McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Aug 1930, p. 8

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McHenry, 111. SHOWS EVERY NIGHT THURSDAY -- FRIDAY Aug. 14-15 Alice White in "PLAYING AROUND" ^ SATURDAY "ON THE BORDER" • 'S _ T with . / •;p:^';:l^-Tin-Tin ' SUNDAY -- MONDAY Sunday Matinee 2:30 % jNorma Shearer in "THE DIVORCEE" • * TUESDAY WEDNESDAY United Artists Presents "THE LOCKED DOOR" "iS&'i. All Pictures Are Vitaphone Talking Productions CHICAGO LAWYER CATCHES TAGGED FISH H. A. Linawesver Reperta First T»|* god Fish--Crafkt Near Old Bridge The first tagged fish to be"reported to this paper was caught in Fox River Sunday, at the old bridge. The fish, which was a red horse, measured thirteen inches in length and was caught by H. A. Linaweaver, a Chicago lawyer, visiting in the Thomas McLaughlin home. On the tag were the letters L N. H. &, and the mi! ber 2,888. Fish are being tagged in the lakes and river, the work being carried on by the Illinois Natural history survey, the work having been under way in the various streams and lakes of Illinois for the last four year. Fishermen are asked to co-operate with the state by returning the tags and about ten scales from the middle of the left side of the fish to the Natural History Survey at Urbana, 111., with information showing tv~ body of water and exact locati r where the fish was taken and if pc sible the weight and length. If desired, the tag will be returned with information showing how far the fish had travelled and how much it had grown since it was first tagged. Fish are being tagged,for the purpose r f studying their migration and growl Chan* Combination* With chimes of 12 bells It is eit mated that it would require 91 years to ring all the possible changes < sequences, st the rate of two stroke per second. Woodstock is broadcasting m WJJD Monday and Wednesday mornings at 8 o'clock each week, Central Standard time. , 10 " Your Bank Book '-•u A bountifm^harvest kittle unless you save a part of the money it brings into your possession. The wheat in the bin ... the hay in the mow and the well filled silo all go naught Save the proceeds of your crop sales by putting it itu to a savings account at these banks Xour money will be safe and it vHll pay you interest and grow into a larger account. Learn to save the systematic way through a sayings account. ... &. 3 % Paid on Savings Accounts »jil'lliiiii • --^*" , 1 ) i i j* 'V - • ' * v West McHenry State Bank Peoples State Bank ;f of McHenry Y T Y Y Y : T T Y ¥ ¥ Y Y ¥ Y Y Y Y Y Y ¥ T ¥ ¥ T T ¥ Y ¥ ¥T * t Y ¥ ¥ ¥ Y Y Y Y Y Y Y ¥ J J J ¥ ¥y ¥ ¥ •'">r * "'i' - • '• X- % - 1 '> • ; 1 "Behold thou art fair my love; . . thy teeth are like a flock of sheep that are even shorn . . . thy lips like a thread of scarlet; . . . thy neck like the tower of David; thy breasts like two young (deer). Thou art fair my love . . . Thou hast ravished my heart ... thy lips . . . drop as the honey comb ... as an orchard of pomegranates, with pleasant fruits; camphire with spike-> nurd, . . . and saffron; calamus with cinnamon, with trees of frankincense, myrrh and aloes " --°S~o1l-o mon's Fourth S°o--ng. OLOMON, son of David, King of a King--in the most beautiful epic ever written in any language, two thousand nine hundred years ago--beat his sweet sounding cymbals in praise of perfume. The centuries unroll their scroll and a thousand years later Mark Anthony is wooing Cleopat/a, as Nubian slaves waft with wide palm leaves clouds of sweet incense across the decks and beneath the purple silken canopies of royal barges resting beneath the milky moonlight beside the golden shores of the amaranthine Nile. / The hour glass turns. The wise men bring to the ITasarene, in His manger ->t Bethlehem, frankin- •h* mm The Sophisticated woman has her <HTII Jpi*ferenoe in bath salts. • ' r" ' : cense and myrrh. Frankincense was the perfum® and myrrh the resinous gum to be burned, that the odors of the stable might not fret the inTant King of Peace. Again Time moves onward, and, at the betrothal feast of the King of Navarre and Margaret of Valois, a neckcloth of Maria of Cleves, bride of the Prince of Conde, was used by the young King to wipe his face. The penetrating odor of the perfume used by the Princess so fired his emotions that he forgot his betrothal vows almost in the hour of their making. There ensued the war which altered the course of a dozen kingdoms and changed the map of half a world. Odor, color, sound, the three primary needs of one's psychic life, are equally the foundation-, the key-, and the cap-stones of developed civilization. What music is to the ear, and color to the eye, so perfume is to the senses. Just as technicians can duplicate almost every musical note with a corresponding flash of color along the pan-chromatic scale, so the perfumers for FORMULA ;"/S, Bath salts of pine*-- From some fragrant garden* Quite a warm tub-- , (I beg your pardon) r Creme Velva, Rose Lathered Gardenia: Oil of the Desert Brought from Abyssinia; Dans la Nuit On the lips and the hair; Legs sheathed^ in cobtfeb-- Five dollars a pair; * " Gown by Paquin, ^ Paul Poiret or Lucille-* And that is| t hink What is called sex appeal Judy Shea. Allnring woman has her own ap- * ' , pealing fragrance in powder fee the body. ag&s have played upon the senses with fragrance, scents, and odors. Mark Twain humorously declared that Florence was the perfumery center of Europe because the City had no bath tubs. That would be reason enough, Truth knows, but the fact remains that in search of frankincense, spikenard and myrrh, the lateens, feluccas, galleys and barges stood out to sea from Florence. They braved storms and the dangers and adventures of trading with savages that they might bring back perfumes, costly, precious perfumes for every court in Europe. For a century Florence was thus the capital of the world. In Grant Park, in Chicago, a technician in the instrument room below the world famous Buckingham Too Should Knows --for the most subtle and enchanting appeal,' perfume should be applied from onehalf to twt> hours before you wish the effect to be noticed. / --finger tips lightly dipped in your chosen perfume and touched to your hair above the forehead and at tte l^Jbew#8T an added charm <• --that just a touch of scent behind the lobe of each ear is most effective. --a sweet breath carrying with it*, faint trace of your favorite odor may be had by placing just a touch to your ugj>er lip and chin.*' ' ^ . --that elusiveness in perfumery is one of its greatest charms. That it must seem tp radiate from nowhere and everywhere, and yet be only where you are. Bits of absorbent cotton moistened with your favorite perfume hung with your gowns and placed with your lingerie will bring about this quality of elusiveness. --that a little of your chosen perfume is better than a trifle too much. Fountain, plays "the llerphisto Song from Faust. Upon the flashing waters as they fall from their heights in dancing cascades the tonal qualities are transliterated into light. With the changing of the colors you may imagine the fires of Inferno, hear the thunder, see the darts of lightning; you can almost feel the resonant organ tones, yet there is no sound --just color. In some such way modern perfumers have learned to play upon the emotions with odors. The desire to be beautiful is older and stronger than the wish for comfort or luxuries. Eve, we feel, must have been beautiful, or that lovely lost garden "east of the sun and west of the moon" would not crowning glflpj.r Jiaviwu. ffl ' ?%e Dainty woman runs scented fing- . «tips through her hair, v - -' crel^fllg' Wisdom gliding along the aptfle branch tfr drive out Beauty, would not have found her worthy of his hate. Beauty, the shimmering answer to the deep hunger of mortals; beauty of the Living; beauty that is Mystery and Poetry and Faith; beauty df line; of color for the eye; beauty of sound for the soul; beauty of perfume for the senses. . Beauty is power. It opens doors that remain closed to all else. It frees the lonely from the prison of her solitude; it throws wide ther portals into Ropiance, Life and Love. Perfume and sweet odors have ever kept to the company of Beauty. At the Court of Louis XIV, where Mesdames Pompadour, the Magnificent, and Du Barry, the Cunning, held sway, the post of Court Perfumer was next to that of Cardinal Richelieu, king's adviser. There every woman had her own distinctive perfume, compounded for her own use and betrayed to none other. Balzac makes of this situati^ i^ j^ his very cleverest tales. BOLGER'S DRUG ^ Registered Pharmacists Always in Chftrge 44Always Bu»jr,f Charming woman has a touch of V' frangrant perfume here sffd . „ fipy-there upon her lingerie. You, too, may have a perfume of yoitf own. • From the salts sprinkled in your bath to the last touch before you leave for the theatre^ you may have an odeur to accompany your personality; expressive of your own self, accentuating your type and devel oping its charm with an alluring fragrance stimu toting the emotions and arousing the senses of every companion. Iu such a setting your hidden charms emerge as diamonds dazzle most in artful mountings. Constantly added to by wise and skillful choosing, Bolger's Drug Stofe. at McHenry, has developed its Department of Parfumerie until now all but the most difficult of cases may find here an odor to matrrh Won't YOU come in and let us try? rajlJ* « - isriiN*-- , " McHenry ' .w '$ '^-£1,... 'tii km. •a

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