v - v , - . ,c v . - * , -- . ' ^ C * ' . . • "/ ' i • > . . * <. '** \t- \\>, .*-: ;&* i '" ; ' •••• I. ilin'.i'ifiii I ntf I ," • *' if . r- :>,«%P""; -4- v»V* V.*r V . ' , ^.~* • -."*, "<*•4""" »' ' &r*& A• ;| ,f- Volume 63 McHENRY, ILLINOIS, THURSDAY, JULY X, 1937 M'HENRY TO HAVE THREE DAYS AHD NIGHTS OF GAIETY IiOCAL POST TO ACT AS " HOST , , HISS HELEN BOLOER AND JAMES aKEEV WED AT WOODSTOCK A Wedding: of interest to local people was that of Miss Helen Bolger, daughter of Mrs. John Bolger of Woodstock, and Mr, James R. Greeny son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Green of Woodstock^ which took place at 9 a. m., Saturday *t St. Mary's Catholic church. .•.'•• ;i. ."•;.. Altars of the church were decorated with double mock orange blossoms and ferns for the occasion/*' Miss Margaret Flood, church organist, played the wedding piarch and Miss Mercedes Bolger, sister of the bride, was her only attendant. Vincent Green of Chicago, cousin of the groom, was best man and Donald Bolger, brother of the bride, and Gordon Green, uncle of the groom, served as ushers, and they, as well as the groom, wore white suit»s «~*** 1 The bride approached the altar on the arm of' her brother, Thomas P. Bolger of McHenry, who gave her away. She wore a floor length gown of white lace over white taffeta with a white turban and carried a shower McHenry Post, No. 491, American ; "Legion will act as host to a throng cf visitors at its annual carnival to be held at the park on Green street, McHenry,' for three days and nights, Saturday, Sunday and Monday, July 3, 4 and 5. • Flans are all complete for the, big Went, the Ferris Wheel, Merry-go- Sound and other rides and booths have been erected and lights are being installed. On Saturday the crowds will assemble for all the fun, which will continue until the evening of Monday, July 5. There will be a meeting of the -> chairman and workers for the carnival at the Legion hall this Thursday j bouquet of white orchids and gartBveriing, when plans of the carnival > denias. committee will be discussed and wbrk-l Miss Mercedes Bolger wore a floor ers and chairmen will arrange their j »en£th gown of white mousseline-deschedule of hours. E?ie with white bonnet hat. She car- The carnival grounds' are' conven- ® bouquet of tea roses, delphinium iently located in the center of Mc-jan^ l"'es *-he valley. Henry with entrances on Green street' Mrs. Bolger, the bride's mother, and U. S. 12, and plenty of free park-:™01"* a.^own of aquamarine lace and "Big space has been provided. JMis. Green, mother of the groom, » Parade and Fireworks [*'ore a navy embroidered crepe. Both Features of the carnival program vo*® shoulder bouquets of gardenias. - - - - A wedding breakfast was served-at the Woodstock Country Club for members of the immediate families, where decorations were in blue and white with the table centered with white roses and delphinium. Net receipts ofthe carnival will be1, J"'*? Wet}Jin* ?ip' th* ^ used by McHenry Post, No. 491, forl^11^ in a s.llk Print ensemble with j mt_ _ y _ * j wniifi accessories. will be a parade Saturday night and a big display of fireworks on Sunday and Monday nights, and concerts by the McHenry Band, Rockford Boy Scout Band and St. Charles School for Boys' Band. OF M'HENRY DIES AGED 95 YEARS MRS, ELIZABETH MAY HERE IN 1842 PENS NAME CARDS, SHARES PROFITS WITH CRIPPLED CHILDREN 'VM J MRS' ELIZABETH MAY a good cause. The Legion requires She is a graduate of the Woodstock T . . i"«h S'""01 *"*< University of ,,"d """'j Illinois and has been the typing and ? P IT y oe«' pro,"".k Shorthand instructor .t the Woodstock The local Post has already contrib- High School u*d in numerous ways towards im- ^ groom, who als0 attended the proyements for the benefit of res.-, University of I1Iinoi8 is employed dents and are always ready to do their with the General Exchange Insurance pa£^ , I Corporation. Thousands of people who attended Among the out-of-town relatives the carnival last year will return this were Thomas P. Bolger and Mr. and year for they know they will be royal- Mrs. Paftl Doherty. ly entertained during the Fourth of, _________ July weekend. There will be entertainment for young and old and everyone is invited to enjoy three lively days and nights of fun. Old Settlers' Reunion fcleetlcft of officers was held at the The reunion^for old settlers will be meeting of McHenry Council, Knights held at the McHenry park these same | of Columbus, Thursday night, when days. It is expected many of the old Clarence Martin was re-elected Grand timers will be on hand to again greet, Knight for another year. one another, many coming from long Officers we.'c elected as follows: M'HENRY COUNCIL KC ELECTS OFFICERS distances. One of the big attractions this year will be the grand display of fireworks both Sunday and Monday nights. The committee in charge this year announces that contracts have been awarded to the Thearle-Duffield Fireworks, Inc., of Chicago, the largest producer of fireworks displays in the world. All the new and novel effects that they have perfected throughout the past year will be included in the display here. Folks, when you watch the fire* works display each evening, from the first firing of "aerial detonations" tkmt can be heard for miles, youll know it's going to be a cracking good show. Aerial contortionists, monster tour* billions, polychromatic canopies, Pujiyama rocekts, weeping-willow shells, octopus tentacles, whose arms stretch hundreds of feet in the sky, aerial cascades, chain rockets, golden-comets, star-dust shells, double chrysanthemums, "bottled daylight" that illuminates the entire surroundings as bright as day--these and hundreds of other effects and devices are sure to keep you on e^ge from, the very first minute. Grand Finale ' Coming to a close, will be the reproduction of the American Flag in outlines of colored fires waving in the breeze, accompanied by a special grand finale of aerial bombs connected with time-fuses, so that each shell is fired to a greater altitude and each succeeding detonator gets louder until the grounds and heavens seem to literally "blow up" as the "Good ---JNigfct" piece in lines of fire is sure to send the audience away in a most pa- .; frame of mind. y; Spend the weekend in McHenry this year, where there is going to be some-', thing popping practically all the while. The Legionnaires have it all planned for everybody's enjoyment-- «yg»omg and old. Grand Knight--Clarence Martin. Deputy Grand Knight--Louis Smith. Chancellor--Thomas A. Bolger. Recorder--A. J. Wirtz. ' Treasurer--Maurice Schteiner. , Warden--George Larkin. ; Advocate--Carl Weber. Inside Guard--Leo Freund. ^ ^ Outside Guard--Arthur J. Stiffing. Delegate to State Council--Johr A. Bolger. Alternate to the Grand Knig.it-- Louis Smith. Alternate to the Delegate -- Leo Winkel. Other officers wiU be appointed by the Grand Knight. Among: the Sick Mrs. Paul Marrie of Waukegan is at St. Therese's hospital, where she was operated on Saturday. BOY, OH, BOYJ That's what you will sav when you witness the grand display of I? FIREWORKS Mrs. Elizabeth May, 95 years old, the oldest resident of this vicintiy, died at 6:15 a. m., Wednesday, June 30, after being confined to bed for the past six months. "** Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mathias Lay, were among the early settlers of this vicinity, taking Upua farm north of Johnsburg in 184£? --. Born at Luxemburg, Germany, on January 1, 1842, she came to America with her parents when only a few months old and they came diYectly to this locality, where she always resided. Elizabeth Lay grew up with the country which progressed from a virgin prairie and wooded hills to the population of today, with fertile farms and pleasant homes replacing the lonliness of the early countryside. They settled on the Martin Lay farm, now better known as the Stilling* farm, north of Johnsburg. On November 27, 1861, she was united in marriage to John M. May, at Johnsburg, with Father Layman officiating at the ceremony. For many years they lived on the Martin May homestead, where William Staines now resides, and here their seven children were born. Four of these children, Mrs. Martin S. Freund, Mrs. Peter M. Freund and Helena K. May of this city and Peter M. May of Spring Grove, survive their mother. She is also survived by thirty- eight. grandchildren, eighty-three great-grandchildren and five greatgreat- grandchildren. Last year Mrs. May had her pictare taken with others of the family, showing four generations. Children who preceded their mother in death were Mathias J., Martin N., and Rose, who died when about ten years old. Her husband died about twenty years ago in January and a brother, Martin Lay, died about a year ago, leaving Mrs. May as the only survivor of her fajnily. Mrs. May and her husband retired from the farm and lived in Johnsburg for many years and after his death, shft resided with her children, Mrs. Martin S. Freund and Martin May, having been in the latter home for about nine years. Funeral services will be held Saturday morning at 9:30 a. m., at St, Mary's chulrch, with burial in Johnsburg cemetery. Charles H. Wager, pen artist, who has penned millions of name cards in his fifty-five years on the road and shared the profits with crippled children, set up his stand near the Empire theater in McHenry Tuesday and Will remain over the' weekend. His object is to raise $30 to buy a wheel chair for Jackie Gerasch, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gerasch of this city and he expects to have the amount raised by Sunday. From 2 p. m. Tuesday to the same time Wednesday, he had made about $10. This is not the first time Mr. Wager has helped a crippled child for he states that he has bought nearly 100 wheel chairs during the many years on the road. At Rochelle, he helped Helen Burright, an elevn-year-old girl,, who had been crippled since the age of two years, at Naperville he ^donated a chair to a little girl, Bethany Purpur, whd was born without arms or legs, and at Beloit he purchased a wheel chair for Virginia Brown. Mr. Wager has penned millions of name cards in his fifty-five years on the road and has always shared his profits with the children, Leg^pn posts and charitable institutions. He has also "been making a nationwide campaign for safety on the highways. His truck is equipped with loud speaker and signs on "Highway Safety." Mr. Wager was in McHenry about fifty years ago, he states BRUCE KLOHTZ TO WASHINGTON FOR SCOUT JAMBOREE BOY MADE ASSISTANT PATROL LEADER s r nj f i MUFFLEY-HAMIL NUPTIALS, JOLIET, ^ SATURDAY MORNING St. Joseph's church at Joliet was the scene of a pretty wedding Saturday morning when Opal June Muffle/ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ober of Crystal Lake, became the bride of Mr. Peter J, Hsmil, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Hamil of McHenry. Father Wencel Sholar officiated at the ceremony at 9 a. m. Ruth Zeimis of Joliet was bridesmaid and Gerald Hamil served his brother as best man. The bride was charming in a gown of delicate pink mousseline-de-soie over pink satin and a long veil caught in the back with clusters of orange .blossoms, forming a cap edged with the same flower. <She carried a bouquet of pink and white roses and baby breath. Miss Zeimis was attired in a gown of cocktail blue mousseline-de-soie with accessories in thfe same color. She carried a bouquet of pink roses and blue sweet peas. r A wedding breakfast was served at Jacob's Tea room in Crystal Lake for the bridal party, parents and a few close friends, numbering fourteen. Mr. and Mrs. Ober entertained at a reception in V. F. W. hall • in the ! grasshoppers evening for the bridal couple, With ( are hurrying OLD TIMERS BACK FROM SO. DAKOTA PR A BRIEF VISIT '•ifN WITH SISTER, MRS. J. CLAXTON Mrs. J. F. Claxton is enjoying:^ visit this week with her two brothers and sister and a niece and her husband from South Dakota, who arrived on Thursday of last week. Her relatives are George and Albert Fryer and Mrs. Emma Lea of Doland, S. D., and Mr. and Mrs. David Decker Hitchcock, S. D. On Monday they visited friendis at ^ 7'^;; - • ,* 1 -X* •••"I >/v 'i 7 . * t .A": w Kenosha, Wis., and are busy ^seeing / old scenes and visiting with old fritends before their return home the last of the #eek. . • ' ' s - They report that crops in the Da-' kotas gave promise of being fair this year, but that during the last week, is is becoming dry there and the hot winds are beginning to blow and the re arriving and they BRUCE KLONTZ Bruce Klontz, son of Dr. and -Mrs. C. W. Klontz, left Saturday to attend the Boy Scout Jamboree at Wash- „ , , . ... ington, D. C., where for two weeks He. haf aLS°.,taUKl?t. Penmansh,P "J he will be one of the 27,000 Scouts to camp of canvas on the k this weekend to about one hundred invited guests harvest their rye and other ripening, present. j grain before the grasshoppers do too Musicians--from Harvard furnished much damage. music for dancing, after which a buf-j The Fryers are extensive landownfet supper was served, with Ralph ers in South Dakota, George ha Bristol as toastmaster. The pyramid 1,800 acres, Albert 1,500 acres fjii ^ » ' "tl •" ' r wl wedding cake, was made and decorated by a close friend, Irene Bortnich- •sen of Woodstock. ' Mr. and Mrs. Hamil, who have de Mr. Decker about 640 acres. Mrs. Lea, who is a widow, has been on her father's farm of many acres. dozens of schools and army camps and j jjv in ^ In addition to farming, Mr. Decker th,6 ,many yearS has donated! banks of the Potomac river TndTn the |ferred their wedding trip until fall, is a cattle dealer and George Fryer, $12,500 of his earnings, to cripples,! experienceg of - uptime he will meet|are at McHenry, where he is who has never married, raises full worthyorgjinizBtmns and poor, in President of the United States,1 associated with his father on the; blood Percheon horses. Until six y.ears ago he made frequent visits to this vicinity, bringing carloads of horses to Woodstock to sell. The last time he came, however, he found horses so cheap that he decided, thereafter, to take them to vi9it points of interest .nd particiover $2,300 to Boy Scouts alone At Woodstock he gave away 500 ice The bride attended school at Crystal Lake, while the groom has resided to charitable purposes. Mr. Wager will be 77 years old on Nov. 17. His home, when he travelling, is at Genoa, III. stops TWO DROWN IN NEARBY WATERS LAST SUNDAY ONE SAVES A BOY BUT LOSES OWN ...LIFE Two Chicagoans were drowned in waters near McHenry Sunday, one. in Fox river at Burton's Bridge and one in Bangs Lake at Wauconda. One of the victims, Leo Calderone, 37 years old, of 3012 W. Jackson boulevard, Chicago, was drowned while swimming in Fox river at Bay View beach, near Burton's Bridge, pate in the program of thrills and life .... . | in the great Jamboree camp, where . * cream cones to the children, and m he wiU me€t Scouts from alt over the M McHenry for a number of years, W0° i country and abroad, demonstrating that intangible something--thfe Scout spirit. Bruce was his parents Saturday morning where, ;with seventy other Scouts from this area; he boarded a train to Chicago, and there transferred to a special train bound for Washington and the Jamboree, where he expected to arrive Sunday morning. BAKE SALE St Mary's Christian Mothers will SkT^ for sill . , „ , , , . . hold a bakery sale at Jacob Justen s taken to Rockford by|furnjture store, Saturday, July 3, He now has about forty head I horses and about 500 acres of land ! planted to grain. George Fryer is j ,74 years old and this, is his fifty-fourth crop in Dakota. WEDDING WURDAY : were small, with thir SCHROEDER-SEVICK . , Miss Jessie Schroeder, daughter of aiTj~ ivf""""}' """ rC." The Scouts from this wrea will be, Mr &tl(j Mrs. Louis Schroeder of Won- neftr Woodstock. Their sister Mrs. members of the Bear Patrol of the der Luke, and Mr. Stanley Sevick, son tea uorn her_ ' Blackhawk area. of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sevick of M" ciaxton who will be 81 On Wednesday night Bruce attend- Woodstock, were man-ied Saturday 0id in Ju, is t'he oIdest of the famiI ed a meeting of the patrol at Har-, evening, June 26 at 8:30 o'clock at of twelve childreni six of whom ^ vard, where all equipment was u - the Congregational church, Woodstock. now Uving Her parents and most of spected and checked and officers elect- Wlth Rev. K. Murphy officiating at the the family moved to South Dakota ed, with the McHenry Scout being ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. John Emery, more than half a cen^y a?0( elected an assistant patrol leader. friends of the bride and groom, at.|ing Mrs ciaxton and her sister, Julia Weeks of preparation preceded the., tended the couple. ' Page, here. anticipated event when equipment was | The bride wore a coronation blue Another sister, Mrs. Lillian Gilbert, purchased and assembled* No suit-. ensemble with blue and white acces- j who visited here last year, also recius or trunks are permitted, the sories and a shoulder corsage of sweet gjde8 jn Dakota and Howani Fryer, Scouts carrying all personal equip-1 peas. Her attendant was dressed in whose home was there, moved two ment in a packi | pink with white accessories and a yg£rs ago to Ferndale, Wash. S50-Acre Caaip | shoulder corsage of sweet peas. j Here 43 Years Age The 350-acre camp is located on the j Mrs. Sevick graduated from the]- Although Albert Fryer was iMfi Sunday. The body was recovered Potomac between Columbia Island and McHenry Community High shortly after it sank in the water by A. Kammin, assistant ftre marshal, and Henry Buchert, a fireman at Crystal Lake, but all efforts to revive Calderone proved futile. The body was removed to the Gilberts funeral chapel at Crystal Lake, where an inquest was East Potomac Park, within sight of; with the class of '34. the White House, Lincoln Memorial, the Capitol, Washington Monument and other historic buildings. For more than a week khaki-clad youngsters, backs bowed under their ! packs, have filed onto the camp School two years ago and George six years 1 ago, Mrs. Lea has not been back since w BLIND INSTRUCWMl -V A picture of Fred Gilly, Rockford WindmaA, appeared in the Rockford paper l^st week Wednesday. Gilly was to open a school to teach oEhpr blind persons the art of basket ppaving. The Lions Club is assisting Gilly in conducting the school. Gilly, a former McHenry resident, who went to Rockford several weeks ago, sells brooms and baskets that he makes. L«gion Carnival, % McHenry* i -Geno Poultry Remedies at Wattles , : - ifrXP --~~ Sunday and Mondajhr4: Nights, July 4- 5 FIELD EXECUTIVE, LESUE WARREN, MARRIED JUNE 30 K Miss Marjorie Florence Skeliy, daughter of Mrs. Rev. William Aylesworth of Minooka, 111., and Leslie Warren, son of Rev. and Mrs. T. Warren were married at five o'clock in the evening, June 30th, at the home of the bride's aunt, Mrs. Glen Warne of Elhurn, 111. Only the immediate families were present. The fathers of the couple, Rev. Warren and Rev. Avlesworth, performed the ceremony together. Miss Skelly is a graduate of the Silver Cross hospital in Joliet and has been working in Woodstock hospital the past year. . 'Mr. Warren, Field Executive of the Boone-McHenry District, Blackhawk Area Council, Boy Scouts of America, is a graduate of Iowa Wesleyan College, Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, and a graduate of the Scout Training School In New a York. Mr. Warren has been Fielcr Executive for Boone-McHenry district the past year and a half. Mr. and Mrs. Warren will be at home after Aug. 1, at 431 W. South St., in Woodstock. They will spend several weeks in the Northern part of Wisconsin and Minnesota. held Monday morning and the body: gi'ounds from special trains and with was taken to Chicago for burial. military precision erected their sleep- He is survived by his parents, his tents and settled themselves for wife* and eight brothers and sisters., a weeks' visit. ^ Funeral services were at 9 a. m., this Accustomed to making and breakmorning at Presentation church and; camp quickly, the Scouts soon burial at Mount Carmel cemetery. Lwes Life Saving Boy Dr. J. Donovan Bohr, 33 years old. make themselves at home and stroll about the city, making visits to points of interest or starting out on souvenir a dentist attached to the staff at the hunts. Chicago State hospital at Dunning, I The, first official meal was served The groom attended the Wo<>d8tock the World's Fair* forty-three years High School and is no#' employed at ago, and she finds many changes and Montgomery Ward's at Woodstock. ! improvements have taken place in that After a short trip to the- Wiscons'n length of time. Mrs. Lea has five Dells, the couple will live with the children three daughters and, two groom's parents in Woodstock. jaons. Two of the daughters are mar- THOMAS GILL SUED FOR DIVORCE; OFTEN PLAYED GOLF HERE Another lot of lovely new, white hats at Mrs. Pich's, Qreen street. 6-fp ried and are living on farms near her I in Dakota. | Albert Fryer, whose wife did tot make the trip with him, has ten children, who are scattered in several states and countries. Three are in Mrs. Maxine Rickard Gill, widow of » Honolulu, two girls teaching' school, Tex Rickard, sports promoter, filed and a boy an electrical engineer, one suit for divorce last week against daughter, now in China, will teach at Thomas Gill, Chicago broker. Mr. Gill Spokane, Wash., this year, one son is ... , is weI1 known in McHenry, where he a-druggist in Montana, another boy is died a hero's death, after saving the Monday night, when about 20,000 boys has been a frequent visitor and player an electrical engineer in Los Angeles, life of an eight-year-old boy at Bangs! were in camp. jat the McHenry Country Club. t Cal. Another is in Minneapolis, Minn., Lake, Wauconda. I ^ Sc°ut who traveled halfway j Mrs. Gill's bill, filed in the Superior and a daughter, Mrs. Nell McBride, •- Doctor Bohr perished after he had around the world by air was Exequiel Court, charged Gill with cruelty. It is living at Lead, S. D., where her husrescued B O. Russell, Jr., of 4106 Irv-1 Villacorta, chief Scout representing j Was said that there would be no con- y band operates the largest grocery and. tag Park boulevard,'Chicago. It is 17,000 Scouts in the Philippine Is- test and that a settlement had been market. believed he became' exhausted after lands. He boarded the China Clipper i made out of court. I The family has set a line record rescuing the boy and after giving him «nd made the trip in seven days. | The divorce action was filed by At- for education, nine of the ten chilover to other rescuers, sank from ! Among other delegations are those, torney^ John H. Bishop and Robert, dren having graduated fr0m the sight. | from New Zealand, Lithuania, Vene-jJ. Burdett. v ! South Dakota State College at Brook- Although efforts were made to re-'zue^a» England and the Bahamas. I Mr. and Mrs. Gill were married July jns, S. D. Several of them received cover the body, it was not found until The distance record at present is 25, 1936, in Our Lady of Mount Car- their master's degrees at other colnearly an homr'later when attempts to1 claimed bycrtwo lads from New Zea- mel church, Chicago. The bride's leWs as well. revive him proved futile. I land, who brought a sack full of Maori daughter, Maxine, then 9, was pres- j It is hoped that these former resi- Dr Bohr is survived bv his wife ' carvings which they hope to trade»for enf. (dents and Old Timers will rentain over father and a sister. * litems to take home. | Early in 1920 the Rickards were the weekend to attend the Old Set- Funeral services under the auspices The Jariiboree program started on married, just before one of the great- tiers' Reunion in the city park on Julx of Cleveland Lodge, No. 211, A. P. ft Wednesday, special features of ijrhich est successes in Rickards career, the 3. 4 and 5. A. M., were held in Chicago at 2:30 will be the troop opening color Cere-, fight at Boyle's Thirty Acres, between p. m- Wednesday, with burial at; monies, national torch ceremony, sec- Jack Dempsey and Georges Carpen- Acacia Park j tional camp fires, regional opening ti^r. . The weekend was one of tragedy in1 ceremonies, national guard review on Rickard died in Miami in 19'_9 and the state with several drownings -ire-! Constitution avenue, reception on j ater his widow came to Chicago to corded, among them being thofce of White House grounds. Arena displays,; live. In 1933 she met Gill and their Russell McCurdy, eight years old, of Convocation at Washington Monu-1 engagement was announced m 193& Chicago, who was drowned while ment, pilgrimage to Arlington. Indeswimming in the DesPlaines river; pendence Day display, citizenship in- William Robinson, 19 years old, at vestiture ceremony, fireworks on land i BirtllS S p r i n g f i « l d ; John B r a . d o n , IT ^ . . . . . JANE AMELIA CARE DIES AT DUNDWT Mrs. Jane Anieliu Carr. who would have been 89 years old on July 1, died Tuesday afternoon at the home of her daughter, Mi's. Mabel Cruikshank at Dundee, after aft illness of about four months. Airs. Carr. who was forherlV Jat '> old, of Rock Island, who drowned near Brotherhood display ana tne granai ; riiomn«nn is n»i- Galesburg, and two brothers, Delbert closing ceremony. , Mr. and Mrs. Gus Unti are the par-) Am.eha Tlin mp^pt3, u the^la^t mer ^ and Melvin Meisinger, 19, and 21 Displays in thfc large arena will be,ents of a son born early Friday V" held evenings and pageants will be; morning, June 28. , ^ * ^ i. presented, based on the historic and years old, who drowned in a near Peoria. creek Miss Helen Freund,. who is employed here, was a weekend visitor at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Freund, near Ringwoo.d Beautiful white hats from $1.00 to $2.00 at Mrs. Pich's, Green Street. 6-fp geographic background of the different regions of the country and including dramatic presentations- by great masses of boys of different phaaaa of the Scout program. Collection of Exhibits To develop interest and appreciation of Scout technics in all sections of the " (.Continued on TZrtljSiaur--"" Mr. and Mrs. J. Mackenzie and Mrs. Mary Friend of Chicago were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Diedrich over Fl°yd C*" of Greenwood. Mrs. Editn and spent her entire lifetime in this locality. She is survived by three children, AS White of Detroit and Mrs. Mabel Cruikshaek, Dundee. Funeral services will be held at the home at 1:30 p. m.. Friday amI S p. the weekend. John Schreiner of Elgin visited in the home of his siater, Mrs. Albert Krause, Sunday. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Albert Rosing of Lib-; DST. at the Greenwood M E. churclv ertyville visited relatives here Sunday.. with burial at Greenwood.