^tfiraiJay, September % 1980 THE- MeHENBT MJUMBEALHt Wonder Lake NEW TEACHERS INTRODUCED AT INITIAL PTA MEET ' Hue Oucey A look at community planning will be the program at the nrst meeting of 'Harrison's PTA Tuesday, Sept. 13. The meeting will start at 8 p.Vn. The four new teachers will be introduced to the audience and welcomed to the community. T h e e x e c u t i v e c o m m i t t e e chairmen will also be introduced and the proposed budget for the PTA year presented for approval. Community plan n i n g, the subject which received second highest vote from parents on ,;the questionnaire last spring listing program potentials, wiil ^be -tibly handled by Harold Bacon, president of the Eastern ^McHenry Cpmpany Plan association, and Richard Babcock, a director of the same organization. Wrhis group, newly formed last spring, has been conducting a land use survey of:i the four townships on the eastern side of the county this summer. Maps are being prepared by Northwestern university student.; <vlw> conducted the survery) which provide a clear picture of what is taking place in this fastgrowing area of the wunty. ^The sneakers will outline the broader principles of planning which are the concern of the Northeastern Illinois Metropolitan Area Planning Commission, made up of eight appointees of Gov. Stratton, five of the Mayor of Chicago, and one appointee each from the six counties in the northeast region. AThe $200,000 budget which this group has is made up of appropriations from the State and voluntary contributions from the 6 counties and the city of Chicago. The Eastern McIIenry County Plan association, on the other hand, is supported by voluntary contributions alone. £>3,200 has been received but an additional $1,000 ul needed to complete the cur- Mit program. The public is invited. Refreshments will be served in the social hour following. Karhina Neighborhood Meeting The first meeting of Kachina neighborhood Girl Scouts will be held Wednesday, Sept. 14, a.m. in the basement fcOTO . Of -t leran enure] I'hree Weeks aqd Thirty-seven Hundred Miles Mary Lou Hartog spent three full weeks vacationing'ln Western USA. Accompanied by her brother. Bill, and his daughter, they drove to the coast, taking in the scenery tgtod sights over 3,700 miles of mghway. Places were Lake of the Ozarks, Dodge City, Royal Gorge, Mesa Verde, cliff dwel* ling Indians, painted desert Paf* and petrified' forest, and Zion National park. People visited were another brother in Las Vegas, and the Cheneys in Palo Alto. Mary Lou spent an evening and a day with Delia and Frank, (Delia has put on weight) Lynn is a jet pilot stationed in New Foundland -- Danny is a junior at Stanford. Mary Lou missed son. Bill, by an hour and had to wait a week for him to come back in port. He has been stationed at Long Beach since March. They had a few hours together before the return trip and Bill's leaving for Japan for two more years of duty. The trip back by jet from San FrSn took 3 hours and 45 minutes, contrasted with the. two weeks auto trip out. Nativity Lutheran Church Ne>vs Sunday school will have its Bible Church News The early Sunday service will be discontinued after the Labor Day weekend. The congregation enjoyed association with the summer residents and visitor's during t h e p a s t months. The next meeting of " the Youth For Christ group will be held at Barrington Saturday. Sept. 10. Young people of the community are invited and if interested in going can contact Pastor Wright for transportation. A letter from the Gordon Hortons was read at the Wednesday service. The Horton family left the first of the year to do missionary work in Panama. They write that their clothing and supplies have not reached them and they have had to purchase these things to keep going. An additional mishap has been the loss of their boat used for river travel. The boat was cut loose and will have to be replaced. Financial help is needed for this family as money is the easiest aid which can be sent to them. Watch for the starting date of the Pal's Club -- it will be soon. School Starts Today A colony of Wonder Lakers is growing at Grand Rapids School of Bible and Music and classes start today. Dorothy Pope is a freshman there this year and her brother, Kenny, starts his second year. Also at Grand Rapids is Robert Repke who went to Trinity Seminary last year. The Beamans will both be sludents. Larry will attend regular classes 'and Marilvr> plans to take evening classes. # ^ Flanagan's Auctioi ?M, H. RUSSEL Auctioneers EtliWlX VOC.EL Having decided to quit dairying, I will sell my dairy on the farm situated on Route 176, three miles East of Route 31, one mije West of Burton s Bridge, six miles West of Wauconda and five miles fast of Crystal Lake, on SATURDAY -- SEPTEMBER 17ih, 1960 COMMENCING AT 12:80 P.M. « 25 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK Consisting Of 21 Head of CHOICE D \IHY COWS 4 HOLS.TEJN HEIFERS, Springing This is a good dairy of cows and I have used Curtis Candy Fann breeding service on my heni. MACHINERY Case Silo Filler; End Gate Seeder; Int. Hay Loader; Elec. S-tariline Hot Water Heater; Wilson Milk Cooler; Can and #>ver Rack; S. Steel Wash Tank; 12 Milk Cans. 85 CHICKENS ' ^ T. P. FLANAGAN, Owner AT THE SAME TIME AND SAME PLACE rtrr following Machinery will be sold belonging to HENRY "V^NSTRA, Mr, Wynstra has bought a farm in Wisconsin with all machinery and equipment on it, therefore, is selling his surplus: Int. "C" Tractor; A His Chalmers "60" Grain Combine; Case 3 Bot. 14" Tractor Plow; Truck bottom R?ck; New Holland "76" Hay Baler; Case 8 Ft. Tractor Disc; Buzz Saw; Hay Rack. 5 GEESE and 40 BUCKS. HENRY WYNSTRA, Owner ^ USFAL BANK TERMS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCrt>feNTS FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF WOODSTOCK CLERKING Member of Federal Reserve Bank Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation annual, picnic Sunday, Sept. 11. starting at 1 " p.m. at the church. There will be games and contests for all ages, including those for adults. Evening refreshments w i 11 be served by the "Men of the Church" who are sponsoring the event. Everyone is welcome to attend. "Who Is My Neighbor?" is j the sermon topic for both the I 8 and 10:45 a.m. services Sept. 11. A nursery is provided during the latter service for small children. The Lulher League will meet ; in the evening at 7:30. All high school voung people welcome. Sunday school teachers and officers will meet Tuesday. Sept. 13. at 7:30 p.m.. - All women are invited to the meeting of the Altar Guild on Wednesday. Sept. 14, at 8.p.m. More are needed in this service of, caring for the chancel and.altar of the church. Come to the meeting, enjov the program. and" see how you can be of help. Th^ Visitation committee for the shut-ins and institutions will meet Monday. Sept 12, at 2 p.m. This is the regular quarterly meeting, and all are invited as more are needed to call on the aged and shut-in in our area. It was about this time that school board members worried a bit about the possibility of building t o o much school. There was talk about the "year arounders" packing up and moving back to the city as soon as the post war building boom produced housing for them a~ain- ^ STATE GIVES 6 PER CENT OF CARE DONATIONS Minimum Building Fund Goal Reached The minimum building fund goal of $25,000 has been reached by Nativity according to Pastor Schroeder. With this wonderful response it will be possible to pay off the loans on schedule and meet the obligations as a congregation. This great advance forward builds a sure foundation for the future. Attention Women Bowlers Women bowlers are needed for the Wonder Lake league which plays at 7 p.m. Mondays at Johnsburg. If interested call W.L. 2121 or 3311. League play Donations of $558,387, or over 6 per cent of the total collected, were sent to CARE by Illinois residents during the fiscal year ending June 30, announced the non-profit overseas aid agency this week. This enabled CARE to distribute nearly $40 million worth of American aid in the form of fortd. drugs, tools- and educational ' equipment in 27 count ries. "In the annual report, made public at a meeting of the I CARE board of directors in j Washington, D. C., Executive , Director Richard W. Reuter said that U. S. and Canadian surplus foods had reached j more than i3V2 million people i n t w e n t y - f o u r c o u n t r i e s around the world through CARE Missions in the course ( of the year. 1 Included in the total for I960 were $9,279,755 contributed by individual donors, groups and business concerns in the Uniled States and Canada, and nearly $24,000,000 | worth of farm surplus foods ! given by the U. S. and Canaj dian governments to CARE's relief operations overseas. The balance was made up of ocean freight reimbursements by the U. S. government; payments by foreign governments for CARE's administration of joint school lunch, institutional and welfare feeding programs; and p a r t n e r s h i p p r o g r a m s w i t h governmental and private agencies. starts Sept. 12. It's difficult to keep an open mind and closed mouth at the same time. Sunnyslde Estates RESCUE SQUAD DEDICATION RITE IMPRESSES WRITER Polly Steven* EV 5-1256 At the dedication of the new Johnsburg Rescue Squad building. Sunday, Aug. 28, your reporter felt very humble arfd very proud. Proud to be a part of 'his community -- proud to know that in this troubled old world of ours there are men like the Rescue Squad. Men who give of themselves to their community -- men who want to help their fellow-man with no thought of remuneration an$ruen who take pride in the work they do. Thanks, Rescue Sqi:;ul. Sunnyside Estates entry in the parade represented the newly formed Boy Scout Troop 144. Scoutmaster Ray Jensen drove with Scouts Dennie Banker and Johnnie Rau. They ivere accompanied by Ray's wife. Donna, and Ray, Jr. „ ~ a-future Scout. Ga., t'o visit Mary's brother and wife. Maurine- and Fred Edwards, and son. They live on a farm and Donnie had a wonderful time there, seeing the farm afnimals and riding the tractor. On to Jackson, S. C.. to visit 1 Mary's sister and husband, | Johnnie Mae and Bobby Joe i Newman, and their sons. Dean | and Darrell. The Roses had a | marvelous time but according | to Mary "there's no place like j home." es in Milwaukee recently and while there they took in the Wisconsin State Fair. They enjoyed the exhibits and the many other attractions. A Northern Trip Lorraine and Steve Major have just returned from a trip to Toronto, Canada and points nbrth. The. days were warm j but the nights were really cold. I On their return trip they vis- I ited Saulte Ste. Marie. They 'hod a wonderful trip and'en- 1 joyed every minute of it. How j our residents do get around. Wedding Joan and Stan Walczynski spent the weekend of Aug. 27 in Chicago where they attended the wedding, luncheon and reception of a close friend. A beautiful wedding in a beautiful church, says Joan. They returned Stan's niece. Peggy Zmudzki,. home after a week's: visit with them. INCREASE IN SALES Though National ' Tea Co. sales for the year to date are up $12% million, the last fourweek reporting period, ending Aug. 13, 1960. showed slight improvement dpe to the summer sales lag,' H. V. McNa- , mara. National Tea Co.'s pres- | ideht. announced National's | sales for the • four weeks end- ! ing Aug. 13 totaled $63,509,442, j which was an increase of $174.- j 884 over the corresponding I period of 1959. Register* Yet? The Kiwanis and Ftotary Clubs and the League of Women Voters are sponsoring an all out. drive to get everyone of voting age to register. Have YOl' registered yet? The deadline is Oct. 10. Let's all register so we can vote in Novemlier. iW I Seven Youngsters J The Radtke household was ! really jumpin' recently when I Ann and Rick entertained A n n ' s y o u n g e r s i s t e r a n d I brothers. Kathv. Billy and j Wally Eggclbrecht. The four I Radtke children enjoyed all | the excitement of company, i the outings and the picnics. | After a week Ann's parents. ' Mr. and Mrs. Walter Eggelbrecht came oul for a final picnic and to take their youngsters home. A Picnic Millie and George Kropf, son. Ray. his friend. Chuck Herman, and little Billy Walczynski a 11 e n de d George's company picnic. Sunday, Aug: 28, at Arlington Heights. They enjoyed it very much , and as usual. George came home with a prize. He's a lucky devil! Early Deadline . Due to an early deadline last week there is no report on the S.E.H.O.A. meeting. The cakes were" donated by Marge Palmer, Henri tta Rau and Mary Rosei NEW LABORATORY -- State funds have been released for building projects at the University of Illinois. A Zoonoses laboratory to be constructed for study of communicable diseases common to men and animals received $170:000. I This will be the first such center in the United States and i the second one in the world. More than 20 projects in the remodeling and rehabilitation of buildings on the Urbana- Champaign campus received $335,000. 3 tllft Congo Tfie most recent report, of Jack and Flora Loshbough, Bible church missionaries In the Belgian Congo, is that Jack has gone back to Bavja Baya where the family was stationed. Flora and children are waiting in Frankfurt, Germany, for permission to rejoin Jack. The family \tfas evacuated when trouble started in the Congo. However, Bavja Baya is in a quiet zone removed from the recent action and the natives cannot understand why their missionaries have left them. Then and Now Little Eddie Dee started kindergarten at Harrison school last week. His class is in the same room his mother attended when she was enrolled in Harrison school 18 years ago. Only when Barbara Sellek Dee stalled third grade at Harrison in 1942 it was a one room si-hool with a total enrollment of twenty-six students... Tilings have progressed a bit by the time brother Ratidy went to first grade five years later, A second teacher had been added. A Southern Trip Mary and Herb Rose and son. Dennie, recently returned from a 16 day, 2.921 mile vacation. They visited Mary's mother, Mrs. Bessie Edwards, in Jacksonville, Fla. On Aug. 24. Mary was bridesmaid for her sister, Virginia, who married Jimmie Bohrom in the First Baptist church there. They spent a day in Silver Springs and Donnie was "all eyes" looking at the millions of fish through the glass bottomed boat and the aligators sunning themselves on the bank of the river. They drove to Savannah, Counteracts damage • EBmimrtes tangles • Restores natural | boatrty Famous LIFE LOTION HAIR TREATMENT penetrates deep down to give new radiance, new tester, new manageability to an hair-no matter how badly damaged by bleaching, coloring, ouer- VfjKtog or exposure to sun, wind and water. Eliminates sparts and tangles, wonderfw ior children. Use LIFE LOTION HAIR' TREATMENT attve«* Sh«90O0t "Zi A Mid-western Trip Lois and Bob McDonald and children. Gail. Mac and Paul, recently visited Bob's brother and wife. Ruth and Joe Mc- . Donald, and their four daughters, in Washington, Iowa. Lois ! and Bob are our latest vaca- 11 ioners. Birthdays Happy birthday today. Thursday, to Dick Gerke and Edward Marczyk, and to Dolores Gerstein on Sept. 11. Another Trip The Andersons, Butes and Zeig.^rs attended the auto rac- Annlversary Best wishes to Dolores and Donald Gerstein who celebrate their seventh anniversary on Sept. 12. About the best thing to* be said of hill-billy or rock-androll music is that they haven't gotten around to bagpipes yet. I work on prison I Work on Illinois million dolj lar security prison in Johnson county was ordered last week i when Gov. stratton released ; $13,000 for planning. The prison will be operated as a farm for prisoners who have reached rehabilitation status at Menard, Pontiac and Joliet-Stateville maximum security prlsonsi iiifl It would be wonderful If we could find other things as easilv as fault. |{llimilllll!llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllll|||||IHIHIIIII VILLA NURSING HOME ON PISTAKEE BAY NEAR McHENRY Home for the Aged SENILE BED PATIENTS | Mrs. Anna Zee -- Owner | Phone EVergreen 5-0461 Top Swiss cheese producer in the nation is no longer Wisconsin. Illinois ranked first in 1958, taking the title with 33.4 million pounds. BglLpWO BLOCKS UBBi "Psr-s-sat . . . let's fell her about the beautiful ash paneli n g a t WONDER LAKE BUILDERS' SUPPLY, SO die hustles over there and gives us the day off!" NYE DRUGS. Inc. NYE DRUG, Inc. 129 N. Riverside Dr. Ph. EY.JH426 McHenry 129 No. Riverside Drive EV 5-4426 3 BIG DAYS - FRI. - SAT. & SUN. CIGARETTES tsjfintu* Regulars $|98 per ctn. A Kings or Filters *2W plus fcgC FLASHLIGHTS 2 Cell -- Less Batteries Reg. 98e 47 LUSTRE CBEME HAIR SPRAY Keg. SI.50 -- 15-oz. Panel Delivery $1958.00 delivered locally How does a one-ton truck chalk up against a Volkswagen? We admit IL A standard one-ton truck parries 170 lbs. more than a VW--which carries 1,830 lbs. But look wh$t a difference a Volks* Vagen can make. You'll be driving a nimble, sharptornering truck that knows how to keep out of traffic jams. You can operate two Volkswagen Trucks for what it costs you to operate a single standard one-ton truck. Yon can park your Volkswagen m places that the average one-ton has to forego. A VW is three to five feet shorter, jfc Tiree, depreciation^; in:su--ra nce^ they all cost you lessw^jttk^* If you never take IwM Oftcfof 2,000 pounds, no use talking. But if you do, come in and see us. We'll show you authenticated operating cost figures. © AUTHORIZED DEALER European Delivery For details contact your local dealer IMPORT MOTORS Of McHENRY Route 120 -- Lakemoor Aspirin Tablets Bottle of 100 44. Pure 5-Grain 11 (Limit-1) P • ' NEW -- Fast Ifclp for ACNE PROBLEMS Kubenstein Complete Treatment Results fiiin ran teed or Money Back Reg. $4.50 Value $295 Introductory Offer SKIN DEW SALE Buy Skin Dew Moisturizer at Reg. Price of $5.00 Receive $4.00 Herbessence Cleanser $9.00 Value FREE MINERAL OIL Worihmore Pint Bottle Reg. 69c -- Limit I 25 Reg. $1.13 Dura Flash Bulbs No, 5 <-- Sleeve of 8 ft ALMHN F&M AU Purpose 620 - 120-127 Reg. $1.29 3 Roll Pack 79 CHARCOAL LITER Full Quart Reg. 49q W All Green GRASS SEED Guaranteed 5. Ibp. Reg. $i.3ft INSECT BOMB 2% D.D.T. H»sr. 98c •a. BEST LIQUOR BUYS! GIN -- Walker's Reg. $3.80 5th $319 BOURBON VjSupvemi Straight Whiskey 00 Proof 5th Reg. $4.59 $359 VODKA -- Semkov Reg. $3.49 * $2«» JValker's Private Cellar 100 Proof -- Banded 5th Reg. $4.69 $y9 GIN -- American Reg. $3.29 5th $279 BRIARCLIFF Blended WhM<«y 5th $2^8 Slumber-Soft BLANKETS ELy Beacon Extis Large • ft. x 7>2 ft. Reg. $6£5 $479 Car 8c Sports BLANKETS Full fifx72 inches Reg. $429 $29*