• 3% V If/ -*•" L . ft i * -5# , •'a;/ ->.» •• >'; *' w ^. * .jit »». • •- ^ <***» »>"* „ jj£f- * r ' ' >;•* \t Tiw1'/ ' u j5^ <' ,> \ ••:**% r-^p &£? v^:-~ ; •^K.i ,-*4£ . • !•&?& • *»',% » < • >»<>"• V-3f "."*•>"( THUBSDAY, "* 'it1 'fV n""* * --'r^? ».• *" ^** •• '•.-• \"*«- „u. . • -, • r* *->•»- - ; .: ••V i «> •#"' "? :--- • , V- * * . • • ' ---" . ,-..** •!'** NO VEMBER 26,1931 - F SLOCTJM LAKE '"V^! "V ' ,"' Iffarty Matthews and sons' iobwt and Lyle, vfrere callers at Lake Zurich Saturday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bacon and „ . Children were callers at McHenry on Saturday. ^ • Mr. and Mrs. John Blomgren spent $Ut Friday at Waukegan. Ray Dowell was a business caller ' .'<& McHenry last Wednesday. ;:T 1A Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dowell and dfugh- • -^r, Alma, were callers during the 3«st week at Waukegan, Woodstock North Chicago. - Elmer Esping was( a dinner gue.t K 4 «pt the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. D. £ <Jarr at Spring Grove last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Geary and children were caUers at McHenry Saturv;' <Jay evening. Mr. and Mrs. LaDoyt Matthews of Crystal Lake were callers last Thurs- V - ^jay at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Har. Matthews. Mr. and Mrs. Anson Foss and • S; ""daughter, Mrs. Walter Cobo, of San- " ^dusky, New York, spent last week at * "•'the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Foss. ••.. , Mrs. Raymond Lusk and daughter, • - "Bt-tty Lqu, of Vol o spent Sunday at >lhe Blomgren home. - Mr, and Mrs. Ray Dow.ell assisted ^iokmfr turkeys at the home of Mr. ; ' -and Mrs. Earl Davis a few days last v vtRrcck. *. • "%, • V •" Mr. and Mrs. l£ L, Brooks : ^ wallers at Aurora last Thursday. • Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Foss and gdests and Mrs. Anson Foss spent last Wednesday evening at the home of |Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Foss at Libertys <rille. ^ Misses Dorothy and Delores Dowell ' -Spent Sunday at the home of their -grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Davis. • Mrs. W. E. Brooks and son, Ches- :i Ttiey, were business callers at McHenry ' -||ast Saturday. l'\l Mr. and Mrs. Earl Converse and " "daughter, Frances, attended the Miller r* -theatre at Woodstock last Thursday Evening. George and Tied Eplie <rf Chicago ®pent Sunday at the home of'Mr. an# •- "Mrs. Wm. Foss. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Brooks spent 1ast Friday afternoon St the home of k *"iMr. and Mrs. Wilbur Cook at Wan- ^otida. ^ ~ 4. • Mr. and Mrs. Jack Geary and chil» ^. ,'.>dren were recent visitors at the hom# Mr. and Mrs. Harry Geary. \f *• - Willard Darrell in company with ^Messrs. Owens, Elmer Rosein, Carl Brascher, John Wallace, Julius Heinr • . ~f. •jputh, George Schimming, George Zoe. - lick and Harry Bergham attended a v1 Bectional meeting of the Farm Supply' , -Co. at DeKalb last Wednesday. Robert Malcom of Chicago was a mealier Saturday afternoon at the home .. ' -of Mrs. Clar^ Smith. Elmer Esping attended a Fuller ' 1Bru.<h banquet at the Edgewatef Beach hotel in Chicago Saturday night 7 fn honor of A. C. Fuller of Hartford, ^;<Conn. Mr. Esping participated in the program with whistling solos and bird -" ; 'imitations- Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bacon and son, .Kenneth, accompanied Mr. and Mrs. "Wm. Davis and daughter, Frances, to .Wheeling last Friday. The Ladies' Auxiliary of the Federv-:; Tated church of Waueonda met at the -home of Mrs. John Blomgren. last %^5fThursday afternoon.. A pleasant af- 1 Ikernoon was spent in sewing and visitf after which a business meeting ; "^was held. Dainty refreshments were ~ • served by the hostess- ,o..J , r Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Foss of Liberty- • rwille and daughter, Vivian, spent last •Thursday evening at the Wm. Foss : "ihome. - v Miss Pearl Foss, Leslie Foss, Anson S'oss and daughter of Sandusky, N. and Wm- Berg of the "Flats" spent '-^Saturday in Chicago. Mrs. Jos. S. Haas of Waueonda vis- •* ited at the home of Mrs. Clara Smith ' 'last Friday afternoon. , ' rssf? ONLY ONE OF THBM HAS RIGHT TO SMILE It's hard to tell whether the turkey is showing fright, or whether that funny look is an attempted emulation of til* broad smile his capturer is wearing. But if it is a smile it won't last lorig--Thanksgiving day is at hand. Day's • Pennsylvania Town Put® Curfew on Radio Sets Shomokin, Pa.--Couneilmanic ordinance set 11 p. m. as the curfew hour for all radio sets within Shamokjn borougli. At that hour all sets nrast be turned > down so that they cannot be heard outside the house and all windows must be closed when the radio Is playing. Shamokin was not alone In seeking to place restrictions on radios play- ' fng late at night. At Wilkes-Barre police anounced that they would respond promptly to any complaints against excessively loud radios and would direct set owners to cut down the volume immediately. <"'J" Water Diviner Claimt Streams Aid Health Bolzano, Italy.-- Signor Giovanni Gotsch, diviner for water-seeking eltisens of this region, claims that underground streams possess radiations which are beneficial for many mal ; adies. Gotsch, who has been long noted for his ability to find underground stream* by the use of a diving rod, has mada experiments in these underground radiations. He claims that a sick person placed over the path of one of these hidden streams reports an Improvement in health. New Submarine Vallejf ^ Named for Survey Ship submarine valley. United States Boaton.--A wered by the discoast . and geodetic survey near the southeast edge of Georges ban*, henceforth will be known as "Corsair Gorge." i The pit, located off the Massachusetts coast and not previously known to exist, is reported to be more than a halfmile deep in places. It was named in .honor of the survey vessel which discovered It--the yacht Corsair, formerly owned by J. Pierpont Morgan. The average American family eoo- •aaes mora than two packages of chewing gam weekly. Collier's Waekip. Not Ourselves Alone* is Thanksgiving Motto. Ijrdw fat' along with me The best is yet to be, The last of life for which the first wav - J* made; The ax is in his hand, - Assassination's planned. Stand pat, get fat, nor be afraidl Poor vaunt of life, indeed Were Turk but made to feed On corn alone; to seek, to find and feast, • When feasting ends, to h<W»l Is this the end of fowl? - Irks care the crop-full bird? No doubt we'll soon be fleeced. Rejoice we are allowed To grow and yet be proud To grace the festal board, be stuffsd to " •> burst, Be turned upon the spit . Till ws have browned a bit, * Then eaten up with one fell swoop, that's worst. So take and eat thy Turfed Save carcass that may lurit Amid the gravy's lure; pick clean the bones. Next day, pray eat us cold, * Then hash us in a mold. Soup comes at last, thanks be, to hush our moans! --With Many Apologies to Browning. s* *5 3; - 1 > i i'-fe ',vv; u .uJk A';.v-;$r ^ jt;-- y?U: 4 'X h' 'is®'?* ^ i'-V •Aa#V ... I .% M ^ Like the turkey and the epicureans, we are prone to eat, drink and he merry,"for tomorrow we may die. Wt* -must have a particular day appointed in which to give thanks, lest we for get. We take so much for granted, accept all the good things of life without stopping to count our many bless Ings, or to name them one by one, as we were admonished In Sunday school so long ago. ^ We enjoy years and years of health, forgetting what a wonderful gift it Ys. until illness lays us low. We accept our friends who strew our path with feroses and cheer our way with kind oess until one is gone, and we realize how much more we might have been to him. We think we love our chil dren, but when they have all left the nest, how gladly would we have them back that we might show them how much more we could prove our love. The editor of the Outlook, somt years ago, expressed the true spirit o( Thanksgiving so effectively that 1 quote him verbatim: "If tbe end ol society is to produce the largest num ber of free human spirits, of generous human hearts, of strong human hands of pure human homes, of noble hu man lives; if the liberation of serfs, the Betting free of those In bondage the care and reverence for the man as a man, the open door to the boy and girl whose feet are eager to climb, the breathing of tbe breath of life through a stagnant world, means prog ress toward the ultimate goal, then let us reverently thank God that we werr born In an age and In a country in which It is our supreme good fort urn not to be ministered unto but to mln Ister." "If we are to return thanks," he goes on to say, "not for ourselves alone but for *11 men; not for work done, bnt for noble chances to .work; not for a finished civilization, hut for the greater civilization that may be de veloped; not for a few choice spirits, but for the opportunity for all men t<> lift themselves Into the light; not fo> things which make for onr own com fort, but for the things which make for the healing of the world; not foi the life that has been lived, but for: the boundless life that is to be, then let us thank God that h« has given us, not things but chance of growth; not comfort but opportunity of service; not ease of spirit bnt the tolls of the unselfish life."--Indianapolis News. condemned bird showed no at a breakdown, but rose sarty and ate a hearty breakfast, THE • Spare Tia* lapwtaal Guard well your spare momenta. They are like uncut diamonds. Improve them, apd they will become the brightest gema If a, useful life.-- Bueraon. AabUMlwftr Vasts bf a university profassar to Philadelphia demonstrated that abaut 20 per cent of all pereona are •nabldaatrous, «5 per cent rij^t-tisadfd **418 left handed v: v • ChANKSGIVING--by presidential proclamation, tradition and sentiment--is observed in every home o're the land. ever to. can Cl it, i even though the skies are dark. Conditions are not the best this year, many are out men t, business is future seems to hold nothing for great betterment. ' • ' X •f- , .. ... " .. . ' .. But, as this great day is at hand and we pause to take an inventory of our blessings, there isal- For those who are in want, a great movement has been started all over the nation to create funds so that suffering^will be held down to the minimum. Our thanks are " • v. -' m .91 * s^fTy*, 4\-» ; * -:>l A V r in giving and we know that those we help are those who are less fortunate! ' ir * ' *-v £a£-