h mm! A very enjoyable time “(lull by evvryone present. nu. Dunman Mr. and Mrs‘ C a.“ did Mr. and Mu\ Albert m to Yorhflle list Sat- flgb ad want be thy: ï¬ll:- 1;- 29th. The beautiful ground- .r. W an appropriate setting for' the many which took place immed- m after a sumptuous fem had The Taupochon Campï¬re Girls held a ceremonial meeting and picnic m on the Weinhgimer lawn on [agitation is amended to a" W Ind friends to nttend. 0†of the best things Mr. Benâ€" “ aid in his wonderful lecture at Q. mhuqua on Saturday eveninl .3 "Pay your mhlcï¬ptim." It Dov-an Grove people do not take .7 of the many other wanderfnl thing-n he slid to heart. we sincerely up; they will take this particuiar d Mela Imam in honor of '3. Edward Reno, who performed 3! D Mumps here on that eve-lag†Inlaoisonnofunmostpopdn â€be“ of chat cranium. The Ladies Aid Sodety of the Con- muonal Church will meet Thurs- hy. July 115 at 1-30 1». m, at the h of Mrs. Perkin, Ill 01km! m. In. Boon ad In. Harper will assist in entertaining A cor- We situation right into number on. See “The Flapper" at the Die- h Mn Stturday. July 10. adv. It. and In. H. 8. Flinn enter- “ at dinner on Thursday even- I. flaunt! right in 1nd flappal {at out and flawed right in m. u! like the story of the duel. “'1 it? But no, its Um story of to. Olive Thomas flops am of one E M In.) 160: and 10th. Mnmpidunhmtuw - Nounâ€"M's nyin‘ Mm: Youulkmwlutupotlm Ia. Taiwan-own“: Ice- ~hh'l’hefmn6hm"flthe - -4.. Q: an and I’ll"- H «Immmhmrm and» WW lend-q Saturday “(M M; Tuesday It u said am lanai†I had on from Ink- mlong long-t a ("I who won vd- Farmer’s and Merchant’s Bank A State Institution under State Supervision Established 1892 Do you realize that unless you do you are phyla; with ï¬re? Begin TODAY to save some portion of every dollar you cum. Open a S‘vinga Account in this bank and let us help you save. How Much of Your Income Do Y-O-U Save? D0 you know that you The Corner Grocery VA Nnh Phone No. 8 If You Buy It at The ‘ Corner Grocery It Is Good. BACK OF EVERY SALE IS A RECORD OF TWENTY NINE YEARS OF SQUARE DEALING should save a part of every dollar you Saturday’s game m peppy and fast and was more or less I pitcher‘s :battle except for the numerous er. =rors which counted for many hits. lAltho flue bells were Mic. they idispluyed a Wt brand of be". hurling. The Htmlin Dodgers a! Chicago, a ï¬ollection of semi-pro’s and ex- ;big league try out: triumphed over ttbe locus in a mat game, 8 to 3. The locals were considerably handicapped ‘by not ‘nnving 1 sufl‘iciency of hurl- !ing material. Sunday’s game was a rather gruel- some Mair. The pitching of Matty. of Lnernge was the feature or a freaï¬ of the game. He used a flow "goof†hull which was so slow you couldn’t hit it. Not once during his six innings: of ï¬ghting did he put a fast one in the groove. For the lo- cals' mm and. arm did m4 and.» It was a week-end of success, winning two and losing one. The Io- t-als copped two hot tilts from the La Grange team, winning the Saturday m§m4undthe80ndaygnme9 Win 'l'vo Fr.- L-Gnnpâ€"la-e to Ila-II Dodgers. 1 Sent Pro Ch. of an“ LEGION TAKES TWOâ€"DROPS ONE OVER WEEK END Chic-go diceâ€"so I.†the Martial. For the put flirty-nine you: Father Delay-rt h- m the m of the Winston ell-nu. proceeding M be was pastor n: Nani-vino for 10 mm Kmuhemhyeverypï¬mm hymn of his {1% In this vichity, lhefmrnl'l‘uesdaymahrpm.] 01. than B. (halvi- numdtd 1k tours] on My at an Ru. Wm. OIL-â€n, who run buried n View Wan-hrofplfl-hldn' mum-IMMM“ ï¬le. Theyvfllpuunilmnu fauRMhMmfl‘h-WW‘ [‘0er in; 0' â€a Fox flvcr. They The Legion team 1);er of than â€Intro-Gnu Best of Ygr. men is no doubt that the belt (Addition-l Locals on page 5) By Scribe. lunatic“: of the On Wednesday. June 30th, Miss Co- letta H. Riedy of Lisle, and Mr. D. L. Bannister were united in the holy bonds of matrimony at 88. Peter . Paul Church. Rev. Herman Ree" flout-ed the double ring ceremony. Little [mine Rechemnacher. an flow: er glfly'm a dress of pile blue or- gandy and lies. lute Media a six, airplane which went over from An- rora Sunday to carry passengers at ten dollars per eon-y did a rushing business all day long. At times then were as many as ï¬ve or six awaiting ltheir turn to go aloft. The plane IA the property of {our Aurora young men who bought for this purpose. § The youngest to view West Chica- lgo from the skies was Worth Norris son of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Norris. He is the hero of all the kids in town today. The oldest was D. E. Wright. and D. E enjoyed every minute of it,: if anyone should ask you. Two young ladies took the trip tooâ€"Stella Wort: and Alice Gregory. In all 25 flights were made during the day. This is hunted by the fact that the In, Sacred Al.“ in Airplane at WEST CHICAGO FOLKS PROVE TO BE HIGH FLYERS Toul ................. 40 O u 0 Two hue himâ€"Cooke. P‘mko, Binder. "thick; Hm n1.â€" Coole. 170m but hitâ€"41mâ€. Struck out, by laminarâ€"5 in 5 im- im; by Bram. 4 in 4 innings. m hose on balls E‘nninger l; Brutus I: Erickson I. Donbk- MIyâ€"Cgrpentor Hun“- Dodger; Klein I! .. Hawkins If lot-Ml ab . Cam-(er :3 Curtis. lb - Binder 2!) ..I Dal-cu P-lf lrivkh cl . to (Mn! on Biuler‘u double. Shain- 3" mingled to left flooring Curtis. ‘lud Binder. Ilrh'kh got on by an rmr tad Null fluinhod the tuning That wan I" the ext-ï¬lament {or (M thy The eighth inulng looked like t'm- big smoke but the rally cmk‘d with Nuh taking [hm swim for the (MM out. Cum» vandal and wont West Chicagoans are high flyers. RIEDYâ€"BANNIS’I‘ER fl-nlin First to Score. Ehninger started the twirling {or the locals and was going good until the ï¬fth when a home run, a double and a single pushed three runs across and drove him from the slab. Bruns‘ was called in to ï¬nish the job. In‘ ‘ the third Hamlin scored twice when! Miller got a triple on several fluke) bounces. His gmunder was straight for Curtis but hit a pebble and leap- ed over his head. Klein went after the ball and it evidently struck amp ther pebble for it went over his head i for a triple. Sachs singled scoring 1 Miller. After Sachs scored on al single by Cooke “Herb" tightened up ' and fanned the next tw.o Cooke got 1 his homer in the ï¬fth after Miller had singled. His blow sailed far overl Hawkins' head and lit somewhere be- yond the creek. A crowd a! 600, (more or less, use your own judg- ment) looked for the ball but have not found it yet. With the bog: fullI in the sixth Moclwl tried for home . Ibut was flagged bv Sachs In the, “Heath Mrvickn doubled and scomd‘ cu Nnh'n roller to hhort. Naxh tiiull' to some from second on Mochel'u a binxle back of short was thrown not. i «meduwyurmphydmlm depeMeuceDdyAtmn‘guneMl of thrills Ind good held-strong base- hall. The Hamlin Dodgers are a real l-all club and have some brainy play. em among them. The locals fought hard from thq start but could not rat the runs across. Several times they had men on the sacks with none gone and" they failed to ship a man across the plate. Cooke Star of the Game. ml as ushers. The Hamlin Dodgers have a third Ninetwï¬ve relatives and friends of baseman ‘of no mean ability. He the couple attended the reception and played a stellar game. Not only wm enjoyed the day at the home of the his fielding and handling of the sack bride's parents on Center street. good but his batting was rare. He “I? happy couple have gone for a travelled to the plate ï¬ve times and two weeks’ motor trip to Early and each time registered. A home mu. Cami, Iowa. where they are visiting a double‘and three singles were the relatives. They will he at home to extent of his «mm- with the stick|their friends at their home at 32 Colâ€" which drove three runs sense the 10mm" 8V6» Napérville. ~Clarion. Gme ABRHSR A" R H 3|! he†7"; .J 0 2 '9‘ 6 If a mpmmtath‘e of one 0! :ho Iarxwt telephone uncrfl In the big- yc-st city. requimd mrviu- in one o! the smallâ€: rxchanmx in the mart-st hamlet. the Telephone Sy-tcm has anticipated the need. It in than in n tiny ouhango. ‘ v In onto-r to mint-In this ohnln nyn-I tom of exchnnm 3nd pmvtde hem-1 tics nn-l pay )wlp. Ill :djmtmenl 0! rate» in yucca-nary. It in the Imu- thlnp that count. A littlo- uflllnr- mu by new tuba-ï¬ber. to um tn Inn MW In rum: and the Mg, hood Tum-e Swarm an hr up- I It is the little things that count in ‘these days. The little things that ‘perhaps slip by the, average obser- !vor during trying times. But they |exist just the same. ‘ In maintaining a. 'l‘olcphonq 8y;- tem, rate: are adjusted to equitably ï¬t conditions. But this confinuous chain of do» my of tiny. small and large exclmn~ gm mnlu- the Big System, and pro vidl‘ the same facilities for local and long disztanw. as can be obtained in the biggest clly. I For instance ~â€" scattercd around over the suburban territory of the Chicago Telephone Company, are do:- ens of small Telephone Exchanges. Some very small, in fact, tiny would better describe them. The amount of business done in ‘these dozens of small and tiny exchanges would not ï¬ll a fair sized pill-box and the pm-l ï¬t requires a microscope to ï¬nd it. 1 3 Large Cans Tomatoes . 3 Large Cans Sour Krout Large Can Spinach ...... Ginger Snaps in k s 2 Packages Com . Canon Cans Sorghum. 1.85 About 25 pair Misses Strap Pumpé and Ankle Ties in patent leather and gun metal; $4.00 to $6.50 values. Good assortment of sizes. Any pair at . .3250 ear of the bride. won: named not owr pink silk faundntion and cardod pink roses. The bride's gown of white ‘hanneuse was embroidered with me- talie beads. Her veil was held in place with sprays of forget‘meonots and she carried a‘shower bouquet of white roses and sweet peas. The groom was attended by Em- mett Riedy as best man. George Wil- helmi of Joliet, and Dewey Riedy act» ml as ushers. About 12 P N Corsets, small sizes, sold formerly at $2.00 to $3.00 each. To close this lot we will sell them @ . .50c $1.25 Bleached Turkish Towels @ $1.00 Bleached Turkish Towels @ . 75c Bleached Turkish Towels @ .. Thermos Bottles and Lunch Boxes. They are ï¬ne for that auto or picnic trip From $2.50 to $5.50 They are made attractiveâ€"these EIFFEL MAID Union Suitsâ€"of dainty nainsook, hatiste and sill: mull. Fash- ioned for perfect comfort, in bodice style with elastic band at waist and shoulder straps of silk ribbon. “But- tonless.†Fine knitted Union Suits U N SING i213"..23e33§§i" ‘i‘fn‘: ‘ - Suits and also two piece THE BROAD VIEW ' EAR Eiï¬el Maid Union Suits are selling his now. public â€who. AdVOHWI Turkish Towel Special Good, Strong Heavy Towels for the Bath A Corset Special By K. F. C. GROCERJES The rest is â€say. We help yd“. Start with $1.00 The First Thousand is the Hardest. above makes esare pricedssa at 81.50,].165, .75.].79.l.85 .2.00..2.25.2.50 3.00 sea in all styles if ou -â€" insist on wearing knit underwear. UNSINGWEAR Union Suits and also two piece suits will give abso- lute perfect satisfaction. Garments in all the above makes are priced at Which is simply another way of sayingâ€"â€" Fine knitted Union Suits for women and mi» FIRST NATIONAL BANK Stead) Heating - Sewer Building Gas Fitting Get the Habit of SAVING Large Can Pork Beans in Tomatn Sauce. Fancy Stewing Figs. per pound ........... gatmpuper @3th ........................ [Fred D. Heinke PLU M BINQ Downers Grove. Illinois. Telephone Sl-R 52¢