Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 12 Mar 1953, p. 10

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

i ? Shepard >jp- THE McHENRY * ,;r r.r "" ftrfe " Ml%. Q. L. Harrison entertained the Wtj|fe|p's five-hundred club at her koMf Wednesday. A 1 o'clock dMMrt luncheon was served., Macs were awarded to Mrs. I^Ottls Hawley, high, and Mrs. Ben Walking!on, low. The Bwico club was , entertained Itr the home of Mrs. Georgia Thomas Thursday. A 1 o'clock dessert luncheon was served. Prises were awarded to Mrs. Lizzie Thompson. Mrs. Lester Carr and Mrs. Viola Low. Tile pupils of the upper room Will give two plays March ,31 in the church hall. The first will be "The Silver Arrow." with Dick Ai*sen Sharon Rossman. "Jackie, Skidmore, Grace Hiller, Anna Mae Aissen, Loretta Fizxel. Charles Sowers, Barbara Fezzel. Lois Hunt and Wesley Bruce. The second will be Hyptizing Tavv". with Jay Walkington. Billy Deates. Virginia C&rr, Loretta Feezel. Maty Jane Bell, Russel Carr, John Hogan. Le- Roy Hiller, Jim Pearson and Barbara Fessel. The Ringwood 4-H clubs are holding their display in the window of McGees clothing store in McHenry. The study group %ield their meeting at the holme of Mrs. Gene Decker Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Walkington entertained their five-hundred club Saturday evening. Prizes were 'awarded to Mrs. John Cristy and Walter Low, high, Mrs. Walter Wilcox and Mitchell Kane, low. Mrs. *Kmily Beatty spent Thursday with her sisters, Mrs. Harry Peet and Mrs. Luella Schneider In the Armour Burk home at Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bruce spent Thursday evening with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.%AxeJ Carlson atf Woodstock and helped her father cclebrate his birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Marlowe and family and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Donahue and daughter of Huntley were' Sunday . dinner guests in the C. L. Harrison home. Mrs. Viola Low, with Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Olsen spent Tuesday in the Charles Frey home at Palos Heights. Mrs. Beatty, who has been visiting there, returned home with them. Mrs. Fred Wiedrich.. Sr., and daughter, ,Mae, Mrs. Grace Mc- Cannon and Mis. Emma Anderson called on Mrs. Lill Conway at the Shangri-La Rest home hear McHenry Friday afternoon.' Wm. Claxton of McHenry was and Edward Skidmore spent Sunday afternoon at Genoa City. Mr. and Mrs. Pete Sebastian attended 'the Woods-Schult* wedding and reception at Wilmot and Bassett Saturday evening. Mrs. J. C. Pearson attended school in Chicago Saturday. Mr. and Mrs, Walter Wilcox of Woodstock, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Low of McHenry and Mr. and Mrsfi Walter Low and family spent Sunday in the Beatty Low home. r Mr. and Mrs. John Blackman and son, Tommy, of Antioch a visitor in the home of his sis- ! spent Sunday afternoon with Dr. ter. Mrs. George Shepard, Fri- ancj Mrs. Wm. Hepburn, day afternoon. Wm, Cruickshank attended a Mrs Clayton Bruce and Mrs. shorthorn cattle sale at Abing- Charles Ackerman were visitors don. 111., -three days the past \rfi- 1 "'"M'CLIJUMI'I] at Woodstock Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Rov Wiedrich and family •©£ .Genoa City spent Sunday with his mother, Mrs. Fred Wiedrich. Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bowman and daughter, Nancy, and* Betty Skidmore attended the Woods- Schultz wedding at Wilmot. Saturday nighl and the reception at Bassett. Wis. Mr. and Mrs. John Skidmore and family and Mrs. John Ehlert and daughter, Mabel. also attended the reception at Bassett. Wis. * Mr. and Mrs. Alan A»nger and daughter. Mary, of Hebron and Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard were callers in the Wm. Claxton home at McHenry Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Dean Ehlert of Kenosha spent Sunday with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Ehlert. ? ' Miss Marjan Jean Block and friend of Naperville spent the weekend with her» grandparents, Dr. and Mrs. Wm. Hepburn. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Malsch, Nancy Bowman, Betty, Jackie Mr. and Mrs. Weldon And|Mi and daughter, Margo, spent 8bnday afternoon with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ebel, ,at Algonquin. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hawley spent Sunday everting ih the Ernest Reinwall home at McHenry. » ' ' Mr. and Mrs. Phelps Saunders and daughter, Georgia Mary, of Sycamore spent the weekend iq the Fred Wiedrich, Jr., home. Weldon Andreas is starting a course on social studies at Da- Kalb' next week. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lenard and family of Lake Geneva spent. Sunday in the Fred Wiedrich, Jr., home. . Lucky You week, Mr. and Mrs. Axel Carlson and Mr. and Mrs. Delmer Shook and daughters of Woodstock spent Saturday evening in the Clayton Bruce home and helped him celebrate his birthday. Wm. Melton of Dillon, Mont., spent Friday night in the Wm. Cruickshank home. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Adams and family were recent supper Jpiests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Condon, at Richmond. Duane and Audrey Andreas of DeKalb spent the weekend. at their home here. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Adams were dinner guests in the Edwad Adams home at McHenry. Frank Walters of New London, Iowa, Miss Cora Walters, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Howe, of Crystal Lake and Ma and* Mrs. Wm. Reinwall of McHenry were Sunday dinner guests in the Louis Hawley home. Mrs. Clayton Bruce and son, Wesley, find Mrs. Chas. Ackerman spent Sunday afternoon at Genoa City. MEW POSTAGE STAMP Go'vernor William G. Stratton has issued a statement urging Illinois residents to make wide use of the new National Guard three-cfent commemorative postage stamp which has just gone on sale at postoffices throughout the country. Praising the Illinois National Guard for its distinguished and honorable record in both war and peace, the governor pointed out that thousands of its officers and men are now serving in Korea, Western Germany, and in Army camps within the continental United States. "Letters from -home are the best morale boosters in a serviceman's life," the Governor declared. "I hope everyone in Illinois who has a friend' or relative in the armed forces will take time to write an extra letter to him and use the National Guard stamp for postage." - _ m f Tb* Timlfn Safety S«rviw ^ The average acre of Sugar beets yields 3,500 pourtds of granulated sugar.. • _--, $ _ "SPEEDY" by McHENRY GARAGE TMINO THAT TMAT P»6WT NICK MILLED *HENRY6MA6t ALWAYS LIVE UP TO THEIR FINE »EPUTATK>N POP FIRST CLASS WORKMAN* SHIP AMC> AT SEASONABLE PRICES TOO. >. THEN RACK1 W E WON'T MEED whDaOtN UO ^OUP 1 THOSE TOOLS, HAMMEt? AtJOl THEQE S MO SAW AND .1 WOODWORK THINK HuOOY OVEP I LL ^UPNlSH L THE NAILS *W» i • ON VOOP E WILLYS-OVERLAND SALE* 604 FRONT STREET PHONE 403 By Their Punches You Know Them! Some people sign their names in full. Some use abbreviations, initials, even an X. And some do it with a punchy These are the railroad conductors or trainmen--the men who pick up your ticket on a train;-- and you'll never get two different punches from the same one. Your ticket won't, that; is. For every railroad ticket collector has his own personal and distinctive punch mark, or signature. Each one is registered in his name (like a policemen's revolver) and^ there are no two exactly alike" on any one railroad, though there may be similarities 'among railroads. Take a look at the cut-out in your ticket the next time you ride a train. It inay be shaped like a rooster, or a hat, or a half-moon or even a fish. It will be one of thousands of designs. The railroads began the punch signature system many- years ago Ttatrwfct. Warctt-lgi M59 to increase their efficiency aitf to know just who punched what. A punch is registered in a trainman's name the day he begins collecting (tickets ; and he retains it until he Stops. A trainman usually has two punches witih the same mark, ftne to be used when the other is being repaired or sharpened, And it's rare when a trainman looses his punch. The railroads coHect millions of tickets annuaHy and store all of them under a filing system in case of passenger claims Which run into the thousands every day. ! One Eastern ' railroad still remembers the refund claim made by a fugitive from justice. The man bought a ticket from New York to Chicago, but was arrested in Harrisburg, Pa., and taken off the train. He wanted a refund. A search of the tickets collected on the train he rode turned up a New York-Chicago ticket that had been punched only to Harrisburg. The man got his refund.' , r •peed Hate amd lived [4'1 '}• i|"t' •!' if' if if iji .|..fri}i •{, ,|i i}. .ft.|i 4. if..ft.ft •}.+1. INCOME TAX BETURNS PREPARED tHONTHLY BOOKKEEPING ; For the Small Business. Evenings by Appointment --4>i--e : McHenry Bookkeeping ft Tax Service >.210 S. Green Street McHenry, PHONE 788 or 265-MX i f , > . I , , W •» |»'t' '1"I' >!• If 1 j l ig. .ft j •» •» Worwick's McHenry Camera Center Cameras Bought. Sold and. Exchanged^ r PHOTO SUPPLIES 0«r Free Expert Service Does Not Stop With A Sale. " « • -- : I; -'-'J See us before you buy. WORWICK'S STUDIO 111 N. RIVERSIDE DRIVE PHONE ITS *'-• t t • I HL DR. HENRY FREUND OPTOMETRIST At 136 S. Green Street. McHenry (Closed Thursday Afternoons) •LASSES FITfK® 1 VISUAL REHABILITATE 1TES EXAMINED •I8CAL TRAINING -- COMPLETE VISUAL ANALYSIS j HOURS DAILY 1 9 to 19 A. M. and 1 to » P. M* FRIDAY EVENINGS: «:M to 8t80 P. M. : 1 EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT PHONE McHENRY 452 ^ f.r •••M ' ili '1 A 1 Working in your kitchen will be more enjoyable when here's a place fbr everything! and everything is in its place. Sturdy, good-looking KITCH'N-HANDY £abinet Attachments help keep kitchens orderly . . . help you do your work jjuicker. They are easily installed on either wood or metal Cabinets. Make yours a "KITCH'N-HANDY" Kitchen! $«« SHRVtS, feftwM Is InMi itf cabinat <bot| holds *pic* «on» in plain view for aoty ulcctiort. 5-con model SUlr. i 7-con model.... $1.05 14-can model . ' '» '-con model.. .. •« ok 10-can model double row. DISAPPEAMNG TOWB. MYERS, ThrW telescoping Wan bold towoh; slide Out for quick MO; *MO out of tifhf «t « W-. Attaeho* to Mmidt of «Mf, to tWo woH or l« bock wall KOOIM fooTl imide of cabinet doors. 14-in. lonf. 16-in long... U-in long ............V»2.05 $2.15 »•.•••• $2.45 i/ .** UD HOLDER. HoM« M* in vertical position bock of cvp- ' board door. No more cMtered noisy pjles of Wds with thb C^QA UTENSIL HOLDER. Keeps kitchen tools and utensils In por> fed order. Eight adjustable hook* on metal rod attaches C Bjbinsl. « . ................. bliA^EAMNG fOT HOlb«[>ots and pom "hand thorn, selves to you" when this handy holder slides out from under shelf or work table. Holds ten utensils. BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT MARCH 1 All the thrills of Sweet Sixteen action brought 3 % . Jo you direct from George Huff Gymnasium, \ f ' - University of Illinois, by a team of top announcers . I; CLOSET DOOR SHELVE! Wuw, deanerL etc kept off Ihe floor. Installed bock of doset 4mr... flOv UTILITY SHELVES. Soaps, cleaners, dish cloths are easy to reach and out of the way when these shelves are placed on undtrsink doer, I!"*' • fi .6^0 -- HANGM6 CUP SHELF. Attacher to mdenMe of UW etlliso* otherwise unused space, holds six or more dipt In saf^,convenient location CORNER SHELVES. Triangle sfcelves odd beauty and utility fOP-Uf GARBAGE CONTAINER. Open wndersink door, A - . Kd pops up; close door, lid shutt tight... without using your hondi. Rust proof 12-^uort capacity. Loft-band and A «(•»hand tpiii|„ PIATE-AWAY, The Better Way to SSttoorree Dishes. Sturdy, adjustable device attaches between shelves, stores plate* according to size, three ring holders swing out for'easy selection, swing in again Out of the woy. Also on ideal flower pot holder whan attached to woR, port or shelf... ' , ** HARDWARE •'l-~ ' i.*.: SHEET METAL SHOP •* 4 featuring complete toornamni coverage by WCFL eee on your dial •eeplvt focof bremfcaifi through Public Sorvif ^ 3rd oivAvof n^fwonlf • WKRS WCMY-< WUMN-BJ; WFIS WJ0L OrnnV. Main KAV4r^UT MTItVUWS AND COiWMTAW Fbffbm kY-BY-HAY WlcHmturf, I1L Imuafa Id vol our ynw favofila rodBo ifnfiiMi fcv • Boh • • v "ItAr. tUBLIC CQMEAfcIV QF»NQRTIjERN ILIINQIS r

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy