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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 24 Sep 1959, p. 11

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1 ftursd ay, September 24, 1959 THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER Page Eleven Eastwood Manor WOMEN'S CLUB PICKS SLATE OF CANDIDATES Lois Ryan EV. 5-5877 Qfi Monday, Sept. 14,' the W<men's club of Eastwood Manor met to get their organization program underway. A committee was chosen to set up a slate of candidates for the six offices open in the club. Helen Mathes is in charge of the committee with Delores Wool wine, Pat Borcovan, Edith) Long, Dolores Lawrence and Hannah Harner to help her. Bat Kellogg is temporary chBrman of the club. She is taking care of the dues and the register until a permanent treasurer is chosen. The welcoming committee for this month is Pat Borcovan and Lena Campbell. These gals really do a wonderful job. Landscaping Winners Announced Mr. and Mrs. Len Lawrence won first prize in the landscaping contest. Second prize went to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kellogg, and Mr. and Mrs. Len Hansen won third prize. The honorable mentions went to Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lessard, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stoll, Mr. and Mrs. Lew Kellogg, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Tucker, and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gruhn. Congratulations to all the winners. You all. deserved your prizes, because you worked very hard with great results. Boot Exchange A boot and skate exchange will be held at the barn on Saturday, Sept. 26, between 9 ajn. and 12 noon. Hannah Harner is in charge of the project and she will accept all the things at her house through Friday, Sept. 25. Block Rosary On Tuesday, Sept. 29, the Block Rosary will be held at the home of Tim and Lois Mc- Cormack at 147 Country Lane at 8:30 p.m. Welcome Wee One Cathy Ann Fenner made her first appearance on Aug. 31 in Chicago. She weighed in at 7 lbs. 11 % ozs. Richard and Lydia are quite proud of their new addition to the Fenner family tree; They spent six weeks in Chicago before the arrival of Cathy Ann visiting with relatives. Family Picnic Everyone was stuffed full of delicious food after the family picnic on Sunday, Sept. 13. The children had a good time playing the games set for them and the adults were covered with egAfrom the egg throwing contest but it was all great fun. We'll be looking for you next year. Faith Presbyterian Church News Sept. 27 is Christian Education Sunday at which time we will dedicate our church school teaching staff for 1959-60 curriculum year. Starting the first Sunday in October the church school classes, which are at 9:30 a.m. will be as follows: 3 year olds will be in Lewis Keli logg's basement at 113 Manor Lane, 4 and 5 year olds will be in the Manse home at 209 Eastwood Lane. All classes for first graders on up will be in the church on Lincoln Road. For any information about these Classes please call EV. 5-3454. Teachers from Eastwood Manor for the coming year will be Pat Kellogg, who will teach the 3 year olds, Pat Borcovan, who will teach the 4 year olds, Charlotte Urban, who will teach the first graders, and Dan Mathes, who will teach the junior high class. Also on Sunday, Sept. 27, the Sacrament of Baptism for infants will be administered. Happy Birthday Today tnereare a number of Eastwood Manorites celebrating their natal days. Betty Lahman, Tom Simpson, Raymond Salo and Robert Coughlin, who is two years old are the lucky ones. Tomorrow Kevin Coughlin will be one year old and Steve Davis will be four. On Sept. 26 Jeanne McHale, Lorraine Monahan and Alfred Ritter all will blow out their birth- j day candles. Rita Simpson | missed her husband's birthday ! by three days. She was born j on the twenty-seventh. Moyse ] Cary will add another year on ; the twenty-eighth. On the last j day of September Joey Phil- i lippe will turn seven years old, j Rita Thienes will be two years old, and Dennis Woolwine will turn four. Happy birthday to all. Happy Anniversary Our best wishes for a very happy anniversary are extneded to Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Priester, who will celebrate the anniversary of their wedding day on Sept. 29 and on the very next day Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Simpson will celebrate the anniversary of their wedding day. This and That The McHale family travelled all the way to Chicago and for a very good reason. They brought Jeanne's mom, Mrs. Helen Nelson, back with them for the Labor Day weekend. Dolores Lawrence's cousin and her family, Mr. and Mrs. Olson from Morton Grove, carrie for a visit and a birthday celebration for Dolores' sister, Mr. and Mrs. Locascio and children, from Chicago. The Garrelts family had a delightful week recently when Peg's sister, Miss Dolores Barnett (known as "Pete") from Newport News, Va., stayed at their home. They had a couple of good shopping sprees, some nights out, and lots of talking. This was Pete's first visit to Eastwood Manor. We hope that she will come back again soon. Doris Shaw had a meeting of her high school girl's club. The gals who came from all over are Barbara James from Atlanta, Ga., Ann Egan from Wheeling, Deane Geider from Chicago, Dora Flint from Linderhurst, Carol Lubke from Arlington Heights, and Georgians Claeson from Chicago. They enjoyed chatting and cake and coffee. On Saturday the Shaws entertained Mr. and Mrs. Warren Flint'for dinner and a delightful evening. Cathy Durkin celebrated her sixth birthday with Kathy Penick, Susan Andersen, Monica Haldeman, Melody Iverson, Kathy Alford, Janet Long and Margie Birmingham all joining in for cake and ice cream and lemonade. Sounds like fun.v Madeline Freckman and the children. left the homestead on Friday and returned on . Sunday. They were in Chicago staying in Madeline's sister's home. Mr. and Mrs. Valentl were happy to see Madeline and the children and Madeline had a chance to see her mother who waS in the hospital. She is doing fine now. Little David Messer really enjoyed his birthday cake and ice cream and candy and all j the trimmings for his third birthday party, because all his friends were there to help him. Pam and Darlena Campbell, Ricky, Dennie, and Terry Woohvine, Kathy and Frances Mathes, Dean Brodin, Sally and Kathy Hawkins, Donnie and Jean Rollins from McHenry joined in to make it a real party for David. He had another party on Sunday when all his relatives came for dinner and to spend the day with him. The Messer family -recently returned from a vacation visiting Dottie's relatives in Trenton, N. J. On the way home they stopped over in Hershey, Perm., to visit Dottie's brother, Robert Eversberg, who goes to school there. Elbreta Koerper was hostess for a demonstration which Yvonne: Davis gave. Grace Gruhn. Donna Rohrer, Kay Stephenson, Lois Zender, Jackie Ahernes. Jean Bucaro, Jeannette Koerper and Gladys Shuringa very much enjoyed the evening. A surprise birthday party was given for Jo Ann Koerper and a surprise going away party was given for Dick Anderson, who left for the service the following Monday. The combination get together was attended by Diane Koerper, Roland Koerper, Bonnie and Sandy Bucaro, Larry Swedo, Chuck Anderson, Sue Dhalquist, John and Pete Parisi, Linda Pedicone, Judy Hansen, Gordie Rheberg, Jim Tiffany, Sandy Radner, John Sexton and Kathy Hughes. A big sheet cake read "Good Luck to Dick and Happy Birthday to Jo Ann" and it was devourecT by all. FOR THAT OLD FASHIONED FLAVOR COME TO WILLI KOENEMANN • COUNTRY MADE SAUSAGES • DELICIOUS HICKORY SMOKED HAMS • LEAN HICKORY SMOKED BACON • 22 VARIETIES OF SAUSAGES • TRUE GERMAN STYLE FLAVORS Route 120 - Just East of ' Route 12 - Volo, IU. Phone EVergreen 5-6260 In Closing Next week there will be a report on the EMPOA election out come. Now that the landscaping contest is over for this year and the old officers are retiring1 for a rest the new officers can start with a clean slate. Good luck to all. ^ E^ye now. See you next week. Wear your usual face when you have your photograph taken, advises a stylist for a famous New York photographer. "Use a make-up that gives you a glow," she suggests "and forget the dull rouge and powder. If you use eye make-up for evening, put it on. Eyes can stand some accentuation." WATER ANAYSIS A modern method for shortening the time required for analysis of public water supplies has been initiated by the Illinois Department of Public Health. The new method accomplishes in less than 24 hours what formerly took from four to six days. According to available information, Illinois is the first state to officially adopt the membrane filter technique for standard water testing in routine laboratory work. Years of meticulous comparative testing in the state public health laboratories j preceded the adoption of this I quicker method. One obvious j value of a faster water analysis I is apparent in times of floods [when pollution of public water : supplies is often swift and can i be dangerous. The advantage Qf knowning at the outset i whether pollution is present | enables public health authori- | ties to remedy a situation to I head off water-borne epi- ! demies. Some folks condemn the worry habit one minute and then practice it the next. HAVE YOU TRIED THE MLLVIEW COIN LAUNDRY? 20c A WASHER LOAD 10c FOR 10 MINUTES OF DRYING Each Dryer Holds 4 Washerloads HILL VIEW SHOPPING CENTER RICHMOND, ILLINOIS Why we built two cars for 1960... as different as night and day! On October 2--for the first time in Chevrolet's 49-year history--you will be able to walk into your dealer's showroom and see two totally different kinds of cars. • One is the conventional 1960 Chevrolet, brand new in appearance and more beautifully refined and luxurious than you can imagine. • The other is unlike any car we or anybody else ever built--the revolutionary Corvair, with the engine in the rear where it belongs in a compact car. • We'd like to tell you why we built two such different cars, how we built them--and for whom we built them. Why two kinds of ears? Because America itself has been going through some big changes in the past few years. Our cities have been straining at their seams. Traffic is jam-packed. Parking space is at a premium. And our suburbs have spread like wildfire. People are living farther from their work, driving more miles on crowded streets. There is new leisure time--but more things to do. There's a new standard of living--and more need for two ' cars in the family garage. In short, America's automobile needs have become so complex that no one kind of car can satisfy them completely. That is why we at Chevrolet, keeping tab on these trends, have had a revolutionary compact car in the planning stages fcx* more than nine years undergoing revisions and refinements. Consequently, when we decided three years ago to prepare for production of such a car we were ready to build it the way it should be built. There was no need for a hasty "crash" program that would create only a sawed-off version of a conventional-sized car. That is why the two cars you will see in your dealer's showroom October 2 will be two entirely different kinds of cars--each one built the way it should be built, to best fill the needs it was meant to fill. One is the conventional '60 Chevrolet--brand new in beauty, with new space inside, new spirit under the hood, a new feeling of sumptuousness and luxury never before attained by any car in its field. There is great V8 power, linked with new thrift, plus Chevrolet's superb (and America's most popular) 6-cyUnder engine. It is a traditional car that comes even closer to perfection-- in silence, in room, in ease of control, in velvety ride--than any car we have ever made. The other is the Corvair, a compact car that is astonishingly different from anything ever built in this country. It has to be--because this is a six-passenger compact car, with a really remarkable performance ... a car designed specifically to American standards of comfort, to American traffic needs. The engine is in the rear. Among the basic advantages resulting from this engine location are better traction on a compact 108-inch wheelbase and a practically flat floor. But to be placed in the rear, the engine had to be ultra light and ultra short. So Corvair's engine is totally new-- mostly aluminum and air cooled; it weighs about 40 per cent less than conventional engines. It is a "flat" horizontally opposed six--so it is only three cylinders long . . . and that leaves a lot more room for passengers. Another weight saving: like modern airplanes, the Corvair has no frame; the body-shell supplies its great structural strength . . . it's a welded unit that is virtually squeak- and rattle-free. The ride is fantastic. But to get it we had to design independent suspension at every wheel; conventional springing would give a compact car a choppy ride. Right now we'll make one prediction: the Corvair will be the only American compact car with this type of suspension system --the only one that rides so comfortably, holds the road so firmly and handles so beautifully. Now there are two kinds of cars from Chevrolet --because it takes two kinds of cars to serve America's needs today. If you love luxurythe utmost in luxury--and if you want generous interior space, breath-taking performance, automatic drives and power assists--then the conventional '60 Chevrolet may be your choice. If easy parking, traffic agility and utmost economy are high on your list--then you should seriously consider the Corvair. But the best thing to do is to look these two new cars over at your Chevrolet dealer's . .. take them out for a drive. It may be that the only logical choice for your family between two cars like this is--both. They make a perfect pair. THE ENGINE TO MATCH THE CAR Tte fycsJ-jaajjitod engine provides most efficient weight distribution in a conventional- sized Chevrolet, splitting the load almost evenly between treat and rear wheels. Since a 4-door Chevy sedan weighs 3,550 lbs., this design puts adequate weight in the rear far sure-footed traction and road-grip while giving a solid, consistently balanced big-car tide. A rear-mounted engine gives the best weight distribution for a lighter, compact car like the 2,340-lb. CorvEir. This design puts soma 60% of the weight on the rear wheals for extra traction m cornering and driving on ice, mud or snow. Corvair, by avoiding noseheaviness of front-engine compact cars, also gives you better riding, handling and braking characteristics. li SPIN YOUR DIAL AND SPAN THE NATION! Now, Nationwide Direct Distance Dialing is here and at your service! Folks are finding it fast, fun and easy. Phoenix, Los Angeles, South Bend, Boston, Detroit, Dallas . . . these are just a few of the hundreds of cities you can dial direct! It's so simple to make an out-of-town call when all you have to do is dial it -- much as you make a local call. Forty-nine million telephones across the nation are that close to you. Why not dial one of them ^ tonight? The Information Section of your directory tells you exactly how. w See aU the new Chevroletis October 2 at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's CLARK CHEVROLET SALES 204 W. ELM ST. McHENRY. ILL. EVERGREEN 5-0277 TWO F11E SERVICE AIDS 1. If you get a wrortg number, just dial "O" and tell your Operator. She'll see that you're not charged for the call. 2. If you don't know the number of someone in a distant city, just dial "O" for "Operator." She'll connect you with Information in the distant city. Tell the information operator the name and (if possible) the address of the person you want. She'll give you the telephone number. No charge to you! HJLDMdlS Bill. TILE 111 North Court Street •PH©NE Phone: EVergreen 5-9981 . Remember! Many Illinois Communities can be reached without first dialing an "area code." Check the Information Section of your directory for a list of these points.

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