; 'r <•$ . • * .<%-,. ' - * , -r • < .^ •'• . v" r -. * • - * .' *"? V? ^n'w •*--^.' • •, '_•, • ft" - ' ..-• ,1' . ;#i»" ••V'..v,' „ . 'iv " • : • •' V T ..••• ;/v T» 'r- **V Johnsburg News By Sin. Betty HettMiMM Another beautiful wedding I took place here last Saturday. The ceremony was in St. Tohn s rectory at 10:30 and united Miss Lorraine Freund and William Rutzen in holy matrimony. The reception was held at the Community Club, after which the newlyweds left for a honeymoon trip to Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Rutzen will reside in an apartment in her parents' home upon their return. May we extend our congratulations to the newlyweds. We have had two newcomers Who were brought her*, via. Mr. Stork last week. The tirst was a girl, born to Mr. and Mrs. Richaid Schneider of Sunnyside Estates. It was the fifth daughter for the Schneiders. T think ttiey are giving the Bddle Cantors some stiff competition. Mr. and Mrs. Harry . Thelen are the proud parents of a baby born last Saturday. It wu the first child for the Thelens. Mr. and Mrs. James Hettermann, Mr. and Mrs. Gene King and Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Meyers attended the Ice Follies last Saturday evening In Chicago, after which they ate at the House of Pierre. The Meyers and the Hettermanns were helping Mr. and Mrs. King celebrate their first anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Lasser entertained a group of relatives from Chicago on Sunday. A large crowd gathered at the Community Club hall for their annual feather party. An enjoyable afternoon was spent by a fairly large crowd. Around S o'clock a hot p'ate lunch was served. The evening's festivities continued again after the lunch was over. Don't forget the dance sponsored by the Rescue Squad on Nov. 28 at the Community Club nail. Plan on attending if you enjoy modern and square dancing. * Art Kitnkel had his crew out working on his boathouse again last weekend. The same old story of more spectators and suggestions than workers. Judge Sengstock and Mr. Schulbert were on hand and quite* a bit of work was accomplished; * I guess Biil Ricks must hava had a hungry look last week because his good friend, Fred Huffmaster, presented him with a nice rabbit. Good old Fred!! Chester Crowley had dinner at the "Mayor's" house. Spare ribs and sauerkraut were fp the menu. Bill Ricks is busy trying to make the Rescue Squad dance a big success. He has b^eh diligently working and selling tickets for the dance. ELECTROCUTION DANGER PRESENT IN MOVING ELEVATORS It happens every fall one or more Illinois farmers are usually electrocuted when corn elevators they are moving contact overhead electric wires. Prank Andrew, rural electrification specialist at the University of Illinois, says such accidents are easy to prevent. He offers these tips: If the move is in your farmyard, pull the fuses at the main service box while moving the elevator so that overhead wires which may touch the elevator are not charged. If this is impossible, have one person watch the operation from a short distance and warn you of close overhead wires.' This final precaution, Andrews . says, may help to avoid doubling the toll if a man is electrocuted. Only after turning off the current or breaking contact With the charged wires is it safe to touch the victim. If the current cannot be turned off, use a dry rope to pull the body away. Failure to observe this rule can mean death or serious injury to anyone touching the victim. Y PLAINDEALEP lpson raffic Safety i H r F ( \ S f C A P f- N 1 I f P - v..1 .1. , >.( '.-I .If. It's wheat harvesting time in Illinois, at present, a period during which there is an additional liaiard on the hlgways for passenger Car drivers. That hax&rd Is the combine. This large piece of farm machinery must be moved from farm to VACATION JOM The Illinois Public Aid Commission reports that its program of finding school vacation jobs for children from families receiving public assistance enabled 1,481 youngsters to earn more than $100,000 last summer. farm, and while farmers dpn't keep it on the highway anj longer than necessary, it is very decidedly a danger epot when It is there. Farm equipment moves much slower than normal automobile traflle, and you will need a lot more time and distance to slow up enough to stay behind it than you will when you are overtaking another passenger car. Combines particularly are huge pleoes of equipment, and even though the operator Is staying as far to the right as possible, even riding far out on the shoulder, they still cover a let of the paved area. Ton will need more room on the left and will have te use considerably more caution to get around them. Be N the lookout for combines and other farm equipment, especially when coming over the crest of a 1011 *r around a curve. Subscribe To l*e Plaindeaier Otter tlpi To Amateur Painters: . Scores of folks are trying their hands at interior painting these days. Some are delighted with the results; others are disappointed. Wherein lies the difference ? "Hi ere is more to a professional paint job than just applying the paint, says Dorothy Iwig, home furnishings specialist, University of Illinois College of Agriculture. Time, patience and considerable "know-how" are very important ingredients. The first step, is to prepare the surface for the paint. If the plaster is cracked, take time to do a professional repair job. Use sprackling material for the small hairline cracks. Apply it with a putty knife, a case knife or your finger, working rapidly and smoothing the surface before the filler dries and sets. Large plaster cracks call for piaster patch. Cut out a' triangular channel or trough in the plaster along the line of the crack. Make the channel narrow at the surface and wider at the inside or base. Then feed the plaster patch into the channel through the narrow opening, and smooth the surface. When the filler is thoroughly dry, apply a coat of undercoater or nrimer. The next step & to remove the hardware from the doors and windows and loosen the light fixtures, dust the walls and ceiling or, if they are very soiled ,wash them. Let them dry completely before you attempt to apply the paint. All paint, regardless of type, calls for care in mixing. The job will be easier if you pour most Of the liquid from the can of paint and then mix the remaining liquid with the pigment. Paddle it in until the color is uniform and the texture smooth. Then add the liquid you removed and mix it in carefully, and the paint is ready for the brush. TWICE TOLD TALES Forty Years Ago In honor of Miss Marguerite Granger, who is to be a November bride. Miss Julia Stoffel entertained fourteen of the guest of honor's intimate friends at a 6 o'clock dinner st her home Saturday evening. At least one of McHenry's summer resort families will remain here during the winter months. H. C. Hettinger and family, who own a home at Orchard Beach, have decided to rrmain the entire winter. If these people can stick it out during the winter without freezing to death it may induce others to do so next year. Ben Rosengarten, who has been actively engaged in every line of work known to mankind, is now a full fledged traveling salesman, being connected with a broom factory. Theodore and Bertha Schiessle celebrated their birthday anniversaries in an enjoyable manner at their home last Saturday. Guests were Leona Jus ten, Vera Buss, Margaret Bauer, Rosina and Camelia Freund, Geneva ferefeld, Marguerite Overton, Arline Harrison, Eddie Buss, Glenn Wattles, Kirk Harrison, Vernon Hut son, Louis McOmber, (Jeorge end Jacob Stoffel. Married at St. John's patholic church on Wednesday morning of this week were Miss Christina Zimmerman of Rockford and Joseph Smith of Johnsburg. Our people were given another shock last Thursday when the sad news of the sudden death of William McGee was v made known. . | YOUTH COMMISSION Hw.eption centers for delinquent boys and girls who are committed to the new Illinois Youth Commission after Jan. 1, 1954, are to be set up, probably at the Illinois State Training School for Boys, at St. Charles, and at the State Training School for Girls, at Geneva, according to Lee E. Daniels, commission chairman. An enactment of the last session of the General Assembly provides that on Jan. 1, 1954, facilities of the state correctional institutions will be transferred from the Department of Public Welfare to the Youth Commission. Court commitments of juvenile cases will be made to the commission, rather than to the institutions; Need A Rubber Stamp? it at the Plaindealer. Pig* Fifteen No Holiday For Balanced Menus Illinois Nutrition Week, scheduled for Nov. 15 through 21, will come at a time when homemakers are on a big merry-goround of activity. Thanksgiving Day is drawing near, and Christmas gift-shopping miy afready have begun. With so much to do, and so little time, there's a natural temptation to put the family on a diet of "hurry-up" dinners and leftover lunches. That's why it is hoped everyone will take seriously the Nutrition Week slogan, "Food First for Fitness." and make sure the family gets all the -nutritious foods it needs. The United States Department of Agriculture says everybody needs these foods: Leafy, green and yellow vegetables. One or more servings daily. Oranges, grapefruit, tomatoes. One or more servings dally. Potatoes and . other vegetables and fruits. Two or. more- servings daily. Milk, cheese, ice cream. Children, three to four cups milk. Adults, two or more cups. Meat, fish, poultry. One serving daily if possible. The most important factor in the winners' sucoeaa in this year's Illinois sheep production project was that they liked and took an interest in their sheep, reports a livestock specialist. -->4AiJ>4k* rr-- • • • -«.• --f* BUSIEST WORKERS EN TOWN! PLAINDEALEh WANT AOS WE DRESS YOUR FLOORS S WMDOWS SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE * LINOLEUM - TILE - CARPETING •# DRAPES - CURTAINS - RODDING • VENETIAN and VERTICAL BLINDS PHONE 917 for Free Esttanate TONYAN'S HOME FURNISHINGS 208 E. ELM STREET / McHENRY, fake |U«W Makes travel easy an YOU-- a No driving strain! • No parking probhmtt a Convenient $ehoduh$t » Service to off America/ - -JMywr MCRm00K,lM! Busses Dally Chicago * 3 - $1.30 Paul • 3 - $7.30 Madison - 3 • $2.25 Lake Geneva 3 SSc Dos Plaines - 3 - 75c Oak Park • 3 - $1.10 (pin U. S. tax) MV| *0% ON TIN MlV«N VMM B*y • rawrf-frfr ttefcef; return «ay tiau wriffcin A OewHiil OUYHOUND BUS TIUMINAL Cor. Green a Eto Phone UM-fi G R E Y H O U N D LAY AWAY YOUR SEWING MACHINE NOW For Christmas Easy term*, no, interest or carrying charges New and used straight sewers and Z}g Zags FREUD'S SEWK6 MACHME 9HONE 064-J-S Sales & Service Afroos from Hunterville Subd McHENRY, DLL. LOOK at the YIELD in the NATIONAL CORN CONTEST ENTRANT * VARIETY YIELD PER ACRE* John Blomberg, Harvard DeKalb 406 122 bu. Alv&n Blumhorst, McHenry DeKalb 406 144 bu. Glenn Carpenter, Marengo / DeKalb 408 121 bu. Walter Dravis, Union DeKalb 406 115 bu. R. H. Henning, Huntley DeKalb 404A 105 bu. McKee Bros., Marengo DeKalb 459 122 bu. Jake Miller, Spring Grove DeKalb 406 142 bu. Alvin Rudsinski, Union DeKalb 406 112 bu. Jess W. Rugh, Union DeKalb 458 118 bu. Robert Schmarje, Woodstock DeKalb 406 114 bu. The above yields have been reported by your local DeKalb dealer. See him today for high-yielding, dependable, quality seed corn. *A1! yields were made on selected 5 Acre Plots in the DeKalb National Contest. CLINTON MARTIN McHENRY ^ - Eg*s. fVmr or mote a wadt** , fj Dried beam, peas, nuts, pe^» j" #ut butter. Two or mora aerv- 0 -tags a weeUi; Bread, flour cereals. BvertB*.*- Butter and fortified marg&rieti ' day (whole-grain or enriched^ lome daily. A University of Illinois faaC economist says that pricing ricultural products to meet com* petition is one of the most im* important conditions for export. H - f>am~: Renew ihsl •MbseilpMsa to rialndealw now! , „ iHiHraiiiiHHimiiiMiHffliHiuMiiimiiuiianMaM} "All I said to Hie little - watt that I forgot to call Radio a TV. for aervfoe m Radio set!** At Tour Serrlce F|U( RADIO AMD • I'L TELEVISION ;u3 Air Conditioners oH Clock Radios Childrens Portable Pbooograpiii Sales - Service - Installatl--art" .,'T* Prompt efficient service oo a% makes by Raytheon bonded tacit* nicians. We guarantee aty Pfurta by ua for 90 day* after repair. r,H Authorised Dealet• i' ^ ~ ••••**9% 1 J' FOB . cut 'PM • SENTMEL;! Jj.\ • WESHNGHOITSF, • ADMIRAL " " ! «.-r •• SCPtBAAHnTiYOWN ^ }i $j , • RAYTHBOIL -»*H S 3; • CAPEHAHT ;: 'f 11:' • HALLICHAFTiat U q *•' 0T |i PHONE 979 ^1; 906 E. Km SC. Mcflewy, HL ' L about the Car-the Price-the Deal s'Mm ii V i** QiMtMAL M0T0M9 10W£ST UttCKD SlttT No question about it-*now Is the time to buy a Pontiac! > . The car is the finest Pontiac ever built, offering beauty, luxury, size and performance rivalling the very costliest automobiles, plus thrift and reliability that bow to none. The price is just a few dollars above the lowest. And even that small difference disappears when you figure resale worth. According to independent research, Pontiac returns more'of its'purchase pric& at trade-in time than any car in its price range% As for the deal--your present car will never be worth as much as it is right now. You are losing money every day you wait to buy a Pontiac. And these are only highlight facts about this wonderful buy. Get all the facts and watch the proei pile up that dollar for dollar and deal for deal-ar" you can't beat a Pontiac! Buy a Pontiac Nmv! OVERTON CADILLAC PONTIAC fct---- I 400 Front Street McHenry Phone 17 . < p,v| yvy