TJuwday, November 16, 1961 THE McHENRY PLA1NDEALER Page Nine Hingwood BUNCO CLUB IS ENTERTAINED IN THOMPSON HOME Ruby Shepard The Bunco club was ente.;,~ ^ lined in the home of Mrs. Lizzie Thompson at MeHenry Wednesday. A one o'clock dessert luncheon was served. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. Agnes Doherty, Mrs. Ray Page and Mrs. Viola Low. It's a Boy Rev. and Mrs. James Mc- Chesney, former pastor and now of Dixon, 111., are the parof a son born Nov. 11. They have a little daughter, Cynthia, to help welcome him. Home Circle The Home Circle met in the home of Mrs. Ruby Shepard ly. A one o'clock lunchserved by Mrs. Shep- Mrs. Gerry Kunz. Thp business meeting was and for the program progressive bunco was played. Thur eon usual . W.S.C.S. . The W.S.C.S. was held at the c h u r c h W e d n e s d a y e v e n i n g . Mrs. Bessie Cruickshank had the meditation, and Mrs. Iona Hood the program and lesson. "Jesus Christ, the Light of the World". Hostesses were Mrs. ^orothy Aissen and Mrs. Kate \weser. House wa r m i n g Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cristy held a family party in Iheir new home Sunday. They also celebrated the birthdays of Mrs. Kenneth Cristy and Mrs. Gordon Fossum. Those to attend were, John Cristy, Sr., and John, Jr., of Wonder Lake; l^nneth Cristy, Jr., of Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Cristy and family of Crystal Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Fossum and family and Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Cristy and family. Box Social Come on ladies f and girls, too) pack a box of •goodies for the box social. Place is the Ringwood school on Nov. 20 at Gentlemen (and boys' are especially invited, bring along your wallets to buy a delicious lunch. Bob Brennan will auction the boxes. Children's box lunch will not exceed fifty cents. Personals Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kunz were dinner guests at Waukegan Saturday. ^Mr. and Mrs. John Morris of Janesville called on Mrs. Nellie Hepburn Saturday. Mrs. Alan Ainger and daughter, Nancy, and son, David, of Hebron spent Saturday afternoon with her .mother, Mrs. Ruby Shepard. Mrs. Clayton Bruce, Mrs. Oscarson, Mrs. Leonard Ackerman and Mrs. Charles Acker- (0jan were Elgin visitors Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Phelps Saunders and daughter of Sycamore spent Sunday afternoon and evening in the Fred Wiedrich home. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kayser of Hartland spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kunz. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hawley of Crystal Lake spent Thuvs- HJw in the Louis Hawley home. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Hopper of Glenview spent the weekend in the B. T. Butler home. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Low and son of MrHcnry spent Sunday in the Beatty-Low home. In the afternoon they with Mrs. Viola Low and Mrs. Emily Bcatty were visitors in the Walter Wilcox home near Woodstock. ; Mr. and Mrs. Roger Kunz were Sunday dinner guests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kunz. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Farrel of Beloit called on Mrs. Nellie Hepburn Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Reinwall and sons of MeHenry spent Saturday in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hawley. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Woods of Genoa City spent Saturday evening in the Pete Sebastian home. Charlie Sowers is spending, the weekend/in the Leonard Spencer home at Urbana. Robert Greb and grandmother, Mrs. Nellie Hepburn, spent Sunday in the Robert Schuetze home at Wauwatosa. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Brennan spent last Sunday in the Dick Schmitt home at MeHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Sigurd Jacobson and family and Mr. and Mrs. Gene Garrison and family were Sunday supped guests in the Byron Sowers home. SP-4 Richard and Mrs. Kunz and son, Scott, of Waynsville. Mo., and Mr. and Mrs. Roger Kunz of Algonquin spent the weekend with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kunz. Irving Herbert of Chicago and Alva Herbert and son, Russel, of Elgin spent Saturday with their sister, Mrs. Emily Beatty. Mr. and Mrs. Dean Ehlert and family of Kenosha spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Ehlert. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bruce and daughters, Bonnie and CindyV spent Sunday in the Merrill Culvey home at Belvidere. Mrs. John Skidmore and Mrs. Fred Bowman spent Friday evening in the Russel Eh'- ert home at Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. William Cruickshank spent Sunday afternoon in the Francis Costello home at Hartland and celebrated Dianne's eiehth birthday. Mrs. Jim Wegener and son and Mrs. Bob Brennan spent Thursday in the Don Smart home at Waukegan. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kunz, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Kunz and Sp-4 Richard and Mrs. Kunz and Scott spent Saturday at Milwaukee, Wis., and were dinner guests at Waukegan afterwards. Mr. and Mrs. James Wegener and son and Fred Wiedrich were supper guests Wednesday of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Brennan and family. Mr. and Mrs. Granville Carlson of Chicago were visitors in the Clayton Bruce home Sunday. Mrs. Fred Bowman and daughter, Nancy, and Joe Fliege spent Sunday afternoon in the Floyd Yardley home at Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Thompson and son of Greenwood spent Sunday in the John Hogan home. CORN STORAGE Oct. 1 stocks ot old corn in all Illinois storage positions, amounting to 368 million bushels, were seven per cent larger than those of a year ago. and the largest of record for that date, according to the Illinois Cooperative Crop Re)>orting Service. Carry-over of old soybeans as of Oct. 1 amounted to only 864 thousand bushels. This is not a record lowbut it approaches the smallest stocks of the past decade. Both farm and off-farm stocks are roughly one-fourth as large as those reported a year earlier. IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE When You Say 'THANKS' To Your Hostess Say It With Flowers FROM * LOCKER'S CALL EV 5-2300 WE DELIVER "Arrow From The A&P Next To The New National Tea" UNDER 21 A column lor teen-agers By Dan Halligan DEAR DAN: I would like to have pen pals between the ages of 16 and 19. I'm 16 and I'll try to answer all letters. Judy Lahr, 125 Frorer Avenue, Lincoln, 111. DEAR DAN: Several girls like this one boy and we don't know what to do about him. Don't say we should give him up because none of us want to. On Sundays this boy will take one girl to Sunday School, another one home to dinner, another girl to supper and then he takes still another girl to evening services. Dan, what would you do? -- Poor Girl. DEAR POOR GIRL: The minister should talk to this boy and remind him he attends Sunday School and evening worship for the benefit of his soul and not to put on an exhibition of how popular he is. I think all four girls, yourself included, are stupid for allowing this boy to use you as he's doing. DEAR DAN: Christmas will be here soon and I have to earn some present money • as quickly as possible. I'm only 15 so jobs aren't available for me and I hate baby-sitting. What can I do to earn the money I need? -- Erlene. DEAR ERLENE: Baby-sitting may not be your favorite money-making pasttime but considering your age, it's about your only out. If you want to earn money for Christmas badly enough, you'll swallow your feelings and baby-sit. DEAR DAN: My boy friend is never satisfied with one or two goodnight kisses. He always wants to make-out for Iflor 15 minutes in front of my house and when I say I have to get right in, he gets mad. But if I sit out in the car, my folks get mad. I can't please the three of them and I think my parents should get preference, don't you? -- F. G. DEAR F. G.: I know they should. Your boy friend should realize that if your parents get mad enough, there'll be no more dating and not even one goodnight kiss. Besides that, it doesn't look very nice for a girl and boy to sit too long in a car outside of her house. DEAR DAN: My girl friend is a cheerleader for our school, as of this past football season, and I hate to admit it but I'm jealous. She's going to be going on a number of road basketball games this season and that means she'll be meeting boys from other schools and going to dances at their teen centers. 4 I tjhink when a boy and girl are going steady, that has to mean something and if I don't go dancing when she's away, she shouldn't go dancing either. Am I right or wrong and if I'm right, please print this letter. -- Anxious. DEAR ANXIOUS: You're wrong and the letter still gets printed. Going steady has its limitations about extra dating but I think when you try to prevent, your girl from attending an after-game dance, you're drawing the line too far. If you're that worried about your girl, then you shouldn't be going steady. DEAR DAN: I've done everything I can think of since September to get this one boy at school interested in me but nothing has happened. He just doesn't date and I can't break him down. Can you tell me what might help? -- June R. DEAR .JUNE: If the guy doesn't date, he doesn't date and you'll wind up with a sore brain and nothing more. One of these days he's going to start dating and then your efforts might pay off but not at the present time. DEAR DAN: This is not a serious problem but I would like your advice. I'm 14 and I'm going steady with Jim, who is 15. We've been going together for about a week and this morning Mom, Dad and myself had a discussion on which hand Jim's ring should be worn. They said I should either wear the ring on my right hand or on a chain around my neck but not on the third finger of my left hand where girls wear engagement rings and wedding bands. Which is right? -- Wondering Teen. DEAR TEEN: I don't know which hand is right (or left) and I don't particularly care. I'm sure your parents must feel "it's cute" for you to be going steady at 14 but I think they're light in the upper story. • When a girl starts going steady at 14, you can be sure she'll go steady ten or 12 more times before high school graduation and that borders on the absolute ridiculous. DEAR DAN: We've taken a poll in our freshmen class and out of nearly 150 boys and girls, here are the results: All of the kids say they read your column faithfully but only 87 said they agreed with you all the time. Thirty-six others said they thought you were usually more wrong than right and the rest of the kids said you were always wrong. Most of the disagreement came from your ideas about dating and going steady. The kids here think you're oldfashioned and have lost touch with present day conditions. I'm one of your faithful readers, Dan, But I just thought you should know where you stand here so you can change your ideas if you think they need changing -- Emmie. DEAR EMMIE: Take another poll in three or four years when these same ldds are juniors or seniors and then let me know the verdict. I think you'll be quite surprised to find out the great majority then believe as I do. Your group doesn't quite understand me, I'm afraid. I'm here to help teen-agers and other young people and regardless of how many of your friends disagree with me on some answers, I believe in the answers as being best for the kids. My life is dedicated to young people and has been for the past four years. While this column may not go. on forever, there are many other youth phases in which to work during the coming years and thafs exactly what I intend doing -- working for ldds, win, lose or draw. DEAR DAN: I'm 17 and my boy friend is 19. We've been going together for two years and we want to know if you think we're too young to become engaged at Christmas. We get along well together and our families like each other. Will you give us some fast advice on this? -- S. DEAR S.: Quit trying to flatter me. You know as well as I do that regardless of what I say, if you two want to get engaged at Christmas, you'll do it. Personally, I can't see a 17-year-old girl becoming engaged no matter how long she's been going with the boy. You began dating at 15 and how much dating you had done up to that- tender age Is something I don't know but it wasn't enough. NO INTEREST TAX OBJECTOR REFUND PAYMENTS The following are rulings held by William G. Clark, attorney general for the state of Illinois, during recent weeks, which should be of public interest. A tax objector is not entitled to any interest on whatever refund he may receive by order of the county court. All earnings accruing on the investment of protested taxes by statute shall be paid into the county general fund, Clark's opinion advised State's Attorney Richard R. Cross of MeHenry county. No money can be paid out of the county treasury except by order of the county board or when payment is specially authorized by law. As no statute directs payment of interest on tax refunds, the opinion said, tax objectors therefore are hot entitled to such interest. Resignation of a justice of the peace is effective and a vacancy exists even though the resignation has been rejected by the county board and the justice has turned over all of his books and records to the county clerk. In such case, Clark's opinion advised it is the duty of the county clerk to call an election to fill the vacancy. In so doing, the opinion said, the county clerk can use "reasonable discretion" as to the time the election is to be called. Established poli t i c a 1 parties, the opinion said, may hold a caucus to nominate candidates not more than 88 days nor less than 78 days before the election, while independent party petitions may be filed not less than 78 days nor morethan 85 days before the election. Males under the age of 17 cannot be committed to the Illinois Youth commission upon <L»vtNGf "I'm shooting for a secure future with plenty of savings at McHenry Savings and Loan Association at 3611 W. Elm Street where I know the money is safely insured by an agency of the Federal Government!" Will Be Paid To All Of Our DIVIDEND Christmas Club Savers Start YOUR New Christmas Savings Account Today J/2% on INVESTMENT \ SAVINGS ACCOUNTS $5Jffi0 becomm $A0if4.95 In 5 short years based on 4% on Regular Savings Accounts Mc He n r y Sa v i n g s A N D L O A N A S S O C I A T I O N , 3611 W. Elm St. MeHenry, 111. ^ iki Phone EV 5-3000 their conviction of misdemeanors other than those carrying the possibility of a penitentiary sentence. • .» Marriage of couples who due to their age must secure consent from their parents or guardians must be performed in the county in Illinois where the marriage license is issued. A registered voter who moves from one precinct to another in the same city is no longer eligible to vote in the precinct from which he has moved. In another opinion, Clark held that a county board can at any time appoint a county supervisor of assessments after a first appointment to such office has been defeated at a referendum. WATER DIVERSION Illinois is host to a meeting of the Great Lakes commission in Chicago, Gov. Otto Kerner has announced. For the first time, the commission as a whole is considering Gov. Kerner's proposal for the diversion of Canadian waters from the Hudson Bay area into the Great Lakes. The proposal has r e c e i v e d f a v o r a b l e c o m m e n t from representatives of the U.S. State department, Great L a k e s c o m m i s s i o n m e m b e r states and Canadian officials. States represented at the commission meeting are Pennsylvania, Wisconsin. New York, Michigan, Indiana, Minnesota and Illinois. Ohio, although not a c o m m i s s i o n m e m b e r h a s a representative. Technical )>ersonnel from the Canadian provinces of Ontario and Quebec are also in attendance. McHENRY CIVIL DEFENSE John J. Shay, Director Phone 385-2404 Auxiliary Fire Service The present compliment at Station One of the McHenry Township Fire Protection district, located at McHenry, is twenty-three. This includes the chief and two assistants of the district. For the normal fires occurring during the year, this is a sufficient number. However, during a time of great devastation, such as an enemy attack or a natural disaster, the present force would not suffice. The civil defense organization for the McHenry area needs men to volunteer for the auxiliary fire service. The training will take place with the firemen of Company One. The auxiliaries will augment the present force. They viall not be summoned for all fires/'The chief of the district, Edward Justen, and the captain, Henry Buch, are in the process of developing a training program. There will be classroom study and actual training on the operation of the trucks. All volunteers will be taught the safe and correct way to extinguish fires. After they are versed in the operation of all fire equipment, they will have actual experience at fires. A training ground will be selected for this. At the completion of the training they will then become part of the vast McHenry civil defense organization. The entire program must rely on volunteers. Quite a few men have a deep-seated desire to become firemen. This is your chance to fulfill that desire and also continue your present work. Is there a better hobby than learning how to save life and property? Think! Some day it could be your NEW ELECTION CALENDAR FOR 1962 ANNOUNCED Secretary of State Charles F. Carpentier has announced the publication of the primary and election calendar for 1962. A unique feature of the booklet this year is inclusion of requirements for nominating petitions for candidates for Congress at large. This was done because of the possibility the current special session of the General Assembly may not reach agreement on congressional reapportionment, which would result in all congressional candidates running at large. An additional note states that should agreement be reached on reapportionment, a supplement to the hooklet will be issued listing the nominating petition requirements for each of the new districts. . Other information in the booklet includes the dates of the primary and general election for national, state, county and school officials, the offices to be filled, dates for filing petitions, obtaining and submitting absentee ballots and various other dates affecting the elections of 1962. home or your loved ones that are in need of help,. If you would like to volunteer for this worthwhile program, send your name, address and phone number to: McHenry Civil Defense, McHenry, Illinois. Begin to serve yourself and your community NOW!!! Mr. Shay, the director, will be most happy to discuss this with any interested person. His number is at the top of this column. Please call him if there are any questions." Bill Brda Whenever a person does all he should, he doesn't have time to do what he shouldn't. CRUISE BE SMART! "CRUISE" AROUND McHENRY IN BEAUTIFUL KNIT CO-ORDINATES Lined Slims Exciting Colors: Butternut - Papaya - Turquoise Sizes 10-16 98 . . . B„lo uses *298 mm Riwwik TCetoi? DuiJrf //O HFGW PR£SSOR£ sr LOW r- WEST END OF OLD BRIDGE IN MCHENRY //- FOR PEOPLE WHO LEAD TWO LIVES! Men who are "all business" during the week and "all sportsman" on the weekends need a 'Jeep' Utility Wagon. They need a 4-wheel drive wagon that's as much at home in forests and rocky riverbeds as on that paved highway leading to town. A wagon that can haul better than a half ton of bulky loads or six husky sportsmen on a hunting or fishing trip. We have it. Test-drive the \\ \|\ 'Jeep' Utility Wagon today! Til IIP III MAVKRICK (Sunday) Evenings 5:30 P.M. * lUNt-IN FOLLOW THE SUN (Sun.) Evenings 6:80 P.M. McHENRY GA AGE 926 N. Front St. Phone EV 5-0403 McHenry. I1L P