, March 24,1955 McHENRY PLAINDEALER Wf? 'ft W**** -A I By Urfc George Shepard Birthday Party o ;. • The Round-up club will; hold' their birthday party next Sunday evening in the Greenwood church basement. The public -Is invited. The donation will be one cent for each year of your : age or one dollar, the proceeds to "go towards the Ringwood church.'.^ Oake Walklor Community dub The ^Community club will hold, a cake walk at the schoolhouae next Thursday evening. viMiss Clark, will show slides of; her trip, the proceeds to ' go toward the Community club. . Social Activities Mr. and Mrs. Ben Walkington entertained their five hundred club at their home Tuesday- evening. Prizes were awarded' to Mrs. Pete Sebastian and Louis Hawley, high, and Mr. ancffc Mrs. Earl Shales, low. ^ r:" •> Mrs. Viola Low entertained ' the women's five hundred club at her home Wednesday. A 1 o'clock , dessert luncheon was served. Prizes, were awarded to Mrs. Lester Carr and Mrs. Ben Walkington. The Community club held a card party at the schoolhouse ^Friday evening. About twentyfive dollars was taken in, proceeds to1 go toward the Community club. Mrs. Licias underwent surgery at the Woodstock hospital Monday morning. movies of the last M.Y.F. meeting that he took. This was followed by games and lunch. Senior M.Y.F. The Senior M.T.F. met at the home of Anna Mae Aissen Sunday evening. The business meeting was held and games were played and lunch Vvas served. Scrap Drive The M.Y.P. will have a scrap drive on April 12 for paper, magazines, books, etc. The area to be collected will be Ringwood and Greenwood and if anyone outside would like to give some paper, notify someone in Ringwood and they will pick it up. School News » Two new pupils have enrolled " in our school, Beverly Blair, wji© is in fourth grade, and her sister, Jeannie, who is in second grade. Wte have befen practicing our three plays, "The Baby Sitter," "Borrowed (Tails," and "Who's a Coward?" this past week. Tuesday night the cast of the play, "The Baby Sitter," practiced at the home of Jackie Skidmore. Thursday night they practiced at the home of Jay Walkington. Veronica Davis, school reporter Junior M.Y.F. The Junior M.Y.F. met at the home of Jay Walkington (Friday Evening. The business meeting was held and Walter Low showed Among those from here to attend W.S.C.S. guest day at the • Community Methodist church in McHenry Thursday were Mrs. C. L. Harrison, Mrs. Ben Walkington, Mrs, Wm. Cruickshank, Mrs. Roy Harrison, Mrs. John Hogan and, Mrs. Viola Low. Mrs. Lester Carr, Miss Mae Wiedrich and Mrs. Oscar Berg attended the card party at Spring Grove Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Walkington spent Saturday in Chicago with their daughter, Virginia, and attended the Ice Capades. On Sunday they went to Evanston to spend a few days with their daughter, Mildred, and family. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Seegert of McHenry spent Friday eve ning in the George Shepard home. Miss Lftulse Hunt of Omaha will visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Hunt, March 27 to March 30, when she has a few days vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Alan Ainger and family of Hebron spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs George Shepard. Patricia Hogan, Charlotte and Annette Smith went to Champaign for the weekend as it was "Little Sister" week. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ebel, Jr., and family of Marengo spent Sunday afternoon in the Weldon Andreas home. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Olsen and sons of Richmond, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wilcox of Woodstock, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Low of McHenry and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Low and family spent Sunday in the Mrs.. Emily Beatty home. I Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Jr., and Mrs. James Wegener spent Tuesday in the Jack Leonard home at Lake Geneva. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Benoy and family of Elkhorn and Mr. and Mrs. Glen Benoy and family of Hebron were Sunday dinner guests in the Paul Walkington home. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Aissen entertained Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Schroeder and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Thomfordha of Woodstock at cards at their home Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. John Powers, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Padgett and Mrs. Martha Bowman of Chicago were Sunday dinner guests in the Fred Bowman home. Mrs. Charlie Rush of Richmond spent the weekend with her sister, Mrs. John Ehlert. Mrs. Stikete of Holland, Mich., came Thursday to spend a few days in the home of her daughter, Mrs. Ruth Oonk. Mrs. Oonk has been moved from Mt. Sinai hospital to the Woodstock hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Haiyley of Fox River Grove, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Hopper of Chicago and Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Smith of Pistakee Bay were Sunday dinner guests in the B. T. Butler home. Those from here to attend the milk meeting at the Conrad Hilton hotel in Chicago Saturday were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cristy ,Mr. and Mrs. Art Hoppe, Clinton Martin and Mr. and Mrs. Henry rThomlinson. Mr. and Mrs. Fred MacWilliams and Charles Bright of Edellyn farm, Waukegan, were supper guests Friday evening in the Wm. Cruickshank home. Mr .and Mrs. Clyde Stevens of Evanston visited Dr. and Mrs. Wm. Hepburn Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Ellsworth of Gary, Ind., spent Friday night in the B. T. Butler home. Kenneth Cristy, Jr., of Chicago spent Sunday with his ,parente? Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cristy, ,§r. Mr. and Mrs. William Cruickshank visited Mr. and Mrs. Henry Watt at Aurora Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Wolf Shadle returned home Sunday morning from California, where she has been visiting her sons and families and also her brother and family., Mr. Shadle met her at Midway airport. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Atlason of Gurnee spent Sunday afternoon in the Wm. Cruickshank home. Mrs. Oscar Berg was a visitor at Woodstock Friday. Mrs. Dora Cole and Mrs. Wm. Hepburn visited Wayne Foss at the home Of Mrs. Brown at Genoa City Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Marsh and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Vopilak of Huntley spent Sunday afternoon " in the Roy Harrison home. Mrs. Charles Brennan and Mrs .Wm. Hepburn visited Ray and Elizabeth Webb at Antioch Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Harrison were Sunday dinner guests in the Wayne Donahue home at Huntley. DR. HENRY FREUND OPTOMETRIST At 136 S. Green Street, McHenry (Closed Thursday Afternoons) EYES EXAMINED -- GLASSES FITTED VISUAL TRAINING -- VISUAL REHABILITATION COMPLETE VISUAL ANALYSIS HOURS: DAILY 0 to 12 A.M. and 1 to 5 P.M. FRIDAY EVENINGS: 6:00 to 8:80 PJL EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT * PHONE McHENRY 452 WORWICK'S McHenry Camera Center Cameras Photographic Equipment Amateur and Professional Bought, Sold and Exchanged PHOTO SUPPUES View Masters and Beds Color Films Processed . Family Albums See Us Before You Buy Worwick's Studio 117 N. Riverside Drive PHONE McHENRY 278 Mr, and. Mrs. Roy Frank and *fr t^d .Mrs. Frank Southern of isytal Lake spent Sunday afternoon in the Roy Harrison h6me. Mrs. Prank Frisbee and daughter of Milwaukee called on Mrs. Flora Harrison Sunday afternoon. Ai,:man Kenneth Tretow of Sampson air base, New York, arrived here Saturday to visit his wife and children at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Byron Sowers. He will leave this week for officers' training in Texas. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Jr., and Mrs. James Wegener were visitors at Belvidere Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Shales and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Howe and sons went to Marengo Saturday evening and celebrated the birthdays of Roy and Connie Stohlquist, twin grandchildren of Mr. and Mrs. Shales. CHECK WINTER DAISY FEEDING SUPRLIES NOW Check your winter roughage supplies to be sure you have enough to last until you turn your dairy cows out to pasture. J. D. Burke, dairy science specialist at the University of Illinois College of Agriculture, says Feb. 1 marked the halfway point in barn feeding. You may not have enough feed to last if you started feeding the second half of your hay /or silage supply before then. Estimate how much hay or silage you have left. To see whether you have enough, figure that each cow will eat pounds of hay (or its equivalent) for each 100 pounds of body weight, or 25 to 30 pounds a day. That means you'll need about one ton for each cow to last until spring. Mdmrtittmm Horn where I sit ~.6tf Joe Marsh Finally Talked Herself Out A certain talkative young lady almost spent a night locked in "Doc" White's drugstore. She entered Doc's store about , ,11 PM, going directly to the pay phone. At eleven-thirty Doc went ' heme-not having seen a custom- '^fjrjfor a half hour. Around mid- ' j, flight he got a call from the store - j . /she had finally run out of conversation (and money) and found , the front door locked tight. , ; Doc vowed he'd leave her there '-$6 teach her a lesson. But Mrs. spoke up: "Now you go turn fcer looBe. It's hard to cut a good conversation short -- something only a woman understands!" From where I sit, however, plenty of men are as hard to pry away from a telephone as any female. Some people are Just naturally long-winded, while others are the silent type--Just as some of as like coffee and others prefer a flass of beer. The Important thing is to be eofuuferate... before friends start giving us the "busy signal." ^otOlCuuZ, Copyright, 19SS, United States Brewers Foundation it it looks as if you're going to run short, you can limit the amount of roughage you feed and increase the amount of grain. Or a cheaper way is to buy more good hay. It is worth up to two-thirds as much as grain in feeding "value. It's a lower cost source of nutrients, too. Another answer to the problem is to push the pasture season ahead 10. days to two weeks by planting a cer®il gnitai for ear# pasture. • ; : , - You can get yotrir putwei ready for grazing earlier by applying a nitrogen fertilizer to them. Put it on Just .before, the pastures turn green. . Savings invested in Lake Savings and Loan earn 2,o^ plus extra. 23tf Save $1,s NOW through MARCH 31 BENNETT'S FEED & HATCHERY will give you ... 3-36" CHICK FEEDERS ... $170 1-1 Gallon Glass Fountain $1.15 TOTAL VALUE $185 ONLY $270 with an order for BENNETTS BABY CHICKS ORDER NOW! Bennett Feed and Hatchery U.S. Approved and Pullorum Clean 108 N. Jefferson Street Woodstock 634 SEE THEM FRIDAY! qM30,000,000 American Homemakers cook Happiljj with Gd& cooking is EASIEST! Cooking with GAS hoi ofwms been easy.. • and today's wonderful iww GAS ranges make it easier than evert Tt^ offer aut^natic timing arid lighting, instant ^n/otf heat, unlimited burner settings, smokeless broiling, perfect baking and roasting -.and much more! SPECIAL LOW INir^LED PRICES during;©ur SPRING RANGE SALE 5 •» 36" Crowk f e Built-in cast aluminum griddle converts easily to a 5th burner $I9795 INSTALLED n a n r n y0ur ranfl* 36"0|ln • Alttrol "Center Simmer" top burner* e Convenient new *175'* INSTALLED and your old range • Self-lighting top burners e Top panel hat concealed lighting $l97^4iiWU|D and your old rang* 36" e Exclusive "Governess"--e controlled temperature top burner e "3-way" range top *25735 INSTALL1D and your old range jicQuf e Easy-to-use swing-out broiler $l5ffS INSTALLED and your old range GAS does it RETTEB... for LESS! Wltfi GAS there's no exponstve installation necessary--boeause fQmombtr with GAS, your present service connections are more then adequate! 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And there's a new choice of transmissions, including new Overdrive* and Hydra-Matic*. New Power Steering* for all models. Come in and see the newest things in trucks! *Optional at extra east. Overdrive available om 16-ton models, Hydra-Malic on -Ml and 1-ton models. CLARK CHEVROLET SALES 204 W. ELM STREET PHONE 277 McHENRY* ILL.