tpn^pp^p^p^ip1 S?JV> "^j^^p^pwp i PLAUfDEALER ?zmm • August 21.1952 •Y~m% Ringwood The Home Circle was enteray tained in the home of Mrs. Flora Harrison Thursday afternoon. * ;•/' ^Mrs. Ben Walkington had charge •-£ :of the program. This was capsule . , Jsister day and each one received gift from her capsule sister. Jce cream and cake was served. The Round-up club attended Y'Jvthe water carnival at Lake Ge- ^ , ineva Friday evening. ? School will start Sept. 2. William Bergin of Hebron will teach m the upper grades and Miss Hazel Heideman of Union will teach •i^fjthe lower grades. y ••*'> The Evening W. S. C. S. met 11at the home of Mrs. Paul Walkington Wednesday evening. Mrs. Alvin Benoy gave the lesson on f'The American Indians." Plans "were made for the serving of V «?dinners. •yj y$ Rev. and Mrs. Sample are the proud parents of a 9 lb. 11 oz. daughter, born at the Woodstock hospital Friday, Aug. 15. The W. S. G. S. will serve a roast beef cafeteria supper in the churcH hall Thursday, Aug. 28, serving to start at 5 o'clock. Mrs. C. L. Harrison, Mrs. Wayne Donahue and daughter and Mrs. Collins spent Wednesday in the Donald Brenner home at Arlington Heights. " fMrs. Roy Neal spent last weekend in the Arthur Neal home at Waukegan. Mr. and Mrs. Roland McCannon and family of Bloomington spent the weekend in the Ben Walkington home. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Norman and family returned to their home in 'Evanston Sunday after spending the past two weeks at their cot- ' a . tage here. Mrs. Martha Bowman of Chicago spent Wednesday until Friday in the home of her son, Fred Bowman, and family. Fred Bowman returned home Friday from the Woodstock hospital, where he underwent surgery. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Olsen and ^ Mrs. Glen Jackson of Richmond and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wilcox ' of Woodstock spent SJunday with Mrs. Emily Beatty and Mrs. VI- - ola Low. * Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Cristy, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Low and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Low atten- *--ded the Milwaukee Fair Sunday. Mrs. Madeline Stone of Kenosha spent Friday with Mrs. Wm. Hepburn. - Mr. and Mm. Kldridfe van Atten of Flint, Mich., spent the past week in the George Shepard home. * Mr. and'Mrs. Louis Hawley and daughter, Marian, and Wm. Rfcinwald were visitors at Harvard Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Vivian Austin of Genoa City spent Monday evening with Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Butler. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Pettise and family of Barrington spent Sunday with her mother, Mrs. Agnes dencks. Mr. and Mrs. Jcvn Carlson and son, Donald, Mr And Mrs. Delmar Shook and daughter. Karen, of Woodstock and Mr. and Mrs. Granville Carlson of Maywood spent Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bruce and helped them celebrate their twenty-second wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs."" Wm. Heine of Chicago spent Sunday in the the George Shepard home. Mrs. Tollefson and Mrs. Wm. McCannon called on Mrs. Edith McCannon at Woodstock,. Thursday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Newman of McHenry, Miss Clara Smith of Portland, Ore., Garry Smith of N. Hollywood, Calif., and Mr. and Mrs. Chancy Harrison were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Butler Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Tony Senkerik of Chicago and Mrs. John EMert and daughter, Mabel, of Wilmot were supper guests in the Fred Bowman home Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Andreas and Margo spent Sunday evening with her parents at Algonquin. Mary and Jane Stanek of Elkhorn, Wis., spent the week with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Butler. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wiedrich and son, Fred, of Caledonia visited his mother, Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Sr., Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Wm. McCannon, Mrs. Oscar Berg and Mrs; Lester Canvisited Mrs. Luella Stephenson at the Woodstock hospital Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Phelps Saunders and daughter of Sycamore spent Sunday morning in the Fred Wiedrich, Jr., home. Mrs. Lena Peet of Crystal Lake and Miss Marian Peet of Elgin spent Sunday at their home here. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Clay of Rockford and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Peet of McHenry called on Mr, and'Mrs. Wm. McCannon Sunday afternoon. Sunday dinner guni&s oI Dr. and Mrs. Wm. Hepburn were Mr. and Mrs. Albert Reck end Mr. and Mrs. Philip Mueller of Des- Plaines. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Donaldson of Libertyville spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cruickshank. Mrs. Tollefson of Crystal Lake, Mrs. Wm. McCannon, Mrs. Lester Carr and Miss Mae Wiedrich called on the Misses Carrie and Mary Adams near Burlington Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Oliver of Portsmouth, Va., spent Saturday with Dr. and Mrs. Wm. Hepburn. Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard spent Saturday afternoon and evening in the Alan Ainger home at Hebron and helped their granddaughter, Nancy Ainger, celebrate her birthday. Mrs. Angela Pagni is Visiting her daughter in Chicago. Dr. and Mrs. Wm. Hepburn were callers in the John Blackman, Jr., home at Antioch Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hawley, Miss Lona Brever and Gust Pearson called on friends at Beloit Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Becking of Woodstock were callers in the Mrs. Flora Harrison home Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Donahue and daughter of Huntley spent the past week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Harrison. David Collins and Miss Anna Alberts of Beloit spent Sunday afternoon with the former's grandmother, Mrs. Mabel Collins. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cruickshank visited Mr. and Mrs. Harry Knaak at Arlington Heights Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Ferd Wiedrich, Jr., and daughter, Mary Ann, spent Sunday afternoon and evening in the Charles Vogel home at Broadhead, Wis. Mrs. Luella Stephenson returned home Sunday evening from the Woodstock hospital. On Monday she entered the Villa Rest home at Pistakee Bay. "Butchie" Lenard returned to his home at Lake Geneva Saturday evening after spending the summer in the Fred Wiedrich, Jr., home. He left on a trip to the Dells with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lenard. of Hebron is a, iay Walking- Mr. ami Mrs. F. A. of Sycamore spent Sunday B. T. Batter home David Benoy visiting his cousin, ton. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Pagni attended a picnic in Chicago Saturday given by the company where she is employed. •Rev. and Mrs. R. Gillfland and daughter of Cobden, HI., Were dinner guests Sunday in the Weldon Andreas home. SIRUP PACKS I SUGGESTED FOR FREEZING PEACHES Sirup packs are bettor than dry sugar packs for fretting peaches. That's because peaches have little natural juice and darken readily when exposed to air. , Use a 50 to (0 percent sirup for peaches, advises Dr. Frances Van Duyne, foods research specialist, University of Illinois. To make a 50 percent sirup, dissolve one cup of sugar in fourcup water. For 60 percent si use the same amount at with one-half cup water. Of course, you can use a sweet sirup, says Dr. Van but 50 to 60 percent sugar centrations seem beat for serving peach flavor, shape and color. Stir or heat the sirup mixtdre to dissolve the sugar more quickly, but be sure it is cold when you add the peaches. If ybu use ascorbic acid--to help prevent browning--dissolve the tablets or crystals in cold sirup, use three 50-milligram tablets #or one cup of sugar sirup, or u se one-fourth teaspoon of cryft .Is to four cups of sirup. For the best product, p< el peaches without using a botli ig water dip. Halve or slice t le peaches directly into a cart >n that contains sirup. Press 1 »e fruit down and cover comple^ ly with sirup. Leave one-half-nt :h space at the top of pint Detainers for expansion during freezing; leave one inch jfor quart containers. Crumpled cellophane on top of the fruit will help to keep the fruit from floating. TWICE TOLD TALES Forty Years Ago A number of our young people had a very unusual experience on the waters of Pistakee Lake and Fox river last Wednesday night. The couples had attended dances at the Bay and Johnsburg and on their return four boat loads of merry-makers were lost in the dense fog. The Borden factory at this place is being treated to a new coat of paint. Frank Buhr is doing the work. Stephen H. Justen, ex-policeman of this village, is now touring the country with a thresh tog outfit. The framework --of the new blacksmith shop that is being built near the railroad tracks by Joseph May of Ringwood is up and it will not be long now before Mr. May will be ready for business in McHenry. The section men of the Chicago North Western railroad have been granted another increase in wages this month. They now receive $1.70 per day. That's a little more like it! M. M. Niesen, the hustling Centerville groceryman, is having his store enlarged and shaped up to better advantage. In spite of many reports to the contrary, the world famous lotus beds in Grass lake will again be in full bloom in a few days. The Hunter ltfc« is running boats to the beds daily. The Hudson Medicine company closed a week's engagement here last Saturday. The show was well patronized every night and the company succeeded in selling the usual amount Of medicine, soap and tooth powder. The company went to Ringwood from here. Forty Years Ago W. E. Whiting is improving his home south of town by installing a hot water heating plant and bath room, with hot and cold water throughout. Theo. Winkel has purchased the E. W. Howe house and property on Broad street on the north side of the public park *nd will take possession of same early next spring. Peter Wirfs has purchased the W. A. Fisher house 'on .Center street on the West side. The McHenry public " school will open the fall and winter term on Monday, Sept. 2. M. J. Walsh, the progressive and wide-awake West Side merchants, is now doing business in his handsome new store, located just east of E. F. Matthews' meat market. - Gus Anderson, familiarly known here to McHenry ajjd around the lakes, where he had made his home during the past several years, as "Shorty", was shot and killed by a companion at Pistakee Lake near Fox Lake last week Friday night. The shooting took place following a yiolent quarrel between the dead man and tils companion over tfie equitable division of a string of fish which the two ' men had caught. The audience at the Certtral opera house last Friday night was handed one great big, large, juicy lemon at the hands of the Kissing Princess company. The vaudeville part of the show, with the exception of one number, was a farce and the minstrel was a complete fizzle. Such rot as this will go in some places but not with McHenry people, who know and _ appreciate a good show when they see it. The bowling tournament at Emil Geier's alleys closed last evening. The winners of the contest were: First, Arthur Meyers; second, N. P. Justen; third, Glen Robison; fourth. Will Freund. 34* §1- JOHN'S, CHURCH - ^ CARNIVAL JOHNSBURG, ILL. Fri. Sat. and Sim. August 22-23-24 GAMES - - - REFRESHMENTS J PLATE LUNCH SERVEIIK; ^from 4:30 to ^ P. M. NEED cows? RALPH ROUSE'S AUCTION SALE Now held on farm -- located 3 miles south of Grayslake, i-raile north of Ivanhoe, just east of route 83--Watch for sign 1 mile north of Mundelein on route 45 to Winchester Road, prest 1 mile. S TUESDAY. AUGUST 26, 1952 ^1:30 PJC DAT* ; <0--Holsteins A Guernseys - X * .* tCloae springers £ fresh djWf 1*" A few steers A stock bulls T. B. and Bangs tested TONY/UTS HOME FURNISHINGS Art It Leone Tonyen ARMSTRONG -- NAIRN -- KENTILE LINOLEUM and TILE Installation By Factory Trained Mechanics. PLASTIC WALL TILE JOANNA WESTERN SHADES - ROLL-UP VERTICAL BLINDS SIESTA VENETIAN BLINDS ~~~JCAMEO-SHERBACK CURTAINS""*"' Drapery Fabrics by the Yard. Custom Made Draperies and Slip Covers. Bus. Phone 917 • Res. Phone 790-W _ •• . •••- * ~ 20* E. ELM STREET .* ^ McHENRY, ILL. GRAND CHAMPION#; A McHenry county stock farm scored a repeat victory at the state fair last week when "Brampton Medallion Basil," top prize winner in 1951, was picked as grand champion Jersey bull over his offspring, "Candy Basil Curtiss," the junior champion. Both animals are owned by Curtiss Candy Co., farms, Cary. Curtiss also had the grand champion Jersey female. Renew that subscription to the Plaindealer now! 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