Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 6 Oct 1960, p. 22

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Ptgi Twenly-Two TOE McHENRY PLAINDEALER Thursday, October 6, 198ft McCullom Lake BOARD VOTES TO REBUILD SPRING ROAD Eve Levesque At the last meeting of the president and the trustees held on Monday, Sept. 26, the board voted unanimously to set the "wheels in motion" for the rebuilding of Gate 5. This will be done with motor fuel tax funds. All paper work .will be completed during the winter months so that everything will be in readiness for work to proceed as soon as the frost is out of the ground. This will be the third road to be done, since the work was completed on Orchard drive. Won't it be nice when all of our good condition? tion have been busy brewing ideas for the krazy hat party which will be held on Oct. 27. Prizes will be awarded on the basis of etiginality and geheral appeal, and the whole affair , should be good for plenty ^f mirth. Girl Scout Fund Drive*' According to Mrs. Mildred Watson, local chairman for the Girl Scout fund drive, a total of §43.02 was collected in the village. Helping her in the d o o r - t o - d o o r c a m p a i g n w e r e V e r n a S c h l o f n e r , T h e r e s a Schultz, Louise Hammerstein. Anne Zahn and your reporter. Hospitalized Mrs. Betty Murray is coming along very well after her surgery of last week. She has roads are in j been a patient at the McIIenry hospital and may be home by The proposal submitted by | now, or will be in the next few Herman Mass of. the. Double H ! days. Here's hoping her physi Farms to move Gale 1 ---150 feet west was appro\ ed by t he board by a vote of 5 to 1. The petition ^ as accepted will be identified as ordinance No. 45. The next meeting of the village board will be held on'^Jtap-' "day, Oct; 10, at 8 p.m. and the public is invited. October Nuptials for Local Couples On Saturday. Oct. 8; Miss Diane Tabor, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nick Tabor of Lakewood Subdivision will walk down the aisle of the N a t i v i t y L u t h e r a n c h u r c h . Wonder Lake, to become the bride of Mr. A1 Horn. Jr. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. A1 Horn, Sr.. of Wonder Lake. They will werl at late afternoon services at 4:30 p.m. Immediately following the ceremony will be the reception for invited guests at the Johnsburg Community hall. The two young people hru4»-been "keeping comnany" since their high school days. Another romance will culminate in marriage when Gene Huff of Greenwood Road takes Mifes Ann Marie Groh of Johnsburg for his bride. His parents are Mrs. Nick Huff the late Nick Huff, while trh^ bride is the daughter of Mr* and Mrs. Raymond Groh of JoHnsburg. They will be united in imarriage at St. John the Baptist church on Saturday, Oct. 22. at 10 a.m. Mass. Thenreception will also be he held at the Johnsburg Community hall. Our very best wishes to these four young people who are starting an entirely new phase in their lives. cal ills are a thing of the past. Mrs. Edna Thorp and Mrs. Forrest Bailey are patients at the Shangra La Rest Home on Idyll Dell Road and would no doubt be very pleased with a cherry greeting from you. Just because they are shut-in, let us not shut them out! club have reserved Saturday, Nov. 12, for the date of their annual feather party. The public is invited. -- "Knew You Were Coming So I baked a cake" was the idea set forth by Mrs. Warren Kommer when she surprised girl chum, Mrs. Dorothy Cunningham, for her natal day last week. With three little kiddies and the fourth one expected. this 23 year old gal has. her hands full! Sept. 27 was the date of the celebration and present were young matrons Phyllis Straumann, Gerry Jensen, and Betty's sister-in-law, Nellie Kommer. The gals enjoyed "coke" 'n' cake, since none of them felt old enough for coffee! Convention Gals Jean McDonald and Caroline Justen of McHenry drove to Springfield last week to attend the annual convention of the L.B.A. They "hung up their hats" at a local hotel where the business sessions and the festivities were held. The women really lived it up by taking advantage of room service and daytime TV. Jean stated that it wouldn't be difficult to get interested in the daily soap operas, but being a hard working gal, she doesn't get much chance! Last Few Days to Register!! Monday, Oct. 10. is the deadline which has been established in order to he eligible to vote in the November presidential election. If you have any doubts as to your status -- please check now with our village clerk. Mrs. Emma Fyritz, who is the local registrar. Her address is 716 Fountain Lane and she will be happy to accommodate you. Register first, and then be sure to vote on Nov. 8! Off With the Old How many of us don't take up valuable closet space with garments that are out-dated or no longer usable? According to the old axiom -- "one man's poison is another man's medicine." Now is the chance to get rid of it by donating your rummage to the W.S.C.S. of t h e C o m m u n i t y M e t h o d i s t church. Mrs. Peggy Kasper-- EV. 5-3456--will gladly call for your merchandise before Oct. 11 and deliver it to the propter place. Her women's organization is having a rummage sale on Thursday and Friday of next week and need all the help they can get. Your donations will be appreciated. Ladios of the Lake " The gals will meet tonight in the beaefthouse to make arrangements for the feather party which will be held on Nov. 19. The gatherings have been increasing in size and we're hoping tonight will break all records. The time is 8 p.m. and you can also count on being fed! Members of the organiza- Piek Up Date--Oct. 15 All newsprint, tied in bundles will be picked up on Saturday. Oct. 15. This is the day when the Ladies of the Lake will hold their paper drive and the proceeds will be donated to the Cullom-Knoll building fund. One more reminder next week. For any further information please call chairman, Mrs. Jim Carroll, at- EV. 5- 3615. OreKid Occasions Related greetings to Dawn Mefcim (even if she can't read!) on the occasion of first birthday, Sunday, Oct. 2 . . . "Time flies department" --- Phyllis and Dennie Straumann will complete one year of marriage on Monday, Oct. 10. . . Carrying their years well are Theresa and Willard Schultz as they look forward to their thirtieth! wedding anniversary on Tuesday. Oct. 11. . . .Happy birthday "y'aH" to Sandy Passalaqua in Conroe, Texas, as she celebrates her seventeenth on Oct. 13. Advance notice so her chums of long standing can send cards td her! Best wishes to everyone celebrating a special occasion this week! Dive for your storm cellars this weekend as two anniversaries come due! Last year on Oct. 8 was "blow day" for Edgebrook Heights while two years ago Oct. 9, we in the village had cause to shudder! See you next Thursday. M C H S N e w s Judy Nowak With or Without A costume, that is, you will be welcomed at the Cullom- Knoll Hallowe'en dance to be held on Saturday, Oct. 29. Good music for dancing and refreshments available should add up to an evening's enjoyment. Mark the date in red. The Cullom-Knoll association will also sponsor a costume party for the kiddies at the beach on Monday evening, Oct. 31. The first "big" weekend on the high school agenda drew to a successful close last Saturday night. Homecoming began Thursday evening with a pep rally at McCracken field. The rousing cheers, led by our effervescent cheerleaders, gave evidence that school spirit is running higher than ever before this year. The homecoming parade Friday afternoon displayed the artistic talents of our students. The floats were very imaginative and skillfully constructed. The teen-agers accomplished this feat in five e\teni%s of 'hard work. Friday evening featured the high spots of the weekend. The Warriors matched their skill with the Zion Zee-Bees in a fast-moving football game at McCracken field. The dance after the game ended the evening with a flourish. The crowning of the homecoming king and queen was the high point of the evening. The Turkey Talk McCullom Lake Men's The early records tell us that the Etruscans (500 to 800 B. C.) slept on air cushions!! They used inflated goat or sheep skins. People, it seems, wore Jewelry before they wore clothes. Whedt Program Is Unchanged With winter wheat planting getting under way; Bert Bridges, chairman of the* McHenry C ,o u n t y Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation committee, pointed out that the wheat program for 1961 will be essentially the same as it has been in recentfyears. As highlights of the program, Mr. Bridges, listed the following: , • ' 1. MARKETING QUOTAS -- As a result of an 87.4 affirmative vote of wheat growers who voted in a referendum July 21, marketing guotas will be in effect for the 1961 crop and rhe marketing of excess wheat will be subject to a penalty. 2. PRICE SUPPORT -- Price support will be available cn 1961 crop/wheat at a minimum national average rate of $1.78 per bushel, the same as. the rate for the 1960 6rop. 3 . ACREAGE ALLOTMENTS -- Each wheat-producing farm has an acreage allotment, representing the farm's share of the national allotment, which again in 1961 stands at 55 million acres, the minimum permitted by law. Under the marketing quota system, any farmer who keeps within his wheat acreage allotment (or does not exceed 15 acres of wheat) may market his total wheat crop without penalty. Also exempt from penalty is any farmer who obtains approval to participate in the feed wheat program and produces 30 acres or less of wheat for use on his farm. Other growers who exceed their allotments will generally be subject to a marketing quota penalty on the normal yield of the excess acres. The penalty rate for 1961 will continue at 45 percent of parity, which for 1960 worked out to a dollar-and-cents nenalty rate of $1.08 per bushel. The wheat price support program for 1961 will be carried out through loans on farm-orw a r e h o u s e - s t o r e d g r a i n and through purchase agreements. Support will be available from harvest time in the summer 1961 to the end of January, 1962. The tentative support level is a minimum announced in advance of planting, which may be increased on the basis of later information next year but may not be reduced. The total U. S: wheat supply for the 1960-61 marketing, yepr is now estimated at a new\ fetord Of '2,682 milliori bushels, according to the latest U. S.' Department of Agriculture report on the wheat situation received at the local ASC office. UNDER 21 " " 1 * ' Vr:" A column for teen-agers By Dan Halligan ED'S RENTAL RENTS Floor Sanders to Rotary Tillers EVergreen 5-41 $3 DEAR DAN: My steady and I date each Friday night for our canteen dances and we usually have a lot of fun except for his jealousy. He can't fast dance and doesn't want to learn because I've offered to teach him several times. Anyway, I love to fast dance and I always get asked to by different boys during the eVehing. Well, everytime I accept, my boy friend does a slow burn and for the last three weeks we've ended the evening with a big argument. I think very highly of my boy friend but he hasn't any right to fie jealous just because I don't sit out' all the fast dances. We both read your column and would like to hear What you have to say. -- Bette. Dear Bette: Oh, for the joys of going steady. Anyway, girl; you're paying the price for going steady with your boy friend's jealousy and your ruined evenings. 1 certainly don't think you should sit out every fast dance to please him but you could sit out several of them. You know, this problem would be solved to the satisfaction of both of you if your steady would learn to fast dance and learn right away. Otherwise, ithe arguments will probably keep up until you have your final one. ' • • . . • • » DEAR DAN: Would it be proper if I went to visit my boy friend at his Army camp some Weekend and stayed alone in a hotel nearby? My parents know I wouldn't do anything wrong and can be trusted but they, don't think the visit would be proper. Do you? -- Anhie G. Dear Annie: Sorry, but this visit would be very improper. If your steady's parents were going 'to be along, then you would have no worries. If you were several years older, engaged to the boy and your wedding date set, then possibly you could get by without fracturing any rules of good taste. However, considering that you're still in high sefhool or a recent graduate and under the circumstances you described, such a visit would be in poor taste. Sorry. Buy Lumber For Cash and SAVE 25% CASH and © CARRY Buy from SPRING GROVE LUMBER CO. Oa Route 12, North of Foot Lofco Where You Get A Square Deal Everything For The BdSlder ! GET OUR MONTHLY PRICK LIST 1 Part* On Your Lettwtwatf r miMfl CHOVI LUMBE* CtL SWAddrw. 3N THE SQUARE! I. PHONE: BICHMOND 2961 This Is The Place You've DEAR DAN: There's a girl wlio sits beside me in study hall and she's driving me crazy. I met her on the street a couple of mornings and gave her a ride to school and now she seems to have the idea I'm her boy friend or something. She's always passing me notes, mostly cute jokes, and usually manages to; walk along yvith me when classes are changing. Yesterday, for example, she just "happened" to be standing near my ear when school was dismissed and I was practically forced, to give her a ride home. I don't have a steady girl and don't want one but unle^ you can tell ome what to do, I may wind up: with one. Please answer this soon before I find myself engaged. -- Worried Senior^ 1 Oear Worried: Furnv tfrnrr. I never had n^obiems like that when I was in school, but I guess some guys have it and some guys don't. As far as the attention you're getting in your study hall, I think if you politely warn the girl the teacher will eventually see her passing notes and may read them aloud, that should stop that practice. In going to school in the morning, take a different route and you may not meet the girl. Your problem of giving her a. lift home in the afternoon can be solved if you park your car "around the corner" or beat it out to the parking lot and get gone before she comess out of school. Or, kill some extra time in school and let her leave first. . - You may be able to discourage her from latcihing on to you as classes are changing if you grab hold of a buddy and concentrate all your attention on him. This. 6eems a little cruel (and the girls will hate me for it) but there's no sense in this girl having the wrong idea about you and perhaps haying her feelings hurt later on. Many people seem to feel that success is measured by dollars, cars, cjol hes or vacations. Think back for a min- Man is a gregarious cre^l ture, and hates to be left alone at any time. Hence, the popu.-? larity of telephones, movies,- ute -how many of the world's, radio, and finally, television. REAL benefactors have been I Each of these means of corninterested in any of the above \ munication provide a feeling of criteria? ! companionship. SAVE BY OCT. 10th 1 EARN FROM THE 1st Money placed in a savings account on or before the 10th earns dividends as of the first of the month. Act Now!! Open or add to your account today. Current Dividend (late INSURED Marengo Federal AND LOAN ASSOCIATION MARENGO, ILLINOIS 102 N. State St. Phone JOrdan 8-7258 A Mutual Company Serving Northern Illinois Since 1925 Total Assets Over $12,000,000.00 I Letters Mean So Much! j More -- When You ! ENCLOSE SNAPSHOTS SEE US FOR KODAK cameras AND FILM BROWNIE :RaXnl£l20 OUTFIT Versatile camera outfit... with tiny built-in flash! Everything "for indoor-outdoor picture-taking in one outfit! Brownie Flashmite 20 Camera takes any kind of picture black-and-white or color, snapshot or slide! Uses the tiny but powerful, low-cost AG-1 flashbulbs, in built-in 2-inch reflector. Automatic film metering and double-exposure prevention. '16.50 DRUG STORE Ph. EV 5-4500 BOLGER'S 103 S. Green St. SUNNY RIDGE FARM AUCTION ED VOGEL -- Auctioneers -- WM. RUSSEL The farm being sold, the undersigned will sell at Public Auction on the farm known as Sunny Ridge Farm on U.S. Rt. No. 12 South City limits of Spring Grove, Illinois or 4 miles East of 111. Rt. 31 and U.S. Route 12 or, 3% miles Northwest of Fox Lake, 111. on ^ SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1960 Sale To Start at 12:80 P.M. Sharp 3 ANGUS CATTLE -- 1 Heifer and 2 S/teers. MILKING EQUIPMENT -- 3 Surge Milking Machines; Double Wash Tank; Gas Hot Water & Room Heater; Stainless Steel Strainer; 210-gal. Groen Bulk Milk Cooler; Milk House Ventilating Fan. FEED -- 50 Ton Alfalfa & Brome Hay. CHICKENS & EQUIPMENT -- Approximately 600 Laying Hens; Chicken Feeders and Waterers; Nests and Portable Roosts; 3 Gas Brooders; Auto. Poultry-Lite Switch; Egg Washer & Baskets; Poultry House Fan. MACHINERY -- 2 TRACTORS: A.C. - W.D. Tractor with P.T.O. and quick hitch; A.C. - W.D. Tractor with cultivator; A.C. 3-bottom Plow, 14" pickup; 10' A.C. rear-mounted disc; Schultz P.T.O. Manure Spreader; 10' 2-sectional metal Drag; A.C. all-crop Drill; Fertilizer attachment; A.C. rear-mounted 2-row Corn Planter; A.C. No. 7 Power Mower; A.C. Sidedelivery Rake with P.T.O. on rubber; A.C. springr-tooth Harrow; 28' Mayrath Bale Elevator with motor; A.C. "60" all-crop Combine; 2 rubber-tired Hay Wagons; 5 h.p. Briggs-Stratton Motor. EQUIPMENT -- 2 stock tanks; Barn fan; 40' Board Fence; Sections; Grinding Stone; Extension Ladder; Wheel Barrows; Silage Cart; 2-16' Gates; 10" Bench Saws; Blasting Generator. HOG EQUIPMENT -- 4 Pig Shelters with extension roofs; 3 - 2-pen Farrowing Houses; Boar House; 4 Hog Feeders; Tox-O-Wick Hog Oiler; New creep feeders, waterers, heat lamps and reflectors; 8 metal Farro-crates, new Hog loader, etc. HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE & ANTIQUES -- Antique love seat and 2 matching chairs; 2 drop-leaf tables; Walnut Dining Room Table; 9 Blk. HitcJhcock-Type Antique Chairs; 3 Rockers; Hall Bench; 3 Kitchen Cabinets; Large Desk; Filing Cabinet; Antique Captain's Chair; 3 large Antique Wardrobes; Twin beds; 4 dressers; 2 Antique Wash Stands; Portable Shower Stall; 19 cu. ft. Refrigerator; 121 cu. ft. Freezer; Kenmore Auto. Washer with suds-saver; Kenmore Auto. Dryer and other household articles. State Bank of Richmond, Clerking TERMS: Usual Bank Terms. Make arrangements with clerk for credit before purchases are made. KARL A. ROST & HARRY C. HERMAN. Owners Not Responsible For Accidents £>.,.1 .11*IN ~7 ^j v It's 10° cooler when you cook in a flameless electric kitchen Heat from an electric range goes where it's intended to go: in the pan and directly into foods--not into your kitchen. The oven is insulated on all six sides (not just five). Hardly any heat escapes. Clean as electric light. With no flame burning, no dirt is created to soil walls and ceilings or blacken pots and pans. Your kitchen, and everything in it, stays clean about twice as long. When you build, buy an appliance or remodel your kitchen, k^ep in mind the clean, fume-free cooking you get in a flameless electric kitchen. (J Public Service Company So Clean, So Safa, So Modem 8> Commonwealth Edison Company

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