McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 10 Oct 1935, p. 4

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-its tj* <• Four mi. %$ " . ' • - **o*»•£* T,»«H>l»ia».*ylMlt , • <* r f * r/ '£>» '•"4>V f, j\rvi PM':' S3 - »J. -*y XBX KoUMET FLAJHDSALB 1HE M'HENRY PLA1NDEALER iwy "Thursday at McHenry, 111., by .Jr Charles F. Ranich. Entered as second-class matter at the postoAce at McHenry, I1L, on. ir the act of May 8, 1879. ry , r One Tear .-- tlx , Months fSLOe FOR SALE FOR 8ALE--Five Room House. H. C. Jtamholz. Modern 19-2 A. H. MOSHER, Editor and Manager tiflliaYi Sayler, Local Edito* -- -- -- -- Telephone 197 Uncommon SoyJe^ns ^f ke IT. >, „ Marketable Hay Sense 1 .^n nuv« _, • -- Early Cutting, Curing Well Important, According , v *° a Specialist. v ; J John Blake iicnto--WNt'Service. \*v *~y« ( , ^ i" r * r, • / . K:u-»* l i f e a s i t js. .Don't run away J • fBi'lii it, • Ton ill have ' , ; Placing'" >'o«f .share of • trou- Hoo!-t ilirfjX.""1 "er>' rJ/" ",,-Yoti will nwt ^v\ ith disappointments. .*. -Y dejects v;: : . . Hut s>tand up and t*ke It vPon^ run ;• ?. , Probably'the job* of attaining' dis-< i v ^nctioti is unire: difficult today than .It , tfver has bern -• . C , ' Th^re is more fcowpetitiGn for »tbe irigh pri7e« * , , > " . - "There areTnore competitors1 who* are • -traliiM ahd 'well educated. \ Time was in the early history of this country when a man who could read and write and "figure" had a better chance than most.of his neighbors. What are called "advantages" are more general now. ^illiteracy has practically vanished. Tou never know today with whom you are competing. It may be the man next door. It May be sonig fellow who lives on the other side of the continent, but who has the same ambition that yon-have, and the same determination to Suc- • ceed. ' . , . . .Sow »hd then when some great in- . vent ion is made, and some earnest able studious man profits by it, you find that perhaps a hundred people Safe b^eri working on the same thing. But don't bother about that ' . Everybody is on their own. If they are gifted with.the willingness to work hard, and have keen and intelligent minds, tiiey are .pretty certain "to win ^ / some kind of success. " With people like these you mtlst com- Pete- . ':-k.v> 'r Y<HI never heard of them; they never heard of you. But you are in "the Siame race, ami "doe among you is going to win. ., • That isn't easy. But nothing worth is easy. f-j- > -.the best education you cab at the start. Improve on It as you go along. -CaTtlraUi as far as possible [lie ln- FOR SALE--Irish Setter, male puppy, 4 months old; fast dog for hunting; $5. Also two young goats, 5- months old. Inquire B. Popp's Shoe .Store^ W. McHenry. JPhone 162. 19-2 FOR SALE--Upright piano, Urbandale Farm, McHenry. $10.00. *20 FOR RENT terest and the friendship of people who have Intelligence and perseverance. , Play just enongh to keep yotir body v good health. • 4* for work, indulge in it as much as you can. Worry may kill you. Work won't Jmless there is something the matter with your physical system. ' It may be that, In spite of everything you will leave no "footprints on the sands of tilne," but at least before you leave this planet you will have the satisfaction that you used everything you had, and that you did make progress along some new path. ' _ » 'V • Except In partially civilized conntlies there should be no such thing as provincialism. Rupjrilea by ,th« United State* Departni«|kt V «f A^'Ht'iiKure.--W NX' ScfVtct. ' ' • •" C«tfirig soy beans at any time from (he forming of the seeds in the pods until they are about three-fourths defvelopedV Stnd 'proper-, during, are- essentiaL in the proihiction of a high ity, fnarkPthbie hay crop, .according to \V. II. nostei hian. h«y; specialist la the kl<'partibent, i whV is ifi close touch :-;Vlth hay aaarkets and producers to Middle West. - : ~.r> • • In Ohio theeiperimgnt stntfon r^GOBimends that soy bean hay should be curod, by September 10, to avoid heavy dews and fall rains, as well as shorter "curing days. Under normal seeding conditions .soy bea« ha;j ts harvested not later than early September. If a grain blnder^e used, a cleaner hay Is assured, as lere rubbish from the preceding crop is picked up and less soil accumulates on the hay. Farmers have found thai hay tied loosely in small bundles sod put into small shocks cures better and loses few or no leaves. Soy bean hay cut with a mower and cured In the swath and windrow loses many leaves, col- Jecta d^rt, and often contains trash FOR RENT--Room, centrally locat> ed. Inquire at Plaindealer office. 15-tf FOR RENT--.-670-Acre Farm.. Also 6-room house in McHenry. Call McHenry 93-M^ ; : . 16-tf WANTSO) WANTED--Girl or woman for gener5- al housework. State age and experience. Give address and phone num- Write care of Plaindealer. , -/ " *20 MISCELLANEOUS WE PAY FOR DEAD ANIMALS . . . V MIDWEST REMOVAL 6j). PHONE DUNDEE 10 Reverse Charges I PAY CASH AND QUICK REMOVAL OF DEAD AND CRIPPLED COWS AND HORSES. Call Axel Bolvig, Woodstock 1645-W-2 and reverse charges. *46-26 HOW: PAST WE SPEAK AND SPEED AT WHICH EYES MUST ACT.-- "You are going too fast, sir," protested a police constable whose ability as a shorthand writer was being tested In court at Pontypridd, notes a writer in Pearson's Weekly. The magistrate, who had a stop watch in his hand, agreed. "You qre, reading at the rate of 145 words to the minnte," he told the solicitor. "It is only a verbatim notetaker who can write at such a speed." In another case tried at a wellknown county court, the judge objected te the slow speed at which the defending barrister spoke. "I have timed you," he said, "and you have taken fiO seconds to say" 51 words. Your pauses are unnecessary." Actually, It appears, that the ordinary rate of speaking varies between 100 and 120'words a minute. And that in a year a man speaks 11,800,000 words. Few of us give a thought to the speed at which we perform mechanical actions. Your eyes, for instance,, have you any idea at what speed they work? Do you know that, in reading a: nofel, they have traversed About a inile and a half of type? Even those whose daily reading is confined to a newspaper read 19 to 25 "miles of type yearly. WHY= Children Born in U. S. Are Legal Citizens. Children born in this country, of whatever parentage, are citizens of the United States. Under the laws of most countries they may also consider themselves citizens of the country of their parents. This^dtial citizenship exists until the child becomes of age and decides which of his cltlzenships he will tise. A child born at sea takes th» nationality of its parents. ' Foreigners who are legally entered in the United States as immigrants need never take out citizenship* papers if they do not choose to. Those who come here merely as visitors may not become citizens, and must leave at the end of a specified time, usually six months. In most countries a wife takes the citizenship of her0 husband, and that was the law in the United States until September 22, 1922. Since that date women in this country have an i.ndedependent Status in citizenship and can neltjier acquire nor lose citizenship by marriage. A foreign-born woman who marries an American citizen must take out papers for herself if she desires Citizenship.--Cleveland Plain Dealer. from the preceding crop. Seeding of soy beans for hay so they may be harvested with grain binders is becoming more popular in Iowa and Ohio. For best results with the binder the beans are seeded in lands not more than 4V4 fe^t wide. These lands are usually about I .foot apart, leaving enough room for the binder's divide board so a clean swath may be cut. If the beans have been sown at the end of the field, they are usually Cut with a mower. Otherwise they are likely to clog the binder.. Recause of.the severe drouth which destroyed large acreages of timothy, clover, and other grass and legume crops in 1934, soy beans have gained popularity as an emergency hay crop botn for home use and on the market. . In Iowa, farmers have been using 60 to 70 per cent of the soy bean crop for hay. Of 1,200,000 ticres planted in Illinois last year, 700,000 acres.were harvested for ha v. I Looking at the World PaP*r8> furnished with electric eyes and ears that do their work in all parts of the world, happenings in London and Paris and the Balkans and Constantinople are known to the whole world the next morning. Every intelligent man and woman Is a newspaper reader. , Whtij I was a child in a little town in the Middle West, the papers in the nearest so-called cities printed briefly of, columns. Once tne man who lacked the meant to travel knew very little about what, was going on in the world. Today lie knows all the newspaper correspondents and reporters and ed itore know, and that is a great deal. '* •*- - As a result of the growth and improvement of the newspapers there is >no ioni/or any excuse for ignorance outside jungle countries. There are nevertheless many -. peopie who will not take the trouble to read, unless it is about prize ring fights or bandits, or little wars in South America; If they get no. benefit from the press ^ILJS their own YauIt_ii_,i&_ihfiEe_je^ Hay Contains Vitamin D; Sun Content Increases One of the reasons why hay is n valuable feed for live stock Is because It contains a goodly quantity of vitamin D-^-the antirachitic constituent. Vitamin D Is produced In the hay by the ultra violet rays of sunlight. We all like to "make hay while the sun shines," and even if we have not always been able to appreciate all of the reasons for this conclusion, ths„ bright sunlight, nevertheless, improves the 'quality of hay, in that it tends to increase its content of vitamin D. This conclusion was brought out and demonstrated by th<f Michigan Agricultural experiment station some years ago, when they were studying the na ™a-v .t_h_e,°tw.8; j twe and cause of rickets in calves-- a disease of the bones. The experi menters fed four lots of calves a basal ration which contained practically no vitamin D, and those whose ration was not supplemented with this vitamin developed rickets; that D, which makes it possible for the animal to asslmi late the minerals U contains. Without vitamin D, the« assimilation of mln erals cannot take place, no matter how much mineral matter may be present in the feed the animal receives.--Wal- I WILL PAY $4.00 to $14,00 (for old and disabled horses. They must be able to walk. Call or write FRANK M. JAYNE. Phone Woodstock 209. 19-tf ARE YOU HAVING TROUBLE with your sewing machine ? If so, call McHenry 162. We repair them, no matter, what the trouble may be. Popp, West McHenry. 37~tf HAVE YOUR APPLES AND GRAPES pressed at Kattner's Cider Mill. Pressing price, 5 cents per gal. Open Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays. Located 1 mile east of Spring Grove, Tel. Richmond 912. *18-3 "Monk" Has the Ball 5"- ery morning, or every afternoon in clear type. " Every day the world Is getting more interesting. „ Today something that looks like a Far cloud 1^ rising over the Balkan*. Once before a war cloud of about the same size was observed In the same place, and a few days afterward the whole world was catching fire. Jf you want to talk convincingly, to think intelligently, you must' afcrat 8omething t0 thl1* and talk. You will find what you want when you pick yout newepaper up from the door step, or when you buy itTom a newsboy in.the street • • * . . * • • • • • Dpn't let these opportunities go for nothing. 1 ' liead,, mark, and Inwardly digest" From every land, from every clime WUI come tidings that are always Interesting and may become extremely important -' Keep informed about them. It will > make you a better citizen, it will give yoa a higher regard for your own country. • t have never known a conituni newspaper reader who ua.< not well informed and free from the belief thai the only country that amounts to anything at all, j U- ifur Ottm. Soil Partic4es The size of the soil particles is a factor of great importance in deter mining for what crops soils are adapted, These particles, which determine the soil's texture. rans?e from large size to those that can be seen only ,^he aid of a Powerful microscope. As "a wmaIter jftf convenience these par tides are divided into a few rather than many groups. For a long time soils have been referred to as sands, sandy loams; silts and silt loams: and clays and clay loams; but, with the inauguration of soil purvey work by the .United States Department of Agriculture, the grouping of soils was begun on the basis of the size of the particles, although this grouping differs somewhat from European groupings adopted at about the sailie time. Avoiding Milk Flavors •cTo avoid undesirable milk flavors many dairymen feed highly flavored feeds before milking. Silage made from corn, alfalfa, sweet clover, or soy beans : and green alfalfa, cabbage, turnips, rape, and kale when fed an hour be fore milking produce noticeable fla vors in milk, tests by the United States Department of Agriculture show. Green rye, green cowpeas, potatoes, dried beet pulp,, and carrots af feet milk slightly. Green corn, green oats and peas, green soy beans, pumpkins, and sugar beets show little effect. Ensilage to Fatten Cattle .^ton of ensilage, properly supple- Airn ' j'ill replace 4.61 bushels of « rati • I P°UndS °f Cl0Ver hay In fn thl°T „°, fattf'n catt,e. notes a writer J ® '!?d ®n.a Farmed Guide. When fed as shelled corn at the Ohio experi ment station onfe crop acre carried "a steer 166 days only, while an acrY of corn in ensilage furnished enough feed to i last one steer 375 days. As much milk may be-obtained from 5<) acres of ground fodder as where 63 acres of bua&e lo&lar «re fed. How Children Differ ill Growth in Some Section* There apparently Is a geographical differential In the growth of children in the United States. This is shown by public health service measurements of height, weight, chest circumference and vocal capacity of more than 30,000 school children-- divided into sex and age classifications-- in all parts of the United States. "On the whole," says the report, "children from the northeastern section tend to be largest, those from the north central area next, those from the south central region are third, and those from the western section the smallest." The reason for this geographical differential, shown for children between six and fifteen years of age,- is unknown. Comparative rates of growth show no consistent differences,--Detroit- News. ' Charles "Monk" Meyer, backfleld candidate of the Army football team is snapped at practice, carrying tho ball in a "broken field" run. Although it was only drill, Cadet Meyer put his all into it, as his facial expression Jn dleates. He Is a native of Fort Sheri dan, 111. , . One-Piece Dress • How Union Jack Got Nana . Union Jack is a strange name for aflag. It is like this. The original flag of England was the banner of St. George--a red cross on a white ground. When James of Scotland became also king of England, the banner of St. Andrew-- a diagonal white cross on a blue ground--was combined' with St. George's banner. Then came the union with Ireland and the banner of St. Patrick--a diagonal red cross on a white ground was added. Thjs gave as the new familiar flag--Union because It was made up of the banners of the united countries. Jack -is a form of the name of King James in Latin-- Jacobus--in whose reign the flag came Into use.--Pearson's Weekly. Why Baby-Faced Females Outnumber Opposite Sex Why are there more baby-faced women than men? We might think this a question for Cupid alone. But Prof. •Wingate Todd, a Yorkshire scientist, who, since 1929, has been studying and measuring the faces of thousands of children and adults, besides inquiring Into their life records, now conoludes that, whereas girls' faces cease growing at the age of fourteen, boys' faces continue developing for several years longer, thus enabling them to recover from stanted effects °ln their youth. Snub noses, he declares, are the result of under-nourlshment In the early days of a child's life; lack of proper vitamins causes the nose to freeze prematurely.--Tlt-Blts Magazine. Mr. and Mrs. James Downs - will move from the Asmalsky house, east of the river, to Geneva on Oct. 15. H. Nielsen, proprietor qf the Green Street bakery, will movie to the Asmalsky house. Roy Miller, Miss Harvey and Peter Miller and daughter, Lillian,; visited Mrs. Peter Miller at the hospital, Saturday evening. Mrs. William Tesch visited at Salem Wis., this week. ^ . Mr. and Mrs. John Peterson of Chicago visited here Monday. Mrs. Peterson's mother, Mrs F E Cobb, returned to Chicago with them. Miss Marion McOmber of Chicago has recently returned from a visit to Wmra&y; OcSbMrlff, 1955^ Sunday evening at Woodstoek. Mrs. Alby Krug, L. V. Adams and Mrs. Ed Bacon of Volo attended the M. E. Conferences at Elgin Friday evening. ' -- Elmer KennebecK is employed wf; the Alemite factory, Woodstock. The William Jenkins family ha#- moved from the old creamery at Grig* wold (Lake./ Frank. Anderson yand family of Crystal Lake now conduct^ the tavern and auto shop there. , > ? Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn Jones of Chi«r cago spent Sunday in the C. W. Good* ell hopie. Mr. and 'Mrs. Anton Linhart, Chi* ' cago, and Mr. and Mrs. James Linhart, Cicero, visited in the Albert Vales home the last of the week. V Mr. and 'Mrs. John Berheide of Delphos, O., spent the past week vi&fc iting in the home of Mrs. Berheide'a brothers, A. E. Nye and Dr. N. J, Nye. - Los Angers, Cal., where she visitetl f Evel-yn Freund of St. Therese's hos* relatives including Mr. and Mrs. John Pital 8Pent Sunday with home folks*/* I. Story. ^ ' Mrs. Alice Bowles, daughter, Mar-' , Catherine Diedrich, who is. taking! Saret. son, Richard, and James Dohn*^ nuivrosoe'esr tfrraaiinvi,n:g.- in an AA uro• ra: hospitni.: I im , '-..J al, spent the weekend here. V Mrs. Frank Aylward, daughter, Clarice, and mother, Mrs. Shoewer, of er of Chicago spent Thursday with" Mrs. Margaret McCarthy. VS Mr. and Mrs. Ray McCarthy ami children arid Frances McCarthy of Whitewater, Wis., were recent guests , Chicago spent the weekend in the Fred How to Tan Fnra For small skins such as rabbit, the following formula for a tanning solution Is generally used. Dissolve four pounds or salt in five gallons of water in a wooden tub, then add very carefully two fluid ounces of sulphuric acid. Before being placed In this, the skins should be covered with salt on the flesh side and allowed to stand a few days to dry out They should remain In the tanning bath for one to three weeks, then they should be rinsed and dried. How to Teat Vocabulary ' " To count your own vocabulary, according to a method once outlined by L. M. Terman in his book, "The Measurement of Intelligence," get a dictionary of 18,000 words. Select the last word in every sixth column until you have a list of 100 words. Then multiply the number of these words you can define by 180. If you're an average adult you should be ahiA tn do. fine 11,700. If you're a superior adult, 13,500.--Chicago Tribune. '• ' How to Make Grinding Wheel - One method of making a grinding wheel is to grind emery into a fine powder, make into a paste with a dilute acid, such as hydrochloric acid, then mold or press to shape and dry at a high temperature. An artificial whet-, stone is made by dissolving gelatin in an equal quantity of water, adding 1% per cent of bichromate of pptash, previously dissolved, then mixing with nine times Its weight of, very fine emery. The paste }s molded to shape, pressed together and dried in the sun. Two collars are better than one on this one-piece dress of brown, beige and orange printed tie silk. Pleats extend from the deep cut yoke to the hem. Buttons and suede belt are orange. Roy, Ed and Alford Miller, Lillian Miller and Helen Harvey attended the show at Crystal Lake Sunday night. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Diets were in Chicago Monday. ' Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Dietz were Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Kobsa and M*. and Mrs. Philip OieWx of Q*icag9. . -- - How to Dispose of Old Flags > According to the flag code, established in 19^3 by representatives of 71 patriotic organizations the flag should be destroyed as a whole, when Is it no longer In fit condition to display as an emblem, preferably by burning or by some other method In harmony with the reverence and respect we owe to the emblem representing our country. According to the War department, the United States disposes of Its worn-out flags by burning them._^p r-7- How to Clean Hairbrush Put a dash of household 'ammonia In warm water and dip the brush In it several times, with the back up. Do not rinse. This stiffens the bristles. Wipe the back with a soft cloth and lay the brush on -its back to dry. ^ ' Horses Not Natural Jnmpera Horses, it is believed, are not natural jumpers, although they have been trained to clear 8-foot hurdles with a rider on their back. In Australia they have been known to die of thirst In sight of water-holes from which they were separated only by a very low fence«-HColller's Weekly. Jut a Siga If you have company on Mondayv lt Is a sign you will have company each day through the week. Wky Red Croaa la a Symbol An International conference met In Geneva, Switzerland, In 1864, to devise a code of hospital and ambulance rules and safeguards for use in war fare. The Red Cross societies are the outgrowth of this convention. A symbol and -flag were needed to mark-hospitals, ambulances and the persons carrying on this sort of work. The flag of Switzerland Is red, with a white cross. As a compliment to the nation In which the conference was being held It was decided to adopt as the International relief symbol this same device with the colors reversed--a red cross on a white field. The cross, therefore, Is heraldic rathei- than religious In (origin/and it has never had any religious significance so far as the Red Cross organizations are concerned. i Why Songs Are Called "Bluet" There was an undercurrent of melancholy In the early songs of t^s type. The blues are a highly distinct form, of Afro-American secular folk song, which became popular among lower-class Southern negroes before 1910. Because of their undistinguished Origin and associations the blues were frqwned upon at first, but they made their way notwithstanding. While melancholy Is the predominating characteristic of the blues, the personality of the singer is at least equally stressed. He sings of bis troubles and resentments, of his strong desires and pleasures, but all in a vein of cheerful philosophy and of uncomplaining acceptance of the blows of fete, which gives to these ditties a character and fascination all their own. Why Elevators Havo Cables An elevator bas a cable, or semetimes several cables, hanging from the bottom of the car. The solid steel cables found hanging from the bottom of many elevators are known as compensating cables, and are of the same stuff as the cables holding the elevator . al the top. When the elevator goes up, the compensating cable hangs lower and lower In the shaft, and as It comes down the cable Is used In the upper reaches of the suspension cable. Other cables,- not of solid steel wires, may house electric wires for the lights and operation switches on the elevator and are known as control cables. Such cables also usually enter the car froin below. --Kansas City Star. ' y , Why Salt la Uuj in Ice Cream In the process of melting, ice absorbs more heat than any other substance. This reduces the surrounding temperature, and by speeding the melt Ing process, as with salt, It is further reduced--sufficiently to freeze the Ice cream mixture. The solution of salt in water causes the absorption of heat, and If there is little or no addition of heat from the surroundings, there is caused a fall of tempera ture. Why Yawning la "Catching*. Yawning Is really a sign that the body needs more oxygen; when we are tired a good yawn fills the lungs with oxygen. It Is not really "catching," but when we yawn because we need oxygen others follow, our example for jthe same reason.--Answers Magazine.! : - * Why Oysters Are "Out" in Summer • .If oysters are perfectly fresh and taken from undiluted waters, they may be eaten at all times of the year. The reason for the popular idea regarding the months without R in them, May to August. Is that this is th<> spawning period of oysters and th^ ajt'll rrs'lv. Peculiarities of St. L*wftne« River In several ways the St Lawrence is unique among the large rivers of the world. /-Etffiy going, it does not dig up mucn slit and therefore has no alluvial felta at Its mouth. Its banks are ste«p to the ocean's rim and the channel at its mouth is deep enough to clear the largest ships afloat Life of Earthworm M»e average life of the earthwom is ten, years. of Mis. Margaret McCarthy. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Purvey, d(f Clji-. cago spent the weekend here. V . . Miss Florence Steffes Visited in Chicago last week, Joseta Merrick of Chicago spent Sunday with her mother. Mr. £nd Mrs. George Zorn, daughter, Louise, and son, Arthur, of Waukesha, Wis. visited at Charles Michels' home Sunday. Mr. and* Mrs. Charles Stoffel of Milwaukee visited relatives here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hitzeman and little son of Chicago spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Nye. Ruth Nye and friend, Miss Armelle Haines, of St. Therese's school of nursing at Waukegan, spent Saturday and Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Nye. r Mrs. C. W. Goodell spent several days last week in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Vogel attended the forty-first wedding anniversary of his parents at Richmond, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe E. Miller and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Miller and family, Mr. and Mrs. Joe P. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. George 'Steinsdorfer visited Mrs. Peter Miller at St. Therese's hospital, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Vogel and Mrs; E. E. Bassett motored to Chicago Saturday. Mrs. Fred Schoewer, Mrs. Lester Bacon, Mrs. Anna Howard and Mrs. Peter Neiss attended* the County Legion Auxiliary meeting at Algonquin, Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schoewer visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Klein, at Waukegan Sunday. Mrs. Lillian Steinhoff is spending the week at Racine, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Kennebeck spent 1 Beller cottage, ; Mr. and Mr?._ Nick Freund.of &ing«, 4 Wod were Sunday guests' ih the Geo;. Scheid home. Mrs. Fred Karls spent Monday with ' = her sister, Mrs. George Scheidi t Mrs. Martin Weber and Lillian Mil. . ler visited the latter's mother at St." Therese's hospital", Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Phil Guinto were in. Chicago Monday, where they visited1 ' her father, John Kowalske, who is in Martha Washington hospital recovering from injuries received when he was run down by a truck. Mrs. D. L. Rigden of Oakland, Cal., arrived in Crystal Lake the first of the week to attend the funeral of ' Maud Harrison. Mrs. Rigden, who will be remembered by her friends here as Miss Nellie Clemens, will visit relatives and friends here a few weeks. Among those who attended the funeral of Maud Harrison at Crystal Lake Wednesday afternoon were Mrs.. Robert Thompson, Mrs. H. C. Hughes, Ray Page, Mrs. Abbie Martin, Mrs., Clinton Martin, Mrs. Lou Francisco,, Mrs. W. E. Whiting, J.*V. Bucklarid,.. Mrs. Cora Flanders, Mrs. Will Snuth,. and Mrs. Libbie Ladd. GIBBS BUYS "BACON'S NOOK" C. W, Gibbs has bought "Bacon's -Nook," the popular restaurant on Main street in West McHenry and will take over the place on Saturday. Mr. Gibbs is employed with the Pure Milk association. Mrs. Nellie Bacon has conducted the: restaurant which has become popular for its good meals and home cooking. Faateat American Snako The fastest American snake, the red racer, can go only 3.6 miles an hour. v - DUCK SUPPER -- 50© Saturday Night, October 12 NELL'S WHITE HOUSE 1 mile east of McHenry lilSH FRY EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT Bring Your Friends to Henry Nell's . OLD-TIME DANCING FRIDAY NIGHT, OCT. 11 | i DANCING EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT f Bill Benson and His 7-Piece Orchestra No Admission Charge--Good Beer 5c--Mixed Drinks Open All Winter FRANK NELL'S PAVILION Johnsburg Bridge 3 Miles North x>f McHenry JOHNSBURG TAVERN Joe B. Hetterman, Prop, SATURDAY NIGHT--Music by the Night Owls . Chicken or Duck Plate Dinner -- 33c* Follow the crowd to the Johnsburg Tavern for ?otur home-cooked meals FISH FRY FRIDAY NIGHT The Place to Eat and Drink Special on Saturdays and Sundays Chicken Plate Lunch 35c Chop Suey Saturday Night .1 25c r Mexican Chili -- 10c , ^ ilSH DINNERS ALL DAY FRIDAY My Place Tavern JUSTEN & FREUND, Proprietors ^ Green Strg$t McHenry, 111. LONE MAPLE TAVERN River Road, south of McHenry A. H. Watson, Prop. * SATURDAY NIGHT--Fried Chicken Dinner--35c Music by Ben Thonnesen Orchestra Kitchen under new management -- Mrs. Fred Wagner. Fish Fry Every Friday Open All Winter .

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