Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 2 Oct 1919, p. 8

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VV, fc-V : r.c^.SA-.«.«:..,; . i£ ;-f ' - , •••••• :Savt $10.00 ON YOUR Net Fall Suit! **DAD With Mary Pickford at the on Tueeday Evening, Oct. 7 J," i, I* />• "' i v ' k':";r:rM S80WS EVERY NIGHT EXCEPT MONDAY I WEDNESDflf THURSDAY. OCT. 2 Tom Mix IN Rell Rotrio' Reform and A Fox Comedy Soft Tenderfoot *Sr We can make you a saving of $10 J on a Suit if you buy of us before 3 the present supply is sold. These r I Suits were bought at a price so we can sell them for less then we will have to pay for a new supply--so ^ do not delay your purchase until too late. Call and we will be glad to show you our stock of Suits and let you judge of the saving we will make for you. v ^ JOS. W. FREUND WEST McHENKV, tLL. .•'?W -OUR BIG Undertakiag Embalming OFFERS ^SELECTION very seldom found in a town many times the size of McHenry. Our aim to keep our stock up to the standard has been quite successful even during the trying months when factory deliveries were so uncertain. We attribute our home as well as our out-of-town patronage due to our splendid selection coupled with fair prices and prompt deliveries. Let us fit up your home. JACOB JUSTEN McHFNRY, ILLINOIS A desire for service has animated us in the assembling of our perfectly matchless line of General Merchandise--Dry Goods, Shoes, Groceries, Notions, Etc. It is a good sized job to keep upja stock fai condition to meet the wants of all the people, ]|kit that i» just what we are doing. We arepregtared at all times to give you the best of the mar- Jlet--clean, fresh, satisfying groceries of every de- |jcription. Try us next time and we'll make good. jMso see our line of samples from the famous International Tailoring company. The snappiest on the market tpday and prices right. :: Telephone Goode delivered. '•> WEST McHENRY M. J. WALSH jm . • | r SAVE BY BUYING GOOD GOODS! When you buy Mayer Honorbilt Shoes and Armour Plate Hose for ^ <Jhe whole family here, you save, because they wear longer. Prices |So higher than others. Phf^e No. UN SMITH BROS McHENRY, ILLINOIS The Cast Mary* Pickford Jerusha Abbott* Milla Davenport.. Mrs. Lippett Miss Percy Haswell. .Miss Pritchard Fay Lemport Angelina Wyckoft Mahlon Hamilton.. .Jarvis Pendleton Lilian Langdon Mrs. Pendleton Bjf-tty Bouton .Julia Pendleton Audrey Chapman Sally McBride Marshall A. Neilan.. Jimmie McBride Carrie Clarke Warde.. .Mrs. Semple Judy Abbott does not have loving parents, kind friends and a pleasant home like other little girls. She lives in a big orphan asylum where things move by machinery, where children are raised on the "wholesale plan, where the head matron is a tyrant in skirts, the trustees are crabbed and none too interested and where the loving interest which children most need for their development and happiness is completely absent. Judy, whose full name is Jerusha, reached this great - heartless home, founded by a man who had made his money from convict labor, and who consequently put prison discipline into operation at the asylum, when she was a baby. About the time a rich little girl named Angelica Wyckoff was entering upon a pampered existence Judy was put into an ash can wrapped in a few rags by sonieone unknown. Thence the poor little waif was taken'to the John Grier Home For Orphans, where she was named from a telephone book. She got along as best she could until the age of twelve, when she began to be more or less of a personality about the home. Of a bright, sunshiny disposition, she gave to the little kiddies about her the warmth and help they never had gotten from others. Often she nursed them in their illness. One sick tot of three died in her arms and is carried away by the mother it• never had known on earth. Something of Judy's strength of character and her importance about the asylum is seen on a certain day when the trustees come, as they do every "Blue Wednesday." Judy, trying to aid the matron, Mrs. Lippett, deceitful woman, in having the orphans make a good showing, succeeded in making them appear very mischievous, and herself incurs the enmity of several of the sour trus tees. Angelica Wyckoff, a daughter of one of them, has brought along a doll, for which a sick baby cries. The selfish pampered child, who is clad in silks and satins, contrasting pitifully with the striped gingham in which the waifs are dressed, refuses to allow the child to have her doll. Thereupon Judy cleverly steals it and carries it up to the baby who gets to fondle it for a moment. For this fearful deed Judy is sentenced to have her fingers burned on a red hot stove by Mrs. Lippett, "as an example." Not long after, rebelling at the poor food which is served the orphans, Judy instigates a "prune strike." The only ones who "stick" are she and a funny freckle-faced little boy. They refuse prunes and are entenced into the yard without food by Mrs. Lippett. While they are there praying for Little Miss No Account 5? AND SA. BIS V Comedy SATURDAY. OCT. irHB TRIANGLE^ 'V'^ prwentth t, „*V» Anita King -IN- Jr'l„ stakes Identity , SUNDAY. OCT. S WM. FOX present* Theda Bare IN The She-Devil A alorjr of • beautiful woma without i conacicnce MATINEE AT 2:3* AllmUsioi), it and IS Cents i * ' .1 • • TUCSOAY, OCT. 7 ; ONE NIGHT ONLY < . 'Mary Pickford --in-- Jmb Wtbtter1! Fmbou* Story and Play "Daddy Long Legs" MUa Pickford paid $4MM for the screen rights to this great story ^ i tie system of banking by mail is not hi the eifc- -nperimental stage. It is, rather, an approved, perfected p, means of transacting financial affairs, and is character- S ized by extreme simplicity and ease of operation. ; It will be to your decided advantage to ; the efficiency of this institution's banking-by-mail de- 1 partmentt J»ropusac,wd - ? mation. v. . , - • - •. S$. '< v \ * *#&•. i » m I® Hz' West McHenry State Bank that he wishes to &e Judy Abbott. In his mail that morning he finds a letter from her explaining that it was not because she is in love with another, but because she is ashamed of her past that she refused him. A moment later when she comes into his luxuriously fitted study he gives her the surprise of her life by revealing his identity. She is a little put out over his failure to tell her the secret before that' time, but a moment later is fast in the arms of Daddy Long Legs." Friend* of Irish Freedom Note* [From News Letter of the Irish National Bureau, Washington, D. C.] The amount of Ireland's own [money permitted by the English taxgatherers to be utilized for educational purposes annually is about $9,000,000, less than the amount spent something to eat, there is thrown.^ ^ coUntry> an amount over the fence by a thief a jug of I.. . . hard cider and some sandwiches. The famished children set upon these provisions with the result that both ac cumulate a mild "jag." While under its influence they do all sorts of funny things and in the end Judy comes in for more attention from Mrs. Lippett, the tyrant. In the long run Mrs. Pritchard, pne of the trustees, who is humane, begs a new trustee, a young man of wealth and position, to interest himself in the bright little Judy. The young man in question says he is not interested in girls, but that he will provide her with a college education. So, with no other knowledge of her benefactor save the sight of his tall shadow against a door, Judy goes to college. Being intelligent, pretty and accomplished she goes ahead wry rap idly both in her studies and socially. She often writes to her "Dear Daddy Long Legs," as she calls her benefactor, and draws him pictures of how she thinks he looks. These amuse Jarvis Pendleton, or "Daddy Long Legs," and he secretly decides that he will meet his ward land see what sort of a girl she is. As she never has known .Mm by any name he is easily able to do this at a social event. Her work in Romeo and Juliet," played on the college green, with herself las "Juliet," has won her another ardent suitor, Jimmy McBride^ a very young college man. But now, as she finds herself at the height of happiness, with two men of wealth and position interested in her, with her college education obtained, and with a new world opening before her, she suddenly looks into the sneering eyes of Angelica "Wyckoff, the girl who once saw her on "Trustee Day" back at the orphan asylum. Judy overhears Angelica speak of her past, linking Judy's name with that of Jarvis Pendleton. So, when the latter proposes, Judy sees her beautiful white frock turning back to the ugly stripes which once she wore as an orphan asylum child. Then she decides she cannot marry anyone. Pendleton, seeing a younger man in the field, thinks Judy does not want to marry him because he is older. But she refuses Jimmy on the same tvniunds when be appears. Both men leave in the midst of a .sevor? raio storm. Jarvis txKomes ill. As lie g«t» bettet? he sends *wrd v s . TEE SOLUTION ^battery troublf^ ~ Equip your h"-- car with an ^ •-*' ATTENTION ifettbe'Ba backed by "Exfoe" Service^ v: ;• v # • ; S t ^ \ Jjtight at this time you should •"-' ;T.-piink of your Starting Battery. * WILL IT DO TO WOEK? s»'i Batteries for~ You Must Not Guess! that represents $2 per capita of the population. The United States expends for Indian education approx imately $14 per capita of the Indian population. Is it any wonder that Lindsay Crawford, founder of the Independent Orangeman, declares that Irishmen in demanding the free dom of their own country include the urgent need to educate their own children without foreign interference? The oldest members of the U. S. senate, the veteran newspaper correspondents and a host of highly qualified critics unite in saying the hearing of Saturday, August SO, before the U. S. committee on foreign relations, conducted by the Friends of Irish Freedom, was the most ably conducted hearing the senate has witnessed in decades, -in point of able, forceful and helpful presentation of great subject. Judge Daniel F. Cohalan, Hon. Frank P. Walsh, Ex- Governor Edward F. Dunne of Illinois, Hon. Michael J. Ryan, Hon. W. Bourke Cockran, John Archdeacon Murphy, Lieut.-Governor McDowell of Montana and Daniel C. O'Flaherty of Richmond, Va., were the speakers. The senators who listened for a full five hours unite in saying the arguments, in point of facts, delivery and burning intensity of interest, were "simply wonderful." The advocates of the cause of Ireland, as an evidence of the respect won from the senators who listened, have been signally honored by having the entire record of the hearing proceedings published in the Congressional Record. > Winter Schedule We wish to announce to our patrons the inauguration of our winter milk delivery schedule on Oct. 15. Our milk depot will also close at 12:00 o'clock noon on Sundays to remain closed for the balance of the Riverside Dairy. Netice to Hunien Public notice is hereby given that hunting and trespassing is hereafter strictly forbidden on my premises Violator* will be prosecuted. Peter F. MiBer. Notice to Hunters Notice is hereby given that huntaiig and trespassing on my property herewith strictly forbidden. Violators will be prosecuted Bring Your Battery to our Service Station located V2 block west of Fox River bridge. Let us take a HIGH DISCHARGE TEST which will determine in 5 minutes whether or not your battery is in a sound condition. HyE ARE EQUIPPED TO MAKE THE NECESSARY REPAIRS 3^ on all makes of Batteries. Obey that impulse. Do it Free Battery Test W. fc. HOWELL & COfc EAST McHENRY, ILL. ^ Look for the Sign) BATTERY 0 SERVICE WE CAN SUPPLY M lie Satisfying the inner man is our business and when your table is laden with food stuffs from this store you are assured of the purest in the land. We always carry a fine line of Staple and Fancy Groceries, Fruits, Vegetables, Canned Goods and Bakery and our truck delivers to your very door. M. M. Niesen McHenry Phone M-W 18-fl2t Wegener. Did Not Organize A meeting held at the village hall on a recent evening, for the purpose of organizing a local post of the American Legion, was not as well attended as was anticipated and as a result an organization was not effected. However", the sponsors of the local move are not discouraged, as another attempt will be made to place McHenry in line with other progressive towns of the county thru tho bringing into existence of such an organization here. Misses Katie Frett and Coletta Freund of Johnsburg and Miss Dorothy Carr of Ringwood are new employ* at the Elgin watck lactary. XJBJE UNIVERSAL CAR n What the Ford caris among motor cars, the Ford truck is among motor trucks--far jghead of all others in practical saving ser- ' vice. The Ford truck embodies those de- jy „• sirable Ford merits--sim- H * $ plicity and strength with Assured economy in operation and maintenance. " ^ No business too large nor so small that a Ford truck won't prove a * Wi money-making utility to it. Its value is univer-1 |al in business, in city, town, village and > 0n the farm, and the price only $550, withfut body, £ o. b. Petroit. The dem^odJs..j. v^-:i iig. Place Order without dekgr. a Truck In the Market STAR GARAGE ' 'John R. Kaox, IVop. ALFORD H. POUSE felepkeae No. 108-& SIMON STOFFEL ^ funraaee agent tor all classM^ ' property in the bast companies J#?,*

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