/ f*age Tin THE McHENBY PLAINDEALER Thursday, July 1964 jL MCHENRY SHORES BEKNICE WILSON HOLD SHORES CLUB PICNIC AT BEACH SATURDAY ' In case it has slipped your mind, the picnic 'for members 0f the McHenry Shores Club will be held on July 11, beginning at 2 o'clock. Games will start at 2:30 and food will be served from 5 to 7 in the evening. It has been decided by the committee that to eliminate the cost of postage and envelopes, tickets will be distributed at the beach as you enter. Marty Kolena repqrts that about 75 percent of the members have returned their cards and will attend so if the weather man co-operates we should have a rip snprtin' time. In case he doesn't and sends rain the picnic will be on Sunday, July 12. Hope to see you all down at the beach. Day of Celebration Many happy birthday wishes this week go to Thomas Stark on July 11. Tommy will be 7 years old, Martin Koleno on the 12th, no record of Marty's age, how about it Marty? Donald and Paul Pogor on the 13th, Paul will be 5 years old, Randy Miller on the 14th, Randy will be 8 that day. and Kathryn JLamerand who will be 6 on the 15th of July. Anniversaries Robert and Dorothy Miller will be celebrating another anniversary on July 13, best wishes for many more. The Millers are now residents in the Shores and live on Sunrise View. Beach Duty On Sunday the twelfth, William Tennert is in charge of thev men on beach duty and John Smith, C. Simonsen. A. C. Simbourger and J. Rezincek are his able helpers. Since this is the day after our picnic I am sure there will be some others willing to give the boys a hand in clearing up what remains to be done. Ball Players Wanted The SSAC club would like to organize a team to play at the diamond every Tuesday at 7 o'clock, everybody welcome, no age limit and you don't have to belong to any club. If they can get a bunch together that is good enough they will challenge other areas around here, but in the meantime come on fflown, if you don't want to play Just cheer the boys on. 385-4380 Dale Jenner's neighbors helped them celebrate their anniversary by joining them at the beach for a cookout and a day of fun. The Lexows, Musielaks and Hastings went for a boat ride, indulged in water skiing and helped each other eat the goodies they brought down. The children of the four couples went wading and made sand castles, since most of them are still young, but everyone had a fine time and agreed to do it again before too long. Mr. and Mrs. John Stroberg drove up from Norwood Park last Sunday and visited with the Matt Zeimels. Daisy Smith attended a three day convention in Springfield and marched with the 5th Disstrict group with the Commander John Morehouse. Daisy presided over her last meeting as president of the Past Presidents Club and was presented with a pin from Marie Kosner of Illinois. On the 4th she will march in Warrenville and Wheaton, better put on some comfortable shoes for all that walking Daisy. Baseball Mitt Found Mrs. Mondry has turned a mitt in to me, she reports that her dog brought it home some weeks ago and it probably belongs to one of the boys around there. If you have lost a glove contact me and identify it. Congratulations to Kathy Barrows Congratulations to our Kathy Barrows of 1106 S. Hilltop for being second runnerup in the Fiesta Day queen contest held at the VFW on Monday. Kathy who is 17 will be a senior in high school in the fall, received a trophy and roses. Here and There Last Sunday three of the Returning Travellers Bill and Ing Corcoran spent a pleasant week in Birmingham, Mich., visiting with Ing's sister, Mrs. Moore, who left for a vacation in Europe on June 30. Her flight will include visits to Ireland, Switzerland^-^Austria, F r a n c e a n d N a p l e s , S h e is taking one of her granddaughters with her as a guest. The Corcorans also spent some time with their niece, Mrs. John Annas. One day Ing had lunch with some of the girls in the new gas company building in Detroit, the restaurant being called appropriately enough, 'the Top of the Flame.' Bob and Shirley Harper have just returned from a vacation in New Jersey and Connecticut visiting Bob's aunt and uncle in NJ for a few days and then going on to Niagara Falls before heading home. Sounds like a second honeymoon since the Harpers left the children with Shirley's mother and went to the Falls alone. How about that? Mr. and Mrs. Ray Mack bundled the six kids into the car and drove to Reno, Nevada, visiting friends there for a few days, then through the South Dakota Badlands, Rocky Mountains, Mt. Rushmore and Virginia City, Nevada area, mak ing 4,600 miles in the two weeks they were gone. Mrs.. Rack was most enthused about Virginia City, some of the Westerns are being filmed there now, although it is almost a ghost town. Clare Mueller had to go to New York on business so he surprised the family with an offer of 10 days at the fair. Irene and the children took a bus tour in New York, seeing such attractions as Harlem, The Statue of Liberty, Empire State Building and Millionaires Row. The high point of the Fair to the family was the Vatican building, where the statue 'The Pieta' was on display, also the Oriental buildings were most interesting. Happily the old car stood up well during the whole trip which always helps make a journey more enjoyable. The only complaint Irene could SEND COUPON BELOW FOR FREE COLOR BR0M LY m©ATBONIcAIN5D UPPER DELLS BOAT TRIP. •. 15 nsSsa ®2 gettable ccenery featuring fantastic rock foamatioEfc 8 scenic Porte dl Cal at Cold Water Canyxsa,, WiMaae Gralclbt snd Stead Rock. SDWEB DELLS BOAT TRIP . fewgh Rocky Idaad Bsggao. SrOitT DELLS... Step IbEglk fete Jh ca» fisali* exciting ftcEfefesnl, l^imTfagA, <^~uJBwland. S3&ND ROCK Hsmt, spectacular pagewat psesmtoH by over CO fedfarB in imposing --" ' ** (Psaefci, boat 8KMD FOB £MS COLOR BROCHURES. PScxo (back b( D BOAT TRIPS O STAND ROCK Q PORT M» •*, taa, Dtpt. tc, ess SCZ? taiiwanM® c?' make was that she came home with so^e feet, saying she never walked so much in her life. Patty and Robby will have many happy memories of the trip. INJURY SUIT A $50,000 personal injury suit has been filed in the office of the circuit clerk, in which Eugene G. Irwin of McHenry asks $25,000 damages on each of two counts for alleged personal injuries sustained in a collision between his car and a McHenry county sheriff's squad car in July of last year. Driver of the squad car was Frank Petzelt of Crystal Lake. The suit claims that the defendant's auto struck Irwin's vehicle from behind as both were driving east on Rt. 120. Philosophy has been defined as common sense in a tuxedo. The Drivers Seat • One of the common gripes of police traffic officers is that drivers consistently disregard traffic signs. But disregarding signs is only one facet of a many-faceted problem.' "Besides those who disregard signs, there are those who look at them but don't see them; those who look but don't think; and those who look but only react partially. • Have you ever looked idly at something and not realized until later that,you saw it? A headline in a newspaper, for example. When a friend mentions the subject of the newspaper story, you respond, "Oh, yes, I saw that." Psychologists call this delayed perception. So it is with a driver whose mind is temporarily absent. He may look directly at a large, red and white reflective stop sign, glowing in his headlights, yet drive past it without even taking his foot off the accelerator. Lying on a stretcher in an ambulance after the accident, he remembers the stop sign vividly. Then there are those who look at signs, all right, and notice them, but just don't think don't comprehend their meaning. and don't respond. Gilbert Carrel, chief of the Colorado State Patrol, expressed it this way: "Too many drivers read signs with their eyes only." No mind. Finally, we have those drivers who see and recognize signs and observe them--to a point. But, just how safe a driver is a man (or woman) who dutifully brakes his car to a halt at a stop . sign and then, feeling slightly self-righteous, accelerates across the intersection without looking in either direction? These are the people who, still wide-eyed with astonishment, report to traffic officers after their accidents: "I never ev^n saw him coming." But, in the interest of a just assessment of the problem of drivers who violate the letter or the spirit of traffic signs, let us realize one thing. Even drivers who look for signs and react to them with intelligence, when they see them, sometimes don't see them. The reason? The signs are hidden behind utility poles or shrubbery, or are too high, or smashed by vandals or weather-beaten. Currently in progress is a drive to standardize, by January, 1966, the shape, color, location and meaning of signs throughout the country. Motivating this drive is a realization that drivers often are con- BUY REFUGES Many farmers in south-eentral Illinois enjoy telling of large numbers of prairie chickens on or near their farms 20 to 30 years ago. They speak of chicken hunts of many years ago when there was an open season for hunting the birds. They like to describe the colorful courtship displays that occurred each spring. In time they get to the question. "Why fused by different types of signs which mean the same thing, or similar signs which mean different things, in different states and communities within states. The fault in traffic accidents in which signs were involved has not always been the drivers'. At fault sometimes have been officials who selected signs, chose locations for them, or failed to maintain them. did the prairie chickens disap-j pear?" In the fall of 1962 only] about 2,000 prairie chickens re mained in the state, accordin to a report from the Illinoi ^ Natural History Survey an<| the stage's Department of Con», servation. More recent re^|| search by Natural History Sur«;, vey biologists has revealed that,1;, prairie chickens in Illnois werflk,: reduced by approximately l9f.~ per cent between April, 19(53, and April, 1964. The Prairj&V Chicken Foundation of Illinog, working since 1959 to prevent extinction of the species, haijS; purchased two refuges ncafr Newton in Jasper County, These refuges, totalling S7. acres, provide nesting cover fotfr prairie chickens in that are$,':. but they represent only a ginning. 0 • • it READ THE CLASSIFIEDS!^ UlTS OF seats IN THE meat CUT FROI THE FINEST RATH WiSIEIM CORN-FED BEIT ROTDSSEME BEEF ROUND, SIRLOIN TIP, OR STA> Imagine hearty, corn-fed beef roosts with the EAT in the MEAT guaranteed ... or your money back. How can A4P do it? Care is the real answer. Care in selection to exacting "Super-Right" specifications. Care in handling . . . care in trimming . . . care every step of the way until the minute you buy. Yes, care is the real watchword at AIP, and because of it we can guarantee you complete satisfaction or your money back. 5 39 [SPARE RIBS ^49 W Pork Butt Roast '3T *49* Is Beef Gate Steak ™ *8* tonsil ifeak tendinis! lens •w la ft. Stuff with '• <U. 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Tons cat Star VI'/i-k. tiaa «*• -- Pu*»tnto A I4aj, Gf*p«frvit J BH frozm mm Peanut Butter llo. ffil or Strip* liquid for MihM r 3 - T Cafiforma 2 Frozen XUl Pk«- Gerlir'j Jmiir Fosi 4 59* Ban Beodorait *]" j lwI Tea il6 KostofipfeMdingSXil* feSlpaste "isi®8 Nooibiif Faci^ ^ ie Jell W Bo is Doli Fruit @s Peter Pan Lavishly lced# Delicately Spiced! * Arv.V J*NE PARKER • Spanisl Br Cake* CHERRY PIE 8-M.SOC CCfFS CAES ( KG. 5* 45( ) 45' Smooth or Crunch/ Him te Beterpit 79* I* YaiCaepBean ^ 2« liaso Bine Sstepit *^"79* fprlie IS IIS fide Mh|mI .43' 3« Tmi weiwjeii ^2 39e •t. 11* 0rieaas Beg rood SAVf! CASM A&3® BELAID STACifllPS TO®8 CONVIVES 0.-VCWC3 mv®k«CC3 C3«\UV«K ^ Nx2:sTt35 GBlflF AlinnilC b PMlfIC ?2Q E0MPABY. #5i AMEMCAS OiPUOASli f000 AU PRICIS KPnCTIVB THRU JULY 1U 1964 WE INVITE YOU TO AT UP AVE CASH AND PLAID STAMPS TOO! ICED TEA i vn / PRICE y FLAVOR SMCI tIM 3710 WEST ELM ST. McHENRY. ILL. STOBE HOURS: DAILY 9 TO '6 THOHS. & FBI 9 TO 9 SUNDAYS 9 TO 2