McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 8 Sep 1949, p. 7

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f Thursday, fteptenfter 8, 35? ""f.#" ?": f^Wr^3^mSKN^ fmpwji •PflSPl :ii: ipiniip M.ipijp TttHeHKiatTPIdmfDEALKK > RINGWO0D »• I !••• Ill 11 H 1' t i| i| 1 l»»* (by Mrs. George Shepard) ' •,•••11 • 111 • • • • • • »l 11 Mlt clob Thursday veiling. Prit#i J Mrs. Stephens at Greenwood on " 8 * * were awarded to Mrs. Weldon An- Thursday, Sept. 16. dreas and George Shepard, high, j Mrs. P O. Ostby and Mr. and and Mrs. George Shepard and B., Mrs. Sam Bergstad of Los Angeles, T. Butler, low. j Calif, Bpent a few days the past Mrs. Agnes Jencks entertained | week with their sister, Mi's. Karl a few friends at a 7 o'clock din- | Betts, and family. ner at her home Thursday eve-] Miss Virginia Jepson of Hines birthday of 'Hospital spent a few days the The Rlngwood school opened on | Tuesday morning, with Mrs. T. I nin8» honoring the Butler teach ing the lower grades Mrs. Joe Holly. Those to make j Pa8t week with her mother, Mrs land Weldon Andreas the upper ! UP the happy group were Mr. and Rose Jepson. Mrs. Lester Carr entertained'Mrs- Joe Holly, Mr. and Mrs.. Mr- and Mrs. Fred Wledrlch, the Bunco club at her home Thurs- ' Robert Thompson, Miss Maud I ^r"' Mayday afternoon. Prizes were award- Granger, and Mrs. Spencer of Mc- w„ ' Thursday evening. ed to Mrs. Nick B. Freund and Henry, Mrs. Appley of Liberty- r" a Mrs. Dick Oldson and MM. Georgia Thomas. ville and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cristy j Kane. entertained their Five Hundred; The W. S. C. S. will meet with COMPLETE TREE SERVICE UtEE FEEDING v SPRAYING * Weed Control ; * Fly and MosqultO ANDERSON TREE SERVICE 519 Waukegan Road McHenry 724 COMFORT There's comfort in knowing that all will be taken care of in your hour of bereavement. Our efficient, experienced personnel will take charge of all •details for you and will arrange a quiet, dignified service in perfectNqj^ping with your wishes. Jacob Justen Sons Funeral Home PhOM 108-R or 1IS*W tflNGSlZe ALL PICTURES etnARsa> AT NO EXTRA CHAR6E! •* V PER ROIL A* ttmm tttt on cmrmcr l2EX.FlLM69*-t6£X.8li* WATTLES DRUG STORE 615 Main Street P. McHenry Phone 450 family attended the Elkhorn Fair on Saturday. Mrs. Bob Dawson of Waukesha, spent the past week with her mother, Mrs. Marie Wegner. Mr. and Mrs. Alan Ainger and family of Hebron spent Wednesday evening with her parents, Mr. and Mrft. George Shepard. Mrs. Agnes Jencks spent Friday in Chicago. Win. Pagni spent Wednesday afternoon and evening in Chicago. Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Jr., and Mrs. Jack . Lenard spent Wednesday in the Phelps Saunders home, in Sycamore. John Oonk, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. John Oonk, Jr., Edward Oonk of Holland, Mich., Spent the weekend in the Albert Oonk home. Mrs. C. L. Harrison and daughter, Carol, and Mrs Clayton HarrifeOti, spent Thursday at Waukegan. Mrs. Nellie Blackman "attended the £Slkhorn Fair Friday ' Mr. and Mrs. Tom Pettise and children of Barrington spent Saturday' with her mother, Miss Agnes Jencks. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Harrison spent Thursday morning in the Ardin Frisbie home at Greenwood. Mrs. Donald Brenner of Chicago spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clancy Harrison. Mr. and Mrs. Clarende Pearson and softs attended the Elkhorn Fair Saturday. Mr. and Mrs Anton Senkerik and family, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Stoffel of Chicago and Mr. and Mrs. John Bhlert and Mable spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. John Skldmore and family. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hinze of Crystal Lake, Marian Put of Elgin, and Mrs. Lena Peet and daughter* Alice, enjoyed a picnic at Fox River Park Sunday. Gust Pearson and Miss Lona Brever attended the Elkhorn Fair Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Heine of Chicago spent the weekend in the George Shepard home. On Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Shepard, they attended the Elkhorn Fair. Dr. Hepburn attended the Elkhorn Fair Friday. Mrs. Georgia Thomas and daughter, Hiley Jean, and Mrs. Reed of Woodstock were callers in the Beatty-Low home Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. John Hogan and family attended the Elkhorn Fair Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Low attended the Elkhorn Fair Sunday. MrB. Armour Birk and Mrs. Florence Schneider. o£ •Woodstock-spool Sunday in t&e Beatty-Low home. Mr and Mrs. Lenard Brown afcd lather, S W. Brown, returned home Saturday from a trip to the iBmokey Mountains. Mr and Mrs. Chancy Harrison and daughters, Carol and Mrs. Donald Brenner, and Mrs. Etta Wattles were Sunday guests of {Mr. and Mrs Henry Marlowe and family at Huntley. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Hitchens of Sycamore spent the weekend in the B. T Butler home. Mr and Mrs. Murl Wiedrich of Harvard Bpent Sunday with their randmother, Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Norman and family of Evanston spent the weekend at their summer home here. Mr. and Mrs Oscar Berg were visitors in the home of his brother, Cecil Berg, at Walworth, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. George Hoffman and family of Chicago spent Sunday in the home of his brother, Wm. Hoffman, . Mr. and Mrs. Harold Carr of : Kalamazoo, Mich, spent the weekend in the Charles Carr home. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Benoy of ^Woodstock spent Labor Day with jher parents, Mr.. and Mrs. B. T. Butler. Calvin Mbhn of East Liverp<j>ol, Ohio, spent the weekend in the Mrs. Rose Jepson home. Mary Stanek of Ridgefleid spent Saturday and Monday with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Sutler. « Mr. and Mrs. Harold Carr, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Carr and family and Charles Carr attended the Elkhorn Fair Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Anderson of Chicago visited their grandmother, j Mrs. Jennie Bacon, Sunday. ' Mr. and Mrs. Russel Soddy of• Kenosha visited Mrs. Nellie Black- j man Sunday. j Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lane of Chi- j cago were dinner guests in the Wm. Pagni home Monday. Mrs. Frank Kmet of Springfield is spending a couple of weeks with her daughter, Mrs. Mitchell Kane, and family Mr. and Mrs. George Bacon of Antioch visited his mother, Mrs. Jennie Bacon, Saturday. , Mr. and Mrs Charles Brennan, Mr., and Mrs. Bud Winters and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Oxtoby fittended the Elkhorn Fair Monday. Mrs. Harry Anderson and Mrs. Robert Anderson and daughter of Richmond visited Mrs. Jennie Bacon Monday morning. - • Mr. and Mrs. John Blackman Jr. and sons, Donald and Tommy, spent Sunday with their mother, Mrs. Nellie Blackman. Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Marchi and daughter, Vera Mae, of Chicago, spent Monday in the Wm. Pagni home. Mr. and Mr$. A1 Austin of Detroit, Mich., and Mr. and Mrs. Urban Bauer of Wonder Lake spent Sunday with Mrs. Ed Bauer and family. Mrs. Joe E. Miller and sons of Richmond were callers in the afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Neal and two daughters" and Francis Wice of Oak Lawn spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Neal and son, John. Mrs. Ed Bauer and family spent Tuesday evening in the Fred Nordmeyer home at Wauconda. Mr. And Mrs. Dick Oldson and family attended a Bible conference at Williams Bay Monday. , _s Students Good Listeners Children spend the majority of their time in school listening, yet ! few teachers consciously teach lis- j tening as a fundamental skill of < communication. It was found in a i recent study that children listen 1 57.5 per cent of the classroom ac- j tivity time, the majority of this time being devoted to listening to the teacher. Because teachers have not helped students to become better listeners, many children only h al f-listened, or day-dreamed through the activities. j EYE INJURED Fred Conley of Chemung was treated at the Harvard Community hospital last week for severe burns of the left eye and- face suffered in an accident with a whitewashing machine. Mr. Conley was whitewashing a barn on a farm near Sharon, when in changing the whitewash lime with 200 pounds pressure sprayed over his face. His. wife said that doctors hope to save the eye. First Invention 14 Now lost in obscurity, buj^ well known in his day, was Tom Blanchard, who at 14 conceived a handy apple parer that peeled the fruit twice as fast as could be done by hand. Four years later he developed a machine that turned out 500 tacks a minute. V' NARROW ESCAPE' Eight children, a school superintendent, and the driver got out of a stalled bus last week seconds before it was smashed to rubble by a speeding passenger train at Genoa. The driver, Maylon Davis, j 28, had stopped the school bus at the Milwaukee railroad crossing on Washington - street and started across the tracks when .the motor stalled. At the same 'time, the a warning of an approaching west-bound Hiawatha streamliner. Optic Topic While reading, eyes spend 10 per cent of the time in jumping across the type and 90 per cent hi pausing to absorb the words. Mockingbird is famous out the world for the wooderfid wir. it can imitate £m sounds o( o£p birds. V.'- Subscribe, tor The Plaindealer. Indians comprise about 11 cent of Arizona's population. - • Wen Their way J There have been three vice-presidents who have been elected presi- ' dent in their own right after having succeeded to the presidency-- | Theodore Roosevelt, Calvin Coolidge and Harry S. Trumani Read the Wani Ads. Coal sometimes ignites spontaneously in a shaft, the phenomenon being called a "gob fire." Special Fall Classes Tiny Tots to* Adults Taught the Finest In Dancing BALLET -- TAP -- ACROBATlGPtl ^ Modeling and Personality Singing Studio Shows and Outside Appearance Plus Television Shows and Auditions Arc! Available To Our Students. r DANCING -- GRACE --.POISE Are Cultural Benefits Marjorie Young Dance Studio ANTIOCH 405 M-l BOX 448 j CLASSES START -- THURSDAY, SEPT. 15 St. Patrick's Auditorium -- 1:00 to 5:00 / School Approved By NADAA National Association jof Dance and Affiliated Artists, Inc. / D«n't Wait fer Weather ti Catch tn Vipnpind / Itfe Coo/ Z&wuhf ?U€#a<% »he LENNOX "forr/iZ/o/re" %C0Al BURNING FURNACE Squeezes heat out of coal, • <xoal gas, and smoke, before --. it has a chance to go up the chimneyt Gas-tight, ' leakproof steel construction virtually frees your home of dirt and abot^ Direct-draft damper prevents smoking from firing door when open. Locomotive-type bar grates art masters of fuel economy! Readily adaptable aa a heat generator for gas or oil and air ^conditioning!: Ask to see this famous Leanon natt today! able in 6 different LENNOX""-EMKEU IF MMimraiaB / Althoffs Hardware Phone 284 West McHenry C a l l us t o d a y ! We are YOUR CERTIFIED L E N N C X [ r . REPUBLICAN PICNIC SUNDAY, SKPT. 11 - 1 P. M, CRYSTAL l.AKK BEACH PARK * ' Crystal Lake, Illinois Games for Young and Old Prizes'Awarded A. D A N C I N G Lunch and Refreshments Served Tree Prominent Speaker Everyone Invited •. < * , McHENRY COUNTY CENTRAL COMMITTEE •< - , \ • Greater power per gallon lewer cost per load ^ADVANCE-DESIGN X TRUCKS j 1 A CHEVROLET Yeu've found the answer II you're looking for § truck with a-master load of power plus recordsmashing economy. That's what you get in Chevrolet trucks with their Thrift-Master and Load-Master Valve-in4Jead engines. These world-famous truck engines develop more power per gallon of gas and deliver the load at lower cost than any other engines ^of their size now in use! Come in and see these Advance-Design trucks today! Featuring: VALVE-JN-HEAD ENGINES--Greater power per gotten, low* cost per load • DIAPHRAGM SPRING CLUTCH--Smooth einiogomew* • SYNCHRO-MESH TRANSMISSIONS--Quick, smooth sMfNi* • HYPO® REAR AXLES--5 times stronger than spiral bevel type e DOUBLf-ARTICU* LATED BRAKES--Complete driver control • WIDE-BASE WWERS--Increased Hie mileage • ADVANCE-DESIGN STYLING--With the cab that "treatfceo" e BALL-TYPE STEERING--Easier bamOfaig • UNnr-DBSWN iOOt--, -Precision built FKIFIRRIDIY MORI USERS THAN THEHIX! HID MASS COMItMM CLARK CHEVROLET SALES PHONE 277 McHENRY, ILLINOIS CORNER ILL. 31 AND 120 • 1 '

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