". •• ^.'v?' • '/ f- '___. : • "'••'• ' ' .1.. 1. „ Page Sixteen THE McHENRY PLAXNDEALER : ••&> tiv v-:. / • - ~ ~~ • ' Thursday, June 2,195J UKEMOQR & tILYMOOR By Marcella Fou Village News Now that the school children will hi- outdoors playing all day, the speed limit of 15 miles per h«".ir will He enforced at all times, so drive witl caution and save a child's life. S t a r t i n g Tuesday, the policenun of Lakemoor will go door to door concerning dogs, dog licenses ami vehicle licenses. So if you hnven't purchased either one of these, licenses and you have a cm or d'>g, please do so before Tuesday, May 31. Accident : Thursday evening, driving home w;ih • Mr. Fields of Lilymoor in the storm, Mr. Paterson (Pappy) was injured in an sditomobite accident. He had nine stitches" around the right eye, cuts and bruises and a knee injury and arm injury. Mr. Fields was not injured, We are all very sorry to learn of this accident antf hope "Pafipy' will soon be well again. He i:;is survived more serious Accidents and we are sure he will be well very soon. trip to Hawthorne tylelody Farm. Please be there on time and bring along your consent slip. Pinochle Club The Pi-nod-de club met at the home of Marcella FOss on Thursday last week. A cold lunch was served' by the hostess. Winners of the prizes that day Were Rita Erickson, Irene Leon and Helen Para. Helen Para also received her belated birthday gift at this meeting. Graduates Friday evening, the following boys and girl will graduate from McHenry high school: Sunny Mc- Deimott. Roberta Wirfs, Bob Bitterman and Dick Beahler. Congratulations to all of them and we wish them success in whatever vocation they choose. From grammar school we extend congratulations to Terry Brady, who is graduating from St. Mary's school on Sunday, and Frances Weiler of Lilymoor, who is graduating from St. Patrick's. Birthdays On Saturday, Donald Kibbee celebrated his thirteenth birthday with the following children attending an afternoon party: James Hansen, Eddy Steadman, I Bob and Corky Fosfs, Roy Erick- j son and a few other friends. Ice j cream and cake were served to J the children and games were j played. Katharine Brzezihski celebm- j ted her eighth birthday on Mon- j day, May 30. She will have her j friends over on the following I Saturday. I Auxiliary Meeting Last Wednesday evening, the | auxiliary held its monthly meeting. The new officers were hos- ' teases at this meeting and served ; a very lovely lunch. Jello molds, • d' eese and crackers, brown bread , and cheese, cookies awj coffee were very tasty and filling to . the members. i At this meeting, the following I members were appointed to offices: Ema Hoppert, hostess chair- I man; Marcella Foss, sunshine chairman: Jean Booster, liaison officer: Marian Sulak and Ann Brzezinski, county delegates; Jenny O'Leary and Rita Erick- ; son, alternates; Jenny McDer- I matt and Marie Hyatt, house | committee; and Helen ' Buchwalj ter, ways and means. L1A Card And Bunco Party Just a reminder that the tickets are now on sale for the card ; adn bunco party anii installation j of officers on June 11 at the Community-Fire house at 8 p.m. Jenny McDermott, Dick Hyatt, Marcella Foss and a few others have tickets to sell. On Vacation ! Mrs. Art Berenids went to j West Virginia for a ten-day visit j and rest. i Friends of Myrtle Booster will! be interested in knowing that i Myrt is vacationing in Lexington, | S.C. Get this, girls, Myrt is now j getting real sporty and dressing! in sT.opts most of the time. Trip to Michigan Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hyatt went on a trip to Lakewood, Mich., to investigate some property they own there. # Brownie Meeting The 'last meeting for the Brownies for the sumiiier will tak^ place on June 7. Anyone who becomes seven yeags old throughout the summer Is eligible to join the Browni^ in the fall. .,'.v On June 7. the Brownies are to meet at 9:30 a.m. to go on a General News On Wednesday of last week, Ann Sands, Nellie Wrublewski and Teena Morrison went to the home of Mrs. Nellie Kiehl in McHenry to celebrate their birthdays, which occurred this past month. Last weekend, Mr. and Mrs. Cleve Wade were surprised with a visit from Mr. Wade's brother from Alabama, who is 93 years old. Also his brother, Walter, and wife, Nellie, of Marion, 111., and their son and his "wife and children and his daughter and her husband and children, all from Chicago. Also Mr. and Mrs. George Griffith, Cleve and Alice's daughter, and her sons from Lombard, and their daughter and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Dowell of McHenry, and their son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. A1 Wade, from Hartford, Mich., and Mr. and Mrs. Streller and Mr. and Mrs. Cooper were out to keep Alice busy. Since Alice was off work for four days, she decided: to have the ladies from Sheridan road over for a little lunch on Saturday and visit with them, which she so seldom gets to do"with working in Chicago all the time. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Para went to Chicago on Sunday for the high school graduation of i Helen's cousin, James Szyszka. Did you know one pound of evaporated milk uses 2.2 pounds of milk ? BOY NOW for your SPRING PAINTING NEEDS) >r Get this $6.95 Value ^ Approved STEP-LADDER when you buy 4 gallons of MARTIN-SENOUR PAINTS Here's the exact color you want for every painting need...inside and out! Put your home in a Springtime mood--inside and out-- with fabulous Martin-Senour paints! Here's the world's widest array of colors for every decorating purpose, every surface . . . wood, plaster, wallboard or masonry. Come in--see this Martin-Senour color wonderland for yourself. Buy for all your Spring painting needs while you get this valuable ladder free of extra cost. f ' Choose today! Get your FREE STEP-LADDER with 4 gallons of any of these quality Martin-Senour faints! • Kolor-Brite * N®u-Tone Flat * Floor l> Trim Enamel • Glos-Tone Satin Gloss • Colorsol • Monarch House Paint MARTIN SliNOUR PA 1 NTS THE'EE S T 4LESS 103 No. Riverside Drive Phone 459 McHenry, iu Limited Quantity -'One Ladder Per Customer They Are New and Extra Good THE SENATOR SAYS By State Senator Robert McCIory Good eating and cooking apples are plentiful now in yoii* grocer's. You can give family and guests a wonderful treat with this new recipe called Gold Coast Baked Apples. Seiwe plain, or with whipped cream or vanilla ice cream. COLD COAST BAKED* APPLES li baking apples CUP sugar U cup seedless raisins '2 cup water. "i <•up canned sheered blanched I teaspoon grated orange peel almonds ' V* cup orange Juice I tablespoon orange marmalade ' tablespoon butter Core apples; being careful not to cut all the way through. Peel about 1/3 of the way down from the stein end. Combine raisins, almonds and marmalade! fill apple centers with this mixture. Combine remaining ingredients in saucepan; stir over low heat until sugar dissolves; simmer 5 minutes. Place apples in baking pan; pour syrup over them. Cover; bake in moderate oven 350" F.. 45 minutes to 1 hour, basting frequently with svrup in pan. When tender, baste once more and run under broiler to ulaze. Serve with whipped cream. Every parliamentary trick in the book will be tried before the end of tHe present session of the Illinois General Assembly on June 30. Two major maneuvers have been staged by the Democratic minority in tT.".e Senate so far. The first coup occurred when the committee hearings on the governors bills to enlarge the powers of the attorney general threatened to wreck the Democrats' plans for victory in the Chicago mayoralty election. On that occasion the' Senate's minoraty leader, Sen. William J. Lynch, (also Mayor Daley's law partner) u.pset the Republican strategy' by making a motion that the bills "Do Pass." That en'^ed 'ti"~e committee hearing, and the bills were on their way. But the expose with all of its political dynamite was effectively quashed. Next came the filibuster. Of course, in the national Cohgress a filibuster means nothing more than a long-winded speech which prevents or delays action on legislation to which the filibustering member is opposed. In the Illinois General Assembly a filibuster generally means something more disturbing than mere "speechifying." It also means reading the bills "at large," or, in full. A single member can bring about just suoh a revoltin' development, as Senator Lynch again demonstrated just recently. On that occasion, a proposed Republican plan for redistricting the Senatorial idiistricts of the city of Chicago was about to be introduced in the Senate. The session opened in the usual way. The lieutenant governor called for the reading of the journal, and immediately recognized Sen. Robert Lyons (ROakla! nd) who made his usual motion that the reading of the journal be dispensed witt'i. Sen. Lynch "objecteidi," and tihe secretary ' bfegan the long, tedious reading of the journal. A majority vote could have ended this, but if the secretary thereafter had attempted to read the first bill "by title" (th^ usual practice), a single objection could Meflesry - County Tkrsngii TSia Years by Marie Schaettgen have required the reading of the j -were Nixon, A. C. Smith, Star Titus and Richardson. A. C. Thompson was the first justice of t) e peace. Other names appearing among the early officers are McLean, Overacre, Rockwood, Abijah Smith and Walker. In 1864 the officers were • Bishop, Mayes, John Huemann, George Rothermel, Castor Adams, Harsh, Colby, Holmes, Perry and Homer Wattles. The first town in the township was McHenry. It was laid out by a Chicago surveyor, named Bradley, in 1837. Through the efforts of Henry McLean, his "services were obtained. McLean built the first house, a log building, near ti'.:e site of what was known in 1885 as the Riverside House. The building was used for religious services and for public entertainment. The first hotel was built by R. B. Brown in 1837. Horace Chapter 4S j Long built the Mansion House. McHenry Township (Cont.) | This structure was the former The first elected township offi- i court house which was abondoned when the cqunty seat was moved. bill ~-- and all other bills -- in full. The Illinois Constitution in Art. IV, Section 11, explicitly requires that all bills shall bp read "at large"- (in full) on t/iree separate legislative days. This constitutional requirement can be waived, only by unanimous consent (the usual order). A single objector can require the reading of all bills in full. To act in violation of such an objection would render all legislation enacted "unconstitutional." That is what is meant by a "filibuster" in the Illinois General Assembly. We have seen it operate once this sessioh. This writer predicts that it will oper-r ate many more times before the legislature adjourns on June 30. CRASH TOTAL Motor vehicle crashes on Illinois highways killed 154 persons during April, 1 per cent fewer than the 156 deaths that occurred in April, 1954, according to a report by Edwin A. Rosenstone, director of Public Wonks and Buildings. His report shows 615 highway deaths for the first four montihs of this year, up 4 per cent from the 589 figure for the corresponding period last year. About 1851 Mr. Baldwin built a fine frame hotel, the Fremont House. The Riverside House was built in 1864 by John W. an^ David Smith. McHenry had a ford across tfoe Fox river built by Indians of square cut sandstones. The pioneers later 'dtug these stones from the river bed and used them as hearthstones. The mystery of these stones was never solve How could the Indians produc stones which had obviously been mechanically quarried ? The pioneers soon established a ferry to replace the unsafjB ford. This was used until 1842, wf' en a bridge was built. It was washed away in 1849 and' another bridge replaced it. Several bridges were built and destroyed, or improved upon, before the present modern concrete bridge was built. Remember Father on Father's Day, June 19. Niw-Have Your Hair Dried by MINE OUTPUT The shipping mines of Illinois produced 3,110,453 tons of coal ' during April, according to a report by the state Department of Mines and Minerals. TV.is is 982,034 tons k.-s than the March output, but 216,950 tons above the amount reported for April last year. The April production came from 41 strip mines that turned out 1,349,055 tons and 58 shaft mines which hoisted 1,761,- 398 tons. FARMERS If you have something to Buy, Sell or Trade ADVERTISE In the PLAINDEALER New Wonder-Drug for Mastitis AURE0MYCIN OINTMENT Lederle FOR UDDER INFUSION Effective against all organisms acted on by Penicillin plus many other groups. A single infusion clears,streptococcic and staphylococcic infections in a high percentage of cases. Prompt treatment brings prompt results. Bolder S drug store w PnHtiAONwEr 4A0n 103 So. Green St. 1 McHenry, 111. VNIRINAR? UKRTOEBOOMCMYlOClfDSrt1 (HNiaum to Udcdotnr tfaitifnu afai rf Auraomycta ^ pack*?* circuit industry Stcth Great Gifts Coming From Our Collection If you want to please Dad, give hind a gift lie can wear! You're sure to win his high favor, especially if you make your selections here. It's our business to know what men like when it comes to wearables! McGee's Store for Men 117 So. Green St. Phone 47 McHenry, 111. OPEN DAILY: 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. -- Fridays 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. SUNDAYS 9 a.m. 'til 12 noon. DRIES YOUR HAIR WITH DRY AIRI discover NEW comfort--NEW hair beauty BUICK TEST PILOT NOW INSTALLED At CLAIRE Beauty Shoppe 200 So. Green Street McHenry, 111. Phone 10 Right now we're out to demonstrate to everyone the thrilling power and performance of the 1955 Buick. So we've hung this "Reserved" tag on a new 236- horsepower CENTURY for you to try its surging V8 power, to sample the electrifying take-off that comes from its new Variable Pitch Dynaflow Drive.* Come in and get a thrill that's like winning your wings --drive a '55 Buick today. •Dynoflow DWve rs standard OP BOADMASTEB optional at extra cost oo mther SerU R.I. OVERTON Motor Sales Phone 6 403 Front Street McHenry. III. SPECEMEN BALLOT Special election held June 21st, 1955, in and for the City of McHenry, McHenry County, Illinois. Ballot to vote on the question of issuing $160,000 Sewer Improvement Bonds. EARL R. WALSH, City Clerk (Instructions to Voters: Place a cross (X) in the square to the right opposite the word indicating the way jou desire to vote.) Shall bonds in the amount of $160,000 be issued by the City of McHenry, McHenry County, Illinois, for the purpose of constructing improvements to the existing sewer system in said City, maturing serially on January 1 in each of the years and in amounts as follows: $ 5,000 - 1958 through 1961 10,000 - 1962 through 1975 bearing interest at a rate not to exceed Two and Three-fourths Per Cent (2-^4 % > per annum, payable semiannually? YES - NO