THK M T PLA1HBKALEK, THURSDAY, MAY Spda Glories la Part "iMnflriFi--ir-~ has issehed many put* ef Europe, but to Spain Ita to- Imtt It law apparent Pride of birth, . pride In history, pride In great works k art and literature and pride in cities whose beauty Is unequaled, have kept tbe Spaniards aloof from Imitation of •ther nations. It la true that there la A subway In Madrid, and ft broadcasting station at Seville, bat the, poetic Sharm of old Spain is still In evidence everywhere--Kxcliange. SLOCOM'S LUES STRIKING C0NVHCUG PROOF that Dirt, Air orMoirtwe caritqffixithe SEALED WCT ' • TiBcoaTladMupdtf-wKeftMtii JL proving the nets hundreds of of wen already know-- thttOcaMlBkdricR(M|tnlo(Mic ttoAbfieof end lerWtt tut. A flawkas --A--ism, barbed in oil, is swlad in stecL Do»t, dirt, moiHsre and nst cannot harm it or halt its iphi.ift' irm.de pendahW operation. irfrjfmNr has operated day after &CMya General Electric coolddo Pnwnariislty cc winAi#y- €»uppnl glatlUt has shewn why not a I'miB fi PP'jy M» «wr spanta cent for yjy. • rhy ftmmiry *• aealed sssisip • Bnflt of all Maslead porcelain llssrl, grcMist rood Monca --paslty is provided. It Is nonbli rsa be General Electric i i faithfully the rwhiwd. Prices are reasonable - -- « GENERAL •ELECTRIC Ali*ITECI lEFllUUTM Mow man AS UV A* ! #205,- if: Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Davis and daughters were business callers at McHenry last Tuesday. > Mr. and Mrs. Jack Geary wen business callers at McHenry Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Converse and daughter, Frances, were business vis-; itors at Crystal Lake Monday. Mr. and Mrs. William Foss were business callers at McHenry Thurs day. Mr. and Mrs. Emmet Geary of Fremont were callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Geary Wednesday Mrs. Wayne Bacon and Mrs. Leslie Davis and daughter, Helen, were call ers at McHenry last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews and sons were callers at Grayslake and Mundelein last Friday. Leslie Foss was a caller at Diamond Lake Saturday. Emmet Geary of Fremont was i caller at the Henry Geary home Mon day. Mr. and Itfrs. John Blomgren at tended a show at Fox River Grove last Wednesday evening. Mrs. Richard Dowell and children of Soseville were callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Davis Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Gilly and children of Barrington spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Winkler. Mrs. Leon Lara bee and son of Bristol, Wis., are visiting a few days at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Brooks. Mrs. Clara Smith spent Friday afternoon at the home of her sister, Mrs. Joseph Haas at Wauconda. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Staneck, Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Matthews and Mr. and Mrs. LaDoyt Matthews of Crystal Lake were Sunday evening visitors at the home of Mr. and lbs. Harry Matthews. Harry Geary and Horman Smith of Grayslake were Sunday evening visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Geary. Mr. and Mrs. George Lungren and Mr. and Mrs. AxeWLungren of Chicago spent Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Blomgren. Mr. and Mrs. H. Mai man of Wauconda were callers at the home of Mr. anU Mrs. Henry Geary Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs* A. W. Poss of Libertyville were callers at the home of the former's parents hare Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Williams and son of Crystal Lake were Sunday guests at the home of Mrs. Clara Smith. John and Leo Zimmer of Barrington were visitors at the home of Mr. atafl Mrs. Jack Geary Saturday night, Mts. Zimmer returned home with them after spending a few days at her home. William Foss and son, Billy, were Grayslake callers Monday evening. Myrna Bacon and Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Steinsdoerfer and children attended the township exercises at McHenry last Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Lusk and daughter, Betty Lou, of Bound Lake spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Blomgren. Mr. and Mrs* Frank Mulholland and children of Chicago spent the weekend at their farm here. Mr. and Mrs. Willard Darrell, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. LaDoyt Matthews of Crystal Lake, attended the funeral of Mrs. C. H. Esping at Moline Thursday. Mrs. John R. Knox of McHenry is spending a few days at the home of her parents here. Miss Pearl Foss snd Leslie Foss were Waukegan callers Saturday evening. LAKE SUPEHOR IAY GET NATIONAL PARK Electric Shop llione 251 Green St McHenry Jain ts* in the General Elettric Hour icatf eoery Saturday eeening aaer d nation-wide N. B. C. network, Eagliah "Prairie*1* • down la an expanse of high rolling ground destitute of trees. The term is occasionally used for a smooth, founded MIL The chalk hills In Bngland are known as the "Downs." Apostle Islands Named In Bill Before Congress Ashland, Wis.--A group of islands, nestled like precious stones in a setting of natural charm on the edge of one of the most beautiful natural harbors in the world, may become the site of a new national park. The islands, termed the Apostle group after a band of 12 rollicking brigands who called themselves the apostles and who preyed upon lone coureurs de bois on Chequamegon bay of Lake Superior in the early Seventeenth century, are as wild, rugged and beautiful as In the earliest days of Wisconsin's civilization. ,» Already the mecca of hundreds' of wealthy Americans who maintain summer homes upon Madeline Island, the largert of the group, the Apostles are to be made a national park if the efforts of Wisconsin dtisens are successful In congress. BUI Ponding in Congress. A bill Introduced by Congressman H. H. Peavey, Washburn, Wis., to establish a part, Is pending before congress now. At La Pointe, the population center of the sparsely settled Islands?, the first known dwelling in Wisconsin for white men was erected about 1658. Two Frenchmen, Pierre Radisson and Medard Chouart de Crosseilliers, built the log habitation and, according to the history of the region, "were delighted with the country and Radisson described its beauties with an eloquent pen." The country was so pleasant, so beautiful and fruitful that it grieved me to see that the world could not discover such enticing countries to live In,** wrote the French explorer.' ": Converted Indians, v.* The French remained In the w* colonizing and establishing trading posts, converting the Indians to Christianity and extending the boundaries of the French empire In Wisconsin and Minnesota. The islands remained center of this work, the trading;* post at La Pointe, occupying a! strategic position in the French fur trade. Later, when the Erltlsh obtained the territory, Madeline and the other islands flourished as local centers of the vast Northwest fur trade. La Pointe at one time was the county seat of Ashland county, losing its Identity shortly after the founding of Ashland. It still remains a center of fishing, trapping and has a population of several hundred summer Nteident& Several of the islands are unin-i habited but possess rare natural beauty In the form of sandstone3 * caves and rock formations, cut Into queer and fantastic shape by lis) waters of Lake Superior. ; _ ¥* Rnbfcer Cssis Het Melded Oootraty to what ssaa* to be the futte Hantaan lmfrr--stsn, rubber goods are not cast by pouring the me^ed material into molds. Instead the crude rubber is worked between Steam-heated rolls and at the same time the sulphur and other Ingredients are mixed In. The warm, plastic mixture is then molded and heated to vulcanise the rubber--that is, to cause the sulphur to combine with it. Farm Life Fifty Yean Age A pleasant picture of American rural life as reported in the Farm and Journal of November, 1879: "The tobacco has all been gathered In and the farmers are busy cutting corn and seeding. Their wives are making pumpkin plea. The big boys are after the girls. The little boys are after the muskrats." Education's Alas , Ike ultimate aim of education Is the building of character, without which there can be no real success, and there is no school for the development of character like the one in which we graduate by means of self- Improvement and the overcoming of difficulties.--Ralph Waldo Emerson. A Svffieitacy It Is sufficient for a man to apply himself wholly, and to continue his thoughts and care to the tendance of that spirit which Is within him, and really and truly to serve him.--Marcus Aurelius. Phone McHenry 1M-M ' JOHN OEFFUNG ; Distribute* efprima Vmnupe Distributor Sheridan Springs - Soft Drinks MtHENkY, ILLINOIS J.*-. < / V- *« * tot* Mi Frigidaire is sold with a definite guarantee, backed by General Motors* And still more important to you as a purchaser is the fact that year after year Frigidaire continues to give satisfaction long after the guarantiee has expired. If service should be (S> quired it is tendered instantly and without removing the maphmy from the premises* K . C - *3" *""i Iretrr-i -tivrr. 0 Son* VSX THK CLASSIFIED COLUMNS TOR QUICK RESULTS The Truth We Deay It has been charged that religion Is a great exaggeration of reality. . . . So is literature, art, love, politics, history; the only real thing Is the truth we deny.--K. W. Howe's Monthly. Not Em Your Best Friead Another thing your best friend wont tell you is the exact allowance the auto dealer made him on bis old car. --Des Moines Register. Boston University Has - Typewriter Orchestra Boston.--Almost any day if you stand within earshot of Boston university's college of practical arts and^f letters, you may hear a strange staccato rhythm, a novel Interpretation of a currently popular tune. Investigation will show that the weird melody, as fascinating as the, dot-dash-dot of a telegraph instrument.^ emanates from what is probably the country's only typewriter orchestra. Miss Elizabeth Carvell, instructor, Inaugurated the plan recently "to demonstrate the elasticity of the method: of using rhythm in typing." While a phonograph plays, for ex- Jample, "Parade of the Wooden Solidiers," or some other tune that lepds Itself to touch system interpretation, the 14 "musicians" sit in orchestral® formation and tap out an obbligato. ' One group devotes Its technique to> clicking out the melody, another to hammering out the second part, whilef* a third punches away at the bass. The ultimate effect Is surprisingly rhythmic. v "It may not Necessarily speed up the words per minute," Miss Carvell explains, "but it gives a uniformity td the work which otherwise is often lacking. The second aim lfr using music Is to give a new interest to tbsfe - typewriting work and key up the girtar to a new stride in their progress." TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS. SPECIAL OFF£B QtE v •(*?> «fe*. -?• O ACCOUNTS FOR {SALE |£fce following accounts are offered by the undersigned as agents, for sale to the highest bidder. The right Is reserved to reject la foil or in part any offer. Andrew Eddy, McHenry, 111., Groceries.... f 16.16 Silas Swailes, West McHenry, 111., Groceries snd Dry Goods.... 74.27 Fred Merchant, R. F. D. West McHenry, 111., Meats and Gro. 49.85 Harry Ashbaugh, Richmond, 111., Groceries Harry Ashbaugh, R. 2, Richmond, 111., Merchandise Gordon Smoak, Antioch, HL, Groceries and Mdse Jos. Hironemans, Waukegan, Groceries and Meats C. Bracher, Round Lake, HI., Groceries and Meats ,,,, Walter Robinson, Barrington, 111., Groceries and Gus Toole, Kenosha, Wis., Groceries and Meats L. W. Howard, R. F, D., Genoa, Wis., Merchandise 10.66 Piere Wasnuk, Barrington, 111., Note and Interest. 65.00 Ben^Kenebeck, R. 3, McHenry, I1L Groceries and Shoes............ 86.94 86.04 14.78 101.99 65.94 12.12 106.67 Model of Ex-Kaiser Is Target in Gallery Trondhjem, Norway. -- Trondhjeni will be boycotted by German tourists unless the shooting gallery here ceases to use models of the ex-kaiser and the German crown prince as targets. This step Is threatened by the German Traveling association in a written protest demanding the demolition of the figures, but the populace of Trondhjem is having a good laugh, for Investigation proved that the targets In question were made IB Germany and exported to Norway, The above listed accounts are guaranteed by the owners to be CORRECT and UNDISPUTED, and will be advertised for sale until sold. All bids for the purchase of the above accounts will be re- ••ived at the -office vt the undersigned. > Service IN So. State St" CHICAGO, ILLINOIS Merchants and professional men desiring to dispose of their judgments, notes and accounts wiH be given full information-on request. in Poorhousi* Husband Asks Divorce Great Falls, Mont--One of the most unusual divorce cases ever filed in a Montana court comes to Issue when Solomon T. Niles, eighty-one-year-old Civil war veteran, attempts to secure legal separation from Mrs. Johanna G. Niles, seventy-nine, on the ground of desertion. The wife, forced to Uve In the poor farm, denies her husband's allegations. In her answer, she asks that her husband be compelled either to take her bade or to provide for ber, -- v :v; S I -- . One's Home a Castle The house of every one Is to him as his castle and fortress, as well as his defense against injury and violence, as well as for his repose; this New This la not jaet a reminder; it is \ m warning that only until Jime 10 you cash in on our amnring offer off $30.00 for your oM sto*cft ^ If you do not have gas. If you hay® to make a coal or wood fire mornings, or light smelly wicks, or generate „ burners and fuss with fuel buckets, bokes or cans, or wait for wire heatp ing elements to get hot, thenjyou are just one who will appreciated clean, efficient gas stove. this MID Skelgas Siove are ad* ^febced features never before combined in any on£ stove; its impressive beauty, easy to clean enamel finish, over-size oven, sturdy construction, in fact everything a perfect stove needs, combined with clean, efficient, <juick-cooking, safe Skelgas. From one of two cylinders in a beautiful cabinet outside your home, Skelgas is supplied to your stove. You have a generous reserve on band * ^**To see that beautiful stove", said one Skelgas user, "is to fall in love with it." And we want you to see it, too. Let us show you what hundreds of Skelgas users have written praising tglis magic fuel. You, too, can have this stove and Skelgas. Payments if yon wish. But 0meinnow. . ; • Laad ef Silent Bruise During the first dky of her aurM life s Korean bride must nfet Aetfcjtfr even te her husband. rsa AS STANDASD MI UNDSKWEITSaS t | itmurmmm •M* •• I j •••!• it HMatlfctagteeiw** wfcrf Aiinh «* «»•••• 1*« MM -- -ac^-sas HZTStaTTliuN. M MM* WSfcii i)' Crmj trmm Lf, "r "*• SM«MkMl|^>r<7 l*w. IjiImI .ftk. Marly ••••traellea ••MMl lMMMM wl o J t y tmmmwmt *Mk •at M MMi am Elm Street FREUND il • t