• ***? % i * " v** r.%~ * THE M'HENRY PLAINDEALER, THURSDAY, JUNK 20, 1929 s? tflE CALL OF THE OUTDOORS THE WISE TROUT A sliirty protective coating covers tile minute scales on the members of the trout family. Oh, yes! Trout hive scales, even though the average fisherman doesn't think so. If the protective coating is removed by human or other enemies, a fungus growth or "Bore" usually develops. This frequently kills the trout. Many fish culturists claim it always proves fatal. Much depends upon the water in which the fish lives and the extent ol the injury. "Did you see that big, burly cheater that just had me hooked?" asked a badly frightened brook trout of one of his brothers. "Why, he didn't do a thing but float a nice, innocent-looking little bug down the stream and I grabbed it to finish out my breakfist. It was a cheat, one of those things with a nasty hook in it. But just as he reached out for me with his dry hand I wiggled off. Just a " sore nose instead of the frying pan for me!" * "Did I see him?" laughed his broth- "You bet I saw him and his bug, too. But I had caught a lot of real flies and bugs this morning and 1 w»sn't so foolish as I was, yesterday. He didn't trick me!" "You seem to think it a joke," said Hie first speckled beauty. "It wasn't fanny at all. And say, what about that nice young woman who had you looked yesterday?/' "Oh, sure I admit she fooled me," •giid the second brookie, "but then she Uns so innocent-looking herself that I didn't suspect she was actually trying to catch me. But that girl evidently was a member of the Izaak Walton League. She used barMSss hooks and while she kept the line tight Slid looked at me sorta longingly-- I .am about eight inches long-she did qjpt do a thing but give me a chance .11 wiggle off, £ "Just as I escaped I heard her say Hat if she hadn't been using the barbless hook she would certainly have wet llpr hand before turning me loose to grow bigger for next year." - . "Well, we have both learned something about fishermen and fisher- •Women, haven't we?" said the first trout as he nursed his sore nose and *t>wed that every angler should at . Ipast be a member of that Walton League and help give the small trout B chance to grow up. "" v "You Know," he concluded, those '$flaltonians are not only saving us ijttle fellows, but they are raising Millions of trout and other fish and the more they raise the less often they going to try to catch us." PART TIME WORK TOUR HOME TOWN rom RESPONSIBLE PEOPLE oAf ttahroe *C Chlheiacaaog oA C--oropcoi*ratitoiioin owf hCo uamnm iwnaeaok aMada who a» fantfah th« wry h--tb«n> ir»i «f«i is ricM now preparing (to plana for tho Great, flileaw World'* Pair to bo opened in ISM. W/ awaiatdh iBn aIhSO H mmil-- p worc iCo hiinc amgo rtoj dtnr pamwi tto want fhirtnff their apare time This nan tim* work is intaraating aatf'fatft* abta. Some of our reprr Matiiiwa Mfca banaoaa ttOS and WOO par month, bowovar, moat be o»er IB jraan old aad bm •ad we amdaOsr hope that people in the above ••liiiiiaif piufaaaiima wSI write na ialll»i to (Ma uptiia Uinlty. TWhai CnW aenadgo t Whoaaraiadn'ad aF aoifr wiMfl] Mbiia cto a rCfHhoisaaag eof. r-t-^-«b7=3:>bf «^tie if jam wmattomabe tMaaaotiay write aa at > your age aad oeeopatioa aad tell aa aboot yimiealf; all bain W<U f awaSaa aBdh nrtaakaa fa» war > witta yoa fuHj--ADDUDH: RINGWOOD Miis'Noreen Krohn and Loren Harrison spent the past week with their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Walker in Waukegan. y Mr. and Mrs. Max Beth and son, Billy, of Chicago spent Wednesday in the William Beth home. Ben Walkington attended the Bankers' Mutual Insurance convention at Freeport, 111., Monday. Mrs. E. C. Hawley has gone to Carazozo, New Mexico, to visit in the home of her son and family. Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard and family were visitors at Harvard Thursday morning. Miss Marjorie Whiting and Nellie McDonald were supper guests in the Del Bacon home at Crystal Lake on Thursday evening. Frank Walkington and Miss Fern Lester of Libertyvillte and Helen Rice of Richmond were supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Walkington Tuesday. They helped Mr. and Mrs. Walkington celebrate their wedding anniversary. Mrs. Lewis Hawley was a,Chicago visitor Wednesday; Mr and Mrs. George Shepard and family were visitors at Lake Geneva Wednesday evening. •The Home Circle met at the home of Charles Peet Wednesday afternoon where a good program and a fine supper was enjoyed. There were 33 ladies in attendance. Mrs.' ElmerV Olsen entertained the Bunco club Thursday afternoon, prizes being awarded to Miss Ethel Biggers first; Mrs. Ed Thompson, second; Mrs. Nick Young, third; Mrs. Sam Beatty, fourth, and Mrs. Leon Dodge, the consolation. Mrs. Gus Pearson received the punch prize. At the close dainty refreshments were served. Mr. and Mrs. George Young and sons spent Sunday evening at Mc- Henry. Mrs.- Edgar Thomas and daughter, Hiley Jean, and son, Loren, and Mrs. Viola Low were callers in the William Blake home near McHenry Friday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young attended the play at McHenry Thursday evening given by the pupils of St. Mary's school. Wayne Foss was a visitor at Woodstock Thursday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. George Young and sons spent Wednesday evening in the Ed Buss home at McHenry. The Four-H club girls of Ringwood held their second meeting at the home of their president, Miss Jessie Schroeder on June 11. The president opened the meeting. Roll call was responded to by a name of a bird, followed by games furnished by Miss Ellen Smith. There were six members present and two new members, Mina Laurence and Mary Celine Adams. At the next meeting each member should bring fourteen menues for breakfast and supper. The next meeting is to be held at Mrs. Charles Peets Tuesday, June 25, at 2 o'clock. The roll call is to be responded to by the name of a flower. The games are to be planned by Marion Peet. Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Shepard and family left Sunday morning for Flint, Mich., where they will spend the week visiting relatives. BERING SEA ISLE : ^ . HINTS OLD RACE ns of Ancient, zation Found, TELEVOX MAKES LANDINGS SAFE Mechanical * Man Lifhf* Air- ' at CalL?.^*'" Fairbanks, Alaska.--New evidence of an ancient race of Eskimos baa been uncovered on St. Lawrence island in Bering sea by Otto W. Geist of the Alaska cdllege at Fairbanks. Geist, who is spending a ,\ear in explorations on the island, has forwarded to the college several stone axes which he believes were mad* by a race of cave dwellers centuries ago. Several old mounds will be investigated by Geist before he leaves. The discoveries are similar to those made last summer by Harry B. Collins of the Smithsonian institute. Collins found ou Bering sea islands old villages and other indications of a civilization more pretentious than that of present day natives. Still other evidences of former days were uncovered during the .summer by the Stoll-McCracktin expedition of the American Museum of National History. Stone implements found by Geist were uncovered where there had been a dirt slide on, the north shore of i. Lawrence island. He said the axes rehiinded him of those used by prehistoric people in upper Bavaria, Germany. He added that none of the island Eskimos had seen .anything like them, nor did they know what they were. "Perhaps the age of these axes corresponds with the age of the human bodies excavated by Mr. Collins on I'unock island," *Geist said. "These bodies were found several feet below sea level. Since there is a jumbled mass of rock with cavelike rooms directly above this slide and there are several others near the site, I have advanced the theory that the makers of the axes perhaps lived in them and were real cave men." Newark, N. J.--Mr. Tele vox, the mechanical man, has come to the aid of aviators by making dangerous landings on uniighted flying fields unnecessary. In obedience to the note of a siren on an approaching plane the mechanical tnan turned on the flood lights at the Newark airport without the aid of human hands. Mr. Televox, whose name freely translated, from the Greek and Latin means "distant voice," demonstrated his ability as an airfield attendant when in repeated tests he flooded-the new airport with 24.000.000 candle power in response to the distant voice of a plane high in the air. Pete Branson, air mail pilot, ap-« proached tlie Held from various directions and at different altitudes In the test, turning on a wind-driven siren as he heared. Each time the sound of the siren reached the field, the mechanical man flashed on the lights. The device which gives Mr. Televox the similitude of human response to sound is the combination of two recent inventions, the Knowles gridglow and a vibrating reed selector. The vibrations set up in the reed selector when a Sound of a certain pitch is impressed jpon it are transmitted to the grid-glow, converted Into electrical energy and amplified snlfl ciently to operate the switching mechanism of the flood lights. - _ i iv-i* .BOTBBIBTCOl TT ItWAnDVGTM Rh, CBICAGO A Wet Wrfcfc Spring A certain Frenchman was 'lescrfbfag an unfortunate occurrenfee fn hte life: "My watch had dropped into the sea. We were in Greenland af the time. X dove down and recovered my watcft, but the Ice had closed wp again. Impossible t«> get through; to go round would have taken too long r I shouted with the voice of a Stentor: "Throw me a saw." They threw me one. I sawed my way out through the ice. but the sawdust dropped into my eyes and I. perished." jet tjour Kodak Count oa as (or Kodak Film •" Expert Firiiakiacf THOMAS P. BOLGER "The McHenry Druggist" Plum* 40 McHenry, I1L Wood Tim to Agate Next time you come across a petrified tree it may Interest yoa to know that in a few centuries more ft will become agate from which the Jewelry and marbles of another age may be made Up to a few centuries ago, notes The Farm Journal, this woodstone was highly prized as a magic charm, and was believed to be able to do everything from stopping the flow of blood to palming a hurricane. ' '*» JgjjMuigo Crop Import*at Oranges at and eleventh In value of all United States crops Apples lead all fruits in value and oranges are second It Takes Fire to Melt Their Neighborly Ice! New York.--It is generally supposed that people who live^in city apartments seldom know the other tenants in their building. Usually that is true, but exceptions may be found in certain dwellings that house virtual colonies of artists, writers, or actors. Such a building is that at 142 East Eighteenth street, known as the first apartment house in New York. Erected in 1860, it has be< altered from time to time for the installation of modern conveniences. Mrs. Rutherford Stuyvesant of the "first family" Stuyvesants is the owner. The tenants Include an actress, Chrystal Heme; an author, Clayton Hamilton; an Illustrator, Eric Pipe; three editors, and the widow of an editor. Most of the tenants 'n the 16 apartments have been there a long time. Hamilton has lived tiiere 15 years. But even such permanent occupants are apt to have a stranger In tftcfr midst. One night a tenant went to the roof to watch a lire In' the neighborhood. He found a man already there whom he had never seen before. "How did y©«* get here?" he asked* "This is a private roof." "I know it," the other replied. "I've been living In this building for a year and a half. U. S. May Install Radio and Cut Cable to Alaska Tacouia, Wash.--The cable between here and Alaska may be abandoned. Curtailment ol the War department's cable service and the substitution of radio, under consideration by Gen. George Gihbs, chief signal officer, has raised a storm of protest front both ends of the 1.500 mile wire. Besides abandoning the cable the plan would mean the retirement of the cable ship Dellwood. General Gihbs estimates the installation of the radio system would cost about $200,000, whereas the upkeep of the cable costs that much a year. Much of the cable Is new, having been laid In 1027 at a cost of $1,500,000. Wooden Teeth in Skill! Are Puzzle for Museum Springfield, Mass.--A curious Indian skull has been placed on exhibition in the Museum of National History here which contains three wooden peg* In places where the natural teeth are missing. The pegs are in the lower jaw and in the front in a conspicuous posi tion. The fact they are carved to dup licate real teeth raised a question whether Indians who once lived in Florida were skilled sufficiently in dentistry to msfte false teeth of hardwood. ^ The skull and some additional bones w^re disinterred "by Lawrence J. Sikes of Springfield in the Everglades. The museum has consulted such authorities as Prof. Warren K. Moore, bead of Phillips Andover academy and Prof. F. B Loojis of Amherst, both noted for their investigations into American archaeology. Both believe the wooden teeth were inserted in the skull after death when the skull might have been exhibited as a trophy of war. EDDIE, THE AD MAN ®Ufc AO SECTtOU IS A RUJfcKr erA-ncpj for f WOUR. CASH Re^lSVEflL / 'try our KI6U7EST td&2 tfo ovt "5S>ujp Bufixfft KaocJg ovt Ol sw«7 STOMACH TROUBLE AND KIDNEY PAINS ENDED BY K0NJ0L0 Lady Had Great Change In health Affee She Started Usiag -"New Medicine Hettermann Motor Sales All kinds of car and trpek and general re_ ing, also welding, done by expert mechanics. Main St., West MeHemf:S, ^ 1 1***m PS GRAND PICNIC Phone McHenry 94*R FOR ICE McHenry Ice Co* Move to Save Home of Wilson's Boyhood Columbia, S. O.--A state movement to establish a Woodrow .Wilson"memorial museum In the old-fashioned white frame house in which the war time President spent his boyho< 4tMays is under way here. The house was built In the early •70s by Dr. Joseph R. Wilson, father of Woodrow Wilson, who from 1870 to 1874 was a professor at the Columbia Theological seminary. Going into private hands after a number of attempts to make it public property failed, the Wilson home was resold to make room for a proposed municipal auditorium. This develop ment roused again attempts to save the house. Bills were introduced In the state legislature to provide that the state appropriate $17,500 contingent upon un equal amount being raised by pub lie subscription and that the property be held by the state historical commission aa a permanent memorial mu seum. MRS. LYDIA CANNON "Konjola has ended the health troubles I had been suffering from for years," said Mrs. Lydia Cannon, 30 North Elm street, Galesburg^. "My whole system was badly run-down, and I was nerveous and full of achesand pains. Stomach and kidney troubles, and constipation were the causes slightest trouble. My kidneys and of much suffering. I did not rest well! at night. I had tried medicine • after medicine, but Konjola was the only one that helped me "I noticed improvement riglit from the start. In a short time all the' old troubles were gone. My stomacH was corrected, and never causes the bowles have also been regulated. I enjoy sound, refreshing steep every night. I hope that others who suffer as I did will profit from my experience." Konjola 7^is sold in McHenry at Thomas P. Bolger's drug store, and by all the best druggists in all towns throughout; this entire section. St. Mary's Fremont Sunday J u n e A 75c-Chicken Dinner will be served at 12 o'clock, Chicago daylight saving time London Fog Only Friend of Youth* in Courting London.--A lovers' lane in London where young folks may have leisure and privacy for courting is urged by 1tev. J. Shepherd, an Islington clergyman. "The curse of the crowd Is :he ruin of romance," he said In pleading the cause of the city's youth. The London fog, so generally and violently execrated. »s the only friend of youthful Londoners In their courting, the minister said. • Many B e a u t if ut Prizes - will be given away / GrandPrize Dining Rootia Set, and ten others; among them " ' Four $5-Saving Accounts USE THE CLASSIFIED COLUMNS FOE QUICK RESULTS NASH "40 O" fit* Bi%rM it» JtMiMr Car Ftotw* QI333G E1<XI=] iuoc=JG I?*?" WEST SIDE GARAGE Adams Bros., Props. f - ' . ' % Tel 185 General Automobile Repairing Res. Phone, 639-R-2 I Old Country Doctor | |: Is Hard to Find Now| Ji, Jeffersou <'ity. Mo.--The old £• * eout-try doctor, who drove •; through any kind of weathrf at $ any time of he day or nlg!&vt<i Ji minister to his patients, is drs^ appearing from Mis-oourt. - :Jj •J A survey conducted by Dr. £ *•! .It mes Stewart, state health £} commissioner, shows that there >: ttre too many medical prtictlv Uoners in the larger cities of >: Missouri while the number is di- £ mlulshing In the rural districts. K There is one physician for every 400 person.. In the urhan sections K but only one for every 805 persons In the rural districts. Doe- S tor Stewart learned, a « 3K «Q*GieK3KaB£3aE;«3ae3sQaC3sa*C«3K3ae3*C3saiE3saK3s£SaC39iM3». Titled Beauty Turns to Modeling Dresse* London.--Mayfair's trek from bridge to business has gained another recruit. The countess of Erroll Is shortly leaving England to become a manikin for a Paris dressmaking firm. Lady Erroll. jwlfe of the earl ot Erroll and a sister of the earl de la«" Warr, Is noted for her gift of wearing clothes beautifully. It is sal* that the simplest frock becomes dli* tinguished when she puts It on* and) *; Paris dressmaker once offered M dress her for nothing If she- wwtld wear only his creations. Her initiation Into tb* mtta&kin parade will be mad* at- Gannett, wtwe she will show dresses for the fatuous designer, Captain M**yn«aax. fi til HA] •* 4-DOOR Woman Will Carry /• Mail in Mountains STANDARD SIX Ddhtrwi, Fully £«*#«* SPECIAL SIX • DMmd, Fully Equipptif \ ADVANCED SIX DtHmrtd, Fully Equipp&d m ^ Y Lnray, Va -- Miss OarrW Shenk of this county, who ha* >; been api»ointed by the Post jjj >; -iflloe department service to fill % a vacancy on ruute No. 1 from S Kimball, will be the only woman S & rural carrier In northern Vlr J 5 glnla. She began jerving the ;<* £ 24-mile route February 18. ' $ '•! The Kitnball route Is almost >; entire)} in the Blue ridge, and !«; $ crosses one stream of water 18 V times in ascending and descend Sj >*: ing the steep mountain grades & at times covered with snow and >•1 ice. ^fhe road in many places is $ ;«i dangerous on account of las dnr S ing the winter months. # " • m Central Garage JOHN8BURG JUO J. SMITH, Proprietor Chevrolet Sales. General Automotive Repair Work IX ' Give us a call when in trouble " j? EXPERT WELDING AND CYLINDER REBOBINO Phone 200-J Night Phone 640-J-2 Big StrHck of Water Iks Gulf of Mexico extends sppraa* Imately 1,000 miles from east to west and approximately 800 miles from north to south. It contains 716.000 square miles. It Is bounded on the north by Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida; on the west by Mexico; on the south by jthe Bay of Campecbe, Yucatan, the Channel of Yucatan and Cuba, and on the west by the Straits of Florida snd Florida. Diatiactioa Ws fere astounded to lesrn tbst tke preacher who wrote a book on experiences as a cab driver In New York has so far eluded the classification of hick writer.--Detroit N*w*. • Adi Die Ym«| Some live to a ripe old age snd others try to see bow rapidly thep can get through traffic to nowhere is part tap, lar.--Longvlew New*. -<#r $998 Lower, Delivered, Com, THROUGHOUT the automobile industry Nash engineering enjoys s reputation for enviable excellence. A clear example is the Standard Six "400" 4-Door Sedan--* big, jull5-pasttmgtr car^--the leader of the $900 field in quality,* and performance, and value. - DK.IVE it! Note the exceptional power, speed, and acceleration of its Nashdesigned, high-compression, 7-bearing motor, with Bohnalite pistons, and torsional vibration damper. > Chief among the attractions of the DJweiwf, Pric* Rmmgt •/ 23 "400" iwUM| Tmmring, ff amtlwtmr, Cwp«, Cntw'iL, Ftrtm larger Special Six snd Advanced Six 4-Door Sedans is the great Twin- Ignition motor. Nash-Bijur ceQtiralized chassis lubrication is another invaluable asset of these larger "400's". « ALL Nash "400" models are fully factory equipped with front and rear bumpers, hydraulic shock absorbers, and spare tire lock and tire cover-- •e extra charge, Nash also offers three 2-Door Sedans at respectively lower prices. US* ts tSM* SJmmMmJM J George A. Stilling Garage *•'••8* "t-*-.: < aPhto.n.e. 1m8m- uM^cnH cw-,y . nmi. - w mth-m -"iM'jisfik™