ai •s/'ft , >-*.<• ft OBSESSIONTRAGEDY OF THE CAUSE « »" ' *•*" By Fannie Hurst I9S1, Mi'i'lurf N. W5|«1|"T Syndicate. > (V.'Sl Survlce.) blazing August fitted . down like a *«*£- hot,/.stove lid <?ver Clancey street,. -jn its way/It renUwdwi Ktta s & f „ «f the hoaxing kind of .fanaticism- hpr • T* . ' •<* father brought home to the ground , -floor, -four-room oi>arttwent, thery oet'ii-, v: <t' <• n[c<i in jr iitngv brown tenements Ktta t„ *>' wall* of their apartment tfing With *' the haranguing^ 'the iUtfe»^tive, thc^aiS- \ V - ' ' S } g ument artd tfie diatribe of hi* fnnsUi~ / '-Vf* oismvwi 'the" subject of ; better eondi- \ ' tions for day laborers in the building * 7 - /*-" ': -" trade. > ^ Of course. Ettft agreed With him. Vn«. \fier"father himself was a living argu- . • r ment, He dragged a leg from a Kt eel, '! .. beam that had felled him while worfcfng on a scaffolding of one of the most \ . spectacular office- buildings in New f York. One of his lungs was half eaten away from pnneumonia contracted while working on a building whose foundation had oozed wet slime v '• - • ... over his feet far half a winter. Etta Rouke had plenty of reason to resent the perils, the long hours, "the " " - ; exposure of a trade such as her fa-' ther's. But his haranguing was so relentless. Every spare hour was spent at the meeting hall, at union headquarters, at organizing camps. Vj The neighbors in the gaunt brown t'eneir , ment shied away from him. The chil- .,'/; i ' dren made blah-blah noises with their tongues when they saw him coming. • With the whole of her heart, Etta, . who was thirty-five, tired and disillusioned, came to hate the very name1 of the Cause t,o which her father was devoting so much of his time, his ' vitality and his strength. For twenty • yeprs, while her girlhood had slipped from her and her devotion to her fa- !>' ther had Gulled her eye -and broken her spirit, Etta.h'ad lived rebelliously in the narrow slum. After all, man had always been man's oppressor. There would always be t4 day laborers hurtling from scaffold**" ings and carrying down with them the , : . entire destinies of -helpless families r • and little children. There would al- £ • ' • • T ~ " w a y s ~ B e ' m e n " w h o w o u T d " n e v e r " T T v e ' T o ~ . '4k see the interior of the beautiful homes they created. There would always be men. forced^to live, in the squalor of airless tenements while others lived In The beauty of the homes their manual labor had constructed. Rouke was tilting at windmills, and Etta who had yearned and yearned over a period of twenty years to coax him into the country. where he could ply his building trade at the more placid work of carpentry, grew older and bitterer and more disillusioned asjj • the merciless wiliter and the merciless summers lasjied their way into the narrow aisle of Clancey street. Earlier, when her own spirit was Jigher and there had been a youth XZo had finally tired of waiting, there had been something idealistic and r.oble and exciting about Route's loyalty to the cause of his fellow laborers. All that was «one now. Rouke r-as a garrulous old fanatic. He buttonholed whoever would listen to h'.m, he! prattled of capital and labor, and vested interests. Mean- ; the men *S o bad w<-«rted side V-t side with hi® oo the f«yr a esjs^w f«r» grow*. , *«aSsSrjr: towsntae foremen ul I lUm&f jwattM of 4Hb; Ekftiua.. whl'di. while 1t r*^ * ' t >• 1 ** ' Tights, mnmbling of widow* and children, mumbling of pensions, mumbling of - organized labor, made day and night alike a nightmare. One night Etta, ina-frerisy of What plight have been actual madness, caught her father by the coat lapels as he came staggering in from a meeting around midnight and screamed out, between sobs of agony and moans of pain, her inability to prolong their kind of life. For the first time. Rouke seemed iiTffHISS' wru^of uifrits! agpny and deprivations that had been his-daughter's. The years of her dinning it at him had apparently left him unmoved and now, suddenly, lopking fit her frenzied eyes, hearing her tormented cries, he" seeffled to., uixlerstand. . . • After he succeeded In quieting her that night, Rouke agreed to sacrifice the uppermost .interest in his life-- better conditions for the day, laborer-- and move .with his daughter to the country. He admitted defeat. He admitted to the need of the chttnge of ^nvininment for them both. Afid ifee next day.'.in the ttJldst of an impassioned arid what he aijn{ »ance»l was a. llnal plea for, a pen- Tsipn jfrill for wives of laborers who ;fead beetj widowed by accident, in -th^ tfade, riouke toppled over iwid'ardpped d e a d . ; . ' « It was as ft should haye been. On fjite rostrum of liis Cause, Rouk®' had surrendered only to death. : 1 Etta felt that . way about It and secretly blessed the destiny that-had not permitted her father to live to surrender. ~ Etta still occupies the tenement in Clancy street. Taking up where her father left olf, she is the moving spirit in the movement to obtain better working conditions for the day laborer. Every day she lectures in some meeting hall or another and, by night, she harangues. The neighborhood children, when they see her coming, stiek -otft Jfcbeir tongues and cry, "Blah-blah." A decrease of approximately It1,000,- 000 in income tax figures Was Teeord- KINGWOOD % " and Mrs. Sam Rahn of Elgin spent Friday and Saturday here. Mrs. Paul Meyers of McHenry spent Thursday afternoon with her sister, Mrs. Ed Thompson. Joe Guzzardo has opened a barber shop *t the Math Welter place, where he will cut men, women and children's ed in the southern district of Illinois' hair; fnr tho firei eovor or.^ oTto-Koif i Mr. and Mrs. G. E--Shepard wire Many Names Proposed for Thirteenth Month . If a thirteenth month is added to the calendar, as many who favor calendar reform propose, what shall its name be? As yet the thirteen-month calendar is only a subject for discussion, but already George Eastman, chairman of the American committee on calendar reform, has reeclved fortyfour suggestions of names for the extra month a^ni has forwarded them to the League of Nations, which will hold an International conference on the sub; ject. Some propose that the new month be called Between, Middlemonth, Central, Medial or Mid-estival--names apparently chosen because, according to some plans, the additional month would be placed between June., and.. July. And since other positions for the new month have alto been proposed, such names as Triinavera, Primor„. Ultimo and Annular haVe been suggested. * 1 Many are In fkvor of Sbl or Helial, which are Latin for sun and a Greek derivative, respectively but others prefer Lunar, Lune, Lunes-or Luno. after the Latin for.moon. Some would follow the precedent already set in naming the months by giving the new one the name of one of the Roman goddesses Minerva, Venus or Ceres--and ofhers by giving the month a number in Latin; included in these are Trecember, Sextember, Undecember, Unciezember and Sextober. Again, it has been pointed out that the n«v name might serve to symbolize a new spirit and to that end, Liberty, Pax and Progress have been proposed. Others favor Christ, Ohristus, Salvator, Vincent, Benedict and Pius. Other names proposed thus far are: Retoador, Meton, T reiser Maxime, Evember, A vent, Vacance andWoodro. --New Jork Times. months of 1931 as compared With a similar period last year, according to a recent statement made by O. G. Addleman, collector of internal revenue- .1 Arthur P. Holt, superintendent of marketing in the department of agriculture, has made a tour of the Greene, Jersey, Pike and Calhoun county apple belt, and reports the apple harvest season well under way. The fruit is being prepared for market in a more attractive manner this year and a bumper crop; is ready for the pickers. "fWST National Encampment of the G. A. R. -w-ill be held in SpringiSeid. This was decided at Des Moines at; the recent meetmg/ Springfield being given tjie preference by unanimous consent. The last legislature appropriated $15,000 to help defray the expences of the event. This is probably the last offical meeting of this organization according to many of its members. " - State Treasurer Edward J. Barrett rejected the bids of the banks of Illinois for the deposit of state funds ot> active accounts, because the bids were for only one-half of one per cent. He told the bankers it would cost the state approximately $500,000 per year and that at this time he felt it would not be wise to accept the bids. A bill in equity has been filed in the Boone county circuit court attacking the constitutionality of the congressional reapportionment passed by the fifty-seventh general assembly. The complaint asserts that the districts as created by the act are unequal and <that voters in the seventeenth district have more than twice as much power as the voters in the fifteenth. The case will probably be carried to the supreme court before it ends. This court has steadfastly refused to take any action regarding any reapportionment acts, holding that the legislative branch <$ the state government has exclusive control of such legislation. visitors at Woodstock Friday.^ Adrian Thomas of Chicago spent Thursday and Friday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Thomas- The Home Circle will entertain the Greenwood Dorcas at the M. W. A. hall Wednesday, Oct. 14. * There_will be a Rally Day program at the M. JS. church next {Sunday < at 9:30. • Mr. and Mrs. Charles Row® of Genesa, ill.,- Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Trull of Wayne, 111., Mr. and Mrs. L. Smith a£d two children of Bartlett, 111., spent Saturday with Mrs. Lillian Stevens. John Wolfe of Woodstock was a caller in the Mrs- Jennie Bacon home, Wednesday.... , '* 'Mr. and Mrs. Lewis "Schroeder and daughter, Jessie, and Rollo Chamberlin spent" Thursday evening in Chicago. Mrs. Viola Low and Mrs, Ray Peters spent Wednesday at Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. George Herbert and Miss Lena Kelley of Woodstock spent Thursday in the S. H. Beatty home- Mrs. Frankie Stephenson and Mrs. Rillah Foss spent Thursday with Woodstock friends. , v t Mrs. Viola Low was Woodstock Thursday. . ; i > Wayne Foss spent Saturday morning at McHenry. Miss Bernice Romie and Lotus Johnson of Paddocks Lake spent Friday evening in the Frank Dix home. Mrs; Edgar Thomas and Mrs. Wm. McCannon spent Saturday afternoon at McHenry. <= Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young and Mr. and Mrs. Math Nimsgern spent Wednesday at McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Alec Anderaon and family spent Sunday-afternoon with Woodstock relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Thomas and family spent Friday at Forest Park. Mrs. Lou Smith, Mrs. Lillian Stevens, Mrs.-J. C. Pearson and C. W. Harrison attended the O. E. S- meeting at Crystal Lake Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Fuller Boutelle and sons of Lake Geneva spent Wednesday evening in the George Young home. Mrs. C. L. Harrisdn and Mrs. J. C. Pearson attended the R. N. A. convention at McHenry Wednesday. * Mr. and Mrs. G. fe. Shepard and HmJ to ExpUia Moo* the cause of »<•ods lies usually toe to be caiqudly «J^?ermiDe«L • Por <"5My all Kpirimal and invisible eompaty Uft.e as up or down A new prison to hoyse first offenders is to be erected at Joliet according to Warden Henry C. Hill. This will be _ the fourth unit hj. the prison colony family 8pent" Sunday afreraowT with at this..place, The unit will, be erected, relativesCrystal Lake. ~~ mainly by prison labor and work, will j and Mrg Charles Carr speat start at once. 'Hie new building will; Saturday afternoon in Woodstock, be a departure from established prison | Mrs. Agnes Jencks and daughter, buildings in that the prisoners will bei Mary, of Evanston and Mrs. Cal housed in dormitories instead of cellsj Bragg of Chicago spent the week-end and will eat in a common dining room, | with Mrs. Lillian Stevens. On Sunthe first floors only will be barred and i day they were dinner guests of Mr. two wire fences will form the otrtside, anti Mrs. Thomas Kane. barricades of the farm. It is felt by; Mr. and tyrs. Nick Young, Frances officals of the welfare department j Young and John Freund spent fiunthat this method will tend to remove j day afternoon at Alden. HONOR ROLL--SCHOOL Those neither absent nor tardy for September--Shirley Hawley, Pearl Smith, Robert Anderson, Betty Lou Kelley, Marion Hawley, John Doherty, Russell Laurence, Robert Low, Robert Adams, Howard Shepard, Walter Low, LeRoy Neal, Charles Thompson, Zane Grey; Betty Thompson, Doris Laurence, Shirley Neal, Audrey Merchant. Frances Dix. Shirley Carlson, Esther Smith, Rosalie Whiting, "Rtta Tuae Merchant, Amy 'Harrison fend Elsie Doberstein. ' Those having perfect spelling lessons for September--LeRoy Neal, Rnssel Laurence, Zane Grey, Robert Low. Neil Harrison had the misfortufne to fall off the slide, breaking eW« wrist and spraining the other. Mr. and MrsC James Bell of Richmond were callers in the George Young home Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Frederickson spent Sunday with relatives at Woodstock. Mr. and-Mrs. Arthur-|*eet ansi, son, Elwin, of Greenwood spent Sunday in the Charles I^eet home. Mr- and Mrs, S, G. %oe and son, Leriard, of Brooklyn, N.-V? Milled on friends here Tuesday. V Mr. and Mrs. Frank f'ay, Jr., of Kenosha spent Tuesday in the Frank Fay home. » . Mfes Wynne Kelley spent Tuesday with McHenry friends, ; Mrs. J. F- Claxton of McHenry spent Tuesday with her daughter, Mrs. George Shepard, and family. Mr. arid Mrs. Robert Schuetze of Monroe, Wis., spent Sunday in. the Dr. Hepburn home. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Weingart, Mr. and Mrs. Math Wyora and Mr. and Mrs. Peter Weber of McHenry spent Saturday evening in the George Young home. E. E. Bokemeier was a business caller at Rock^ord Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs, Frank Martin of Belleview, Fla., were callers in the W. A." Dodge home Tuesday morning. Mrs. E. C. Hawley returned to her home Tuesday evening from a visit with relatives at Morristown, Ind- Mrs. Merville Hawley and daughter, Mary Margaret, of Lake Geneva spent Saturday in the Harold Kelley home. In the afternoon all drove to -Libertyville. Mr. and Mrs. Edr Young and daughter of McHenry were callers in the George Young home Friday evening. Mesdames Ray Peters, Viola Low, S. K. peatty and Frankie Stephenson were Woodstock visitors Tuesday. Rev. and Mrs. Paul Dibble of Greenwood attended the dinner here Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Ladd, Mrs. Howard Buekland and Mrs. Rillah Foss spent Wednesday in Rock£gp4"t-. "Fir® Weather" Among foresters, "fire weather"' refers to an atmospheric condition favorable to the rapid spread of forest fires. It involves a high rate of evaporation due to a combination of high temperatures, strong winds.^w^%..low relative humidity. the inclination of the men to return to their old fcves when once they are let out. of prison after serving their terms. Hardened criminals and- old offenders will be kept either in Stateville or the old prison at Joliet. Mr. and MJrs. Lester Carr and family, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wiedrich and family and Charles Coates spent Sunday in the Fred Wiedrich home. Mr- and Mrs. W. O. Fisher spent the week-end with relatives at ; Plymouth, Ind. Frank Wiedrich and daughter vis- George R. Meyercord, president of the Meyercord company of Chicago, has advanced a plan to aid the em- j ited at McHenry Thursday" morning, ployment situation. His plan is tot William Hendrickson and Mrs. Eva prorate the available payrolls among Perkins of Richmond spent Sunday all workers instead of retaining some! afternoon in the S. H. Beatty home, at normal wages, thus affording part-j Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ray and family time employment for all workers, of Belvidere were callers in the Ray Peters home Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs- Robert McLean of Woodstock spent Sunday with Mfg. Frankie Stephenson. Using an army of 7,300 men* the Mr. and Mrs. Axel T. Carlson are State of Illinois through the highway I visiting relatives in Nebraska, department constructed 41.51 miles of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Carr and pavement and 10.46 miles of gravel > Charles Carr were visitors at Keno* This he asserts would relieve - the economic situation for this winter and reduce the need fot relief work. In Six Parts An epitaph quoted by the Natal Mercury via the Boston Traveler, reads: "In Memory of Our Fathar, Gone to Join His Appendix, His Tonsils, His Kidneys, His Ear-Drum and a Leg Prematurely Removed by a Hospital Surgeon Who Craved Experience." u School Auditorinfii 8:15 o'cloek Benefit of Athletic Association lt«t«rved seats may be obtained at Wattled an&' ^3v,?;;Boii^!8':l>rug Stores Thursday, Oct, 8 • f, # 50 rpntfi .J * i *(• i ^ , v " v '. % Mb RINGWOOD, ILLINOIS skinned, boned and rolled whole or half, lb. Smoked Butts, boneless, ib. .q.20^ Kerber's Bacon, whole or h^lf, lb. 22c Bacon Squares, lb. 10^ Kerber's Frankfurters, lb. 18* • :fetri Pot*on to Tears have a very practical purpose. An English biologist has discovered that tear fluid, even greatly diluted, is an exceedingly powerful desgjpyer of bacteria.--Popular Mechanics Magamataed brigta io h^otuwMedWec, i' 2.nf ^ ti^ere is *o }and macadam, during the week end- | eha Thursday. j;vew dimmer and dunmer it the diiaitUQfr rye* ir? Etui. , Tt»e auwinw were ««b more terl trtaiiSitiOE lor the I&ct tbat fZ>we':uub« ! ing Septmber 9. This brought th^i Eugene Thomas and w«f Wiedrich tiw future proHusmg. fcmusic? j season^ t/otal mileage of state and called on friends at Twin Lakes Sun* j aod worth its pri'n, vhile o^^yij>er ; county highway systems to 939.09, of, day evening. ' ,jbicirat Hot-Dog Staled! Nuremberg, Germany, claims the first hot-dog stand. For four centuries "The Old Sausage Bell" has served little grilled franks and sauerkraut to tourists and townsfolk. \r' '. :t, 'j/' - V: Tibbt than toe wtnteca. Ti»e one that dd.i et, ol, rsiaci,e # and. .b oies in, «aa>e in thiK particular August vm m , ,, , . , . , n.ask H. tb* face TUe nar- | „ Ttm teoemeot street ottaed smells! ' t. * A side Fables lay Baked on fite «s,W ! Fruit rotted and dripj>ed on the push earte. The a|#artment which Ella stiared with her fa titer was rancid with stale air and, to top it, K was . neeestsary becaui^e of lack of windows "to tl»e 'gas burning all day or Indulge in the alternative of sitting. sweltering in the .hot darkness. Hate began to smolder is Etta. Not against the Cause that was keepsng 'l*r' Jatlinr. fanatic that he was. |c tbe sw^ltjer of saeeitog h*!J« when he ira* »««• at hi# work, not against the ctifiing tjenetoec*. tnst a>ra;ii¥t Wet 1ither himself. Fanatic.- Fool. The o!d dream of a place In the country, even' a one-room shanty on a river front, began to press against her hlazing eyelids with a pain that was Scarcely endurable. The time had come, Etta realized to hprself, when jj was either a matter of escaping the turgid horror of. those terror-ridden days or going mad. Her father was sacrificing his life to a cause that thanked him not--sacrificing his sanity, because sometimes it seemed to Etta that the madness of frustration lay in pools in the old man's eyes, the same madness of frustration thgt might be said to lie in the pool of TBtta's heart. The days were unbearable. The nights were unbearable. The comings ' and goings of Rouke, mumbling of injustice, mumbling of workingmen'g whatever fate aoay fwt tot® It--Exchange. '• • ; , • •" AtewpbaV Part mi Ecrtii The a'njosphere is «.-ooKidered as as envelope of the earth and just as much a j^krt of the earth as tie rocks are. It gttes with the rest of the earth through space and is •fHsential to the life of the earth aod to most of the presses in operaUmb the earth spilace. A balloon suspended the air, even though It is not connected with the surface of the earth, is being carried through spaee'by the rotation of ,iha earth and by its revolution around the ' sun. This, of course, is in addition to the winds or movements of the air due to other causes. Monarch Export Arckof Henry V it I was a great sportsman and patron of the chase, wrote W. W. Greener in "The Gun and Its Development," says the Detroit News. lie was a great archer, and although generally using a long-bow, he frequently .made use of the cross-bow when shooting for wagers. At the Field of the Cloth of Gold he shot his long bow against the French cro -s-bow men and „won their applause, putting his arrows successively in the center at twelvescore yards, whilst they with their cross-bows were unable to hit the target which 747 9 mile* are high type pave-, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Peters spent ment and 191.29 miles of gravel and'Sunday night and Monday with relairiacadam, including 4.32 miles of tem-! tives at Bflvidere and Hunter, porary gravel (Jn the state bond issue. Eugene Thomas sjm|k Sunday af- 'route*.,,TWs' statement, was made by j ternoon in the AHthu#|jpKiting home rank T. Sheets, chief highway en- near McHenry. g-ineer. * ; Sunday visitors in the Mrs. Jennie " I Bacon home were Mr. and Mrs. OJnoy Federal Judge Louis FitzHenry re- Moe and daughter and Mrs. Thomaioently fined the Fleishman Yeast so° of Chicago; Mrs. James- Conway Company $3,WO on liquor conspiracy °f Libertyville, Mrs. Malissa Gould charges growing out of the activities 1 and daughter, Jane, and Melvin Wag- <yf Dominie Tarro, the Corn Products Rcr of Elgin,..Mrs- Leo Karls and son, Refining company, and others in Ma- Mrs. Eva Perkins and Wm. Hendrickcoupin county. The Corn Products son of Richmond. Refining company had already been and Mrs! Millard Mann an.l fined $10,000, Tarro is dead, others daughter, Doris, of Durand, Wis., Mr. have had their cases. settled and this: and Mrs. Homer Mann and son, Seycase ends the litigation. Attorneys for mwur and Mrs. Ada Mann of Woodthe yeast company contended that the: stock spent Sunday afternoon in the company had ceased to exist six|Edgar Thomas home. Talleyrand's Idea of Coffee Talleyrand's definition of good coffee was: "It must be pnre as an an* gel, strong as love, black as the devil and hot as hell." Saturday anil Choice Native Pot Roast, lb. Fresh Ham Roast, boned and rolled Fresh Pork Shoulder Roast with shank lb, V-r 12 ?»C Fresh Spare Ribs, lb. --12 h & Veal Shoulder Roast, rolled, boneless, lb/ 22C Pure Lard, lb. -lOo Bacon Squares, lb. -12 2C* Lake View Tomato Soup " 4 cans-j25^ Monarch Coffee, special, lb* i/., '*.->L7;':-- 32^ X lb. Fresh Liver and A lb. Sliced Bacon Fancy Tender Round Steak, lb. Veal Steak,-- 25c Grocery and Market Phone 3 Green Street months before the indictments were returned and could not be held a party to the suit, but the court did not pass on the question, and it is expected that it will eventually go to the supreme court, for final decision. Central Garage JOHNSBURG FRED J. SMITH, Proprietor Chevrolet Sales. General Automotive Repair Work Give us d t'dU when in trouble 8EPERT WELDING AND CYLINDER RBBORING Day Phone 200-J Night Phone 640-J-2 Abuses of the mothers pension fund distribution are being rapidly eliminated according to Miss Edna Zimmerman, superintendent of child welfare- Taking children from state institutions where they have been cared Mr and Mrs. Byron Hitchens of Chicago spent Wednesday night and Thursday in the F. A. Hitchens home. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Carr of Greenwood and Mr. and Mrs. William McCannon were Sunday dinner guests in tHe Merritt Cruckshank home in Elgin. In the afternoon they visited Frank Lawson, who is serioufely ill, in the Sherman hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Neal and family spent the week-end with Chicago relatives. for and returning them to their moth- Floyd. Carr of Greenwood was ers who are aided by the pension fund] caller in the Wm. McCannon home has materially lessened erpense ' and Saturday. also has handed delinquency Miff | J- V. Buekland and Miss Flora Tayblow, According to her report; j 'or Wer® Sunday dinner /guests of , Mrs. Briggs and daughter, Alice, at Another claim has been filed In | Elgrin. In the afternoon all drove to court for the gold recently dug up t Aurora. at Buffalo. James J. Rogers, one ofj ^r- and Mlt. Henry Hinzie of 'the men who discovered ihe coins is Crystal Lake and Edward Harrison the latest entrant in the court fight j °f ^'K'n spent the week-end in the for ownership of the gold. Alex M. Charles Peet home. Booth, on whose property the gold was discovered has possession of it, while Anna M. and Myrtle J. Leeds, of Lincoln, heirs of the l|ite Peter J. Leeds, who ownetl the property and is »aid to have buried the coins, claim it is part of the Leeds estate. Edward 'Jack has also made claim with Rogers because they discovered its hiding place while digging on the lot. Mrs. Viola Low and Mrs. Glenn Jackson and daughter, Marilyn, spent Monday afternoon in Greenwood and Hebron. Mr. and MrfiC George Harrison and daughter, Lora, and Charles Peet returned home Wednesday from their trip to Missouri. Mrs. B,?T. jjwttor »p«st TiMaday m Chicago. • -Is' , We desire to announce that hove secured V'. .: the agency for - SALES AND SERVICE * Also Dependable Used Cars The public is invited to come in and see us before buying an automobile <tnd let.us make'a-demonstration.. U» S» Tirol and accessories. , Storage, day or monthly. - Greasing , "washing. Repa'ting oo all makes of cars or trucks. .. •hell Gas and Oil - TELEPHONE 317 ^oo Routef U. S. li and 111. ao V . . . . * """ ,7<"7.