| Thursday, August 13* 1984 THE PhkBsimMm "I® ^4KSSSM SodlonTwo --PigtOnt; -p.er ionati&i -- Mrs. Eddy Adams, children, Debby and Ricky, and Mrs. Adam's mother, Mrs. Marion Johnston, of Hialeah, Fla., visited relatives here and in Wauconda the past week.,, Mrs. Robert Conway, son, Bob, and daughter, Judy, motored to Chicago, Sunday, where the latter accompanied by Sharon Karr and April Gus of Chicago boarded a train for New York City where they will spend the next two weeks visiting friends and attending the lair. Dr. and Mrs. Henry Freund and daughters, Mrs. Alida Wirtz and Mrs. Ernestine Christian of Chicago, attended the funeral of the former's brother- in-law, William Eaton, in Princeton, Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Martin and their guests, Mr. and Mrs. William Lasher of Lyons, N. Y., spent a week in the Fred Wallace home in Gordon, Wis., and on Thursday they were sightseeing in Chicago. The Lashers returned to their home Monday after a two weeks visit here. Mr. and Mrs. Louis N. Brefeld and family left Sunday for jChehallis, Wash. They plan to make their home in that vicinity where she will be near her relatives. Their home at 3610 W. Freund avenue will be occupied by the new owners, .the John Lescher family of Spring- Grove. Mr. and Mrs. William Jordan have returned from a vacation in Estes Park, Colo. Mr. and Mrs. William Althoff, Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Meyer, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Dehn and Mr. and Mrs. Michael Schaefer attended the 39th International Convention of the Catholic Order of Foresters held in Milwaukee last week where Mr. Althoff was re-elected a four year trustee of the high court. McHenry friends have received invitations to the wedding , of Miss Patricia Lynn Bouxsein, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Bouxsein, of Spring Valley, 111., to Mr. James Troglio, which will take place in Sacred Heart Catholic church, Granville, 111., at 2:30 p.m. Aug. 22 with a reception following at Labor Temple, Oglesby, 111., from seven to eleven. The bride to be is a former McHenry resident where she' was employed at the McHenry hospital for some time. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Marshall and daughters, Earla Marie, Deborah and Ruth Ann, enjoyed a vacation atDevil's Lake, Wis. last week. It was their first experience in Camp life. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schoewer attended a picnic held at Third Lake park, Waukegan, Saturday. . Mr. and Mrs. William Afthoff picked up their grandson, Jimmie Wiater, at St. Coletta's School in Jefferson, Wis., for a brief visit in their home before boarding a plane for California to spend ' a vacation with his parents, Dr. and Mrs. Wiater. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Koerner of Naperville were visitors in the Carl Weber and Nellie Bacon homes Wednesday evening. Mrs. Fred Schoewer and Mrs. Alpha Pedersen attended the McHenry County Past Oracle monthly meeting and picnic held at the Harvard City Park. Tuesday,' Aug. 4. Mrs. Teck of Marengo will be hostess for their next meeting on Sept. 1. Miss Helen Schneider of Chicago, a former McHenry resident, called on several old friend here Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Martin and daughter, Mary, vacationed at Eagle River, Wis. the past week. Twenty members and guests of Fox Riyer Valley Camp, R.N.A. were present at their annual outing and luncheon held at Crystal Lake on Aug. 3. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hood and children of Gibson City, 111., were guests in the Henry Tomlinson home Thursday. They were all classmates at the University of Illinois. H. M, Engdahl accompanied his wife and sons here from Livonia, Mich., for a brief visit with his parents, the Senior H. M. Engdahls, where his family remained for a week's visit. Mrs. Engdahl Jr.'s, father, Glenn Lupton, and her sister, Jeanne, of Peoria, motored here Saturday and she and her son, Bruce, accompained them home for a Peek's visit while Mark and Glenn stayed with their grandparents who will go to Peoria to pick them up next weekend. Nineteen members and guests of Riverview Camp Royal Neighbors of America enjoyed their annual luncheon held at a popular eating place near Crystal Lake recently. Mr. and Mrs. John L. May of Waukegan, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Rosing of Libertyville and Mrs. Eleanor Manning, of Oak Park were supper guests in the John R. Freund home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hogan of Elgin are spending a few weeks with her parents, Mr. ana Mrs. M. L. Schoenholtz. The Jerome Sharp family has moved from the Arnold Larson place on Center street to the Clarence Young place on Court street which they have purchased. The place they have vacated will be occupied by the Gene Brooke family, who is moving from Cooney Heights, Sept. 1. Atty. and Mrs. J. Albert Woll of Washington, D. C., and daughter, Mrs. Paul Stokes, and son of Rehobeth, Md., were weekend guests of McHenry relatives. Mrs. Woll remained for a longer visit. Mr. and Mrs. George Justen have moved, from Waukegan to their home on River Road. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sutton spent, the weekend at the Dells of Wisconsin. Mrs. John R. Freund and sister, Eleanor Manning of Oak Park, are vacationing in the home of their brother, Frank May, in Chetek, Wis., this week Mr. and Mrs. William Sutton and son and Herbert Doughton of Elmhurst visited McHenry relatives Saturday. Mesdames ClSfa, Stilling, Frances Schmitt, Amanda. Freund and Miss Laura Weber accorppanied by Mesdames Frank May7-Nora Miller, Mollie Miller and Mary Tinney of Spring Grove, have returned from an enjoyable week's vacation at Pine Point Resort, Elkhart Lake, Wis. They made many side trips while there and also visited interesting places enroute. Miss Darlette Freund has returned with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John McCarthy, HORNSBY'S BRACH'S COCONUT TOASTIES Fresh, flavorful candy treats! Reg. 29c 23 pkg. Biffdst Selections! Guaranteed Qualify! Low, Low Prices! GIRLS' DRESSES Newest fashions in exciting prints, plaids & solid colors for fall . . . easy-care cottons. All first quality! Select several at these low prices! SIZES 3-6x *J97 (0 $39 SIZES 7-14 *297«»$397 LADIES' SWEATERS Classic cardigans, pullovers, % sleeves. Banlon, wool, nylon. Luscious new colors. BOYS' LONG SLEEVE SPOiTT SHIRTS "Sharp" selection of expertly tailored sanforized cottons. Regular or button down collars. Newest colors & patterns. 96* t0 V9 Sizes 32 to 38 $ 39 7 59»7 Size 3-6x 79* $179 FALL Scores of exciting new styles, all sleeve lengths .* . . whites, prints, and patterns. Sizes 32-38. BOYS' HAPPY JACK Double Knee. Size 2-12. Black - Dark Green $1 Ladies' Mew Fall SKIRTS Fashion-right selection of petite or regular styles. Straight or pleated . . , dacrons and wools. Beautiful plaids or solid colors. Sizes 10 to 18 $2'7t»$497 FINE QUALITY 5fi© SHEETS FILLER PAPER Ruled, Punched 5 Holes QUALITY TENUIS SHOES FOB BACK TO SCHOOL Girls Sizes 12 V2 -8 V2 Ladies Sizes 5 to 9 Boys Sizes 3 to 6 Men's Sizes 7 to 12 *2.57 *2.87 BOYS' 100% COTTON CREW SOCKS Nylon reinformed heel & toe. Reg. 4 pair $1.00 Pair 88 GIRLS' WHITE COTTON MORPUL ANKLETS Action cuffs . . . stay put! Reg. 2 pair $1.00 Pair 76 TRIPLE SAVINGS! Coats & Clark MERCERIZED IRE 300 yd. spools. Black or white. Reg. 25c spool. 3 sp@iis 57° ha HORNSBY'S For Your Shopping Convenience ITse Our I,ay Away Plan Compare at $1.00 Always Plenty of Free Parking Hours: Open Dally 9 to 0--Sundays 9 to fi FAIR-GOEK3 FROM McHENRY SEE POST OFFICE OF FUTURE | Visitors to the New York orld's Fair from McHenry lave an unusual opportunity to sjee a post office of the future, postmaster LeRoy M. Smith $aid this week. A carefully-chosen group of eighty employees from New York area post offices man the facility which handles all the fair's mail and some from the Flushing, New York, area. The outside mail is used to keep the highly mechanized devices operating at "full tilt." The post office handles approximately 250,000 pieces of mail each day. Postcards to friends and relatives back home are a big item. About 30,000 are mailed from the fair each day. One third of these are addressed to persons overseas. Foreign visitors have no trouble understanding U. S. postal operations. The facility has staff members who speak twenty languages. Postmaster Smith notes that residents of McHenry who attend the fair and wish to try out their foreign language ability can either talk with the multilingual window clerks or listen to a tape recorded presentation in the post office lobby which features individual earphones for those who speak Japanese, French, German, ItaLt ian and Spanish. New equipffrom a six-week visit at the McCarthy home in St. Petersburg, Fla. Her grandparents will remain for a time in the home of their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Freund. moist on hand includes an experimental Pitney-Bowes Centrifeed which spins envelopes rapidly around a wheel-like mechanism and places them upright on their longest side. They then move into a machine which cancels stamps and postmarks envelopes at a rate of 500 letters a minute. , Letters are sorted to go all over the world by machines which position the mail so that the addresses are visible to an operator who sits in front of a keyboard similar to that on a typewriter. By pressing the correct buttons, 100 letters a minute are automatically directed to bins for 50 different destinations. A larger device drops letters and cards into 131 different bins at a rate of fifty-eight letters per minute for each ..of the twelve operators. The work area is surrounded by a ramp and gallery for visitors which is open from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., seven days a iweek. Tape recorded vignettes explain the action on the work floor and describe the operations of each machine. Outside the building, mail boxes from 21 countries serve as background for the red, white and blue box of the Unfted States. A prototype stainless steel box being tested as an eventual replacement for the standard box used for the past forty years is located at one of the fair's busiest intersections. Postmaster Smith suggests that McHenry area visitors to the fair express their comments on the new box by dropping a note addressed to the "Superintendent, World's Fair Post Office" through the modernistic mail slot. Postage is not necessary. McHENRY FIRM IS SUBJECT OF HOUSE DEBATE A McHenry area firm--Modine Corporation--was the subject of a recent debate in the United States House of Repres e n t a t i v e s . A d d r e s s i n g t h e other members of the House, Congressman Robert McClory called attention to the adverse effect of a Canadian Order, which subsidizes exports of automobile parts. The effect of the practice has been to curtail the Modine corporation sales of automobile radiators and other automotive parts. Congressman McClory told the House: "I have 170 workers and their families in my 12th district of Illinois who depend for their livelihood on the continued operation of the Modine corporation plant in McHenry. While these workers are not engaged in the production ok auto parts of the type which are presently entering the United States from Canada and, therefore, they are not directly affected by the operation of the Canadian subsidy program, nevertheless their futures are unquestionably interwoven with those of their brother workers in the three other Modine plants which are directly in the line of the Canadian exports we are discussing here today. These workers realize that what happens in one part of the Modine corporation will have repercussions on the McHenry plant. Their concern about the impact of the Canadian subsidization program relating to auto parts exports is therefore manifest. In addition, the parts which are produced at the Modine plant in McHenry--parts for automotive air conditioners--may Be, next on the list of products to> be subsidized by our Canadian^ neighbors." \ » Congressman McClory ex-' pressed the hope that the Ca-" nadian government or the Trea-; sury department would take ac- * tion soon to eliminate this piWN tice of granting subsidies. « Lake Region YMCA Sponsors Zoo Trip The many interesting animals! in the Brookfield Zoo will be* seen by the adventurous boys', and girls registered for the third adventure trip sponsored' by the Lake Region YMCA on, Wednesday, Aug. 19. 1 Registration fees include the chartered bus trip, supervision! and zoo admission costs. The - porpoise show and the children's zoo are extra attractions and need not be visited to make the day fun. However, if any | youngster wants to visit either or both time will be provided, but the admission fees for each must be borne by the individual child. DRIVER REVOCATIONS A total of 30,590 driver H® cense revocations and suspensions was entered during the' first half of this year, as com-. pared to 27.407 for the same period of 1963, Secretary of State William H. Chamberlain has Reported. Reasons for the increase may be found in the continually rising number of licensed drivers and vehicles, im-' proved reporting of traffic law violations convictions by courts' and vigorous enforcement of traffic laws by state and local' police agencies, Secretary, Chamberlain Elementary, Dear Watson ! To find the BEST Home Financing you follow the tracks of present home owners to McHenry Savings and Loan Association! Since 1956 we have provided Mortgages for hundreds of Mc Henry area f a m i l i e s . . . (in fact, many of your neigh bors!) To save time Watson, drive over and park in our spacious lot.! Savings in by SATURDAY August 15 Earn from the 1st. SAFETV SAVINSS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 3611 WEST ELM STREET McHENRY, ILLINOIS ® Phon« 385-308$