McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 26 Apr 1934, p. 2

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... . ' . - ltpTm PLAXNDEALER Thandty, April 98,1934 Gon/ult the, "Beware of little expenses; a small leak willp* k a gr&t ship." APRIL ;.V:-' 23--Hrtt operation ISr *p« pendicitii performed, 1887. Jpain starts her taring T war on U.S.. 1898. • 'ft* - T arrhwi from ^ France to help U.S.. 1777. t , _ K--First lod(C of Odd Feli ' ' 'lows opens at Washiric* •; ton, 1819. S. Grant, the i«U» ' ' . . . President, born 1S22. , M -Surrey shows only 5,000 radio sets in U. S., 1920. pn Jo dMr 29--Coxey leads his famous army on Washington. v.- «w Have Yotr Eyes Tested y --BY-- Dr. C. Keller 45 Tears' Experience Sundays and Mondays at my Summer Home, Riverside Drive, McHenry, III. All Work Guaranteed Tel. 211-R GONNEL M. MiDERMOTT ATTORNEY-A T-L. AW I! to 11 a. m.; 1:30 to 5 p. m. Evenings, 7 to 8 Phone 238 Fries Balking McHcarj, in. KENT & COMPANY AD Kinda of 1NBUBANCI Placed with the aiost •• Ceeipaeke Omm la talk H Nepfccoe No. toe v Mil A Kfiiuiiaptfgv agent* far all h tM be WB8T MeHKNRT . - ILLINOIS Qur lie's Repair Shop fansrly Pfst'a BtacksaritJi Skop--Pearl St Radiator* Repaired, Bodies and Fenders 8traigfatened Sign Painting Truck Lettering Acetylene Welding CHARLES RIETESEL Downs Motor Express The Pioneer Line Operates daily between McHenry and Chicago Phones: Wabash McHenry 7518 1256 A. P. Freund Excavating Contractor Tracking, Hydraulic and Crane Sonrico . 'v Road Building' • ttl 404-M McHenry, m AttmpM from ik* Celebrated Staoe Phjf Ay EDNA GIOROI FEftBER *"• KAUFMAN A fcya Mm* • • T 7 * C H A P T E R I I I ,lt%LUFP. AND A SHOWDOWN Mm Kane had bad news for Larry Renault. Baumann, who had verbally tgreed to star Larry in the play the tun star had brought to him, had Kne sour on the ides and was going uth for his health,.after turning the play over to Jo 8tengeL Larry's irrath was assuaged at the prospect 11 appearing under Stengel '• management until Max told him * that Stengel had engaged Cecil Bellamy for the Stellar role, and that it might fee possible for him to persuade Bten- K1 -- Max had ones been, his office y -- to. give Larry the C0le of the feeach-combez. v Then Larry want up in the air. "You're asking SM to go on and play a part that has but one seenef Bo on -- get out I Get cut!" With the native shrewdness of an actor's agent, Max persuaded the nut film star that the role of the beach-comber dominated the play -- that the audience would be waiting for him to reappear until the very end. "A pushover, Larry! At the end the audience will be yelling for fou while Bellamy takes .'the bows! 'm going to see Stengel right away. It 'a just what you need to build you up for the talkiesl" "He mustn't think I'm after the part, Max. Make him come to me." "Now, Larry, it isn't done that way. You're an actor... Well- maybe hell come to .see you -- as a - favor to me. I was Jo's office boy once." 80 the great film star of the silent days waited for the great New York stage producer to come to his hotel and offer him a role of but one scene in the play he had picked himself as a stellar vehicle to prepare the way for a comeback in the talkiesl And while he waited, the management of the hotel arrived, asking that he The nurse'entered at thB moment, and announced that Oliver Jordan, seeming quite ill, was in ths watting 1 room. Lucy Talbot retired at ones while Dr. Talbot had Jordan in fori an examination. He tries to keep the seriousness of his diagnosis coronary artery, thrombosis *»a Jordan but the lajtter let the phyrieian understand *• was not deceived. , He might live for months, .weeks, l perhaps only days. While MUUeeat Jordan was hav-] ing her own troubles preparing for the dinner that night --- ths aspic didn't "s*t" and the eook had to throw it out, ths lobster had gone bad and Rieci couldn't m oat for more because he had quaneled over the maid with a fellow servant, stabbed him and beea arrested -- Oliver came home from ths Doctor s pale and weak, and Carlotta Vance breezed in. having totally forgotten she was dining there at eight, ana upset OliveT further by confirming the report he had from his offiee that she had sold her Jordan stock. Other stockholders had sold, or been approached, and Jordan knew that someone was trying to get his shipping line away from him. As if. that wasn't enough, Paula tried to tell her mother about the state of het feelings for her fiance and her relations with Larry Renault. Luckily for Paula, Millicent was too distracted to listen to her... The climax of' her troubles about that unlucky dinner came a few minutes later. The Ferncliffes's secretary 'phoned that Lord and Lady Ferncliffe couldn't attend the dinner --they had just left for Florida! The financial wizard, boss of Wall Street, came back from Washington, 1 with the offer of a cabinet job, only 1 to meet discord and opposition in his domestic establishment. Kitty flatly refused to. live in Washington r$m little tattle- !" tifti •He wufkt (iw /air marnikt. matkt, perhmp* --if dipt. pay his Mil, aasettlod fsr several weeks, as ths cashier coaM halaaca his books. Larry priakil Ike next day, and sought to S. H. Freund & Son CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS ffcrn 127-R McHenry Ow expericnos is at Tour Strriot in building Tour Wants T: is few smcs dollars from his agent Is tide him over. Bat Max had Men "temahed" too frequently, and rehill Larry was driven to samsssa ,a favsvite bellboy and ssad him oat ; to try to pawn the silver frame for l Paula's photograph, the gold, dia> iaMasd-otaddsd links from his shirt caffs to raise the price of a driakl Dr. Talbot was remonstrating with Kitty Packard, oVer his office telephone, for aahiag him to call on her daring his office hours, whsa his wife, L*uey, wrea-like, faded but pes- |sessed of both poise and power, entered, and listened. TJpoa eatckiag {sight of his wifs, Dr. Talbot I switched to his eool, profeesioi jsaanner, but Lucy quickly let him [understand that she knew he b been having another "affair" with the lady on the telephone. "I'm not going to make a scene," she told him. ' * I knew when it started -- the affair with Kitty Packard. Remember how nieely behaved about the others! Don think I don't mind, but 1 can't let it tear me any more, as it did at first, to know my noble young phy jaician-husband was just a masher!" I "1 don't know why you've stayed [With me all these years. Lucy Why Ididyout" ' '1 " Because 1 'm still in love with you. These other women -- it's just like gambling, or drinking, or drugs. You just keep on." "Ill never see her again--" • "Nonsense!1 You are seeing her tonight at the Jordans' dinner. I've good sews for ytm. Youi mm has decided what he wants to be when he grows up. -- a doctor liho' his f ather--' and miagle with the faded, frumpy wives of the other eabiaet members. Paskard tried kis basiaess methods ea Kitty and foaad they wouldn't work. Tfcey were seen in tks midst of a Mtter quarrel; recriminations Sow thick and fast. Kitty's Irisk •v was up: ske let Daa Packard knew he want the only maa ia her >ife -- that while he had beea patting ever his crooked deals, little Kitty kada't beea sittiag at heme with folded haads just waiting for daddy to eoaae homo. For all his threats, Packard eoalda t get from Kitty the anas of ths saaa she'd boa carrying oa with. Wild with fary, ke cried: "111 divorce yen! Ill get detectives! Yon woa't get a cadi" "I won't kave to get detectives), to prove wkat I've got oa you!"1, shrilled Kitty. " Stealing from Delehanty and the Thompsons, gyping old maa Clarke, and now this Jordan -- skinning him out of his eye-1 teeth! When I tell whst I know you can't get into politics! You; can't get into anything -- not even! the men's room at the Astor!" "You poisonous little rsttle-, snake!" cried Packard, " choking! with wra"th." I'm through with you! I'm..." "Oh no you ain't! You ain't ' gonna walk out on me! I've got you where 1 want you. Big Boy, andi you '11 squirm. Listen while 1 run off the mouth, you 're gonna let that Jordan stock stay where it is, or I'11 spill the beans to old man Jordan tonight, in front of this Ferncliffct. ou re goin' to turn back the stoek you chiseled him out of or I'll broad, cast the whole rotten deal and when I open my trap you can beat it back to Montana! Polities for huhl"- you -- And Daa Packard^acw shs mcaat HOW TO BUILD By tEONARD A. BARRETT ' Will western civilization be annihilated? Some persons are convinced that it has already started on a decline which will gradually gain In m o m e n t u m u n t i l little shall remain as a witness to the most prosperous peripd in American hlgtor y. Those more, optimistically Inclined grant the seriousness of the present economic disorder, but have sufficient faith In the moral integrity of the country to convincingly affirm that all will be well again. Out of all past depression periods we have successfully emerged and this one will prove no exception to rule. Perhaps It will help to clarify one's .attitude toward this disputed problem if wo ask, what do we mean by civilisation? The dictionary defines the word "as a conditlow"of organization, enlightenment and progress." Civilisation, then, is a condition of organized society. Without society we cannot have a civilization. The social group Is the prime requisite and up6n its enlightenment, moral, Intellectual and spiritual, does civilization depend. This is quite a different p6int of View from that one which makes the security of civilization depend upon skyscrapers, automobiles, airplanes, banks flooded with money, palatial ships, marble palaces, or whether United States Steel or American Can goes Up ten points or drops twenty, or the regulation of the tariff. All attempts to perpetuate a civilization upon these terms is already doomed, as witnessed in the fall of the Roman empfre. It is like building a house upon the sand which soon falls because it is not able to withstand the fury of the wind and storm. Civilization is an outward expression of the inner soul of a nation. Its security depends upon spiritual qualities and not upon size, bulk, weight ar speed. What we need to do is to cultivate a deeper faith In the moral order of the universe and through its expression In our dally toll, build a house upon the foundation of integrity, righteousness and justice. Civilization is a condition of fyfe and not a Babel tower of stone or' steel. ® by Western Newspaper Union. QABBY QERTIE CatsifUlaw Big Eaton "Probably no crsatnre cats mora la its existence than a silkworm caterpillar," writes an authority. In "WondOrs of Animal Life." The lifetime capacity of one of thsaa caterpillars Is approximately 4,700 times Its own Initial Wright Fonrtooatk Centnry Frw^sW Fourteenth century frescoes havo keen found in a church at Ho tone*. Italy. bum 0 "Nuts grow meetly on family traaa." Stella Sets Record Whoa There Were No Flowere There ware no flowere oa earth dar> lag very early stagee of Its history. TOLO Mr. and Mrs. John Capaller and family of Chicago spent Saturday here with the tatter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. Roesduestcher. Many friends, relatives and neighbors are very sorry to learn that' Mrs. G. A. Vasey is seriously ill at this writing. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Harvey and family of Wauconda spent Friday evening1 at the home of Mir. and Mrs. Frank St. George. s Miss Dorothy Witt of Grisiwold Lake is n$w employed at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Dunker. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and family visited the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hafer at Fremont. Mrs. Fred Nordmeyer and daughter of Slocum Lake visited Mrs. G. A. Vasey Wednesday. Mrs. Eart Donley attended a surprise shower in honor of Mrs. Henry Ortmann, nee Grace Moffett, at the home of Mrs. John Gosselle in Wauconda, Wednesday evening. Miss Eileen Magnus sen of Fremont called at the home of M!r. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher Wednesday. Mrs. Charles Rossman and son, Mrs. William Wright of Barreville, visited Mrs. G. A. Vasey Tuesday. Mrs. Frank St. George and Mrs. Earl Donley spent Friday in Berwyn at the home of Mir. and Mrs. Richard Dusil. Mr a. E. Lockwood of Richmond spent the past week with her sister, Mrs. G. A. Vasey. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dalvin and family of Wauconda spent Sunday at the home of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. George^ Dowell. Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and family, Mrs. Esse Fisher, visited, Miss Edna Fisher at Waukegan Saturday. Mr. and Mr. Lloyd Benwell and daughters of West' McHenry, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rossman and son, Mr and Mrs. William Wright of Barreville spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Vasey. The Volo baseball team played the Round Lake team-at Renehan's Park Siimday. The Volo team won with a score of 5-2. Mra Ray Seymour of Wauconda, Mrs. Frank Hlarrison of Chicago visited Mrs. Esse Fisher, Sunday. Mrs. Lee Anderson and daughter of Terra Cotta visited Mrs. G. A, Vasey Tuesday. Mrs. Esse Fisher spent a few days the past week with her daughter, Mrs. Richard Dowell. Miss Frances Wiser, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wiser passed away at the St. Theresa hospital Friday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. A private funeral was hald Saturday afternoon at four o'clock in St Peter's church. Interment in the 8t Peter's cemetery at Volo. Richard Cronin of Chicago spent the week-end here at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hironimus. Mr. and Mrs. Ed! Bacon and family of Round Lake were Sunday dinner guests at the home of Mrs. E. Bacon. Mrs. George Scheid, Jr., and daughter, of Wauconda were Sunday supper guests at the nome of Mr. and Mra. Lloyd Fisher. Adolph Waldmann of Chicago spent the past week here at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Waldmann. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Donley motored to Chicago on business Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Passfield, Mrs. Clark Nicholls, Mrs. Richard Dowell were Elgin shoppers Tuesday. , Pattie Briggs of McHenry spent Thursday afternoon with Ellen Hironimus. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rosing and famtily of McHenry called on Mr. and Mrs. B- Rosing Sunday . Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hironimus and family of McHenry spent Sunday here at the homte of Mr. and Mrs. Frank HKronimuq. G. A. Vasey called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L> C. Benwell, treat of McHenry, iSunday. Misses Edna Fisher and Jeanette Warren of Waukegan $pent Monday here at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher. Mr. and Mrs. John Wirt® of Waukegan spent Wednesday here at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Wirtz. Mr. and Mta. Joseph Lenzen spent Tuesday evening at the, home of Mr. and Mrs. Alex Martini at Wauconda. John Wortz visited Peter Wortz in Chicago Tuesday. Mrs. J. W. Wagner of Chicago spent a few days here the /past week with hw daughter, Mrs. Eddyx\ Rosadeutscner. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Tompkins of Libertyville called on Mr. and ^trs. Herbert Michalson Wednesday. Miss Priscilla Wagner spent Tuesday at Wauconda with her sister, Mrs. A. Wagner. Mjr. and MVs. Frank Rosing and family of McHenry called on Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher Sunday evening. Mrs. Alex Martini and aon of Wauconda called on Mm J. F. Wagner Tuesday. Miss Emima Vogt spent Saturday in Waukegan with relatives. John Molidor of Grass Lake called on Mir. and Mrs. Albert Rosing Thursday evening. Mrs. Charles Miller and son of Libertyville spent Wednesday here at the horn* of her paranta, Mr. and Vra» John Ocffling. Mrs. Bud Ford of Wauconda visited her mother, Mrs. Catherine Frost, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Tompkina^di Libertyville spent Thursday here wft^k Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Michalson. Frank Rossdeutscher attended ft meeting of Veterans of Foreign WarBt Post 2486, at Crystal Lake, Sunday. , Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Freund Richmond visited Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lenzen and Mr. and Mra. Joseph Wa$« ner, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Maypole of Fo* ' Lake visited Mr. and Mrs. Herbert, < Michalson Friday. 1? _' John Molidor of Grass Lake apeiifcr Sunday with his mother, Mrs. Catherine Molidor- ~ Joseph Lenzen and Paul O'Leary attended a Firestone meeting at thgt - Waukegan Hotel Friday evening*. Mrs. Joseph Wagner and daughter* v Bpent Wednesday in Chicago with Mi*/ . Cook. l':' Mrs .A. J. Martini and son of Wauconda called on Mra. J; f, Wagner Thnraday. • Adoke Houses In Andee Houses In the Indian Tillages of Ckf Andes mountains are made of adob* and usually thatched with graat No Fir* in VolcaaoM There Is no fire In volcanoes; motfar. ,. lava causes the rlow. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES "Doctrine of Atonement" was the subject of the Lesson-Sermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, April 22. The Golden Text was, "We also joy In God through our Lord JesuS Christ, by whom we have now received the atonement" (Romana 5:11). Among the citations which com* prised the Lesson-Sermon was thefollowing from the Bible: "I exhort; therefore, that, first of all, supplications, prayers, intercessions, and . giving of thanks, be made for all ' en; For there is one God, and oner ' iator between God and men, the ian Christ Jesus" (I Timothy 2: 1,5). « The Lesson-Sermon also Inr eluded the following passages from the Christian Science textbook^ "Science and Health with Key to tho Scriptures," by Mary Baker Eddy: "Wearing In part a human fotm (that is, as it seemed to mortal . view), being conceived by a human mother, Jesus was the mediator between Spirit and the flesh, between Truth and error. Explaining and^ demonstrating the way of divine Science, he became the way of salvation to all who accepted his word" (& 816). gives you cd no extra cost • 'a -SV ii'.,• aline Stella Walsh, th« sensational Polish- . AmeHcan speed queen. Is shown winning' the 200-meter event at the women's national Indoor track championships in the Brooklyn naval armory. She covered the distance In the world record breaking time of 26 seconds flat An already is let out to keep in motors By n«w adjustanmti in ths control room. Standard Oil rtffining enginaots have convartad the heavier, slower parta of an already excellent gasoline into lighter, fasteracting units--in other worda, into more Live Povrtt Thia reaerve of Live Power in Standard Red Crown Superfuel is like extra money in the bank. Tou can draw on it to aecure whatever super-performance you want... For swifter pick-up For higher top speed Drive in where you eee the familiar Red Crown globe end get a tanfcful of thia new Superfuel. See for youraelf how Lire Power give* you more for your money. STANDARD RED CROWN Capr IHiaMMOOOa SUPERFUE At All itaetfard eil ttaMeaa «nd Bealera. Metrlketere ef *«lee Tlree For easier climbing For longer mileage' , i S\R, \ VANf" a eor \ -CCVAOWSOW I WASTA MARCH \R -\*ve K RRTWO J • • ... •>'. --.V "

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