Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 2 Oct 1952, p. 8

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' •«. '•e&ff.' ^ v y ^ f p \> ';^, :',l>V^^,-"'*'*::,'&r ; s • \> I , ( „ •« T *>. « « t W• ' * • IMSWsWB 4 *. ^,<* * *• *4 ^ \ # »t L 4 %. & lAKEMOOt & LILYMOOR (tip Kttty WoJMs) 4*«MM «w«it>,H(ttiiiifUNititiiwmifliitiHiuiiiniivtfl4iuiiiiuiu<uuimi Jtapor £'• A meeting of the village board #ni be held, Thursday, Oct. 3, .At 8 p.m. at McDermott's garage. Hie meeting is open to the public and is very interesting. I would li|e to urge as many as possible to attend these meetings andvBee how the people we voted into office are doing their J*>. ' __ • ; Mr. and Mrs. John Kraus' son, JPfc. Waynne Kraus, is going to Undergo an operation on his knee as a result of an injury he received while playing football m high school several years ago. He will have to be hospitalized tor some time, so perhaps his old friends and neighbors would like to send him some cards of Cheer. Bis address is: PFC. Waynne C. Kraus, 129638, U.S.- M.C. U. ' S. Naval H o s p i t a 1, JSJorona, Calif., Ward "D-4J" Lillian and Dan Vicondia and their daughter, Judy, were dinner guests last Sunday at the fcome of Mrs. Louise Nielson. The Vicondias have purchased the home next to the Dr. John Grey residence, and will become residents' of our village very •oon. dinner, at the Rustic after the ceremony. Add to the list of ifeW car owners, Mr. and Mrs. Wade, who are sporting around a swell new auto. Congratulations. • Laura and Jimmfe Suprittski have returned from a trip to visit relatives in the vicinity of Pulaski and Green Bay, Wis. They were especially impressed with the little roadside shrines that border the many country roads in the vicinity, lending a touch of the "Old Country." u^trmjny craWVtT where such shrines are common; TOCXirJlAI DwIIwV/Jj sights along the roads. They ai PARTICIPATING IN so managed to take a trip to Holy Crojss, Wis., 4he shrine there. '"J'**-' • Fran Wp&er were hostesses for the affair. Toinette will become £)ie bride of Mr. Richard Daniel Courtney on Oct. 4. Mr. and Mrs. HeM(y Hoppert have returned from their trip abroad. The Hoppers left early last June for a trip through Germany, visiting many points of interest. Although they would not have missed the trip for the World, they are .glad to be home now, and back In the good did U.S.A. Mr. and Mrs.»Walter Baranski of Chicago and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Hueckstaedt of Kenneyville were Sunday visitors at the Charles Hueckstaedt home. Alma and Bud Hueckstaedt are celebrating their twelfth wedding anniversary on 6ct 6. A son was born to the Mogdan family of Lakemoor last Friday, Sept. 26. The new arrival has been named Michael John and weighed 9 lbs. 1 oz. The TESTING PROGRAM M c H e n r y C o m m u n i t y h i g h school wiB be among 475 Illinois schools which wiU participate in the University ,of Illinois statewide testing program this fall. Results may be used by the schools in student guidance, de- David Fantus was one of the Hoy Scouts from our aria that went on the over-night hike last Saturday. It's good experience a*"* lots of fun for the fellows. A dinner party was held last Thursday evening by, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Heindon as a dual celebration. It was the "big day" for Charles Hueckstaedt and a celebration for Wayne Herndon who will be 13 on Sept. 30. The guests included Mr. and Mrs. Charles 'Hueckstaedt, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Tobey and Mr. and lbs. Ed Ooehl. Mrs. Jennie Mestlin, a friend •f Eunice Tobey's ' for many years, has been visiting at the Tobey residence for several Weeks. Mrs. Mestlin's hoihe Is in Chicago, and she enjoyed her *sit in the country very much. Mogdans, who arrived from velpping the school program Munich, Germany, last May, have two other children, a son, Karl, and a daughter, Ansa. Judy Cammarata, Carole Szarek and Barbara Gilmore deserve a pat on the back for their efforts in door to door collecting. for the "Kids Day" fund, sponsored by the Kiwanis club. The girls had to do plenty of walking to make the collections, and they did a swell job. discovering students in need of special help, and as a record of student attainment. Tests designed to indicate thinking ability and ability to express ideas will be administered to • ninety-two Juniors and seniors at the school and returned to the University for scoring. Testing will be completed in all schools by mid-November, and scores wHl be available before the Christmas^ holidays. More than 42,000 high school juniors and seniors were tested and scored last year in this pro- We noticed the Flyrins are doing some decorating on the exterior of their home this week, j gram of the Univeristy of Hli nois Bureau of Educational Research. The test battery includes The Lily Lake P.T.A. will hold , the California short-form test of It really Ipoks . nife.^ their regular monthly npeeting this Thursday, Oct. 2, at 8 p.m., at the school house. Mary Harvey, the kindergarten teacher, and Mrs. Velma Douglas, the first grade teacher in lily Lake, will be present and speak to the mothers on the problems of the children that are beginning school for the first time. A social evening will follow the meeting. and refreshments will be served. The public is iretiy cordially invited to attend. Little Karen Lyim Smith celebrated her third birthday last Wednesday with a nice party for Some of her little friends and their mothers. Her guests included, Dorothy Bonder' ahd Bonnie, Rose Flynn and Tommy, «*nd Evelyn MacDaniels. ssavi E Another' third birthday celebration was held Thursday in |lonor of Bonnie Bonder. Lunchfon was served to her little friends and their moiherg, which I n c l u d e d , I t u n i c e " t o b e y a n d t>avid, Hhdne Smith and Karen Glani tarrest, Jennie Mest- Linda Lee Wojtas and Patty ly. Bonnie's two sisters, Gayie fnd Janet, and her aunt and •nele, Mr. and Mrs. Kessler, oi Chicago, were also on hand to fcelp her celebrate her day. Little Glenn Forrest Smith, •<® of Mr. and Mrs. Rosweil fSmith, was christened in the Community Lutheran Methodist ^hurch in McHenry, last Sunday. The occasion was celebrated with * Juffa I^raus had a very successful demonstration party last Wednesday night. The gals really enjoy chatting over a cup of coffee and a piece of oake. A very lovely bridal shower was held last Wednesday evening in honor of Toinette Weller. The shower was held at Club Lilymoor and the .gifts were planned to carry out the "Trousseau" theme.- Jeri -Eindpsft* and mental maturity to measure the General level of academic aptitude, the Illinois test of reading comprehension in social science and physical science, and the Illinois test of writing skills. Bigelo Saniord's Karpet Kara Binding and Sargtng On Location Carpet Cleaning Bogs and Furniture Cleaned Tidy Rug Cleaners Phone Woodstock Id Free Pickup and Delivery MINE OUTPUT The shipping lpines of Illinois produced 2,582,060 tonS of coal during August, according to Director Walter Sadie of the Department of Mines and Minerals. Production for Jiily was 2,151, 788 tons. The August output came from 21 strip mines which turned out 660,941 tons and 85 shaft mines which hoisted 1,021,- 119 tons. • » * - * 1 . *• 'v *' * '< k '* . ...... is..' lass; m+t t mm H 11 * Heara .••••<• •••I1 I lil 114 Immunity Against Disease Are your children immunised? That is, are ' they promoted against the development of certain diseases such as whooping cough, smallpox, diphtheria or typhoid fever? Today, these conditions can be prevented, yet many parents deny this protection to their youngsters by neglecting to have them vaccinated, the educational committee of th? Illinois State Medical -Society observes in its HEALTH TALKWhat is immunization ? Actually, there are many types of immunization which are somewhat complex. Simply, immunization is a state whereby a person, through vaccination or injection, sets up within his own body a storehouse of substances to ward off the causative germs. These substances are called immune bodies which, if injected into a human being, provides what is called passive immunity. Since passive immunity is shortlived, perhaps only a few days or weeks, repeated injections are necessary? But if the causative germ of the specific disease is injected into the blood stream of the body in a modified and harmless form, after a series of carefully controlled injections, the person produces his own immune bodies with which to fight the invading germ. This is active tion for protection against typhoid is imperative. And even then, armed with this protection, every attention. must be g^jgn to adhering to the good r^foa of hygiene, such as drfetfclllg only boiled or bottled water ahd eating only cooked foods which are handled under sanitary conditions. Other diseases, for example, dysentery, are spread through contaminated food and water. It is a well known fact that a community with 80 per cent of its population immunized will not develop an epidemic, shice the remaining twenty per cent of susceptible inhabitants can- . not furnish sufficient living space for the germ. However, the disease can recur in such a community if it is brought in fi om the outside. Since immunization provides an insurance toward good healtli of the individual and the community, wise is the parent Who gives this foothold of good health to the child early. The time «for beginning there in lections varies with the condition. Fo« this reason the parent should consult with his physician. For example, babies are susceptible to whooping cough from birth,, and from 40 to 70 per cent of those under six months who contract the disease die. Thus basic immunization against whooping cough should be started early, certainly by three months of age. Don't postpone the protective immunization until your child immunity. goes to school. Protect him now. Active immunity takes a long He may be fortunate through his time to develop, but once it does growing years, only to contract the person is protected against future contact with the disease, usually for a number of years. But if a person who has not been actively immunized again*t one of the diseases comes in contact with the disease, the procedure of creating, passive immunity is the only resource. In most diseases, the body mechanism for producing immune bodies deteriorates in time. In influenza, for example, it is active for only a few weeks. For whooping cough and diphtheria it lasts one to three years. In other diseases, sueh ?s scarlet fever, the active immunity may continue a life time. But Jn diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough and typhoid fever, active immunity may be quickly re-established with periodic "booster shots." With" modern improvements fat sanitation, typhoid fever is not cemmon. However, if a person is going into an area with poor Sanitation, inoculation or injeca condition that may take his life as an adult. Help prevent disease by protecting yoiir flj^ild with immunization. BUY CONCRETE . ' / / i ' modern way. . iUm-red READY-MIXED V To ftgMtrj: w« can supply Beady-Mixed Concrete !** :*** w1 iob-from a back-yard lily pool to a com. jpleta fflfrlr home or building. Prompt, quick delivery ex> •cOrmb*** and when needed. * 4 Our Ready-Mixed Concrete is uniformly dense, «ndurina «ttd strong--as you expect ot good concrete. Th« mix * U ti*ht fet the use intended ... accurately proportioned at central, plant. Even a small job ttejs the r lsrgei volume production. To Prospective Owner* •/ New- and Butldinvsi O* course you want concrete. It s the modern way to build ~>fcresafe, permanent, moderate in first cost and requiring , almost no maintenance. Let us put you in touch with experienced, reliable contractor who will give « QUlf;Tir |»b at a satisfactory pne* < McHenry Sand & Gravel PHONE McHENRY 920 Mt FRONT STBEET - McHENjft. llS: IF YOU OWN A DOG YOU SHOULD READ THIS AD! IT TELLS YOU ABOUT A NE# "WONDER DRUG" POWDER • - That Destroys Fleas, Ticks, Lice! • Evens Kills Spoied-Fever Ticks! 9 Stops Fungus Itch In Minutes • 9 Kills Bacteria -- Repels Odors! • IT'S NO JOKE . . . when your dog scratches himself into a frenzy, he is in real misery and cannot help himself. Ordinary "flea powders" often cannot relieve his suffering because nine times out of ten it is not fleas that are causing his trouble, but a serious caae of fungitch (fungus itch). NOW -- YOU CAN HELP, simply, easily, economically, .Dr. A. C. Merrick of Brookfield, Illinois, nationally known for his research in to dog and cat diseases, has discovered a sensational new "wonder-drug" formula that stops fungus itch, kills fleas, ticks, even the dreaded Rocky Mountain spotted-fever TICK, and checks body odors. Newspapers and sports magazines ca^ll it the big&est advance in dog care in a generation, - THIS WONDER FORMULA is-in powder form for easy, clean handling. It combines mercaptobenzothlazole, a spore-killing, itch-relieving drug with benzene hexachloride, a powerful, longlasting insecticide that kills fleas and vermin on contact---and in addition, famous hexaohlorophene, to destroy the bacteria that cause body odors. It is non-alkaline, non-irritating. All this -- everything needed to stop Itch, kills fleas, ticks, lice, ar»d destroy odors -- yet it is harmless to dogs and humans alike. YOUR DOp IS_LIKE A MKMB£R OF YOUR FAMILY! When he suffers, you suffer aldo. He looks to you for food, for attention. But, most of all, you can now prevent him from becoming flea-laden, vermin-fested and rash-ridden. Start now--ke£p him , scratch-free all summer long. Get a sifter-fep can of Or. Merrtck"s (SCRATCH Powder 2nd dust it into his coat. It takes only 5 minutes and may save you time, trouble and money later on. One thing is certain -- your dog will stop scratching, lose, his jitters apd feel better or you can get your full purchase price back. Read What D09 Experts Say About M. HBtMCK'S SCRATCH POWER "In all sincerity, this i« <the * best dog powder I ever have used on any dog I have owned. Incidentally, my wife*! has used the powder on our two cats and with just as good results." T * - Russ Davies, Sport* Editor, (Chronicle-Telegram) Elyria, Ohio. "The Scratch Powder worked beautifully. One application and no more scratching."-- Frank Reichstein, Beloit (Wisconsin) Dally News. "Your Powder has afforded my dog real relief from fleas and ticks. RFLIFVIS DOG ITCH LIKE MAGIC DR. MtRRICK'S SCRATCH POWDER 98< Also A Complete Line of DOG COMBS, BRUSHES ite. BOLGER'S DRUG STORE Mt-S. Oreen St PHONE 40 MeUenry, nj. We give and redeem Gold Bond Stamps. FATAL ACCIDENTS A mounting trend of .fatal traffic accidents on Illinois highways is disclosed in a report by Charles P. Casey, director of the state Department of Public Works and Buildings, which shows 1.302 deaths during the first eight months of this year as against 1,210 deaths in the corresponding period last year. During August, 212 persons were killed in traffic accidents, an Increase of five per cent over the 202" deaths reported in August, 1951. Holiday Turkey The turkeys are already fattened, cooked and canned in special CARE food packages designed to bring Thanksgiving: and Christmas cheer from America to relatives and needy families in other countries. Fullmeated Beltsville Whites, each weighing at least 8 and % pounds and steam-roasted in their own juices so that they can be served hot or cold, the CARE turkeys this yeaf wiU travel abroad in two ways. n For $18.75 the annual CARE Holiday Package, containing both the bird and the dinner tri minings for as many as twelve persons, will be delivered In Austria, Belgium, Finland, France. West Oermany and Berlin, Great Britain, Greece, Italy. Netherlands and Norway. Just the canned turkey alone can be delivered for $12 into the Russian Zone of Germany, Yugoslavia, Japan, Okinawa and the Philippines as well as the above countries. To supplement the $12 turkey, or as a separate gift, there is also a special $6.05 Budget Food Package for all the countries listedexcept Japan, Okinawa and the Philippines. Each of the CARE turkeys is packed in two pounds of lard. With the Holiday Package is 1 lb. each of plum pudding, bacon, coffee, chocolate candy, hard candy; 29 oz. peaches; 15 oz. raisins; % lbs. butter and ox mustard. The Budget Feed supplement has S lbs. each of bacon, aufrar. rloe; 1 lb. esbh at coffee, butter, preserves, candy; 15 os. raiaina and It os. luncheon meat. Orders may be sent, starting immediately, to CARE's Chicago Office. 189 W. Madison street. Deadline far Thanksgiving is Nov. 1st.; for Christmas delivery Dec. 1. freedoah are Gnawer A soologist el the College ot A| rlsutture ef the University of CaL ifornia reported that the state'f native gopher is such an assiduoul gnawer that It has to grow a re^ placement ef almost .one Inch «n tooth per week. DAIRY RECEIPTS McHenry county dairy farmed ; received $374,803.54 for milk d*» livered to Bowman Dairy contfpany receiving stations during the month of August. ; Want everybody's iiiiTiiiHimiMBiiiitiitiiiiiwiiHMUiwiwiiiiiiwnwiiiiiniiiiiitiiiiiiiiwiiiiiiiiinHiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiniiiiiiiflHS A*--* • ' % BOLGER'S DRUG STORE « GREEN STREET PHONE 40 MCHENRY, lfJr We give and redeem Gold Bond Stamps. ! fflmwwHiwinHtHiniimiiinMnuminiiuwinuwiHiuiinniwiiiiwnnuunmiwminmwnHiminiiMHi^"SPEEDY" by McHENRY GARAGE e. WE'LL. Aw WE COUUJWT THIS !T4$seoYTO 1AKSA V c i we WOOtONT HAVE HAD m %AKEAWfOMWCS» IF ALL I 4 THOSE MODDPISTS WOULD 'A' VrtJPT THEIR 8RAKE5 ADOOS-fa>BV KICK MlUiltt WILLYS-OVERLAND SALES 604 FRONT STREET PHONE 403 THIS GAS RANGE! \\"// Prnn't ITOK fills moMjf-iavihg volwe • • • special fmaturm$ at a specfof prkef Ask any good cook and she'll toll you GAS cooking is good cooking I You know, too, that you can courit on a modern GAS range to give you #xactiy the heat you want... when you want it! You have dozens of heats to choose from, fpr simmering soup^pr pon-broiling. GAS range ovens bake and roast the way you like, too. Accurate temperature ^controls make sure you get cook-book results every time. And, of course, nothing beats the clean blue GAS flame for smokeless broiling. Cook the way you know... and fhe w«y you like,yfttflh o modem GAS range! ' V j * v. ^ SM tk» mtdtn ra«||i at tir MMF *t»rt tr Y»»R dialer's II PUBLIC COMPANY OF NORTH ERN ILLINOIS "IV"-- >

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