mm | THEMHENRY PLAINDEALE&, THURSDAY, MAY ft, 1MSI $ • t'-- h HOME OF A M U S E i f E " f l T "WE CANT PLAY THEM ALL SO WE PLAY THE BEST" SHOWS 7:30-9:00 THURSDAY . FRIDAY MAY-3-4 "TWO GIRLS WANTED" With Janet Gaynor A Happy Comedy, Drana of Youth Love, and . Laughte* And _ ' V Universal Comedy , \ - SATURDAY MAY 5 Monte Blue * "ACROSS THE ATLANTIC" A Hirillinf Romance of the Air. With VAUDEVILLE PATHE .WORLD'S LATEST NEWS And the next diapter of fte Great Adventure Play 0 THE VANISHING RIDER" SUNDAY MAY 6 "SQUARE CROOKS" Society's Black Sheep Fighting to Turn White with Dorothy Down A DouMe Barrelled Romance in Story of the I'nderworld With VAUDEVILLE AESOPS FABLES In FLYING FEATHERS And the Fox Comedy -A TEABONE FOR TWO" T If: TUESDAY WEDNESDAY MAY 8-9 The New Edition of "Damaged Goods" NOTICE--Owing to the Boldness of Various Scenes Men and Women Cannot Be Admitted together to See This Picture. Children Under 16 Not Admitted Approved by Various State Boards, Civic Societies and Clergy. Oil Tuesday-Women Only Wednesday- Men Only No Basic Conflict Among the Republics That Make Up the Two Americas **-• • 8*8. ' • By HENRI V. BERENGER, Ex-French Ambassador. HERE ii no liaaic conflict between Anglo-Saxon America and Latin-America. There are difficulties and misunderstandings, b^Europe will be stupidly bliijd if it refuses to see the progressive evolution of the two Americaa* toward ^ke-eame ideal of ma terial prosperity and* intellectual culture in an economic and politiraf federalism. / The various American republics were all forhier European colonics and they all rejected the yoke of England, Austria, Spain and Portugal, opposing the holy alliance of democracy to the holy alliance of monarchy. The Monroe doctrine was the first Pan-American dogma proclaimed b> the Americas--the Indian-Latin America and the Anglo-Saxon America Whether Latins or Nordics, they are all Americans and they all have an equal" conception of federalism and business. Europe would ^he mis taken if she believed she could act 9s an arbiter among them,. • " It is not fitting to exagg«ate the difficulties between tTie republics 0/ North, Central and South Americas, which have been unavoidable since Europeans abandoned the Panama canal to the United States, thi§ being the key of both the Americas, permitting them to exert a continuous in tervention, which is not always flexible or discreet. But the final object of the Pan-American conferences ha^ precisely as their goal to put an end tj> all friction. • tr .• ' , ' Another source of difficulties lies in the economical consequencef of the World* war, whose responsibilities belong to Europe. The United States has replaced Europe in the first commercial and financial pkce in Latin America. : - «. The constant siege of the dollar has produced conflicts of wounded pride which, however, only assume a secondary place before the Inter American economic federalism and capital. The economical, maritimr and political federalism present three phases already inseparable in the great Pan-American pyramid, and we, Europeans, should become persuaded that this pyramid does not hold pharaonic mummies, but fratprnal youths of one of the most powerful families m the human future. American Bar Association Wisely Seeking Prevention of Labor Controversies By MATTHEW WOLL, Vice President JL F. of L. The formula designed by a con.lnittee of the American Bar association to prevent strikes and labor controversies has my full commendation. The effort of the association is to find a method of encouraging an<l maintaining peaceful industrial relations and collective agreements Voluntarily entered into, without applying any power of eompulsion.- It believes this can be accomplished by giving validity to collective agreements and leaving the contracting parties at liberty to determine methods by which such obligations shall be enforced, without bringing these issues into the courts or burdening the courts with these industrial problems. The setting up of a national industrial council for fact-finding pur poses, also proposed in the formula,, should have a wholesome effect on both workers and employers, in that it will present to the public the true facta underlying any industrial situation. It is believed that ultimately public opinion and judgment are tVr more powerful and influential than any power of government. It is evident that the bar has come to realize that the law, so far as industrial relations are concerned, must be modernized. THE WORLD'S GREATEVENTS ALBERT PAYSON TERHUNS «N< uaius juiius uaesar, a ttoms rank, exiled from his HTfr&fl jjjk {pi* 91 «Qua pirates km hi* attendant* THURSDAY - FRIDAY MAY 10-11 m DOUBLE SHOW The International Psychic Sensation "icadam Zenola" The Super Mental MaruM Sees All--Hean, AU--ki*uw* All Don't Miss This Guaranteed Attraction And ^ Hoot Gibson In "THE RAWHIDE KID" With Comedy Methods of "Big Business" Must Be Studied and ^ Adopted by Smaller Merchants • - P By LAWRENCE H. WHITING, Chicago Banker. HERMAN J. SCHAEFER Moving and Long Distance Hauling Phone 126-0 * McHenry, Illinois Small merchants who do not study the methods of big business are in real danger of going the way of the extinct hack driver and ferrV boat operator. 'Every year business becomes more of a science. Then, too, there is a constantly growing trend toward buying in the larger cities. Hard roads make it easy for the customer to go Just about wherever he pleases. If you would draw him to your store yoti must train, men in the methods by which successful merchants are getting ahead in larger cities. You must advertise in proportion to the results .you want to acconv plish. You have it within your power to give a degree of service beyond, that which is provided by the merchants in the larger city. As additional proof of the need^for careful study in the retail fi -ld is the fact that, although storekeepers once trained their sons for professional careers, business today is at such a high stage of development and competition that it is drafting trained men from the professions. Broadest Conception of Liberty Is Freedom to Do Right in the-World By REV. W. H. POULKES, Newark, N. J. I In New Location After April 1st N.W. Cor. Green and Elm Streets DR. HENRY FREUND OPTOMETRIST Eyes Scientifically Examined Glasses Recommended Only When Needed Honrs: Every Evening from 7 to 9, except Saturday. All Day Wednesday from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. ' Phone 175 Young people today like to have a great cause for which to fight - liberty bulwarked by law. We should have outgrown the liberty of the caveman and the jungle, which ought to be surrendered for civil liberty. The liberty of the jungle was every man doing what he pleased when he pleased regardless of every other man. Shall America go back to the jungle idea of liberty stressing the individual right of every person or shall we keep preserved the gains we have made? The supreme liberty is freedom to do right in the world today, freedom to do what we ought to do. The time is at hand when the youth of today can be marshaled under the banner of world peace. There is a growing passionate spirit on the part of young people against world war. If you ask any of these men whether they want another World war they will vote against it. Healthy Home Influences Will Turn Youth From Desire for "Petting Parties" By MISS LOUISE MERRILL, Denver Sociologist. Mothers are to blame when daughters indulg^in petting parties. To stop petting parties and like entertainment, mothers must , provide pas times more absorbing. Youth is the most lovable thing in the world and adolescence is a burning question today. A mother's and a teacher's business is a 24-hour job. Every mother should get out the old mi'si< selections she used to play, even if she isn't an artist at it/ Get the chil dren interested in music, astronomy, and such things,cand they won" go out of the home for entertainment. ©odd. M«ad * Comptnr ) Julius Caesar OW that you have me In four power you would be wiser to kill me than to hold me for ransom." "Why?" asked the puzzled pirate captain. "Because," laughed the prisoner, "when I am free I shall return and kill you." The young man who thus jested with death was small, bald_ and .of ]}arsh, aquiline features. lie "was Oalus Julius Oaesar, Roman of Is home city, of Qiyants had ioBe lb seek ransom. When they Same back with if Tie promptly armed ifleef, returned to the place of his pttvlty, overcame and cruclHed the pirates, according to his promise. e Rome, being a republic, was for centuries Swayed by two oontendlng tactions--the Patricians and the Plebeians. In the early part of the last century B. O., the city had passed under the dictation of one Sulla, Whose political rival was Marius, Oaesar's uncle by marriage. Sulla drove Caesar from Rome and kept him out of the city for years, during which period of exile the young man proceeded to perfect himself as a soldier, a writer, a statesman and an orator. He was destined to make marvelous use, later, of all these accomplishments. On Sulla's death Caesar returned to Rome, receiving high office in the state. He spent the next twelve years in building up the welfare of the plain people, whose fortunes were at low ebb, and In trying to heal civil disputes and secure equality for all Roman citizens. This course made him tremendously popular With the people, even while his extravagance plunged him deep into debt. At the age of forty he formed a triumvirate (triple alliance) with two famous men, Ponrpey and Crassus, by which the three were virtually to share among them the sovereign power of Rone. Caesar, in the division of offices, was made governor of northern Italy, Oaul (France and Switzerland)' and the Alps. This office was no sinecure, for the provinces were swarming with Insurant tribes. For tho next eight years ke was constantly on the battlefield; often fighting in the front rank like a common soldier; little by little subtfulng all Rome's GalHe foes. He conquered Gaul, hurled the Germans back over the Rhine and made that tfver a Roman boundary; crossed into Britain, and, after oae repulse, eonquered the country that Is now England; then, as Gaul again rose In a mighty confederacy of revolution, ke crushed the uprising andf stemmed the tide of barbarism which would otherwise have swept over the Alps and engulfed Rome. He kept a chronicle of his campaigns which, as "Caesar's Commentaries," has endured for nearly 2,000 years as the foremost Latin textbook for schools and a. model of literary style. Crassus died and Pompey and Caesar quarreled, thns breaking up the triumvirate. Pompey's party was in power In Rome. To weaken the great general who was becoming the people's idol, the senate, at Pompey's order, deprived Caesar of office, ordering him to give up his command at once and to return home, under penalty of a treason charge. Caesar had two courses open to him--either to obey meekly and to lose all he had gained, or to defy the order and thus render himself liable to death as an enemy to Rome. The river Rubicon divided his Gallic province from Italy. Should ho cross that river under arms it would be an act of open war against Pompey. Caesar did not hesitate. With his legion of veterans he crossed the Rubicon, thus Irrevocably committing himself as Pompey's foe. Pompey, having no army sufficient to cope with him, fled, leaving the field clear to his victorious rival. Caesar, after making himself master of the Italian peninsula, returned In triumph to Rome, where he was hailed as dictator. Pompey «alsed an army in the East, but was beaten by Caesar (who met him with a far smaller force) and soon afterwards was murdered. Pharnaces, Asian king of Pontus, next defied Rome, and Caesar subdued him in one brief campaign, sending home this still briefer report of the victory: "I came, I saw, I conquered I" A later conquest of Spain made Caesar master of nearly all the worilL He ruled Rome justly. But ambition wrecked him as It had many another great man. Haying conquered the world he longed to be king. Rome hated the Idea of a king. Mark Antony, Oaesar's friend, publicly pressed royal honors on him. The people stood mute. Caesar, quick to feel the public pulse, refused the crown. A faction rose against him, working secretly for fear of the populace. Its ringleaders, Casslus, Caeca, Clmber and other demagogues and political schemers, lured Marcus Brutus, Caesar's best friend, into the conspiracy under pretext that national welfare demanded Caesar's death. In the senate, March 18, 44 B. O., the conspirators fell upon Caesar and assassinated him. Rome's old-world greatness was due to Caesar more than to any other man. (rows at ear m flr--Idea, aid te sot to be picked la strangers' gardens." If you do not find happiness in your home It is, perhaps, because you have not planted the seeds of happiness there. Or. having planted them, yon have not stayed around to watch them grow.--Grove Patterson, 1b the Metope Register: Judgment A man of accurate Judgment cannot have a great flow of Ideas, because the slighter relations, making no figure In his mind, have no power to Introduce ideas; hence accurate Judgment is not friendly to declamation or copious eloquence.--Lord Kamee. Wisconsin'* Rmal Name Wisconsin derived its name from the principal river, named Masconsin by Pare Marquette, translated "wild rushing chuuiefThe present spelling is derifW! from a misprint. All aarly French document* have Oaf* consing or Mlsconsing. , > Remember This ' Trying to avoid trouble will keep any man busy. And man who repeats half he hears talks too much.--Los Angeles Times. ^ it Cv - 4"» 2 She wants you to save money--now, listen! It's . all true--what she's been telling you about opf stylish cleaning and pressing. ;|| and -MR. BEFORE AND AFTER our^ Mrs* Anna Howard CLEANING, PRESSING and REPAIRING PHONE 143-W Located over Bolger's Drug Stoff* •"V/ BEGINNING SUNDAY We will demonstrate the ORCHESTROPE next week in our music parlor as a special feature for Music Week. Come in and see the Musical Marvel of the Age. The Orchestrope cannot be likened to anything now in existence. By a slight touch of hand it plays an entire program of music, for the amazing period of 3V& consecutive hours, or until it is silenced. See This Almost Human Instrument! We also announce the new R. C. A. Radiola 18 now on demonstration in our window. An even finer receiver than the wonderful "17" of which more than $27,000,000 %orth have been sold since Oct. 1927. Nye Jewelry, ^iisicancl Radio Shop Phone 123-J J West McHenry Bogy of uOld Agm" Let us free ourselves from thoughts of age I No man is old but ho that thlnketh In his heart that he is old. It Is simply this thought of age, this consternaUon that men feel when time has taken their outposts and outworks that demoralizes men and en ablev time to capture them before they have retired to their impregnable fortresses where time cannot raach or Highest Approval All the world's a stage, but a lot of ua must work behind the scenes. Wo miss the applause of the crowd, and sometimes this rankles. But we really do not miss much. People are often as ready with their handclapping when a clown performs as when an artist endeavors to charm them. The best kind of approval la the aense of having done well a worth-while • I , • « • »» • » , < 1 1 't ! > • < • »" I > 1 1H Hi n i lM » » » l HI IMHMMMMMMMMM y-1tri lifting to greater prosperity and progress for , Healing Stone• of Hawaii Miraculous cures are said to be obtained in Hawaii by visits to the famous" "healing stones" of Wahlawa, near Honolulu. People with seemingly incurable diseases go to them and come away apparently well. Family of Artists At least aeveq of Frans Hals' sons painters, and his daughters married lata tke profession. YOU Save a part of all you earn Three per cent paid on savings deposits This bank will close at noon each ^Thursday during May, June, July, August and September, beginning May 10. West McHenry State Bank t4The Bank That Service Built ,99 r i l l M M t t t t T t T T ' f iillilft IIII mi JIIMMMMMIIII ft -M X