McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 22 Jul 1948, p. 9

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Acnes Jencks entertained a •tf W friends at her home Thurs- •7 evening in honor of her sister husband, Mr. , and Mrs. Leo of Tulsa, Okla. A pot-luck was served, after which airbunco was played. Prizes were •yarded to Mr. and Mrs. Chancey Harrison, Uch; Mrs. Thomas Kane and fwd Wilson; second; Mrs. Eva Eppel •ad Leo Newlin, low. Those present Jj make up the happy group were; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Holly of McHenry, Kn. aad Mrs. 'Fred Wilson of Rich- Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kane, Eva Eppel, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton and and Mrs. Vincent Tonyan | his 'parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl T»n», and daughter spei Mr. and Mrs. Wm. family at Woodstock the birthday of. Lonnie Smith. Frank Smith, with a group of boys are ^camping at Conference ~ ' Lake Geneva. Wurtsinger and aad celebra ted SaRixfn, nurlaon iMr. and Mrs. George ard, George and Nancy Ainger, <Luella <Stephenson, Carol Har- Mr. and Mrs. Leo Newlin and Jencks. The W. S. C. S. was entertained in g« home of Mrs. Louis Hawley, p--day. A pot-luck dinner was •Hved at noon. Hie W. S. C. S. will serve a cafesupper in Muzzy's hall Thursing, July 29. Community Night was observed at Hm Methodist church, Sunday evening. A reception for the new lastor, Rev. Charles Stevens, was ••Id afterwards. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Walkington •Btartained their card club at their Sunday with at Mundelien Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Andreas and family visited his mother at Marengo Sunday afternoon. - ,, Mr. and Mrs. George Miller 'and Point,! Nettie Wiedrich of Sharon, Wis., Mr. I »nd Mrs. Floyd Wiedrich and | Mrs. Lena Peet and daughter, Alice! daughter of Murphyboro, Tenn. were took Marion Peet to Elgin for a i visitors in the Fred Wiedrich, Jr., few days' visit. I home Sunday. | Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hinze of Mr. and Mrs. L6o Newlin of Tulsa, Crystal Lake were visitors in the! Okla., have been visiting her sister George -Shepard home Tuesday eve- ] Mrs. Agnes Jencks. : n'nIT- , j Mrs. Pagni, ST., has returned home Mrs. Albert Escher and children! fr°m a visit with relatives and of Chicago are visiting her mother,' friends in Chicago. Mrs. Tillie Vaillancourt. I Mrs. Harry Anderson and Mrs. George and Nancy Ainger of! L*® Karls of Richmond called on Hebron spent the past week with' their grandmother Mrs. Jennie Bacon their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. j Monday. George 8hepard. . ! FrH Wiedrich and son; Fred Jr., Mrs. Rose Jepson returned home *"? J*"1 S™*1} attended the races at Wednesday from a visit in the home B^'dereSunday. of her daughter, Mrs. Ansel Dewey, i- M.V RoUnd Jackson and and family at Armstrong, 111. They 4a,w lly and Mn and Mrs. E. E returned home with her lor a few ™h,tI,nS 8P«nt> Sunday afternoon at days' visit. Miss Virginia Jepson j Huntley Saturday evening. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. Rokert Howe and Glen Benoy, high, and Mrs. Walter Low and John Cristy, low. TIm Youth Fellowship Group met Ht the Methodist church ' Saturday •vidling. The Feezel children were ses. The usual business meets held after which games were and lunch was served. The pastor, Rev. Stevens met with of Lincoln, Neb., is "visiting "her' Mrs* Collins haa returned heme mother, Mrs. Jepson. I *rom a visit »n the home of her Mrs. Roy Neal is visiting her'8°n' R®**1" and family at Elmhurst. daughter and family in Iowa. L M?- and J- N. Muzzy and Mr. and Mrs. George Shepatd spent'-were visitor* «t BrookHeld Sunday in the Wm. Heine home in Saturday. Chicago. , j Mr. and Mrs. Jay Cristy and sen, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Peet and Mr. and I**' Jr » Yj?itod in ^e Harry Cristy Mrs. ©en Fout and sons spent Sun- hoI?® «t Waupaca, Sunday. day in the Ralph Clay home at Rock-i M,S8„T A"drey Merchant of Elgin toni. * I spent Wednesday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Reinse 0fM,:*nd Mrs. Ray Merchant. ~ Mr. and Mrs. George Bacon of Antioch and Mrs. D. C. Bacon of Crystal Lake called on Mrs. Jennie Bacon Monday. turned home Friday evening from a ,„^?VSS Elizabeth Webb and Ray trim to Minnesota Webb, of Antioch were callers in the Crystal Lake spent Saturday evening with Mrs. Lena Peet and daughters, Alice and Marion. i Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hawley re- Ihe Happy Clover 4-H girls held a mother and daughter tea at the home of Carpi Harrison Thursday •veaing. ' Albert Oonk is nursing a badly hruised left hand. While putting up hay Monday morning his hand caught ia the pulley, pulling him to the top ef the baM before the men worklag with him discovered his plight. Mrs. Jennie Bacon is a patient at the Woodstock hospital. She fell in her yard bruising her hip, but luckily ast Breaking it. had Wiedrich, Jt., left Monday on m haaiaess trip to Albert Lea, Minn. „ Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Smith, Ataghter, Dorothy, and son, Stem, trip to Minnesota. , _ . Mr. and Mrs. Paul Norman and John lfflackman home Monday, family of Evanston spent the week- ,,Mrs„L?u,s Abendroth and Mr. and end with her mother, Mrs. Rose Jep- ]?rs, Melvm Wagner and daughter, son. , [Sandra, of Elgin called on Mrs. Jen- Mrs. George Haberline of Chicago ni* Bacon Saturday. spent a few days recently with Mr. ^ Simday guests in the William and Mrs. George Shepard. Fagm hme were Mr. and Mrs. Stan- Miss Marion Peet returned to her 1?^ E11'8-, <£ Mt. Prospect, Peter work in Elgin Sunday after a few j anA Mrs. Adolph Marchi of weeks vacation at her home here. Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. P. Jacobsen of Mrs. Rose Jepson, Mrs. Paul Nor-! Arlington Hts., Mr. and Mrs. Anthony man and children, Mrs. Ansel Dewey ^epditti and Mr. and Mrs. James and children and Virginia Jepson! Deiznan of Genoa City, Wis., and spent Saturday in the Lee Harrison1 aPd Mr»- Joseph Nuttine of San home in 'Libertyville. Miss Alice Peet spent Hmrsday in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Low and family attended a ricnic of the Moose - Lodge at Woodstock Sunday. Mitchell Kane and •et\^Nancy, attended the Black >w at Mooseheart, Mr daughter, and White Saturday. Mr. anr Mrs. Weldon Andreas ana family enjoyed a trip to the Osarks in Missouri last week. Mr. and Mrs. Ifitchell Kane visited T ANNOUNCING THE SPUEHRS Newly Remodeled RUSS FIRESIDE TAVERN ~ Et. SI -- 4 miles north of McHenry . Ringwood, Illinois # ^ Fine Liquors -- Tasty Sandwiches . * --1 Moderate Prices "r- "Where old friends meet." Francisco, Calif. Dairy cows have M par Mat single birthe, beef eatlla Nl par cent lfoit at tin aia ... Triplet births oocur at the rata at 1 la 100 with dairy cows, or about oaa> third of 1 par cent Delaware, aqueduct Is tha la the world. The to Yoakera, Jaat * New Tort City. Daughters in farm fiamiPei get more schooling than the SODS, according to Texas A 4 M college. Figures on young people attending school last year show that girls make up a larger proportion of the enrollment from farms than boys. Juat the opposite is true of young people in towns and cities. The proportion of all rural young people attending school has increased considerably during the past Ave years but there are still many farm boys leaving school to help with 'arming operations. •WEfeD# by NICK MILLER'S McHENRY GARAGE NO-ITS A YTHCNIT <wm rm^m «rwva ^aM»wwv », IT IP ywiEcMKtMYIiMuaArIft i SoiSSnAr? 608 FRONT STREET ROUTE 31 PHONE 108-R One Permanent Cost15 , the Toni only i2 UHluATwut -lUu-lfc&lbiilf . " vtSawm la^ p . , ; ? . - . • Easy as rolling your hair up on carter* but the wave stays ia for months. • Yes, your Toni Home Permanent will last just as loo^ as r. $15 beauty-shop wave. • No frizzy stage. No brittle ends. Your Toni wave is toft, smooth aad natural Jvt. * !ng. • The twins pictured s'Mtire Gloria and Consuelo CCaaaor r New YxkCtty- Cnasae'ASpt right, 1 as the Toni. NOKMA fOAN ROBERTS me the other day. Rath<^ suprisingly, she got tMi Was Mala Resesree Th. j!!!!!?' !'• ®*er--so far th. bird, .r, conelection of the jcerned. The wrens on the Melvin republic, in September, 1891, i Sinnett farm on Oak Knoll road, resuR#" ® the overwhelming vie- :®arrington, this year spurned the e n e r a l H o u s t o n o v e r ~ - « - * • - -- t - L Stephen F. Austin. HOUSING SHORTAGE OVER J decide to raise their young in move Apparently, the housing shortage' conventional houses, and flew away. _ *hlrsly Tehaeee _ General Houston ovnr Hnry clothespin bag which' housed wren Jf, JJ5? of young tobacea Smith and Stenhen it Aiwtin families for the past two seasons. I This applies to seed in the The first congress of the reoublic jAfter critical inspection of the cloth S^Ut :°r *° J^0011* plants Just «t at Columbia in October 1M« ^ ^hich swings and sways up beguming to take * ith^p su for I hadn't seen herein years, and after the usual exchanges, "How are you? It's too bad we don't see one another more often, down to the point "Did you know your cousin Ethel was being married neat month?" "1 wa* aware of the fact," I replied. rather grimly. "I've already to three ol showers." "Well, since I'm a brides- I simply hava to have one. too. Pve decided on itext Tuesday, and I thought you might like to come." This mm • "arfwaHynai* ibou>*r, **hich, m awrylWy lalpi, mmi that ym em hriag aayrtfci k--* tht bookndt Ammt toml yeir for Christmuu f th* pillow tUp$ yea $lthoi mp drnrmg th* /wmtj toiu for tU98. Our household, unfortunately, never seems to yield any hidden treasures at the right moment, so I bought a rose bowl at the little gift shop up at the corner. I didn't get it .wrapped until the last minute, as usual, and as usual, I found that there wasn't a bit of fresh ribbon in the house. BUT I still had the pearls to wrap up. Much as I disliked the idea, I had to pass them along to the next bride in the family--although Ethel didn't seem like family to me. because until recent!? we hadn't seen her in ages. I didn't even know whether she remembered the pearls, but the shower would provide a good opportunity to give them to her. So I did them up the beit I could, not forgetting the little card that always j went with them. You know the old routine by now. When the scout pootad at the door to watch for the g»est of honor called "Here she earnest" the lights were turned out aattMiere was comparative silence broken only by e lew giggles from the 'teen-agers. Then, as Ethel stood la the doorway, thowise!" went (airly amazement. circle, with Ethel opening the gifts and loan reading the accompanying cards. Then they were passsd on to be duly admired and exclaimed over, and returned via the circle to Ethel. The donor of the sevaath gift, by tradition to be the next bride, turned out to be a stoutist matron who lived down the street and had three strapping half-grown boys. IT was getting late, aad we .were is hopefully sniffing the fragrance EE of the coffee brewing in the kitchen = when Ethel reached 'way down for ' 35 the last package. The white, paper j35 and red cord looked rather plain '25 after all the other pretty wrappings, := and I was sorry that I hadn't taken SEE time to dress it up a little. "This s must be something extra," Ethel 35 said, giving away the fact that all s presents had been accoun)£d for in! E5 her busy little mind. jss Sfce gave an embarrassed laugh when she saw the shabby box, anticipating another joke. , But when met at Columbia in October, lffiff • ?rst popularly elected administration of the new republic was inaugurated. At this first election the-constitution, which had been adopted by the convention of 1836 was ratified by the people. Austin was named secretary of state by Houston, but the man who had come to be known as the "Fattier of Texas ' was in failing health and died f December 17, MM, « .tort time after assuming duties of office. *h?w1 y°unil rapuMfe was rich ia one thing, land, and the efforts of Hourton and his succeaors ware directed toward the gg this resource in such a way that it would yield sufficient revenue to relieve the government of its pressing financial burdens. " _ root. When watat and down the clothesline at the farm *• present the plants or seeds live; home, the wren pairs seemed to when it is not present they die. >.-•>. • , R U P T U R E D ? . yea, but I don't aafftr anymore. I •omar a Non-Skul, Spot-Pad Trtud* Why don't you "cAaags" to tha Nan* SSid, Spot-Pad Truss? ~ who suffered, now enjoy comfort, with our Trass, for alT forms of reducible Coma in now. Expert fitting, thetic undarati PTadiag the Bass Good river spots for bass Include the tails of deep pools, deep hole* banks, around large rocks llow but fairly swift rapyour mowlmblm mt ratandang right citjr, where at m la.' and/in ids riffles. BOLGER'S DRUG STORE PHONE 40 McHENRY, lit. everyone yelled "Surprise!" on 1 the lights, aad she f|rt on a fi convincing display el amazemei We all aat around ft the usual CMo-Crott 23-ft. Exprom Ctwhm with pnA to 32 ttLpJh. Prompt Delivery on New Chrla-Craft! SAILORS, we can deliver this speedy new Chro-Craft 2i^L Fipfim Cruiser NOW1 Also many other new Chris-Craft models for prompt debvety. Come in today. Get a free copy of the new Chris-Craft catnloc in fcdl color and ocxler yqur new ChrisOaft now. See us. * , HEWES BOAT CO- Inc. MrtakwEMd Fox Lak«, QL -- Fo* Lake 2481 AMp.imphutox continue to BOLGERS DRUGSTORE PBONX 40 McHuntv, itft. **Why ef eearse, Ethel, Pll ewa ap," I said qaickly. she opened it, there was only the string of small, well-worn pearls. Not real ones, of course, but well matched and graded. As Joan read the card, a burst of incredulous laughter rose throughout the room. " 'A poorl for trorj 1*** *f hoppimm wh*m yom worn thttt om yomr woddimg 4*y: Why, it tuft wm tigmmt." Ethel's voice was shrQl over the buzz of comments in the room. "This must be s joke. As if I would wear those--those pearls with my wedding gown. I think the person who did this should own up. And I have a pretty good Idea," turning and looking pointedly at me. "who It is." I stood up. "Why of Qourse. Ethel, I'll own up," I ssid quickly. "And I did hope thst you might wear them at your wedding. But I can see that it was a mistake on my part, and Pm truly sorry for what I did. But there's one consolation," I couldn't help adding when I saw the look of triumph in her eye. "Toull not get a duplicate of these at another ^ahowe*. You see. they beloagid te grandmother." k» WNU Now is the time to get in on the ground floor and be part of Mc We have openings now for women and ^irls to sew ladies' apparel. Earn while you learn simplified sewing taught by the assembly line Women and girls will always be in demand in this indnstty. •'% Work 40 hours per week--no Saturday work. You cannot earn less than to* «• Hr». «•«° as to how much you can eam, • - * Pleasant surroundings APPLY IN P ERSON AT OUR OJTIGE POR AIT INTERVIEW RIVERSIDE MFG. CO. the Want - 4 GROWN t and will i "V

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