< I •** , 3« ^ v.- l¥#SSS t V:l#: THE MCHEKRT PLAOTDEJOIS Thursday. Muck 7, HD "Young Citherns In Action"* icrve National 4-H Week SO WITNESSES FROM AREA WILL SHARE CONVENTION "4-H: Young Citizens in Action" is the theme of National 4-H Club Week March 2-9. About 2,285,600 youths in 4l»wn and country will sharp the obsei'vance coast to coast. The hea<J; heart, hands and health of lx>.vs and girls -- 10 to 19 * Jtear.^ old -- belong to more than 94,700 local clubs in all 50 '••Mutate*end Puerto fUco. • '--r" Since 1914, when federal legislation was passed to help -JBnance and conduct 4-H club work, nearly 22,830,400 young "••people have participated in the "learn by doing" program -- How spread far beyond rural areas. Latest figures show 51 »nt of members coming from farm hohies, 29 percent from iral nonfarm homes, and 20 percent from urban homes. .. The aims of National 4-H Club Week in 1963 are to -- focus on this year's citizenship-in-action goals for club members, emphasize career exploration and the value of wise decisionmaking regarding vocational choices, influence more young people to join or form 4-H clubs, acquaint more parents with ^ £-H aims and methods, and expand support for year-round ""'activities; honor 4-H friends locally and nationally, and express appreciation to them for the important part they play. group of representative club members will spend S"""art of the week in Washington, D. C., giving the pnnual 4-H Pannvf tn lha Matlnn " Tho rnnnrtftro will viiilt lhu> Whitp House, and meet members of Congress, top government officials and other national leaders in business, radio, industry educational fields. . Widespread changes In agriculture technology in recent jrears are being faced squarely in 4-H. Leaders realize it is 1"jieither possible nor desirable for all farm youth to stay on * farms. So rural members and others receive help in becoming ^'ivell-rounded individuals who can earn and serve in many '"'fields. This informal out-of-school learning supplements the "^'training given in the home, school, church and elsewhere Pop- '"ttlar 4-H projects, meeting youth needs today in both rural and .•Suburban areas, include career exploration, automotive care and **"Safety, electrification, health and nutrition, personality imrf «4irovement, home beaut if ication, horsemanship, entomology -rn^noney management, leadership and citizenship development Number of projects available to 4-H'ers ranges from about «intwenty-five in some states to about 100 in others. The club program is part of the national educational system of cooperative extension work in which the U.S. Dept. of --qAgTh nltwe, the State land-grant colleges, and the counties fehafc. The Federal Extension Service gives national leadership awto the program. About 307,750 men and women serve as unpaid ••"volunteer local leaders, and are assisted by about 114,960 older JSclub boys and girls called junior leaders. • The 4-H plan hat* now been adapted so that 4-H clul>s " or similar groups exist in more than 70 counties. A program of adult Bible education will begin Friday at the Tebala Temple in Rockford is more than fifty persons from McHenry will join an xj>ected delegation of more than 1,300 Jehovah's Witnesses rom eighteen northern Illinois cities. The Bible conference will run through Sunday, March 10, according to Steven Soviak, .presiding minister ol Jehovah's Witnesses in McHenry. The theme of the semi-annual convention will be "Ri^ht Kind of Ministers." Mr. Soviak stated that emphasis will be placed on practical instruction for properly handling the house-to-house ministry in one's n community. "Jehovah's Witnesses," he explain, "perform a house-to-houne ministry OPPORTUNITY FOR based on the referenoe to Jlial , g£QRE FINANCES kind of apostolic activity ui Acts 20:20." The highlight of the assembly will be the public address, "Who Will Win the Struggle for World Supremacy?" This feature of the assembly has been prepared especially with the public in mind, explained Mr. Soviak, and will be delivered by A. A. Catanzaro, district minister for 200 congregations of Jehovah's Wit- TOLD DEMOCRATS McHenry county Democratic leaders heard a report emphasizing the opportunity to obtain more finances and more workers for candidates at last week's regular McHenry County Democratic Central committee meeting at the courthouse annex. Explaining the background of the event Mr. Soviak stated that Jehovah's Witnesses throughout the world are arranged into more than 1,500 circuits, each comprising fourteen to eighteen congregations. Semi-annual assemblies are held earth-wide and are presided over by a district minister, overseer of ten or more circuits. The Those reports \vt-~t contained in surveys conducted by party sponsored by the Watchtower Society, legal agency for the Witnesses' governing body. No meetings will be held at the Kingdom Hall, Highways 14 and 47, Woodstock, this weekend because of the Rockford convention. All sessions of the assembly will be free and assemblies - are open to persons of all faiths. leaders whiclf "sheared that only nine per cent of the citizens contribute money to any political party. Only 6 per cent work for any candidates. Chairman of the meeting was Thomas Hanahan, Central committee vice-chairman. Guests included, John Clark Kimball, Deerfield, the party's candidate for U. S. Congress in the new 12th district; last November, One area where more effective workers can be obtained was indicated in a report by Mrs. Barbara Ronan, district Congressional chairwoman. Reporting on women's activities in the November election, she summarized, "Women do a good job in politics, and their efforts don't cost much." The Democratic central committee had an active women's committee during the campaign and precinct workers expressed the hope that it will Moody Speaker Is Guest la Fox Eakt Dr. Donald G. Smith, member of the faculty of Moody Bible institute in Chicago, will be the speaker in a series of continue to show an interest for pood government. services at the Fox Lakie l|p- Ust church March 10 to 17. Dr. Smith will speak at the regular 11 a.m. and 7:30 pxn. services on both Sundays and week nights at 7:30 p.m. exq£ pt Saturday. Friday night will feature a Moody film plus the opening of the treasure chest. • 1 SHOP AT HOMlH J-^eter <W\. $us ten & -Son OXYGEN EQUIPPED AMBULANCE SERVICE Phone 385-0063 Approach Of Spring Brings „Fear For Future Oi Trees While the approach of spring is anticipated by almost ^CVervone, there is some apprehension this year for the beauty of the countryside with the insidious progress made toward destruction of our trees by insects and disease. A nature loving public had just become somewhat accustomed to the fact that America's, elms, were dwindling to the point of possible ex 'tlnctlon,-when it became evident that the mighty oak was also being destroye4. in great numbers. The experts tell us that quietly, methodically, some seven trillion board feet of lumber trees are chewed, bored, sucked iin"H hittpw to death each year* In other words, over three mil- --4ion residences worth of standing timber is destroyed annually. Most of us today recall the American chestnut mostly «through poems and stories of another day. Not many remember the once mighty giant, father of a thriving furniture inis all tidt extinct due to ravages of a blight. The tree loss, apart from its effect on the beauty of the countryside, is made all the more serious by our wood demand. At .present, every American will "use" 80 cubic feet of wood in telephone poles, paper products, furniture, and thousands of OtHef ways each year. The estimated increase by the turn of tine century has been set at 133 cubic feet a year per person. Fires, added to insect and disease pests, gives the situation ail * even more grim outlook, . . When the life of American forests was threatened by unrelenting cutting some years ago, the plea was "Woodsman, spare, that tree," and in many cases he did. Today, the problem 4s, how do you tell the same thing to a bark beetle, spruce Ptber smts that are devastating our forests.? ........ • - PRISON TOWN rrssephE. Ragen. director of • the Illinois Department of " Public Safety, is making a • 30-day inspection tour and "survey of prisons in the State -of Georgia. Ragen will visit ; State prisons and prison camns 1 in-.Georgia and will study (tljie possibilities of worthwhile prison industry programs. He will also visit prisons in Maine sometime in March upon the request of Gov. John H. Reed. Character is about the only thing of value one can take to the grave. uo ur WM tn9 in pictured your wedding photographs are a. record of an event which occurs once in a lifetime. They cannot be changed or done over. In later years; your wedding album will be the only {heaps by which you can vividly recall, for yourself and for others, the beauty and sentiment of your wedding. Have a complete candid album made; pictures taken at home, the church and reception. From 125 to 200 pwwfa to select from. Leatherette Albums, complete with 50-5x7 inch photographs *4250 ALSO ALBUMS IN NATIUA. 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