Pig# Twelve THE McHENRY POL Thursday, October 13# -|96Q^ LUpnoor ^ tEAHLSflNEMAN HEADS AUXILIARY foil COMING YEAH ••I Shirley Schuerr EV 5-2645 The Woman's auxiliary held its meeting Monday, Oct. 3. At this meeting the election of officers was held. The officers are Mrs. Pearle Stineman, president; Mrs. Tonie Ehredt, V i c e - p r e s i d e n t ; Mrs. Alma H u e c k s t e a d t , t r e a s u r e r and Mrs. Diane Fuhler, secretary. Those on the welcoming committee for the next three months are Mrs. Edna Crawley, Mrs. Tonie Ehredt and Mrs. Katherine Fuhler. A bake sale was discussed. It will be held Saturday, Nov. 12. More details about the sale next week. After the meeting coffee and cake was served. The hostesses for the evening were Mrs. Behrendt, Mrs. Edna Crawley »and Mrs. Pearle Stineman. The hostesses for the November meeting are Mrs. Bartelt, Mrs. Bresserud, and Mi's. Davis. The next meeting will be held Monday, Nov. 7 at 8 p.m. at the white schoolhouse. Ladies you are all welcome to join the auxiliary, and bring your friends. Tobey Thursday, Sept. 29. After practice the group enjoyed a social hour and coffee and cake. Holds Christmas Party The women of the Moose held its annual Christmas party for the children Tuesday, Oct. 4. Brownies The Lakemoor Brownie Troop 299 is still looking for a leader. Any woman, 1& years of age or older, who is interested can contact Mrs. Pat Morrison at EV. 5-6396. If this troop doesn't get a leader they will disband. Let's not see that, let's get a leader for the girls. Get Out and Vote In the next four weeks we will hear more and more of vote for so and so, he is the best man for that office.- You can an<i should listen to both sides. But the final choice is up to you. Now that you are registered you can vote. So mark your calendar (the date is Nov. 8) to make sure you go out and vote. Halloween Dance Have you got your costumes ready for the dance? It's a week from this Saturday on Oct. 22. Extra tickets are available at the door. Come one, come all and have a good time at the dance. Association Meeting Don't forget this coming Tuesday, Oct. 18, at 8 p.m. is the monthly meeting. The new proposed by-laws will be read the second time and discussed further at this meeting. See you at the meeting Tuesday at the white schoolhouse. Congratulations Go to Herbert and Leona Fantus. They will celebrate their twenty-fourth wedding anniversary Saturday, Oct. 15. Hope you have many more, Herb and Leona." Choir Practice The Community Methodist church choir held its practice at the home of Mrs. Eunice Drive A Success The girl scout drive was a success here in Lilymoor and Lakemoor. Those women who helped were Mrs. Dorothy Bonder, Mrs.. Coughlin, Mrs. Erickson, Mrs. Leona Fantus, Mrs. Diane Fuhler and Mrs. Pat Morrison. Death Mourned Personals KATHRYN PHANNENSTILL Services were held Oct. 5 at St. Mary's Catholic church for Mrs. Kathryn Phannenstill, 73, wife of John Phannenstill. She (lied the previous Sunday following a long illness. FILES SUIT FOR INJURIES A suit asking judgment of $10,000 was filed in circuit court this past week by Howard Thomas, in behalf of a minor son, Bruce John Thomas, against Johnsburg School District, No. 12. The suit concerns injuries said to have been sustained when Bruce fell off a slide at the playground, resulting in injuries. Mesdames Kathryn Worts, Ann Moellenkamp, Alpha Pederson and Ethel Holly of Riverview Camp; Mrs. Agnes Wissell and Mrs. Mabel Johnson of Fox River camp of the R.N.A., attended the October meeting of the McHenry County Past Oracles club held at Huntley, Oct. 4. The November meeting will be at Woodstock on Nov. 1. Mrs. Julius Roeder is spending- several weeks with her son, Robert,Vin Washington, D. C; Arthur Larson called on relatives here, Wednesday, enroute to Florida from his summer home in Hayward, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thompson enjoyed a few days vacation in northern Wisconsin last week. Mrs. Harriett McClarey attended a beauty trade and educational foruih held in Chicago Sunday and Monday. Mrs. E. L. Murray and daughter, Celia, of Baningtori called on, McHenry. relatives Wednesday: . Mrs. Frank Weingart spent a few days last week in the home ol her daughter, Mrs. Edward Skoney, in Elmhurst. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Walsh of Fox Lake called on relatives here Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. George Powers and daughters and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Powers of Woodstock were guests of Mrs. Mabel Powers Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Whitcomb of San Diego, Calif., are spending a month vvilh her sister, Mrs. Helen Miller, and other relatives in this vicinity. Mr. and Mrs. Duke Adams returned Saturday from a week's hunting trip at Sidnaw, Mich., where they bagged a deer. Mrs. Anna Guyser and Mrs. Catherine Guzzardo motored to Chicago Sunday to visit the latter's mot h e r-in-law, Mrs. Anna Guzzardo. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cobb of Chicago were weekend guests in the home of her sister, Mrs. William Danko. Mrs. Mayme Goodstein and niece of Chicago attended the funeral of Msgr. Nix here Saturday and also called on friends. Mr. and- Mrs. Leo B. Rothermel and Mrs. Ray Conway were Grayslake visitors Saturday. Mrs. Robert Conway accompanied her sisters, Mrs. Stella Calbow and Mrs. Thomas Spant ideas and son, Greg, of Crystal Lake went to Hines hospital Sunday where they visited the latter's husband and father and also called on John Dreymiller. Miss Inez Bacon, Bob Bacon, Mrs/ Hazel Lange and Miss Rita Martin were dinner guests in the Harvey Rapp home in Arlington Heights, Sunday evening- Mesdames Bobby May, Rose Staines, Anna Miller, Helen Heuser, Irene Guffey, Elizabeth Thompso^^r^nces Widhelm, Lillian Bolger, Ann Roderkirch and Miss Laura Weber entertained the boys at Downey Wednesday evening. Mesdames Grace Murphy, Ellen Phalin and Kathryn Bask attended Saturday classes at Pestalozzi College in Chicago. Among the out of toyn folks here to attend the funeral of Mrs. John Phannenstill at St. Mary's church last Wednesday were: Mr. and Mrs. John Freund. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Speaker and Mrs. Roman Ketterhagen, Burlington, Wis.; Robert Vogt, Mrs. Bob Anderson and Mr. and Mrs. L. D. M i t c h e l l , Waukegan; Mrs. Henry Wagner, Mrs. Lillian Utah applied , for admission to the States as early as 1849,^ under Ifie naifrte ' of £>es^t*ef (Honey Bee) Then, it included most of the area of Arizona, Nevada, parts of what is now California, Oregon, Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico. Form F.R. 105e-l (Revised Nov. 1955) Budget Bureau No. 55-R004.8 Reserve District No. 7 State No. 70-1660 REPORT OF CONDITION OF McHENRY STATE BANK of McHenry, Illinois, a member of the Federal Reserve System, at the close of business on Oct. 3, 1960, published in accordance with a call made by the Federal Reserve bank of this district pursuant to the provisions of the Federal Reserve Act. ASSETS 1. Cash, balances with other banks, including reserve balance, and cash items in process of collection $ 2,303,331.73 2. United States Government obligations, direct and guaranteed 6,147,823.22 3. Obligations of States and political subdivisions 664,729.54 4. Other bonds, notes, and debentures 350,175.00 5. Corporate stocks (including $12,000.00 stock of Federal Reserve Bank) 12,000.00 <». Loans and discounts (inclining $13,008.39 overdrafts) 7,804,566.68 7. Bank premises owned $150,000.00, furniture and fixtures $1.00 150,001.00 11. Other assets 2,841.93 12. TOTAL ASSETS $17,435,469.10 L I A B I L I T I E S 13. Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations $ 6,228,461.27 14. Time deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations 8,419,113.97 15. Deposits of United States Government (including postal savings) .. 235,845.73 16. Deposits of States and political subdivisions 1,309,725.]5 18. Other deposits (certified and officers' checks, etc> 223,031.37 19. TOTAL DEPOSITS $16,416,177.49 23. Other liabilities 104 071 11 24. TOTAL LIABILITIES .$16,520,248.60 C A P I T A L A C C O U N T S 25. Capital (Common stock witth total par value of $100,000.00) 100,000.00 26. Surplus 300,000.00 27. Undivided profits 362,720.50 28. Reserves (and retirement account for preferred capital) 152,500.00 29. TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS 915,220 50 30. TOTAL LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS $17,435,469.10 M E M O R A N D A 9L. Assets pledged or assigned to secure liabilities and for other purposes 725,500.00 32. (a) Loans as ghown above are after deduction of reserves of 171,485.44 I, Ifiomas F. Bolger, Cashier of the above-named bank, hereby certify that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. THOMAS F. BOLGER ' : Correct--Attest: GERALD J. CAREY '• L_ ROBERT L. WEBER RICHARD J. ZIEMAN •MP' -•1 "11 up Directors VYCITAL'S -for do-it-yourselfers., Prepare Now for Winter! Complete Stock ^of ' Ornamental and Half Round Gutters, Downspouts and Elbows Everything Necessary ^ To Do A Complete Job FURNACE SUPPLIES Pipe -- Elbows -- Fittings -- Ducts Registers -- Filters -- Asbestos Paper METALBESTOS - Gas Vent Pipe and Fittings SHEET METAL Galvanized Iron -- Aluminum Perforated Metal By The Sheet or Piece SPECIAL! Caulking Gun Cartridge-Type Reg- OQe $1.35 39 Caulking Cartridges Reg. 34® 49c CAHTAIOCC CAHTftlDOft calking 0NP0UN Warp's Poly Pane STORM WINDOW 2 - 3'x6' Sheets plus Nails and Fibre Molding reg. 42c 29° Also Clear Plastic -- String or Wire Reinforced Plastic Foamflex Weather Stripping Kits for Doors 2 Pieces 7' Long 1 Piece 3' Long $229 Door Bottom Strips 29*-49*-s1.25 132 S. Green St. McHenry, 111. Phone EV 5-0098 Wirtz and Mrs., Joseph ;'Wiek-: ersheim, Mundelein. <•. ; ; . Also Mr. 'and Mrs.' "i?rank4 Amann, Delbert -and Edward, Round Lake; Mr. and Mrs. Sid A n d e r s o n , C h i c a g o ; Don aid Kennebeck, Niles and Mrs. Russell Lloyd, Harvard. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Stoffel were Sunday visitors in the home of their daughter, Mrs. Roland Ekstrom, and family, in Elgin. Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Sharp, Jr., son, Robert John, Mrs. John Bolger and Miss Kathryn Kortendick were guests in the Jerome Sharp, Sr., home in Elgin Sunday Where the birthdays of Mrs. Jerome Sharp, Jr., her sister-in-law and brotherin- law, Mary Ann and Karl Sharp, were celebrated. Other guests were the latter's grandmother. Mrs. Koch, and daughters of Chicago. Mrs. Kathryn Worts, Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson, Miss Gertrude .^Veber and Mrs. John R. Freund vacationed at Chetak. Wis., a few days this week. Mr. and Mrs. John .. Shay celebrated their second wedding anniversary during his vacation last Week and spent a' few days in; Rockton," 111. Mr. and Mrs. William Staines were. Sunday dinner guests in $ie% George Pat tinson home' in Woodstock. Recent guests in the William Staines home were Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Staines of Kenosha, Mr. and Mrs. George Pattinson -and Pat Hall of Woodstock. Beds in the middle ages were so scarce that people took them with them, when on a journey. Thales, a Greek, predicted the solar eclipse of 585 B.C., the first such prediction on record. OBITUARIES ALFRED KOIJLfcNKARK Alfred Kollenkark, 54, of Woodstock, brother of Raymond, Elmer and Harold Kollenkark of McHenry, died unexpectedly of a heart attack last Friday, Oct. 7, while supervising silo filling on the Kenneth Powers farm near Crystal Lake. Funeral services were held Monday afternoon in Inimanuel Lutheran church, Crystal Lake. THOMAS CONROY Thomas J. .Conroy, a native of County Galway, Ireland, died this past weekend in Chicago. Services were held Wednesday in St. Peter Canisius church, with burial in Mount Carmel cemetery. Mr. Conroy was the father of Mrs. Alfons Diedrich of McHenry. GIES Leo M. Gies of Osage Beach, Mo., brother of Peter Gies of McHenry, died this past week. Funeral rites were held Tuesday morning at St. Andrew's church in Chicago at 10 o'clock, with burial in St. Joseph cemetery. EDWARD DALTON Services were held Tuesday afternoon in Elgin for Edward L. Dalton, 94, of Glendale, Calif., a former resident of Elgin who died Saturday evening, Oct. 8, in Sherman hospital after a short illness< Mr. Dalton will be remembered as the husband of the former Hattie Mead, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Mead, old time residents of McHenry. At 50 degrees below zero, a man's cough may be heard for 3 miles. CLOSED (or VACATION from October 24 to November 8 Thank You ... for your Patronage George and Clara's WHITE HOUSE i VS. -I*... . ; Route 120 and Johnsburg Road * ,, •<,- 'V NEW SRA MANAGER The appointment of Leonard W. Biedermann as manager of the scoring, service materials handling center of Science Research Associates, Inc., was announced: by Lyle M. Spencer, the company's president. The center is located in Wood- Stock, The materials handling center is responsible for the storage, shipping and receipt of all testing materials loaned to schools as part of SRA's testing and test-scoring services. HONORED FOR SERVICE Carl B. Starbuck, R.F.D. 1, Richmond, a field service department. chief at Western Electric's Hawthorne Works, will celebrate his fortieth year of service with the firm ' day, Oct. 27. He will bf honored for his long , careex^t igtH company-sponsoredt lugici e<? 1^0 on his anniversary, and till - presented with a difhorid*' ~ studded, gold service enblem to commemorate the odasion. -r AWARD ROAD CONIIACTS^ The; state division of highwayfe has a n n o u n c e ? the awarding of contracts ft" projects irt McHenry, Iroqv|ls and McLean counties. The local contracts include one t< Lakeland Construction for 1*8(5,788 for .571 mile of concrete base course on Rt. 31, nortriof Algonquin. The other is jor .58 mile of concrete resurfacing in the same arek, awarded^to Sqf> burban 'Oil Co., in -the amount of $26,515. Hurricanes occur iiifj: tt hree areas oil the world--thd Caribbean, the South Pacifc, and the Indian Ocean (whee they are called typhoons). 1 Value Packed Camera Event! See the BIGKODAK Here at Your Headquarters for Kodak Cameras BROWNIE Ste/imifi/b OUTFIT Electric-eye camera outfit • . ^ at tow, low costf Imagine! Everything yoo need to take pictotts indoors or oa»-4> including a genuine Kodak-made camera *vi)li built-in ex sure meter--all at this low, low price! Now yoe can get goc shots every shot because the meter shows yoy exactly where 1 set the lens. Take black-and-white or color snapshots or slid* «« with pvshbvtton ease! Perfect gift, ' All For BOLGER'SSTOR! Ph. EV 54SJ0 " - •*• 150° hot water is always on tap in a flameless electric kitchen " Twill heating units in a new Fast Electric ';¥?Wfcier Heater heat water as fast as it's used. "There's no "saving up" for it to do the laundry or dishes. It's always there--150° hot-- when and where you need it. iSo pilot to light. Once installed, a new Fast Electric Water Heater is on its own. There's no pilot to light or go out, nothing to smell. Compact tank-type models fit in a closet. Modern counter-top models fit: i your kitchen or laundry (offer extra work space, too). No flues are needed. No vents <• long pipe runs. Electric Water Heaters last than any other kind; many have been ii ice for over 20 years. When you build, buy an appliance model your kitchen, keep in mind the advantages of a flameless electric water Jnger serv- (j Public Service Company tftoHnmwItb Bdton Company StOWiSoS4SoModen>