V-'-* y*% r mmmm .,•*•. «r •« -V *. « > »';!^"**'^Sw 1 :-,.i.- v :^' f • mtK TEE MoHXN&Y PLAINDKALKR Thursday, October. 22,199(1 BriNiM no a have'it tism. Herbert "Stretcher whfet? Rhea ma- If you have Real Estate to sell or if jroa wirfi to bay property, wn will appreciate a pllone call or a visit to our office. PHONE 43. EARL R. WALSH. v U4f GOODNESS By fcEONARD A. BARRETT Bennett . * ' James Maftineau,.. the English jbhilnpopher who died a little more * than a quarter of a century ago, was a Unitarian clergym^rj. H e wrote es^ayS on esthetic and moral subjects. From one ,of these essays we quote the following terse sentence: "To get good is animal: to do ^good is human; but to be good is divine." Th'ese Words conveyed THAT'S THE SPIRIT The Old Timers' Club is glad to receive a letter from two of its members and hope that others will write, also, thus renewing interest in the club. Highland Park, 111. Old Timers'.Column: The Centennial is now just history, of which I still have pleasant recollections - I never expected to see so „The melancholy days have c<?me, many old friends and receive such a • . • warm welcome. " . • I The saddest of the year. To see Lillie Breyer, a nurse, the ^ cold enough for whiskey, first girl I sat in the West Side school! Not warm enou*b for Mir."., with, and hear her; tell of the songs ) . - O - T 45 - that Mr. Vasey taught us, etc., and as | ' And this one: yi a dream, I eee the Besleys, Eld- Going far, not far, -rridges, Whitemans, Stevens, Hattie Only to the street car, tA,ta. Mead, Mary Sutton, Jo Frisby,] Lola f -O-T-C- : said that he got no sleep from Thursday night till Monday morning. Will close for this time with kindest regards to all. Will be seeing you at the homecoming in 1937. Your friend, Herbert (Stretcher) Bennett. Way Back When --«• This poem came out a "vital message to the time in which. j^yjwar(j (sol l y to hear of her illness) they were written atid they bring I alj there jn the flesh'. " ; ,a'most important "and much needed ! Mrs;; McCarthy, .the oldest coritinmessage to our ow n age. _ . ,| ltr,„c P»d^nt and her brotHter, Pat Patsy Boley called our* attention to this old back one cf the nineties. " "To get good, is animal." Squirrels li^tV horses .They had purchased ,a. team >f from Hank Wightman to be Cortie on Old Timers, don't let us down like this! Just because t^e Centennial, is over and npw only a memory, is no reason for our Old Timers to lay down on the jr b and leave us without an Old Timer's Column. Old frieqds still want to hear from you. If you have written once, then write again, and if you have never written to the club, now is just the time to do it. : We are still anxious to enroll new members, as well as hear from old ®nes, so write to us, folks. If you have any interfesting old-time pictures send them along, too, as we believe they will make the column iijftre interesting. Your many friends want to hear from you. Write to.us, soon. - ; •: HANK TELLS ANOTHER ONE , West McHenry, Oct. 14u 1936. Hello ttpre, youngster! Come over .here and sit down and I'll tell yo"u the story about the ^Little Red Hen." YQji have read it, huh? Supposed In the nutting season, bury the nuts | ^ "£*7"! used on the brewery wagon. It was as niuch, but you have never heard :imngg of the old-tune,fiddler* doing their ^ magnlficent teamV. draft horses, Mt the way the hen told it to me her- I stuff. tl ey gather, so that they may have ..-a supply of food in'the winter seav' 4«on. Man accumulates possessions viand stores up things needful for . his season 'of lack. If eight hours oig of every twenty-four are given to sleepr six to recreation, it leaves ten hours in which one may earn his daily bread. It is absolutely necessary that we have and use time to work for our living. "If a man does not work, neither shall he eat." But we must be good to our- : selves physically, or we are likely to be worsted in our struggle for food. Proper care of the body, the instrument through which.most of our work is done, is indispensable. Shattered nerves artd a frail physical constitution are detriments to progress. But be we as good to our bodies as we will, We have not discharged our full obligation. "To get good" is only animal; "to do good is human." There is an innate desire that the wrongs of life be made right, and that justice and fair play be ailoted to every one. We instinctly want to help the man who desires '"'..'to "rise on stepping stones of his dead self to higher things." Goodness expressed in deeds for others is a virtue which goes not without its reward. The final rewards are given to those who serve their fellow-men. The beautiful story \of Abou ben Adhem who saw in nis i room an angel writing in a book! of r u ' » 1 w i t h h e a v y h a r n e s s a l l s p a i i g l e d w i t h s e ' / - . •th thp rwHians «nrt un to the nresent brass trimmings. The - next morning Now this hen was one of them sleek the 8 P P | started out to deliver beer and on the Plymouth Rocks and in searching: Tv, .vKiKits oHmJroH »vpn ^rst st0P which, happened to be at around, she found some kernels of MM ai&g arrpett MMrcDDoonnaalHld's ss, IIrriisshh llaaccee . MMrr . i John. Heimer's saloon in Centerville, I corn ^at had been carelessly dropped. jL ^ ^ ^ --, ...» --j| "Quok! quok"! siys she, being an the or were ic «„ I Bish-1 to ^ time to took in the Centennial atj°P had an open buggy standing in'tell me winch way it was because up i the driver let the team stand out and ilrim!" of the?relics^iifjfehe^school'went inside. Maybe the team heard e^pectant mother, as it were, nrt of a muspum whi^h^[ think i the morning train whistle. Anyway, chickens being still in the eggs or thm they started down the hill. Dick Bish-! KoinS 10 he* She didn't have ti, 1I aallssoo, ttooookk iinn ttnhee Cceenntteennnniiaall aati °hftd °Peri bu««y in te" w^ich becau t^ comes a duck, a rooster and an old Crystal Lake: It wlas good, especially lro"t or Jne mill> an« DaeK 01 th h ... ., . , f , Mr Colbv's collection The furniture seat lay 'two sacks of flour for quick. m^ner nen witn ner brood ol chicks. was in suc•h good, condi.i.t-i on an. dJ so Hplivprv. On thpir wav t.hev took one There l)e t enough to go complete and well arranged and such well-dressed old ladies with nice slippers and two and more good lofig petticoats under a good long dress and the shawls and bonnets. Oh Boy! A little girl with a long braid sitting at an old rosewood piano playing "Auld |race, and luckily for the team they delivery. their way they |_ in?,rf 06 ' hind wheel off the buggy, one sack of jaiound, ®ays the fat Plymouth Rock flour went east and one went west,1 hen* _° say we P^an' the and the team continued on its rush. [ s,t „ rftise a crop." They quickly saw that they could not ell with it, said the rooster, make the bridge so the team sloughed won t help you. "To 'ell with it, the wagon upside down in the mill . s0» the goose and the mother Lang Syne." "Thefti was the days," as Frank says. Every week I look in the Old Timers' Column and think other people have more spare time than 1, but it's let George or maybe Frank do it. So were powerful enough to break completely away from the wagon The team came out without a scratch and the wagon was not badly damaged. - 0 - T : G - I hen. "Well then, I will," says the little red hen. " 'Tweren't a little red hen if it was a Plymouth Rock;" says you. "Well this Plymouth Rock was red; or was it a buff couchen? Dartin if ; gold, attests this fact, if we, like him,-do love our -fellow-men'r^iir " names, like his, shall lead, the rest. To d<y good to others .brings a rich reward ofyContentment. We possess what ^e^share with others and lose what/we try to keep to ourselves. ["I'd do good is human;" but "to be good is.divine." The ultimate value of one's life depends not upon what he has or upon what he does, but upon what he is. Possessions are essential'; good ? deeds are praiseworthy; but character is priceless. "To be good is divine." Recall to mind the persons who have crossed your pathway in life. Were not those you remember ; best men and women who were good? Persons you felt you could trust to the limit; persons whose ially 1SS Aqpft Friffih]|r nnil MfgrfRSS Frxsby, at whose homes I stopped a few days. MARGARET McDONALD. 224 N. Second St. Charlie (Scoopum) Block remember- j know. Don't make no difference, as I wanted to ask the editor if he could (ed .the time that he and his cousin,' it was a long time ago." send my paper a little earlier in the I Goldie, and I went fvshing up to | Well, the hen found a nice sunny week as it reaches here rather late, I Dutch Creek, lured there by the good piace and pianted the corn and watchso I thought--I 3 say hello to my pickerel fishing. We had a good catch ed over it, forgetting all about her friends at the same time. 0f fish and as the boat leaped we had prospective family. The corn erew I expected to visit you personally, to keep bailing the water. Finely amazingly, as all corn should. (That but got tjred and had a call back tOjWe made a miss move and the beat was a pun, but Hank chuckled over it Highland Park. I hope to see you all • tipped over. There we stood in water not suspecting his attentive listener next summer. Thanking you one andlUp to our chins. We knew Goldie had would get it.) The hen told her plavall for the pleasajnt time I had, espe^a„Re»t4ngerS6r watch, so we asked mates to scratch around the stalks, him what time it was, and Scoopum bat none helped her, so she said, "Then and I will never forget the look on I will" and, so she done it. Goldie's face as he hustled the watch Bye and bye the corn was ready to out of his pocket. We built a fire on harvest and the hen said, "Who will shore, dried our clothes and the watch help me?" and they all replied, "I in true Huckleberry Finn style, and we will," but the hen was wise and'she nor the watch were any the worse for * said, "Like 'ell you will," and stored it ducking. We lest our lunch but came away for the winter for her own usa. up with the. fish and cpoked them overj She stuffed a corncob pipe with corn the fi.re. . . silk that she had been saving right -O-T-C- , j along and watched over- her treasure In the olden days, Jack Orell, "Lim- an<* E°t ierself hated by the? ber Jack" was his nickname, used toharnyard. J tell us kinds of. the big fish in Dutch' Thanksgiving time came along and Creek. -' Dutch Creek was always a the farmer found her too thin to eatgood place for pickerel in the spring| u see h°w it was? The dam fool of the year. Still fishing with bob- en had formed a habit of saving. She ber and small perch or minnow for ,was a^raid to leave her corn, lest it bait. It was getting along towaru wou^ he stolen *and did not want to noon and he had several'of the Dig ®at it because, if she had, she would ones hooked. He had stopped to light have had no wealth. It gave her a his pip. He saw a big fish swim-1 thrill to hear the barnyard critters ming toward th beat, it had eyes as, sa-v' That is a rich hen.' big as saucers . It made one lunge, > ^he winter was a hard one and gobbled the minnow, shot under the many chickens froze to death and boat taking hook, line, sinker and starved. But the red hen ate sparingsnapping the pole, rushed out into Fox ^ her hoard under the barn and LOYAL OLD TIMER . ' " Stockholm, Wis., October 12, 1936. Dear Old Timers: Just a line to let you know that we are all well, after getting back' to Stockholm and Lake Pepin. Back to the garden, flowers, birds and fish. Between puffs on my old black pipe, I am thinking of the three happy days that we spent in McHenry at the Centennial. When we drove into McHenry it seemed just like we were liearing home and when we" left, it was like leaving home. As we look back cn it today jt seems like one goodness was and perhaps still is, j happy dream. . ' a source of inspiration. 'To be' is Such a pleasure to meet old friends, always better than 'to know'. and to make new acquaintances. Ju.-st What we are in the organic unity | bright, happy people. We got to have of our thought and purposes deter-j another Centennial. Gosh ! 2036, I mines our place in the moral order, suppose it will be along the same entrance into the social order, A man is trusted by his fello\v-men nbt for what he 'gets,' nor 'gives away,' but for what he is. The law of getting in order to live is a basic requirement; the law of distribution that others may live is an obligation we owe to society: but to so live that one's influence inspires another to be good: is divine. Life friendships depend upon what I lines of chatter. Old Timer, What,river an<* disappeared. ' n0t & kernel t° any her fam we are. What a man is influences his year was ycu born in, 1947, 1963, 1951,1 Casper (Cap) Bickler remembered rom. her well-hidden store of food. 1975 or whatever the date happens to! the time that he and I went spearing j . on£ m e ruary she could stand be? How young you look. You hold i mud-turtles up on the northwest cor-1 S ,aiv® 10n no °n£er, so she, visited your age well. We have not met :niner of the mill pond. Our parapher-' am?n^ !\er relations and ate ever fifty years. T remember you. a3 "alia consisted of a sled with a dry , . y ® eu meager feed. Her just a little kid. jgoods box tacked onto it to carry the . . Y^ns are.u n a wor(* ,in Pro" No, it is too early to figure another turtles, one handax and a long iron1,6*.' ecause e o d hen was rich and Centennial, but we of today can figure r°d made into a spear. We had our!,.5*.'1^ ecome won erous wise, kept on having a home-coming each year, skates and the ice was about three! ° , " relabons unti1 ^ ! McHenry is one town that surely cai inches thick, but so clear that we could! Of ea . bhe left no will f ------. i put on a good program to attract peo- see the turtles on the mud bottom. A1 , * t0 at}1^in,stei' I M nDV nT"T Ple- We took great interest in old turtle buries itself in the mud but for I themselves ^ everything for I \JAIjmjY \JI ERTIE familiar scenes and were surprised at scientific reasons he always leaves a 1<W„, , T,;, , , , • . tt_ I j C/ AVX new improvem^nts ' part of the top shell exposed, other- V*1'1 1 "he damned if it isn't suplate a green apple from a tree thsit w'se he could not move out of the • lme*k 6 er take up law, young we kids remember well, it stands on mud. We pushed the spear through' P r^' - n y?,u ^.low UP and have the-corner of Green and Waukegan ! the cie and then sr,eared the turtle,! ^ ^ ^a p and it wks a big tree fifty yejpirs ago. chopped a hole in the ice and brought en We kids learned to like castor oil right, the turtle to the surface. We had ;beC8UM eVery fa^lyJas^e/ there. We missed the old mill pond,! eleven of th^ ftnest reptiles anyone but old Fox River is as beautiful as C0UW wish to catch In the old mill ever. The view to the south is a grariu Pcn(i- We hauled the cargo proudly sight to behold and looking north 's through Centerville and to Old Town. just fine, too. But Boone Creek, some- i The natives crowded around to see I body must have thought it would run such a fine catch. There was enough [away. McHenry is a picturesque little turtles to make soupj for the whole [city. We were impressed with the v'Hage. Mrs. Tony Engeln exclaimed, |mariy beautiful homeis and the gardens "Such fine shell critters." We gave jand flowers, the bright, happy faces of hei the largest one, it must have the people all entering .into the spirit weighed forty pounds. Mrs. Engeln of the Centennial. ' ^as an excellent cook and she made FRANK BENNETT. i- We enjoyed the pageant, and the big parade and the music by the McHenry band. McHenry surely can be seventy bowls_of soup out of it. Wei dressed the turtles in Tom Burke's! smokehouse and used his -big kettle; "When a tight, ropewalker trips toe light fantastic he frequently trips his partner too." My Neighbor Says ;= proud of having such a fine band, to heat water for scalding them. We Meeting the old timer's in the park | n°ticed that a turtle's heart will beat after the ceremonies was surely a riot.' ®fter it is removed. Fhe next day we We all got a big kick out of the old! Placed the heart in warm water and timers' ball game. We all played it started to beat. We tried this for baseball in the old days and when n'ne d^ys. It finally got Qn our nerves that kitten-ball came over the plate it jantVwe "threw the heart away,- looked as big as the moon and it soar- - O-T-CFish requires quick cooking at 9 high temperature to seal the juices. Fish cooked too long is tasteless. • • • If a little butter is rubbed on the inside of pan when, melting chocolate for cake mixture, it will not stick to pan. • » • . -- Tpmatoes and peppers baked in muffin pans or individual molds keep their shape better than when baked in larger pans: / * * • ftever rub soap on flannels or woolens. Wash in soapy water and raise in clear, lukewarm water if you wish to preserve their softness < Mi fine texture. I > NL|ti* M«wwilU| 1 WH11 )w Him J ed cut like a balloon. It did our hearts good to see the old boys scamper around the. bases. 0 Three days was all too short to get around and see everything, but we old timers could not have stood over three days of such rollicking good times. We were telling our old friend, Maddus,. that we got little*sleep and he POTPOURRI Naked Athletics The Greek word, jiminazium, means naked. In early Greek times this name was assigned to places where athletic contests were held and was so applied because athletes in those days competed without .clothing. The American gymnasium, and the uses to. which it is put, resulted from the early Greek ideas; in Germany, however, gymnasium means a college - preparatory school. " © Western Newspaper Union." ^ . T o l d Taui Items of IntMWt Taksn Hies of tbr Plafndsatav sf Tmt* Age SIXTY YEARS AGO STATE OF ILLINOIS, COUNTY OF McHENRY, SS. * IN THE CIRCUIT COURT Home Owners' Loan Corporation, a Corporation of the United States of America, created by Act of Congress, Plaintiff, vs. Bion H. Barnard, et al., Defendants. CIVIL ACTION IN EQUITY No. 27618. Affidavit showing that the defendants, Bion H. Barnard, Genevieve Barnard, Jerry B. Magruder and Elsie E. Marguder on due inquiry cannot be founc^ so that process cannot be serv- The; new fence around the public ed upon said defendants, having been square is now completed and the ap- tiled in the office of the Clerk of this pearance in that locality /is greatly ^ court, notice is therefore, hereby givimproved. jen to said above-named defendants John King, of the fii'm of King and that the plaintiff in the above entitled Htrbes, proprietors of the McHenry j c&use filed its complaint in said cause Brewery, died very suddenly on Sat- pn the 15th day of August, 1936, and urday morning last. He has been out, 'hat said action is now pending and of health fot the past year, but orj 1 undetermined in said court, and that Saturday morning was around attend- y°u> the said above-named defendants, ing to business, as usual. Jmust file your appearance in said ac- The river and lakes are now alive tion on or before the Third Monday in with hunters, and the roar of musk- the month of November, 1936, and in etry. is heard, on all sides, while the the event you fail to do so default may slaughter of ducks is simply immense, 1 he entered against you. MONEY TO LOAN I have clients who have money to lend on first mortgages on real estate and others who want to borrow money on real estate. If interested either way, I will be glad to talk it over with y»u. Joseph II. Sikes Waukegan National Bank Bid*. 4 S. Genesee St, Waukegan, I1L TEL. MAJESTIC 103 $100.00 REWARD for the name of any man living or dead that has sold more McHenry County Real Estate than has Dan Quinlan--that's all he does. Farms for Sale and Rent in Northern Illinois and Southern Wisconsin. Large ottfff and small ones. I sell farms.' DAN QUINLAN r Woodstock, 111. .. ^ Long distance private phon^j We are obliged to send some of our subscribers a half sheet this week for the reason that we received a list of fifty new subscribers on Saturday evening, after one side of our paper had been printed. FIFTY YEARS AGO At the pickle factory of W. A. Cristy, in this village, they have taken in about 15,000 bushels of cucumbers this season. It is seldom we can boast of fresh WILL T. CONN, Clerk of said Court. PlaintifFs Attorney: David R. JSslVn. Jr. • Attorney's Address: 116 Benton. St., Woodstock, Illinois. ' . ' A. V' Wm. M. CarroH.Attorttey -- Woodstock, Illinois .GUARDIAN'S SALE STATE OF ILLINOIS, COUNTY OF McHENRY, ss. , . . t „ By Virtue of a decretal order of the strawberries m October but F. G. County Court of said County, entered Mayes left some on our desk on Tues-' on the 19th day of October, 1936 on day, picked from the garden of Mrs. the application of Peter Miller, Guard- L'r^ H i** * i. • 'ian Marcella Lay, Roseal Lay and The McHenry Brick Manufacturing Lorraine Lay, Minors, to sell the fol- Company are rushing business these lowing desCribed real estate, belongdays, and have orders for every brick ing to said Min6rs situate jn the they can make before cold weather County of McHenry, State of Illinois, sets • 1*.- ... DR. B. C. HUNT VETERINARIAN Crystal Lake, Illinois Telephone 452-M West Hillside Road - ' ' / ' ' • ^ , ' ill'fl • . r " ' ,v .r FIRE AUTO INSURANCE EARL R. WALSfl FARM UFB FORTY YEARS AGO Will Bishop, while out hunting one, cstate:- to-wit: An undivided one-elevenih interest in and to the following described real day last week, had the gun go off prematurely, resulting in the fleshy part of his hand being badly lacerated by coming in violent contact with the hammer of the gun. The drouth has at last been broken and this section has been treated to one of the finest rains of the season,' the first of any consequence in six 1 weeks. | John Stoffel has bought the Wm. I Walsh residence on the corner of Waukegan and Fourth streets. Con-.1 sideration, $800. THIRTY YEARS AGO John Pint was in Chicago last Monday and while there purchased a car-, load of hardwood lumber for wagon material. If you need any work in' this line you should call on Mr. Pint. | The price of butter was quoted at I shall, on the 14th day of November 26 cents firm^ the same as last week,, A. D. 1936 at the hour of 10:00 at the meeting of the board of trade! Monday. Commencihg at the Southwest corner of a Lot Reeded to \yilliam Oeffling on March 1st, 1919, and recorded in Book 152 of Deeds on i Page 290, on March 4th, 1919; thence North along the West line of said Lot, Sixteen (16) rods to the Northwest corner of said Lot; thence West five (5) rods to stake; thence South parallel with the East line, Sixteen 16) rods to the North line of a road; thence East along the North line of the foad, f\ve (5) rods to the place of beginning, containing one-half (%) acre of land, more or less, in the Northeast quarter of Section Thirteen (13), in Township Forty-five (45) North, of Range No. Eight (8). East of the third Principal Meridian, situated in the raine Lay, Minors. 22-3 Simon Stoffel recently disposed of the John Gibbs property, south of town, to Clay Baird of Chicago. Eli Brink has accepted a position o'clock A. M., sell all the interest of said Minors, in and to the said real estate, at the-east front door of the Court House in Woodstock, Illinois. Terms of sale as follows: 20 per Plant of ^ B<*r- cent in cash at time of the sale; bal ance in cash upon approval of sale and delivery of Guardian's Deed. den Condensed Milk Company. TWENTY YEARS AGO A drinking fountain has been installed iri the waiting room at the C. & N. W. station here and will be gratefully appreciated by the traveling public. Miss Elizabeth Thelen, milliner on the West Side was instrumental in getting the much-needed improvement. The beautiful new home of Chas. Unti on Green Street is fast nearing!, 4 A PETER MILLER, ' Guardian for, Marcella Lay, Roeseal Lay and Lorraine Lay, Minors. "22-8 Hillside Carving's Though guide books can give the tourists of England much in explanation of what they see, there are some sights which can never be explained. Illustrative of such . . _. scenic mysteries are the hillside completion and it is expected will he carvings such as the famous White leady for occupancy about the middle Horse cut on the mountain slope of next month. j in Berkshire. Probably the most Jacob Justen, the live-wire furniture j mysterious in origin is "The Long dealer of Centerville, has added a Man" cut on a hillside at Wilming- Ford auto truck to his equipment,' ton, Sussex. which assures the patrons of the place quicker and better service than ever • before. "Limber Jack" had told us if we Little Little Things things! Life and death, ate turtles when we were young that' prosperity and ruin, happiness and We would never have the rheumatism, misery, hang upon little things; Well, Casper and I have never had the rheumatism. All who have eaten turtle soup and never had the rheumatism, stand and say I. All who have had rheumatism and never ate mud turtle soup, stand and say, No. The they are like the lineh-pin to the wheel, on which depends the safe* ty of the vehicle; they are like the rudaer to the vast mass which it guides; like the slender nerves to the hollow muscles MANY REAL ESTATE &AfcES Five old landmarks aggregating $80,000, the famous old property on I the corner of Cass and Main Sstreets, Woodstock, Illinois, known as the Stone lot, where shoes were sold for over sixty years; the productive old Michael Griebel farm of 416 acres on ! Kiehwaukee prairie; the old Robert Forest farm, known as "Level Acrefe," i now owned by John Widmayer" the; old Chris Filwebber farm of 120 acres, 1 now owned by Mrs. Minnie Klemme, j and the Nichols property on the north side of Woodstock, which has lohg1 been one of the attractive homes of that city, that has been singled out as where one of Woods'tock's aristocratic old English families lived, was recently sold by Dan Quinlan of Woodstock. Interesting history could be written about each of these properties. He He certainly had a busy week and all within one week's time. Present indications are , that there will be many more sales. ' Leads With Costly Buildings There is a greater number of large and costly buildings on Manhattan Island than upon any other equal area in the world. &OQO.OO PR,ZES Listen to Radio*s Big Comedy Hit DIAMOND CITY NEWS Get Program Schedule at any Diamond D-X Station Frank W. Bennett RELIABLE MASSAGE v TREATMENTS • At Tour Home. Farm Home Or Office NORTHWESTERN HOTEL Phone McHenry 23 For Appointment Presenting , F ] Reliable Companies When you need insurance of any ktai Phone 43 or 6KM Pries Bldg. McHenry ' Phone 43 VERNON J. KNOX t.: . ... ;• ATTORNEY AT LAW Pries Bldg. OFFICE HOURS ^ Tuesdays and Fridays Other Days by Appointment McHenry Illinois Downs Motor Express , Hie Pioneer Line Operates daily between McHenry and Chicago Wabash : - McHenry; 7518 256 Telephone No. 300 4 Stoffel ft Reihanspergtr insurance agents for all classes al property in the best companies. tfEST McHENRY ILLINOIS S. H. Freund & Son CONTRACTORS . AND BUILDER® Phono 127-R McHenry Our experience is at Your Service in building Your Wanta A. P. Freund ' Excavating Contractor Frucking, Hydraulic and Craai Service Road Building TeL 204-M McHenry, I1L Charlie's Repair Shop Just East of Old Bridge Over Fox River (Rear Schaefer's Tavern) RADIATORS REPAIRED BODIES and FENDERS Straightened •' \&ign Painting 1 Truck Lettering Acetylene Welding CHARLES RIETESSL KENT & COMPANY All Kinds of , I N S U R A N C E Placed with the most reliable Companies Ombs in and talk it over "hone McHenry 8 If -gy OWRL-ET.SUGWCJ /MKJOCEK1T LETS ear across N$E.Lt, YOU KNOW W0\V MR. VOGG? ^ \S ABOUT X 1 I ion needwt (Jet 5b bxjstT£D*\VE prc>KK PICK TTOM m POISON VOUR LAMP trespass™