Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 16 Apr 1953, p. 7

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f wmsf spurns. r-r:- #' "m •V «'<' -- • .' . > ,% '.i•. * • ; 7» April 16. 1953 PLAINDEALEB ;i#s •MS: ^ yjjhfe$*lr3s ,*-T "#t- Lake News By Eve Leveequo, "Mew Ixxik" on The Roads It's a good feeling to drive iMra seme of our streets and H£>t be jolted out of ones seat by tile holes in the' road. However, lots more gravel is needed to complete this gigantic task ai ltt's please get those dues in, Kuh? Frank Poledna, or Mrs. Iknma Pyritz, treasurers, will be glad to accept the money. And, non-members are urged •Ad invited to join. Remember-- you shark in the convenience. Hjn't it only fair, therefore, to shoulder some of the responsibility? However, a sad fact hois beon brought to our attention. With the improved roads it seems a ftw wild cowboys behind the wheel are burning up their tires (and our nice roads) trying to set new speed records. For the information of the public, plans are being formulated so that violators of the - •Pfofl frws will be Prosecuted! !t - Little Shut-In Ginny and R§y A alto brought their five-ye%r-old daughter. Carol, home from the hospital on Sunday. This little lady has been a patient at the Memorial hospital, Woodstock, for the past two weeks.The family physician diagnosed her illness as nephritis and in Carol's case was the >• aftermath of an apparently insignificant case of chicken pox and an earache. Its' rare for an illness of this sort to develop In this manner but it's just one of those things which makes a doctor's life more difficult i and parent's lives so Worrisome. Carol is by no means completely recovered and will probably have tp spend many more weeks in bed. A little "sunshine I shower" of cards would give ;Carol something to look forward to while she is a "shut-in". Simply address them to Carol Aalto, Route 4, McHenry, 111. H the right as for as possible, " thereby avoiding a head-on collison which could have been fatal. Luckily, neither Ginny nor Ray was injured but there is still the matter of, their automobile which must be replaced. h . Where Were Hie VotMs? With 305 registered voters here, not autte one-third of that number showed at the polls on Tuesday, April 7. These dune people who were "too busy", no doubt, are the first to complain about officials in public office but do nothing to place capable men in official capacities. Surely, two-thirds of our population could not have had valid excuses for #! voting. 'Nulf aaidtl^ ^ Involved In AccUtaB , * To further complicate niatMrs for Mr. and Mrs. Ray Aalto, their car was almost completely demolished by a drunken driver While they were returning home from their daily hospital visit on Saturday night, April i .Driving towards the lake on ' Route S20, - an oncoming car swerve& suddenly to the left, barely missing the vehicle in front of Aalto's. Ray pulled to Big Party A great m%ny neighbors and friends raised lusty voices and joined in the happy refrain last Saturday night to wish Genevieve McDonald hapgy birthday. . During .the course of the evening, Mr. and Mrs. Sid Smith, Mrs. Theresa Cunningham, Mrs. Steve Huska, Jr., the Frank Madsens, Everett Ingersoll, Mr. and Mrs. John Boyle, Beverly and Frank Rourke, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Matthesius, Martha and Don Lorch, the Dave Han sens, Mr. and Mrs. George Cable, Ruth and Virgil Adams, Mrs. Theresa Schultz, the Fred Thomsons, Mr. and Mrs. Adam Jablonski, Grandma and Grandpa Rognstad, Mrs. Hairy - Mackin, Mrs. Gussie Stoddard and many others offered their best wishes. Jack Bourelle played the piano in his inimitable manner and was appreciated !? all who heard. > Delicious refreshments were served by the charming haptens, Mrs. McDonald. t;.< V - Hm Operation Ifareft Nented is recd*eftng nicely after parting with her tonsils last Friday. Pearl and Pete Nersted were most anxious about her welfare. She was a patient at Memorial hospital. Report On Our Little Sick Ones We are so happy to report that a black eye is Geoffrey Houck's only reminder of the serious encounter he experienced with a bed spring last week. Little Linda Pasealaqua is out of oxygen now at the Larabida sanatarium and is coming along nicely. However, this youngster still has many more months of 'being separated from her family and it will be a long time before she is completely well. Lets* remember her wttn cards and letters. Linda is saving them all in a scrap book. You can have an active part in her recovery. LaRabida Sanatarium, Jackson Park, Chicago, Ill,, *fce only address required 1 Company For Dinner Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jung of Richmond enjoyed Sunday dinner at the home of Louise and George KiddeJson of Knollwood. The children, Sandy and Dickie Jung, recently recovered from the mumps so this was by way of a celebration with the fond grandparents thankful for their recovery. And Then There Was An, Owl It's common knowledge that Frank Rourke is an avid bird lover and under no circumstances would .he harm one little feather on their bodies. But Frank is adamant on one point,--that is, the big city is no place for owls! ^IIHIIIIHIIfllHIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIHIItllllllllllllinilllllllllllllinillllllllllllllllUHItllHIHIIIIIIIIUIIIUIffllUlfeMffi = v, ? MONTHLY § Btfftkeeping Service • INCLUDING ,~#BOFIT & LOSS STATEMENT - «' r,- (Monthly ft Accumulated) STATE ft FEDERAL TAX RETURNS. BANK BALANCE RECONCILED , FINANCIAL STATEMENTS BACK WORK BROUGHT UP-TO-DAT^.. " CrV* Bookkeeping & Tax Service «0 SO. GREEN ST. - PHONES 788 or SflB-MX Letter Fran Omncti Marge and Ola Olseft Were, simply ecstatic at receiving their first letter from son, Tommy, who is having the time of his young life in Norway with hi* grandparents. Tommy is learning to speak Norwegian and no doubt is stacking volumes of information and anecdotes to report when ha comes home. Tommy was a little seasick on the way over but recovered rapidly. Tommy's on4 desire is to catch fish thai usually gets away. -•?» r .rjK ' . • • • ' -M «iw *•- feslfc': Another Fish Story Gene Pietrowski is really boasting about this one. He caught a fish so large he has been reeling it in for a week and when we Went to press her hadn't reached the tail yet! Osterby, Larry Crick, Sharon Lombard!, Michael and Vickie Mulhall, Billy Aalto, and Corky and Mario Peterson in the family car and took them to the movies in the basement of St. Patrick's church on Saturday. They enjoyed two hours of wonderful entertainment. The trip home was accomplished w^th little difficulty and plenty of refreshments were consumed. by the young guest#. Many Hands Mrs. Marcella Mulhall w||' a busy gal over the weekend wit& scrub brush, pail and broom preparing her cottage on Sprtng Road and Orchard Driye fot^a long enjoyable summer. 4 " Many hands make light work and Mrs. Mulhall had just tjiat; for Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lombard! and their daughter, Sharon, of Chicago helped in this gigantic task. Unusual Party Mrs. Lowell Peterson had"? a wonderful idea for her 0bn« Corky's, sixth "birthday fttii loaded Butch Stacknick, Datihit A Switch In EduratliiK Mr. and Mrs. Tom Byrnes, Jr., have been living in Chicago for the past two months to be near Mrs. Byrnes' 'mother, who has been very ill. This necessitated taking Peggy, Tommy and Patsy out of school but that problem was met and conquered. Mr. Byrnes simply takes the children in with him to the school, where he teaches in Chicago and their education goes cfn uninterrupted. " Attends Convention Lowell Peterson attended the x-ray convention in Gary, tftd., over the weekend. Mr. Peterson is in the x-ray division of Ansco Film Co. • Baby b Christened Mr. and Mrs. Gene- Frost had their infant daughter, Jane Marie baptized at St. Mary's church on Sunday afternoon, Msg. Nix, officiating. The very proud godparents were MrS. Mary Lou Ekstrom of Elgin and Harold Schmitt of McHenry. iY FREUND , )METRIST 1U 136 S. Grjibii Street, McHenry * V . (Closed Thursday Afternoons) • tTES E1AIIHEB GLASSES FITTED VISUAL TRAINING -- USUAL REHABILITATION C*ttPtETE VISUAL ANALYSIS ••OTS DAILY : » to 12 A. X. and 1 to ft fRIDAY EVENINGS: • sOO to StSft P. M. ' , , : iVfNI*«S APPOINTMENT r> ^ PHONE l^cHENRY 452 Mrs. Frost served a delicious dinne!* for relatives who came to see baby Jane Marie at her first public appearance. The guests included Mr. and Mrs. John Schmitt, Miss Betty Burnell, Harold Schmitt and Mr. and Mrs. Roland Skatrom and family, China, Maybe ? »*•,*-- Willard Schultz is mighty proud of his latest project--the big hole he just completed dig-, ging in his back yard for a dry well. We're not saying its deep but tis said strange looking men with long black queues married life, still act like newly wed*. £*ge Severn ' GAMMA GLOBULIN " 'If The American Red Cross has' ^ supplied enough gamma globulin f|| to the people of Illinois during I the past eight years to save sn estimated 1,500 children from iS| death by measles, and to pro- 4 - ... , , „ , tect half a million more against ii Sheriff of knollwood. The young dangerous complications of mea- 1 Sheriffs are former residents of gjeg such as bronchopneumonia, I - . ^Jtockford Gueafs Ailleen and Bob Sheriff of Rockford were weekend guests with Mr. and Mrs. Chester our community. lC So Long tmti| next week---. The word egghead Is now being used to designate an int-Jlecand! tual- a raember of the "liberal" slanted eyes were sighted but they beat a testy retreat. . Summer Residents The Luciano farnily of Chicago, summer residents on Fountain Lane were out on Sunday opening their cottage for summer occupaacy, .*• La-De-Daa . Grace and Ed Walton are sporting beautiful new aluminum blinds ip a colorful red and white on the family homestead. As we've said before, these two, after more than fifty years of intelligentsia. This is curious (unless some sarcasm is implied) because such words as jughead. knucklehead, and chowderhead signify an ignorant person. Another expression to describe a confused person is to say he h.ts rocks in his head. The old words lowbrow and highbrow seem to be passing out. ; * . Isn't it nice when things turn out as you planned them, like an investment in the stock market or a bet on a horse race? - . Maryland has the only stele flag bearing a coat of arms. ATTENTION FARMERS! LIVESTOCK SALE Every Wednesday ROUTE 47 740P.lt WOODSTOCK. ILLINOIS We solicit any livestock you have to Sell. We are a Bonded Selling Agency. For pick-up service call Woodstock 572. ,.v •' WooJrtock Comm. Sales Co., In& inflamation of the brain, and im- : pairtnent of hearing. The report f comes from Dr. Roland R. Cross, director of the Illinois Department of Public Health. He • pointed out that the Red Cross also furnished the gamma globulin used in the mass innocu lations in three American cities, during the polio seasons of 1951 and 1952, wl ich showed that the globulin can confer temporary protection against the paralytia effects of poliomyelitis. The penultimate day of the. month ia the next to the last day. f r t lHM'Kl U HI 1 You Cm SOU 73Hf„.\ i < >:v Everything about our offices at 3 South Spring Street (ground! floor) is new except the phonej number (7360). Call us or come< | [in and see us whenever we can] be of investment service to yo» Jr-or give you any information^ |p ' ! lour complete facilities are] javailable to you, whenever you ;an use them ad van tageoutiy. For information on any invest^ |>ment matter, with no obtigatiaa whatever, mail coupon David L. Heath, Mgr. ; David A. Noyes ft Ca; 23 S. Spring St. Elgin, DL< Telephone IM Members I" J New York Stock Exchange | »| and Other Principal Exchanges! jName ..... Address . TlnformatlMT !!Deslred . . Iff "HIDDEN HUNGER"'* is Slowing You Down Caen Ole-B«re#i-i2 VHMNtam, FOLIC ACm . mo ourm 4»* STMT TODAY/ 0LA-BER0N12 h'i 10 VITAMINS, UVKR, IRON A COPPWkf kidvdini 9 HUdtOOMAMS CKYSTALUNg ;* )*•« - mm. .. Mat CHOLINE MHYDROGEIICITIATE «•{. INOSITOL nmt WHOLE ORICO UVCR 175 •«. FEMOUS SttUATE,OrM,USP(lfN) • m. C0PfEl(AtCem TsWili) 1nt VITAMIN C (htthk AtM) Mn|. VtTAMM 11 (TfeMilljiwUnMi) Km. VITAMM !2(MMMi) . .Int CALCIUM PANTOTHENATE <•«. * nmur muttutr Even 'good eaters'--young or old--often suffer Hidden Hunger, the undercover partial vitamin defid It's like a slow starvation that leaves yoQ feeling worried, robbed of true vitality ... does it so gradually yo^J don't realize what's happening. So be sure you're getting vitamin-rich diet--get OLA-BERON-12! Sttift Tufty/ Get Qls-Beron-12. (dkOU-Dwa If regularly. See what happens to all the dragging syinptoint of Hidden Hunger--the wearineas and irritability cause! by vitamin deficiency. • t ft MS91TS-«• .. YouVe %--n how much MORI Olo-Bsron-12 offers. Now compare Ihe price. For the MOST for your h*ahh, the MOST for your mono/... «0t OtA.MRON.V2I SO cepsvfa. 3.49 Yes, if you've been starving your body with lack of •aeentui vitamins, then watch--! Wstch what happens when you fivj^ your body a sure, rich supply of vitsmins, liver, iron. Watcp, what the dynamic red vitamin, B-12, can do for you. LearO what it feels like to have the surge of energy, the zett for liffcC that's betn missing. Get OLA-BERON-12 ... today% . • TEN Vitamins... Including 3 MCOS. B*li • •lood-Enrlching UVIR, IRON, COPMR Q*l*ALLi*Ola-B9ron.l2lixtknlvmt Largo Economy Six 100 capseles 5.91 feAl --You lave *1*009 Nye Drug 129 N. Riverside Drive PHONE McHenry, 11^ i2J+ l&J H iZjCfu V/ L ! K' I; G S T O R E Mm the w» MuA Ambassador ojfert db tthi/nate in performance--the Nash "Le Mans" engine that topped all American competition for two straight years at Le Mans, France. Also optional Hydrm-Matic Drive and Power Steering. *^*'1 -<'• • . ' • V * • < * ,v*'. • • "WTWpiQjl f ea It... #^5 Completely new flash Rambler Country Club, world's finest compact car, now wears the proud crest of Pinin Farina. The Country Club, like the Convertible gives you radio, Weafher Eye--even amtbmtal law mount Included in the price. - " • Pictured here are the cart that brought the "Continental look" to America--to stay. Cars so fresh and exciting they've inspired a whole new motoring trend. These are the Nash Airffytes for 1953 . . . a complete line of cars styled by Pinin Farina . . . each and .every one a sparkling gem from the world's foremost custom car designer. Each and every one featuring new engineering advances-- exclusively Nash--in performance, in economy, in comfort. These aren't just "dream cars" or "one-of-a-kind cars." They're being built--and bought today in recordjnumbers|>y Ac most enthusiastic owners you ever talked to! ^ -•'< lee your Nash dealer today. Take the keys why there's none so mi* as Nash for 1953! Now alt Nash Ramblers offer yoa'Dml-JKt^m; Iuty Station Wagon quickly converts from lux-. fydra- Matic Drive as optional extra. This '%~T ' Or_y sedan to readv-to-work louu carrier. 1933 gamblers feature new performance and ecoaoatf^ m a , Y o w ' M t F i n d J t f a a « « o M o t w a r n The Noeh Statesman series, like the Nash Ambassador, has the widest seats and greatest eve-level visibility ever built into an automobile. Both offer such famous exclusive comfort features as Airliner Reclining Seats, 7V//i Beds, Weather Eye Conditioned Air System . . . and Na$h Mr. NtoMfcMMv Cmp* Mfc*. - DOWN'S NASH SALES 40S W. ELM STREET VHONE 494 • # McHENRY, ILL. x. ii Record-breaking sales of new Nash Airflytes km Nash dealers the finest selection of Select Used Gar ins they have ever offered. Wide choice of models---priced to sell at once. Early birds get the bargains--so see yowr nearby Nashdtokr ; • "i •%. 1--S a' 7

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