», " J*' •J®sSv t-JTfi, ***** * ^ ^ , •:,M^ -~r 'rvf^.V/- "i-~',• THXlCBKmCy njJVDXiJJER, THUSSDJlT, JOLT », IMS V^-X .. f ,."N' Sicilian Boys Pressing the Kseene* From Lemort Rinds. l'(Vt>l*Ti4 by National O«ovrmphl« toWOr, 1 , .£ WMblBBtM. D.W-WWI Serrie*. '•*"*• ICILY goes back to wort as the : summit of Mt Etna, famous | landmark of the Mediterranean Island, resumes its peaceful, eterttal steaming, Recent nawfeliags and aBJilogions within the mountain have Ifctreceded devastating lavs flow* In the past. ' • • * The present "threat" recalls the eruption of the huge volcano 1b 1928 wben a lava stream, flowing like a 2£00-foot ribbon from one of its era- Mrs, flooded the eastern slope, one of &e island's most fertile regions. Orchards, vineyards and forests ,%ere destroyed; also the villages and towns that thrived on their products. More an a quarter million people live on the slopes of Mount Etna. The ••stern slope Is the most thickly pop- Jwtated with one town almost adjoln- ;tnc another. Almost every foot of 'ground not used for dwellings is cultivated, yielding abundant crops. Btna has terrorised this district | Stony times before. Whether the traveler goes by train or automobile down ' the east coast of Sicily, he passes flow **|ter flow of lava. Some of them %re ' centuries old; others more recently de- ; posited from some of the two hundred 'craters thatxpepper the side of the cone-shaped mountain. The town of S Acireale perches on a 800-foot cliff .! formed of seven distinct layers of l«va. Within the Christian era, Mount Ktna has boiled over its crater rims wore than a hundred times. It has : wiped out cities, towns and villages - and spelled doom to thousands of I homes. Almost daily Mount Etna ! nimble*, and Its summit constantly I qpuitb eicaiii) Uiii ii ianco iiiv?rC »£»«*» j these "suggestions" of action even to I arouse the Sicilian's curiosity. The I homes of their ancestors are sandwiched between two of the lava flows, I and many of the present generation, {like those of Mascall and Nunzlata, chief sufferers of the last decade, have Watched their homes sink' beneath a ftew molten bed. Catania, Birthplace of Bellini. - Catania, lying at the foot of the lountain, has been destroyed and renin many times. Catanians know | Mount Etna so well that the famous [volcano has to spit fire and boil over J'lto rim before they seek shelter, i. To the Catanian who loves his mod- \irn city, Etna has been a benefactor. <To the traveler in search of antiquities jit has been a despoiler, for ancient Catania of Greek, Roman, Saracen jand Norman days is buried, save for fa Greek theater, a Roman amphitheajtar, gome baths and a few unimportant . Monuments. J/.. Catania Is more Interested in Its „ !wide thoroughfares, public squares ^and parks, and In honoring her illustrious sons than in digging up ancient i relics of a restless past. Bellini the ; Composer was born there in 1802, and Qatanians are not allowed to forget it. ! A statue of the composer adorns villa i Bellini, one of the city's finest parks • 'where on summer evenings one can tit and listen to Italian melodies "played by a fine Sicilian band. The »vine-clad slopes and the white head «f Mount~~Ctna form a magnificent background. Another statue of the composer .ftforns the Piazza Steslcoro through l^hich runs the Via Etnae, Catania's ' * main street from the southern part of the city to the foot of the great moun tain. A third statue stands among those of kings and great Italian and Sicilian patriots in the cathedral. There Is also a Bellini theater, once the finest in Italy, and the Catania ' guides point with pride to the tablet Which marks the house In which the 'I ^mposer was born. I The cathedral, and a lava elephiant " • *aiop a tall marble base at its front door, ; are two of the most popular monuments of early Catania. The elephant's ; origin is unknown but the cathedral . ll credited to the prosperous reign of the Norrpan King Roger. Built In 1901, It was badly damaged by successive earthquakes and eruptions of Mount ' Etna, but each time It has been re- Ifltored and used. Agatha, the Patron 8aint. More honored than even the kings' Monuments in the cathedral is that of St Agatha, Catania's patron saint ,Xbe head of her 6tatue Is said to contain tlie head of the saint who in defense of her virtue was tortured by a l|oman praetor in the Third century. Among her relics is a veil which Is •aid to have miraculously diverted a lava stream that menaced Catania in *60. Once a year, In February, Catania tarns out en masse to honor her. The - Statue, mounted on two long pole*, li bosne through the streets from church to church by white-robed menu The route of the procession Is jammed tc suffocation, old balconies groan under the weight of humanity find every roof has its qm>ta ox' spectators. At night there are torchlight processions which brilliantly light up the city, and in nearly every window a candle or two throws feeble beams. The yelling and whistling and confusion of the day continue, augmented by the booming of colorful fireworks, the toll of church bells and the occasional roar of a cannon. The St Agatha celebration la only once a year. Before -fld after, Catania Is busy with Its commerce and Industry. The harbor is filled with commercial craft whose flags add a colorful touch to the view from the Flora delta Marina, a narrow but beautiful parkway near the water's edge. Catania Is not only the second largest city In Sicily but one of the island's chief gates of export through which some 600,000 tons of merchandise pass annually. Sulphur, fruit and wine have made fortunes for Catanians, and these and other industries keep many of the city's 271,000 inhabitants employed. Attractive to Travelers. Interest in Mount Etna's moods Is not entirely confined to the volcano's immediate neighborhood. • All Sicily feels the death-dealing blows of lava flows as much as all America feels the lash of a hurricane sweeping Florida. Normally, however, Sicily is an Island garden spot which nature has endowed with a warm sunny climate and all the charm that might go with it Its wild mountain scenery, ancient history, and picturesque inhabitants make it a mecca of European winter tourists. Travel In the interior was formerly considered unsafe because of brigandage. Such conditions, however, have long since been eliminated. Now the visitor is safe, and in addition to native inns, comfortable pensions are conducted by French, German and English landlords of many years' residence in -the country. Provincial town# of Sicily are famous for their situation, high up on picturesque hillsides or on rocky promontories Jutting into the blue waters of the Mediterranean. Many of these towns are built on Greek foundations and contain ruins of Roman, Saracen, and Norman origin. A few Greek temples and theaters are practically Intact Natives Are a Cheerful Lot Racial types among the peasantry vary from classic Greek and swarthy Arab to blond Norman and haughty Spanish. In spite of his mixed ancestry, however, the Sicilian of today is distinctly a Latin product in matters of disposition, culture and rellrion. Travelers unite In testifying to his cheerfulness, quickness of perception, and hospitality. Stable government and education are said to be doing much to stamp out superstition and secret vengeance and terrorism. This movement for better conditions Is exemplified by wholesale prosecutions against outlaw gangs now taking place at the old Roman bathing resort of Termini Imerese. In Roman times the Island of Sicily was called the granary of Italy, and, while no longer specializing in wheat it is one of Europe's mainstays in the production of citrus fruits. Only California rivals Sicily as a grower of lemons. A part of the lemon crop is marketed in the form of citrate of lime and lemon extract. For thousands of years this football at the toe of Italy has been the melting pot of many races. Its early Inhabitants, the Slkels, who gave the island its name, were conquered by Greeks, whose great cities such as Syracuse dominated the land for flvj hundred years. Next came the rising power of Rome, duging whose heyday Sicily was given over to the plunder of successive governors. Roman oppression grew so cruel that gangs of plantation slaves twice rose in revolution. Succeeding centuries saw Saracen conquests, Norman kingdoms, and Bourbon misrule. Finally, freed by Garibaldi, Sicily became a part of the kingdom of Italy. r During the last half century Industrial conditions and political relations have not always been to the liking of the Sicilians, so that the island has been called the "Ireland of the South." 'Many thousand sons of the racial melting pot emigrated to America, some districts being stripped bare of men of working age. One town whose present population Is 25,000, has sent 15,000 emigrants to the new country. I * Good B sliding Material 'I* «Adobe bouses have stood for hm> Areds of years. The secret of longevity la a dry stone foundation, because Moisture absorbed from the ground or a defective roof is the chief i of the crumbling adobe walla. • i - Warriors of According to followers each Iword, trumpet tgaliUP.tag a Believing (• History "Since we must go on without attempting to change the past," said Hi Ho, the sage of Chinatown, "we may as well try to believe that In the eternal ordering of things history has repealed no mistake*" -- Washington Star. . MAirmyit t.lf* - Mrs. Hurry Mktthsws and- sons and Mrs. WWard Darrell #ere callers at the farm bareau office at Lake Zurich Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Geary and children were callers at McHenry last Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. John Blomgren attend, ed the movies at McHenry last Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dowell and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Davis were callers at Woodstock last Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Converse were callers at Woodstock^iast Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Foss and son, Billie, were callers at WoodsrtocK and Crystal Lake last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Converse and daughter, Frances, and Russell Hanson and Howard Weckerley of Myhth Park were callers at McHenry Saturday evening. Mrs. Clara Smith was a caller at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe S. Haas at Wauconda last Wednesday. Leslie Fosft and Wm. Berg and John Pea* of the "Flats" attended the Cubs- Giants ball game in Chicago Sunday. Mrs. Elmer Esping and Mrs. Wm. Eichoff of Maywood attended the ball g&m« in Chicago last Friday--ladies day BARE SECRET UFE OF IVAR KREU6ER World'# Greatest Swindler Lived aa Gay Libertine, New York.--While big Chicago find New York banks are trying to recover millions of dollars they lost backing Ivar Kreuger, Swedish financial wizard and the world's greatest swindler, facts have come to light revealing his private life in New York, Paris and el&whA-e as that of a libertine who lived secretly In gayety as he lived openly as a hard-headed financial genius. It has been found that he had the staggering sum of $168,000,000 In personal debt and Indirect liability against his name when he committed suicide In Paris In March. It has been discovered that his books were falsified for eight years while he was traveling around the financial centers of the world raising enormous sums from the most astute bankers. There will be little or nothing for unsecured creditors, and scores of millions handled by him appear now to be irretrievably lost Ones a demigod to a hero-war- Mrs, John R, Knox of McHenry shipping world, the silent, domlnsorctwooD Mrs. Nick. Frennd entertained the Bunco club at her hornet Thursday afternoon. Prizes were awarded to; Mrs. Nick. Young, Mrs. Ed. Thompson, Mrs. Ray Merchant and Mrs. Leon Dodge. , 4t the close, luncheon Was served. The 4-H club boys and girls and members of the Home and Farm Bureau held a weenie roast at the home of Mr- and Mrs. Elbert Thomas, Saturday evening. Mrs. Clay Rager and son Cecil and mother Mrs. Rose Agtcliff of Richmond visited relatives at Manteno, 111. the past week. Mrs. George Bacon and Mrs. Lester Nelson and daughter Jane of Antioch spent Thursday and Friday in the W. A. Dodge home- John Thompson and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Thompson of Chicago spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Thompson. Mrs. Harold Whiting and daughter Mercedes of Chicago spent the past week in the Lewis Schroeder home. Mrs. Letah Davis and son Eugene spent Wednesday in the George Shepard home and attended the Hom« Circle picnic at Wonder Lake. Mrs. Henry Foss and son Charles of CHICAGO MOTOR CLUB 0CPLA1NB ILLINOIS LAW Hie term "prima facie," employed in the Illinois motor vehicle act with respect to speed limits for more than a decade, is widely misunderstood by motorists at large, according to reports reaching the legal department of the Chicago Motor Club. "Briefly, Section 2*2 of the act provides that speed in excess of 15 miles per hour in business districts, 20 residential districts, 25 in open areas of municipalities and 45 in the open country when the view ahead, is clear shall be regarded prima facie evidence that the motorist is driving at a speed greater than reasonable," declared Joseph H. Braun, general counsel for the club. "Theoretically, police should not arrest anyone violating these prima facie limits unless the driver in question is endangering life, limb or property. "In cases wherein violation of this section-as charged, the term 'prima facie' should be broadly construed as meaning 'at first view,' or, 'on the face of. , Thus, the defendant is regarded as guilty unjess h« can and does show that he was not endangering life, limb or property while exceeding the prima facie limit. It is incumbent upon the court to discharge Liberty'# Sywbob The torch held on the Statue oi XJb* erty is in the right hand. The left hand supports a tablet Inscribed July spent Sunday afternoon at the home of her father here. Mr- and Mrs. Pete Anderson and son, Rudolph, of Gary spent Sunday at the Blomgren home . , ^ Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews spent Sunday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Pratt at Wauconda. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Converse and daughter, Frances, were supper and evening guests last Tuesday at the home of Mr, and Mlrs. Ray Dowell. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hoffman and son of Chicago spent Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Foss. H. J. Shaffer of McHenry spent Saturday afternoon at the home of Henry Geary here. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews and sons, Robert and Lyle, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Esping, Willard Darrell and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dowell and sons, Pete and Rollin, and daughter, Mayme, attended the baseball game between the Lake Co. farm bureau and McHenry Co. farm bureau near Harvard Saturday afternoon. Wm. BradcJ^e was the pitcher for the winning team. The boys play at Belvidere July 23. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Zimmer and daughter, Joan, of Palatine spent Friday evening at the home of Henry Geary here. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. 8. Haas of Wauconda spent Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Clara Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dowell and Ed Ratelln attended the movies at Mr- Henry last Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Sehrer of Fox Lake were callers Friday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs- Fred Nordmeyer. Mr. and Mrs. W. 0. Brooks of Waukegan spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Brooks. Miss Beatrice and Russell Nordmeyer and a party of friends from McHenry spent Sunday at Stoffel Lake. Mrs. Lucile Rohman of Chicago spent the week-end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Broof.s- Mir. and Mrs. Fred Nordmeyer were Sunday dinner guests at the Bauer Bros, home near Wauconda. Mrs. H- L. Brooks and daughter, Lucile Rohman of Chicago left Monday for Plymouth, Mich., having been called there on account of the death of Mrs. Brooks' son-in-law, Jobn Quartell. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Miller and daughter, Carol, from Chicago were Sunday supper and evening guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nordmeyer. Mrs. W. E. Brooks and son, Chesney, spent last Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Ella Parks at Park Ridge. Chesney Brooks was operated upon last Thursday morning at the Woodstock hospital for appendicitis. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Brooks have.called on him every day. Mr. and Mrs- LaDoyt Matthews cf Forest Park spent Monday evening with relatives at Oak Glen Farm. Mr. and Mrs. Ear? Ritta and children of Ivanhoe were Sunday evening callers at the W. E. Brooks home. M^s. H. L- Brooks and Mrs. Lucile Rohman were callers at Waukegan last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews and sons, Robert and Lyle, spent four days the past week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Bailey at Daven port, Iowa. atJng financier has been proved to possess »11 the frailties of pleasure- loving mortals. The Illusion that he lived only to work, which he cultivated so that he might Juggle millions by forgery and bargaining, has been exploded In an astounding expose of his bluff. Purchased Secrecy, Always the millions he was able to display enabled Kreuger to purchase the secrecy of the woman who visited his secret hideaways. ® And yet in the years during which Kreuger flitted from country to country, from continent to continent, not one of his women companions during his lifetime gave the least public hint of associations that seldom acquired the dignity of true companionship. Out of the dust and confusion of the crash that followed Krueger's suicide, a picture of the man has emerged. Each day the outline grows bolder, more details are filled In. The spiral figures Uom against a variety of amazing background: Kreuger on a little island off Sweden for weeks at a time, surrounded by gay women, sparkling champagne, soft lights, seductive music. Kreuger in a New York penthouse, or in his Paris mansion, with his women, his wine and his princely luxury. A scornfully smiling Kreuger making rubber stamps of the signatures ATvfiol of |o New York city spent thw past week ^^ ^hen auch shewing is made. in the George Shepard home. '* * Appellate Court of ILinois Mr. and Mrs. Charles Frey and o* Section 22: ... it Is a matter family of Deerfield spent the week end in the home of the letter's par> ent?, Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Beatty. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Harrison were visitors at Woodstock Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. G. EL Shepard and family and Mrs. Henry Foss and son Charles Were visitors at Hebron and Lake Geneva Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Alec Anderson and family spent Sunday with relatives at Woodstock. ' Lenard Carlson is enjoying a two weeks vacation from his duties at the Bowman Plant. Mr. and Mrs. Max Beth and son Billy were visitors in the Wm! Beth home Friday Saturday. Adrian Thomas of Chicago spent Thursday night and Friday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Thomus. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Dodge, Mrs Harvey Bumgartner and son, Mrs. George Bacon and Mrs. Lester Nelson and daughter were visitors at the A. K. Burns cottage at Emarld Park, Friday evening, Mr. and Mrs. Jo« Weber and family of McHenry spent Sunday In the Nick Young home. Mr. and Mrs. George Young and family spent Sunday morning at McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Fre<frickson and son spent Sunday at Delavan and Lake Geneva. ILfv crs.^ Mrs QaArrrp RftOOf* S-H that he migtit forge their names to jand Mxs. Lester Nelson and daughter applications for security issues. jjane of Antioch spent Sunday evening A calculating Kreuger with plate j jn the W. A. Dodge home. and acid turning out bogus Issues of j|jr> an{j Mrs- Nick Young attended Italian government bonds to defraud , the movies at Hebron, Saturday evethe trusting Swedish government or ning. the trusting security buyers of the Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Thomas and United States. 'family Mrs. Lucy Thomas and Alice Directly after his death reports of jMann of Woodstock and LaVerae reuger's trickery were broadcast to Whiting of Spring Grove were Sunwitk a careful driver, migtit net ft* unreasonable or danger--s, while a rate of even three miles per Moor, upon that same highway, in thai sane locality, r. while a flock of shetp' or cattle were driven thereon be an unreasonable and dangerw rate of speed and therefore unlawful., "The Appellate Court handed down that comment in 1924, when the prima facie limit in the open country was only 35 miles per hour," continued Mr. Braun. 'The case was Stansfield vs. Wood. The prima facia limits today are 15 miles per hour in closely built up business districts; 20. in residential districts; 25 in open areas of municipalities; 45 on open country highways, and 12 on curves and turns and under other conditions when the view ahead is obstructed. Incidentally, the state law prevails in all cities, towns and villages; no community has authority to pass any speed law in conflict with that of th* state. of common knowledge that there is probably no law upon our statute book as which there is such widespread popular misunderstanding and misconstruction of its terms- There is no speed limit in miles fixed l<y this section of the statute. This misconstruction is not confined to the ordinary citizen but is shared by many officials as well. ... It does not follow that because a rate of speed in miles is stated in the statute to be prima facie unreasonable and dangerous, that such rate of speed is in fact unreasonable and dangerous in every case or that a lesser rate of speed in every given case is reasonable and not dangerous. A rate of speed of 50 or 60 miles an hour with a heavy, high-powered car, on a cement highway, in the country where there are no Bide roads, or farm crossings or farm buildings, with no traffic of any kind upon the highway,, Woodchach Good Eatiif In pioneer days, the groundhog woodchuek was considered tbe makings of a toothsome dish. «&ys the American Game association. Nowadays they are not generally eaten, but since Troodchucks arc strictly vegetsc Me feeders, th«ir« ?s no reason why farm fore who kill woodchucks sbonNS not follow tbe example of ploaeera and eat the 'chuck*. C«llopku« Piwlnctfoa • " ' * Cellophane IS a form of ylscoai made by treating purified celluloat (cotton linters, etc.) with caustic soda solution and carbon dlsulnhid* TldS mixture dissolves the cellulose as sodium cellulosexanthate. By treat* ments with suitable reagents the ceft* lulose, somewhat modified chemically. Is precipitated from the solnkoa. IFlrtl Svlimorlm* Ckblo The early Atlantic submarine cable as devised by Cyrus Field was asmposed of seven copper wires encased in gutta perchs, which was surrounded by a covering of hemp saturated with oil, pitch, and beeswax. Tbe whole was protected by an outer sheath of 18 strands of seven wires each. ) . Dragooa'a Sword Fommi- What is1 declared to be a dragoon's sword of the Seventeenth century period, and probably a relic of the Covenanting days, was found at Stonehouse, Scotland, by two school boys. The sword was firmly Incased In what appeared to be a leather scabbard, but age so rotted it that It fell to pieces when the weapon was withdrawn. The blade Is hooked, heavily rusted and measures 30 Inches from hilt to tip. 'ytf'Wvmg • Captaro Frogs to the right, frogs to the left, frogs above, frogs below, frogs everywhere, brought all work at a large factory at Chalon-sur-Saone, France, to a complete standstill recently. Hundreds of thousands of the hoppers Invaded water pipes, machinery and elevators^ and even the electric power snpply was affected. Llttlo KsowUi* - Certain historians have fallen out ever the question of whether Peter Stuyvesant'e wooden leg was the right leg or tbe left leg. Most of us casual students of history have been satisfled with the knowledge that old Peter went through most of his life with one foot in the grave.--Spokane Spokesthe world. One was that the Swedish consul In Paris had refused to certify the death; that a wax figure and not Kreuger was cremated; that orders were still coming from Sumatra for cigars such as only Kreuger smoked. Investigators Surprised. Intimates of the Swedish Croesus now recall that they did consider It strange that after a day of conference, of hard work, Kreuger invariably vanished and never a word of how he spent his evening was forthcoming. But they never asked for explanations. They knew the man of stone too well. But it Is concerning the evenings of his life, after his Juggling of finances was temporarily ended, when he retired to meet this or that beautiful woman, that the real facts are Just now coming to tbe surface. One of the Swedish investigators of Kreuger's business and private conduct . has said: "We are going from one surprise to another. The more definite our Investigations become, the stranger the personality of Kreuger grows We all knew him personally, but we are only discovering him now." The investigators have learned that there were many parties with women and wine on the little Swedish island that Kreuger owned. Not wild parties --there was nothing of the vulgarian about Kreuger. The women were cultured and refined In his Park avenue penthouse In New York and In his Paris mansion Kreuger gave similar parties. Quiet informal affairs; never orgies. ; But refined outwardly as the match king's women friends appeared to be, the Swedish police have found In his effects evidence that many of them stooped to blackmail. They even found evidence that on many occasions Kreuger had met fcheir demands. Only One Family Live* in Town 171 Years Old Glastonbury, Yt--Ira N. Mattlson liolds the distingtiotrof being the only male citizen In this town, which Is tlx miles square. There are but three legal voters-- Mattlson, his wife, and his mother. Mattlson is the selectman, town clerk, town treasurer, assessor, school committeeman, road commissioner, justice of the peace, and representative to the general court. Three generations of Mattisons have lived In this town, established 171 years ago. Wit Is that which has b thought, but never before was well ex> nrmarrt Tfitinsin r --"COriginal Locomotive Due to the persuasion of George Stephenson, the Stockton A Darlington in England decided to use steam instead of animal traction. At the opening of this railway on September 27, 1825, the first passenger train In the world was drawn by Stepheusua's lo- Active. 1W7IM7W$ The greater men are, the humbler they are, because they conceive of a day dinner guests in the Edgar Thomas home- The M. E. Sunday School will hold a picnic at Beatty Pond Friday Jnly 22nd. Everyone is welcome. A pot luck lunch will be served. Bring youjr own dishes. George Thompson fs home from the' Waukegan Hospital recovering from injuries he received in an auto accident. He is getting along nicely. Mrs. Harry Kist, Mrs. Harry Hartley and Mrs. Pat. Moriarity of Chicago and Mrs. Paul Meyers and Mrs. George Worts of McHenry'spent Sunday with their sister> Mrs. Ed. Thompson and family. Mrs. Malissa Gould and daughter Jane and Melvin Wagner of Elgin were Sunday dinner guests in the Mrs. Jennie Bacon home. Mr. and Mrs. Gus. Carlson and daughter of Greenwood spent Friday evening in the Ed. Thompson home. Sunday evening callers in the Mrs. Jennie Bacon home were Mr- annd Mil. John Wolfe ajid son Jack and daughter Jean of Woodstock, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Buchert and daughter Betty of Richmond, Mr. and Mrs. Olney Moe and daughter of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. George Bacon and Mr. and Mrs. Lester Nelson and daughter of Antioch. Mr. and. Mrs. Henry Wencel, Olive and Virginia Jepsfn spent Sunday evening at Woodstock. • Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Jepson spent Thursday morning in Elgin. Fred. Wiedrich and son Roy were callers in Richmond Friday afternoon, Mir. and Mrs. H. M. Stephenson returned home from their trip Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Fred. Wiedrich and son Frank and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wiedrich spent Sunday morning at Crystal Lake. Clark Huson of Elgin spent WednefW day in the home of his daughter Mra. C. J, Jepson Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr and soft Elmer and Mr. and Mrs. Lester Cart attended tl\g funeral of a relative at Dubuque Iowa, Thursday, Charles Coatea of Genoa City spew! Sunady in the Fred- Wiedrich home. Mrs. Agnes Jencks and daughter Mary of Evanston spent Sunday i* the Mrs. Lillian Stevens home. Dorothy Carr and Dewey Beck of Chicago spent the week-end in the home of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr ^ Noonan Garage Dodge and Plymouth Cars REPAIRING OVERHAULING WELDING TIRES ACCESSORIES ^ fOWlNU ^ iiikx Aril/ Aiunx slEviUl Garage Phone 311 Residence Phone 208-R This new LIGHT-WEIGHT iron does HEAVY WORK £«re #1 bff bmgimg years mom For a short time your old iron has a trade-in value of $1 toward this sensationally different Sunbeam Ironmaster. See it today and learn how easy ironing can be. The Ironmaster is the same size as ordinary irons but weighs only half as much--only 3 Yt pounds. It hss almost twice as much heat capacity which more than makes up for its lightness. No extra pressure is necessary. 30-day Trial Offer Try the Ironmaster for 30 days. If you don't think it the speediest, the best iron youVe ever used, you can return it for full credit. 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