;^ai . .. T Pag« Eight ; V l~,y n-~,J «.~ • ;- •* \ * 4 . ' . ' *- " ^Thursday. February 28.1957 CITY. TOWNSHIP! SELECTION CONTESTS LOOM IMPORTANTLY Continued from Page 1 On the People's ticket, Frank E. Schroeder has listed his name as a candidate for the position of justice of the peace and George E. Gutzman for constable. Only the name of Harold L. Bell appears on the Fair Deal party for the constable post. Joseph A. Cina for justice of the peace and Peter Heitz for constable are named on the Liberal party and Joseph H. Gamen has announced his intention of seeking /the constable post on the Progressive ticket. Voting will take place in nine precincts of. McHenry township on Tuesday, April 2. All are running for four-year terms. r Masin' and Meanderin' CASfTpF SENIOR PLAY (Continued from Page 1) president of the C. L. Student Council and also of the North Suburban sub-district. News About Our Servicemen (Continued from Page 1) Rich Mann and Susan Watkins, both of Ringwood, students at Harrison school, will appear on a championship program of "Bandstand Matinee" on TV March 11, after being declared winners of a daily dance contest Valentine's day. Returning to McHenry after an absence of many years are Albert Pouse and his sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Powers, who moved last Thursday from Crystal Lake to their new home at 806 Center street. Mr. Ppuse recalls that it is just fifty years ago that he graduated from the local high school. He hopes to make McHenry his permanent home this time. Members of the cast of the senior class play are shown on the stage of the high school auditprium, where they will present their spring offering, "A Murder Has Been Arranged," on March 2, Standing, left to right, are Kathy Anderson, Bambi Marticke, John Feyerer, Jim Boger, Karl Tomm, Gene Dietle, Judy Hollenbach, Mary Banks and Jeanette Freund. « Sitting, Dee Ann Hester and Patti Miller, student directors. South America is Harold P. Fishbach, machinery repairman fireman, USN, son of Mrs. Irene D. Fischbach of Route 3, McHenry, aboard the escort destroyer USS Lloyd Thomas with Destroyer Division 242. The destroyers are conducting j anti - submarine exercises along with units of the navies of the countries being visited. Ports of call include Cartagena, Columbia; Salinas, Equador; Callao, Peru; and Valparaiso, Chile. Keeping pace with the growth in membership and the many reguests for use of the Legion home, a program of expansion is now in the planning stages. Store room is especially needed at this time and members hope to erect an addition on the rear of the building in keeping with the style of the present budding. DAVID KNOX RUNNER-UP IN '57 STATE TEST (Continued from Page 1) Donald R. Massheimer, son cf: Frank E. Massheimer of Lake- j moor, recently was promoted to j private first class in Orchard j Park, N. Y., where he is member j of the 465th antiaircraft artillery j missile battalion. I Massheimer, a radio operator | in the battalion's Battery C, en- : tered the Army last February and j completed basic training at Fort ( Leonard Wood, Mo. j The 23-year-old soldier was i graduated from McHenry high school in 1952. GIVEN SUSPENDED FINES Five young people from McHenry and surrounding area, j ranging in age from 11 * to 14.j were put on probation for a per- j iod of one year and given a $1001 suspended fine last Saturday for I shoplifting from local stores. A sixth youth, 14, was also given a year's probation and a $300 suspended fine. DAVIS RITES Memorial services for Burt S. Davis, 90. of Ringwood were held this past week in a chapel in Oak Park. He died in St. Petersburg, Fla., Feb. 10. States. High schools may enter their most outstanding students in the annual competition. This year, over 162,000 outstanding seniors from 12,500 high schools entered, with 750 fouryear college scholarships worth an estimated $3.75 million at stake. NMSC was established in 1955 through grants of $20.5 million from the Ford foundation and the Carnegie corporation of New York. Over forty business and industrial firms offer four-year college scholarships though its facilities. rfiiilSlL .E R REMIND EMPLOYERS TO TAKE CREDIT FOR TAX OVER-PAYMENT Taxpayers who worked for more than one employer last year should be sure to attach the "B" copies of all their W-2 forms (withholding tax statements) when filing their income fax returns, H. Alan Long, Chicago district director of internal revenue. has announced. The should also check to see if they have overpaid their social security tax for 1956. This tax is deducted from wages at the same time as income is withheld. Mr. Long pointed out that the maximum social security tax fo» employees is $84, and that anything withheld above that amount should be claimed for refund or applied to any balance of income tax owed. This excess withholding can arise only when a person has worked for more-than one employer during'the year. "Persons who worked at varying wage rates, or who did not work for awhile between jobs may find themselves entitled . to refunds." on the other hand, taxpayers who worked for several employers might find that they have gone into a higher tax bracket and thus owe additional tax, Mr. Long said. Peisons who have not received W-2's for short jobs held dufii)g 1956 should contact the firms which employed them. Those who have lost the statements ought to ask for duplicates at once. I N C O M E T A X S E H t / I C E The McHenry Accounting and Tax Service 123 North Riverside Drive (In The R. I. Johnson Law Office) Phone McHenry 1400 For Appointment Remember Earlier Filing Brings Earlier Refunds. B .If I.J. .:D.J'N-05! TRIAL Buildings -"V,< % LESS! . . . . L O O K L O V E L I E R Is your rug REALLY clean? You J may think so, but did you know that unless a carpet is put! through professional cleaning1 processes, using modern scientific! equipment, as much as 15% of | the grease and grime cannot be; removed? Ordinary do-it-yourself1 methods do only half the job. Grease is the bugaboo of lovely carpets. It imprisions dirt and: grime down in the "roots" of the j pile, causes it to "mat" down and I stiffen. A rug loses much of its I texture and resilience unless i every iota of grease is removed, j So, in the long run. prolonging the life of your carpets by send-! ing them for thorough cleaning at least once a year - SAVES i YOU MONEY -- because a really I clean rug is longer-lived. Dirt,; insects, grease and grime cannot take their toll. Our methods are based on those developed by the National Institute of Rug Cleaning. j Phone TIDY RUG CLEANERS at Woodstock 1000 for free pick-up and delivery. For new carpets and rugs visit our beautiful show-; room. Junction of Routes 120 and' 14, Woodstock, 111. Adv 100% USABLE SPACE! Phone 1424 the Secret... is in the STEEL SPAN ... built like a BRIDGE for STRENGTH and E N D U R A N C E ! 1. Easy! Erect in days, not weeks! 2. No skilled labor needed. Erect it yourself! 3. Fast delivery from your dealer's stock! 4. Better looking. Straight sides. Gable roof! You are free to choose your own siding and roofing . . . free to put it up yourself with easy directions or hire your own builder . , . free to place doors and windows where you wpntl Standard stock sizes: 32 and 44-ft. widths, 10 and 12- ft. wall heights, any length. No other building costs so little, goes up so quickly, so easily and lasts so long. Get free facts^without obligation today from. . . 'R LUMBER CO. 701 So. Front St. MEMORIAL HOSPITAL SERVED 695 FROM McHENRY IN '56 Every comfriunity of IV^cHenry county was served by Memorial Hospital for McHenry County at Woodstock last yfear--in fact, not only the coufity but out-of-state patients were also served. The hospital at Woodstock had a total of 2,374 patients last year of which 157 came from out of the county and twenty-eight from out of the state. Most of those from out of the home community of the county were accident patients, although some had home ties to the county because of a family or of a trusted doctor. Last year the 'patients came from every point. Most of them, 920, came from Woodstock, including the city and the rural area surrounding it. McHenry had a total of 695 patients served here during the,year. Crystal Lake had 179 patients, with Wonder Lake a close fourth with 134. Richmond had a total of 47, Ringwood had 37, Hebron 33 and Huntley,; 30. Harvard had 23/Marengo 24, and Union had 27. Spring Grove, at the far eastern edge of the county, had 11 pa - tients in the hospital through the year; Fox River Grove, at the far southern edge of the county, had but one. Algonquin, as far away as the Grove, had 3. Island Lake, also at thg/eastern edge of the county, had 2 patients at Memorial, Alden and Cary had 8 and Solon Mills had 2. The accredited hospital at Woodstock is presently constructing a new addition that will cost a million dollars and which will provide more and better facilities at the county's center. The hospital is a non-profit institution and the money for the addition was raised by the thousands among ifs friends who bfelieve in it and have confidence in it Weekend guests in the Leo Blake home were Mrs. Elaine Horstman and daughter, Karen, and Bob Bigelow of Fort Jennings, Ohio, and John and Robert Manning of Oak Park. McHENRY AREA, CHURCHES PLAN SPECIAL SERVICES (Continued from Page 1) given by Fr. Augustine, OSB, of Bennet Lake, Wis. The new bishop of the Rockford diocese, Bishop Loras T. Lane, is honoring St. John's parish on Thursday morning, March 7, when he will confirm about 175 adults and children of the church and afterward, at 9 o'clock, will sing High Mass. Ashes will be distributed after both morning and evening services. wood chuVches are invited to worship at that time. The Sacrament-of Holy Communion will be observed and special music will be provided? by the Ringwood church choir. Ringwood Church On; Wednesday evening, March 6, at 8 o'clock, ah Ash Wednesday service will be held at the Ringwood church. Members of both the Ringwood and Green- 1,: Christ The King $ Oh; March 6, Ash Wednesday, ashes will be distributed after the Masses in. the morning and aft^r Jhe evening service at 8 o'clock at Christ the King church, ,Wonder Lake. Every Wednesday jiight a^ 8 during Lent, rites will consist .of Stations, sermon and Benediction. , - • ^-Nativity Lutheran ^ At Nativity Lutheran church, Wonder Lake, services will begin on Ash Wednesday evening at 7:45 Q\plock and will be held every Wednesday thereafter until Easter, except for Holy Week. Buy U.S Savings Bonds Mason Con tractors 15 and L Builders of New ConstructtoB and Remodeling CONSTRUCTION COMPANY1 PHONE 409 BOB PEPPING, Owner DR. HENRY FREUND OPTOMETRIST At 136 S. Green Street, McHeniy v (Closed Thursday Afternoons) EYES EXAMINED -- GLASSES FITTED VISUAL TRAINING -- VISUAL REHABILITATION COMPLETE VISUAL ANALYSIS HOURS: DAILY 9 TO 12 A.M. and 1 TO 5 P.M. FRIDAY EVENINGS: 6:0>0 TO 8:80 P.M. EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT PHONE McHENRY 452 PONTIAC IS GRAND NATIONAL CHAMP! V fims NASCAR Grand National Championship Race Against AH Cars Regardless Size, Power or Price-Setting New Track Record in Biggest Stock Car Event of Year Following Clean of Its Cliii in Flying isle mi Acceleration Runs. -- NOW IT'S OFFICIAL --| Pontiac is America's Number 1 Road Car! Here's why it's important to you/ You can buy the same model Pontiac right here in town with the same ruggedness, safety and precision-handling that outclassed all the others at Daytona! Remember, this was a strictly production model Chieftain Pontiac powered by the spectacular 317 h.p. Strato-Streak engine -- and introducing Pontiac's revolutionary Tri-Power Carburetion, a great new advance, optional at extra cost on any Pontiac model. This amazing carburetion system literally gives you 2 engines for fhe price of 1 . . . tame or terrific at a touch of your toe!- For normal driving the engine operates on a standard two-jet carburetor (the same type that won the economy tests last year). A little extra pressure automatically cuts in four more carburetor jets for instant response when you need more power. Come on in and drive America's Number One Road Car. You can easily afford it--prices actually start below 30 models of the low-price three! NUMBER 11N PERFORMANCE! NUMBER 11N 10MDABILITY! NUMBER 1 IN HANDLING! NUMBER 11N SAFER! (j DRIVE THK SURI*ltlSB CAR OF TH1 WAR I WHAT FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE? It is insurance on your bank account which protects your deposits in good times or bad. It insures availability as well as safety. This, combined with strong reserves, plus more than 60% liquidity on deposits, assures you thai your money is always safe and available at the McHEN~Y STATE BANK - SERVING McHENRY SINCE 1906