Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 21 May 1953, p. 10

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31.3*5 ning in the Clayton~BAi Mr and Mrs. Oeoifv were visitors in the Al*n home at Hebron Sunday noon NGWOOD Shepard - «um, \E Th» ttUftato club was entertainittr the home ©f Mrs.. Lester Wednesday. Prizes were to Mr*. Viola i«ow, Mrs. Berg and Mrs. Nick *s'. -BfOtU . school will. start June 8 Continue through June 18. s Will be in the afternoon. The W. S. C. S. will serve a ed ham dinner, family style thet church hall Thursday, ay 28, starting: at 5 o'clock. *nte evening group of W.S.C.S. t at the home of Mrs. Robert ecker Wednesday evening. Elecion oif officers was held as folows: President, Mrs. Prank arrison; vice-president, Mrs. rbert Decker; secretary and treasurer, Mrs. Dorothy Smith, Spiritual life. Mrs. Bobby Fospromotion secretary of both evening and afternoon roups, Mrs. Shirley Cristy. here will be installation of officers the evening of June 3 at Jthe church. Everyone is invited. |The group gave a gift of a. high chair to Mrs. L.undgren for her I little son. ^ ' | Louis Hall, who had spent the , Kvint.er with his daughter at i JPhoenix, Ariz., passed away of j 4i heart attack Wednesday on the j als0 train in New Mexico, enroute liome. The 4.-H club held their meeting and party in the church basement Wednesday evening. Mary Jane and Patsy Bell had charge of the table decorations Jay Walkington of the invitations. Charlie Sowers, Wesley tnd4 L^rry Bruc e • had the refreshments. Games were played •nd square dancing was enjoyed. The Home Circle was entertained ih the home of Mrs. Fred Wiedrich. Jr., Thursday, with Mrs. Louis Winn as co-hostess. A fine program in charge of Mrs. Wolf Shadle was enjoyed. Miss Alice Peet, Mrs. Anton fVeiser. Mrs. John Hogan and j Mrs. Walter Low. who have been j attending handicraft school at | TBhe McHeni-y high school the winter enjoyed a party ere Monday night for all those t attended the class. _ Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard Jjpent Sunday evening ill the Mrs. Georgia Thomas home at IJVoodstock. Mrs. Luella Stephenson and j rs. Robert Thompson Of Mc- i , Henry were dinner guests of j Mrs. Grace McCannon Thur sday. | Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard ! were supper g-uests in the Alan | Ainger home at Hebron Tuesday evening. Phyllis Bruce and son, Lenard of Poplar Giove spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bruce. Mrs. John Hogan and daughter, Mary, attended an F.H.A. installation of the new members at the McHenry high sCheol Tuesday evening. Those from here to attend the mother and daughter banquet at Greenwood Thursday evening were Mrs. Collins, Mrs. Flora Harrison, Mrs. Ben Walkington Alice Peet, Mrs. Paul W«lkington and daughter, Mrs. C. L. Hariison, Mrs. - Hunt and two daughteis and Mrs. Frank Harrison and daughter, Mrs. 'Charles Ackerman and her seven daughters, namely. Dorothy, Mrs. Irving Decker, Ila (Mrs. John Hogan) Lillian (Mrs. Alan Wagner), Darlene (Mrs. Howard Wagner-, Kathleen and Dorene Ackerman and Marge (Mrs. Ziegler) and her five daughtersin- law. three granddaughters' and one great-granddaughter - ware present. Mrs. Flora Harrison, "ifrs. Chancy Harrison, Mrs. Collins, Mrs. Ben Walkington and Mrs. Clinton Martin attended a W.S.- C.S. meeting, at Aurora Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Jcfhn Hogan and family and Mr. and Mrs. Feeyel and family attended a charivari on Mr. a n d M r s . M a t h i s o n a t , Hebron Saturday evening. Quite a few from here attended the j»Hrtor. prom' ajl ,#tfcH«iry Saturday evening. Mrs. Jack Lenard and children of Lake Geneva spent Thursday in the Fred Wiedrich, Jr., home. Sunday dinner guests in the Fred Bowman home ware Mr. and Mrs. John Skidmore and family' and Mr. and Mrs. John Ehlert and daughter, Mabel. Supper guests were Mr. and Mrs. Dick Malsh. .? Mrs. Flora Harrison attended the wedding of her grandson at Round Lake Saturday. Stanley Jepson spent Sunday at Kenosha. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Donahue and daughter of Huntley, Howard Wattles and son, Donald. of McHenry spent Sunday in fhe-C. L. Harrison home. Mr. and Mrs. Dean Ehlert of Kenosha spent Sunday evening in the John Ehlert home. Mr. and ^ Mrs, Ben Diets of Glendora,. Caflfr., spent Thursday with Dr. and Mrs. Wm. Hepburn. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Reinwatt. Sr., of Fernwood ana Mrv and Mrs. Ernest Reinwall, Jr., of j McHenry spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hawley. Mrs. Emily Beatty visited relatives at Lombard Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Low and family spent 'Sunday with relatives at Riverside. ' Mr. ahd Mrs. Merlin Moser^and Miss Maryln Moser of Perrysbqrg, Ohio, visited D.r., and Mrs. Wm. Hepburn Sunday and, with Mrs. Hepburn, also called on Mrs. Susie Evanoff at the. Villa rest home at Pistakee Bay. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wilcox of Woodstock and Mr. ' and Mrs. Robert Low of McHenry sperfV Sunday with their mother, Mrs., Viola Low. In the afternoon they were all guests in the Elmer Olsen home at Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Axel Carlson «f Woodstock spent Saturday eve- DR. HENRY FREUNB^P OPTOMETRIST Ai 136 SL Green Street Mcflenrf (Closed Thursday Afternoons) V • EYF.8 EXAHIXED -- CLASSES FITTED VISUAL TUAIKING -- T1SUAL REHABILITATION CeXPLETE TISt AL ANALYSIS . ( •eiTRS DAILY : » t o 18 A. M. a i d 1 t o t IV% ? ^MIDAT EYENI5GS: t:00 to 8:5® tirfbp V EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT IzhZ. PHONE McHENRY 452 Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Jr., and daughter, Mary- Ann, and, James Wagner spent Sunday in the Jack Lenard horrtv- at Lake Geneva. Mrs. L>av;s of Richmond spent Friday night in the Fred Wiedrich, Jr., home. • 'r, F 'v CROP OUTLOOK Some fields in southern Illinois have been planted to corn, and* w i t h " f a v o r i n g w e a t h e r c o r n planting will get under way this week throughout the state, according to state and federal departments of agriculti|re. It Ja reported difficult to tell how much the fruit crop in southern Illinois was hurt by the cold weather - ®f about three weeks ago. Known damage was/confined largely to peaches. A few orchards were badly hurt; In others there still appears «a chance for satisfactory yields. SUOOGST SAFtTY PLEDGES OF PUBLIC BY SCHOOL PATROLS Chas. M. Hayes, president of the Chicago Motor club, haa suggested block by block canvasses for safety pledges by school safety patrol members to cut down the national toil of traffic accidents. * ' Hayes, whp is the pioneer founder of the patrol movement, proposed to the American Autom o b i l e a s s o c i a t i o n t / h a t t h e nation's 500,000 patrol members be enlisted as ambassadors of safety in a nation-wide drive to bring their parents, families and neighbors to pledge themselves to walk and drive' carefully. Copies of the pledge, Hayes announced, will be distributed to 50,000 patrol members in northern Illinois and Indiana before school closes for summer vacation. Patrol members wiil be urged to obtain signatures as a summer safety project. The program, Hayes pointed ' Fragrant Symbol i I LtyVE and W* Mufuet, till "Luaky Lily".... token of affection, invitation to flirtatflftk ad of Franca! And hare it the vary essence these joyous things, translated Into a series of fragrant Toiletries. ..for you! *A trial lit* of th« NEW long-luting Crtamy Skin Sachat is yours withevt -extra chtrgt, »»illustrated. li ToilatWatar (with atomliar), Iff •Sechet Pmvdar 1.00 Tale (with Solid Cotegna).. 1.M 'Dinting Powder l.W Parfuma 1.2S ta 5.00 ..^Solid Cologne 1.2S Creamy Skin Sacfcet 1.S0 Soap (3 cakae) 1.2S ^•telltt Water.,.. 1.2S end 2.00 frlcas elui tM BOLGER'S mmmm VA/O1' flWfca Street PHOME 40 Mclteory, 10. We give and redeem Gold Bond Stamps. m ;«ttort- to extend t0„ other tWttp* tha Iffe-savlng ac«>aiip4tah»Art« wrought by he school, aafety patn^a alnce their origin in Chicago during 1922. The death toll of elementary age children dropped from 3,100 in 1922 to 2,400 in 1951. Had other afe groups experienced the same reduction since 1922, Hayes said, the naticnal traffic toll last year would have been under 10,000 rather than o\ er 35,000. The proposed pledge to be distributed fey patrol members includes this" program: As pedestrians -- Observe traffic signals, cross at cornel's only; b<s extra alert at night; avoid stepping Yrcm between parked cars. As drivers -- Observe courtesy tLt all tiniea; obey all traffic rules; set good example for other drivers; use caution at school crossings and play<grounds. Frida; was th4 day ay, September 26, * of financial Wall Street. Black 1869, panic in V --* . Wellington, New Zealand is the southenpmo^t . capital of the world. v Drive May Be Too Much Moat of' us think of weekends as a time for rest and pleasure. We can relax with the kids, or shoot a game of golf. It's a time for watching television, loafing through the newspaper, going to church, a visit with old friends. ' , But it is also ai time of climactic violence on our roads. More than 15.000 persons were killed and nearly 750,000 hurt in weekend accidenta last year. Forty per cent of the deaths and 36 per cent of the injuries were wcawm naore cars urdiy than on Something else seta 'v apart froih the others, night for 'too many time when drinking and get together. No otte actly how many traffic, are cdused by drinking; but everyone knows itproblem. Everyone ne that even one drink drive is too many. Worwkk's McHenry Camera a. %gtt! • V 9 Cameras Bought Sold and. Exchanged PHOTO SUPPLIES Our Free Expert Service Does Not Stop With A Sale. Vn I See us before you buy, { WORWICK'S STUDJC) in k ltiyERSiPE DRIVE I0E301 PHONE Vlf o Read the WMt JUl DODGE Offers YOU MORE Value than Ever] . ^ • V . • H, prices lower -- *60®? to *201H v:t*v y;; • r w J •> "T>- t Ml . I -,-r ...T Slap In for the best deal ia fevn . a Dodge priced below many modak | -«n the lowest-priced field. Step Up to the Mobilgas Economy Winner that topped1^, other "eightt" On performance. .g^. -- _ a • : "-'J «>f6p VUT in thg'iilaiWMM, p|sea ol " Jive action on Jour wheels . . . The Action t S;' Car for Active Americana. t Specification* and tfuipmsnl iubj*ct kK thange without nclio*. -> { ' le Dodge-Plymouth Dealer.. < NOW * A. S. BLAKE MOTOR SALES, Inc. PEARL STREET -- 30,000 MILE GUARANTEE -- PHONE McHENRY u'V. ' < .y :' ROLLED GROCERIES :--^y if t -- 21/, muut/ , • Fnmous BRnnos SOMCTHlN&o -SINS ABOUT I-Nm4CM«A 2 b. Can I 73 ;,taaACHES.»: i ( LIBBY'S -- 16-oz. can „ I >SPA6HETTI i MEAT ttU3 ?• -rUBBYS /'j PORK JBfAHS. . . RBBST GS' MEATY, , 5s5 'fm UBBY^ -- Strained BABY FOODS IDITNCAN HINES ; CAKE HUCES J jSTAR KMT DINNER fUNAS 6 for : SPMtERIBS - 5 BONELESS ROLLED S I- uini miBiiSi OUR OWN CURED LB. SWIFTKING -- 3 SHORTENING DEUUCH OLEO PJLLSBtJRY CAN MUWT 25 tb. B^r til! L0PUDMN6S ,-^U. POPULAR BRXN0S * if • . tfi: ': Heg. Slxe m •% KING SIZE 3 flu,. . '%• .'A'" fi- ETER PAN -- >r EAHUT BUTTER --jjr,*-rTr 46-oz. can ORMKL8 f JUNE .r t 3 •™th- / 7 f TOMATtjES 191 NEW • - POTATOES 5 SUNKIST NAVEL ORANGES 1 Block North el Rt. 120 Just East ol (Lab'ty 3„d^me K ALWAY5 - 'jaStoSk-.

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