M VJj&j&j&ti mmmm ; •%£--:ank ' 'i * MMwd rrery rsday at McHenry, ltt, by Ciarlsa V. •tend as seeond-claea natter at the I lestdBca at McHesay, BL, liar the act of May •» !«». * *09 I? A. BL MM* 1 1 ai 1 .of SPftnrd GROVE /S..V.n!" Mr. *nd Mrs. Reed Cat* and ^ *nd Mrs. H. C. Sweet sectored *>,:"• jBelvidere Sunday. 1 ' Mrs Ford Jack80n and AMjre W&,' '^McHenry visited here Thuwdsfr. ' '['j Miss Bernice Bell and fi'Wftfl <lf Chicago were Saturday aftenaoon callers in town. * Arnold Rauen of Chicago maa * ^,^fe^^j(|reek-end guest of hte parents !*,•>" . St. Peter's parish will {five a card party Sunday evening, July 12, at ' 1 _ ii fSVf toarish hall. Thirty-three prizes will V'5.-: 4 pe given and lunch will be served. f'~" Mr and Mrs. Bert Cassey of Chs > tjsagc spent the week-end with tkt -V tatter's father, Nicholas Frennd \:fj, , > family. Mrs. Margarette Bowen, who Is nding the summer at her eottag* spent the week-end In Wauke- 'itfiiy'. f • -,i>v ; Fn %-foi 4ad 1 Arda\ pf A few friends gathened at the home Gust Roepke, Sr.. on June 25, to kelp Viola Roepke celebrate her 20th iMrthday. The afternoon was spent *t five hundred and prizes went to Bfrs. Wm, Bowman, Mrs- Leon Vanory and MJJ. Henry Dammler. A ncheon was served at the close off games. Friday, June !#, wiaAed the twenfourth wedding anniversary of Mr. Mrs. Arthur Hergott and on Saty. June 20, about sixty friendf , frent to their home west of town and • *" i *'» "*M&upn <?scorteed them to the town hall, artiere they Were consrratulated by the tsrowd. Dancing was enjoyed and at •j-i' i late hour refreshments were served. ' A group of friends and relatives fathered at the home of Mrs. Gust gRoepke, Jr., on June 23, in honor of 'Iher birthday. Cards furnished the . *• amusements and a delightful lunch -3- l/> ->-*> was served. Those present were Mrs. »**"' <;t" Peter Christenseti, Mr. and Mrs. ; ; Douglass Katxenberg. Mrs. Faye Kat- 2p ^ zenberg and daughter, Joyce, Mrs. % , • < Tom Kosorek and son, Franklin, Mr. . and Mrs. Howard Christensen, Mrs. Wm, Bowman, Mrs. John Eornctorff, Gust Roepke, Sr., and Mies Bertha ' ,> i-jfc- 5 -Roepkf of Waukegan ; k t yn% Want Ads FOR SALE FOR SA1E--8-room house, modern, And JUcar garage, in city of McHenry, centrally located, being across the street from Grade and Community High Schools. Terms. P. J. Cleary. •5-2 •** RQ8 SAMS--Will sell at private sale the folowing articles: 2 hay snares, 8 and 9 years Told, weight about 1400 lbs. each, set of harness, wagon gear, £ in, farm inwk, top box and hay sack, Wm. Jr., 1 mile east of iransforiTner comer. Tel. 286. *5 FOB SAUS--Memtanhip in McHenry ooamtrj club, Baaaooahle. Inquire at jPlamdealer office. 4-4 FOB SALE--Early Nardock Seed Core, also MOW Yellow Early, germination 99 per cent. James Hunter, McHenry, Tel. McHenry 4I7-J-2. 47-tf BEFORE YOU BUY SHOES see our bargain counter. B, Popp. Expert shoemaker and repair shop. street. Phone 162. FOR SALE--Well secured 7% Fin* Mortgages on McHcary Residence Property. In^uirs at Flaindeakr office. 19-tf FOR REST RINGWOOD Tit - > Alice Mae and Walter Ltv celebrated their birthdays at their homo Tuesday afternoon by entertaining f thirty of their little friends at a party. . Games were played and luncheon was red. Those from out-of-town to ' attend were Mrs. George Herbert, their grandmother of Woodstock; Mrs. Leslie Allen of Hebron, Miss Sadie Campbell of Green Bay, Wis. Mrs. Charles Schneider of Woodstock, ? Carolyn Herbert of Elgin, Janette Hawthorn of Hebron, Elsina Low of Muskegan, Mich- Mrs. Roy Neal entertained the Bridge club at her home Tuesday af ternoon. Luncheon was served. FOR RENT Summer home on Fox river near McHenry. Bmil Laa Riverside Drive. 4 WANTED WANTED--Girl for light house-work. No laundry. Call 616-R-l Friday or Saturday *5 WANTED--Pony to rent for boy 10 years old Black and white preferred. Call MfHfRlj 226-R. 91 WANTED--Maid for general ,hous«- work, no washing. A* Alunl, PisiakeC Bay, on Regner Road. TeL Pistakee 660-J-2 *5 WANTED Housework or any kind of general work. Phone McHenry 149-R. 6 FARM LOANS--First mortgage loaas on farms, low interest. Now taking applications for 1931 loans, R. M. Fritz, 2nd Fl., Harvard State Bank Bldg., Harvard, Dl. Phone 147 29-tf MISCELLAITEOUS HAIL INSURANCE--We are writing hail insurance on your crops for five years ©n the installment plan, in high class Companies. No cash in advance. Farmers can now get fire department service. We will pay $25 to department for each run made to your farm if you carry this additional insurance which costs but $2.82 for five years. Stoffel ft Roihanaptrgcr 3-4 , r ;*:V"T>i ml Qodstock's Beautiful Plmy House ntlDAT4UTDKDmT J Mai Sat. 2:00 p. m. 5c-3J' Eve* 7:<^:00 10c-40c Quest Hite Sataidif 2 for 50o Call for Guest Spencer Tracy "•ndKUnts* Also "F. Oomedy and Mews Extra Sal Matinee "King of the Wild" SUNDAY-MONDAY Continuous Sun. 2:30 to 11 50c Family Mat. Sunday 2:30 to 5:00 ~ . Marion Davies i*'; - "• •?Wm" Trreand aUo Bobby Jones in A«%ow I Play Golf*' Ho. WThe Putter" Comedy and Hews ^ I II " . f' ' T | TUESDAY WEDNESDAY Eve. 7 and 9--10c-40c | Guest Nite Tuesday 2 for 50c (fell for Guest Ticket William Powell with Kay Francis Comedy and News DR. W. A. LABRON, O. D. Caaapkte Optical 8erviee Private Examining Room at ' Hauler's Crystal Pharuaoy M0 _Cnr«tal Lake, H*. SEWING MACHINES REPAIRED Rag Ruff* Made to Otdst - All Work Gaarasteed B. P«PP •'*: Phaae ICS Main St. McHeary JOB KYIDERA, CART, ILL. Livestock Dealer Dairy Cows a Specialty Satisfaction Guaranteed ^ Phone Cary 87-J 114f UPHOL8TER1NG--All kinds of furniture reupholstered and repaired. Good work guaranteed. Work called for and delivered. Chas. Rasmussen, CJenter St„ West McHenry, nL TeL i07-M. Dead Animals Dead and Crippled Cows, Horses, Hogs, and old Plugs Prompt Service $1.00 to $101 head - telephone Barrington f5S^ , •%$ Reverse Charges, .';H. .A- " <[ 12-tf WILLIAM M. CARROLL, Solicitor State «f Illinois, McHenry County, sc. In the Circuit Court flf McHenry County, May Tsjcat A. XL lllL ; Adolph Ibsh " vs. Newell F. Colby, et al Bill to Foreclose, Geo. No. 24887. PUBLIC NOTICE is hnnby #tvw that in pursuance of a decree made and ottered in the atowe «eottttlad cause by the Circuit Court otf McHenry County, Illinois, tm tfihe 26«h day of June A. D. 1931, I, Fred B. Bennett, Master in Chancery of the Circuit Court of McHenry Cosaity, Illinois, will on Saturday, the 18th day of July A. D. 1931, at the hour of ten-thirty o'clock in the foeewoa of said day (Central Standard Tine) at the front door of the courthonsa is the city of Woodstock, McHeary County, Illinois, offer for sale and sell at public vendue to the highest bidder iox cash the following described real estate, to-wit: The north half of the southwest quarter of section number twenfcyseven containing eighty acres of land more or less (excepting and reserving therefrom a piece of land bounded and described as follows, to-wit: Beginning at the northwest corner of the said north half of the pouthwest quarter and running thence east along the east and west quarter section line, fifteen chains, more or less, to the west line of a piece of land conveyed by Laura E. Colby and Newell F. Colby to August M. Schiller by deed dated April 14th, A. D- 1911, and recorded in the Recorder's office of McHenry County, Illinois, in book 141 of deeds at page 379, thence south along said west line four chains and forty links to the-center of the highway, thence in a westerly direction along the center of said highway to the place of beginning, containing three acres of land, more or less), also a part of the northwest quarter of said section number twenty-seven bounded and described as follows, to-wit: Beginning at the southeast corner of said northwest quarter and running thence north along the north and south quarter section line twenty chains to the northeast corner of the southeast quarter of said north west quarter, thence west along the north line of the said southeast quarter of the northwest quarter, thirteen chains und twenty-four and two tenths links to the northeast corner of the piece of land conveyed to August M. Schiller as aforesaid, thence south along th<? most easterly line of said piece of land so conveyed, ten chains and seventy-iive and eight tenths links to the southeast corner of said piece of land so conveyed; thence west along the south line of said piece of land so conveyed eleven chains to the east line of a strip of land fifty feet in width included in said deed, thence south along said last mentioned east line to the south line of said northwest quarter, thence east along said last mentioned south line, twenty-five chains and fifty links, more or less, to the place of beginning, containing thirty-six and thirty-one hundredths acres of land, more or less, also lots number twenty-four and twenty-five of the County Clerk's plat of said section number twenty, seven said lots being located in and being a part of the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter and the southwest quarter of the north- - east quarter of said section number twenty-seven, and containing thirty-nine and fifty-Seven hun dredths acres of land, more or 1<£; (excepting and resenjVng from s*la lot nu»iUnr twenty-four the east ten ' acres thereof); all in township number forty-five north of range number eight east of the third principal meridian, and containing in! all one hundred forty-two and eighty-eight hundredths acres of ' land, more or less (excepting and reserving therefrom, all that portion of the above described premises which are described in the partial release deed dated March 16th, 1927, and given by N. J. J us ten, Trustee, to Newell F. Colby, and recorded in the recorder's office of McHenry County, Illinois, in book 182 of deeds on page 388, McHenry County, Illinois. TERMS OF SALE Cash on day of sale at which time Master's certificate of purchase will be issued in accordance with said decree and the Statute. Dated this 2nd day of July A. D. 1981. * PRED B. BENNETT, Master ito Chancery of the Circuit Court of McHenry County, Illinois. 5-3 Q T: one one "New whether mei later $loom, CoMtitktiM First The Constitution was written before the preamble, and voted upon, section by section, it was then submitted to the committee on style, which made the final draft, placing the preamble in its proper place. It was then voted upon In Its entirety • Industrial Railroad* Many large industrial corporations build and operate railroads as adjuncts of their plants. The outstanding example is the United States Steel corporation, which operates 8,500 miles of railroad, counting double track and sidings, or more than enough trackage to cross the continent. Mardi Gra* Mouidi The king of the Mardi Gras Is so* lected by a secret committee from among the dukes of the Bex organisation. His name is not generally kiAwn until Mardi Gras day. He is chosen on a basis of personal popularity mA, standing In the community. Try our claaailiad al- they rata bring results. Goat's Milk 9m eosapositlon of goat's milk and cow's milk varies little, says Hygela. The small globules of fat in goat's milk renders it somewhat more digestible, though cow's milk assumes a similar quality when it Is homogenised. Immortal Eulogiaa ^The three great English elegies are "Thyrsis," written by Matthew Arnold on the death of Arthur Hugh Clough; "Lycldas," John Milton, on the untimely death of Edward King, and "Adonais," Percy Bysshe Shelley, for John ist, what happened July evening, on streets of lower that after dark, Mr not, take on a sinby no means routine was neoethelem not without frequent In iM many years of his ahopirwptac He toew the ear-marks so well. Tfce cfcvafefy ^$t eyes, the snteared patter, the ctf&MHK&e manner of asking for m the case of the girl vrtth the ati^wpiQii y-ootored hair and the pitifui lotpMr hp with a tiny mole thai looked UM a court pla#ter beauty spot, (t snu^'itouch the same as usual, except fhat she was so young. Not over ftixtfeAf H the druggist was any judge, an4'h? flattered himself that he was. The thing to 0o to these eases was not to interfere? to Interfere was to Invite desperate and frightened recoil. There was a little shelf In the store for just such emergency. Neat little phials of barley water duly labeled "poison." In this wise, chances were the subject would have time to recover from the mental abberration and In all probability not repeat the attempt at self-destruction. That had been the druggist's experltnce^ wbert he had been In a position to fouow up the case, but usually they just drifted ou^Of sight after the fiasco lie thrust on them, and it was left to his Intuition, Which ha trusted, to gauge the results* On one or two occasions the wouldbe self-annlhilators had returned to thank him for the deception. But more usually, at least according to the druggist's conviction^ they just drifted sheepishly out of sight In any event, It behooved him to regard the matter that way. It assuaged his unease of mind. The sixteen-year-old girl with tb^ strawberry hair had not returned, but In the odd times his mind flashed ba^k to her after tfie event, the druggist 1 had leaned upon his conviction that failure to «jicc$ed that one# had jerked her to hflr-fenaeC The druggist'ALttjia was too involved in the multitirapK>U« affairs of his little business to let these matters obsess him. The exacting hours ofr his shop weighed heavily. It was at the period when his son was attending Pharmaceutical college and the assistant he had was all too inadequate. The druggist had been fourteen years In his small old-fashioned shop which the antiquated air of a pharmacy still pervaded Instead of the modern electrified atmosphere of the newer type of drug store. He took pride in that, and furthef prided himself In the fact that when his only son had finished trainfng, be, too, would carry on In the spirit of the chemist, rather than that of titfmtt fangled department store regjmh Is hlch had overtaken the comMM^tegist. And even dovr9rfin§te on the remote by-street, tidinnr at tfils small shop spread among physlfplkns to whom the perfectly-filled jifWCription meant much. Motor rot'-that seldom, if freqtl toted part of town swooped now withy frequency into the druggist's street shop became ft trademark of quality. Curiously ^ft&d-'ftgahst thaJ-ttodera tiM&Cy ot the modern youth, the son had returned to fit hlmaelf with enthusiasm and valor for the cause of medicine, in the old shop. Eight years after his graduation from the state college, ha was practically carrying alone the Increasing responsibilities of the drug store. Meanwhile of course the neighborhood had changed, becoming In a way even more remote and even mine sinister In Its Implication. Various the opportunities that had come and the offers from doctors to help finance the reraoval of the shop to a more llkely^Mdftf town, but the old druggist, haaBndden now. Was querulous when qp^iached on the subject, and for one reason or another his son, twenty-nine past of steady caliber, and his father's passionate pride, did not urg# il. ( After all, the fMili 'Was the old gentleman's life and work. It was he who had created It out of pennies; nurtured it, tended it in Infancy and seen it flourish with the years. The world might well be said to have beaten a pathway to the door, of the little shop. It was because of his in tegrity that doctors,Vlth national and international reputations recommended It to their patients, and once gained, a customer remained. No, this was scarcely the time to cross a bedridden old man in his desire for the stabilization of his life work. » Not that It wafl a strenuous or tormented old age into'which he bad en tered. The little rooms above the shop where Re MuMireit the twentyeight years foil owl rig the death of his wife were snus frffcinj as the proverbial bug In It* nufc 'fceuce and pride ruled here; the of honest achievement and. pride in a son whose ideals ideals of the father and whoa^^th stood wide day, naturally, out lntfc# «nr and wJ0a*<*B? MM* It Wifcjfglitt* Be had the ability, the ,f$M jnvbition. Bat whlla Hvad, tfeere he ratoainad to tha alMh right-hand to mmmrn, ri#ht-hand to. tha par eat, Aftd «f BWMt, along about tha time the^eMer aun began to feel upon himself the Shadow, there began to move across his mtod torments, fears, heartaches, even terror for tha future of this boy. There waa aomethlng so naive and trusting and Simple about tills son. His one weaknees In the Sairs of business was his tendency to te every one at his word. Such a youth would fall easily and readily Into the hands of any woman who desired him sufficiently, and at twenty-nine there was dignity to this fellow, fine clarity of eye and brow and a naive quality that gave him added attraction. With t&a old gentleman standing fty to add his pinch of cynlcfinn whenever necessary, all that was wall and good. Tha hoy had had hit threats of pitfalls and come out unscathed. It waa the aftermath the father dreaded. What about after ha had passed on? It therefore tfecame almost a secret obsession with him. What about this boy's future? A woman could break or make him. What vnteld relief to see this boy settled in Ufa before . . . Intuitive always, the old man watched for signs. The retiosacf of secret thoughts--there was none of that Tha absorption la-soma ana af the many charming young women who come Into tha ah^p^-not a suggestion of peraona! Interest with aayona. Tha telephone's unexplained demands that mlghisuggest a hidden sweetheart-- therelNfe no clewa there to Indicate a preparation for the Inevitable, Countless times he attempted to broach the subject but tha boy would have none of It Nat totetaated to women! Why muat father get an. the morbid suhjek of death--nothing but gout the matter with hhmt Let tha future take care of itself. The future did take cart of Itself. One spring evening the son of the oid druggist entered the sick room with a look on his face that caused the heart of tha old man te leap te-terror and hope. This boy was in loval He was, and the matter of introducing the giil to a father who depended so strongly upop Intuition wa« a time of untold nervousness to the boy. "If you don't like her, Father, it's terrible to have to teU you, hut if you don't like her Tm going to marry her VdSBr In bay.jMkt* by . mm •aanit-hr 3%a «M and sitvsr RY OF ARTED HURST OR by vpaper tradMR.) Ice.) airway.' required only one meeting to set the fluttering old heart of the fluttering old man at rest She was right! She was the assured future of his boy. She was everything, in her strawberryhaired prettlness, with the mouth so prettily shadowed by a mole, her eyes so prettily shadowed by good common sense, that this father could wish for his son. One felt so at home with her at the very first meeting. It was aa U one had known her before, . i » te have iipis--lid Ufly> According to a repot t to tha bureau of lilologlral aim Department of AgricoltMre, banded on No*Mb«r 28. if0% af Green Bay, Wis, fi»a (laya later hear Georgetown, a G, which la a record for individual speed of migration. said HI Ho, the sage rit "that many «tt«wt to gat* * M* hood by doing nothing else.*~-Wa*fe- Ington Star. , nectar,; In a faa^ people wlu» abottt tha wMe neighborhood1*, the wh0ted»l%ste*tf* ematf6tt*a trouble* and eaj *y tbess en their ihDGlders.-- Louisville CMfartcisJoarttal. Mgli Maternity Death Rate Tha matenMty death rate fn thar United Stntea la higher than in any other dvlllaed country. Per 1,000 live births, && mothers are lost It Is believed that with adequate maternity care two-thirds of the lives thus loot might be saved. ' 1 ^ ^ Driven to It One great reaaon why many children abandon themselves wholly to si0m*. aati- trifle away all thalr ttme-bisfeidly, fib became they have ftntofr their eurloetty balked. -Locke. *r -"J, >• f?<.* '"ft TT.^1 Long Liaft dl "Olofiea" in Alphabtical Foi'un The following Kfe the principal olbgies: Anthropology, science of man; archeology, antiquities; astrology, Influence of stars on human affairs; biology, life and living organisms; blontology, physiology of the species or genufi; cftrpology, structure of fruits and seeds; cranlology, characteristics of skulls; criminology, criminals; entomology, insects; etymology, derivation of words; geology, structure of the earth; genealogy, d&ctpt |nd ancestors; graphology, study of character from handwriting; horology, time measurement; hydrology, waters of the earth; Ichthyology, IlsMa! limnology, lakes and ponds; mammalogy, mammals; mineralogy, minerals; neology, ecclesiastical architecture; ophthalmology, structure and diseaaes of the eye; pathology, morbid condition of the body; physiology, organic functions ) paleontology, fossils; phrenology, character as Indicated by form of skull; pomology, fruits, sociology, society as s whole; theology, God or of religion, and zoology, animals. Sandwich Suggestions Butter, 16-0*. jar Salmon, fancy Alaska pink, No. 1 tall can ^M^^hirst Quencher? Grape Juice, pint bottle - ^ •:-S« i»v'- dinger Ale, Pale Dry, 12<oc. bottle •"•Mf -21* 12* tra» can* \*r •eMs^aampn .g; 's Corn Flakee, large pkg. Jello, ail flavors, pkg. Sweet Pickles, quart Jar, 19* -11* -7* -29* ART SMITH Fresh Fruits an* Vegetables as* w*m Native African Heneee HlO natlve of Kirdl-Massa, on tha west coast of Africa, builds his home of h- still clay much like the abode .used by Mexicans and Indians. This is poured over a framework of slender wooden poles used as reinforcements, and allowed to dry in the sun. The design Is worked on with a crude trowellike tool while the mud Is moist The houses look like huge anthtUs, with only an inadequate opening for a door in the side and a small round chimney hole at the top to admit light and air. The design on the outside Is often elaborate and worked out with the greatest pains, for It seryes to identify the owner of the hut ; ' Architectural Term : • Chevet, in French, means "a pttlow,n The term is applied to the eastern extremity of a church with surrounding chapels. It corresponds to that part of the cross on which Christ pillowed his head. Sunstroke Easy to Acquire T»i the equatorial regions you miny*4 get a sunstroke from 18 seconds' exposure. You can also get one under canvaa or below an iron roafc She last la a slower process. J5 'v/:'-- . • Lightest Knewn^Gasee Oil cubic foot of hydrogen tmder ordinary conditions will lift .071 pound. One cubic foot of helium gas will lift .006 pound. These are the Hghtest gases known and practically the only ones used for balloons. It is stated that the government helium plant in Texas can produce helium at about $12 per thousand cubic feet, or at a little more than twice the cost of hydrogen. Hydrogen is Inflammable while helium is not While heated gases and smoke have a tendency to rise, their lifting power will depend on their specific gravity and on the temperature ^ ^ \ CVi-,;. Sky's Ub Limit life In rural Aaietica la ftill to tha making, and the farmers are .the Ones who are making it- The sky's the limit.--Country EM?/*!, ------' /*---* Substitute finr Solid Geld. filled gold is a substitute for aolid gold, consisting of some base metal, generally brass, oovered with a thin layer J»P*< inacni^rfl '">v« r For Sturdier Brook facts women ever overestimate, the Importance for Home Companion. Making Friendships Some friendships are made by nature, some by contract some by interest, and some by souls.--Jeremy Taylor. . . u i f PICNIC, F O O D S everything you'll want to make a "miidaiidtferioa*" Foortku Aad «t W jriee^teo, at A*P iiS2ta»n^. . W11K sss«sr3fisrr'^Sii"2i#,2#el OftAMDMOTMSffa IMWWOW^ a 8ILVERBROOK (PRINT OR TUB) Butter' SULTANA f-- Peanut Butter EDEUWE18S (LIQHT OR DARK) {PLUa BOTTLE DEPOSIT) 32® Beverage DEL MONTE g| : ^ 1-LB. ± TIN " Fresh Fruits and Vegetables ## FARCY BAHAMAS • - - - 5c lb. CALIFORNIA WHIEY DEW HELORS, large size 19c Valencia ORANGES, sweet, juicy, Ig. size, doz. 33c WATERMELONS AT A VERY SPECIAL PRICE TOMATOES fancy, ripe, 3 lbs. 25c * 4.CAH8 19C , 10BAR829C Kitchen Klenz«P P&G WHITES ONAAPP HTHA A&V F o o d S t o r e s