wsp' v^pwym •; y jwewv* *«ni V ? > * . ? ->* V**-^ :*},;/ {,. ,'a'*V'- v44 , /'"r"'* "• : v\* ? r<-:^u7 s4* THE M'WINEY PLAINDKALER, JfTtJRSDAY, JUKE 18,1929 ]p** . / Jyf v u TMC McHENRY, ILLINOIS THURSDAY.-- FRIDAY JUNE 13-14 "The Trail of'98" •f|» Call of the Klondike with Dolores Del Rio tad a Wonderful Cast with flonad Effects that put# a feal picture over , And The Comedy < A -BEEF STAKBSf SATURDAY JUNE 15 Circus " Kid" m i* Vf f <•' :*r ;H with the most anaiing iggrejition of artists ever assembled, POODLES HANNEFORD and his troop of PoeHess Performers with Plthe Worlds Latest News And the Next Chapter of the Great Adventure Play "Tarsan the Mighty" gUNDAYMONDAY JUNE 16-17 Sunday Matinee 2:30 " HAMON NOVARRO In "The Flying Fleet" WITH SOUND News World Spotlight f ;MN GARBER'S BAND, ^ ' with and Aesop's Fabl# • V THURSDAY FRIDAY MINE 29-21 ly-otherly v Love" Southern California Football Players In a Dane Arthur Com- V- djr with Souni And the Cont^ V\r "BUTTERCUP*; IIIAILMMMHHMTTHIM S^VER ' C0"B W0RlD'S "ARTS Owner Demonstrates Rare Talents. Bird's New York.--Capt C. W. R. Knlgli^ of England recently" demonstrated hi* .trained golden eagle before an audience of about 20 bird enthusiasts on tlie estate of George Palmer Putnam on Long Island sound. Mr. Putnam explained that the flight was merely to give the bird exercise and that the bird enthusiasts, sonie of whom were members of the Explorers' club, had been given permission to view the • eagle. The eagle weighs about 16 pounds and has been trained to retrieve game and other objects thrown by.Captain Knight. The eagle, which Is being kept at the Bronx zoo, was brought to the Putnam estate in a closed car by Captain Knight and was kept .Blindfolded juntil ready for the "eiercises." Captain Knight explained that he was better able to keep the bird under control when It was blindfolded. As soon as the bllnJfr was removed from the bird's eyes the eagle perched on Captain Kniglit's shoulder Captain Knight threw pieces of meat and dead rabbits as far as be could, and these were brought back to him by the eagle. Among those 'who witnessed the flight was Capt. Bob Bart letK of the Morrissey, who took tha Putnam fpr pedltlon to the Arctic. , FOR MILADY'S FURS y,. tl HERMAN J. 8CHAEFER " Moving«ad Jtfng Distance Hanliny i^PHONE 1S6-J " McHenry, Illinois Grain Links History of Egypt, Abyssinia Leningrad, U. S. S. R.--The hints of Herodotus that the ancient Egyptians and the Abyssians were somehow connected has been corroborated by botany. According to Investigations of the well-known Russian botanist, K. A Plasenburg, a striking likeness is now established between the old Egyptian emmer found in-the sarcophagus of the priests of the twelfth dynasty and the Abyssinian samples collected by the Vavilov expedition in K>27. These Egyptfcin specimens differ strongly from <uher fortns of emmer and especially from the Persian form in which some scientists found grain. From Abyssinia the eramer is believed to have spread to Arabia, India and Egypt. In Persia forms arose which are allied to the Abyssinian ones. In Serbia other forms differentiated which approach the Abyssinian type*. The .Russian emiufr originated from these Serbian formsT ^ Sivtetm At day with Ml Women Cured of Leprosy Slay on With Lepers Carrville, La.--Because there is nO ©he outside who cares for fhem two womeh pronounced cured of leprosy have chosen to spend the remainder of their lives in the United States leprosarium here. One woman has spent 25 of her 70 years here and the other 14 of her 28. Both told authorities their relatives were urfwilllng for them to return home. "So, if you don't mind, we'll just stay here," they told Dr. O. E. Denney, chief physician In charge of the colony. They are the first in the history ot the leper colony ever to remain after they had. beeh pronounced cured. Curt of the dread disease is rare. In the histoix of the colony only 40 persons have been' pronounced cared, De$#r Oebney sWd. Turks Protect Allah From Public Insult Constantinople.--Smasher of Moslem traditions, the Turkish government U nevertheless adainant against tnsults to the Moslem religion. Kiazim Tevfik Bey, editor of Free Thought, was brought to court for publishing "An Open Letter to the Prophet Mohammed." * One passage In the letter stated: "To kiss the pages of the Koran, to sacrifice one's life and goods to visit a city hidden In Arabia (Mecca), is not this the worst sort of Idolatry?" A clause in* the republic's newly adopted penal code subjects those who are found guilty of blaspheming any of the* world's established religions. Christian. Moslem, Buddhist, et cetera, to heavy tlne*< or Millions of Foreign Pelts • A Are Imported/'-' Watfrtngton.--"American for wearers force American fur buyers to search the fur markets of the world to meet the demand for fur garments, although the United States is the world's greatest fur producer," says a bulletin from the Washington headquarters of the National Geographic society * "Stand for half an hour on a busy corner of the shopping district of an American city, and literally watch the animals go by-^anlmals that roam dreary Arctic wastes, African jungles., and all the wild places between. Then, picture the trappers, and your imagination conjures a processional of Eskimo, swarthy Asiatic, bronze African and Canadian adventurer. The romance of furs is one of the most thrilling chupters in all the annals ot trade. Millions of Pelts Imports^. "Wild squirrels and rabbits cavort about all the forests of the United States; muskrats infest the marshes of every state except Florida; for some reason the raccoon avoids only Montana; martens, minks, foxes, opossums and skunks range over a wide area of this country. Yet more than 100,000.000 pelts are Imported annually to trim women's dresses, line men's gloves and make fur coats for both sexes. "China is America's largest source of furs, but o'hly In the supply of dog and goat i>elts does Clfina excel other foreign countries. Karakul comes from the herds of karakul lambs In India'and Central Asfa; most of our foreign mink pelts are from the traps of the Japanese. *Tlie United KlnVdom leads the list of sources of squirrel, fox and mole peltss* Germany plies most of our foreign marten peliaf Peru, Chile and Bolivia, chinchilla pelts; Siberia, ermine pelts; Australia, rabbit pelts, and for our additional supply of beaver.Aand musk rat pelts, we look to Canada. "Etfrly fur wearers wore only gennine furs., Only the trapper and the wealthy could afford fur garments. Then the demand for cheap ftirs developed. Like actors in a commercial drama, dressers of cheap furs appeared In the fur world. Experts dis-, covered that pelts of rabbits, dogs, alley catsr goats, ponies and b; ny other animals could be inadt* Into exquisite furs by the Wft hands of trained fur workers. Australia bad been offering a bounty for killing r;*V bits which had overrun the eoittl*n», but the new fur trade turned a liability in^o an asset. "More than a hundred million elieap- »er furs are used' annually1. With a WEEKLY PERSONALS COMERS AND ObERS OF A WEEK IN OTTR CITY As Seen By Plaindealer Repbrters and Handed I#.- 7 " : By Our Friends f ^ * Mr. and Mrs. E. Knox motored td Mundelein Sunday. Mrs. Fred Weinschenker was an Elgin visitor Monday. Linus Newman spent Thursday- and Friday in Chicago. Mrs. Ray McGee was a Woodstock visitor Tuesday evening. ' • , N. H. Petesch of Oak Park was a McHenry visitor Tuesday. J. D. Beatty of Chicago spent the week-end at his home here. Orville Tulley of Chicago was the guest of Mrs. Lawlus Sunday. Mrs. Ed. Whiting and Mrs. Kenneth Christy were Elgin visitors Monday. Mrs*. Fred C. Schoewer and Mrs. A. L. Purvey were Elgin visitors Monday. Miss Margaret McCabe of Waukegan spent Sunday at her home in thir city. Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Benwell and family called on friends at Wauconda on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Loais Althoff a Ad family were visitors in Burlington, Wis* "undtey. - ^ ' Mr. and Mrs. George H. lohAsott and family visited relatives &t Crystal Lake Sunday. Francis Bonslett of Chicago Was a McHenry visitor Tuesday. „Miss Rovtna Marshall is spending the week with relatives in Chicago. Misses Rose Worts and Dorothy Marshall visited «t Burlington, Wis., Sunday. - Miss Alice Miller, Chicago, enjoyed a week's vacation at her home here last week. * Dr. tieppert of Chicago was a guest in the home of Mrs.^ Minnie Miller Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Draheim and daugh ters of Chicago spent the week-end at their cottage on Fox River. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Miller and son- ->f Chicago spent a few days this week in the home of Mr. find Mrs. Roy Smith. ^ ' Mr. and Mrs. Cari Glover and daughter, Phyllis, of Kenosha, Wis., visited the former'* parents in this city Sunday. Mrik Ada South, Mrs. Granger Smith and Miss Maud Granger of EU gin Mterb Sunday callers in the home of Mr. arad Mrs- R. A. Thompson. Mrs. Peter F. Spoo spent last week wiith he* son;. George F., and Mr*. Herbert Simons. Mrs. Spoo met old time friends here and spent a vesj: pleasant visit, - t ,. . • EASTERN, STAB '/ . • Alfce Lindsay preside!! at "the meeting of McHenry chapter, Order of the Eastern Star,. Koodsy evening in the absence of the wofft&yr matron and* associate matrooy who hud accepted invitations to hold office in other chapters on* fchafc evening. „ „ „ . .... , Miss Arlme Harrison; SR« Elsie1 Mrs. Henry Heuser and children of Vycital and Mrs. Clinton Martin at- Chicago spent the yreek-end with rel atives in this city. Mr. and Mito. Ed Hall of Grayslake visited in the home' of the former's parents Monday evening. F. W. Sayler of Woodstock called at the home of his parents^ Mr. ami Mrs. W. A. Sayler, Sunday. * d George A. Hanly and daughter, Grace, of Elgin were Sunday guests Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Sayler. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Purvey were visitors in the Charles Howard home at Woodstock Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Bender and the latter's sister, Mts. Sergent, of Chicago, spent the week-end at McHenry. Harold Powers and John Nahler of! Dund«^. Chicago were week-end guests in tjie McHenry E. Knox home on Waukegan -street.1 Mr. and Mrs. Louis Engstrom of St. Charles were Sunday visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Newman. Dr. W. C. Beslejr and son, Walter, of Woodstock were the guests of Mr. tended an Eastern Star meeting at Harvard, Monday evening. The meeting was in honor of worthy matrons' night and Miss Arline Harrison, the worthy matron of McHenry chapter, filled the office ot associate conductress. Mrs. Oyy Wheeler acted as secretary at Mayflower chapter, Wauconda, Monday evening. She was accompanied 'by Miss Ethel Jones, Miss ftiez Bacon and Mrs. J. R. Smith On June 26, the worthy matron, Miss Arline Harrison, will act as conductress at' Hebron and on June-12 Mrs. Ony, Wheeler, associate matron, acted as Esther* at Day Star chapter. Istocl and Mrs. W. A. Sayler Sunday night. Misses Genevieve and Barbara Mit-S chell of Whitewater, Wis., ftre visiting their aunt, Mrs. Howard Amman. Mr. and Mrs. George Seeley of Chicago were Sunday evening callers in tfce home of Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Newman. Mitoses Oalla Vasey pnd Martha Miller and Leo, Joe and Harold little dye and expert workmanship, J f reund were Chicago visitors Tuesbunny pelts ar£ made to'lmitate those £ay. of the aristocrats of the fur-bearing Mrs. .Harry- Alexander of Hebron animal world. Babbit furs dyed *cal .• Waited in the home of her sister, Mrsi are known as Arctic seal, bay seal | Robert Thompson, the last of the CANDY is a food-- Include it in your diet! It makes & lovely dessert*. We hav* t/u in canity s Agent for WHITMAN, \ r -- MARTHA WASHINGTOK, JULIA KING'S CANDY \ SPECIAL 2K. libs. Trevor's Chocolates (tut Stay-at-Hom* Fla'gy. France.--That there is no place like home Is the belief of Mme. Jeanne Lavigne. jyho will be one hundred and six years old next month. She says she has never tieen outside her native town. and Northern seal, sealette and sealine. Dyed to imitate fox, they grace the counter of the fur store as B-.title brown, red and black fox, or fox hair. A leopard may not be able to change its spots but leopard spots dyed on rabbit pelts make Baltic, French ami! Russian leopard. These are but a few of more than fifty aNases by which rabbit pelts are kno#\vn, when tley leave the hands of the furriers.. Rival Gold in Explorat(0ft. "Civilization is invading the domain, of the fur-bearing animals in the United States, yet from $45,000,000 to jm,000.000 worth of furs were taken ^1927. "The greatest wild fur producing area in the world lies withia aT GOO-mile radius of St. Louis. lii< aft attempt to increase tiie supply ot genuine furs, fur farms or ranches have been established In the United. St-itesk Approximately 99 per tent of the silver fox-pelts sold on American markets are ranch bred. Prince- Edward! island, north of Nova Scotia, whereftox ranching began about 30 years ago, is literally covered with fox ranches. Skunk, muskrat and rabbit vanxrltes have also been established. "Furs have played an important part In exploration. Explorers «<te* find the cabins of fur trappers Marking the farthest outposts «C civilisation. St. Louis owe* its founding to the early French fur traders WIM^ established a station •• the site in llfbi. Trappers and traders from the St. Louis station, anti those- from Canadian stations opened «p a large chapter will observe Worthy Matrons' night at their next meeting bn June 24. > McHenry chapter has received an invitation to attend Advanced «Officers' Night at Elgin chapter on June it *' • •; J-lrelW iSfri " Fireflies produce « bright, soft, tD* teriuittent light, without sensible Meat, from an organ in the lower part of the abdomen. This organ appears to be a specialized pftjrt of the fat body and is supplied with nerves arid abundant trachea. Tlie light Is sup posed by some jo oe caused ay oxlda tion of § substance 'create# by ^thftrP (•ells. . week- Mr. and Mrs. John Brefeld and chil dren of Waukegan were Sunday visi tors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Brefield. • Mr. and Mrs. John Adams and baby of Chicago were, Sunday visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank ThiirlwelL • Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Hunt and Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Hunt of Oak Pfcrk were guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Sayler Sunday. _ j Miss Grace Hanly- of Elgin is spending the week with her aynt, Mrs. W. A. Sayler. I Paul Kamholz of , Chicago visited his parents, Mr. and/Mrs. Fred Kamholz, Tuesday.- , Mir- and Mrs. Fuller Boutelle and children of Lake Geneva, Wis., #isited in the home of Mr. *nd Mrs. J. R. Smith Saturday. " . N inr. and Mrs. F. A. Conley and little daughter of Chicago were week-end nsitors in the hoihe of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Frett. Mr. and Mrs. W.E.Colby and sons, ZeH and Frank, Of Waukegan were Sunday visitors ^in the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Sayler. Bobby and Junior Bushaw of Rock* ford are spending a few weeks ,ifl the home of their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Thurlwell. Mr. and Mrs. George Dowe and Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Rich and son of Waulkegan were Sunday guests in the'.home of Mr and Mrs. F-. J. Frisby. Mrs. John t T T T f T T t f V C4 FOX RIVER HATCHERY Prices on Baby Chtefci-Bt--ttve >l Once Barred Socks, White >V yaiiiotUa, White Roc|^s, Rhode Isl&i»u £cds, Buff Rocks, Buff Orpingtons ;JE*er 100 $13.00 White Leghorns, Buff Leghorns, A neon as, Black Minotcas • .Per 100 $11.00 Special Pen of White Leghorns ...» Per 100 $13.00 Visit the Greatest Baby Chick Market in Northern Illinois where 40,000 to 50,000 Chicks are on sale every week. Drive into Elgin-- Buy your Baby Chicks just as you buy any other merchandise. . 23 | FOX RIVER HATCHERY ^ Salesroom 63 So, Grove Ave.--Hatchery ^13 Grace Street V Telephone Elgin 1537 . oactly ratoyour caste--can be i»- •Ifently conCAned in our M0M;t»anni» four Penmud-Pmnt Pkn. That is another WAHL-EVER^ KiARP achievement! Yourchoiceof 'points--your choice of holders--any oblor, style orsize--selected separately and united alter you find pt what you want. Only the Wa£I-Everoharp GbliT Seal' , Bkn oSers you«uch a range of selectioni Visit our full display and enjorywitvw •Kperience in writing! 'Qi ndwmiuiiGtf W«hl- Evanharp L . •hounl -arMm atbt »P npiimnwhiewt p*do«tlnntlli.h«nw-- mitt th« liiad mndiadtvMnHtx oi thawriMr M.J' rJ 'S W. "J 1 ^ a ' ' i"^ % * -X. « \ -" SPJfStK: ii ';'S II «¥,. | •.S»*S>j-; |I 4Wss$i |I ' •• _ \ -- Oiita e# 14«ik wltik eepfy holier THOMAS P. BOLGEK " Tiie McHenrv Dnicffiat" Phone 4(| MASSES AT ST. JOHK^ * ^ (Sunday Only) First^--6 a. m.K; , Second--7:30 Third--9 a. mr\ Fourth--10- a. m. John Thurlwell and part of northern and western United Bushaw of Rockford visited in the States. Long before the forty-niners' | home of he latter's parents, Mr. and crossed the plains the' Frenchmen jMrs. Frank Thurlwell, Thursday, reached what is now the state of Utah | jjjgiitft Mary Brefeld and Helen where they learned that Canadian fur j(eefer Qf Crystal Lake spent Sunday traders had already been In that re- I evening in the home of the former's **>»• ' parents,-Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Brefeld. V "Russian trappers crossed the bleak r Mrs Anna Howard and son, Don- OIKAMIA 4A ITa«n/tKa*l>n 'ln « I I.L^ # % §. >: 'vA. AA 9 J ka s ®*pabse of Siberia to Kamchatka In ajjt spent several days the first of ' quest of furs and then pushed on to lagt at Woodstock and attended Alaska. Furs and gold have vied the funeral of Charles Howard in that In opening up 'Seward's Folly* or the ^'y on Wednesday. •Seven Million Dollar Ice Box,' as ' M d ^ John R. gmHh and Alaska formerly was called. But gold * a d Mr and ^ Joe Smith booms have come and gone. Fur trap- iamu" - --. Harem Custom* Bring v >: Argentine Protests Mrut, Syria. -- To protest >: against the attitude adopted by * Syrian Moslems toward Argen- :•! tine women, the Argentine gov- £• emment has closed its consulate 'd In Beirut. >; The consul stated that Angehtine women of the Christian jij faith marrying Syrian Moslems ij- '•£ abroad and later accompanying y their husbands to Syria sulfer g 'St. considerable hardships. On ar- 'd "0 rival in Syria they are coofined ^ X in harems as la customary with !«j & native women, and forced in S J every way to conform to the ping and trading have continued and today two little islands of the Pribllof group In the Bering sea send $800,000 worth of seal and blue fox furs to the St. Louis . fur rirmrket annually. Blue foxes are also* successfully ranched on many of the* Aleutian ialpads." and children were visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Young at Ringwood Sunday. . Mrs. Alice Frasier, who is visiting in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Smith, spent a few days the first of the week in the- b*wu> ot her sister, Mrs. Fuller BoofceBe, at Lake Geneva, Wis. , u '• • | Sunday visitors in the home ot Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Purvey were: Mr. and YOUR SAWS % t j?.. 9. • 'Raise Fr*ak Flowltfi ^ tendon.--A popular craz^ for tt^- Mrs "j G. Compton and Mr. and Mrs era of freak hues has led English p-y^ie Mr and Mrs. Arthur Larson, u -- ~ i-- -- A. McDonald and Sue Keith of lies % Moslem mode of life. ^ >! j ed In devefoplng green, pink, oqpng flesh-color and electric-blue tulips. $1.00 8 P. BOLCM § The McHenry Druggist Week TM Ways Laws«re always useful to those who imsruns nnil vexatious to those who G^ISM^^BOUWEAPK. •fiiilsaiA. horticulturists into an brgy of jexperiment. One grower has succeed- S| oq^nge, • HM RtlUnd of D«|y Among Egyptian peasantry every family raises Its own poultry and eik ery village has a public Incubator^ where all of the eggs are sent to be hatched, thus relieving the hen ot heavy domestic cares. S Vf-¥.5fS ^ . iA He Has To ! The more liberal a man Is Ittg money on a vacation, Ihe tighter he becomes when he returns home.-- lUdMaoo.. ^^ ' H«t So Stele We are, more or less, a stole race, bot very few of ust are able to realat the temptation publicly to reveal the wounds and contusions which Injus tlce and affliction have Inflicted ap oa Philadelphia Public Le4||r ; :-- " WWre Pleasar* Uee '^-vy Owning the richest treasure In the world is useless unless some one alas -M^hai^ss t>ew. • Sawrieaa MsgaHa*. :<u. Plaines and Mr. and Mrs. L B. Cojap- {< • ton of Woodstock. Mat Weber, daughter. Laura, andk son, Joe, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Weber1 and baby and Mrs. Anna Howard and son, Donald, were guests in the home of Mr. and Mr^Leo Lawson at Waukegan Sundd^P Their little soti, Thomas, celebrated hia second birth day on this day. Mrs. Mary Simons spent several days last week n Chicago, where her daughter, Mrs. Hoffmeier, underwent an operation. . Mr. and Mrs. Ed Thurlwell and son and John Thurlwell of Rockford were Sunday visitors in the home of their brother, Frank, a^d family. ^With a savings account in this strong bank, you Slave money at your finger tips, to use whent |uid where you wish it. And while it is on deposit here it is earning money lor you. Why 4ipt start an account today? It-takes but little, laid thm you are playing safe. ff-' & £We Puy 3 % InterekJ "The Bank That Service Built" -X'"' -