PL ^.to MiM erary Thandaf at Ksttibry, nU bt Charlas P. Baakk. Bntaiad aa seeond-claas asatlsi Jsr tbe act sf May 8, 187». - it iiiluSm «t McHsasf, ?U sa- - •, •* , , r •, si.es A.LMOBI IBM, Editor and Maaagcr . •ft1 Bridal Minus Uve No Fraud, Judge | N«w York.--If a lass says she love# a tad and he marries her only to learn that she does not love htm at all--what's to be done aboat it? Absolutely nothing, announced the Appellate division of the Supreme court. The net result was Max Feig lost out in his attempt to free himself of Regina Feig, his Rumanian bride, by annulment proceedings. Max said he proposed the first time he saw her when he visited Rumania and that •he replied that all her love was his and the wedding followed fast. Brt when she came to America, asserted Max, the bride explained thai •fee never loved him at all and went through the ceremony simply to evade the immigration laws. Max asked for freedom. Tbe Supreme court of the Bronx granted It to him on the ground of fraud, bat the appellate Juri*a It «way. Want Ads FOB SALS # DIVA'S RETINUE By FANNIE HURST CO*V KeOor* HtnutMr SradlcaU.> (WMU 8»rric») FOR SALE--7-room house aad garage, located in Spring Grtva. Very reasonable- Inquire of Frank L. Adams, Ringwood, III. 6-4 Man Judged Guilty When Chickens Roost at Home Noblesvilla, In<L--The (act that chickens always come home to roost ff permitted to do so, was the principal factor in the conviction of Clarence OL Ogle, on a charge of stealing chickens from Elmer Heinzman. When the sheriff took the chickens to the Heinzman farm just before dark and turned them loose they ran to the trou&h of water, drank, and then went to roost with the other chickens. Ogle was fined and sent to Jail for stealing the chickens. Has Needy Person Fund But No Needy Person -Aldan, Pa.--There are no needy Untiles among the 2,500 residents of this little town. A fund of more than $800 Is available for their assistance from a total of $2,000 which was collected by the Aldan Boosters' club several months ago. The committee chairman reported that the borough had no persons in need. v Carbaratioa When gas is carbureted then la 1 part of gas to 15 parts of air sucked la through the carburetor. This air Attains oxygen. In combination with the hydrogen atoms In the gas the gtoms Jorin water. This yater FOR SALE--Parlor furniture, breakfast nook. Cor. Washington aad Park Sts. J. C. Yactor. 6 FOR SALE--1930 Ford Sport Roadster, rumble seat, 6 wire wheels, side mdunts, windshield wings, trunk rack, two tail and spot lights, excellent condition. $325. Tel. McHenry 298. % *6 FOR SALE--International Threshing Machine, 22-iiu cyl., 38-In. sep., in good running order. ... Mrs. Jo* H. Justen, fcoute 3, McHenry. 6-2 FOR SALEU-§-ro6ih htfuse, modern, and 2-car garage, in city of McHenry, centrally located, being across the street from Grade and Community High Schools. Terms* • P. J. Cieary. . - . : *6-2 FOR BALE--^Cestfjershipin McHenry country club. Reasonable. Inquire at Flaindealer office. 4-4 BEFORE YOU BtJY SHOES see our bargain counter. B. Popp. Expert shoemaker and repair' shop. Main street. Phone 162. 38-tof FOR SALE--Well secured 7% Pirst Mortgages on McHenry Residence Property. Inquire at Flaindealer office. :;T^« •fAmfSiim------ TOR RENT WANTED FARM LOANS--First mortgage loans on farms, low interest. Now taking applications for 1931 loans. R. M. Fritz, 2nd Fl., Harvard State Bank Bfcdg., Harvgrd# HI. Phone 147- 29-tf MISCELLANEOUS ©?? opt the exhaust fis a vfcpof, a-v tiivu *iw- ema«nnd mmo Clock this «ken ha en- W Tw d petted grippe lift" drops of water. • -.r4: *;. -1 . .Ilaped by Ce»q»ere$^»i#r The name Rock of Gibraltar comes from the one-eyed Berber or Moorish conqueror, Gebal-Tarik, who landed there in 711 and commemorated his first victory by calling the giant rock by his own name. Woodstock's Beautiful Play House FRIDAY -SATURDAY Sat. Hat. 2:M p. m. 5e-Ms Eve. 7 *$-$*• ltc*4te Gtaest Kite 2 for 50c Moang Sinners* SEALED BID&--To whom it may concern: Public notice is hereby given, that under Chapter 130, Re vised Statutes of Illinois, the Treas urer ef the State of Illinois will re- Ctivs sealed bids for all public money io V>e deposited oil sctive and inactive accounts, from any and all banks duly authorized to do business fai the State of Illinois. Such bids will be received by the State Treasurer at Springfield, on or before September 7, 1981, at 12 o'clock noon. Proper blank forms for blading and printed instructions will be mailed to each State and National bank doing business in Illinois. All deposits must be secured by collateral security to be approved by the State Treasurer. EDWARD J. BARRETT, State Treasurer. HAIL INSURANCE--We are writing hail insurance on your .crops for five years on 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 & Reihansperger. 3-4 With DR. W. A. LABRON, O. Dk. Complete Optical Service Private Examining Room at Shuler's Crystal Pharmacy Phone 860 Crystal Lake, 111, Comedy and New* m SUNDAY-MONDAY Continuous Sun. 2:30 to 11 50c Family Mat. 2:30 to®-**' Jmui Crai Sunday in L"- J.* ! ' *." P.; ivi-' f * h "Uugbiag Sinotfs also v" Bobby Jones in "How I Play Golf" *•. a "Chip Ihets" *• Comedy and News ' TUESDAY WEDNESDAY Guest Nite Tuesday 2 for 50c ^ Take a )oy rMs "Six Cylinder Love" Willi •prater Traey liward Evervtt NortM A thrill a second A laiifk a minute Comedy and News SEWING MACHINES REPAIRED Rag Rugs Made to Order All Work Guaranteed --<• B. POPP ' 162 / Main St. Mdhitf 11-tf JOE KVIDERA, CART, ILL. Livestock Dealer ^ Dairy Cows a Specialty Satisfaction Guaranteed^! •Phone Cary 87-J <" Ml " UPHOLSTERING--All kinds of fur niture reupholstered and repaired. Good work guaranteed. Work called for and delivered. Chas. Rasmussen, S. Center St., West McHenry, 111. Tel. 107-M. 12-tf Dead Animals Dead and ('rippled Cows, Horses, Hogs, and old.Plugs Prompt Service $1.00 to $10 a head ^Telephone Barrington 256 t Reverse Charges National Capitol The front of the Capitol at Washington never has been changed, says Pathfinder Magazine. The building 'aces the east--in the opposite direc tion from the White House--and it was toward the east that the projectors supposed that the city would grow. But the development of Washington was largely toward the Wert and northwest and accordingly it Is from the rear that the Capitol usually is approached. % Aacient Jewiak CmIom A sabbatical year was the one year In seven when all land of the ancient Jews was supposed to lie fallow for 12 months. It Is now used for. a missionary's furlough, or a year of vacation from c profession. ROUND the heroic figure of Camilla von Stroheim ha£ -Always whirled entourage. She had been a prima donna since she had Hashed, at a robust seventeen, a magnificent Brunhllde, upon a public that welcomed her permanently to its bosom. For the first fourteen years of her triumphant career, during the lifetime of Hearr Graf von Stroheim, one of-Germany's magnates she had three times toured around the world in operatic and concert capacity, success always In her wake. After the death of her husband, Camilla had spent most of her time in America, traveling in continuous tours with her daughter, three or four maids, secretaries, chauffeurs and a special valet whose exclusive duty was to care for the dosen or so Daschunds, which Invariably made up part of the diva's caravan. Paula von Stroheim, daughter of Camilla, had been born In the Waldorf- Astoria In New York city, christened In Berlin and educated by governess and tutors of practically every civilised country of the world. At seventeen she was a pasty-faced girl, given to occasional outbursts of tiny pimples, narrow-shouldered, slightly nearsighted, and'as far removed as possible, from the exuberant, creaturebeauty of her mother and In no way similar to the stout expansive figure that had been her father's. Curious, but von Stroheim, probably too busy with the glitter of her own career, had never been acutely conscious of these physically shortcomings of her daughter. She adored her. She lavished endearments, gifts, indulgences, and was most elaborately demonstrative She had a nickname for Paula; a ridiculous one. "Pet-cat" "My darllng-cums Pet-cat, what would mother do without you?" "My angel-faced Pet-cat, how could von Stroheim exist If it were not for you?" Angel-face or no angle-face, well might von Stroheim ask herself that question. From the time Paula had been six she had slavishly been serving her mother. By the time she was sixteen, no lady's maid, no masseur, no attendant of any kind whatsoever, could bring to von Stroheim the sedative kind of relaxation that emanated from the fingertips of her daughter. Paula served her mother heart, soul and body. She was on cau In the watches of the night, when the great diva, given to Ifisomnia, wanted to talk. She was on call in the wings 9f the opera house, when the great diva, impatient of her physicians, wanted Paula, who stood waiting with a throat syringe. She was on call with the train schedule; concert schedule; hotel schedule In other words, the frail and pasty-faced little Paula was doomed to walk In tbe wake of grandeur. Until she was about nineteen, however, these realizations did not bite in. Her adoration of her mother was so colossal that it dwarfed her sense of relative values. Von Stroheim was like a great sun In the center of Paula's life, throwing It* fierce, powerful rays everywhere about her. The tempers, tbe temperaments, the moods, the vagaries of her mother, were the Indicators, so to speak, in the life of Paula. When von Stroheim smiled, Paula smiled. When von Stroheim threw glassware and tore silk to shreds, Paula's little soul quailed within her. But it must be said for von Stroheim, that whatever her moods, whatever her fluctuations of temperament, her attitudes toward her child were chiefly those of adoration. As the members of the entourage and the sychopbants who hung on the outskirts of the retinue that surrounded the great prima donna used to say. Pet-cat was her sole reverence. Petcat was the only creature on earth she really loved. And fiercely Paula loved in return; worshipped the flowerstrewn ground on which her mother trod, had no thought of self, because hers was bound up In the magnificence of von Stroheim. It w&B when Paula was nineteen that there wedged into her life an emotion that was new, terrifying and ecstatic. A secret emotion, which she would not admit ht first even to herself, and yet as It became more and more apparent it was wonderful to lie on the cot she invariably occupied at the foot of her mother's great bed, and let these strange ecstasies sweep over her In floods of enchanted sensations. _ . /Paula wai ln love with the small blpnd accompanist who had Joined her mother's retinue a few months previous. He was a German fellow, teutonic, blue-eyed, yellow-haired, who spoke English as fluently as he spoke his native tongue, a brilliant musician with promise of a fine career of his own, after a few years of apprenticeship as accompanist. Von Stroheim was not easy to serve in this capacity, Her experience with accompanists was varied and full of all kinds of regretable experiences. They came they went She was known as a the most sMeifafuL frill; bud liken stfcam -t|« ,dtairt She \ babied him and had him through i heavy bad overtaken hlih of her cross-conntrj had a name for hlnr, its way as Paulal young man flushed spiled lf*to him, evjii her service. It mads »us, and at heart *»« »us, ambitious. feU^W. of ultimate plants*!* tours. as rid "Pet-boy." whenever after moi him feel was a shy, full of dr< triumphs. Paula found herself also harboring these drei where th from city to find a pi room,, and practicing, arpeggioa hotel coi Gluck. In the'hotels ue camped on Its tour her greatest Joy was r the door of duck's there listening to his t came in avalanche 'the long Impersonal Paula wurfn teve. Overwhelmingly maternal as von Stroheim was in her treatment of this girl; ardent, emotional, demonstrative And indulg«gt; 'thfere was not between them, at latft'ss far as Paula was concerned, any relationship that admitted of a revelation of the minute secrets of the mind and heart, chiefly It must be admitted, because Paula up to this time; had owned none in particular. At nineteen she was practically as much of a child to her mother as she had been at nine Paula was no problem to von Stroheim for two reasons i the great diva was to occupied with the intricate problems of her famous self and so subtly had the eventful years slipped by, that von Stroheim had no conception of the fact that her daughter was an adult "Pet-cat my darllng-cums, come sit oh your mother's lap." "Pet-cat angel, come rub your mother's head." "Petcat my baby* wake up and talk to your mother. I can't sleep." And always the talk; was of the diva; her triumphs, her defeats, her hopes, her chagrins, her tempers, her loves, her hates. And of ail of them there were aplenty, because as time went on, and her position became more and more secure, von Stroheim became more and more the temperamental operatic star. That was wfry, when love came to Paula, strangkly, shyly, secretly. It was something sha could not find the voice to Impart to her mother. It was sufficient in the beginning Just to stand off , secretly adore, and secretly, oh set^ecretly, hope and hope and hope And out of the hoping was to come this; > One evening, entering the hotel suite in Detroit, wrapped in sables, blazing with gems, iaden with long stem roses the ydor of which perpetually surrounded her, von Stroheim rushed up to her daughter, catching her tightly and ecstatically in her arms. "My darling-cumS Pet-cat, will you forgive your had, naughty mother who loves you? Idle went and got herself married, Tqu have a sweet new darling Pet-boy for a father." Precisely that had happened. Von Stroheim and Gluck had been married by a local magistrate. A thunderclap had descended upon the life of a narrow, pasty-faced little person known as Paula von Hstrohelm. A thunderclap that was'to reverberate through a life time Strange, that veither von Stroheim nor young GWfcfc were ever to have an inkling of tai* secret catastrophe in the heart and soul of Paula. She was the same unobtrusive, willing little soul she had always been. Von Stroheim, If possible, was more fiercely, relentlessly, maternal after her marriage, than she had ever been before The terrible pkrt to Paula was that Gluck was so gentle, so considerate of her well-being; so eager to successfully serve in his fantastic capacity as Btepfather. After all, he was only eight years the senior of Paula. What happened subsequently came so gradually that it is doubt||gL if Gluck was conscious of It until after the condition was too well established to be remedied. It is doubtful if he eWn desired a remedy, so all-embracing, so powerful, so possessive, and so sedative was the claim of von Stroheim upon his heart and mind. She showered him with the magnificence of her affections, Just such as she had showered Paula. She smothered him with indulgence, with endearments, and with a quality that transcended his own, and Just as it had transcended Paula's. At the end of the second year of this strange marriage there was serving the great von Stroheim, not only the daughter Who walked quietly in the wake of her magnificence, but the young teutonic-looking husband, who had receded by this time, in what was to be the permanent role of accompanist and member of the diva's retinue. ' « From city to city, from country to country, wanders this magnificent cara van de luxe, thfc extravagantly person '-able prima donnft shedding effulgence everywhere she gotes, and In her wake, adoring her, the little daughter named Paula, and the Httie husband named Gluck. < a Buvy Contre and Emil Simon of; Chloaffo visited Mrs. Rosa (Muelle* July 4th. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Miller and family and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Freund "visited Mr. and Mrs. George Lay on July 4th. Mr- and Mra. Anthony Pacek Mid son, Stanley, wars Chtaifo visitors Monday. Misa Catharine Pifcsen of Chicago visited her dad, John Pltaen, Saturday and Sunday. Mias Rose Marie Schaefer spent Monday and Tuesday with Mr. and Mra, George Obanauf at Grayslake. WVslay Oibbs Spent Saturday with Mr, and lira. Russel Gibbs. Mr. and Mrs; Richard Guyser and children of Chicago spent the weekend with the Satter*s parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Oeffllng. Mn. Wm. Smith and children of McHenry visited her parents here on Monday evening. , Mrs. Joe Guaaardo and children of gledde spent Tuesday with her other, Mrs. William Oeffltng, Miss Helen Blank of Crystal Lake spent Thursday afternoon with Misa Helen Schaefer. MUfa Schaefer returned home with bar for the evening. Miss Catherine Pftden of Chisago and Joa Pltaen of Beloit visited Mrs. Ben Schaefer Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Frerintf of Chicago and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Horick and Helen Smith of Wood* stock spent the wetk-end with "Mir. and Mrs. Stephen H. Smith. Miss Olive Hcttermanh of McHenry spent the holiday* with her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Joe Hettarmann. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Michefa, Jr., and family of Crystal Lake spent Sunday with the former's parents here. Miss Mildred Schaefer was a Crystal Lake callir Sunday. Mrs. Ben Schaefer is now up and around after suffering for two weeks from pleurisy. Joe Pftsen of Beloit spent Saturday and Sunday with relatives here. Sr. M. Victricia, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joe P. Schaefer, returned to tl* eoowent at Milwaukee last week. Miss Afvera Hettermann is spending the week with Miss Marie Kempfer in Chicago. / Mr. and Mrs. G^birg* Obenauf and children of Grayslake were visitors here Taeada^r evening. Mr. and Mprs. W. J. Meyers were pleasantly surprised at tb#ir home in Johnsburg Tuesday evlning. The evening was spent in playing games. Dancing was enjoyed until a late hour. Music was furnished by artists from WRJW radio station at Racine. Lunch was served, after which Mr. and Mrs. Meyers were presented with a gift. Out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Meyers, brother of W. J. Meyers, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hull, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bochner, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Wenk, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Young, Mr. and fors. Billie Wentma from Kenosha. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Shifano, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Swift and family and Mr. and Mrs. Archie Good visited with Mr and Mrs. Witf. J. Meyers and fim. ily Saturday ELYSEE PALACE IS ^DEPRESSING ABODE sr*1' • Pavwl Straete la Ifaniaa Venice Italy; Is Jrallt on a group af at the ha«« of the Adriatic of th»-strain ars paved Iftich as Wat hi other dties, but the laajqrlty are canals with the houaia built right at the water edge, so that tbe gondolas or othgt hosts caa pull up right at^tha Indiana was tbft first state to make provlstonTor the cara of the insane Its constitution made such provision. Patent Requirement The law requires that when.an article IVIs patented it be "Patrated" j private Early were a Hast ali' e& The- name is said to h*va originatad front tbe use of the head SMsque iflforical types on occasions of ftftjbr~ It*.* M>lemnity. ; P" --t; K«ap Taeegly * Sophistication Is the cardinal calaa* tty of our race. It Is the death <f « wonder la the human soaL--AaMCteaa * Magazine Unique Manuscript • The oldest known manuscript b which English words occur la a teh charter of 679 A. DGas De»troy» Metal Many gases were developed during the war for one purpose or another, and one which was designed to attack the individual was found to operate in a much- more effective and humane manner. It has a very rapid corroding action on metal so that a gun subjected to the fumes is rendered utterly ugtilpfluin a few hours. Use for Old Railroad Ties Pencil manufacturers of the Bast buy up old railroad ties from the weatern states. These logs are mostly of red cedar in which the hearts are still wipipnirjujr'u-'n»"-f'V'KMrs. Polk the First The first President's widow to draw a pension from tbe United States wss Mrs. Polk. Tbe act of March 81, 1862, provided for a pension of $6,000. Thursday, Friday and , - *3 »**- i* J i CANTAtOUPM SCor TOMATOES l«cll».,3lbs. tfc GRAPES, Seedless 2 Itw. 2Sc GRAPES, Greea 21bs. 25c Aft,®*" •«« Vegetables, at ™ h g Re a s o n a b l e P r l l ay av ^• Fruit Market RlvenideDrltt. McHENRY, ILLINOIS -At; . . WSIFTED PEAS, Sweet Wrinkled 2 No. 2 cans 25c TOI^ATQEg ^ 3 No. 2 cans 25c RICE KRISPIES, Kellogg's, pkg. 9c IGA SHRIMP TOILET PAPER 1 can 17c Eastern 'Miritet Places Che word "baeaar" is Arabic in oriand refers to a market place in the last. Some of „tft^se bazaars are In the open, some are covered over. gn, i ast HeadMi lfbr Grief If we persist in thinking life is futile we're nrapfLng to get much out of It except disAppolntmenta.-- Toledo Blade. / *,*. Wives of French PfesWknts Find It Gloomy. Paris.--The great Elysee PalMa. Is which the presidents of the French republic reside, has not brought happiness to the women who have occupied it as the first ladies of the land. Something of the mournful qualities of the great palace of Versailles, where there was never happiness, only grandeur, are embedded in the walls of the massive building fronting the Rue du Faubourg Saint Honore Perhaps Mine. Paul Doumer will break the apell and bring gsyety to the house where little gayety has been before Last President Unmarried. M. Doumergue, the retired president, did not marry until he left office. There has never been an oflldal hostess at the Elysee during his administration. The vague and scarcely ex pressed sorrow that clings to the great chambers of the palace was not felt by women during his tenancy. Of all the women who have been hostesses in the palace since the establishment of the third republic but two, Mme. Deschanel and Mme. Mlllerand, found the atmosphere congenial and both of them are known to have expressed to their friends the feeling that the palace was too vast and gloomy for comfort Mme. Faure wife of President Felix Faure was not happy amid the grandeur of the great presidential mansion. She and her husband had been used to simple bourgeois surroundings and were never comfortable in the vast pile set aside for the residence of F r a n c e ' s p r e s i d e n t s . J ' ^ Dspreesed by Elysee Mme I«oubet never hesitated to fay that she preferred the life of a senator's wife. The Elysee depressed her and she was wont to say, "We ^were so much happier at. the Luxemburg." Mme. Sadi-Carnot, whose husband was assassinated at Lyon, never recalled the Elysee without a shudder, "It was the bouse of sadness where our great happiness was ruined," she said. / Mme Poincare made 'no secret that sht left the Elysee with pleasure after the termination of her distinguished husband's war-time administration The early days of the republic, trou bled times when the structure of the new third republic was endangered from many quarters, brought no happiness to the wife of Marshal Mac Mahon. Mme. la Marechall, a soldier's wife, found tbe Elysee too ornate and gloomy for her simple tastes. But perhaps the Doumergue family will And the great palace more congenial than their predecessors. It will be modified and brightened for their usa and. Bccording to their tastes, as it Is for every new occupant SOAP POWDER V42 oz. pkg. 21c ART SMITH 3 rolls 19c " • s Freab.Fralts aad Vegetable^ Sfe W«t MtHrar; * * * * *: ¥ * Eight O'clock Coffee • • Red Circle Coitee lb. 23c Bokar CoHee 1 lbs. SSc Kratt Mayonnaise ptmt i«r 33c Airy Fairy Cake FlOlif i*i 17* i,n« Flakes . . i«»i«»fc|. 19c Pure Cane Sugar 10 n*. 4Cc White Hanse Milk 4 taiimaa 25C A&l* Food Stores *e^. 4 cans Fresh Fruits and Vegetables' HEW CABBAGE v . 2 IDs. 5c VALENCIA ORANGES, Urge size, dot 37c' TRANSPARENT APPLES for cookiag 4 lbs. 2Sc BANANAS,fancy,ripe v v "'.IM^ Sc .s- si