vr jn V'y«?p5a^ww m^'WIm. Thursday. July 11, 1957 & » . f x THE MCHENRY PLAINDEALER , *j\ y*v*3 \1 Pag® Nln« RINGWOOD By Mtt. <|eorge Shepard ^ 500 Club Mrs. Ben Walkingt(Hv entertained the Women's *500' club at her home Tuesday. A one o'clock dessert luncheon was served and high score went to Mrs. B. T. Butler and low to Mrs. Agnes<Jencks. Bunco Club The Bunco club was entertained in the home of Mrs. Thomas dDoherty at McHenry Friday. A Qessert luncheon was served and prizes were awarded to Mis. Georgia Thomas. Mrs. Oscar Berg and Mrs. Ruby Shepard. Church New* Rev. John Eddy of Garrett Institute was guest minister at the Methodist church Sunfiay. morning. "•' ' • The Senior M.Y.F. met at the Afrurch Sunday evening. . Monday evening, the official board met at the church. This was an open meeting. The W.S.C.S. will meet at the church - Wednesday evening. The topic "Town and Country" by Muriel Benoy and Shirley Cristy. Hostesses will be Florence Kane " and Dorothy Aissen. _ Hospital News J • Mrs. Clara Durlin underwent surgery at the Woodstock Memorial hospital Thursday. Dorothy Aissen was an accident patient at the Woodstock Memorial hospital Tuesday night. Personals Mr. and Mrs. Starlin of McHenry called on Dr. and Mrs. William Hepburn Sunday. Mr. and. Mrs. Ben Walkington *nd Miss Virginia Jepson spent Friday in the Harold Jepson home at Dundee. Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Andreas and Mr. and Mrs. Clifford StoqJt of Woodstock are enjoying a trip around Lake Michigan and up into Canada. Mrs. Lyle Peck of Elgin spent Friday in the Ben Walkington home. » Miss Virginia Jepson spent Satuday afternoon with Mary Kay Wallace at Woodstock. , Miss Marian Peet of Elgin is spending her vacation with her mother, Mrs. Lena Peet and sister, Alice. Mrs. Jack Leonard and children of Lake Geneva spent Friday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Jr. . The dance class of Rihgwood community under the direction of Pat McCurdy of - McHenry performed for the Women of the Moose in McHenry Tuesday of last treek. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Malsch and1 family are visiting his parents at Madison, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Richrad Stermer and family of Richmond spent Friday evening ill the Fred Bowman home. /. Mr .and Mrs. Weldon Andreas spent July 4 in the Clifford Stock home at Woodstock: Mrs. Fred Zemon and Mrs. Frank Madenby of Mun.delien Called on Mrs. Charles Anderson Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Agnes Jencks spent Sunday with her daughter and family at Barrington. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Waggener of Elgin were callers in the LotUis- Hawley home Friday. Mr.s and Mrs. Johnson (Mildred Waterman) of Blackfoot, Idaho and Mrs. Fred Gilbert (Agnes Dodge) of Brockville, Canada called on friends here Saturday. Mesdames Marian Miller and Marge, Ross of Chicago Were luncheon guests of Mrs. Charles Anderson Tuesday. Mesdames Georgia Thomas, Leona Arnold and Betty Zimmerman of Woodstock called on Mrs. Ruby Shepard Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Tony Joknis and daughter, Nancy, of Riverside, Calif., were callers in the Walter Low home last freek. Mr. and Ms. Pete Sebastian are visiting relatives in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Keeler and children of Wilmington were visitors in the Walter Low home Sunday afternoon of last week. Billy Smith of Elgin spent July 4 in the William Hoffman home. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Adams and family attended a picnic at Jake Millers at Spring Grove the evening of July 4. Miss Virginia Jepson of Chicago spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Walkington., Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Jepson and son spent the weekend with relatives at Anderson, Indiana. Mrs. D. E. Reed and daughter of Riverside were visitors in the Walter Low home Saturday of last week. Mr. and Mrs. William Heine of Chicago spent Wednesday until Friday in the Mrs. Ruby Sheparci home. On July 4 they attended a picnic party at. Fontana. Mrs. Lester Edinger, Mrs. Mary Kay Wallace of Woodstock and Mrs. Manard of Rock Island spent Tuesday evening in the Ben Walkington home. Miss Anna Mae Aissen of Marengo and Ronald Roe of "Weedstock spent Sunday with" hex* parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Aissen. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Norman and family of Glenview spent Sunday in theh Ben Walkington home. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bruce and family spent the past week with relatives at Opdyke and Tayson, til. They also visited Mark Twain's cave at Hanhibal, 111. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth and son, Andy spent the ,last weekend with relatives at Watipaca, Wis. Mrs. Agnes Jencks spent Saturday with her daughter and family at Barrington. Mr. and Mrs. Phelps Saunders of Sycamore spent the weekend in the Fred Wiedrich, Jr., home. On Sunday they " with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Leonard of Lake Geneva. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Winn of Richmond, Mr. and Mrs. James Wegener of McHenry and the Vogels of, Eikhorn attended the ball game at Milwaukee. Mr. and Mrs. Waited Low and family, Mrs. John Hogan and family, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Brerinan and family, Georgia Mary Saunders, Russel - and Donald Carr, Ed Skidmore, Mike Wieser and Butch Leonard attended a picnic at Genoa City Sunday. Mrs. Bob Brennan and. children, Mrs. Attelt and Joanne Schmitt took Mrs. Joe Schmitt to Midway airport Monday where she left to visit relatives in Washington. $1,600 FORESTRY 4-H SCHOLARSHIPS OFFERED THIS YEAR Four high school graduates with a genuine interest in forestry and three years or mol-e of 4-H club work may each receive a $1,600 college scholarship next fall to be applied to undergraduate work in forestry. Candidates will be recommended by the State 4-H club office. Offered for the first time, the scholarships are intended to help qualified 4-H"ers through four years of study. They may enroll in any accredited college or university. The only stipulation other than maintaining satisfactory scholastic progress is that the student carry a major or minor in forestry. Donor of these valuable awards is Homelite, a division of Textron, Inc.," Port Chester, New York. The funds will be administered by the National Committee on Boys and Girls Club Work, Chicago, in cooperation witljv the extension service. The winners will receive the award during the national 4-H Club Congress in Chicago next December. It is likely that one candidate from each of the four extension geographical sections will be selected for the $1,600 grant. The sum-will be paid at .the rate of $400 per year for four years. Further information regarding application, fo^^e scholarship -may be jo^tained the state 4-H club office or the county agent. SPEED BIGGEST f ^ FACTOR IN MOST -1 TRACTOR ACCIDENTS Tractor operators do not deliberately kill themselves by -Upsetting their machines. Why then are these accidents so commotio We can sum it up in two words -- ignorance and carelessness. Ignorance results in failure to recognize a dangerous situation. It also results in failure to recognize a safe way out after the danger becomes apparent. Carelessness is an attitude ~ a refusal to admit personal danger --although the operator is folly awarei of accident possibilities. But carelessness can be tempered by knowledge of consequences. We must;, enlighten those who do not know and, perhaps, frighten those who do not care. . «" The'0 farm tractor is designed to do an important job. The high center of gravity gives it the necessary clearance for fOw crops. The short wheel base told individual wheel brakes make*, it. possible to turn sharply at the ends of rows. The big and powerful engine enables it to do joftis quickly. The transmission, coupling the engine to the big rear wheels, affords a wide range Of forward speeds. In the lower gears, a farm tfactor can pull 60 percent or more of its own Veight. If the load is too heavy, tractor can spin its wheels, even on the best surface. There is plenty of power -- more than can be effectively used in tfce lower gears. But misuse of the very features that make a farm tractor useful can make it a deadly machine. Speed is involved' in most tfactor upsets. The modern farm tractor will travel up to 15 miles per hour or faster -- too fast to operate under any conditions other than on a smooth sti^aight road! A farm tractor on level ground can be upset at 8 miles per hour or less! With rough ground to make the tires bounce -- to catch a, sliding wheel or to affect the steering, a tractor can upset at even lower speeds; Slaw down! Leave the tractor in "gear when going downhill. For Better Results MaHenry. Shop In New, Instant RELIEF for TIRED, ACHING BACK 5! Buy US. savmga Bonds dactert. No nap Ihm; mft. fou* fttbor •«mtr •imw M MMkft " iUum imt tlm. .f.a..d ir-'w » >w %2££\ Bolgers - Tel. 40 WE DO NOT CLOSE WEDNESDAY AFTERNOONS BEN FRANKLIN brwcs First Quality Sport Shirts AT SENSATIONALLY LOW PRICES & STORE HOURS 9-6 p.m. 9-9 p.m. 9-6 p.m. Mon. - Thurs. -- Fri. Sat. -- 9-6 p.m. Sun. 9 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. FREE Parking for Ben Franklin Shopper?. Men s - Boy's Sport Shirts • All Coal Short Sleeve Styles • All Wash Easily - Are Colorfast • Lightweight - Smart - Colorful , , Reg. 2.98 Sale Price Reg. 1.98 Sale Price Reg. 1.49 Sale Price BOY'S SHIRTS Reg. $1.98 - Sale Price J®® Reg. $1.49 - Sale Price *J24 Reg. $1.39-• Sale Price • ' Smart new summer patterns • Solids - Prints - Plaids £ • Sanforized - Washfast * • Sale priced when you need them. 100 EXTRA SPECIAL THIS WEEK-END ONLY Man's OKI toy's CANVAS OXFORDS Reg. «MS - SALE PRICE , (Rubber Footwear {or the Entire Family at Monoy-Saving Prices) • ANNOUNCE 16-CENT STORAGE PAYMENTS ON BESEALED CORN Farmers can earn 16 cents a bushel .in storage payments for reseating their corn under farmstored loans, Bert Bridges, chairman of the McHenry County Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation committee, reminded growers. Both 1956--crop corn under loan and stored on farms and 1955--crop corn under extended reseal loans are eligible for this year's repeal program. Also, purchase ., agreements on 1956--crop corn may be convert^ ed to reseal lpans. "Storage of corn crops on farms for another year is advantageous for both the farmer and the government," 'Mr. Bridges declared. "Farmers have their crop close at hand and they can pay off the loan and use or sell the corn any time tfiey need it or can market it at a profit." "For the government, resealing the corn means avoiding the purchase of additional bins and -the erection of more binsites which would probably be required to.store the crop if much of the loan corn were delivered to .the Commodity Credit corporation upon maturity of the loans." In McHenry county, farmers have 665,550 bushels of 1956 corn crop under farm stored loans and 50,000 bushels of 1955--crop corn under reseal farm stored loans. An additional 98,000 bushels of the 1956 crop are under purchase agreements. Farmers who desire to reseal their 1956--crop corn, convert their 1956 crop purchase agreements into reseal loans, extend their 1955-crop resealed corn loans should apply at their county ASC office up to the final date of delivery specified on the delivery instructions issued by the County office. Eligibility requirements for either of thg 1956--crop reseal or the extension of 1955--crop reseal loans are the same as for the original loan. Horse Show The Horse Show, to be staged on nine of the ten days of the Illinois State Fair, Aug. 9--18. will be the first of the season at ^idwest-state fairs. Its .generous premiums, carrying $75,135 in awards, are attracting entries from many states. Hie premiiim list includes five $2,000 stakes for the. following classes: Fine Harness: Three-Gaited; Harness Pony; Hackney Pony; and Five Gaited. The. American Saddle Horse Breeders Futurity will award $3,000 in prize money. Mid-West ^ Hackney Association Futurity offering is $1,000 and The Illinois Morgan Horse Breeders Futurity offers $500. An "All Western" competition , will pay $6,260 in prizes for working and. parade horses. Riders in this di vision will .wear western clothes in the ring. Premium books for the Horse Show may be obtained by writing the Illinois State Fair, Springfield, Illinois. Insured Swings: (wvtnga Invested In Crystal Lnfte Savings and Loan Association it BQjfured by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corp., and eair 2 Vi per cent plus Vi per oenft extra. 8S-U WEINGART PAVING PHONE McHENRY 1300 Asphalt Driveways & Parking Lois Seal Coating Streets & Subdivisions FREE ESTIMATES GUARANTEED NO STICKYNESS COOKS CORNER By Marie Schaettgen iiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuicrirjuiiiMMiiiiirrni Asparagus is always in season, either out of a can, frozen or best of all from your own garden. Whichever way you acquire it, try cooking it in this manner. Asparagus Casserole 2 small cans asparagus cut -- (or equivalent in fresh cooked or frozen) 2 hard boiled eggs sliced Crumbled potato chips % grated cheese ,l¥ Make thin white sauce using Water from asparagus plus milk. For sauce thickener use cornstarch instead of flour. Add cheese, stir until melted. Place asparagus -- egg and sauce in casserole -- top with chips and bake in 350 rdeg. oven for about 20 minutes, y A free press is vital to the liberty of any people and when you see governments surpressing freedom of speuch, you witness a government that is getting ready to rule without regard to the wishes of the majority. CONVENIENT HOURS FOR DEPOSITING YOUR SAVINGS Fridays Other Weekdays 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. CLOSED WEDNESDAYS EARN UP TO 4% SAFETY! THRU FEDERAL INSURANCE 111 UFETT SMIRK McHENRY SAVINGS and Loan Association 206 W. Elm PHONE 2 McHenry I * iclc IF YOU own an earlier Buick than our 1957 product, you re probably reluctant to part with it -- and who can blame you? After all -- regardless of year of model -- there's nothing like a Buick to set you a cut above the ordinary run of mortals*^ make you feel master of all you survey. ' ^ *> • - C But listen. As wonderful as your present Buick is--we can name at least six good reasons why you should look into a 1957 Buick now. SUE good reasons why you should try this dream car to drive--today. Read 'em -- and leap! *V{ t Jr; 0 Reasons To See Your Bulok Dealer Today 1. Today'* INSTANT Dynaflow* -- Raipont*? Whew/ Smoothness? Wow I Never in history Such a sweet sense of control, security, safety for yourself/ your family, everyone els* en the road I 2. Brilliant VS Power en Tap--This big engine --completely new in 1957--blends plenty of eager energy with silky silence. World's most advanced combination of displacement, compression, bore-stroke ratio, nodal-point balancel 3. Zestful New "Nested" Ride--Take Buick's traditional torque-tube, coil-cushioned ridecradle it to the lowest center-of-gravity in Buick annals--and brotherl You never had it so smooth. 4. iuidt's Ono and Only Safety-Buxxer*-- What's the safest pace you want to drivo at? Whatever it is, turn a dial till that figure appear! iri a "window." If you exceed that pace, the bun-n-z tells you. Simple. Thoughtful. A great safety advance. S. Unique Ball-Joint Handling and New Vrab* ing -- Your steering is amazingly easy. Your cornering is amazingly deft. Your braking stays on the /eve/. (And Buick's powerful new brakes dig in for straighter, swifter, safer stops!) 4. Suave low-Sweep Styling--Clean, crisp, classic lines in the finest Buick tradition--beautiful to look at and live with. Up to 3.4 inches lower, yet pore room inside. Including I eg room for the folks in the middlel P.S. You'll lik» today's Buick prists--and your Buiek doaler's high tradt-in allowanets. *New Advanced Variable Pitch Dynaflow is the only Dynaflow Buick builds today. It is standard on Rcadmnsl*ri Super end Century--optional st modest extra cost on the Special. Safety-Buzzer standard on RoadmaOer, optional at extra cost on other Series. Big Thrill's Buick: SPE THE WORLD S SMClAL « £tMTlJBV • e * J - - MM HEAVYWEIGHT TITLE FIGHT Monday, July 29-N8C-TV Ntfwork* Check your loeaf newspaper for time and channel. •MCM& * C«MTVNV • SUPH . NMOMASTIR -- ,«nd etOADMASTSN ft When better automobile* are built Buick will build them SEE YOUR A U T H O R I Z E D £ * U ! C K DEALER 1Quifif" 0