v<w» «i»i . fr ^ 4- J . I-'V-1 PHONE 291 'f ; • LAST TIME TONIGHT GEO. BRANCROFT ... in - *'Lady and Gent" FKIDAY -- SATURDAY Sept. 9-1® BIG DOUBLE FEATURE r*.. : • "I ' "Million Dollar Legs" JACK OAKIE also > * "Bachelor's Affairs" V;: * ' j ' '"V ,'l \ ADOLPHE MENJOU 4'kt and JOAN MARSH', : /TC SUNDAY -- MONDAY Sept. 11-12 "Mail From Yesterday" ^ 1 •",'CJLAUDETTE COLBERT 5 • k • • j; CLIVE BROOKS WlD -THURfe" > Sept. 14-15 w . - ' ; r .: BIG DOUBLE FEATURE • ' ; '* •. * "Vanishing Frontier" ! '"T JOHNNY McBROWN EVALYN KNAPP and "Two Seconds" EDW. ROBINSON <&. lltil Vveoitji u iNewspaper linion.l Quiet minds canftotlbe perplexed or frightened, but go on In fortune or inUfortttae at their own private pacer like a clock in a thunder •torm.---Robert Louis Stevenson. 1 PAINTY SUMMER OI8HESThere are so many ways of varying ihe ordinary dishes, serving them in unusual ways, to make them more appealing to the sight and taste. Clever women are always thinking up new dishes. The following are some that may be new to many: S t u f f e d Summer Squash.---Wipe a gammer squash and cut nigh the skin on top and steam itll almost tender. Remove the top id center, fill with creamed sweetbreads, chicken, roast pork, or ham. Jfcover the top with finely cut bacon Inixed with bread crumbs and bake vjlhirty minutes, or until well browned. Asparagus and Olives.--Place a pint •^JJf cooked asparagus in the bottom of ® baking dish, sprinkle with ripe '•lives, stoned and chopped, and with Jjiard-cooked egg coarsely chopped. pover with a rich highly-seasoned trhite sauce and sprinkle with a layer ! children f buttered crumbs. Bake until the •yj|rumbs are well browned. Onions au Gratin.--Take a pint of. ^<!tooked quartered onions, place ia a flaking dish, cover with a good white '~pauce, sprinkle with finely chopped or ; grated cheese and then with buttered jlrumbs. Bake until the crumbs are l>rowu. Mock Crab.---Melt foor tablespoon-' Thomas Knox of tThicago spent the first of the week here Mr. and Mrs. John Riggs of Bristol, Wis., spent Monday here. Mrs. Ellen Ensign spent Tuesday with her niece at Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. George Frey Visited at Sandwich, HI., last week- Mr. and Mrs. Richard Fleming visited relatives at Algonquin Sunday. Mrs. Annie Rose of Woodstock visited relatives here Monday evening. Ed McKeown of Chicago visited Howard Phalin the last of the week. Mrs. J. P. McGlave of Chicago is the guest of Miss Anna Frisby this j week. • ' I Mr. and Mrs, James Conway of Libert yville visited relatives here Labor ! Day. j Mrs. Miry Noyes of Greenwood vis, j ited her sister, Mrs. Ellen Ensign, [Sunday. • j Michael Weston and William Walsh | of Woodstock visited relatives here ' Monday. * *: * I Charles Purltee of Long Beach, Cal., visits eld friends and relatives here last week. Dr. and Mrs. F. J. Alcher left Tuesday for a visit with his- mother at I-Washburn'. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hoffman of I Chicago spent the" week-end with rel- ! atives here. , 1 Mrs. C. E. Davis and son, Eugene, 'returned Monday from a week's visit I in Wisconsin. | Warren; Gise returned to Chicago, i Monday after spending a two weeks' ; vacation hete. | Mr. and Mrs. Charles Heaney of j Chicago spent Tuesday* at the Ayiward cottage. | Miss June Gise of Chicago spent the last of the week in the George Johnson home. Mr- and Mrs. Walter Warner and children of Elgin spent Sunday with , relatives here. Mrs. and Mrs^C. Antonsen of Chicago were Sunday guests of Mr. aild Mrs. Thomas Kane. r Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Hovorka of Chicago were guests of Mr. and Mrs. "Dick Fleming^ Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Nelson of Chicago were week-end guests of Mr. arfd Mrs. Floyd Hopper. Ray Conway and Peter Doherty visited Mayor Knox at St. Anthony's h&spital, Chicago. Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. John Sauer of Bloomer, Wis-, visited Tier aunt, Mrs. B. Frisby. Monday evening. Miss Madelyn Holmes of Williams Bay spent several days last week with her sister, Mrs. Floyd Hopper. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Hanly and ffallfnr Htor 7 r-*\f• T--T Tcrin er>AVt^ T a bor Day in the W. A. Sayier home. Mrs. Margaret Rasmussen, Frank Ward and Andrew Kearns of Chicago spent Labor Day with friends here. Misses Marjory Phalin and Antonette Huetch of Chicago spent the week-end in the former's home here. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Winkelman and son of Melrose Park spent Sunday with her mother, Mrs- Anna Knox. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Heimer returned to Chicago the first of the week after a- week's visit with his mother. Mr. and Mrs. Louis B of Janesville Manley ft Hoalikan, SolidUcs State of Illinois, McHenry County. „as. In the Circuit Court of McHenry County--May Term, A. D. 1932. E. L, Axtell, Executor of the Estate of Augusta Holts, Deceased, S ^ VS. ^ Lena Krohn, et al. ' ( : ; , i In Chancery--Gon. No. 25530. Public notice is hereby given that in pursuance of « decree made and entered iu the above entitled cause by the Circuit Court of McHenry County, Illinois, on the 16th day of July, A. D. 1932, and amended on August 20th, A. D. 1932, I, Fred B. Bennett, Master in Chancery of said Court, will on Thursday, the 22nd day of September, A. D. 1932, at the hour of eleven o'clock in the forenoon of said day (Central Standard Time) at the main front door of the court house in the city of Woodstock, McHenry county,, ,Illinois, offer for sale and sell at public vendue to the highest and best bidder"the following described real estate, or so much thsreof as may be necessary to satisfy said- decrtee in full, to-wit: ' The west half (M») of lot number one (1) of the northwest, quarter of section number seven (7), also the eastfhalf (%) of lot number two (2) of the North West quarter (%) of section number seven (7), and also a part of lot number one (1) KKMWUT PLANNED loM fr _ -INJUBBS FAMILY LIMS Poorly ' planned and inefficient housing is largely responsible for much needless impairment of home and family life to present-day America. That Is the conclusion of a pioneering survey of nearly 3,000 homes in 40 States, the results of which are published today in Volume 10 of the final reports of the President's Conference on Home Building and Home Ownership. Defects such as awkward arrangement of rooms, inefficient kitchens, lack of storage space, and not enough space for privacy, are found to be al- THOMPSON TO >EAK AT W00D8T00K To launch its year's program of activities with the first approach of untWiti, the McHenry County Business vind ^Professional Woman's club today announced arrangements_£or a meeting in Woodstock, Monday evening. Sept. 19, when the publicity committee will accomplish the first extraclub contact with county newspapermen. Barney Thompson, editor -of the Rockford Morning Star and the Rockford Register-Republic, an dan able journalist whope ability has brought be most universal and to be leading causes of irritation and consequent w"^e aouity nas orou dissatisfaction with the home The!hira * ? * t Tf?°*mtlon' difficulty is, says the report, that ^ sp^ker D at the progrram in the "the housing situation in cities i ^ . , represents a condition into which we I Jnvitat,ons have been issued to the have drifted without anybody's having I ^ RPaPer publishers of McHenry intended the precise results we find." The need for conscious planning is summed up in the phrase: "Dwellings are not planned fpr the radio age ar.y more than cities are planned for the motor age." The President's Conference, which Spent a year in an inclusive study of the housing problem, culminating in a meeting in Washington last December, formulated a complete program to raise the standard of American .housing. The present volume, entitled "Homemaking> Home Furnishing and Information Services," is one of eleven in which that program is presented to the public. It contains of the South West quarter <%) of JJ1® °f.j?e tw,entr /«\ k„.„U„*iflVe fact-finding Committees of the Conference, namely, the Committee on beginning &t ft point on t.h. © ww.t : H#o mi* emi ak« ing, und«#e r the c•*h airmanship , _f.of the late Miss Martha Van nR ensse.laer, Director, New York State Coltion number sit (6) where the SUtel'.^f Cornell Bo.d ,r„m Chic.,0 the State in: ,„"* Z 4n.uc ee *1. . r Sparks, Presifdetnt, IDetco ra^tors' Club Imp to t.ho SniirhwpKf. rnrnpr nt stmn ( ,, , _. ' of New York City>nnd the Committee line of said lot number one (1) of' the South West quarter of said secline the Southwest corner of said lot number one (iy of the Southwest quarter (Vi) of said se<ftio» number six (6), thence East al°ntrjand the section line to the point where said section line crosses said state road, thence North Westerly along the line of said State Road, to the place of beginning, all in township forty-six (46) North, of range number six (6) East of the third principal meridian, situated in the County of McHenry, State of Illinois. j, TERMS OF SALE Cash in hand on day of sale at which time a certificate 'of purchase will be issued in accordance with said decree and the Statute. Dated this 30th day of August, A. D. 1932. FRED B. BENNETT, Master in Chancery of the Circuit Court of McHenry County, 14-3 Illinois. county to be guests of the club at the meeting which is to be held in accord HmmT ia BiUieal Tiait ' useful as an article of fodd honey was In olden times before sugar had been discovered, and honey was practically the only sweetening thing easily available, we can hardly imagine In these luxurious days. A bit of honeycomb was the greatest delicacy most houses could afford in our Savior's time, and it was what was timidly but gladly brought forth when the Risen Lord wanted to give proof that his Resurrection Body could eat, as could a natural body. "And they gave him a piece of a broiled fish and of an honeycomb. And he took it and did eat before them" (Luke 24:42, 43). So were the disciples taught that he who had died and was now alive again, and afterwards ascended into Heaven, still retained his mortal body which had been born of the Virgin Mary.-- Montreal Family Herald. -1 on Home Information Centers, under ance with the plans of th© national Miss Pearl Chase. Chairman, Plans federation program. Planting Branch, Community j Mr. Thompson, cited as one of the „ Association. Santa Barbara, best speakers in this part of the state, ai ornia. Jchoose his subject from among * m j omemaking Committee's de-; a number of topics suggested by the tailed analysis of *ome 3,000 typical [ national committee. His name has "T an ,an<! ™ dwellings scattered , been associated with journalism in roug out the country to discover northern Illinois a number of years causes of family friction and nn-; and jn 1930 when Mrs. Ruth Hanna revea conditions which Simms combined the three'daily pubreader will recognize Hcations in Rockford under the name as starthngly familiar, however un- of the Rockford Consolidated Newsconscious of them he may have been. | paperS( inc.f Mr. Thompson was hvv<r«atir,S1Iig ^ Jv^.g r°om f°r the chosen to edit the two papers of one Tannin 80 "V es *°° many! Of the'most powerful press organiza- Fe"' ' an<^ ^rand"|tions ever developed outside of,Chiparents; n0 private place to read, or cago. rest, or play, or entertain personal! ' friends; no chance to escape from the rtiLT lathrnn™lenCOmPeting ^'^3 that the Committee cclloosseettss nnoorr ccuunpbbnoaarrHds« 'tto ° s tocroenv tehminegnst, 1( Information Centers has d in_ servire r, s--uicnh seriou_ s. . reflect.i on, s o.n . h.o u- sing!I TmLh e presen,t .is the seven,tLh vo.lu me Home a lastthought in home planning h» "been ' riven to the pSycholoKicl - - - more wl" be Polished .nth. Four near will strike a universal chord in humanf i 8 ^ .xperience. TT.ey sho„ how litfe! gJS ££*?* ^ more will be published the individual as dieiinct frem'the family. | chased for $1.15 each postpaid, from Although {« ii At j. • *^ame3 Ford, Editor, President's they've! "o>e ^ "J must «„d continuity of ^ I affections, intimacies, and loyalties," n c the committee finds the mechanism] ' * tols of butter, add one-half cupful of •flour mixed with three-fourtha teaifpoonful of mustard, one and one-half |feaspoonful of salt, one-fourth tea- ,||poonful of paprika; when well blendafcd add one and one-half cupfuls of jlcalded milk. Cook, stirring well until j|he sauce boils. Add one can of corn, f(me egg slightly beaten and three tea- •poonfuls of Worcestershire sauce, jfclix well, pour Into a baking dish, .Cover with a cupful of buttered crumbs Und bake until brown. Fi«h au Gratjn.--Take one cupful of icooked fish, separate into flakes. Scald bne cupful of milk with a sprig of parsley, a bay leaf and half a slice of jonion; strain and thicken with cooked gutter and flou^ for a white sauce. Arrange the fish a!nd sauce in layers, cov- «r with buttered crumbs and bake. JPimiento or chopped green pepper jpiay be added for variety. vttiH guests of Mr. and Mrs. Johnson. Richard Fitzek, Victor and Keith Hovorka returned to their homes in Chicago after a week's visit in the Richard Fleming home. Albert S. Vales has returned to Chicago after seven weeks spent in the home^of his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs- Albert Vales. • Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Wienke and sons of Chicago spent the week-end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hftiry Kennebeck and family. Misses Marian Krause, Lois Esh and Julia McLaughlin left Tuesday for Chicago, where theyV entered Burnham's Beauty school. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin G. Walsh, daughter, Grace Rita, son, Robert, apd Miss Vera Salaka of' Chicago visited relatives here Tuesday. Mrs. John Elverman, daughter, Bsr- - Floyd E. Eckert, Attorney, ' Woodstock, Illinois ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Estate of Elizabeth A. Pierce, commonly known as Eliza Pierce, Deceased. The undersigned, having been appointed Administrators-of the Estate of Elizabeth A. Pierce, commonly known as Eliza Piercet deceased, late of the County of McHenry and State 0f the house often thwarting" and"obof Illinois, hereby give notice tha: structinir .thusA lmj» Gage and \ they will appear before the County richest growth The cnmmn ?9 were Sunday!Court of McHenry County, at the'fect discovered' was 1 act , George H. Court House in Woodstock, at the I storat .Mce £r " November Ter™, on the first Monday I .„d persons having c;la imsw ha,gcha.in "str s aai'di 1n,rcikv aocfv Pln'JmTor om or workshop 1,SK of iT Estate are notified and requested to 'And i JL attend for the purpose of having the same adjusted. All persons indebted to said Estate are requested to make immediate payment to the undersigned- Dated this 22ndr day of "August, A. D. 1932. T . fVARREN F. pfERCE, United Slates Citrreacy The circulation of foreign money was so general throughout the United States for 25 years approximately after ..the adoption of the dollar as out. unit of exchange that it was a vital element In the circulation. Congress recognized this great ueed by cnactlog a number of laws regulating coins of foreign couiatries and making them legal tender. Finally, congress, on February 21, 1859, enacted a Jaw repealing former acts which had made foreign money a curreoojr or legal tenderfe;'r-.';;':i' - Uh fer 5pUmr WeU Various dark spiders supply fki. web for cross hairs of engineering ta» struments. It is necessary to hava the dark web," which is not transput ent Tropical spiders produce excel* lent webs for this purpose. However, different thicknesses of web are used according to the type of Ina American ladian Writer* Among prominent American Indian authors are: Charles Eastman, Sioux; B. N. O. Walker, Wyandotte: Francis La Flesche, Omaha; John M. OskI« son, Cherokee; Arthur C. Parker, Sea* eca; Luther Standing Bear,, Sioux; J. N. B. Hewitt, Seneca; Marie I* McLaughlin, Sioux; Rlrtinrd C. AA- •ms, Delaware. - ' ' ' J~ Pmi Him the Arnice A married acquaintance says he tnore kick out of bridge wheo ha plays opposite .Us --fr Transcript • "-v. Old Adage Refuted Fiv» days after Napoleon eighteen-year-old Adeline LaBr&cqu« in Concord, N. H., they were marrledL That was in 1806. Now the conpl# are celebrating their sixty-fifth wedding anniversary in San Francisco* They have never regreted •Inrhaste." fairly Swedish Coinage The first Swedish gold coins were minted in Stockholm in 1568, In the reign of King Erik XIV. Previously, east and west Roman gold coins from the Fourth and Fifth centuries after Christ were used extensively in Sweden. - M. E. CHURCH ¥oa are invited to attend suivtolfl at the M. E- church every Sunday, Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Sunday school, 10 o'clock. The new pastor and his family arrive next week from Oklahoma ti? make their home in the parsonage. It is hoped they will be given *. eordial welcome to this city. DON'T BtTV UNTIL YOU SEE THESE BEAUTIFUL PEACHES AND GET THE PEICE i - I ] I ; ; . j » l i T .i... ' . • ' r ,; " x ' ' : WE WILL TAKE HENS AND SPRINGERS UT - - TRADE FOE PEACHES BISTER W. FRETT & SOU MAIN STREET v McBTE$IRY,ftiL T" . . . . . . . . : , : t X 144 FRED W. PIERCE, Administrators, Wm. M. Carroll, Attorney EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Estate of Henry Stilling, Deceased- The undersigned, having been appointed Executors of the last Will and Testament of Henry Stilling, de- . t, - - - icease<^' la^e of the County of McHennice, Rose Elverman and Robert El- ry and State of Ilinols, hereby give verman of Wilmot were Friday visit- notice that they will appear before the County Court of McHenry Coun Spain's Capital City •r Madrid, the capital of Spain, has a population of close to 900,000. Many homes In the city have only one story. - Balconies Jut out from the aides of the houses; and we may fancy a pret- ;; ty "aenorita" sitting on such a balcony during a warm summer evening, listening to the guitar played by one tiof her admirers who statds on the ground below. Unkind Commeatf %kat Chicago thought of Cincinnati back In 1882 ia shown by this piece of reprint from the Herald of that city, says the Cincinnati Enquirer. "We learn that Cincinnati Is to have a College of Physical Culture. Unless «r, It is at the head of an inclined plane £(2 and run in connection with a brewery t and a German band it will be declared 4 ittoconstitutlonal." ' ' K ors in the Louis Althoff home. Mr. and Mrs. George Dowe, Mr. and Mrs. Ed- Rich and son and Florence and John Zens of Waukegan spent the holidays in the R. J. Frisby home. Misses Frances Hughes, Dorothy Wormley and Leone Freund went to Waukegan Tuesday, /where they entered St. Theresa's hospital for training- Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fenske, Pamela Rietesel, Anita Thon and Herbert Fenske of Chicago spent Sunday and Labor Day in the Charles Rietesel home. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Hughes and Dr. and Mrs. R. G Chamberlin return, ed Monday from a week's fishing trip at Devil's Lake and other lakes in Wisconsin Mr. and Mrs. Somimers of Woodstock have rented the Louis Althoff house on Waukegan street and will move next week. Mr. Sommers drives the Farmers Oil truck. Mr. and Mrs. William Fenn and Mr- and Mrs. William Rhode of Chicago visited in the Louis McDonald home Sunday. William Penn, jr„ and William Rhode, Jr., returned nome with them after a week's visit here. Dr. and Mrs. Vernon Besley, little daughter and Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Bruebaker of Freeport were Sundav guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Sayler. ty, at the Court House in Woodstock, at the November Term, on the first Monday in Novmber next, at which inconvenient bath or none at all. In its constructive suggestions for adapting housing to the mental needs of the occupants, the Committee gives illustrations to prove that better planning of houses could do much without additional expense. It especially urges upon parents the wisdom of making the child feel that the house is partly his-- to plan for, work JEor, and use. " Application of principles of art to the planning, decoration, and furnishing of houses will contribute much to the fine art of living," says the Committee on Homemakiing. The Committee on Home Furnishing and Decoration defines these principles for the homemaker. In4 emphasizing the ^0r ^em» this Committee say?: ^There are hundreds of thousands of houses in this country of which the exteriors represent an expenditure far above the quality of the furnishings within." It urges that the Presumption' of Death * The general rule as to how long a • .'person must be absent without trace before there is a legal presumption of , 1 death, as now understood, Is that the IfeK *:i>r«sumpton of the duration of life peases at the expiration of seven years i: • from the time when the* person was *? r last knows te be living, and after a lapse of that period there Is a pre-' sumption of death. In most of the (states |fee subject is regulated fejr statut*, >• time ali persons having claims against structure and its interior fumishincr, sa^ Estate are notified and requested;be considered as a unit in the ' fi4t to attend for the purpose of having place, instead of treating furnishing' the same adjusted. All persons in- -- - • *urnwning. debted to said Estate are requested to make immediate payment to the undersigned. Dat^d this 29th day of August. A. D. 1982 JOHN H. STILLING, HENRY STILLING, 14-t •; ' Executors. De- Wm. M. Carroll, Attorney EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Estate of Nicholas N. Web6r, ceased. The undersigned, having been appointed Executor of the last Will and Testament of Nicholas N. Weber, deceased, late of the County of McHenry, and State of Illinois, hereby gives notice that he will appear before the County Court of McRenry County^ at the Court House in Woodstock, at the November Term, on the first Monday in November next, at which time all persons having claims against said Estate are notified and requested to attend for the purpose of having the Mr. and. Mrs Walter R ' ssaammee aaadjjuuastteead-. AH Persons indebted BeRley have to said Estate are requested to make gone to DesMoines, Iowa, where he immediate payment to the underwill teach in high school .this year. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence MarAin, Misc Anna Frisby and her guest, Mrs. Anna McGlave of Chicago and HeLac Welch motored to Highland Monday. Miss Welch remained to take up her work there, having boen transferred from Joliet. ---T Rarity Bngllah sdsntists havs split an atom, a much rarer proenw tfr&nths splitting of a hair. signed- Dated this A. D, 1932. 2&th day of Angust, • 4:. as an afterthought. If the standards of home furnishing are to be raised, reports the Committee, sound, accurate, and authentic information must be compiled; authentic and unprejudiced advice regarding home interiors must be made available to homemakers; and standards of merchandise must be bettered. To effect these things the Committee has worked out a complete plan for an educational system, with a central sch.ool for specialists at the core, and all the subordinate agencies for carrying the information down to the homemaker. The report also con- , tains a simple and effective plan for j furnishing a home most efficiently, i The Home Furnishing Committee's j insistence on the need for agencies to give accurate advice to the home-1 maker is echoed by the Committee on ' Home Information Centers. A nation-! wide survey revealed that in spite of I the many excellent agencies, public ; and private, which are in the field,: home owners, builders, and home-1 makers have nowhere to turn for au- j thoritative and disinterested advice on j many of the problems arising in the home. The Comfrnittee defines the ; different needs of urban, farm, and j village communities and presents a Zoo'* Huge Pood Supply .tTood consumed by the animals " in the London zoo last- year . Included 14,500 pounds of mofilf«?"nbts,"2;1i04" pints of shrimps, 4,600 bunches of eats rots and 224,904 bananas. T T Tt f T T T T T T T fT T T T J T T tTi T T Ti f- T T ff y IT if IV T V V It if T It v 4 T f Saturday, Monday, Tuesday MALT BLATZ MALT, HOP FLAVORED 3 1b. CANS, EACH 49c Soap Flakes Clean Quick Soap Flakea^- Large 5 lb. Box, each •kmm Palm Olive 3 Bars Palm Olive Toilet Soap 2 Bars Crystal White Lau. Soap Matches DIAMOND OE PEENDEH. MATCHES 6 LARGE BOXES FOB Toilet Paper GLORIA TOILET PAPER 1000 SHEET ROLLS, EACH Fly Spray Cattle Spray, made by Standard Oil Co. in bulk, per gallon SI.OO Jtfelo MELO WATEE SOFTENER; £ IOC C8US 20c Muslin pRtnt) UNBLEACHED MUSLIN > iper yard _ ' Sheeting DRUID UNBLEACHED SHEETING 81 INCHES WIDE, PER YARD HOSE CHILDREN'S U SOCKS, regular 19c and 25c values 2 pr. Z5C WEBER, plan for meeting them. Concerning Executor. these proposed housing clinics, Secre- j |tary Wilbur, of the Department of the j Interior, says in a foreword to the volume: "The sflt'Up of such services throughout th£ cOOntry will depend. firt ttlOj.sktlfirt ,it'^;.jl'nd:la^apttition of existing agencies and organization ft is in the survey of these agencies and th® evaluation,, of tbei? , potenti *:if i. . fi' &.L % ; *: Street, McHenry, 111.