£ dm <**ki »:$. *'f. " . '. * "•< '" ' v •. •" *'• * ' ; • - - March 21, 1935 iVT; ;. . •••..•-.••v.. •• ••. -.-. *i - * 1 * - ^ Page '•i ., • Dollar Day *t VYCITAL'S '* V $1.00 «al $1.00 $1.00 Diamond Spar Varnish Diamond Plat Paint .. J Diamond Gloss Paint ...J: Kalsomine 5 .....pkg. 45<^ Jamesway Oil Burning Chick Brooder : , $17.45 2 gaL Chick Waterer ... "Hf 50-lb Bungalow Chick Feedeir Ball Bearing Roller Skates Large Size Coaster Wagon --S3.19 Hendiyx Bird Cage and Stand "-:'-Vr. • . $2.50 Green Street Phone 98-H Dollar Day Big Basket of Groceries S1.00 Contains the Fallowing: 6 Extra Large Oranges V4 lb. Batter 6 Large Bananas 2 lbs. Sugar 12 24-oz Eggs 1 box Salt Large Package KeHogg's Corn Flakes; ' „ Large Loaf Btetsy Ross Bread V - ^ (This is Piper's Milk and Honey Bread) 1 qt. Riverside Dairy Milk 100 BASKETS, WHILE THEY LAST $1.00 EACH . y ART SMITH West MeHenry Dollar Day Bargains Eastman Kodaks _ __$1.00 4 Tudor Salad Forks, regular $2.00 yalne ,-..- $1.00 Wahl and Cohklin Pens and Pencils $1.00 Ladies" Hand Bags, $1.50 to $2.00 valutas * $1.00 SPECIAL BARGAINS Drum Outfit, Bass and Snar% Tom Tom, also tttsDd, $50.00 value at $25.00 Guitars, good gride at, each AUTO RADIO, Special at --$4.00 $10.00 New Reduced Prices on-- RCA Tubes !RCA, Philco and Crosley Radios • Latest Popular Sheet Music 'Nye Jewelry, Music and Radio Shop Phone 123-J West MeHenry The fever for the Washington trip gre&ter and greater as the time decreases, I can imagine that a pang of Scouts; so whoever wins will be no "slouch." Take it "from ma. A little green book contains all the requirements within its surface. You'd Letter do some fancy studying if you expect to get near the tdp. Repiember, success is never found where you .just, try to get by. YouH have to work. ' . The Court of Honors have sort of got the gang ago in'. Next Monday will see a bunch of McHenryites receiving badges with a group of fellow comrades--sounds like Russia-- from Solon Mills and Richmond. Merit badges and First arid Second Classes will' classify the majority, of badges. Here'? ^ chance for you nota- ].missi^teSj scooters, men and boys, to see the Bobby Jones was 33 years old on St. Patrick's day, March 17, 1935. At the age of 28 years he had been in national and international comswift finish will be done by a whole petition fourteen years and had national golfing Champrogress that these boys make just drop, in on us. But batik to the subject of bjujgejs. Som% o£ you have, a requirement or twoto complete; so don't hesitate. :You've 6hlf got unitl Friday. . V • After tte" chfetlclng Up of tKe ab played in 27 pionships. Like Topsy, the game . of golf in America has "just arrowed". There is, little authentic knowledge as to when, where and how this national game of ours started. Only within recent, years have those who like to get at the root of things begun to delve into jts early history and assemble a few smattering facte. A great deal of credit is due Charles B.- Macdonald for "what he has done to collect some of these facts, adding to them some of his own personal recollections as a player, first winner of the amatuer title, as a golf dry, as «n organizer of some of the earliest clubs and as a designer senties, the* meeting was turned over pienships of some of , , the most-; iSeletoated courses. < ;. r In .h»Vll^;;.^tMd!» •":;Hi. Golf," Mr'. Macdonald has preserved Something of the early history .of the 'jfame"'. here and many interesting details e6ncernihg the' *Sriy cKam-, Prices On Junior Atlas Tires Have Been REDUCED 11 •"JBW-, In another, section of this issue of The Plaindealei prices on ^Junior Mas Tir§s are quoted in otiradv'I^p a<3 was jaimnted in an ritn of the paper and since then we hafe received notice of,a reduction in price. Readers are fts&ed $o ignore the prices: quoted therein. Get our new prices before, you buy, t Phone ;e§ Fred J; Smith, Prop? Johnsburg Get the jump oh "COLDS" ' USE THE CLASSIFIED COLUMNS FOR QUICK RESULTS year Does winter find you "run-down" ~a Victim of the first cold that comes along? If so, there's an easy way to combat this treacherous ailment. Build up your resistance now -- with MCKESSON'S VITAMIN CONCENTRATE TABLETS OF COD LIVER OIL. " These tempting, chocolate-coated tablets bring you an-abundance of vitamins A and D. A helps you resist infection.' D furnishes the extra "synshine" your body, craves in winter. - Each tablet brings you all the vitamins in one teaspoQnfiil of U. S. P. X (revised 1934) Cod Over Oil. In addition it provides Ihe needed minerals, calcium and, phosphorus. Take si* tablets daily airdget the jump on colds this year. At •> all good drug stores. Ope (jlolllar per bottle of 100 tablets. Begin fighting colds the Vitipiin way today with • ;McKESSirtN.;s"' TBATE TABLES: '• /•'V-!-' -- £$i} 'M . v.- to three judges; namely, Bruce It is generally assumed that the .Klofttz, Gordon and Harold Taxman. aRcient game of golf was played in They watched and dosed of points : America, in some form or other, a® for such as follows: reaching over the , early ftS the eighteenth centurj'. patient, wrong bandaging, 'incorrect applications, and others of less importance. Here were the problems given: (1) A man has been bitten by a snake. Treat. (2) a man was thrown from a window and wounded on the left bicep. The wound is bleeding in a smooth flowing stream. Treat. (3) A man waa found on an electric wire where he has burned both legs. He is unconscious and not breathing, treat. You see that the gang had a real task on their hands to do this, but all in all, I believe, the Scoutmaster was pleased. Of a possible 300 ppints Jack Hess -anxtAteam! had 233^ Angelo Unti's team 158, while in the cellar Harry Conway's team had 154. At the next regular meeting another First Aid Contest wil be given. You'd better "Be Prepared,." ItH help you! Signalling will be tke main project on the hike the first Saturday in April. Here's another thng to study on in your spare moments. You Patrol Leaders encourage your members on Signalling and First Aid, two essential things in Scouting: and too>, in later life. The Oath and Law were reviewed by the Scoutmaster as a parting thought. Don't forget them, fellows. They'll play atv important part in the determination of the winner of that magnificent Washington trip. Make a date to be present with us at ths Scout meeting Monday. SCOUT HAROLD TAXMAN History indicates that a colony of Scots migrated to America and settled in Charleston and Savannah in the year 1736 and it is reasonable to suppose that some of these were golfers although there is no positive record of that fact. The first mention of golf in this country appeared in the Charleston "Gazette" on Oct 13, 1795. It was a notice that the anniversary of the golf club would be held on the following Saturday at the club house on Ilarleston's Green. About the same time a notice was printed of the anniversary of the Savannah club. While there is evidence that golf was played near White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., as early as 1881. Golf historians seem to be pretty well agreed that the first organized association in the United States with a continuous existence was the St. Andrew's Club at Yonkers. The club had its beginning on a pasture grounds but four years later moved to a 34 acre tract on Palisades avenue, where a six-hole course wa? laid put in an apple orchard. In 1884 the club moved to a hundred acre tract of ground where a nine hole course was built and in the next' it took out a charter. Other American courses sprung jtnd have continued to grow- SEE THE NEW 1935 FRIGIDAIRE NOW ON DISPLAY! Bemice Wall, Oshkbsh,' and Frances Hadfield, Milwaukee, the. two young Wisconsin golfers who pro-, Creation for Spring %ided the big upsets of the annual JBelleair Women's golf tournament - 4>att!od last week for 20 holes at the Florida course before Miss Wall took the title with a 1 up victory on the second extra green. Women, until recently, have never taken the game of golf Very seriously. The introduction to their advance in golf in our land begun about •1895 for that was the year the first -championship was held in this country. When this championship was held there were less than 100 women golfers in the country and the entry included only thirteen players. -At the rate of the recent improvement in women's golf, It leads one to conclude that if it continues the women will soon be scoring on •ven terms with the men. Preserves feeds safely aft temperatures below 50° Freezes plenty ef iee and desserts quickly Frigiaaire '35 does these things better --even in the hottest weather--because of thi SUPER FREEZER which makes possible A COMPLETE lEFRIfiEMTIOH SERVICE tar Frittingf»r mtUmg Prmun Stor#gt ft to cmktt mid dtmrtt md ic* cr**a ExtrmC*UtS*r*&f*it+mt Mtim Sttmtt ftr mm- Mtnu/AmnAriMl m fwrw mbpb »f ici cmitt UkUl frmMs > rtemirimg dry,frM0 mid Oft' the- face -with a bandeau, la Suey's latest creation for spring. It Is of brown chiffon felt, faced with matching silk and carries a beige toaed 4ulU. Say you read it in THE !»LAINDEALER.. "KM*" of Chippewa Indians The "Kible" of a Chippewa Indian tribe of Minnesota, 119 glyphs of picture writing characters on birch bark parchment, has l>een trahslated by Dr. Albert B. He;.^an. Brighdro Young university. I'rovo, -i.)tah. It shows their' chief god was Mokwa, who guided good Indians to the happy hunting grounds, while sinners, lacking guidance, took the wrong trail and landed in the underworld. " 16 BEAUTIFUL MODELS...ALL WITH THE j*PEI FIEEZEK UtlBI TO MCK KUl in a new sfiow with Freddy Rich's Orchestra, «v«ry Wednesday, 9:00 P. M. over station WBBM. PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OP NORTHERN ILLINOIS - % Telephone; Crystal Lake 280 TOWN OF McHENRY, McHenry County, Illinois Election Tuesday, April 2,1935 EAY McGEE, ToWn Clerk. TOWNSHIP (By Petition) FOB SUPERVISOR (Vote for One) a :x CITIZENS (By Petition) FOR SUPERVISOR J (Vote for One)-- WILLIAM B. TOtfYAN MeHenry, 111.. IJOR HIGHWAY COMMISSIONER > (Vote for One) • q: JOSEPH J. FREUND RFD, MeHenry, Ili. FOR JUSTICE OF THE PEACE (Vote for three to fill vacancies) • Q D m • FOR HIGHWAY- COMMISSIONER (Vote for One) a FOR JUSTICE OF THE PEACE (Vote for three to fill vacancies) \ • o • • (By Petition) JflDR SUPERVISOR (Vote for One) STEPHEN H. FREUND MeHenry, 111. • FOR HIGHWAY COMMISSIONER - (Vote for One) • FOR JUSTICE OF THE PEACE (Vote for three to fill vacancieef""^ fl M. J. WALSH - MeHenry, 111. i ' i Fl EBER E. BASSET? West McBenry, HI. •: Q n ^ r i n i t ' i t i i i i i i K i i i r i i i im X By Petition) "FOR SUPERVISOR (Vote for One) <)• (By Petition) FOR SUPERVISOR (VoteforOne) (By Petition) FOR SUPERVISOR (Vote for One) NICK WE1NGART RFD, McHenr^ 111. ARNOLD J. RAUXR MeHenry, 111. • FOR HIGHWAY COMMISSION^ ' (Vote for ; : M Q fOR JUSTICE OF THE PEACE (Vote for. three to fill vacancies) FOR HIGHWAY COMMISSIONER (VoteforOne) . • LOUIS SCHROEDER Ringwood, 1SU FOR JUSTICE OF THE PEACE (Vote for three to fill vacancies) D •v FOR HIGHWAY OOMMISSIONBft ^ (Vote for Oa.) FOR JUSTICE 0^ THE PEACE (Vote far three to fill vacancies) D Q a Q Q Q Oi v ' - ' - ' i i i