UhMmmm! Thursday, Ji&airy 17, 1852 .•^T* - v\t» ' ' •> , »?!y •*® yi •-• v, McBERltr PU0MCEALE8 ' ^ " v Ji4i. * -f v '"^r . 4r v.v ** «*»-* *(f J J . v i -'.• 1 4 . *' P- -<srr*Vr?~v ' -~~£ ^ -'T.-T ar .It • Wi ' ' *•-, *'- '- r^-#t^t"""r",>' 8 jj: <» NEWS i-ROBK: lake 4r tumm Mb .#,<*• Kiwanla clufcof McHenry Ifcwnship entertained a group ot disabled veterans of the Korean ; war Sunday at dinner, a theater "jferty and a buffet supper a^ter '-lite theater. "-'The dinner and buffet were (^held at LaGreca's. W Those attending both dinner and the play at the Woodstock opera bouse included Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Plotner, Mr. and Mrs. Anton glrill, Mr. and (Mrs. Thomas Stanley, Mr. and Mrs. Horace Wagner, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Monteleone, Mr. and Mrs. Marius Hansen, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hayes and Mr. and Mrs. John Lathrop. Those attending the dinner only iflbgere Mr, and Mrs. Arthur La- *5j|reca and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Davis. •>v)' The play the group saw was • >>M' comedy, "The Kid From Brook- "... ljrn," the first in the second series of five plays to be presented by the t McHenry County Theater Ithiild. | The Klwanls club is now 'launched on its plan* for the big ice carniVal planned for Jan. 27 .at Slocum Lake. This carnival 4nrill include music, outstanding ice skaters and horse-racing on ice. All proceeds from the carni- •61 will go toward a county hos- ^pttal to be built at Woodstock. '• Ticket* for the ice carnival can ; Jbe secured from any Qf the Won- Nfer Lake Kiwanis club members. On School Board Andrew Johnson was appointed •rjjto the school board at a meeting x^aKeld last week in Harrison school. Those on the board include """ *Uf o s e p h Monteleone, president; - Frank Cheney, Joseph Lundborg, Anthony Audino, Mm&lb fcUn«ftn stitch. rlKKid A1 Schimke. Community Clab jQard Party ; : The mothers of Mrs. Slavin's first and second grade children £wiii give a card party Saturday, Jan. 26, at the school, starting at *. P-m. . Tickets for the party are 75 istnts each and will include refreshments. All games will be played. At the Community club meeting fceld last week it was decided Ifcat the group would purchase a coffee maker for the kitchen, as well as a serving table. They will so pay for the folding chairs ordered - last year but which are tust now coming through. The remainder of the money ned this year by the club will put into playground equipment. Other projects this year inc.lud- «0 the Circle Library books which m*t |97, kindergarten equipment and books for Miss Clark's room. tifci Wonder Woods Invites Pa Mir To XKttaf Friday at the Mill Inn the Wonder Woods subdivision association will hold a meeting at which an engineer from the state will discuss pollution of Wonder Lake. The meeting starts at 8 pim. and all residents of the Lake area are invited to attend. Register, For ToUnf ' v At Renters' Store In a recent canvass of Wonder Lake, "Sarge" Steven Duttko, Republican precinct committeeman, finds that a number of eligible residents have not registered for the primary election April 8, 1952. Arrangements have been made with Justus Kellner, registrar, to register eligible citizens at Reuters' store and post office or call Wonder Lake 2834 for other arrangements. „ „ The polling place for the next election will be at the Wonder Lake Syndicate office. Wonder Center. Absentee ballots may be secured by telephoning Wonder Lake 3293. Sarge reminds all residents that voting is not life Obligation but a privilege. Father-Son Banqaot The Men's club will hold a father-son banquet at the Rolalne Grill on Sunday, Feb. 3. Bach member will sponsor a football pltyar. .• lit It Oat ; Patricia Seaman, daughter of the Jess Sejamans, was 1 year old on Jan. 2. She was the first baby born at Woodstock hospital after the new year in 1951. The Seamans are residents of. Wonder Woods. Craft Day Mrs. Arthur Finnie, Mrs. W. E. Troxell, Mrs. Marie Milbrandt and Mrs. J. E. Cotflren were present at an all-day craft session held in Woodstock last Wednesday. The Wonder Lake group were studying the Florentine fiW Sroit Ceremony There will be an investiture of the Girl Scouts at the regular meeting of the Legion Auxiliary, sponsoring group for the Scouts, on Thursday evening. Those who will be invested include Karen Meyer, Kathv Majercik, Sue Spuehr, Lynn Wilkinson, Nancy Eisenhart, Mary Lou and Susanne Miller and Kathy Cihoe. Mrs. John Lathrop is retiring as a leader of the Scouts. The Girl Scout troop wiirbe led in the future by Mrs. Walter Meyer and Mr®. Andrew Johnson. *7* Child Study Group The child study group of the Harrison school will meet Feb. 5 at the school and will discuss two topics which will be announced next week. There Was no January meeting. Cab aad .B<ty Scent New* The wonder Lake men's club, sponsors of the Boy Scouts, are now undertaking the Cub Scouts. Joe Lundborg, chairman of the Cub Scouts, held a meeting at the Harrison school with his committee of Tony Audino, Russ Spuehr, Sarge Duttko, and the district representatives, Ben Phelps and Jerry Frehse of Woodstock. Several prospective den mothers as well as future Cub Scouts were alBo present. A list of twenty-four tentative Cubs is on file and a number of others have voiced their eagerness to sign up. Jerry Frehse of the Blackhawk area gave an interesting talk on the res p o n s i b i l i t i e s , o r g a n i s a t i o n and duties of den mothers and obligations of parents. Mr. Lundborg plans to hold another meeting in the near future for the parents of prospective Cubs, and to apply for the charter of this new organization. Refreshments will be served and we hope to have a good turnout- Lobk for Cub and Boy Scout news each week in this paper. Secretary, Scout Committee Sarge Duttko Tebsggan Party The seventh and eighth grade students were entertained at a toboggan party by Mrs. Eleanor Wright of Wickline Bay on Friday. Mrs. Wright started the ball rolling on parties for the upper grades as talked about in a recent Community club meeting when it was suggested that separate parents aid in keeping the youngsters busy. Following the party Mrs. Wright served cocoa, cookies apd ice cream to the youngsters. tertained Mrs. Lina Hamilton, Chicago, Sunday. The women were friends in high school and had not seen one another for two years . . . Thirty-seven youngsters from Harrison school were taken Thursday to the Woodstock high school pool for a swimming party. They were taken by bus and were chaperoned by Mrs. Frensson, Mrs. Swanson and John Lathrop . . . Gene Wagner, son of the Horace Wagners, has been called Into s e r v i c e at F t . S h e r i d a n . . . . I Gospel Charrh News Jack Loshbaugh was the speaker at the Gospel church on Sunday evening, Jan. 13. Mr. Loshbaugh is a graduate of the University of Illinois, where he majored in agriculture. In February, he expects to enter the Trinity Seminary and Bible college of Chicago to prepare for missionary service in the Belgian Congo. The pastor officiated at the funeral service of Langley Bennett of McCullom Lake recently and that of John V. Johnstone of Wonder Lake in Chicago on Jan. 14 at Chicago. Mr. Johnstone was born in South End on Sea, England, Feb. 19, .1875, and came to Canada at the age of 17 and soon thereafter to the U.S.A. For nearly two years he has made" his home with his only daughter, Mra. Gertrude Dickman. Others surviving and mourning his departure are his two grandsons and six great grandchildren, with two brothers in England. ^ Services at the Gospel church next Sunday. Jan. 20, will be as follows: Sunday Bible School at 10; morning worship service at 11 and evening Gospel jervtce at 7:45. We extend a cordial welcome to one and all. CAJRX. PREPARES COAL PACKAGES FOR EUROPEAN DELIVERY CARE'S Chicago office at 189 W. Madison street in Chicago announces that CARE now has enough coal in its warehouses in western Germany and Austria to begin deliveries of a $10 coal package. The $10 price will include the usual CARE guaranty of free delivery to the home of designated recipients in any o£ j sixteen cities in the American andr French zones and twelve towns in the British Zone, all qf them especially hard hit by the fuel shortage. No deliveries can be made in Berlin or the Russian zone of Germany. The coal also will be delivered in Austria to Vienna and all towns and villages Within forty miles of Vienna, most ofe/i upper Austria and the main cities and their immediate environs in the rest of Austria. The coal may be addressed to a specific person, or a contribution may be made to CARE for distribution of coal to the needy.' The $ JO unit for Germany con*i sists of 660 pounds of briquette! (Press-Kohlen). The Austrian unit is divided into 330 pounds of bri* queues and 330 pounds of anth* racite. , ^ Included in the delivery area lit Germany are Wuerzburg, Augsburg, Nuernberg, Munich, KasseU F r a n k f u r t - M a i n , W i e s b a d e n , Darmstadt. Mannheim, Stuttgart* Karlsruhe. Freiburg, Kaiserlaut# era. Ludwigshafen, Mainz and Koblenz in the American and French Zones, and 'Kiel, Luebeck, Hamburg, Braunschweig, Hanover O s n a b r u e c k , B i e l f e l d , B r e m e n , Bremerhaven, Bonn, Duesseldorf and Cologne in the British Zone. Bulk orders of three or more coal packages will also be accepted for any other municipality in the three zones. The Chicago CARE office, 189 W. Madison St. in Chicago will begin accepting coal package orders at. once. Nation's Fewer 41% at the nation's harnessed and potential hydro-power is sustained by streams of the forested watershed of the Columbia River. Order your rubber stamp* at The Plaindealer now! Permafceat Wave Permanent waving w*! traduced in 1906. given with complied! took almost 12 hours. a home permanent kit, « we^gft can give herself a pel numrtPH home in as little as two boors. IF IT'S WORTH DOING Ifi Worth Doing Righl Loses Baby Daughter Friends of Fred and Esther Chase, former residents "trf Wonder Lake, will be sorry to hear that a new born daughter died soon after birth. The Chases have two sons. Another daughter died at birth in the Woodstock hospital when the Chases resided at Wonder Lake. They now live in Michigan. Mrs. Chase is the former Esther Althoff of McHenry. 15 Day Wool Clearance Sale 20% OFF EVERY ITEM IN THE STORfi Jill wool blankets, jackets, storm coats, shirts, argyle socks, ski pants and sweaters for men, women and children. :'ZZZZ-'ZZ: M*ifl Mis Factory Retail Store L on Rt. 12, 300 ft. north Rl. 120, Vol©-- Sale Hours: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m„ including Sunday. \4notke/ijkoJip fale RUSSEL and SULLIVAN, Auctioneers The undersigned having decided to quit farming will sell Oi the farm known as the Cowlin farm located 1 mile west of the Terra ftotta factory, 6 miles soath of McHenry, 2 miles north of Crystal Lake 1 mile east of the Crystal Lake-McHenry Blacktop Road, on TUESDAY. JAN. 22nd. commmcing at 11:30 sharp 45 HEAD ot LIVESTOCK, consisting of FIB Grade Holstein Dairy Cows. 6 of these cows are close sprlngera d 7 have been fresh in the past 30 days. 2 Holstein heifers, bred; Holstein heifers, open, vaccinated; 4 Holstein heifers, 4 to 6 monthf •Id; S Holstein bulls, 4 months old; 1 Holstein bull, 18 months old. $EED--2000 bushels ear corn; 1200 bushels oats; 30 ton 1st cutting j filfalfa, baled; 15 ton 2nd cutting alfalfa, baled; 8 ton baled straw; (£;|5-ft silage in a 16-fL silo. MACHINERY--McD Model F-20 tractor and cultivator; JD Model D tractor; JD 3 bottom 14" tractor plow; McD 2 bottdm ftV tractor plow; ID No. 5 power mower, 7-ft; JD No. 290 corn planter; 7-ft disc; New / Uea manure spreader on rub.; McD rubber tire wagon and rack; ItcD corn binder with bundle loader and carrier; New Idea side ra^e; #apec silo filler; US grain blower; McD 5-ft. mower; New Idea hay loader; McD 6-ft. grain binder; Papec hammer mill; Ireland hay |oist; McD Broadcast seeder. 11-ft. with' grasB seed attachment; steel ^heel wagon and rack; 4-sec. drag with folding drawbar; Rotary hoe; cultivator; buzz saw, bob sleigh, horse cultivator, 300 gal. gas tank tjr£and stand, potato planter, 2 brooder houses, 2 elec. fencers, posts and wire, barrels, Stegrart clipper, pile iron, Gem fanning mill, slip scrapeis 75-ft. rubber belt, seed corn tgrader, DeLaval milking m^hine, 2 single units, pipe line for 36 cows; 27 milk cans. elec. hot water heater, 2 tanks, pails and strainers, grab fork and pulley, 200-ft. hay rope, allege cart. $erfteh Lunch Wagea oa Grounds. MRS. WALTER BEHRENB and SON. Owaeei tfSUAL THORP TERMS. fharfr Sale* Corporation, Clerk Phone 110, Woodstock, 0- ;----:---- Briefles . and Mrs. Raymond Watkins and Mr. and Mrs. John Lathrop were among those present at a square dance at the Westwood s c h o o l , Wood b t o e k, S a t u r d a y night . . . Mrs. Grace Sellek en- START NOW Start with our Winterising service, and then lei us continue to service yeui car all during the oold months. BUTCH'S We Do Complete Motor Orerhauttng. 309 W. Elm Street McHenry, HL Phone 811 Residence 91-R JODTS orga^izatio* t Richard A. May has been al cepted as a member of The Hols t e i n - F r i e s l a n A s s o c i a t i o n of America by action of the board of directors at tbeir recent meeting in Chicago. The association Is the world's largest dairy cattle breeders' registry organization. Membership in the organization now totals over 42,000, representing every state In the Union. Need Rubber stamps? Order at' The Plaindealer. M rnm 24 How £*(/?/% Towing ^ 'W, Servic* Mining the Cfcsreh People have shown a tendency to Join churches In greater numbers at nine-year intervals, a study of church membership records over the past 120 years Indicates. The churches represented by these membership studies include the Presbyterian,, both North and South, Methodist, Congregational, and Episcopal. However, it is believed that these cycles apply generally to nearly all Protestant denominations. =--mm 2V. ^ofui 3. Stray, 0fdQmetn&t EYES EXAMINED ^ 128 3* Oreen Street McHenry. Tflfneh Phone McHenry 186 SOCKS: ^ !; / . o Z Z - . c Daily 9 to IS -- 1 to »Z/:7 -Z^ZZi •. ^Tuesday and Friday Evenings 7 to . Thursdays By Appeiatsseat Only There is No Substitute For Good Plastering. Phone McHenry 411R With afl the talk about new engines, which car is proved America'* . finest performer? The record books of the National Association of Stock Car Auto Racing show the official record of 102.465 miles per hour was set by the Nash Ambassador at El Mirags Dry Lake, Calif. Come drive a Jetfire-powere4 Nash Ambassador for an eye-opening thrill. Get the amazing news about price, too--and bear our great proposition. Who Set ' ft" •«!)»« >*• ' IO2465 M.R& Stock Car DOWNS HASH SALES. 405 Elm Street McHem,a TV Ftin t Wotch Paul Whitemon TV Teen Club . ; • ABC Network. Nash Motor*, Division S*sk-Kflrinator Corp., Get •Hjunthm origlintal Lrn". AUTOMATIC CLOTHES DRYEK Uefc What Y»« Oiv* wHh • HAMILTON ©ry«r! e Real waihday freeden-- indoor drying at fast at she wgshe*' HAMILTON is the <tryer oa the market. e f inest drying weather there is--at (he flick Of a switch! Clothes laar loafer, stay lovelier! e Clothes dried ready to iron or pat away. No tedious sprinkling! NajailTON Ixclwaivatl e New Ml-P«w«r Ixhaett System -- •liminatai lint and meistvre PMWmm. • New HAMILTON U«t- CantreI -- twice as effici* M, «osi«r to cl»on I e Ne harsh, (trct^air dnrh»el Patented "Carrier Currant" drying float! cloth«» gently through warm, clean air. • Faatee* SUN.I-OAT Lamp sanitizes, releases' atone f$r "outdoor" freshness. Why Walt Anetker Washday far Year HAMILTON ? («. $274.00 (bmmc $296.00 ...be calm...b« corefrtt with o Dry your clothes automatically tough at the waatnarl Forget about clotheslines ana heavy lifting ... and start enjoying extra hours of leisure! The new Bendi^ Automatic OAS Pryer does the job automatically, economically * . .perfectly I -1# aTwPIXJ Soe the new Bendix GAS Clothes Dry erf today! TRIAL PURCHASE OFFER Aelr eheut new Easy Purchasing Man -- •f te 7t weeks te pay! Hi 'lap Banilten ALTHOFFS HARDWARE S01MAINST. PHONt 284 McHENftY, ItL. 'Here** your chance fo' seeTwhot a'difference days. If, at the end of that period, you are nq^ a Bendix Automatic GAS Clothes Dryer can make completely satisfied, let us know and we'll pick ^your iifeLjUse one in yow own home for 30 vp the dryer and refund your down pa^menj^ IJAVI IT TQ WWTO DRY CLOTHES 2W/ See the new Bendix Automatic OAS Oothee Dryers «t eur nearest stere or your dealer*^ KUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY Of NORTHERN lUINOIff, ' . - • • ' - A , . :Pii