McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 Mar 1950, p. 8

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VT --T? • 'ir ir ;'** ^ /: «• * • ' * ; • . -. .:s„' 'firsts £\: KING WOOD •§»in II M M M m i l l l t l l (IV Mrs. Qcow Shepard) * Mrs. ROM Jepson entertained the Woneayiilve Hundred club at Her home Wednesday. 1 o'clock insert luncheon was served. • PHms were awarded to Mrs. Viola bpw and Mrs Marie Wegener. .The bunco club was entertained lib the home of Mrs. Georgia Thomas at Woodstock Thursday afternoon Prizes were awarded to %s. Thomas Doherty. Mrs. Viola Lpw and Mrs. Nick B. Freund. The W.S.C.S. will mfeet at the ' home of Mrs. Rose Jepson Thursday, March 16. The Com unity Club met in- the cfcurch hall Friday evening. The upper grade school children presented the play, "Mother and JTfcther Leave Home," the Dummy -Play and the Nursery Play". The pupils of Mrs. Butler's jooni sang rand danced. Doughnuts and cof- ; f«e were served. There. were 150 /•present. . a Don't forget Che March- review hame talent plav and special nuiur 'bers at the church hall March 15-. vCoine and hear the accordian play- ;?jer and the boys' chorus line. . *r Thare will be movies in the 'fc ^ \ '-Tchurch hall each Monday evening. ' There is a full length picture, serial and comedy. Everyone is P'-- Invited to come. | * Mr. and Mrs. Karl Betts, Jr., are the parents of a daughter, born at the Woodstock hospital March 4. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schuetze tend daughter, Ruth of Milwaukee Spent the week-end with her father, Dr. Wm. Hepburn. Mrs. Roland McCannon returned to her home at Big Rock Friday after spending the week with her Inother, Mrs. Rose Jepson. Mrs. Viola Low and sou, Robert, *rere visitors in the Walter Wilcox home near Woodstock Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hawley of tVix River Grove visited relatives liere Satjrday. v f Mr. and Mrs. Murl Wiedrich and dpugliter of Harvard spent Suny with their grandmother, Mrs. ed Wiedrich, Sr. : Mr. and Mrs. Lester Carr and Ikliss Mae Wiedrich w«*re visitors it McHeury Friday. Mr. and Mr6. Phelps Saunders and daughter of Sycamore are Visiting in the home of her mother, p^rs. Fred Wiedrich, Jr. Mr. Buckner of Kenosha spent Sunday with Mr, and Mrs. Charles Efrennan. Mr. and Mrs. Granville Carlson >r^yyirad daughter of May wood spent the weekend in the Clayton Bruce jy* Borne. | Mr. Buckner, Mr. and1 Mrs. ijjJL r_JCharles Brcnnan and MrB. Nellie jBlackinan were visitors in the John Black man. Jr. home at Antioch Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bruce and jfamlly were visitors at Woodstock 'Saturday afternoon. Mns. Nellie Blackman returned kome Monday evening from Los \ngeles, where she spent the past three months with her daughter Jand family. •i-. Bob Brennan, Robert Low and ^Charles Carr returned home Tues- Iday morning from a trip to Flori- Bill Windrich of Harvard is ^siting his grandmother, Mrs. •"^red Wiedrich, Sr. ; : Mrs. Roland McCannon and, her ther, Mrs. Rose Jepson, visitrelatives at Dundee and Elgin Tuesday. Mrp. Viola Low was a visitor Mr. and Mrs George Shepard spent Sunday in the Alan Ainger hoiue at Hebron. Mrs. Ed Bauer and daughter, Lu Ana, visited relatives at Antioch Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Kane spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kane, Sr., at Mundelien. George and Nancy Kane, who spent .Saturday night there, returned home with them. Mrs. Vincent Moan and children of Woodstock spent Tuesday with her sister, Mrs. Paul Walkington, and family. Mrs. Mingel Andreas of Marengo is making her home with her son. Weldon Andreas, and family. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Pagni and Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Marchi and daughter. Vera Mae. of Chicago spent Sunday in the Wm. Pagni home. Mrs. Ed Bauer and family spent Thursday evening in the Marvin Arsneau home at Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Winn and daughter, Janet, of Richmond spent Sunday in the Fred* Wiedrich. Jr.,, home. Mrs. Henry Marlowe and family of Huntley, Glen Wattles of McHenry and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harrison and family were Sunday dinner guests in the C. L. Harrison home. ^ Mrs. Maynie Harrison of Mc- Henry spent Sunday in the home of her daughter, Mrs. J. C. "Pearson, and family. Mr and Mrs. Arthur Dimon of -^Ostend were Sunday diuuer guests in the Dick Olson home. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cristy were visitors in the John Cristy home at Huntley Friday evening. vVf 1 7/O/f i\ Vni urn .' bundaif V- • 10c LARD-WHAT DOES IT MEAN Recently in a number of places week-end specials have been featuring lard in pound containers at 10c each. Nothing startling about this except that hogs are costing the processors from 17c to 17%c per pound, live weight, and in the "good old days" lard usually sold 5c a pound above the price of live hogs. In our scheme of modern living we do not care for the large quantities of fat we formerly consumed. Furthermore, competitive fats and oils have entered the picture to a greater degree. Instead of lard serving as one of the major profit items for the processor of hogs it has become a "drug on the market". At the price mentioned above hogs are selling about $2.00 per cwt. lower than they wpuld if the percentage of lard were drastically reduced. It all points to the moral in the item on "Bacon and Lard" in our February issue--i.e.--get rid pf the hogs when they weigh around 200 pounds. MONEY TALKS In (520 A.D. a model in wax of a proposed coin was brought for insepection to Empress Wenteck of China, who, in taking hold of it. left an impression of her thumbnail. The impression has been a marked characteristic of Chinese coins for hundreds of years, and has been copied on coins of Japan and Korea. I MONK TAXI * snvtct. "One Great Hour of Sharing". This phrase will go out. over the air waves, will be read in religious and secular papers and journals, and will be announced from nearly 100,000 Protestant pulpits in IS Communions to approximately 24,- 000,000 members during this week of dedication, March 5-12. In this Great Hour of Sharing on Sunday a special free-will offering will lu taken for many different projects in our Christian world. Hundreds of pastors will preach on the theme, "Bear ye one another's burdens, and so fulfil the law of Christ." (Gal. 6:2.) The relief, rehabilitation; inter-church aid and local requirements are still tremendous in our modern world and throughout £his week churtli members will pray for their churches, their fellow Christians and themselves. We ask you to join with us in these prayers, and,your presence and gifts in our service this 'Sunday, it is our prayer that this service Will be one. of the' truly meaningful ones in ouf 'Christian year. The Lenten service last week, when Rev. Earl Olson of Marengo spoke, was well attended and Our thanks to the hostess of the evening. Your pastor had a wonderful time at Marengo. It was a cold drive but the wonderful spirit and warm reception was a blessing indeed. Next week, March 15, the following ladies will be hostesses: Mrs. Rudy Johnson, Mrs. John Looze, Mrs. Kinar Olson, Mrs. George Johnson, Mrs. Leslie Olsen, Mrs. Howard Lockwood, Mrs. Henry Freund and Mrs. Frank Rourke. We hope that you will be there to enjov both the service and th$ fellowship hour following.-On March 22, the service will he under the direction of the Young Adults of the church. We hope that as you read this, providing you received your pa per on Thursday, that you are hungry, very hungry. Just step to the door and see if you can't smell that fragrant odor of baked ham. It is coming from the Methodist church, for the ladies there; are having a supper. Get your hat and hurry right over for they are serving continuously from 5:1,0 through 7:30. so you have lots of time, but it is always wise to get there early, if you are not on the hungry side, and remember it is being served famil> style, and you will be. ped (at least 1 used to call that) potatoes, ham, fresh _ . . corn, parker house rol{6, coffee or milk, pumpkin pie or chocolate sundae, aud all the rest of the trimmings. I've already gone Into training for that dinner, I'm not going to let them make anything off nie at the $1.50 they are asking for adults. Why don't you come on over. Mother needs a vacation from that hot stove and where can you find better fellowship and a chance to talk to your neighbors? The ladies will have a gift booth for your convenience at the dinner, a chance to get your Easter gift. Last 'month we cancelled our speaker for W.S.C.S. but he will be here with us on Thursday the sixteenth. This picture will remind you of-the experiences of Nathanael Ogboola Adibi. Several of his fellow students of the Evanston Collegiate Institute, .oiir Methodist Junior College, will bring rAKM HMnHtaw GOHMXXTS \ (William Tammeut. Farm Advisor) >ATHA>AfcL OGBOOLA ADIBI us a very inspiring program, It will be a dessert-luncheon meeting beginning at 1 p.m. If you can't make the luncheon, be surtf to make the program at 2 o'clock. Last Sunday morning Miss Nancy Rudin sang the very lovely Entreat Me Not To Leave Thee," by Gounod, for our special number. Mrs. Harry Barr accompanied her on the organ. Next Sunday the Junior Choir will sing "The Sunshine Song" ahd Miss Judy Roesch and Miss Joan Colins will be the soloists. Come and join ut*ln this "Great Hour of Sharing.". "See you in church this Sunday." Pasture improvement time is near at hand. Just remember that you wouldn't expect to grow oopn in that hard old soil out there in your old bluegrass pasture, so why expect grass to grow there. A good seed bed is needed for best results in growing anything. The best' time_to tear up the old pasture is in the fall, so it,can soak up snow and rain alt winter, but it can be done in' the spring. A field cultivator is the best because a disc just doesn't go deep enough. Plowing is good, but it isn't necessary. It takes longer to get a good seed bed after nlowing. After tearing up the sod, a good double discing and dragging is best before sowing the Seed. Drill about a half bushel of oats with your seeding of five pounds of alfalfa (northern grown) one pound of ladino apd four pounds of northern brome. Without a soil test, the best guess is to put on probably 200 pounds of superphosphate per acre, with plans to put on just what is needed /text fall after a soil test has-been made. For wet soils, sow oats with six pounds of Reed's canary grass, six pounds of unhulled clover and one pound of Ladino clover. Probably 200 pounds of 0-20-20 fertilizer would dp the job temporarily until a test can be made. We talked to a farmer the other day who has a hundred- acres of timbeixpasture for hiB dairy herd. He sayG he gets seventeen cans of milk in the spring and gets down to four cans in July and August. Our suggestion is that he clear off ten acres of the timber and plant it to a good permanent pasture mixture. He can be assured of as much feed off this area as he has been getting off the whole 100 acres and will get .it distributed over the entire^ year. He will receive ninety acres of good timber in return for the cost of clearing off ten acres and sowing to pasture. An excellent exchange I would say, in these days of high lumber costs. Th6 best argument against ammonium nitrate on bluegrass pastures, I think, is that it just makes more pasture when you have a furpltts of it rnmym*y. the money on son** m4 alfalfa seed. AIM, M yoir pas mostly wtedft, ammonium te makes bigger weedi too. * maps were completed last sum- About 85 per cent of «11 the U.S. Savings Bonds bought by the' public in peacetime in tlie United States have been issued by banks. rubber atamwrtf--Girder" Hip Plnindenler. . ' Pbone as or hall u . , No matter the time of day or night " . ^ we're always at your ready service to take you safely and Woodstock Friday. ,« ; i t Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Kane attended the Northwestern and 1111- :,i»oia basketball game at the Chicago Stadium Saturday evening. : Miss Marian Peet of Elgin spent | r-3uf*>k-l-v vm.r &uuday with her mother, Mrs. Lena y destination Peet. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wilcox and daughter, Linda, of Woodstock spent Sunday in the Paul Walkington home. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Walkington and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Low attended their Five Hundred club in the Clarence Harrison home Saturs#: day evening. Lf .• Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Andreas and family and Mrs. Mingel Andreas visited relatives at Algonquin Sunday. ' McHenry Cab Phone 723 rfniftiMt- THE FOX HOLE LOUNGE -V RIVERSIDE HOTEL McHENRY, ILL. PRESENTS EGONSTURM * ~ * Piano Sensation! I . from 2 Years At Town Casino, Ohicago) (Except Monday BETTER VALUES v. I; equipment... look for the fofo symbol of service! When it comes to every requirement for lawn and garden care--depend on the judgment and the merchandise of your hometown hardwaremanl Remember--he's a part of your community, vitally and personally interested in its welfare!... Make the red, white and blue irha emblem your "buying guide--it's the sign of sound values, honest goods, fair dealing! NATIONAL aad tfqUAJED RETAIL HARDWARE ASSOClXnORS ; : " , V\ " • " 1 VYCITAL'S HARDWARE 442 GREEN ST. SHEET METAL SHOP^ PHONE 98~ Now to the vote. Charlie president ot the Il)ln0is Agricultural Association, told us Jthf other dfy th^ he had just recently been to Washington and had vifcited each law maker from Illli nojls personally, except a few Chicago representatives he didn't have time to around to. He said each one of them had urged him to get the farnrers out to vote in the primary. One representative said he had tried for some time to get a younger .qualified man to run to take hfs place, but they are afraid of the machine because they say the public wont get out and vote in the primary. Qualified men know the public won't support them in the primary and they don't want to get tangled up with the machine to get in. Machihe politics always win because they know only those vote who are supporting or are supported by the machine. Did you know machine politick are a result of you re not voting in the primary? Doh't blame the machine, you have a scheme worked out to make money too, only you think your method is all right. Forty-nine counties in the world are now using the same method of classifying soils that the U. S. Soil Conservation Service is using in McHenry. Yesterday I met at Crystal Lake with NormAn Specht, our conservationist, where he presented soil maps to Rudolph Koenig,Algonquin, Peter J. Larson, Algonquin; Quinter Martin, on the Giessecht farm; atld .Virgil Moore this Hanrahan farm, Woodstock; Herbert Mau Huntley;and Ralph Peterson, Algonquin. These farm ifier and are colored to indicate th4 soil class. On each color are Code numbers indicating soil type per cent of slope and degree of erosion. 1 With this inventory, Norman can intelligently work out with these men a cropping system and rotation that will be to fit their farm to conserve fertility top soil and water and feed the livestock being raised regulhrly on the farm. This will be done individually with these men before they get in the field this spring. Mighty oakrf from little acorns grow. Your financial security will grow from small beginnings by systematic saving through U Savings Bonds. 8. Read the Want Ads! SCIENTIFIC IATMII Dr. Damon Catran, „ ^kayoclate Professor, Department of Animal Husbandry, Iowa State College, in an address before the Chicago Farmers Club recently made the statement that hog feeding lias passed oat of the "scoop shovel" era and has virtually developed into an exact science. The numerous ingredients which are com* pounded Into a modern swine ration require a great deal of skill. and careful effort to properly standardize. When this is done pigs can be made ready for market rather easily fa Jive and one-half to six months. A half century ago most hogs were fattened on ear corn and most pigs were about thirteen months. old by the time they were ready fof market. Every year cattle grubs in thia country spoil enough potential leather to put soles on the shoes of about twelve million men. & K' i® TELEVISION, EMERSON and MOTOROLA SALES -- SERVICE > .-.Vv Phone 403 604 Frbfct St or 653-R-2 West McHenry, Illinois "SPEEDY" by McHENRY GARAGE " WHO'S CIOAR. 7 yxj SAW IT FW?STj-BO«r NKK MILLERf BUTT IS THAT? HAVE FROM CTC ^ ' DIAMOND t1*RU0K8 ' 004 Front Sireet WILLYS-OVERLAND SALES Phone 403 In accordance with the original order of the Illinois Commerce Commission, the resumption of coal mining having be«^ tondtriice4 all Slstrieticms > ou use of electricity are at an end. ' • - \ Hi*:-- -is". • :> ov I map now full use of normal electric service. again to make The spitodid cooperation received during this I ' ' ' trying period from our customers in their homes and !Q businesses and from jwblk authorities, is sincerely 4.C \j appreciated. v*. PUBLIC ftfcHVICE COMPANY OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS . ^ t v

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