Page Sixteen THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER Wonder Lak* RETARDED PUPILS VISIT WONDER LAKE FIRE HOUSE •*ne Dueey The children in the classroom of the training center for retarded' children took their first go-see trip last week when they visited the Wonder Lake fire station. They had a bis time, climbing into the fire trucks and trying on the firemen's helmets for size. Equally attractive were the flashing lights on the trucks and their sirens. The class has been making the most of the beautiful au- \ tumn weather playing baseball out of doors with plastic bat and ball. subdivision to raise, the jaoney bjr various projects. When complete this plan will result in much better fire protection for all, and the community can lend a hand by supporting Highland Shores in its prpjects. Girl . Scout Fair The Girl Scouts are going to have a bake ^ale booth at their fair held Sunday, Oct. 23, from 2 to 4, in Mathews Hall. Funds raised fct? the fair will be used to build a library foi- the use of the girls when working on their hadees. ^Reference materials on nature and craft subjects is needed in sufficient tfopies so that more than one girl at a time can be working on the same badge. Final plans for the fair were made at the Kachina Neighborhood meeting last Wednesday nt the parish house of the Lutheran church in Richmond. In addition to cookies and cakes for the bake booth, the scouts will sell coffee, hot dogs and do-nuts. All the money will be used for the library for Kachina neighborhood. Mrs. Charles Paetow, neighborhood chairman, express^ her thanks to the business people and residents of the Lake for their support of the fund drive just completed. This money is used for leader training and camp maintenance. Flro Protection for Highland Shores _ To provide suitable housing for two pieces of fire equipment based in Highland Shores, the Property Owners association and the Women's auxiliary of the subdivision are sponsoring fund raising projects. You can help by attending the dance Saturday. Oct. 15, at the VFW in Woodstock. The Highland Shores rescue squad and the Wonder Lake fire district have been working in. close cooperation to establish a tanker, pumper and auxiliary equipment on the Highland Shores side of the lake. Bids for a new tanker are now being taken for next May or June delivery. The new truck will be kept on the east side of the Lake and the present tanker based in Highland Shores. The fire trucks and rent on the proposed building in Highland Shores will be paid by the fire protection district. The burden of huildintr the fire house in Highland Shores rests with the Qirl Scout News Jackie McMahon called the meeting to order when Girl Scout troop 494 met last week. Folowing the pledges to the flags, Vickie Gustavson read the minutes of the last meeting. Pam Sinclair called for dues. Jackie McMahon made a speech. Mrs. A. C. Topp talked about the Girl Scout fair to be held Oct. 23, between 2 and 4 p.m. at Mathews Hall. Mrs. Topp and Mrs. Fred Maxstadt handed out the Girl Scout badges. After the girls sang songs they had refreshments of cake, and served the mothers coffee. Miss McMahon adjourned the meeting ait 4:35 p.m. Barbara Hansen, reporter. Intermediate Girl Scout Troop 495 met Oct. 5 at Harrison school. We started our meeting with the flag ceremony Joanne Hink was color sergeant, Marilyn Coburn was flag bearer and Julianne Wasielewski and Janice Mendyk were color guards. We worked on a project for the Girl Scout fair We have' three new scouts in our troop: Kathy Sullivan. Melody Skalla and Donna Itiddell. We were delighted to have Mrs. Jack Falkenthal and children as visitors. Twenty-one scouts attended and Mrs. George Rink and Mrs. John Harris, leaders. Interclub With Crystal Lake --At Monday's meeting of the Township Kiwanians they learned of the project of the Crystal Lake Kiwanis club to present a travelogue series through November, December and January to benefit the Mc- Henry County Mental Health Center. The Township club bought a block of tickets and Anyone interested in further •details can contact a local Kiwanian. In other business they mads "plans for the annual football dinner, Dec. 1, at the McHenry high school which they cosponsor with the McHenry Kiwanis club. 6,000 bags of peanuts were sold by the two clubs with a $433. net profit and the township club thanks the youngsters of the community who assisted with the sale. The Wonder Worker 4-H club .will present a 10 minute program at next Monday's meeting. Christ The King Church News Janice Mary Paulin, daughter of Howard and Elizabeth Komes Paulin, was baptized Sept. 25 by the Rev. A. J. Neumann. Godparents are Miller Paters, Jr., and Marguerite Moriarity. Oct. 2, Gerald Walter Raske II, son of Gerald and Evelyn Hi At: HAIR SPRAY For women who cannot use ordinary hair spray t4e (yU<^cHal HYPO-ALLERGENIC COSMETICS Wonderfully Effective! Marcelle hypo-allergenic Hair Spray First hypo-allergenic hair spray . . . product of years of research . . . formulated for women with allergies and sensitive skin. Equally fin* for every woman who wants lovely looking hair. • Sets pin curls quickly, easily • Controls hair softly, beautifully NO IACQUCK ... NO IANOIIN . . . MO StiffNttt ... NO SriCKINtSt TRY IT TODAYI only $|50 WATIR-SOLUBU B0LGERSSDTOR, 103 S. Green Street Phone EV 5-4500 Wojciechowski Raske, was baptized by the Rev. James Vanderpool. The godparents are John Gustek and Rose Marie Bushell. On the same day Father Vanderpool baptized Jeffrey Glen Timothy Anderson, son of Robert and Judy Odeen Anderson. Godparents are Gerald Anderson and Marie Torelli. Rev. James A. Vanderpool, pastor of Christ the King church, will conduct inquiry classes every Monday night, at 8 p.m., beginning Oct. 24. All non-Catholics are welcome, both those interested in becoming Catholics and others simply interested in knowing more about (he Catholic faith. Catholics are welcome to come with their non-Catholic relatives or friends. Classes will meet in the classroom. , Nativity Lutheran Church News The first social event in the new church will be held next "Saturday, Oct. 15. It will be the four seasons festival sponsored by the "Women of the Church" to. which everyone is invited. Desserts of the four seasons will be featured in a gala setting of the four seasons of the year. Serving will begin at 7 p.m. Come and enjoy an evening of fellowship and fine desserts. "Greater Than the Greatest" will be the sermon title Sunday, Oct. 16. All are welcome to come worship in the new church in a setting of beauty and reverence. The Nativity Mates will have a bowling social Oct. 16 at Edgetown Lanes. All married couples desiring to attend are to meet at the church at 6:30 Sunday evening. toads and beaches are an average obtained from the 1959 and 1958 budgets of these subdivisions. These figures are maximum. It is expected that the amounts would be reduced appreciably. Using the highest cost figures: . Real estate tax -- Now -- $168.34 Incorporated -- $214. 44. Subdivision dues -- (average $17.20) -- Beaches -- Now $8.60 Incorporated -- $8.60. Roads -- Now -- $8.60 Incorporated -- $0. An alternate proposal is also submitted: the following estimate is based on the saJme figures, plus a garbage levy. Real estaite tax -- Now -- $188.34 Incorporated -- $214.- 44. Subdivision dues -- Beaches -- S8.60 Incorporated -- $8.60. Roads -- Now $8.60 Incorporated -- 0. Garbage collection -- Now $24.00 Incorporated 0. Total Now -- $229.54 Total Incorporated -- $229.04 SERVICE NEWS Marine Lance Cpl. Dennis May, son of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin J. May of 119 W. Washington street, McHenry, is serving with the Marine barracks at the Naval Air station, Miramar, Calif. Before enlisting in July, 3958, he graduated from McHenry high school and was employed by Mills trearh service station. Will Taxes Increase Uuder Incorporation? This is the question of interest to most Wonder Lakers in the proposed incorporation of the area. The proponents have released the following figures to be used as a yard stick in considering the matter. These figures are for an average home with a market value of $10,000, assessed at the maximum 60 per cent rate, or $6,000. The subdivision dues are an average of Lookout Point, Indian Ridge, Wonder Center and Deep Spring Woods No. 2. The costs of maintaining the V.F.W. NEWS }>y J. B. Smith Attention V.F.W. . members Our fiffeenth anniversary will be celebrated in grand style Saturday, Oct. 15, at a dance given by Post 4600 for our own fabulous fifth district of Illinois. There will be a clever hypnotist to entertain you with a genuine performance seldom seen in these parts. A dance band will also perform. Please note, some of the top department and district officers of the V.F.W. of Illinois will tour our section of the state in a caravan Saturday afternoon, Oct. 15, visiting many of the posts in this vicinity. They will be glad to meet and talk to you. Remember, your top Brass is cordial and the men are just veterans like yourselves. Our senior vice commanider of the fifth district, Ray Mann, paid us a surprise visit and s&t in on our last meeting Monday evening, Oct. 3. We always welcome Ray and his charming wife, Marie. Ray is department chairman of the V.F.W. National Home at Eaton Rapids, Mich. He gave a short but very informative talk about 'fthe home and its operation. What about some news boys? Don't forget my address is P.O. Box 7, McHenry, HI. meet coming going ? Does our~^^^fc town seem to be filled with quite a few carbon ^Ipcopies of you? If you're a decided individualist (or just hard to fit) America's most famous tailors H A R T I 6 H A P F N I R « M A R X •re at your service. Come in, choose the fabric you like from hundreds of samples and select the style you prefer. Our tailor takes your measurements then HS&M master craftsmen tailor your suit to perfection. The charge is slight for an HS&M suit that's one-of-a-kind, tailored for you alone. ^TORE for MEN 7TH INF. DlV., KOREA -- Army Pfc. Richard A. Kunz, son of Mr. :UK1 Mrs. Earl L. Kunz, Ringwood, recently participated with other personnel from the 7th division's 31st infantry in Operation Jolly Roger in Korea. The operation featured an amphibious landing on the eastern coast of Korea as part of the continuous training of the "Bayonet" division, one of the two U. S. combat divisions in Korea. Kunz, an automatic rifleman in the infantry's Company A, entered the Army in November, 1958, and was stationed, at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., before arriving in October, 1959. Thursday, - October 13# bf Itoketoddt;' is participating •ih extensive field exercises in the mountains near Hilo, Hawaii, Sept. 23 to Oct. 17, with lihe First Marine Brigade. The 3,000-man force from Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, was flown to the maneuver area to engage in small unit training operations including firing all of the unit's weapons. Marine Pvt. John F. Lavin, son of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Lavin of Lakeland Park, completed four weeks of individual combat training Sept. 19 at the Marine corps base, Camp Pendleton, ,Calif. Hie course included the latest infantry tacftics, first aid, demolitions, field fortifications and advanced schooling on weapons. A-B Vernon P. Block has completed his basic training at Lackland field, San Antonio, Tex. His new; address is 3366 School Sqd., Amarillo, Texas. * OPEN YOUTH HOME Opening of the state's first Youth Home, for boys 9 through 12 years of age, has been announced by Gov. William G. Stratton. The new home is in Lowden Memorial State Park, near Oregon in Ogle county. The Illinois Youth Commission, which supervises the home, has transferred 20 youngsters from the Illinois State Training School for boys at St. Charles to the new project. "Taking these boys out of St. Charles," the governor said, "is Another progressive step by the commission. At Lowden they will live in the environment of a foster home, away from contact with older boys. They will be given a special school program geared to their needs because all have been academically retarded due to environmental circumstan c e s in the homes they came from. Children of their age all have individual problems and each boy will receive special attention from teachers and counselors." EttTttSHt CBOBABD BY TWO WIS Table, Ladder Prove Helpful To Many Patients HAWAII -- Marine Lance Cpl. Dennis R. Kosup, Jr., son The average person can distinguish 150 or so different colqf Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Kosup ors--an expert, some 100,000. 1961 License Plate Service We Are Taking Applications Now! Fftst Delivery December 1st WORTS SINCLAIR ^ 120 8t 31 McHenry Ph. EV 5-9856 Committees of Woodstock's Women of the Moose have donated two vital pieces of equipment to the Easter Seal Therapy center in Woodstock. They are a Kanavel table and foot placement ladder. Many neuro-muscular disabilities involving fingers, hands and forearms are corrected with the aid of the Kanavel table, according to Mrs. Eleanor Jorgenson, physical therapist and center director. Paitients exercise these limbs to regain strength and H frMtuBfed. bones,. .broken tendons arid: strokes benefit from; the exercises afforded by the table. The second piece of equipment, tne foot placement ladder, is used to train victims of cerebral palsy to pick up' and place their feet when walking. Hie device aids ^e patient in gauging the length of his steps. - The public is urged to visit the center to see the various typ^s of equipment in operation. Located at 708 Washington street, it is open from 8:30 a.nv to 5 pjn. Monday through Friday. The center is run by the board of directors of the county chapter of the Illinois a!i>- cjaition for the Crippled, Inc. (Easter Seal society). Richard Taylor of Woodstock is president. Pigs and dogs sweat mainly through the nose--that's why , .^ . - - a dog's nose feels cold in warm dexterity in them. Victims of weather. IT'S LATER Than YojJhink! Use Our * Lay-Away Plan A Small Deposit Holds Your Complete Xmas Toy Order | Bike Repairing & Service Trade In Your Old Bike on a 1961 Ranger ' • Schramm's Toy Shop 301 W. Elm Stree| Phone EV 5-2535 117 S. Green St. Phone EV 5-0047 McHenry, 111 Open Daily 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. - Fridays 8 a.m. to 9 p!m. Sundays 9 a.m. 'til 12 Noon USE THE FREE GREEN STREET PARKING AREA WORK IN ER0 MFC. CO.' New Modern Plant Routes 14 & 31 Crystal Lake, Illinois Work clow to home, with no ccetly travel expenses and wasted hours oil the road. Ik •<r Paid Holidays Paid Vacations Free Hospital & Surf Seal Benefits Applications will be accepted on October 13th & 14th from 8:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. and on Saturday. October 15th. 8:00 A.M. to 12:00 Noon at the new plant for the following: /" OFFICE Switchboard operator and receptionist (must be able to type) Typists and clerical help FACTORY Power sewing machine operators* experienced and trainees. Cloth cutters, male and female* experienced and trainees Stock men Otder pickers Factory help of all kinds WE'LL TRAIN YOU