, kaxob mrtm *vi-.' ,"<» :Pr'^ . ^ (tV_ -• & *y£J'y 'r^: -'-nir V'-V;^-'-t> y.-;». .*' <* *, \ . en crrr elbction I « »•*»» and • vmm i* **• Notice is hereby riven that oo'pipiac prwfcW witli the necessary Tuesday, April 19, A. D. 1982, ma trim, eooptoig®, unions and by-paw. election will be held in the City of I All water meters shall be installed McHenry, McHenry County, Illinois,1 and located ynder the direction of the for the purpose of electing one alder- Superintendent of the Waterworks man in each of the first, second and and shall be at all times accessible third wards. The date for filing for reading, repairing, etc. petitions expires March 15. Polling"places will be located follows: Jfirst Ward--McHenry City HalL Second Ward--Stoffel Building. "Third Ward--Engeln Building .as MO MUMM* Dla klfwtntlllflntl PROJECTS JDJF1931 Many Changes ra cial Geography of World. Property owners shall bear the ex- "" pense of all repairs oh their water Washington.--Important engineering meters due to freezing, hot water or projects of 1931 wrought many changes from any other cause, owing to neg- in the /commercial geography of the ligence on the part of said property; world/according to a bulletin from the National Geographic society reviewing tb<» outstanding construction accomplishments of the year. V'The year saw the greatest highway construction program Inthe history of _ t ewner or his tenant. The repairs shall The polls will be opened at 6 o'clock be made by the City and the cost shall la the forenoon and will continue open ^e added to the quarterly water billuntil 5 o'clock in the afternoon of the Where any water meter two (2) same day. inches or larger is to be installed there Given under my haiid- at McHenry shall be a by-pass. The valve on said ; the United States." says the bulletin, this 8th day of March, A. D. 1932j. by-pass shall be sealed and in no case) "because of a liberal expenditure polr * Z.'??"*"' MSTER A. NEISS, shall said seal be broken without first Icy by federal, state and local gov- 41 - * City Clerk notifying the" Superintendent cf "> '•* tiAtif. , Waterworks. •4 OVRlUD/IlNil AANliCvfEj || •In" case of a disrp ute over the " Ayr ORDINANCE PROVIDING FOR amount of a bill or the accuracy of a . »^FHE A PPOINTMEXT OF JUDGES meter the Superintendent of Water- ; AND CLERKS AND DESIGNAT- works will, at the request of the eon- •" ' ING THE POLLING PLAGES FOR sumer, test the meter. If it is found t.-!v^THE ANNUAL CITY ELECTION upon such test tnst the meter regis- ; • IN THE CITY OP McHENRY FOR ters a ^reater pmount of water U,an TTTF wati A n io'io .has actually passed thru said met«tr the {allowing1 two and one-half per cent • Mayor and City Council of the City of Accuracy) the said hill McHenry, that the following places be ** adjusted to Wown with the designated as polling places for the «'rrect amount pacing through and animal city election to be held April owner shall be ^required to bear IWh, 1332: - - - - ., First Ward--McHenry City Halt. Second Ward--Stoffel Building.- - Third Ward--Engeln Building. the exuense of said test. Section 3--In the event that the City Collector shall be unable to collect the money due the City of McHenry fot Section 2--Be it further ordained City Water then the City collector that Math. Heimer, Wm. Simes and fh«H ^ authorized to turn said water Harry Ritter are hereby designated to Wis over to the Superintendent of act as judges of election for the first, * collected by him. ward for the annual City election of Section 4--AH ordinances or parts the City of McHenry, to be held April °f ordinances in conflict herewith, are 19th, 1932, and that Mrs. Frank Cobb, he"^. rep®al~:. • - Mabel Wheeler, Mary G. Doherty are' Section &-This ordinance shall be hereby designated to act as Clerks of in ful1 force and uP°n its passelection of the first ward for the an- a^® an<* approval according to law. Approved: JOHN R. KNOX, Mayor. nnal City election of the City of Mc- Henry, to be held April 19th, 1932. Section 8--Be it further ordained. i , that Mayme Harrison, John Fay, Ray Attest: Peter A. Neiss, City Clark* Spurling are hereby designated to act Passe<i: March 7th, 1982. as Judges of election for the second Approved: March 7th, 1982^ ward, for the annual City election of Pubhshed: March l&th, 1982, the City of McHenry to be held April 19th, 1932, and that Robert Patzke, Jr., Gerald Newman, Dorothie Nicktls are hereby designated to act as Clerks of election for the second ward City Council Proceeding! Council Room, March 7th, 1982. The City aldermen met in regular for the annual City election of the City monthly meeting Monday evening, of McHenry, to be held April 19, 1932. Mayor Knox, presiding. Aldermen Section 4--Be it further ordained present Barbian, Kreutzer, Overton, that Mrs. Kate Schneider, Geo. Bohr, Schaefer and Wattles. Absent Do- Wm. Bishop are hereby designated to herty. act as Judges of edection for the third Motion by Kreutzer, seconded by ward, for the annual City election of Schaefer, that the minutes of the prothe City of McHenry to be held April vious meeting be approved as read. 19th, 1982, and that Mrs. Ella Gans, Motion carried- Miss Gertrude Weber, Clarence Whit-! Motion by 1 Wattles, seconded by ing are hereby designated to act as Overton, that the Treasurer's report Clerks of edection for the third ward be approved as read showing a balance for the annual City edection of the of $4,780.31. Motion carried. City of McHenry to be held April 19th, 1932. Motion by Schaefer, seconded by Barbian, that the Collector's report Section 5--Be it ordained by the be accepted as read. Motion carried. Mayor and City Council of the City of Motion by Kreutzer, seconded by McHenry that the City Clerk is here- Barbian, that the Clerk's report be \cby instructed to post the necessary cepted as read. Motion carried, notices, giving notice of the annual Motion by Barbian, seconded by City election to be held April 19th, Wattles that the following bills be 1982, such notices to be posted mt paid as read and O. K'd by the finance least forty (46) days prior to the committee. Motion carriedelection. jJohn Walsh, Feb. salary .„W.M|135.00 Section 6--This Ordinace shall be in W. C. Feltz, Feb. salary- ...;...j$110.00 foil force and effect after its passage,; M. M. Niesen, Feb. salary ........ 60.00 approval and publication, according to Peter A. Neiss, commission* and law. Approved: S JOHN R. KNOX, ' Mayor. Attest: Peter A. Neiss, CityClerk. Fassed: March 7th, 1932. Approved: March 7th, 1932. . • afcuch 10th, 1933. ORDINANCE AN ORDINANCE AMENDING SEC- stamps 24.00 Illinois Bell Telephone Co. service 60 John Suiting's Tire Shop, storage, etc., ...... 12.00 Geo. Meyers, gravel 12 60 Henry C. Kamholz, supplies, sewer lift 8.35 McHenry Plaindealer, printing 9.60 "tVattles Drug Store, fumigators, etc 4.10 TION ONE (1) CHAPTER THIRTY- SIX (36) OF THE REVISED J?hn J' ^ycital, toilet paper .... oO ORDINANCES OF THE CITY OF Jfayme Buss, commissions, .... 8.35 McHENRY ENTITLED WATER ,rH EIectnc ?.^P' 8upphes aDd 0 „ WORKS AND AMENDING AN' la^°rJ sfwer .l,ft - 8.7J ORDINANCE IN REGARD TO J?- P-oil .... 6.92 WATER WORKS, PASSED SEP- ^ ^wman, gravel ............... ^ 8.. 5 TEMBER 12th, 1927. EXCEPTING PuW»c Service Co* street lights 146.S0 THAT PART OF ARTICLE 1 OF ^!\c c°-. "treet lights 124.71 SECTION 2 HERETOFORE Servic« Co-. Power, sewer AMENDED I -- --19.56 Be it ordained by the City Council. Publi« Co- P°wer- P«»Pinsr ^ of the City of McHenry that Section 34 C0 TV-o (2), Chapter thirty-six (36) of P"t>l.c Service Co., city hall ^ thti Revised (kxlinances of the City of ^ lr --.. 4.65 Mr Henry, and an Ordinance revising West McHenry State Bank, jud*. Setstion Two (2), Chapter thirty-six! - 300 00 (••'<]), passed September, 12, 1927, be' Mo + t,on ^ 0ve^®"' ^ an! the same are hereby amended to . reu zeIj.^> p£y $300^00 on West Mcr, ad as follows: i Henry State Bank Motion Section 2- METERS AND METER carried. RATES. The quarterly rates or taxes Motion by Overton, seconded by "by "e^hT person farbian, that the Clerk be instructed using the city water of the City of ^r?1,t *»•^* McHenry water works thra a meter ^ Bond A lssue .Route No. 61. Moshall be as follows: ^on earned. (a)--The rate for water consumed M°t,on by seconded by shall be forty cents (40c) per each Barbl^n' that the Milk ordinance he 1,000 gallons, if the amount used does 08ss* aa ° inn /'nr,n not exceed 5,000 gallons each quarter. „r^,ti(>n ^verto"» .seconded by (b)---And thirty-three cents (33c) Wa"les, that an ordinate amending per each 1,000 gallons used each quar- , sec,t,on l> chfPj«r *6' o{ ,th* ™VIPod ter in excess of 5,000 gallons and fcot °r<"T^ f the, Clty °f exceeding 20,000 gallons. , entitled Waterworfe and amending an (c)--And twentv-five cents (25c) ordina i nc cf ^°1^,terv"ork?' per each 1,000 gallons used each quar- Pass^ September 12th, 1927 excep^- ter in excess of 20,000 gallons and not p of Article 1, of Section exceeding 60,000 gallons. j2' heretofore amended, be passed as (d)--And twenty cents (20c) per,rea^* Motion carried. each 1,000 gallons used each quarter' Motlon V Kreutzer, seconded by in excess of 60,000 gallons. j Wattles, that an ordinance providing (e)--All meters shall be read quar- for the appointment of Judges and terly, and the said charge or tax shall ^Klerks and designating the polling be paid by the consumer quarterly. ! Peaces for the annual City election in (f)--The minimum quarterly charge *be City of McHenry for the year hall be Two Dollars (|2.00) per *932, be passed as read. Mouarter. jtion carried. (g)--All water rates shall be col-' Motion by Schaefer, seconded by ected by the City Collector except as! ®ar"ian> to adjourn. Motion carried. lereafter provided, and all persons or colorations who shall ?ay their bills thfe water consUTS?d on or before ie 20th day of the months of Feblary. May, August and November ^hall be allowed a ten per cent (10%) iscount on their water bill. Persons >aying after the 20th dav of JOHN R. KNOX. Mayor. SS, City Qariu ernments. More than 11.000 miles of federal aid highways alone were under construction at a cost of over a third of a billion dollars. ^Ouba contributed the most spectacular single highway project of the year when in February she threw open for use Ihe 700-mile paved motor road extending from end to end of the Island. , "At Washington, the United State* government brought aim oh f to completion a model modern automobile road, built In. preparation for the bicentennial celeh.-atfon of the birth of George Washington. It is the Monnt Vernon Memorial highway, extending from the National Capital to the home of the first President "The Mount Vernon roadway Is wide enough for four lanes of traffic, and is to have on each side parked strips of lawn, flower beds and shrubs. No road however unimportant is permitted to cross the highway 'blind.' The least important roads have staggered crossings. Others must cross between safety Islands. The Important cross roads are carried over the highway on ornamental viaducts. Hudson River Bridge. "The most notable engineering event of the year was the completion In October of the George Washington Memorial bridge across the Hudson river between New Jersey and Manhattan island. This bridge with a span of S,.*>00 feet Is the longest suspensioa bridge In the world. Only a few weeks later, the near-by Kill Van Kail bridge between New Jersey and Staten island was completed, the longest steel arch bridge In the world. Its length, 1,652 feet, one Inch, exceeds by two feet, one Inch the length of the arch In the Sydney Harbor bridge, Australia, also virtually completed in 1931. , "In Africa, a new combined highway and railway bridge was put Into operation in Uganda across the Nile near the river's point of Issue from I^nke Victoria. As a result of this complex tion. the first railway train entered Kampala, one of the leading cities of Uganda. "The outstanding canal completion of the year was that Of the New Welland canal In Canada between Port Colborne on T^ake Erie and Port Weller on Lake Ontario. At one point the Welland river is siphoned under the canal "In November the Panama canal was temporarily closed by the first major landslide of the year. The slide was quickly cleared away. "Work was begun on the huge Hoover dam project on the Colorado river near Las Veens. Nev. Numerous dams were completed. Including a waterworks darp near Calgary, Can.; the Rngnall dam on the Osage river In Missouri; the Saluda dam near Columbia. S. C., and the Tijunga dam, near Los Angeles. ^Important railway construction probably led all other engineering activities in wide distribution throughout the world. Of great significance was the building of a railway section In Belgian Congo which made It possible for the first time for passengers and freight to move by rail across Africa from Loblto on the Atlantic to Belra on the Indian ocean. The line opened up rioh copper mine areas In Katanga, Belgian Congo, apd-Wborth era Rhodesia. Bermuda Gets First Rail "One of the most Interestir railway building was In the Islands, where a line 20 yriiiles Ions was opened to traffic. It Is the first railway to be built In this old Rfitish colony. Legislation has heretofore prohibited railways In these islands. "In the Malay peninsula, a railway was opened along the east coast, establishing communication between Singapore and the border of Slam's long southern tall. "Of Immediate economic Interest was the opening for grain shipment* for the first season of the railwaj from Canada's western wheat region to Churchill on Hudson bay. Of geographic interest, with economic results to follow later, wns (he virtual completion of a railway through northern Ontario to the southern extremity of Hud son Bay at Moose Factory. "Rails were pushed ahead steadily, adding to the world's railway mileage In such widely scattered regions as Finland, Brazil, Turkey, the Philippines, Nova Scotia, Argentina, Algeria Colombia, Manchuria, Japan and Ecuador. "In the United States an Important link was built in southwestern Penn syhania; a cutoff from the southwest corner of Kansas Into New Mexico; in the Texas 'Panhandle*; in northern California, and In a number of other Western states. A short, but Important line was built in southern Nevada, connecting the site of the Hoover dam with existing railways. "In the Netherlands, the first 'polder' of the vast Zuyder Zee "^clnmatlon project was put Into use. These 38,000 acres were reclaimed from the sea after remaining submerged since 1284." bits of ermuda tonths of February, May, August and November, being the day on which the Quarterly installments for the city .ater shall be due, shall not V? entitled to a discount. The City will furnish and ft stall 111 meters and the owner of the sei vice be metered shall pay for aid leter. The property owner shall al*o a suitable place for the meter Morality Morality, when vigorously alive, sees farther than Intellect and provides unthe ] consciously for IntelJ^,:ty4U .nffimu^ --Froude. Mu'i Benefactor A *Var on all sparrows" would be •cry tnjurlous to man. In one week a very small sparrow family will eat 3,000 Insects, all capable of injuring mlllioaa--Exchange Giving the Low-t)own A scientist says it is the lower part of the face, not the eyes, that gives away one's thoughts. Especially when one opens the lower part of the face. --Dakota Farmer. It DMa't Get Over 4JM ewt our way who tried TO 4iftlr highbrow to a new beau found later that he was referring to her as a crops and reproducing themselves to'f-platrtnfitTtnm HENRY L. COWLIN.Attorney NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR PROBATE OF WILL STATE OF ILLINOIS, McHenry County, ss. To Nellie Ferbend, Pa^l Fetfeeral, John T. Kelahan, Russell J. Kelahan, Thomas R. Kelahan, Benjamin Kelahan, Irene Kelahan, Frances Kelahan, John D. Kelahan, Virginia Kelahan Jurs, Mable Kelahan Tesar, Albert Kelahan, Mary Jane Kelahan, Katherine Scanlan, Rev. F. A. Kilderry, Fred E. Jayne, B. C. Getzelman, the unknown heirs and legatees of Christ Kelahan, deceased, and the unknown heirs and legatees of Julia Lammersal, deceased, heirs at law and legatees, so far as known, of Marcella Kinkor, deceased, late of McHenry oounty, Illinois. You are herby notified that application has been made to the County Court of McHenry County, Illinois for the probate of the will of Marcella Kinkor, deceased, and that the hearing of the proof of said will has been set by sa>d Court for the twentyfirst day of March, A. D., 1932, at the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon, st the Court House in Woodstock, in said County, when and where you can appear, if you see fit, and show cause, if any you have, why said will should not be admitted to probate. R. D. WOODS, County Clark. --r-- 89-3 v :$i *5 rt vlH A®*'/ . .;»* *\*/ •/; j " * - " /f \ 4 i«1 Wbea Benjamin Franklin applied te the king of Prussia to lend his assist* ance to the struggling colonies, that worthy asked, "What is the object you mean to attain?" "Liberty, sire." replied Franklin. The king, after a short pause, then said, "I was bora a prince; I am become a king, and I will not use the power I >o--to the ruin of my own trade." Thea TUjr Hate H^a AH tkt world loves a lover--except when he and bis sweetie are holding up about forty cars behind them.-- Arkansas Gesette. Smart CM The mud-fish found in South Africa Is little concerned when the river la which It makes Its home dries ap. ft arranges Itself comfortably In a befl of mijd where It sleeps until the river channels are again filled with water. popular refrigerators are bet ng offe red at -ofew" €«#" be safely saved in an electric refrigerator. Its controlled cold keeps foods healthfully fresh for days. Thousands of women are discovering that it is good business to invest in electric refrigeration. By practically eliminating food spoilage, it saves nickels, dimes or quarters every day--actually helps to pay for itself f See the new models and ask about convenient monthly terms at your local REFRIGERATOR DEALER'S or PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY STORE * ' ; •" ~ < BE3 CHESE people are alert people, people who do things in the world, whether it is banking or window cleaning; people who buy things, from overshoes to grand pianos; people who have unlimited incomes and people who have to keep within budgets, but all of them people who know the value ol money and the returns they can get for it. That is why they lead the Plaindealer, where they can compare prices, and quality, where because of the high standard of The Plaindealer they fro assured of the high standard of its advertisers. You too may reach these many readers by advertising in THE PLAINDEALER setta .' t *l3., ' t