Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Aug 1952, p. 7

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If' 1wp*" ¥< wwf»|«|«»J • ** * ;• ?•'•••• ^ V'KI>* '•i?-;,i'"» V Thursday, August 14 1992 Ringwood i Bjf Mn, Gtorye Skqiahl & V# Mrs. George Shepard entertained the women's five-hundred club It her home Wednesday. A 1 o'clock dessert luncheon was served- Prizes were awarded to Mrs. IRL E. Whiting, high, and Mrs. iiouis Hawley, low. Mrs. Oscar Berg entertained the bunco club ' at her home Viursday. .A 1 o'clock luncheon was served. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. Georgia Thomas, Mrs. Wm. McCannon and Mrs. • Lizzie Thompson. The W.S.C.S. will meet at the fome of Mrs. Louis Hawley Thursday, Aug. 21. The Benoy family reiinion was fetid at Veterans Acres at Crystal Lake Sunday. Those from here to attend were Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Benoy and sop and Mr. and Mrs. Paul . Walkington and family. .The Edwal Labratories held Ijjleir picnic at Fontana Saturday. . i Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jaeger of Chicago spent Sunday with Mr. Otd Mrs. Wolf Shadle. . Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lackey and family of Moline spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Pete Sebastian. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wilcox of Woodstock and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Low of McHenry spent Sunday with their mojther, Mrs. Viola Low. Mrs. Lena Peet of Crystal Lake and Miss Marian Peet of IBgin spent the weekend at their igjnne here. . Mr. and Mrs. John Blackman «§id son of Antioch snent Sunday jpith Dr. and Mrs. Hepburn. ,1 Mrs. Viola Low and Mrs. Walter Low and daughter, Donna, spent TNesdav in Chicago Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard Jjmnt Tuesday afternoon in the Alan Ainger home. ' Miss Alice Peet is on a vaca>- tion trip to California. She went with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Peet, who are going to make their home at San Diego. Mrs. Lena Peet is staying at the home of her sister, Mrs. Henry Hinze at Crystal Lake while Alice is away. • Mrs. Viola Low spent Monday the Walter Wilcox home at Woodstock. : Mr. and Mrs. Geirge Shepard ttt Monday evening in the Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Ghilain of Crown Point, Ind., are visiting her sister, Mrs. HepMr, and Mr. and Mrs. Winters. ) Mrs. Elaine Barber and daughter, Patsy, of Beloit and Mrs. Nora Berg and daughter, Geraldine, of Walworth spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Berg. Mr. and Mrs. Alan Ainger and family of Hebron spent Wednesday evening with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Norman and family are spending the week at their cottage here. Mrs. Gertie, Glosson spent the past week with her mother, Mrs. Martha Stringer, at Mondovi, Wis. Her daughters, Karen and Janet, who spent .the past two w§eks there, returned home with her. Charlotte Hogan and Annette Smith left Sunday to attend the state fair at Springfield. Charlotte will model her off-the-shoulder ballerina formal of green eyelet and taffeta and Annette will go as an alternate in food demonstration. Miss Lois Johnsop of Chicago spent the weekend in the Wm. Pagni home. Mrs. Louis Hawley and daughter, Marian, of Elgin spent Mondav in Elgin. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Heine of Chicago spent Sunday in the George Shepard home. Mr. and Mrs. Webster Blackman and family of Chicago spent Sunday with Dr. arid Mrs. Wm. Hepburn. Mrs. Fred Bowman, daughter. Nancv. and son, Fred, Jr., went to Wilmot Saturday evening to the Kenosha county fair. Mr. and Mrs. John Skidmore and family went to Chicago Saturday to Riverview Park. Mr. and Mrs. Don Frits of Union spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Cristy. Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Andreas attended the Ecksteadt reunion at Harvard Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Powers and son. Glen, and Mr. Maffle of Chicago spent Sunday in the Fred Bowman home. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cristy spent Sunday at Waupaca and Kenneth attended a reunion of Company C. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Meyer of Marengo spent 8unday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cruickshank. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Peck and son, Philip, and Mrs. .C. G. Huson of Elgin spent Sunday in the Ben Walkington home. Mrs. Huson remained for a visit. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Lovelette and son, Gordon, of Chicago spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cruickshank. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Redmond of Kenosha spent Friday with Dr. and Mrs. Hepburn. Mr. and Mrs. Wolf Shadle visited friends in Chicago Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bruce and family spent Sunday in the Delmar Shook home at Woodstock. Among those from here to attend the Moose picnic at Crystal Take ^Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. John Hogan and family, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Carr and family, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Low and family Mr. and Mrs. Albert Oonk and family and Clyde Carr. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bruce and Mr. and Mrs. Marion Shoijse attended the stock car races at Harvard Saturday evening. Dr. and Mrs. Joe Schivinfurter of Skokie were callers at< Dr. Hepburn's Saturday. By W. H. Timnnaa It sorta makes me sick the way the town kids of Woodstock break up things at the fairgrounds. Last week while taking down the picket fences where the livestock tents were, the 4-H boys who helped, piled about a case of empty poo bottles found in the tedding so we could return them. A day or two later when we went to get them they were all broken over some stones. I don't care about the bottles, but the glass is dangerous and awfully hard to clean up. We left a table out in the live-, stock area and it was broken in a dozen pieces. The light bulbc were left in the hog barn for twc days last year and whten I went to get them every one had bew broken by throwing rocks lit them. 4 All of the hard work it takes to put on the fair seems rather useless and futile when things like that happen. What makes kids do it? A number of phone calls have come in with folks wanting to sell hay as a result of our note a couple of weeks ago. We ai* not buying hay to ship south and have no intention of doing s*. We are merely calling attention to the dire need for livestock feed in the drought area. I have letters from three sources you might write if you have a carload or more to sell and are willing to load and ship it. They are: Ben Price, County Agent, Batesville, Arkansas; Seed Service company, Box 2033 DeSota Station, Memphis, 2, Tennessee; and McMinn and Son, Box 672, Abilene, Texas. If you have smaller Quantities, contact a reliable hay dealer. Sheep numbers have increased a lot in this area recently. There is much most people can learn to raise them successfully. Worms are the sheep's worst enemy and I believe 90 percent of a sheep's ailments can be attributed to them. Ewes you intend to breed this fall should be wormed now and kept on legume pasture? Phenothiazine will kill the worms and can be given easily after you get on to it. If you can't locate this stuff elsewhere, see, me. The farmer gets $4.12 for what he has in a man's suit (7.95 pounds of grease wool), 30 cents in a man's shirt (.79 pound of -lint cotton), 3.2 cents in a half oound box of cornflakes (1.05 pounds of corn), and 3.1 cents in a loaf of white bread (.912 pounds of wheat) according to the American Farm Bureau Federation Chicago office, so when the merchant tells you prices are higher because the farmer is extracting a higher price for food Or fiber he is either ignorant of the facts or is not putting the facts to you straight. Small people work with things. Big people work with ideals. , Credit is a wonderful Asset if it is available and advisable. One of the main things wrong with McHenry county farming" is that the farmer has too much to do to do anything right. He takes on too much and everything suffers profitwise. He has enough field work to do if he didn't have those 40 cows to milk and could work in the field from 6 to 6 instead of from 9 to 4. Consequently, his corn is weedy, his hay doesn't get put up 'till it's nothing but broomstraw and hi# thistles grow so that we have a' national reputation for them. Too many farmers are tired, old men with nothing to showj for it but homy hands and a' crook in their backs. 41 Judging from the number of executives from the city who own farms here, the farmer is* about the only fellow who is his own boss who isn't able to buy a farm. If these last two paragraphs are your philosophy you are on the wrong track. Farmers are successful and some of them are able to buy farms. Why? They are able to manage a farm and their time so they can get their work done properly and still have time to get away to the -county fair and other meetings where they get new ideas and ideals. A deplorable situation created by ^p6or management of government-- only 81 Vs million dollars kre spent per year on agriculture research, just half the amount spent in 1948 to support the price of potatoes and this summer we couldn't buy any. How do you get a change in administration when there are enough people working for tht government monkeying with th« price of potatoes and an that to carry the election? PICNIC SITES ey made by the state division of highways shows that Illinois has 260 roadside picnic sites at various places along its highways. More than half of these average about two acres in extent; the others are picnic spots. Most of the picnic sites have space for parking cars, and a considerable number of large tables and out-door cooking places^ are maintained for the use of tourists. • Subscribe To The flllsiiwlir KINGSIZE Q U A 1. I T V SNAPSHOTS " • • " - rAUUM. "SPEEDY" * McHENRY GARAGE HOLYK fftUMCPUM! •FIFTEEN MINUTES, IVE BEEN WArriNO to cxtoss this THOROUGH MAE WEST » "fiasu ||A nf Twin MAT. I r.M--fVI. 1:30 I WEEK ONLY, TOES* 1116. 12, THRU AUG. 17 IN PERSON JULIE HAYD0N (Star ef "Cocktail Party") with Ten POtTON--JOSEPH EMMET--IRWIN MMRONE 'THE SILVER WHISTLE" PRICES lacl. ta*. tax: CVCS. Sl.M. 2.4». I.M; MAT*. (J P.M.) WmI.. Am. 13 So*.. Ax. 17 All Swh r*Mrn«. Si.M. ORDER SY MAIL. Maka tkaaki ar MHf artir Hyakla ta CHCVV CHASE SUMMER THEATRE. WHEELING, ILL. RESERVATIONS at Minkill fi.ld I Company ()rd Floor) or 1 • Mton* ROqars Fart 1-1177, 1-0444 or Whoolii* 2W PICTURES ZNIAK660 AT NO EXTRA CHARGE! - Wattles Drug "THE HONE STOBEMain Straat PHONE 35» MtHaaiy. OH BO*! THE WAV THOSE CARS CAME TO A STOP// THEY MOST HAVE HAD THEIR BRAKES ADJUSTED AT CttiCAfitUND'S MOST BEAUTIFUL SUMMER TNKATM ONK MILK NOITH OF WHEELING, ILL. ON MILWAUKEE AYt. 5 HEY* -TK COP' WILLYS-OVERLAND SALES 604 FRONT STREET P«ONE 409 ^ V. EOtLOW THE* GIAKT '4> * J DAY CELEBRATION > AND CARNIVAL • o •' • ' ' ^ CITY PARK McHENRY ILL THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY AUGUST 14-15-16-17 : ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY V- BEAUTIFUL PRIZES - RIDES - GAMES REFRESHMENTS ____ BRING THE ENTIRE FAMILY -- --7 ; Fun For The Chlidren and Grownups Too 2 BIG PARADES 2 THURSDAY NIGHT 7:30 P. SUNDAY 5:30 P.M. c> 1 • iMiiittt $TS™ THERE is a Host of things that endear a ROADMASTER to anyone who loves to drive. There's the might of its Fireball 8 En^iniP** most powerful ever put in a Buick. There's the thrift of its Airpower carburetor --a four-barrel automatic that literally brings increased power right out of thin air. There's its hushed and luxugipus silence -- its poised and level ride that cosfa million dollars to develop--and the i n finitc^ sjn oq|hness of its Dynaflow Drive. JB ut the thing that has brought the most cheers for this big and obedient beauty is Buick's version of Power Steering.* Gone is the tug of turning, parking, maneuvering in small space.__ Power Steering takes over the effort of turning the front wheels--makes it a one-hand , operation. * I * Do you have tofearn to dr&ealf over a£am if you have this new Buick feature? WHIN SETTER AUTOMOBILES All BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM "You definitely do not. On tKe open road, yod have that same sure sense of command that you've always had. Coming out of a curve, you can loosen your grip, and the front wheels right themselves just as they do on every Buick# But you'll notice this: When you suddenly hjt loose dirt or sand--or a stretch of rough road-* Power Steering smoothly goes into action-* helps take up the jerk -- makes control of thli wheel easier and driving safer. Wouldn't you like to try out this newest wonder; --on a ROADMASTER or a SUPER? .\ou say tl% word, and we'll do the rest. Equipment, accessories, trim end models m* smbject to chemgK without notice. *Oftiond st Mrs «aa om tLosdmsster Super only. *$$>• -m ( u s l o i n m i i l l l { ( ) \ l ) \ l AS 11: n 5 < k v 3 * R. I. OVERTON MOTOR SALES 403 Front St. Phone 6 McHenry, f-1!#

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