fPSSS^IiPi ^ : , v . / v tv ^ * • v j . % . . . ±k,..it:td . i / . . . . , • * . * j,. ifejtW Mliii •S ^'*' McHENRY 1 , . » - W -- . J V • • ; » iUt-^K - *•/-,«,... S<1 „V * ) " • « • ' P , •' •'•••..?•.'.'..•> • <:." ** -' •• . • • •»:.-^V 'X >• ' • jr. J*• ' ? Thursday, July 5. 1951 WHEN YOUR "E" BONDS MATURE The Treasury Department offers thre<i choices to holders of Series E, United States Defense Bonds, when their Bonds mature: Choices: You may: One, accept cash, if you so desire; Tuo, continue to hold the present, bond with an automatic interest-bearing extension; Three. €xchange your bonds in amounts of $500 or multiples for at Defense Bond of Series G, which earns current income at the rate of 2V2 percent payable semi-annually. Action: If you want to obtain cash, you simply present your bond, with proper identification, to iiny paving agent. If you want to extend the ' matured bond you have ABSOLUTELY NOTH» i*#NG TO DO--just continue to hold it. Extended ; bonds may be cashed at any time you wish. If you __ want a G Bond, see your bank for details^ Interest: The. extended bond will earn simple interest on the fate;; ftmount at tjie rate of 2'/i percent for the first seven and one-half years. ^' ^Thereafter it will be at a higher rat£ sufficient to provide a total return ^ - for the 10-year extension pq£jj£»d of 2.9 percent compounded. . . < Taxes* You have the choice of (1) reporting E Bond interest for Federatj 'income taxes on an annual basis or (2 ) paying the taxes on the interest in, . 1{he year when the bonds finally mature or are redeemed. The privilege ofj deferring taxes does not apply if the E Bond is exchanged for a G BondJ BUY <W hold U. S. DEFENSE BONDS • BUY <W fotd U. S. DEFENSE BONDS < uhins and a bridge across the creek have been built out of con- ! tributions from 4-H clubs, individuals and organizations in northeastern Illinois since 1946. The kitchen and dining hall will aero modate 27">. We have just that here now. It cost $2.1,000 and was completed befpre camp last year. Each county chooses, a particular three-dav period when it Would like to come. A schedule is Set up about* May 1, to come as near pleasing every county as possible. There are four counties present this period including Mc- Marshall-Put- IIEMVJ^ Confessions Saturdays; 7:30 to 8 and 2:804^, to 3. " m Thursday before First Friday: 2;30 and 7:30. St. Mary's by the Lake, Episcopal Oriole Trail and Dole Avenutt^p Crystal Lake Rev. Ledsam. priest-in-charge j Mission House, 331 McHeniyAra. .Sunday: 9:00 A.M. Community Methodixt Churchy Main and Ceater Streets fc J. Elliott Corbett, Pastor Church School: 9:30. ' Morning Worship: 10:4f. ' ^ Official board meeting oh second Wednesday of month at 8 p.m. A cordial invitation is extended to you and your family to comeaad Worship with us. Methodist Youth Fellowship: Sundays, 7 p.m. Young Adult Fellowship: Sim* days: 8 p.m. ;; • .•/ . Cherub and Juniorchoirs: Wednesdays at 3:30 p.m. Senior Choir: Thursdays, 8 pap. ^ McHenry Bible Cbgreh .^1(8 S, (Jreen St. (Pries Bldg.) Donald G. Liberty, Pastor -Sunday Bible School, 9:45 ^Sunday Worship, 11:00 A.M. ' 'l -^Sunday Evening, 8:00 P.M. Wednesday Prayer, Fellowship and Bible Study, 8:00 P.M. "You're always welcome here" Mailing address: McHenry Bible Church. P. O. Box 232, McHenry. Phone R. W. Brooks, 601-J-2. Here's Savory feeef Stew and Economy, too A few left-overs can be quickly transformed into something special -- Savory Beef Stew. To make it, combine left-over beef with vegetables in a flavorful blown gravy and serve on flaky hot rice. ' Savory Beef Stew 1 -^.^tablespoons butter- " '<3 cup cooked peas - : ! 5 tablespoons flour - - ,. 1 cup diced cdok^ Wf , 2Ja.teaspoons meat paste .-v. . , \ : ; 2%' cups hot vegetable liquid:a$& 1 (1% cups) pre-coolrtd ' . water . . ' lice :, • '% cup sliced cooked carrots .' i'i cups water % cup cooked small white onions" Vi teaspoon salt. " Melt butter in saucepan. Add flour and stir until 1bte'Hag&" tftif6lve . meat paste, in hot vegetable liquid and water; add to flour mixture gradually. Bring slowly to a boil and cook until thickened, stirring constantly/ Add cooked vegetables and meat; simmer 5 minutes. Meanwhile, combine pre-cooked rice, water, and salt in saucepan. Mix just until all rite is moistened. Bring quickly to a boil over high heat, uncovered, fluffing rice gently once or twice with a fork, (Do wot stir.) Cover and remove from heat. Let stand 10 minutes. Serve with the meat mixture. Makes 4 servings. Rain in camp! It's terrible. I'm wet clear through and been that way all day. It runs in under the edge of the ^nt into. niy clothes. ! jjenrv. Kankakee. The tails of my bed clothes are nam "and iroquois wet and it travels up on the bed like oil up a lamp wick. No place to get warm or dry out. The only way you can get warm is to keep active and I'm so tired.' stiff and ' sore 1 can hardly move now. 1 have a charlie horse in both. * hips from playing ball yesterday ; and my arm is sore, too. from pitching. Everybody is mad at me | for my poor decisions in the hall- * game we played in the rain tliis - afternoon. The rain kept running ; through my eye brows and into * my eyes, which was the reason 4 1 couldn't see. I'm in a heck Of a shape. We 1 like it though because it's camp- - Camp Shaw-waw-nas-see on rock creek near Kannakee. There are Sixty-eight litre from McHenry county--all active young kids who • enjoy it tremendously. Last night I was late getting to my cot. Everyone wanted to know in our tent how come I couldn't get. in when the rest did. My answer? I had an awful time getting the creek shut off for the night. They waited till I was. in bed before the firecrackers started going otf. Then we had to get up and put a stop to that. You can't be in both ends of the tent at once though. Tent 4, my home, contains twenty, seventeen and eighteenyear- olds, mostly from McHenry • county. It is extremely gratifying to see boys of that age from our county enjoy themselves in a few days vacation. Something completely different from home life and *ork. The camp contains sixty acres of. native wooded land through which a very rocky creek flows. It was donated to the Extension Service folks of northeast Illinois by the Public Service Company of Northern Illinois shortly after the war. The farm and home advisers set up a corporation to receive and develope it into a camp. The improvements, including a complete water and sewage system, a large dining hall, some ' The actual cost of operating the camp is paid for by camp fees. A little profit has been made this year, but it is intended to be^-ar non-profit operation. In connection with the crafts program. thereN has been something new added this year. Public Service has a tent here in which they have some electric motors.* some wiring panels and other things for the boys to work with and a laundromat and dryer, a steam iron and mangle iron for the youngsters to use. Ray Gault:®'111' St. Patrick's Catholic Church Rev. Edward C. Coakley, Pastor Masses Sunday: 8:00; 9:00; 10:30 and 11:30 a.m. Daily: 7:00 and 7:3(1 First Fridays: Communion distributed at 6:30 and during 7:00 and 7:30 brasses. Confessions . Saturdays: 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 to 8:00 p.m.. and on Thursdays before First Fridays: 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. St; Mary's Catholic Church .Msgr. C. S. Xix. Pastor Masses Sunday: 7:00; 8:30: 10:00. and 11:30. Holy Days: 6:00; '8:00; and lC:0d Week Days.: 6:45 and 8:00. First Friday: 6:30 and 8:00. Confessions Saturdays: 3:00 p»m. and 7:00 ^Womlfr Lake <»ospel Church (Nonsectarian) Frank W. Andersoh, Pastor Services Sunday Bible School: 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship: 11:00 a.m. Sunday Evening Service: 7:45 p.m. . • Prayer Meeting Thursday, &: 00 p.m. Bring the family^ with you to Sunday School and Worship Serv- ^ ^ar an<* ices. There is a place and # . Welcome for everyone. » * DAILY AUTO DEATHS TRIPLED CASUALTIES IN KOREAN CONFLICT Rlngwood Methodist Ctitrttli Riiigwood, IH. Rev. Darrell 1). Sample, Pastor Sunday: Public Worsliip, 9:30. . Cliurch School: 10:30. Choir Rehearsals: Wednesday evening. and Owen Fordham, P. S. repre sentatives. are working with the boys and Mary Campbell, their home economics specialist, shows the girls how to wash dry and iron clothes! I ironed a shirt today on the mangle for the first time. i ue dryer is getting a workout this afternoon with all the wet clothes. Maybe I'd get warm if I'd crawl into it. Camp is a great thing for kids in spite of the weather. It builds personality and character and teaches them to entertain themselves. The state Department of Pubic Health announces that 128 Illinois hospitals have agreed to make their facilities available for the diagnosis or treatment of polio patients this season. In past years, some hospitals were reluctant to admit polio cases for fear the disease would spread to other patients. Of these 128 hospitals. 66 will provide diagnostic facilities only; 34 will provide diagnosis and treatment; 12 will give diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation care and 16 will provide convalescent and rehabilitation care. Thursday before First Friday: After 8:00 Mass on Thursday; 8:06 p.ni. and 7:00 p.m.; ' St. Peter's Catholic Church Spring (»rot,e John L. Daleiden, Pastor Masses Sunday: 8:00; 10:00 and 11:00. Holy Days: 6:30 and 9:00. Weekdays: 8:00. First Friday: 8:00. Confessions Saturdays: 2:30 aiid 7:15. Thursday before First Friday: 2:30 and 7:15. 8:30, Weights for Eggs On the basis of U. S. weight standards, small eggs must weigh at least 18 ounces per dozen, mediums at least 21 ounces, large ones 24 ounces and extra large 27 •ua$es or more. , St. Joaepli's Richmond, III. Sunday Masses: 7:00 10:00 and 11:30. Holy Days: 7:00, 9:00. Christ the King Catholic Church Wonder Lake Rev. James A. Vanderpool, Pastor Masses Sunday: 8:00 and 10:00 a.m. Weekdays: 8:25 a.m. Confessions: 7:30 and 9:30 a.m. "ML John's Catholic Church Johnshnrg Rev. Joseph M. Blitsch, Pastor Masses Sunday: 7:00; 8:30; 10:00 and 11:30. Holy Days: 7:00 and 9:00. Weekdays: 8:00. First Friday: 6:35 and 8:00. Eyeglass Wearing To#lf. 5 Not Like Yesteryear Nearly 100 million Americans arc wearing spectacles today, the Better Vision Institute reports. And these modern eyeglasses not only -act as seeing aids but they look good. They are. a far, far cry from the glasses invented by Italy's S*lvino del Armati 665 years ago, and from those framed in wood, bone, leather, and other materials in the centuries that followed. The Florentine's eyeglasses swiftly gained favor, and by the year 1300 Venetians were sending spectacles to customers throughout Europe-- customers who could afford their high prices. By that time, the Chinese--who had probably invented s p e c t a c l e s i n d e p e n d e n t l y -- w e r e making many pairs. The Chinese made tortoise-shell rims because they considered the tortoise a sac- JTed animal whose shell would bring long life and good luck. As glasses were used in China for reading, they became the badge of scholars and aristocrats, and even lensless rims were sometimes worn as a' symbol of position. The invention of printing in 1440 brought eyeglasses into more widespread use in the western world. For more than two centuries, itin* erant peddlers roved the roads of Europe with trays of spectacles marked "young" or "older." There were no prescriptions or adequate examinations then. Not until about 1700 were glasses fitted to the individual, and even then examinations were pretty primitive. the first year of the Korean conflict, have reached a total of 998,- | 000 in the 176 years and two months since the Battle of Lexington on April 19, 1775, the study shows. In the fifty-one years and six months since the first S. automobile death occurred at the turn of the century, nearly Complete line of liee*s poaltrf vciiietlft-s at Wattles Drug Store, Mcllenry. 8ttf ' * ,MMt, , I. I GfM8G#A5S #(//# : Easy does it with SicottL. anti - Crobgross compound Or £«ck I4* THt ORIGINAL INStCT RlPELLtNT LAMP REDUCIS INStCT a t t r a c t i o n UP TO W ' I just shake it from box or better •till, broadcast with spreader. >*r is friendly to good grasses but lethal to Crabgrass. The result of four years' Scotts research, ) „_JSCiiXL_is,. the- lown-proven onswer to demon Crabgross *»o it ct little cost. One ^ SCUTi to 4005 5sq0 0f t s--q 7H9 ~c $5.857 2 50 sq ft -- $1.95 ffCrakfifW Is matted and wiry,apply DOUBLE dot$t» fflHy repeat treatments do it JKm« """" BJORKMAN'S RIVERSIDE HARDWARE 'JM X, Bherside Vriv# Phone 722 McHenry, 111* SlMHl'S 9 A. M. TIL 12 \00\ • ' ) • 7 % ' Insect Repelling'- YELLOW GLASS LAMPS that art translucent..: five ample lighting for all outdoor needs*. .yet they re -Awe attraction for insects.. .mosquitoes.. .gnats up to | ..Use them freely on porches.. .in gardens... fcyjh® barbccuc pit... and all over your summer cottage. . E 60 Watt Size 2Jc ea. I 100 Watt Size 29c Bolger Drug Store Phone 46 An average of thirty-three American soldiers was killed daily In Korea during the first year of the war, while at home automobile deaths averaged ninety- nine a day, a comparative stutraffic fatalities disclosed. Close to* 12,000 combat deaths have occurred among United States forces in Korea since hostilities started on June 25, 1950, according to Defense department eports. On the eve of the war's first anniversary the accident preention department of the association Of Casualty "and Surety company estimated that the nation's traffic dead during the same 12-montli period totals about 36,- OSO, threes times the "U. S. death toll in Korea battles. Traffic deaths currently are seven times heavier than U. S. war fatalities, however, with the stimated June average of ninetythree lives lost daily on highways almost equaling the low weekly average of niney-five soldiers killed in action in Korea as the war entered its twelfth month. American military deaths in all of the nation's wars, including speeding and drinking-and-driv- 980,000 men, women and children have lost their live$ in traffic accidents. In a strange historic parallel, both "GI-X" and "Victim X," the millionth victims to be killed by U. S. wars and automobiles, may die only a few weeks apart this year if the war continues, instead of within a few months of each other, as predicted last January. The unkown soldier who will become "GI-X" if the Korean war continues apparently has been given a respite of several months more of life as a result of far lighter casualties recently. Combat deaths fell off nearly twothirds a month ago to the surprisingly low rate of thirteen to fifteen fatalities a day, or ninety to 100 a week. This compared with a high average of forty a day, or 275 a week, two months ago. An average of 210 U. S. soldiers was killed in action weekly during the year; 253 a week in March, 275 in April and 125 weekly in May. A 7 percent increase in traffic fatalities during the first four months tliia..year over the same 1950 period, as reported by the National Safety Council, indicates the prospect of a far heavier automobile death toll later this year and the urgent need for immediate drastic action to curb ing, the major causes of traffic accidents. f _ Self-Powered Rocket The "power plant of the modern rocket carries its own oxygen, in turn moved and burned with gas, then thrust out as with the iet. - ^oVem-'dry 'em-don fa/ SKIPPER T-SHIRTS IF IT'S WIIS0N WEAR ITS FAULTLESS She'll love you In these! Tht resilient knitted fabric's easy to wash, dries in a flash, and needs no ironing. Wilson Brothers' famous Skipper .quality and tailoring means plenty of comfort and long wear. Cool as a swimming pool.Choose yours from a wide atfrortmeoi of bright coktfi today! $1.95 -- $2.50 -- $2.95 McGee's 117 S. GREEN STREET McHENRY ff«w •tact Ata* Sfltastor UMltffMs liltlil Tntf Satisfactory initial testa of the University of Chieago'a $2,500,600 synchrocyclotron, giant atom smasher, have been made after three apd one-half years spent on design 'and construction, Samuel K. Allison, director of the University's Institute for Nuclear Studies, announced. Deuterons, the nuclei of heavy hydrogen atoms, have been accelerated to an energy of 250 million electron volts, the highest known energy ever achieved artificially with these atomic particles. Herbert L. Anderson, professor of physics in the Institute, and John Marshall, assistant professor, who directed design and construction of the big accelerator, conducted the tests. Next step in getting the Chicago instrument into final working order will be to produce a focussed beam of protons, the nuclei of ordinary hydrogen. In the test, the deuterons were not brought outside the magnetic field. The energy attained with deuterons indicates the synchrocyclotron will accelerate protons to energies of the order of 450 million electronvolts, making it the most powerful accelerator of positive ions ln the western world. ' Deep Subject " * » Now generally regarded as toil greatest known ocean depth is Cape Johnson Deep, northeast off Mitt» danao in the Philippines. It was accurately measured as 34,440 feet in July, 1950. This figure replaces a 1927 determination of 35,400 feet in the same area, produced with^ less exact instruments of that day. C£u£e DrSchoffc AIR-PILLO Relishes >Aiqr foods from pickle* U» Jam Ipnd^from cottage cheese to raw vegetables may he used as relishes for a main meal. •* Ak C«as •very Step Do your fee* ache, bun£' ' feel ttrad? Here's won* doffful relief! Like wade*' ^ lug on pillowsl Pot* •firing in your slop* makes walking a reo! |oyt Szes f or Men pa ' • and Women. pmkJO^ BOLGER'S DRUG STOFtil PHONE 40 MtHENKr1 HANDICRAFT Bird Houses* Lawn Chairs, Lawn Swings, Picnic Tables, Tier Benches, Flower Boxes, Wheelbarrows and Sand Boxes. Trellis, Pergola, Picket Fences, Etc. Screens and Cabinets Made To Order. Clarence J. Smith JOHNSBURG PHONE McHENRY 583-J-l Don't Wait Until a Man § Bites a Dog § 9^ A*uft>*te V Dies V Elopes V Has a Party V Receives an Award V Has a Baby V Makes a Speech V Gets Married V Holds a Meeting V Has Guests V Goes Away or Moves V Has a Fire V i s 111 V Has an Operation V Has an Accident V Buys a Home V Wins a Prize • V Builds a Home V Or Takes Part In Any Other Unusual Event THAT'S NEWS AND WE WANT IT JUST CALL The McHenry Plaindealer PHONE 170 -si-.