Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 5 Jul 1934, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

nu MiuJiKi luuuiu wsm, J T$1£L£i %•' ,V*. V V .,,, 'A. E. Nye, John Bolger and Earl %«sh attended a K. G. initiation At Aurora Synday and remained for the banquet in the evening. Miss Elsa Nye of Milwaukee has been a gujest in the homeof her uncle,- Dr. N. J, Nye.- ~^|Mr. and MVS. Henry ^~ogel visited irt krhicag-o Saturday evening. _ Mrs. William, Green and Mrs. Elmiep- Huemanri were recent visitor^ in thKEiL^rt Conway home at RockfonJjliss . Dorothy Fisher has gone , to Chicago,' where she.is employed at the Century of Progress. Mir. and Mrs.' Franfi O'Flaberty of Elgin visited Miss Nancy Frisby last week and Miss Frisby returned home -With them for a visit. , --•-» Neva Toynton-^'Watt^-ftdj . -was a refent caller in the D. I- Gran- ' g<n- home. .. -'.. •••'•v,Mr?. F. Q. 6ans, daughter,.Mfs. E<J- *ward Dowling. of Dallas,'T-ax., Mrs. , YV. Rothemel and Mrs- . Albert lCrause visited Mrs."' fV'-it* 'Moijlt^W Milwaukee,, Friday. •*,, >; Supt. and' Mrs. C. B. Duker and -^ughter, Marjory, are spending the rVjijeek with relatives- at Goshen, Indf. ' . Dr. and Mrs F. J. Aicher spent the: ^eelu'rid' with relatives aWWashbUiin.r "'•:,VvV' ' " Miss Ruth Phadin and bother, How- . • &rd,,'of Chicago, spent, the weekend J. M. Phaiin was a weekend visitor . in Chicago. ' • ' -' { \.; ^ /'••: • Mrs- Stacia Ma^one of E^in visited ; T^diatives here this week. ' , * . Mrs. A1 Woll of Chicago visited her mother, Mrs. Mary Carey this week. ^ Miss Helen Wegener of Chicago • spent several days this' week with u JMends here. ' Miss Kathleen Givens spent Friday - in Chicago. ~Her sister, Mrs. Harry - tiwrence, returned to McHenry with -^"•jtor.. • * : - :i Mrs. Walter Warner and children •tydf: Elgin are visiting relatives here this week. Dick Warner-will remain for the summer with his aunt, Mrs- Nellie Bacon, i - William Spehcer spent Friday in •' 'Chicago. ' ; iVfr?. P. H- Weber and Miss Cla'ra " SehiessJe were Chicago Tutors Frfday. -* . . Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. FWund. were •Chicago visitors Friday, Charles Owen of Chicago spent* the Weekend here- Martha Page was a Chicagd visitor Friday. ' - 'Mr. and Mi's'. Fi W. Sayler of Woodstock visited "relatives here Saturday.. •W-jjffiss Mignonette Walmsley of North Dakota is visiting in the home of her uilcle, Clarence Martin. Robert Miller of Cleveland, 0., is "Visiting in the Clarence Martin home and with other relatives here. ~ M isses Frances Hughes and -Leone busi Frettnd of St- Theresa's Waukegan, are enjoying vacations at -their homes here. \ Mr. and Mrs. Edward Smith oi Crystal Like spent the Fourth of Jul# with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John R. Smith. Miss Phyllis Mdulton of Milwaukee is spending the summer in*^hC^iomes of her aunts, Mrs. Albert Krause amt Mrs; J. W- Rothermil. ' Fred C. iSchoewerl waa'a visitor in Chicago, Monday. : . Mr.' and Mrs, Jerome Moeller arid Mr. and Mx*s. Roy Johnson and "son^, frim ahd Roy, of Chicago, visited in the home of Fred Karls, Tuesday. Anita and Esther Althoff are spending,, this week in the William Elverman home at Burlington, Wis. M# and Mrs. George Garrity .of Chicago visited -herp Sunday. He? father, !Peter 'J. Schoe.we'r, who. came with them, remained for a visit here. Mr. and Mrs. William Elverman and family of Burlington, Wis., visited in the Louis Althoff home Sunday. • Mrs;. Kate Stoffel returned home Saturday from a three weeks'^visit in Chicago and Joliet. CMr,..'.and Mrs-_ Fred Wynkoop of Woodstock called on Mr. and MrS.-W. A. Sayler Sunday evening,., .. Miss Mary Althoff. visit^tvat Wew.' Munsteri: Wis;", last week/:^ ...'-M;r.' and 'Mrs... R^T?avis: >"of; :Joliet spent the weekend irjt tlfe Sti>ffpl home;, i:v, ^ : Mr. and M*si Wy. C. Resley., who 'fere spending, the summer at their cot-" tage^ at. Lake' Geneva, Wis., called on Mr. acd Mrs. W..A. Sayler Sunday. Mrs. Frank "Cobb, Mr. and Mrs- A. C. Cobb and son of Chicago were Mon-- day visitors in the -Louis" McDonald home. ' ,.r • • < ; - -Mr.-and Mrs. Louis McDonald visited at Terra Cotta Sunday evening- Mr. and Mrs/L. F. Newman were Woodstock visitors Saturday morning. JVtr. and Mrs. J. Bonden of Wil. mette visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John King, Sunday- Mrs. Carl Schmitt and children "of Chicago visited her parents, Mr. antl Mrs. Fred Kamholz, Monday. Mr.- and Mrs. Harry Durland and children are spending- the weekend sn the North woods. 'Starving' Chinch Bugs Checks Loss Diet 6f Legume Crops Good - Plan to Minimize r Threatened Raid. 't- Bv : Early Gr^at Lake* Boati ( LaSalle, In ]built the Grlflfon, llrst sailing vessel^ manned by white men to traverse the waterS of the' Great. Lakes. ' The "first American built boat on Lake Erie was put into commission in 1795 and the .first steamboat. Walk-in-the-Water, 1 was Milt,at.Black Kock. N. Y.. In 1818. stnnri of This steamer and the vessels that fol-. lowed her did a thriving .'business transporting-emigrants to the West. Northernmost Inhabitxi Spot n. The northernmost permanently Inhabited spot on 'he globe Is Hooker Island, in the Franz-Josef Land archipelago, nearly 900 miles north xST~the Arctic Circle, and-its sole Inhabitants are' the staff of a weather station. FRED J. SMITH, Prop, JOHNSBURG, ILL. Best Equipped Garage in Northern Illinois ^ TOWING AND REPAIRING ^ ^ " ° v': •" • V - . • - ^ ' . ' . . . - V / "Agency For ) ' • • • ' • "T-7" Johnson Sea Horses Full Line of Pairts for John&on Motors Phones--200-J - - - 1 Wight--640-J-2 Here k Miss Frontier W, P. Flintg Entomologist, Collega of Agriculture, University, of Illinois. - WNU Service. • , What threatens, to be .one. of .the most destructive Invasion of chinch bugs can be headed off and widespread damage prevented or at-ieast minimized if farmers will starve the bugs by rirniti'hg* them ' tb'a "diet" of legume crops. ^ Unless the weather durlirg May and June !s wetter than usual, so as to -dro\y'h out the bugs, they threaten to cause more damage than they have causeir tn any "year (luring, the past 50. .A , Farmers that are known to be In the heavily Infested chinch bug ^rea arie being; warned to include all the legumes possible in the field, crops they grow during the Cotoingeseason. This Is. one of the njost effective'arid at the same time one of the least expensive, methods that farmers can use in fight- I n g t h e b u g s . , - i . y ' it chinch, bugs co^ #be pbiifiped only to legumes during the coming , season,;;tbe-y wowld not iive any jlongcr than. A* meai-eittihg animal would live ott ?this same diet! ,Chinch bugs will, feed i»n any -(if the legumes, itj> cly.dlfcg alfalfa, si)y;r. beans, cowpeaS,v field peas/ reti ctover, sweet cloverv vetch or lespedeza. JCeither will they fged on such other common field crops as rape, buckwheat, fla|:, sunflowers or stock beets. . •. The crops' tliiit are "meat" for chinch bugs ' and tlte only ones on which fhejfc feed are the grasses, and these grasses must be green with the sap" flowing in them, as the chinch bug is a sucking .insect and takes Its food not by biting off and chewing up a" bit of the leaf surface, but by inserting Its beak in the grass plants and sucking out the sap. They feed on all the small grains, Including barley, spring wheat, winter wheat, oats, rye, emmer and, spelt. They-will also feed on sorghum, broom corn, field corn, sweet corn, Sudan grass and millet.. u If corn and soy l>eans are planted together and a good growth of soy beansis' olitaiii£(l so that the beans shade, the lowef|pa"rts of the cornstalks, such shaded st'aiks will have fewer bugs than corn without soy beans, A heavy sudan grass atid soy beans wilf^Stfffer only slightly from chliTch bug damage, whereas sudan grass alone would be killed. ' SLdCUlM'S LAKE Urge Sanitary Measures* for Control of Garget ' No one can estimate the economic loss caused by'_ mastitis, commonly known as garget, say Prof. D. H. Udall and S. D. Johnson of the New York State V'eterinary college. In some dairy cattle herds the loss Is -slight, they say, and In others it Is severe. Each herd, however, pays an unnecessary toll, and the total loss is enormous, because of the hidden nature of the disease it may often go unnoticed. ' ; When an owner says that a Certain covy made a high record but was "burned 6ut,f by high feeding and never produced well again, lli'e USual cause is mastitis. The disease is -marked by~repeated attacks that tend to appear when- the cow fs drying off, or shortly after she freshens, or when she is- fed on a high protein diet, or when exposed to unusual strain. If the ^disease is active the milk may become watery' or contain flakes. The best evidence shows that Infection occurs" during milking-, and' extra precaution «t milking Is urged.v Garget Spreads less readily . 4n herds milked by hand t^an in ,herds>milked by a, Jmaqhine. • ' " > •' . • '•• .jry ' I ; wwm. ~ ' « it i-Farming Revolutionized The. revolution in 'method wrought on the farni by the tractor is not generally reali?ed . fd urban communities, points out the .Montreal Qatette. It has ushered In the era of power-farmvng, affording employment to a smaller, number of persons, but with an Increase of Individual .output. The chemist with his fertilizers, the biologist, by segregating special resistant quali Itles for particular climates and soils, have both contributed their quota to a development, as significant In Its way as the coming of the railway train and steamship. " _ The Best Potato Seed " O^ewl pieces from the tip or seed, end of potato tubers produce much more vigorous plants and greater yield than pieces taken from the basal or Btem end of the same tuber, Says F. C. Stewart, potato specialist at the state experiment station at Geneva, N. Y. His experiments with spuds strongly support this contention. The experiments also show, he says, that lnf^ctic^-of the seed tubers with leafroll does not alter this relationship. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Converse and daughter Franees were callers at Waukegan last Friday afterrw>on.<:v " Mr. and Mrs. "H, C. GilkeraJn and two children of Grayslake were callers Sunday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Willard DarrelT. * * Robert Lage^luml of Chicago spent the past week with his relatives, Mr. And Mrs. John Blomgren. John Blomgren was a business Caller at" Grayslake Monday morning. . , Mrs. A. W- Foss and daughter Vivian' of Libertyville spent last Thursday at the home pt Mr. and Mrs. Wnn Foss".' • .' Arthur Wackerow and three friends of Waukegan spent Saturday evening at Kenosha, Wis. Mrs. Ella Parks, Mrs. Mary Duff and son and Mrs. MacLenan of Park Ridge spent Thursday evening at°th? home of Mr- and Mrs. W. E. Brooks. , Mr. and Mrs. Frank.' Peterson - of Chicago were Sunday dinner and afternoon guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Blomgren. / , ' . Mrs. Fred Nordmeyer and daughter Beatrice and Mrs. Frank NorcJmeyer and daughter Bernice attended a prenuptial shower on-vMiss Mabel Loh' man, at Barj-ington lftst Thursday eye^. ning. : Mr.'and Mrs. j. D. Williams and son Jaimes llow^ard of Crystal Jtake- were Sunday dinger and afteiTibon guest^ at the home of Mrs. Clara Smith, i." ; Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Williams and son James Howard of Crystal Lake were Sunday dinner knd afternoon guests et the home .of Mrti. Claro Smith. Miss Beatrice Nordmeyer enteJlained a number of relatives and ffliei\ds Sunday evening in honor of her oirthday- ' Mrs. Clara* Smith ahtVPage Smith and twins, Douglas and Mae were business callers at Waukegan Monday. Recent callers at tl^e home-of Mrs. Clara Smith on her^y8th birthday were Mr. and Mrs: C. K.' Werden of WaiiQpnda, Mrs. 9: J.\ Russel and daughter Alice of Volo,\Mrs-^ Emily Smith and soft Russel"of Ediso'n Park and Claire Smith of Lake View Villa. Mrs. Clai;a Smith calltH at the hom^ of Mr. and Mjrs. Jos. S. Haas at Wauconda last Wednesday. » Ray Dowell and daughter Dolores Were.callers at 'McHenry Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. v Ray Dowell, and daughter Dolores were callers at, WbodstQck^Saturdary evening. ^Trs. Ray Dowell antJ Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Davis and daughter Frances were callers at Dundee last Friday afternoon. Mr. and -Mrs. Wm. Harris" " and daughter and Raymond Harris of JHc- Henry spent Sunday at the "homie of M^ and Mrs. Ray Dowell- " Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dowell ancJ daughter Dolores attended a show at Barrington last Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews and sons Robert and Lyle and Pete and Harry Dowell motored to Sycamore Saturday where the Lake County Farm Bureau bpys, Lake Co., won the game with a score of 7-3. Mr. and Mrs- Matthews and sons motored from there to Hillsdale and visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Bailey, returning home Monday evening. Miss Bertha Davis of the "Flats" spent the weekend with Miss Frances Converse. Mr. and-Mrs. Harry Matthews andsons, Robert and Lyle, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Esping, Mr." and Mrs. Jofir. Blomgren, John Nestad and guest, Robert Lagerlund of Chicago, Mrs- Joe Dowell and three daughters and two sons, Mrs. Celia Dowell and children attend*ed the program given by the W.L.S. artists, Thfe Westerners, and Max Tehrune at the auditorium at the Grammar school at Grayslake last Wednesday evening. Mr.- and Mrs- Peter Weber and fam1 lly of Loon Lake' spent Sunday"afterthe Max tin* Cfaunpioi POLITICAL HERESIES NOW IN VOGUE . Max Baer of California, the new. wprld's heavyweight champion, is here • seen ln'ftghting pose.. He yfofi,the title" by defieatlng Primo Carnei«i;ln a! otfs battle on Long Island. .. ', . - IatKli o'n Duckweed \ - Tiny plants of duckweed, that form living blankgts on stagnaat ponds arq Inhabited .by Insects cor/espondlngly tiny. membert. " The decision was made to award the cup to the one of these three units obtaining their next new member. At noon the group enjoyed a delicious lunch served by the Greenwood Dorcas Circle Number 1- The afternoon program opened \yith three numbers by * the County Women's Chorus under the direction of Mrs. S. Smith. Glen Walkington, a Greenwood 4-H boy, gave a very entertaining reading. TTie new units were given, .recognition by Community singing of; «or.gs having fitting, original v^ords. Mrs. Dan Desmond, county chairman? explained the Relationship of the Unit and the County. Miss Patterson, assistant state leader, spoke of-the Relationship of the County and the State and Federal Government. Mrs. Bert Bridges, member of the State Federation Board, told of the Relationship of the Individual Member and the State Federation. Mrs. Omar Johnson, from McLain Cov chairman of the Stata Legislative Committee of the State Federation of Home Bureaus, and former State Federation president was speaker of the afternoon. -She emphasized the need for women to enlarge their visions, to keep up with the times, their responsibility to study economic conditions of the day. She explained several legislative measures that haVp been recently supported by the Farm Bureau ahd strongly commended their stand. In closing, she left this admonition with^ the group: "Nothing in such matterjs can be accomplished individually--it must be done through organization." • y ~ We are asked what would have been the result in the Presidential election of 1932 if a candidate had <|eclared in his platform what he proposed to do, if elected, in the following directions: "I propose to extend and encourage government competition with many lines of private business and to institute a governmental control and regulation of business aptivities through at least 50 new bureatis and commissions which I "Will set up in Washington. "1 shall oust the more experienced government employes and supplant them with new appointees, exempted so far as possible from civil service examinations and chosen by my political campaign manager, and* I will add at least 50,000 additional government, employee^ to the federal payroll in the first year of my administration. • s » '11 will propose not only to abandon the gold standard but to debase our currency, repudiate the promises of the government to pay in gold, and make it a crime for private citizens to have gold in their possession. I shall call, upon some college professors to Establish by experiments a new monetary system with no definite and fixed value for the monetary unit.; - "To as«fejt agriculture I iihall pay a bounty~?or the killing of many million pigs and- sows and the plowing up of one-fourth of pur cotton acreage and I shall furthermore distribute! tofarmerS from the federal treasurj' •sums aggregating several hundred million dollars in such a fashion that the farmer will receive greater revenue for non-production than he will for production. I shall take steps to artificially raise the price of cotton 30 that American cotton will be at a disadvantage in world markets, and thus stimulate the expansion of cotton production in foreign countries- In other farm commodities I shall fix pricey regardless of supply and demand. "I propose to demonstrate my faith in the Russian experiment in Communism by recognizing Russia, by reducing the Russian debt to the United States and by lending to the- Russian communist government a few hundred million dollar? from our federal treasury. "I promise to tell our people that this being the age of ^plenty they fhould work less and produce less and demand more for what they do and to emphasize my belief in this program I shall employ millions of idle people to do unnecessary work, and pay them therefor higher wages than are paid by private employers to useful work. "I shall advocate the redistribution of wealth, arouse the workers against their employers, the producers against the distributors, and while urging producers and distributors to increase s.iiiecon ramera^pi ein^ robbed. ( .. ) ijfvoid constitution prices, Fillbe tpid they are bein "J*o constitutional barriers I shall cause attacks to be made upon the strict interpretation of the con St itution' as being out of date and noli.; longer adequate to protect the peo-' ": PIe" All this is a faithful photograph oif1 federal government heresies as -ad» ministered by Roosevelt. It is a terrible indictment of his efforts to overwhelm economic principles that have been the Salvation of America ever since thai Revolutionary War tesulted' in the establishment of the republic/ as ta> constitutional government. A careful study of it may well arouse the people to the fearful consequences that are likely to come utile^ they shall be checked-at the bal- ' , l°t box. We have gone far from the £ okl principles under which we became a prosperous people, and were ruled by justice and American "principles.'-JW- G. Sibley in the Chicago Journal ';" , of Commerce. • . - - . THEBUOGEfBAnERY THAI WOULDN'T He thought was savin? money when he bought a "bargain" battery. It looked nice in the dealer's window, but it didn't have the "guts.* You can get a genu* ine 13-Plate EXIDE Battery for as low Oi ITS AN Own 1983L. bt Giectrte iStonc* Putin OikV *! ffriw hupttion cm All Maket of Blake Motor Sales Phone 156 Hymoiith GU"""Dr. Paul A Schwabe T" Fitted Examined OPTOMETRIST A. E. NYE BUILDING West McHenry Thursday Afternoon--Hoars 1 :S0-5:00 Phone 123-J noon at the home Fred Nordmeyer. of Mr; and Mrs. Home Bureau News i This Hew . GENERAL ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR . 'J ,.\ • \ _ ........ " i l l t h e m o d e r n Manure for Mushrooms .Horse manure- furnishes tlie only satisfactory compost known for mushroom growing. This may contain an ample .supply'of straw which has been used in bedding. The straw not only adds tq the bulk of the material but it also reaches a desirable stage of decomposition in a comparatively short tlmei and has that moisture holding capacity which isjso desirable In inush-. room growing Some growers advise the addition of 1-3 of fresh loam ii} .fbe cdnttposti-'-Montreal rierald.- :, . * Tk« dolden Rule • It 1| not known Just how^the vers^ of' Scripture wa» first nKniart the Qblden RuTe. It Is found In the E'ng^ lish language as early as 1074, when It Is.cited In "Murray's Oxford dictionary --r: HOME BUREAU MEETING The annual meeting of McHenry County Home Bureau was held on Friday, June 29, at"Greenwood. -Sixtyfour responded to the roll call at 10:30 a. m. standard time. By noon, 120 were in attendance. The'morning was given over to the business of the organization. Reports from all chairmen were heard. F*ropi these report? it was learned that fifty members had been gained during the past year, making the present enrollment. 278. Fopr new units were organize* I during the past year. They -are Algos® quin, Burton, Woodstock Evening, and McHenry. Uptown unit had the most publicity during the past year with Greenwood second and Chemung third. Mrs. Clara Greaves Sweeney gave an interesting report of the past year's work. She urged the members toJcnow their organization intelligently;! co1 operate with the state, county, and| local leaders; attend meetiiig9 regularly and maintain always an open mind, realizing anew the need of knowledge. Mrs. Dan Desmond, county chairman., who has so efficiently executed her duties this past year, gave a splendid report of her work. The election of officers, presided over 'btf Mrs. Georgiania Harrison* Vice chairman, resulted in the following: County chairman, Mr-s. Dan Desmond; vice chairman, Mrs. L. Rush; secretary, Mrs. F. .tttckson";--trea§urer£ Mrsf. W. H< Gardner; 4-H Club chair man, Mrs. A.* G, Beard; Community interest, Mrs. Irene Ferguson; Major project, Mrs. F. Cay; Miner project, rs. M- Warner? special, Mrs. F. Hitchens; publicity, M9*s. E, S. Smith. A prize of a box,of candy was lad to Ringwo6djaMtvfor haying g i v e s y o u convenience feature 5 YEARS on sealed-in-st us I mechanism ~~5tandard lyear warranty plus 4 more y e a $§• >. r o n l y $ 5 Miss Lois Crane, born on a Wyoruiut life" In the open, was selected as thl most typical western girl reign as Miss Frontier 193-Liiyer the,Frontler Days celebration in Chevenne on July 28. - niug ranch 'and-who has speufc-xrAWt- of the- mo»t typical western girl find will , . l-!l ,i,J • "..'.ll.i . J ; Llr* Without Food ' . cold-blooded animals can 11* for unbelievably long period*. Snail* sometimes do not eat anything for flv« years at a time. the largest percent of members pres ent at roll call. Another box of candy was given to Uptown for having larg- 'e^t score for the past year. The cup, which is annually awarded to the unit gaining the most new members .during year is still at the Home Bureau Three units: Solon Mills, Huntley, and Marengo;'.tied for this!: • award, each unit having gained nine: f the yei irffice. m • All-steel cabinet, built for a lifetime with gleaming porcelain interior an4 either porcelain ot ttstening glyptal 'enamel exterior^ ** • Stainless Steel Quick Fteezing Chamber. Cannot chip or rust. Easier to clean. Larget roomy, convenient. Freezes., more ice faster? • Sliding Shelves slip forward at touch of a finger bringing food ia pi ain sight and easy reach. V . • i : • r ? r " ' . • Auxiliary Foot Pedal poor Opener. When. hands are full a touch of the toe on the pedal swings * door open. • i Automatic Interior Lighting turns on when door is opened, Off when door closes. • Temperature Control for fast freezing or economical operation ist mild weather. ;§ Refrigeration uninterrupted whi|e defrosting. : • Operates so Quietly you can scarcely hear it, uses less current and has ample refrigerating capacity for evenunusual demands. T FOR OnLY F'"® cents -the cost of • pickageotgum--^willopy~ v crate»wishing machine, I t Yi P •vacuum cleaner, a per- ' V-A wt> C* colaror. an electric iron, a toaster, a waffle iron -- : one time--for one hour at the new20 ilowatt-hour pori etlcct after l7 ki]owatt- hours per room have been used in the month. Other useful electhcal devn.es also cost but a tew pennies to operate. Take advantage of the new low rates --think what comfort, what convenience the use of taborsavirig appliances .will bnng to your Rome. M YtO «vatuu I " v/ v colator, " m r » > * 'oaste Nickel^^ tion offhe electric rite, in e ~M PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY f f85 J . : OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS ^ Telephone: Crystal Lake 280 r. : - j:- n

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy