Ifr^ j;u ypiw.) ""• ••, ,T-';t man OT THE-McftENRY PlAmDEALER * * ' ' • ' * 'r * ' , » * + \ * V ' " • ' si*: , f '^r\S f /"-v( ¥W.¥EWS By Gladys Sonde AUXILIARY At the last meeting of the #.P.W. Auxiliary to Pout 4800, fhembers of the local org^miza- •fion were pleased to have as ||heir guest Mrs. Lillian Hahne if West Chicago, who is the Wth district president. During Ihe course of the evening Mrs. lahne gave a very interesting ecture on membership and the prizes that are. being offered fcr lembers or their auxiliaries fringing in the most neifr memr^ ers and re-instated members, ••he also congratulated the local Auxiliary for all ^ the splendid ' "^rork they have been doing the •+|>ast year. Mrs. Hahne was accompanied to. McHenry by her ; - Jnothcr. Mrs. Richards, also of * "West Chicago. Betty Clark, the hospital cochairman, read a letter from t>owney 'hospital telling the Jjhembers about the Downey XIrias party which will be held . |>ec. 22 and 23 at 10 a.m. Any "members or anyone interested in attending any of these parties I'hould contact Betty Clark, fembers who attended the last )owney party, wnich was Nov. 18, were Louise Smith, Helen Low, Jean Weyland, Angela Brown, Irene Stoller, Doris Thomas, Elizabeth Thomas and ipetty Clark. f Donations were given to the , Woodstock Children's Home and also we sent in our Downey Christmas donation. Isabelle Thompson, child welfare chairman, reported on Christmas baskets for this year And also asked for used toys and clothing. Anyone having Used toys or clothing are asked Jo contact Isabelle Thompson. Lorraine Murphy was elected . lo the office of three-year trustee to succeed Kathryn Bolger. The next meeting of the fSr.RW. auxiliary will be Dec. 14 at 7 p.m. and will be ttie Annual Christmas party. Bach member is asked to bring a dollar gift for the gra£ bag, and the committee in chargo is promising an excellent evening of, food and entertainment. Gladys Soucie reminded the •Matter* about #» < Petticoat Party TV shot* Wednesday, Dec. 2, and there Still lire a few more tickets for anyone interested in attending. Members will assemble at the clubhouse at 12:30 I-.m. The meeting was adjourned, after. 'which cards were played and a delicious lunch was served by Hostesses Octavia Weyland, Elizabeth Weyland and Olivia Hoyte. MOTORISTS AND HUNTERS WARNED OF FIRE DANGER MinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiftiiiifiiiiiiifiiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiHi - MEW & USED RUGS - " FOR SALE • dill# *To Our Plant and See 'f Complete Selection of tiee*g and Gultotan Samples. Or P h o n Woodstock 888 or 162 for Home Shopping Service. TOP PRICES FOR YOUR OLD RUG IN TRADE OUR PROFESSIONAL SERVICE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY Also Linoleum and Tile Sales and Installations, Carpet Laying, Rug Cleaning & Repairs. TIDY RUG CLEANERS FLOOR COVERINGS 604 Washington fit. Woodstock, 111. pwiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiminiiiiNHiimi Illinois opened its upland game hunting season with field and forest in about the driest condition within memory, and Director Glen D. Palmer of the state Department of Conservation expressed hope that hunters would be especially careful to ^void fires. • " . The quail season extends through Dec. 11, and rabbit may be hunted through Jan. 15. Raccoon hunting runs through Jan, 15. -- - r7 - Particular attention is called to the fact that the daily limit on rabbits is five, with a possession limit of ten after the first day. Palmer said a great deal of concern has been shown in many quarters over fire dangers involved in hunting operations, but that he was confident hunters could enjoy their favorite feport without menacing the state's woods and prairie land. "Hunters are blamed for more fires than they cause," the director said. "More fires are caused by careless motorists who flick lighted cigarettes out car windows. than are caused by hunters smoking in the field. "That doesn't mean that some hunters aren't careless, too. We warn every permit holder on our public hunting areas about matches and cigarettes and cigars, and always caution hunters to be sure any campfires are extinguished. "The careless hunter or motorist not only can cause a .lot of damage to property and endanger lives, but he also deprives others of future hunting by destroying the habitat of the game." If it's a fob for Bottled 60s • ITS A JOB FOR SHELLANE LBfCOLN SCHOOL FINE TRIBUTE TO VICTIM OF POLIO Dedication of the Jacksonville (Illinois) new Lincoln school on Nov. 8 was a step forward in IllinoiB education and a tribute to a woman who long ago dedicated herself to the teaching of all children. The school was coitceived as • project for the instruction of able bpdied youngsters. Because of the foresight and courage of Josephine Claire Milligan, who teaches in Jacksonville, its out-' standing modern facilities will also help the many crippled of Bier community. Miss Milligan's sensitivity to the needs of physically handicapped children is the direct result of her personal experience. She has been crippled with polio since she was 18. Because she refused to adniit defeat to a crippling disease, and because she chose to lend her strength to others who are physically disabled, Miss Milligan was presented with the national "Who's Crippled?" citation of the National Society for Crippled Children and Adults, the Easter Sea? society. This award, presented through the Illinois Association for the Crippled, is made to outstanding individuals like Miss Milligan who have successfully outwitted a severe physical handicap. The presentation was made in Jacksonville as the Lincoln school was dedicated. As he gave Miss Milligan the citation, Crit Haneline of Jacksonville, vice president of the Illinois Association for the Crippled, described her work for the structure and the service of the Morgan County Association fpr the Crippled. Serving as consultant to the school architect, Miss Milligan pointed out numerous architectural barriers that should be eliminated when the Ln.coln school «M being built fb make it easier for crippled chOdNtl to go from class to class. This included wide doors, broad ramps alongside of stairs, and a lowered auditorium permitting eswy jfentry by wheelchairs. Effective Oct. 1, ifiss Milligan, through the Morgan county ait* sociation and with the cooperation of the Jacksonville public school system, employed a registered physical therapist. Completion of the biuldlntf is the culmination of more than fifteen . years of effort by "Kfiss Milligan. Stricken when she Was a sophomore at Illinois collide. Miss Milligan was forced to leave school to become her own therapist in 1924, before the widespread facilities of the National Society for Crippled Children and Adults and its Easter Seal societies were established. She gave herself treatments in the warm waters at Hot Sulphur Springs, Colo., and became well enough to return to college. Although still crippled, she j studied art at MacMurray college, where her brothers carried her up four flights of stairs to class. . Miss Milligan returned to her Jacksonville home as a qualified teacher, , hoping to work with crippled children. Told by the school superintendent that Jacksonville had no cripples, Miss Milligan began a search. She found two cerebral palsied boys, but since there was no room at the school, she began tb instruct thein in her home. The following year she added three other crippled students and later was assigned a room for her Work, ultimately attracting attention of philanthropic groups who helped with gifts of equipment. Today, Miss Milligan works for the integration of crippled children into normal society, believing that if given a chance, a handicapped person can lead a happy, useful life. Make New Lcrws On Milk Purity At tjpt last session of the Illinois Legislature, a law was passed which provides that after July 1, 1957, no person shall offer for sale any milk for human consumption unless the herd from which it is produced has been tested for -Wucellosis and the herd owner is cooperating in an eradication plan. Though thjs ^ is an important law from the standpoint of consumer protection, there are several laws being currently enforced that are also important. Some of them have been included as misdemeanors under the Illinois Criminal Code. The following practices are prohibited: t 1. Adulterating milk intended as human food with water or any foreign substance. 2. Knowingly selling skimmtlk: for food without the purchaser's being informed. Need A Rabber fttaaap? £tet It at (he Plaindealer. aoi DR. HENRY FREUND OPTOMETRIST At 136 S. Green Street McHenry (Closed Thursday Afternoons) EYES EXAMINED -- GLASSES FITTED VISUAL TRAINING -- VISUAL REHABILITATION COMPLETE VISUAL ANALYSIS - •OURS: DAILY 9 to 12 A.M. and 1 to 5 *J*. 'FRIDAY EVENINGS: 6KM to 8:80 PJH. EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT / PHONE McHENRY 452 id KRUSE HAHDWARE COMPANY Rich mood, McHenry County, I1L Long Distance Phc.de 101 Speeds wot*-saves money--helps deliver quality work jftSut prompt ieliwj, dea, any place* •No MM to clean Bp; thunpad •ancdy where wanted* iHliiiii accurately proportioned for your job. • Full strength, reliability and uniformity in every load. •Low price dtliTMe4~io gamble on cost. ' DM tad four builder will both benefit by using ear Eeedy-Mixed COUCH*, Phooe us before you faafld f v McHenry Sand & Gravel RADIO DISPATCHED McHENRY 920 606 FRONT STBEET McHENHT. ILL. < 11111 >1 I I I 11111 O I i I I I 1 1 1 1 1 M l l > » l l I l i l I I I I Ml ' BRAND NEW SPINET PIANOS Fan 88 Note Keyboard In Mahogany $469°° USED SPINETS FROM $37500 VSED GRANDS FROM $34500 , ALSO BIO SA VINOS ON FLOOR SAMPUbl SAVE OP TO $200°° Large Selection To Choose From SIMONSON*S 2 Established 1919 RS6 N. Grove Ave., Elgin, Dl_ jj Open Mon. ft Fri. Evenings jj | 8. Knowingly setting milk frbm which the '***tHpplftgR" have been withheld. 4. Knowingly sellmg for hitman food milk from a cow known to be so diseased as to render the milk unwholesome. 5. Knowingly selling milk so tainted or corrupted as to be unwholesome. 6. Bringing to any dairy manufacturing establishment products affected in any of the above live ways without those interested being informed or knowing. 7. Doing the above acts for or on account of the person suprend^ ring the -products unwholesome as humall food. 8. Keeping for milk production, or sale and exdiillfp, cxnfrs that are in an unhealthy, condition or knowingly feeding them on feed that produces ttnwfeolesonie milk. 9. Manufacturing, selling or offering for sale a substance purporting to be butter or cheese that is not made whol'y from pure cream or pure milk unless it is truly labeled in a durable and conspicuous manner. 10. Mixihg, coloring, staining or otherwise altering the product with harmless ingredients, unless it is labeled to show what plying the product or knowingly has been done or unless the puradding any foreign substance chaser is informed. tfcis net deeieres as 3 matter of law that the addition of water or any foreifn substance to milk or cream is an adulteration; that this act does not affect the addition of su^ar to condensed or preserved milk; that it does not prevent the use of skimmed milk, salt, rennet or harmless coloring matter in the manufacture of butter and cheese; and that any milk obtained from cows fed on distillery waste or an <ny substarce in a state of putrefaction is declared to be impure and unwholesome. These laws are in the Illinois Revised Statutes, Chapter 38, Sections 9, 10, 13-18, 21-25. 0 mm 10 Our Whitman's refrigerator gives you kitchen-fresh candy all year 'round..; Get some today! CHOCOLATES BOLGER'S drvgstok 103 S. GREEN STREET PHONE 10 McHENRY. ILL. w .J/>b E3 0 0 RIJSIHEQ AERO WILLYS The Know-It-Owl Says: Save work... $•"1* -. t ,IJA i PRICES START AT $149950 AtraJfalk 2-Ooor Sedan F.OJ. Tptafbt Ohio. Plus Federal Taxes, State and Local Taxes (if any), Tron^Jortotion, BfcUvery and Handling Clwgefc Equipment. Extra. use the Yelkfflr Pages! Suppose you want to call a painter named Brown, but have forgotten his full name. Don't bother to check all the Browns in the alphabetical directoryuse your YELLOW PAGES I Your Browp is easier to find in the shorter, classified listing under "Painters." In the YELLOW PAGES, all typ6s of products and services fre logically classified in alphabetical ord6r. Look in ftie YELLOW PAGES-- the Classified aaction of your telephenebook. With its aero-frame construction and aerodynamic styliQg, tfae Aero Willys Hakes conventional car-buying habits obsolete. Y*m it to to and drive this extraordinary, this agile, this economical car / ^Tith its cockpit visibility all around and 61 inch seating, front you'll agree there's no car quite like the Aero Willys, Come McHENRY GARAGE MmWT STREET I SH n