McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 5 Jan 1950, p. 9

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,J®ntt&ry5,l06#tf -- - * **r !*N .OM LAKE Oa Parade (By Yards k) / logs Folks: #The fog has lifted, \ "Cupid* Pred ThojHsen's off-the-hip Baroafe ha« been stored awav in moth bal's lor aaother year, our New- Year's resolutions have been broken and forsotten, Jake Wills' supply of asperin has been replenished, and after a comparatively quiet New Ye#r's celebration, AlcCulloin Lake has settled down to its normal pace, to, fac«, the second half of tjie twfei^tieth century witli determination to keep the clea.i, ^ftealtiiv a:id beautiful community kMb today. " jTh'e ueuse fog and unsafe drivliiiK conditions on New Year's Eve ITere responsible for keeping most , of tour residents at home where they ushered in the New Year at iQtbrmul parties with triends and .'neighbors. . Rov-AI and ><cl>onald, our two : bighteries, provided," plenty of enttFtsinnient for the record-'crowds' they both enjoyed Unit evening.;- .ij^At a regular monthly meeting to be held tomorrow evening. .Ian. .6 the Screwy Dozen will elect new rQffU'*M's for the coming year.. All liufhlbers are urged to be present. , Mr. and Mrs. M Wet'e are making plans . to change their residence to Louisville, Ky., where Mir. VVeMe will onter an ice creain inanufatturing business. The /Wetles leave behind niatvy reminders* of the years of service ^Lev have Kivin for the betterment of oyr community. Where the goi'JK was tough, one could al- ---w*,ys find old "75" giving his all to put the project over. With the Wetle's go our best wishes for a successful future. Mr. alid Mrs. Herbert Fantiis Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Frisa, Mr. 1 nrid Mrs. Ilelge Davidson and Mrs. Rofee Kreund rang oat the old and ushered ,in the new at a gay party at the home of Mr. and Mr.*. William ltochelle. To make the evening complete^ the Frisas, Fantuses and Kochelles Journeyed to McHenry wh®re they were Joined thirty other nice people at the Town Clob for a midnight supper Mid further celebration. An unidentified motorist played the role of a good Samaritan to a i-ouple of lost sheep at 4 a.m. Sunday, as they waited at Roy-Al corners with transfers in hand for a Halsted street car to take them to 47th street. We cau'4 help but wonder if and when they reaelitjd their destination. Mrs. Jeanette Quaa and MP; and Mrs. Peter O'Neill of Chicago en- Joyed a big weekend as guests of Mr. und Mrs. Helge Davidseai, where they celebrated Mrs. Davidsen's thhty-fitth birthday anniversary on the first d*y of the nt* year. * An important special meeting of the directors of the Pioperty Owners Association will be held Sunday, Jan. 8, at 3 p.m. at the hone of Al Wetle., All directors uie asked to be present. ' Adios ' ?• 'X; t €*ffee di*e':V V A good way to use some of the abundant apple crop is to add the fruit to your favorite coffee cake better. Peel, core and chop coarsely enough apples to make one cup. Add to any fatally-sized, coffee cake recipe. IT PUUtmtEALER * *' *r •'*» ( 5h~* •W" Vs.-',, V # . - ' pmm Mi. 11 at 8 p.m. in the church. All members are urged to be present. The banner for Sunday School attendance was again awarde<l to Miss Rudin's o.Iass. Several individual attendance awards were distributed. This U«t will be announced next «re(|(X A See you in church ^ri^ftulidiy School next Sunday. ,A-' - » Hard Pears If peats found on the markets are hard to the touch, ripen them at home by keeping them at room temperature -- 80-70 degrees--with some moisture to prevent shriveling. Stored vegetables Fall stored vegetables need to be examined once a month if necessary loll in si#rage if to be prevented. . " COMPLETE TREE SERVICE TREE FEEDING * Trees > BPRAYINO . » Weed Control ' '--* Fly and Mosquito" ANDERSON TREE SERVICE 519 Waukegan Road •• McHenry 724 "We are on our way." Often we hear this expression at the beginning of a trip or some campaign. "We're on Our way into a brand new year. What will it bring? Time ^loae will tell for our world, our nation, our community. our church, our homes, yes and for ourselves. But what we so often forget that time will tell us just what we make it tell. History isn't written by impersonal forces, but bv persons. It is written by us and the way it is written depends on the way we live day by day. > Ytars ago a very Viae man wrote, "Thy Word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my way." He was, referring to Scripture, his Hible. Today we still use the sa»ii<< term "the Word" when we refer to our Bible. How wise we would be throughout 1950 if we would Ititerit, to the neglected .reftdiug <nir JtLfetes. i '•peaking throogP the ftcrifitfft #s :*niglu be the "light opon our w«y." , The Bible is the storv of our toith. it records how (Tod re^e*lea hiniHelf to Israel and to us through Christ. In it we learn liot tfnly what God is but what man jHhQUld be. It records for us oui* Christian heritage. l»nt» more Hn: I portant it gives us the help that,. HEBRON «IRI, nira < w e n e e d t o l i v e a C h r i s t i a n l i f e . I n A l l l ' n " " , 1 , * it God sooaks to us. and by using A,r „ 1 U. ir" a fre8bmat1 at it We find ourselves coming into ^o' v !!'0^ ^ fhoo» died at a living fellowship with Him. Ia ww.v™f.T ,, p.l '*• M U'a"kpf" the Bible we find light for dark- « . X ^ " ness, strength for weakness, cour- ! the^e u stnce Tuesday of age for faint heartedness, and 1? f and had b^?n sick fo1, comfort for sorrows. jt!£ P9St The theme for the month of J«*£ ! | # nary in the "Advance for ChrliV L Speed j and His Chuveh" is "Our Faith In ! congestion on d«w«»wi the Bible"'. Throughout January * c^y streets has slowed automobile, the seifiK,)! themes will be center- public transit vehicles, ambulances od on this "Kveryma-a's Book". We and even fire engines to an average will attempt lo see what the Bible speed of only three miles an hour s, what it may mean to us, and according to leading traffic engi-> now we can'host usp it throughout this New Year. Keep your Bible handy and use it as we study tOr gether at 10:4i» Sunday1 mornings. Mrs. Duker. chairman of Circle am.ounces that the .lanuarv meeting of liei circle will be held at lier homo on Green St- Wednesdav after.iooii. Jan. .11. kilU tNTERESTlNC NEARBY leaders fa colleges throughout ifee icotntry. RETI RES FOR TfttAL Richard Jackson, alias Donald Harris. IS, one of two .youths who escaped ffom the Illinois State Training School for Boys near St. Charles after assaulting the night engineer with a heavy bar on $ept. 27. 1948. is under, arrest at -Martinez, Calif., and will be re- HAH, FOR A lonely billy goat spent a re- •Cent night in the Woodstock city v oiii ( aiiu wu[ re_ Jail. The animal was apprehended turned to Kane < o"untv 7or trial Ivy Officers George Meyers and an indictment charging assault George Beu after, a hurry call was with a deadlv weapon Paul Lvnn turned in from the Frank Hoffman alias Lind. the other youth who" store. At 10:29 radio operator, was arrested shortlv after the at- Henry l<arger at the sheriff's otj tack, now is serving a ternuin the cy call • Sweet potatoes itftk* Oiling that some- p«09l pumpkin. This is a goo# left-over sweet potatoes. for ttie pumpkin in any* recipe. The addition of a littlf ter improves it and the tatoes works up better it is mixed with it n««r». §• / .. •: . People in the United States save 120 billion steps each year by riding on moving starways. In a year's Ume, five billion passengers are carried by the nation's 2;000 stair- The ()ftniiil Hoard . will; '.meet ( w|iys. fice received the emergency and radioed the Woodstock police, i car who made the Madison" street i address on vthe double. There they j found the goat cavorting around on the porch at the Harold Ewati home J|hd not too tactfully peering at the windows. | , • ;/' IN 44WHO'S WHO * - , , Rohei t - Roesel,. ...Ingleside, is / j among eight students at Peril ] j State Teachers Col lege. Neb., -! nained. to the collegiate "Who's Who", it was announced. The eight students ' approved last niontH by a ,'camptis faculty committee for - leadership. characteristics and .'contribution to college among campus . state penitentiary. _ ; " Steel Rail Due to lmt>rovemenU In the design, metallurgy and methods used in manufacture, steel rail now being installed is only one-fourth as liable to failure in service as . rail which was installed in 1922. Adjataat ' Ap. adjutant is a high ranking officer in the U.S. army, but in India it is a flying garbage collector. It is against the iaw in India to kill the long-billed birds known as adjutants because they eat the .bodies ,ot dead, animals.. The first port of Franc*, the ancient Norman tmf/KmX Rouen, located on the Seine about 30 miles inland from the i Later, harbor installations built at Marseille and Le Ravtti while the port development at Cherbourg is comparatively recent.' Mt. Patemar Tsisssf . vt Glass for the 200-inch mirror ttt the Mt. Palomar telescope waS" made from quartz mined i6 Kfrtfe Carolina. v.--' K': ' Meat BesMa Meat flavor is in the meat **4 removing the bones has no effect upon it. Their removal make% many cuts easier to carve and coo •serves • frecefT storage spa«% ', x " xL.?*c- •/» ri>-: r -v K '<%• -rli m-: i :':xt A . QuM&nk /ioasutUuf Ketuteli Located 3 Miles South of Pox Lake* -^2 Miles North of Volo on Route 12 . . * Individual runs for dogs. Box 617 INGLESIDE, ILL. Plum* MccMeHAy 632-M-2 L & H TELEVISION EMERSON and MOTOROLA SALES -- SERVICE Phone 403 or 653-R-2 604 Front 3t West McHenry, Illinois When the anti-trugt lawyers in Washington filed their suit to put the A&P out of business, they immediately handed out for all the newspapers of the United States a story giving in detail their "allegations" against this company. --4" L.. '• "s';,; • •• • v ; When we published adv<n*tisements giving our side of the case, they protested, even though they had made, and have continued to make, in newspapers, in speeches and over the radio these charges that would seriously damage our business, if they were believed by the public. .Every week millions of American housewives patronize A&P stores. Manyofthem would not want to deal with the kind of people that the anti-trust lawyers represent us to be. ' We think we have a right to protect this 90-year old business which has made it possible for millions of American families t^ get more and better food for their money, which is providing high-wage employment for I 10,000 Americans and which is helping millions of farmers to improve the methods of distributing their produce. ' * " . ' v No answer by us would be necessary if the anti-trust lawyers were always right. But they, like all other human beings, can be wrong. • • . • * * In this case we know they are wrong. They have been wton& before. - < i1 lr. case after rase they piacUt chargfi agains dation. We will prove that statement right up to the iMr ^ * FRIDAY NITE SPECIALS THIS SALE GOOD FOR FRIDAY NIGHT ONLY EARRINGS ..... . Wore $1.50 NOW $1.00 WATCH BANDS 25 Per Cent Discount Record Carrying Cases 25 Per-Cent Discount Special 1 Cent Sale oh All Shellac Records Buy One Record and Receive The Other For, X Cfftf Stej/jcuU flewelsuf. 514 West Main Street McHenrt •The anti-trust lawyers tell the public that they won a previous anti-trust suit against us at Danville, Illinoii. They did. ~ ^ What they do not tell you that they brought Case after case against the A&P in federal -courts all over the United States. Before they won this case they suffered three defeats. y The anti-trust lawyers have told everybody about the time that the courts said they were right. We think you are entitled to know about the three times the courts said they were wrong. Now We are going to tell you about the first one. In future advertisements we will tell you about mil of them. The Washington Bread Case V4:; * r: :c-' >09? : s * . •? * i I L L I N Formerly Barnard's Mill North End of Wonder Lake , at the Bridge TELEVISION COCKTAILS UQIJOR -- WINES BEER COMPLETE DINNERS SERVED From 6 to 9 p. m. Daily except Monday » / Saturday 6 to 11 p. m., Sunday 1 to 7 p. FISH FRY EVERY FRIDAY WE CATER TO PARTIES Frank and Jerry Wiedeman Phone Richmond 312 t § In April, 1941, the anti-trust lawyers brought a criminal suit in Washington, D.C. They charged that the A&P, two grocery chain- competitors, two labor unions and other good American citizens had conspired to fix the price of bread. Can anyone imagine any charge calculated to jbe more damaging to a retail grbcery business? They asked millions of people-to believe tha$=*r we were the kind of grocers who would take bread out of the mouths olF poor people and make it harder for a wife and mother to feed her family. These charge* were^false. In that case it developed that the A&P and the t^ro competitors who were charged with conspiring with us to maintain high bread prices actually,, sold bread cheaper than most of the other stores in Washington. The anti-trust lawyers presented and argued their case. When they wete through, Federal District Judge Allen T. Goldsborough ruled that A&P and the other defendants did not even have to put in a defense. He ordered the jury to bring in a verdict of "not guilty." Judge Goldsborough Maid to the anti-trust lawyers: "If you were to show this record to any experienced tried lawyer in the world, he would tell you that there was not any evidence at all. "Honestly, / have never in my over forty yeartf expert' -- ence seen tried a case that was as absolutely devoid of evidence as this. That is the honest truth, I have never seen one like it." v So here was a case in which the anti-trust lawyers made seriously damaging charges against the A&P, in support of which, in the words of the court, they did not have "any evidence at all." This' was not the only time the anti-trust lawyers made charges against the A&P which the courts said were not true. In future ads we are going to tell you about these other suits. We are not going to duck, either. We are going to tell you about the criminal suit that the anti-trust lawyers won at Danville, Illinois. f The anti-trust lawyer* say that they are not attacking "hfgneaa** ar . efficiency. They have to say that because die courts have decided; malt "bigness" and efficiency and selling at low prices is not a crime. •- But the fact is crystal clear that they only brought their bread,suit against the big companies and against companies that Sold good bread at the lowest prices; just as in this current suit they are attaching a big company that sells good food cheap. "We are going to show the American people that the suit to deitrojr A&P ' is really a suit against efficiency and against real competition. The real question involved in this suit is whether businessmen are going r to be encouraged to do a better and more efficient job; or whether we are going to let the anti-trust lawyers in Washington blow the whistle on --anybody who gets big by giving the people more for their money. No one can make iff believe that it is a crime to try to the best quality food at the lowest possible price. THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIfIC TEA COMPANY V3 E

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