SPRING GROVE Li ! _ » ^ i-' ' -fa-'- ',*• , itT,8f|- 8 - , I ™ / Mrs. Marge Smith of Round Lake was a visitor in the home of Mr, and Mrs. A1 Schmeltzer on Tuesday. ^ A party of friends motored to Richmond on Wednesday to spend the evening with Mire. William Bowman in honor of her birthday. Cards furnished the entertainment and several lovely prizes were awarded those achieving high scores. A lovely lunch was served by the guests after which thej guest of honor was presented ifrith a gift. Miss Florence Werdell of Chicago visifced in" the Charles Freund home on Wednesday. Misses Carol and Ellen Bower motored from Waukegan on Saturday to spend the weekend with:their mother Mrs. Margaret Bower. Frank May and Paul Weber transacted business in Woodstock on Monday. . _ ; "jit dance foT the benefit Of Vincent Feltes, who has beea in (St. Therese's hospital the past month, will be held at Town Hall on Saturday night, October 29. Everybody welcome. Mrs. Joseph Brown left for Michigan on Saturday where she was called by the illness of her mother: Misses Lucille Hergott and Ruth Gracey enjoyed an evening of roller skating at the rink in McHenry on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. A1 Schmeltzer spent the weekend with relatives in Rockford. This community was deeply grieved by the death of Father Vollman of St. John's parish in Johnsburg. Many from here attended funeral services on Tuesday. Michael Wagner of Chicago spent Monday with his children at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wagner. The Community Club held its regular meeting at St. Peter's parish hall on Monday night. Following the meeting cards were played and refreshments served throughout the evening.;. /; •' Thursday, October 27,1938 CENTRAL GARAGE Vwbeii your car or truck needs attention, we are prepared T*• to serve you. One of the best equipped garages . mi Northern Illinois. . : C; Full Line of Atlas and Goodyear Tire* ' / * ' Electric and Acetylene Welding r«4J . Car Washing and Polishing Phone 200-JT Towing Johnsburg SNUG HARBOR TAVERN On East River Road -- South of the State Bridge A. H. WATSON HALLO WE - - and - - - - WALTER SCHTMMEL PARTY SATURDAY NIGHT DUCK SUPPER --^ _ Fish Fry Every Friday :--: Dinty Moore Special, Corned Beef and Cabbage Every Thursday MI PLACE RESTAURANT : . . . Phone 377, JUSTEN & FREUND, Props. Green St. HALF SPRING FRIED CHICKEN -- 60c FISH FRY EVERY FRIDAY FRESH PERCH linO IIC COCKTAIL LOUNGE AND DINING vUuIFL ROOM AT LILY LAKE, ILLINOIS . Featuring just Good Drinks and Good Foot™ | at Popular Prices Equipped with New Kelvinator Bar We invite you to enjoy our most unique atmosphere. ROY V. HOBBS, Mgr. ROSE GLASS FOOTED DISH Modern in the latest trend. Sparkling, attractive swirl pattern. Gracefully designed and lends itself for many uses around the home. Serves fruit, cakes, sandwiches, candy, etc. 10 inch diameter. REGULAR VALUE 25c HMLOUJEEII PARTIES ;MASH TUB 79^ A Halloween special lor "bobbin" apples. Gak vanized. BesKTeak and rust proof construction. 22 inch diameter. CHINESE CHECKERS 49/ The nation's newest and mosKpopular game 16 x 16 inches. Made of heavy cardboard. With 60 marble*. " COOKIE PRESS Add greater enjoyment to your Halloween party by serving fancy cookies. Seamless aluminum. 4 pattern dies. Whlmpy's MUSICAL HUM-BURGERr~ Something new in musical instruments. Looks like a hamburger and produces the tone of a saxophoner- Main Street West McHenry I Vegetable Habit To Be Commended Minerals and Vitamins - Essential to Health 'r By EDITH M. BARBER EGETABLES seem to be a fet- * ish in the United States," said an English visitor to me the other day. "I went to dinner the other night with some friends and there were nine vegetables besides tomato juice." Nine vegetables! That does sound like a lot. There were, however, I found, raw carrots, cauliflower and cucumbers served before dinner for dunking in a piquant sauce. Radishes, young onions and celery were passed with the soup. There were potatoes and peas with the main course and a romaine salad. This vegetable habit, which is becoming more common each year in this country, is certainly to be commended as well as exclaimed over. The minerals and vitamins, as well as the roughage which the fibers give us, are invaluable, although they cannot be counted by calories. Perhaps that is one of the reasons why they are so popular. We can get the fuel which we measure by calories and the protein which we need for repairing the body tissues from the other components of the meal. • " ' Perhaps "you are commenting to yourself that I should not have included potatoes among vegetables when I was mentioning low calorie content. While potatoes are higher in this respect than are most other vegetables, they are not nearly so highly endowed as is generally thought. About 75 per cent of a potato is water. Just don't be too lavish with the butter if you are being careful about your calories. O'Brien Potatoes. 4 cups potato cubes Deep fat Salt 1 small onion ; 1 tablespoon butter 2 pimientoes ~~-~ 2 teaspoons minced parsley- Fry potato cubes in deep fat, drain on soft paper and sprinkle with salt. Mince the onion and cook in the butter one minute. Add the* pimiento, cook one minute more, add parsley and pour over potato cubes in a hot dish. Spinach With Soar Cream. % cup sour cream I tablespoon tarragon vinegar 1 tablespoon grated horseradish Salt Paprika 4 cups cooked spinach - Whip cream, add seasoning arid pass with spinach, which must be very hot when served.. Fried Cabbage. 1 head cabbage ! V V 1 tablespoon butter 1 teaspoon sugar 2 tables'poons vinegar 12 frankfurters Shred the cabbage. Melt the butter in a frying pan, add the cabbage and cook uncovered for 20 minutes, or until cabbage is tender and slightly brown. Add the sugar and vinegar and serve with frankfurters which have been grilled in a hot frying pan. Savory Sweet Potatoes 6 sweet potatoes 3 apples y* pound sliced bacon Boil the potatoes until soft and place in a greased dripping pan. Pare, core and slice the apples and place between the potatoes. Place" the strips of bacon across the potatoes and bake in a hot oven (450. degrees Fahrenheit) until the bacon is crisp and the apples soft. Picnic Vegetable Salad. 4 tomatoes 2 cucumbers 1 onion 1 head lettuce French dressing Peel and divide tomatoes in eighths. Peel and slice cucumbers and onion. Wash and separate lettuce. Mix all ingredients with french dressing, put in glass Jar and chill until ready to- go. Cucumber-Onion Sandwiches. 2 medium-sized cucumbers 1 onion Mayonnaise Lettuce " • 12 slices bread Pare cucumbers, remove skin from onion and slice thin. Sprinkle lightly with salt. Put cucumber and onion on lettuce leaves between slices of bread spread with mayonnaise. . © Bell Syndicate.--WNU Service. Walnut From Oak If your room is paneled with oak and you prefer a walnut finish, such an effect may be obtained--if the wood is not quartered oak. First remove the varnish, then go over the wood with one or two coats of walnut stain. When dry, apply coat of thin white shellac and later varnish it. Never use a varnish stain for this purpose. * RINGWOOD W. F. Clark, Dean of DePaul University, of Chicago has purchased the Allen estate. Mrs. Fred WSedrich, Jr., entertained the Sewing Circle at her home Friday. A pot-luck dinner was served at noon. The Bunco' Club was entertained at the home of Mrs. Mildred Munshaw in Elgin Tuesday in honor of the birthday of Mrs. Wm. McCannon. A potluck dinner was served at one o'clock after which bunco was played with prizes awarded to Mrs. Frankie Stephenson, Mrs. Lester Carr and Mrs. Geo. Shepard. Mrs. Rilla Foss spent Wednesday in the home of her'son, Floyd," at Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard and son, Howard, were callers in the Ruth Cunningham home at Woodstock on Thursday, evening. Wayne Foss and Alice Wilcox , attended a teachers' meeting at Joliet Friday. . Mrs. B. T. Butler visited relatives at Delavan Thursday. Jean Muzzy entertained a few of her little friends and their moithersj at her home Tuesday afternoon in honor of her third birthday. Howard Britee Harrison entertained the members of his Sunday school class at a Halloween party at his home Friday evening. Mrs. Robert Mehshall of Elkhorn spent Thursday with Mrs. Joseph McCannon. Mrs. Fred Gibbs spent Friday with her daughter at Lake Geneva. ^ Miss Alice Mae Low of Waukegan •spent the weekend at her home here. Mr. and Mrs. George Young attended the Jackson - May wedding at Johnsburg Wednesday.. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Gibbs and family of McHenry spent Sunday with the former's parents, »Mr. and Mrs, Fred Gibbs. The Home Circle will meet with Mrs. Clayton Harrison Wednesday, Nov. 9. daughter of Greenwood spent Sunday in the Charles Feet home. « Mrs. Wattles and son, Glenn, of McHenry, Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Smith and awarded to Muriel Butler and Marjorie Lucie as the beat dressed boy and girl downstairs and .Shirley Freund and -..v. w>uuw Marion Hawley upstairs. Ghosts and family and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harri-1 goblins were everywhere. Cider and son and family were Sunday dinner . doughnuts were sold for a penny each, guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Harrison. Mike Freund played the accordian and Miss Alice Peet of Barrington and. Snyder the piano for the music Miss Mu--arji--on Peet of Elgin spent the for dancing. weekend with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Peet. Mrs. Glenn Jackson and son of Rich- Mrs. Viola Low were visitors at ternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Jc ind Betty Brennen lukegan Friday af- Coates of Greenwood were Sunday} dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe McCannon. Mr. and Mrs. George Hutson and daughters, Vera and Zelma, and Mrs. Lucinda Francisco of Woodstock were Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Libbie Ladd. Mrs. Francisco remained for a visit. The Ladies' Aid Society wiil serve a chicken supper and bazar here Nov. 17. i Mrs. Joe McCannon entertained the Scotch Bridge Club at her home Wednesday afternoon. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. Roy Neal and Mrs. Remer. Mr. and Mrs.* Fred Wiedrich and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiedrich and son visited at Delavan Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Dimon and family of Ostend spent Sunday afternoon in the Dick Olson home. Mr. and Mrs. John Dreymiller, Mrs. J. F. Claxton and Miss Martha Lea of McHenry were callers in the George Shepard Jiome Sunday afternoon. Miss Mae Wiedrich attended a basket social at Barnard's Mills Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Peet and Early Use of •Mr.- and *Mrs.' In American Colonial days, the prefixes "Mr." and "Mrs." were generally accorded only to the gentry, including ministers and their wives. Elm Street and Riverside Brim Colorful Bedroom Harmoniously colorful is the bed' room with decorating scheme based on a turquoise and gold combina tion. The dark turquoise floor is sur rounded by walls painted a lighter turquoise. ° Attic Room for Maid A maid's small attic room with bath adjoining, has the walls paint ed shell pink and the woodwork powder blue. BREAKS WRI6T ; WQiile on a trip through the west mond, Mrs. S. H. Beatty, Mrs. Viola two weeks ago, Earl Monear of Solon Ix>w and Mrs. George Shepard were Mills, formerly of McHenry, had the visitors at Waukegan Monday. I misfortune to break his wrist in two Mrs. J. F. McLaughlin and daugh- places in an accident which occurred ter, Julia, in company with Catherine in Wyoming, and Thomas McLaughlin spent Sunday in the Otis Murry home at Geneva. * ( ' Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Harrison entertained their children and families at a birthday dinner Sunday honoring the birthdays of their daughter, Mrs. Ardin Frisbee and their son, James. Those to attend were Mr. and Mrs. Ardin Frisbee and family of Greenwood, Mr. and Mrs. Vern Malsh of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Harrison and family and Mr. and Mrs. Milford Smith of Round Lake and Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Pearson and don, Jack. The Home Bureau will give a party at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Itoy Thompson, one-half mile north of the Keystone school house on Friday evening, October. 28. Everyone is welcome.. There will be a basket social at the Howe school Thursday evening, Oct. 27. There will be a good program. Mrs. Woodford and daughter, Iva, of Park Ridge were callers in the Wm. McCannon home Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Smith of Crystal Lake were supper guests in the George Young home Sunday. ' Mr. and Mrs. George Young and son, Alfred, spent Sunday evening in the Peter Weingart home at McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Smith were pleasantly surprised at their home on Thursday evening, the occasion being their fourty-ninth wedding anniversary and the seventy-eighth birthday of Mr. Smith. Ice cream and cake were served. Those to attend were: Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Smith and family, Miss Catherine Freund, Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Butler and family, John and Bernice Smith, Ringwood; Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Hopper and family of Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Smith of Harvard; Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Wurtzinger and family of Woodstock; Miss Mercedes Lindemann and Miss Irene Hopper of Crystal Lake, and James Lindemann of Dundee. Mrs. Jay Cristy entertained the "Easy Aces" at her home Tuesday afternoon. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. W. B. Harrison and Mrs. George Shepard. - Mrs. George Young spent Monday with her daughter at McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr and son Elmer, attended the funeral of Mr. Hunter at McHenry Wednesday. ^ Mrs. Louis Hawley spent Friday in CKicago. The P. T. A. sponsored a Halloween penny carnival at the school house on Tuesday evening. One of the features of the evening was a parade of the school children a)l in costume. Two horsemen dressed as ghosts led the parade followed by the drummer and the children. They marched down through the business district and in front of the judges. Prizes were B I D S WANT B D The Tuberculosis Association Committee of the Board of Supervisors of McHenry County, Illinois advertise for bids for one four door sedan for the office Of the County Nurse. One 1935 Plymouth for trade. Specifications to be furnished by Miss Mabel Hobbs, County Nurse, Woodstock, Illinois. Sealed bids to be filed in the office of the County Clerk at Woodstock, Illinois not later than Wednesday, November 2, A. D. 1938 at ten o'clock A. M. The Committee reserves the right to accept or reject any or all bids. ^H. M. TURNER, 2S. (3hairman of said Committee. ' ' ) 1 ' ' Idea of Bieyele Old The general idea of the bicycle to suggested in ancient carvings, but the machine was not successfully developed until the Nineteenth century. • • McHenry, HI. 7:30 to 10: fitink is also available for private parties any 'evening fom 10:30 to 12 at 25c per person. Make your party reservation now! FQE HEALTH'S SAKE -- ROLLER SKATE /-------A FOX RINK t Change in Milk Delivery BEGINNING MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, MILK WILL BE DELIVERED LATER IN THE DAY Order Extra Milk or Cream Sunday if it is needed for Monday's breakfast. RIVERSIDE DAIRY mow* * oiPfMSSHi, IN TUB NEW 60 A-POOR SWDAM **S9+ -- ALSO-ANOTHER BIO NEW OLDS SIX ANl A GREAT NEW EIGHT AT REDUCED PRICES NO question about it . . . the stand-out car for 1939 is Olds mo bile! With the pick of them all in the low-price field ... a brand new, allquality Six with a flashing new Econo- Master engine. And it's Olds again in the popular-price field. With stunning new editions of the Oldsmobile Six and Bight, both reduced in price. See these three great cars . . . check them against the field. There's an Olds for everybody in 1939! • Delivered price mt Lansing, Mich., subject to chmnge without notice. Price includes safety glass, bumpers, bumper guards, spare tire and tube. Transportation, state and local taxes, if any, optional equipment and accessories --extra. General Motor a Instalment Plan. "'VOLuno»ARy „Siv RHYTHM/c ' • Qu* d r , -Co 4- - 4>f/C y -"cr/o/i, WH E s LS ^ "Vou OUGHT TO OWN AH OLDS/ A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE SUBURBAN MOTOR SALES McHENRY,ILL.