j Wf^T^FTKTWT^VWt ' .y ' ' I • ' • ¥ - . \ £ " • .*< .a« itlvWr-fSTAi. r /** . m&m m THE M'HENRY PLAINDEALER, THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 11 * - -jr>,. f.as fF . ft'# , * . «"?•, V 1 *-*' , ^f-r •*•*'«' WJ® * * .< I- "" i ,v- Mlhr oA ^ *&•* v *-•:«* • \*; . - / MRS. VERN LONG ' Mrs. Vern Long of Chicago, 25 > "years old, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jehn Walsh of Fox Lake and ffrand- 4auprhter of Mrs. B. Frisby of McHenry died at the Lutheran Deaconess hospital in Chicago, early Wednesday Morning. June 25, 1930. The passing mt this beautiful young life came as H great shock to her relatives and friends, cut off as it was, in the very ftallness of happiness and young Wmanhood. Margery Walsh, was born at Fox §*ke April 11, 1905, where most of Iter life was spent. She graduated ftam the Antioch high school with tfce H»5s of 1923 and since that time fcis been employed in Chicago. i On Soptember 15, 1928, she was "Wiftvi m marriage to Vern Long of Madison. Wis., the ceremony being performed at Fox Lake. She has lieeit happv in planning and working her home and many bright hopes -for the future have been shattered tad a home broken ISy her death. v Besides her husband she is survived a baby daughter. Margery Jean, '"who was bom just before the death xf her mother, and who will be cared for by her grandmother, Mrs. Long, At Madison, Wis. She'is also survived •by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Walsh, her graifdmother, Mrs. B. Frisby of McHenry, three sisters and three brothers, Mrs. Genevieve Swenjson of LaGrange, Irene of Chicago, Sternadine, Howard and Robert at home and Ray of Long Lake. ? The body will be brought to Fox **ke for burial, arriving on the 9:30 je'clock train Friday morning and Will be taken directly to St. Bede's church at Fox Lake where funeral will be held. WEEKLY PRSOIMLS COMERS AND GOERS OF A WEEK IN OUR CITY As ;§•>: METHODIST CHURCH >t :5Tou are invited to attend services vW the M. E. church every Sunday. ' ^Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Sunday school, 10 o'clock. Wooden Arrow Shaft Best rxAn arrow with a metal shaft may M shot with accuracy, but not so consistently as the wooden shaft The mason is that the metal shaft does •ot have the power of recovery that nature has put into the well-seasoned Horwegian pine shaft. By recovery ;!• meant the action of the shaft as H| leaves the bow. --nr^nnfnr^nnjni\irMrwijnijr>iiiL|nit<Vi-ri-rx. k-x- Seen By Plaindealer Reporters and Handed In By Oa* Friends Raymond Baur of Chicago spent Sunday here. Mrs. J. Comisky of Chicago visited friends here Sunday. Will Martin of Chicago spent Sun* day with home folks. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ferwirda were Chicago visitors Monday. Mr. and Mrs. R. I. Overton were Harvard visitors Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. William Whrobble of Chicago spent Sunday in this city. Hay (Jroh and Angela Groh of Chicago visited relatives here Sunday. Will Aylward of Solon Mills visited his aunt, Mrs. M. McCarthy, Sun* day. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dowling of Chicago were McHenry visitors Sum day. Mrs. Thomas Kane spent last week with relatives and friends at Kenosha. Mrs. F. O. Gans spent several days the last of the week with relatives ill Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hoffman and son of Chicago spent Sunday with relatives here. Charles Dowe, Robert Thurlwell and George Bylsma were Chicago visitors Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. A. Matson of Chicago attended the wedding of' her brother, Clarence Pearson ^nd Miss Arline Harrison, Saturday. Paul Brefeld was a Chicago visitor Saturday. Dr. R. G. Chamberlin was a Chicago visitor Monday. Miss Maud Granger of Elgin spent Sunday at her home here. Miss Laura Kads of Chicago spent Sundity at her home here. Miss Clara Schiessle spent two days last week in Chicago. • - -- Arthur Krause of Elmhurst visited his parents one day last week. Frances Bonslett of Chicago was a McHenry visitor Tuesday. Jolyt Erickson of Chicago was a McHenry visitor Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Brefeld visited at Madison, Wis., Sunday. Mrs. F. E. Cobb spent several days the last of the week in Chicago. Miss Floribel Bassett visited friend* at Richmond over the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Schaefer visited at Cleveland, Ohio, lastrweek. Adam Jackson of Solon Mills visited in the Ford Jackson home Sunday. Miss Theresa Karls of Chicago spent last Wednesday in McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Vrakelos of Chicago were McHenry visitors "Sunday. Mrs. Frank Martin left Friday morning for her home at Belleview, Fia. Mrs. Perry Short of Chicago has been the guest of Mfts Lou Schneider. Mrs. H. C. Hughes and Mrs. R. A. Thompson were Waukegan visitors Wednesday William Vastine and Estelle Witteman of Chicago spent Sunday at Mc- Colum's lake. Misses Leone and Kathleen Givens returned home from their eastern trip Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Erickson attended the funeral, of a relative at Rockford Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Alexander of Hebron visited in the Robert Thompson home Sunday. Mrs. F. O. Gans and Mrs. Albvt Krause visited relatives in Chicago Over the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Phalin and daughter, Ruth, visited at Terra Cotta Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Besley, Jr., of Chicago were week-end guests in the W. A. Sayler home. Mrs. Maizie Rosing and children of Round Lake visited Mrs. Margaret McCarthy Friday evening. Mrs. H. J. Miller and Mrs. J. Lv Basely attended the funeral of George Waterman at Elgin, Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. William Lester of Elgin were Sunday callers in the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Burke. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Williams and John Neiss visited Peter Neiss at the Speedway hospital, Chicago, Monday. , Mr. and Mrs. Joe Miller left the last of the week for Almena, Wis., where they will spend the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Richards of Libertyville spent a recent day in the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Phalin. Mr. and Mrs. William Drey and son of Forest Park spent the weekend in the home of Mrs. .Minnie Block. Mrs. Anna Weber of Johnsburg, Minn., has been the guest of relatives in this vicinity the past few weeks. 1 Misses Viola and Olgo Brefetd spent Thursday evening with their sister, Mary, at the Evanston Country club. Mrs. R. V. Powers and Mrs. Robert Thompson visited Mrs. Dwight Williams at the Woodstock hospital, Tuesday. Misses Lois Bacon and Gwendolyn Overton spent Thursday and Friday as the guests of Mrs. William Cowen at Harvard. Mrs. Robert Knox, Sister Mary Hilda, Sister Mary Celine and Mrs. J. M. Phalin visited at Woodstock one day last week. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Duker and children returned hop* last week from a two week* visit with relative* in Indiana. Sister Mary Hilda and Sister Mary Celine returned to Chicago last Wednesday after visiting their father, Patrick Conway. Mrs. Ralph Walkup and daughter, Ann Ella, and mother, Mrs. Anna Mollohan of Ridgefield,, called on friends here Tuesday. 4 Hubert Ziegler, Charles and John Dossinger, Peckford Hermann and Olive Zimmerman of Chicago spent the week-end in McHenry. John and Will Sutton and Misses Dorothy and Genevieve Knox, Marjory Phalin and Antonette Huetch visited at Mundelein Sunday. Ben Klapperich, Susie Klapperich, Mr. and Mrs. Henry May and Tillie May of Meyer, Iowa, visited relatives here several days last week. B. J. Frisby and sons, Robert and Weston, visited in the home of his motlter, Mrs. B. Frisby, Sunday. Weston remained for a weeks' visit. Mr. and Mrs. Will Smith of Waukegan called on friends here one day last week. They have Just recently returned from a trip to Europe. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Phalin and Mr. and Mrs. William Spencer visited Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stenger in their new home at Waukegan, Sunday. Miss Marjory Phalin and her friend Miss Antonette Huetch, of Chicago spent the week-end In the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Phalin. Walter Warner and daughter, Arline, of Elgin visited relatives here Sunday. His son, Dick, returned home with him after spending the week here. Mr..and Mrs. M. J. Walsh, daughters, Mary and Dorothy, and Lillian Freund visited Mrs. Walter Carey and Vera Doherty at the Zace Sanitarium at Winfield, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kamholz and ao« nstevad to Chicago Sunday. Ufa* Caroline Miller of Wilmette >ptot Sunday with MeHeary friends. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Barbian of Chicago spent Sunday with relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stenger of Waukegan visited friends here Wednesday. • Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Sayler and children of Wofxlstock visited relatives here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Blake spent Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Rosing at Libertyville. Miss Anna Frisby, Ifab y/»nfj| Givens, daughter, Leone, and son, Donald, visited in the John Walsh home at Fox Lake Wednesday evening. v Mr. and Mrs. Albert Purvey and son, Mrs. Albert Krause, Mrs. F. O. Gans, Mrs, Walter Walsh and Mrs. E* R. Sutton attended the funeral of Frank Jewett at Woodstock, Wednesday- ' . 'V?""".', .J*•> •--*• v"•.•" .Carthage hi Mythology #:•*' ^ Tradition has it that the actual founder of Carthage was Elassa, a king's daughter, who took the name Dido, which meant refuse. Accord1 ng to Virgil, Aeneas, escaping from burn- Sng Troy, stopped at Carthage on his way to Italy, where he was to found the line of Romulus. Dido, according to the poet, fell In love with Aeneas, and when he*sailed away he saw the smoke from the funeral pyre in which •he burned herself. - y:r, Success Rules If you wish success in life make perseverance your bosom friend, experience your wise counselor, caution your elder brother, and hope your guardian genius.--Addison. BUICK SHOWS GOOD INCREASE IN SALES Retail deliveries made by Buick dealers in May we're more than 2,06Q greater in number than in May of last year, according to figures just announced by C. W. Churchill, general sales manager of the Buick Motor company which show that in th* month just closed Buick delivered 15,- 603 Buick-Marquette units against 13,483 in May, 1929, an increase of 2,120. * 7\ "Naturally we are highly pleas#! with these figures, said Mr. Churchill in making the announcement. "When compared with the fact that Buick lb now selling 30.1 pAcent of its price class, which includes fifteen different makes of cars, against 24.6 percent year ago, they prove a remarkable i|&" dex as to Buick's popularity in a market where values are scrutinized mocer carefully than ever before. ft "During the last year Buick hifc,; . climbed from sixth to third place number of cars sold. In doing so the' three makes of cars it passed are all in a lower price class, and the two which now surpass it in volume are the lowest priced cars obtainable. So far as our own price range is con«? cemed, national registrations prof# that more than twice as many Buicfca. are being sold as any other make car in the price range.** ^aiilier Qootatioa Tfie line, "Joy, temperance and r<fc-' ' pose slaih the door on the doctor1!! nose," is found In Sir John Harriiuf* ton's translation of a Latin poem dedi cated by the anclent\ school of medl» cine at Salerno to Robert, son William the Conqueror. The tran tlon was published in London In 1< If you have an ice box for a classified ad. THURSDAY-FRIDAY Ji&e 26-27 'HARMONY AT HOME' With William Collier, Sr. A Comedy of Home Life and Metrotone Act SATURDAY, JUNE 28 'TREE AND EASY" With Buster Keaton A Cornedy with a Great ~ Cast "fox Movietone News Metrotone Act SUNDAY -- MONDAY June 29-30 ?< •mpire rembles terror-stricken cpowdslawoif destruction ^ * then out of the clouds roars The SKY HAWK to save them w a fc--rfrerf My thrUta <• the ALL TALKINO ?•« Hevistsiw r"- mithmMr \' n ARE HERE AGAIN THIS IS VACATION TIME--the hot summer months are here enjoy, but in order to make them extra pleasurable there are a number of necessities which must be included in the list and the purpose of this advertisement is to paention a few which can be secured at this MODERN DRUG STORE. 2^ •rs rfiYGOLF SUPPLIES Par and bogey hold no* terror for the golfer using Burke equipment. Get yours now-- Golf Bags-- Golf Balls-- Golf Clubs-- PENS AND PENCILS Sheafer's and W a h 1' s Pens and Pencils can be used every day to good advantage. All styles. FIRST AID KITS Your vacation equipment should include one of these first aid kits. They pre invaluable in case of injury. Bathing Caps, Shoes, Belts, Wings, Balls & ALWAYS USEFUL FLASHLIGHTS Warranted Flashlights in all sizes. Darkness vanishes with the push of a button. , ftASTHAN OAMZKA3 for Vacation Pictures , Have a permanent record of yonr vacation experiences. Use an Eastman Kodak or Camera. All | eizes. We can also supply jh>u eiimera. /Vfc-'% Printing and Developing-- Ji-hour service BOOKS TO READ book fe read While f&u*re resting after the swim or boat ride. We have a large assortment "to select from. Newspapers TENNIS RACKETS + Complete with carrying Wise and ball. Enjoy tho.; thrill of tennis at home or 0* Miignjrin<i| PTHURSDAY - FRIDAY July 3-4 "THEY LEARNED ABOUT WOMAN" with Bessie Love Jofe gchenflc Gus Van NOTE--All -pictures Are Talking Vitaphone Productions and Prices Are 20-40 Matinee 1540 SUMMER HYGIENE NEEDS Make this store headquarters for all articles of hygiene-- cosmelios, astringents and other toilet needs. Whatever you may want can be purchased here. The Fourth of July Is Near at Hand The Same as In Former Years . FIREWORKS at BOLGER'S All the late current issues CIGARS CIGARETTES TOBACCOS . PIPES V / • Oh, Yes! -- ' ! r ' ' " ' f - " ' r fb°l "!FA Remember ^ >ut thosfr ^t FAMOUS CHOCOLATE SODAS ? We still serve them^-and. how ft'-, i: #HEN the SUN BURNS USE WOODBURY^® LOTION Its soothing and healing qualities will quickly give you relief from the most severe pains of sunburn. Keeps the skin soft and velvety Delicately perr:-:- • - •< 4- • ' s*: . '.v , "The McHenry Druggist" • • • , • » . v Mil # IM MMMtH tUMimtUAOUlHIji MJ.III I.I > Ml I MM