1 n Thursday, November 20, 1958 THE McHENRY ILAINDEALER locaoi loaoi OBITUARIES Mark T. Bark . ' Mark T. Burk, 62, of Pistakee Enthlands died in Downey Veterans hospital Nov. 12 following a lingering illness. He Was a native of New Lisbon, Wis. where he was bom Jan. 16, 1896. A retired trucker, he had been a resident of this area for the past three years. Survivors include the widow, Emily Cramer Burki a daughter Emily, at home; a brother, EWvard Burk, anda sister, Mrs. Jennie Moe, both of Wisconsin. The body rested at the Justen- Hamsher funeral home in Fox Lake, where services were held Saturday, followed by interment in Avon cemetery. 1>. H. Lasco A Worthmore estates main, L. Hoit Pasco, 75, died Thursday c^iing, Nov. 13, in an Elgin hospital, where he had been under observation for three days. Mr. Pasco was a retired clerk for the Chicago and Northwestern Railway. He was born April 13, 1883, In Minneapolis, Minn. Mr. Pasco is survived by his wife, who resided here, and a son of Chicago. Services were held Monday (tftrnoon at tthe George R. Martin of the Community Methodist church officiating. Masonic services were held at the Elm Lawn' cemetery in Elmhurst. The body arrived in McHenry Wednesday morning; accompanied by Miss Mabel Lumley. Arrangements were made at the Peter M. Justen funeral home. GIRL SCOUTS Arthur G. Liptrot Arthur G. Liptrot, 69, father of Hubert G. Liptrot of Mc- Henry, died of a heart attack Sjgjiday, Nov. 16, at his home in Clarendon Hills. The deceased was born in St. Helens, England, Oct. 22, 1889. He was an interior decorator by trade. Survivors include his wife, Elizabeth; three sons, Hubert G. of McHenry, Stanley, A. and Frank X., and a daughter, Ursula S. Schnetzer. Services were held Wednesd* at 10 o'clock from Notre Dame church, Clarendon Hills, with burial in St. Patrick's cemetery, McHenry. Stella Lumley Stella May Lumley, 82, formerly of the Ringwood community, died in Minneapolis, Minn., Sunday, Nov. 16. Graveside rites were held at 2 o'clock Wednesday in Ringwood ceme- ^^r. ^'rth "George Martin officiating. JETS I, -ialSBSMlhte Off DISPLAY " SEE THEM WOEM OVER 70 PUMPS IN S7@€X - EASY TERMS ftlfawy UgD & Ptap Cck WELLS DSXLLED {A iSITEH V« »!>*• mi ftando all -- & irtiMJrtjf tncittd In fte VHbga of Lake ^ ^') XL 114i1 , afnrdo mW IofcnHdetrw Lya kaen Rthree SM cCoJlcm The Adult Girl Scouts of Valley View Neighborhood met at the American Legion Home on Wednesday, Nov. 12. The colors were presented by Mrs. A, J. Wirtz and Mrs. Ray A. Moore. Color guards were Mrs. Alfred C. Leigh t and Mrs. Warren Kuhlman. After the pledge of allegiance and the Girl Scout promise were repeated. "Girl Scouts, Together" was sung. The regular monthly meeting followed. There was an election of officers conducted by Mrs. Norman Morrison of Lakemoor, chairman of the nominating committee. The following officers were unanimously elected: chairman, Mrs. Frank Gans; nominating committee, chairman, Mrs. Arnold Eckstein, McHenry, Mrs. Edward Oleyar, Holiday Hills, and Mrs. Robert Joyce, Johnsburg; delegates to Council for two years: Mrs. Maurice Granger, McHenry, Mrs. Robert VanZevern, Pistakee Highlands and Mrs. Arnold Eckstein, McHenry; delegates for one year: Mrs. Harold Breede, Holiday Hills, Mrs. Norman Morrison, Lakem o o r ; A l t e r n a t e s f o r t w o years: Mrs. John Urban and Mrs. Donald Dobecki, Pistakee Highlands and Mrs. Robert Myers, McHenry; alternates for one year: Mrs. Leroy Marshall, Johnsburg and Mrs. Nick Tabor, McHenry. The Dec. 10 meeting will be a luncheon at the American Legion served by the Le&ion auxiliary. The chairman of this event asked that all reservations be paid for by Dec. 5. For further details contact Mrs. Engh at 739. If it will please her at her age, why not tell her she's beautiful? But don't yawn when you say it. Take It Easy -- Take A Cab! When the weather's bad . . . When yon want to reach your destination in a hurry . . When you have luggage or heavy packages with you, it's time to call us for is cab'. Remember our number. Radio Dispatched M tHiNRY CJIB PHONE 723 EXPERT GIVES SERVING TIPS FOR TOM TURKEY So you're getting ready for Tom Turkey again. First decide how you want to serve him. Then you can decide how to cook him. If you want to carve the turkey at the table, you'll want to roast it without a cover. But if you plan to carve in the kitchen and serve a platter of sliced turkey, you may want to braise the bird with a cover. Geraldine Acker, University of Illinois foods specialist, says these tips come from U.S. Department of Agriculture research home economists. Regular oven roasting at 300- 350 degrees F. takes longer, especially for larger birds, and for best results you should baste the turkey frequently. You'll then have a goldenbrown bird, attractive to set on the table. To cut cooking time, you can oven-braise the turkey at high heat (about 450 degrees F.) Cover with foil or the roaster lid, and cook according to directions. Large turkeys (22 to 24 pounds) cook by this method in about half the time needed to cook them uncovered at low "heat. With 4 to 8 pound birds, you can save about one-fifth of the total cooking time. Braised turkeys won't have the fine appearance of, those roasted without a cover. Even if you take the cover off during the last half hour or so- to brown the turkey, the skin us- Page Mine ually splits and blisters and the color is less rich and even than that of a roasted bird. But if you plan to slice the turkey in the kitchen, this won't matter. GIRL SCOUTS SPONSOR NEW TELEVISION SERIES According to Mrs. M. E. Olson, publicity chairman and Mrs. Fred Hartmann, president of the Sybaquay Girl Scout troop meetings this week as "Adventuring in the hands arts," the first Girl Scout sponsored educational television servies, appears ori station WTTW at 4 to 4:30 p.m., Friday, Nov. 21. Approximately 7,500 Girl Scouts in this area will view the programs and adapt their TV lessons to future-hand craft work. The series is a cooperative venture of the Girl Scouts of the U.S.A., the National Broadcasting company and the Educational Television and Radio Center in Ann Arbor, Mich, Designed to intest the general viewing public as well as to stimulate Girl Scouts to new approaches in the arts and crafts field, and will highlight examples of art work being done by people in far distant lands. The peoples, arts and cultures to be visited in the series include Peruvian, Polynesian. Melanesian, Alaskan, African and Mexican. It is not a "how-to-do-it" series, nor is it aimed specifically at Girl Scouts, but is rather a dynamic explanation of man's' creative activity. MORE ENTRIES FROM COUNTY AT EXPOSITION Additional entries from McHenry county, for the fiftyninth annual International Live Stock Exposition and Horse Show, have been received by the management. Northern Pump Farms, managed by Brad Scott of Richmond, has entered sixteen head of purebred Hereford cattle in the breeding classes and six steers in the carcass events. John G. & Marianne McNitt of Huntley, will show • three head of purebred Angus, including a bull that won a, 1st place ribbon at the Wisconsin State Fair this year. Jimmy Etten and. Kenneth Eppers of Richmond, each have Hereford steers entered in the carcass classes. Jimmy will show three head and Kenneth will compete with six steers. Tom Jones, 13, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill L. Jones of Huntley and a 4-H club member, will compete in the junior classes with a purebred Angus steer that was champion of the light weight animals at, the McHenry county fair. Accidents . are the leading cause of death to persons 1-36 years of age, according to the National Safety Council. IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE HERE AND THERE IN BUSINESS CONVENTION DELEGATE For his outstanding performance as a local sales representative of the Gerlach-Barklow company, William A. Corcoran, McHenry Shores, has been chosen as a delegate to the organization's annual con-j vention, according to E. J. Shoots, general sales Manager of the Joliet calendar concern. ,C. R. "Chuck" Peterson of McHenry, a member of the Frank Klondike Rockford agency of Bankers Life company, Des Moines, Iowa, attended a senior sales training school at the home office Nov. 3 to 7. VISIT NASSAU Mr. and Mrs. George P. Freund and son, James, left O'Hare field, Chicago, Nov. 18, with 126 Case farm equipment dealers from Wisconsin and Illinois for a five-day international sales meeting at Nassau in the Bahamas. They will visit Nassau as part of a total of nearly 5,000 dealers and sales representatives who will fly to the moth-long series of meetings in chartered air - liners from points all over America. Safe More By Shopping At Home Snua ^JJarb I Eoai CU THANKSGIVING You'll Enjoy Thanksgiving Dinher With Us Prepared By CHEF ALFRED FAL8C SERVING NOON TO 9 P.M. 9iie 2671 Street Forward Control 'Jeep' FC-150 >UT IT TO THE TEST! Come in for a demonstration and discover --'Jeep' 4-wheel drive vehicles go more places • do more jobs * cost less to own! FIRST IN 4-WHEEL DRIVE V vjr ui iir, i ir»c Bi Y• i u• in i l•i1 v1 ei Mi , A« ~T>1 Ai« oMej u/nnt ivoW "_Ii ia inp /»rew> 'r MANUFACTURER OF 4-WHEEL DRIVE VEHICLES '• • • one of the crowing KAISER industries wiun t \ Morom Come Ectd for a d!em©Fas§pa£&on MeHSMRY (100 Front St. • -- Phone 40S McHenry,. 111. J O I N NOW McHENRY STATE BANK CL^ CU 1959 E L E 0 N E N I E N L The above photo shows Dtmald Wattles and Kathleen Freund mailing the McHenry State Bank's Christmas Club Checks totaling almost $150,000.00. Ray McGee, McHenry Postmaster, accepts the savings of 1000 club members for delivery in plenty of time for early Christmas shopping. i 1 8 I SAVE 50* per week $ 1.00 per week $ 2.00 per week $ 3.00 per week $ 5.00 per we©fe $ 10.00 per w@@k $ 10.00 per week • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • JOIN NOW Save Save^ Save Save Save Save Save RECEIWi • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • TTi McHENRY STATE BANK Established Since 1906 -- Resources of $15,000,000.00 MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM PHONE 104