Thm^y,Au^VA1^4 *-" ,:- ""•*' "7« •*• ->"r ?s: ' . -C*s , ^j-t,* , > f-v ' msm # " " " -••£#£••£•* - PLAHIDBALBB ^ . !^'" •'-.•.••'••• -rOja't * :• ' , "t* . ' JS5§?-t"*V« \r- V * r- • •"* v r. - '• ii: Page Seven JOHNSBUBG . •<?• Mrs. Joe Schaefer motored to Milee, Wis., Thursday. " - Mr. and Mrs. Roy Horick of Wood- Stock spent Tuesday evening with Mr; and Mrs. Stephen H. Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Nye of West t "£j". McHenry were callers here Monday . ^ evening. * Lawrence Hluff of Woodstock is . Spending a few weeks with Mr.' and • Mrs. George Oeffling. • • Isabel Schmitt of' Chicago spent Saturday and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Math N. Schmitt. Hv M^r. and Mrs. Henry Thelen and -Mrs. Mary Thelen were McHenry callers Saturday afternoon. -» Mr. and Mrs. Alex Freund of Chicago spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. - -Stephen H. Smith. !wl v,- Louis Schmitt spent a few days in 4Chicago this week. '0:$r£% Mr. and Mrs. Frank Michels and 7 daughters were Crystal Lake callers ^ ;%.;Monday evening. ' Mrs. Richard Guyser is spending a few days in Chicago. , , John Ruff and AnnaLunkerheimer , f," Were Woodstock callers Monday. > Mr, and Mrs. John Lay of Spring ' ' Grove were visitors here Tuesday eve- '•£ ;,3iing. • - Mr. and Mrs. Wra. J. Meyers and -jkon, Elmer, were Woodstock callers «*"'"iVedftesday afternoon. ; i Mr. and Mrs. Peter Smitli aid daughter, Phyllis, spent Wednesday with Mr., and Mrs. Bay < Horick at Woodstock*. Miss Katharine Althoff of Elgin is spending a few days with home folks. Mr. and Mrs. Bill May and family speat Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Hoffmann at Wilmette. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Wilkie is spending a few weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Peter F. Freund. Mrs. Furst of Minnesota is spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Michels. Mr. and Mrs. John Lay and Mr. and Mrs. Math Lay of Spring Grove visited Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Schmitt Sunday afternoon- Mr. and Mrs. Albert Huff and Miss Helen Mickels were Waukegan strappers Wednesday* Joe* King, Joe Schmitt, and' John Schmitt motored to Milwaukee Wednesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Tonyan were Woodstock shoppers Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe P. Miller and family v;^ed with Mike Gorski at the Woodstock hospital Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. John M. Schmitt and Mr. and Mrs. Allie Schmitt attended the fair Wednesday. Mr- and Mrs. Wm. Althoff and Miss Mary and Katherine Althoff and Bernard visited at the homs of Mr. ana Mr^ vAis^Wegener at Wauconda Sund a y . V : . v Say yoii read it tn THE PLAIN DEALER.. ' ^jDr. Paul A Schwab© B,M Examined ; _ • i. E. NYE BUILDING West McHenry OPTOMETRIST Thursday Afternoon--Hours 1:30-5:00 Phone 12S-J •. - v. • . vV" '•. . VK-.ri We've Been Telling You For several weeks in this space about liow necessarjHt to have your car or truck checked over for mechanical trouble. Many owners have responded to this advice and saved money thereby. Have you seriously considered this matter! It not, do it today. The checking service iSfree. •••;, ..v. SMITH'S GARAGE Phone 320 McHenry -- call on the McHenry Floral West McHenry Greenhouse on TJ. S. 12 (1 Mile South of McHenry) S Telephone McHenry PLEASE! Anyone --ELOPES --DIES --GETS MARRIED --HAS GUESTS - --GOES AWAY --HAS A PARTY --HAS A BABY --HAS A FIR* -JS ILL --HAS AN OPERATIOU --HAS AN ACCIDENT-- --BUYS A HOME / --WINS A PRIZE --RECEIVES AN AWARD BUILDS A HOUSE MAKES A SPEECH --~ 1 --HOLDS A MEETING --OR TAKES PART IN ANT --OTHER UNUSUAL EVENT That's NEWS! .. Mnd we want it TELEPHONE 19T • -s, \ Elm St. and Riverside Drive WhenrY<w1Sfzed Flowers of Plants Phone 293 Glres Package to Wrong Man; Jailed High Point, N. C.--Behind jail bars, J. A. King ponders the adage tbat "haste makes waste." King heard an auto horn toot In front of his residence.. and came rushing out, bathrobe flying, and shoved a package in the hand of the driver. But instead of a friend 10 need. It was Policeman Kivett, who received the package. fie t6ok King to Jail few possessing liquor. V RINGWOOD INDIANS USE DOPE IN STRANGE FAITH Become Barbaric in New Religious Rites. , : &lB&n. Okla.--Oklahoma* trtaftis Indians are worshiping the Holy Trinity with narcotics, in a strange new faith combining aboriginal, Christain and Oriental rites. The ceremonies consist principally af eating peyote-- the dried tips of the sacfrd Mexican cactH%--then singlns «nd praying as effects of the drugs it contains are felt. Grotesque visions, haUu^lnations Of smell and hearing, diminution of sight and a general feeling of ease and. bliss come to those who eat peyote. Those familiar with goings-on among the Cheyennes and other plains tribes In western Oklahoma -iay the new religion, called the Native Amercan church. Is supplanting both the old credo of a happy hunting ground and the Christian faith imposed, by tireless white missionaries. Though peyote eaters become barbaric, singing welrcl songs and beating tom-toms in warlike fashion, their worship still Is directed toward the Christian God, who they believe Is above them durlnig the ceremonies, and toward Christ himself, whose spirit they say is in the peyote. Cheyenne Indians of the new faith liken their ceremonies to the white practice of the Holy Sacrament, except that an Immediate and tangible effect comes from the cactus, whereas none is felt from bread and wine. Native American church worshipers go through a~s" solemn q ritual. In the beginning, as any Christian church about to observe the sacrament. Peyote buttons, dried tips of a certain species of cactus, resemble potato chips with a tuft of cotton on one side. ' Users of peyote werfe granted a state charter ln 1918. Armenian Caught After Hiding for 15 Year! Istanbul. -- Stephen Hatchadourian, an Armenian living in Istanbul, stayed indoors for fifteen years. Thinking that after such a time, his altered appearance would prevent recognition, he ventured out into the streets and cafes. The long-memoried" Turkish police, were not long In picking him up on a murder chargeL Hatchadourian had been with the allied forces when Istanbul was occupied after the armistice. With two companions It Is alleged that he killed two Turkish policemen when thefy remonstrated with the trio for annoying a Turkish woman. Watch Lost Four Year# Is Found in Farmyard Montgomery, Mich.--After Orville Small's wife died he carried her little gold watch every day for a year. Then he lost it on the farm of Ralph Wlgent -That was four years ago. Small felt so badly that he worked for days and moved every stick of nn 85-cord woodpile, looking for it in vain. A few days ago Mrs. Wigent, walkling through the yard, saw the watch lying in plain sight out In the open. Its case was open, but It was undamaged except for a broken crystal. Woman's Hair Caught in Gear; Her Life Saved Denver.--Quick action by fellow workers in a Denver garment factory saved Mrs. Esther Downware, twenty- five, from breaking her neck Id whirring machinery. Mrs. Downware stooped over to pick up a bobbin that dropped to the floor when her hair J>e came entangled In a revolving shaft Mrs. Minnie £ Riley seized her by the shoulders and another worker held on to her feet until the power was shut off. The Ringwood annual Home Coming'will be held in the M. W. A. Hall Friday, Aug. 24. A program will be given in the afternoon followed by a cafeteria supper served by the Ladies Aid. In the evening the first part of the program will be a one act play. Friday For Luck." The second part will be put on by TPrahk .Mathieu, "Clown Juggler" which will consist of juggling and magic. This will be especially interesting, to the children. There will also be musical numbers. Admission' for evening, 25c and 10c. School will start September 4. There will be Sunday evening services at the M. E. Church next Sunday evening. Mrs: Viola Low entertained the Bunco club at her home Thursday afternoon. Prices were awarded to Mrs- Edgar Thomas and Mrs. S. H. Beatty. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Jr., and Mxs. Frank Johnson of Harvard, attended the fair at Monroe, Wis., Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Frey and family of Deerfield spent Sunday in the S. H. Beatty home, V < Mrs. Frankie Stephenson spent from Thursday until Sunday in' the home of Ker sister at Woodstock. Ethei ahd Lora Wiedrich were visitors at Richmond Thursday morning. Howard Freyer of FredrickS, South Dakota, Mr. and Mys. J. F. "Claxton and son Will of McHenry were callers in the George She par d home Wednesday morning. Roy and Mae Wiedrich spent Thursday morning at McHenry. Mrs. Lester Nelson and children and Mrs. George Bacon of Antioch Spent Friday with Mrs. Nellie Dodge. Mr. aiTid Mrs. George Shepard,. and children and Howard Freyer spent Thursday and Friday morning in Chicago and attended the Fair Thursday. Fred. Wiedrich ad son Fred, Jr., speht Wednesday in Chicago. Andtew Jepson and Arthur Dunn left for their homes at -Williamstown, Mass., and Stanford, Vermont, Saturday after visiting the past few weeks in the C. J. Jepson home. Mr. and^ Mrs. Lester Edinger and family, Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Marble, Mr. and Mrs. Joe McCannon<und sons, Mr, and MirarC. J. Jepson and family and Mrf and Mrs. Roland McCannon and family enjoyed a picnic at Wonder Lake, Sunday. Mi,ss Mercedes Lindemapn is Spending a couple of weeks in Chicago. Mr. a^i Mrs- George Shepard and family, and Mrs, Nellie Dodge Were visitors at Woodstock, Wednesday afternoon. • i . Mrs. Genevieve Dodge and children spent a few days this past week in the Clarence Howard home in Elgin. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hiene and son Eugene and Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard and family visited the lotus beds at Grayslake Sunday. The Ladies Aii Society .held an all day meeting at the home of Mrs. Ray Peters Friday. A pot luck dinner was served. Mr. and Mrs. Matt. Nimsgem and family of Spring Grove spent Friday evening in the Nick Young Tiome. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Schaefer and daughter of Chicago spent Friday in the Joe Shaefer home. , Mr. and Mrs. George Young spent Wednesday at Spring Grove. Mr. and Mm Joe Weber and family of McHenry spent Sunday in the Nick Young home. The 4-H boys and girls went to H u n t l e y ' . W e d n e s d a y a s i t w a s Achievement Day. Those to win prizes were: On table covers, Helen Harrison, first; Marion Peet, fecond; Harriet Carr, third. On undergarments: Amy Harrison in darning, third; Bobbet Cristy received first On her record book; Patricia OrSsty woh first on Junior dress review. 4-H Boys: Frank Martjn, second pure bred c&ives, Holstein; Earl Harrison, first in pure bred yearlings, Holstein; Earl Harrison, third an pure bred cows, Holstein;>. Clarence Adams, third in grade calves, Holstein; Elmer Glpsson, second in Brown Swiss calves. Ethel Nell, second in first year dress review, on the posters, Virginia Jepson, first, Shirley Hawley, second, and Ethel Krohn, third. Mr; and Mrs. Pat Moriarty and children, Dr. and Mrs. Harry Hartley of Chicago and Mr. and Mr^. George Worts and son of McHenry spent Sunday with Mn» and Mrs. Ed. Thompson and family. , Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Miller and family of Crystal Lake spent Sunday evening with Mrs. Cora Flanders. Mr. and Mrs. Floyid Foss of Richmond spent Sunday with Mrs, Rilla Foss. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Schafer and daughter Shirley spent Sunday afternoon with her parents at Spring Grove. Wr. and Mrs- Arthur Peet and family of Greenwood spent Sunday afternoon in the Charles Peet home. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Peet and familv spent Sunday at Rockford. »-t ! Miss Marion Peet is visiting at Elgin and Crystal Lake. Miss Betty Thompson is spending the week with relatives in Chicago. Mr/and Mrs. Russel Brown of Jolict -- " spent Sunday in the George Harrison home> ' % Mr. " and Mrs. George Young and;' family spent Sunday evening in the Waldo Frederickson home at Delavan, Wis. Mrs. Rilla Foss spent Wednesday and Thursday.at the home of her son and also at the Kruse cottage at Richmond. • ^ Richard Darby of Florida is visiting in the W. B! Harrison home. Mrs. George Bacon, Mrs. Lester Nelson and family and Mrs. Nellie Dodge were visitors at Spring Grove Sunday afternoon. Misa Lillie Darby of Chicago spent the weekend with her sister, Mrs. W. B. Harrison. * • The Ringwood 4-H Clut) will hold a card party and Achievement Day at the home of C. L. Harrison, Aug. 30. Admission 10c with lunch,. Mrs. Sarah Sherburn passed her 102nd milestone last Friday, Aug. 17. Her , grandchildren, and great-grandchildren came to see her and also a number of friends. She received gifts of /Candy and flowers from her friends. Amcing her grandchildren to call were Mrs. J. Clyde Bell of Richmond, Mrs; Milford Smith and Mrs. Wrii. Harrison and children of Round Lake, and Mr." and Mrs. Frisbie and children of Greenwood. Mr-, and Mrs. Louis Scheaer of Waukegan announce the arrivaj of a bom at St. Theresa's Hospital Thurs day Evening, Aug. 16th. Mrs. Srheae was formerly Miss Sue' Harrison, daughter of* Mr. and Mrs. Ciaytoiu Harrison. Miss Marjorie Campbell of Media, • 111., is visiting, in the F. A. Hitchens^ home. - Mrs.' Clyde Dugan of Western Springs, Mrs. Isafeelle Boyd of Oa' ~ Park, Mrs. M. Hamlin of Hitchcock, South Dakota and Mr. and Mrs- Chas. Potter of Huron, South Dakota were dinner guests in the "S. H. Beatty J-, ,'* home Monday. Mr. and Mrs. William \ Hendrickson of Richmond were call- * ers in the afternoofi. ^ • Mrs. Viola Low and children and Mrs- Joseph McCannon were Woodstock visitors Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Edgar Thomas of McHenry •frks a visitor in the William McCannon home Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. F. A.'Hitchens return-- " ed home Sunday evening from a visit with relatives* at 'Jacksonville. B«li«f* R*Uii«4 ^ lltny primitive tribes still ' that white men are the ghostp of Macfc*, - men, that apes are a race pt peopi«„-.'| and that the only natural deaths suicide, homicide atid fatal accidental . : t --all others being the work of ev U ' ^' Spirits.--Collier's Weekly. , ^ ] V CENTRAL GARAGE FRED J. SMITH, Prop. JOHNSBURG, ILI* : Best Equipped Garage in'Northern Illinois -v'V- , - ,y... TOWING AND REPAIRING Agency For Johnson Sea Horses , ; Full Line of Parts for Johnson Motors v - v Phones--200-J - - - Night--640-J-2 THE GENERAL ELECTRIC Modern Enoch Ardeil Return With Families Bucharest.--Missi Constntinescu and Georg VIdor, returning to their homes at Topletz after twenty years In Si beria, where they were, taken as prisoners of war, brought with them their Siberian wives and children and thus avoided the Enoch Arden role. They found that their pre-war twlves, believing them dead, had remarried and raised new families. N CASH PRICE / SmuM down payn Balance Monthly on your Electric Service-- bill. m:- a new-t ric erator that operates at extremely low cost Firemen Rescue Robin; Woman Sets Broken Leg Omaha, Neb.--When Mrs. John A. Soli working in her garden saw a robin entangled in a radio aerial with its leg broken, she turned In a fire alarm. A fireman, using a ladder, rescued the bird. Aided by the fireman Mrs. Soil dressed the wound and fashioned a splint Fallowing which Mr. Robin joined his mate In the treetop, ipparently in fine fettle except for a a^rto side J. See the "Companion" Electric Range 'JL companion to the G-E "Liftop" rcftigr erator is the new G-E electric range--one of the simplest, most compact ranges ever built. See.it on display at your Public Service Store. You'll be delighted with the many features of this range which is priced at only $76.00. When bought in combination with the "Liftop" a special, reduced price applies. Ask about this offer. HE Generis!':Eltctfic'; **1.1f tot -the latest triumph of research and engineering 6 -- briri&s the economy ana convenience of electric refrigeration within .the reach of the? most modest income. The G-E "Lrftop ' o is powered with die" For fitly ONE NICKEL Five cents--the cost of a package of gum--will operate' a washing machine, a vacuum cleaner, a percolator, an electric iron, a toaster, a waffle iron--all at one time--for one solid hour at the* new 2c per kilowatt-hoyr portion of the electric rate, in effect after 17 kilowatt-hours per room have been used in the month. Other useful electrical devices also cost but a few pennies to operate. Take advantage of the new. low rates-- think what comfort, what convenience the use of labor-saving appliances will bring to your home. famed G-E "sealed-in-stetl" mechanism, has the same refrigeration principle asithe world renowned G-E. Monitor Top models. It operates so quietly you can scarcely hear it. It needv-no attention--no oiling. jf-The "Liftop" is all steel, with one-piece stainless porcelain interior, glistening white Glyptal-baked enamel exterior? Equipped with sliding food rack and fooa basket. Two ice or dessert freezing trays. Will freeze 20 cubes--2 pounds of ice-- atone tjme. The "Liftop! is compact, but storage capacity has not been sacrificed for tjbe sake of compactness, as an inspection of thefcig, roomy interior will ^ See this revolutionary new-type refrigerator at your nearest Public convince you. Service Store. Ask about our easy payment plan.which-puts the "Liftop" in your home for only s small down payment, the balance monthly, the "little-by-little'* way, 6n your Electric Service Dill. To cover interest and other costs, a somewhat higher price iscbargedfor appliances sold on deferred payments. ft PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY 3* OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS Telephone: tirystal Lake 280 "i: -Vr