McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 25 Oct 1951, p. 26

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x.l«' A I '• ip ; >5P ^l^df f* nf-v •>»*£ "ft^^wrr; Twtatf - Section Two Ringwood * if*'.- nmm 'gM:II «&**€» THE McHENRY PLAINDEALEH Thursday, October 25, 1951 (by Mrs. ()«orce Shepard) C /The party a month club held witr October party In the chnrch liall Monday evening Oct. 22. Hary Ann and Bernard Klapperioh had charge of the invitations. Barbara, Shirley and Lc.eita Fie- *«1 had charge. of the table decorations. which were in keening With Hallowe'en. M: ;y Jane Bell. Audrey and Edward Peterson were on the refreshment commitand RUSF^I Carr and Jerry Tlogan had. charge of the games. fcLrh month, there are different committees ^b. each child has her tnrn» . 4re.. thirty children tlpt T»elb' . ;to this organization. Mri V 'la Low entertained ,the women's rive-hundred club at her home Wednesday. A 1 o'clock desert luncheon was served. Prizes ere awarded to Mrs. Roland wuckson, Mrs. 1?. E. Whiting. Mrs. Pete Sebastian. Mrs, Louis Hawley and Mrs. Lester Carr. - Mr. ami Mrs. Mitchell Kaifeen* trrtained the Community Inquirers at their~*»home Friday evening Mr. Mauer of Chicago gave a talk on "Investment Council". * The W. S. C. S. met at the home of Mrs: George Shepard / lursday. A pot-luck dinner was served at Doon. Mrs. Cristy had charge of the meeting. Mrs. Collins led the devotionals and read from • the book "The Earth is the lord's". jMrs. Flora Harrison read the Story of happenings * from the book "lie Wears Orchids". Plans ere made for the bazaar which ill be Thursday. Oct. 25. ' The Golden Ag« club has /been discontinued for the winter. The Brownie Scout meeting wag lield Tuesday. Oct 16. at the •choolhouse. Members brought leaves that had been pressed then the" girls made leaf books from ihem. Cookies were served by Patsy Hogan. Next week girls will finish their books and centerpieces. Reporter of the week is jpeanna Oonk. Mrs. Flora Harrison, Mrs. Oscar )3erg, Mrs. Mitchell Kane. Mrs Kenneth Cristy and Mrs. Sampk attended a W.S.C.S. meeting at Antioch Wednesday. . Mrs. Louis Hawley and Mrs. John Woodward and son, LouiB, were Elgin visitors Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Harrison were Woodstock callers Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hinze of Crystal Lake Spent Wednesday evening in the Mrs. Lena Peel home. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Collins of Wilmette visited his mother, Mrs. Mabel Collins, Wednesday. Mra. Agnes Jencks visited her t daughter, Mrs. Tom Pettise, and family at Barrington Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Luella Stephenson attended the" wedding of Miss Marguerite Johnson at McHenry Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. (Seorge Shepard were Woodstock visitors Friday morning. \ Mrs. Ra|^h Wingate of Crystal Lake was a Ringwood caller Friday afternoon. Mrs. Collins went to Port Huron, Mich.. Friday, where she at* tended the wedding of a grandson on Saturday evening. Dr. and bjs. Hepburn were Richmond visitors Friday afternoon and also called on his sister, Mrs. Evanoff; at the Solon Mills rest home. Mr. and Mrs: Albert Oonk aud family left Thursday for Holand, Mich., for the Weekend, to visit their parents, Chase Koch was called "to Long I s l a n d . N . V . , S a t u r d a y h y t h e death of his nipt her. Patty and Mikel Hogan visited their uncle and aunt, at Auburn, 111.. Sunday afternoon. .- • • , Mrs. Hepner was a' Chicago visitor Thursday. , - - , Mrs. George ..SHepard, with MrtL Georgia Thomas and dixughter, Hiley Jean, were visitors in the Walter ; Feltz home at Crystal Lake Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. H.f ison spent Sunday with their daughters and families in Huntley. Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Montanvr and family of Huntley were visitors in the Beatty-Low home Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Kane and family spent Tuesday evening with his parents at Wauconda. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Norman and family of Evanston spent the weekend at their cottage- here. Miss Marian Peet of Elgin spent the weekend with, her mother Mrs. Lena Peet. - Mrs. Leslie Allen, Mary and Jean Low of Harvard and Mrs. Northern Illinois State Teachers convention at Aurora Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Win. Cruickshank spent Wednesday and Thursday at Atwood, 111., where he judged the shorthorn show sponsored by, the South Central Shorthorn Breeders' association. Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Jr., and^ daughter, Mary Ann, and Mrs. Phelps Saunders and daughter, Georgia Mary, spent Wednesday at Waukegan. Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Andreas afnd daughter, Marsjo, aud Mrs. Miiigel Andreas visited relatives at Rockford Sunday. Dr. and Mrs. Win. Hepburn spent Sunday and Monday in thfe Robert Shuetze home at Milwaukee. Mr. a:id Mrs. Phelps Saunders and daughter spent Sunday hi the Ben Saunders home at Harvard. Mrs. Albert Ebel and JMrs. Raymond Rattray of Algonquin spent Sunday evening Iji the Weldon Apdreas home. Phelps Saunders. Mrs. Hailimerschmitt and Miss Loretta Court of Sycamore,, were dinner guests in the Fred Wiedritth, Jr., home Wednesday evening. Mrs. John Hogan took her daughters, Charlotte and Mary, to Joliet Sunday to a Methodist Youth Fellowship rally at, the Township high school. There were 4,000 that attended. Charlotte is a sub-district officer. While the girls were there. Mrs. Hogan and lier sons. John and. Jerry, toured the city and saw the old prison and new prison and oth^r official buildings. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Larsou bf Gurnee were dinner guests of Mr. and Mr*. Carl Eranson Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cristy spent the weekend with relatives at Waupaca. Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hawley of Chicago were visitors "in the Louis Hawley home Sunday. Mrs Agnes Jencks spent Tues- Farm Notes w. m TAMME18 \ T T . j , „ „ day and Wednesday with Iriends Irene Low and daughter. Polly, , Chicago of Wayiand, Mich., and Mr. and ; ' Mrs. Walter Wilcox of Woodstock were guests of Mrs. Viola Low Sunday. Children Remember Children remember more about Mr. "and Mrs. Wm. Heine and ;^ m<?tj0n.^tLr!f; «>an adtilts, and tor Mr. and Mrs. Henry Heine of Chicago were guests in the George Shepard home Sunda" afternoon and evening. Mrs. John Skidmore and children and Nancy Bowman were a longer length of time, according to tests reported by Childcraft books. Action is remembered best, especially when it is connected with types of activity that are familiar to •he child. All children tend to ... • , accept as true everything seen in visitors in the John Ehlert home the movies. unless, it is clearlv aO• t UW'lillmmnott SCnunn/ldnaty.. I -- » Mr. and Mrs. F. K Muzzy visited relatives at Marengo Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Don Smart and son. Bob, of Waukegan spent Sunday in the Fred Wiedrich, Jr., home. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Adams and family w6re Sunday supper shown to be false. Oon't Underestimate The fact that mental growth is almost complete by the 16th year should help to convince parents that they must not underestimate adolescent's capacity to make guests in the Joe Condon home ati *"se decisions atad to carry them Richmond. ^ out* F. N. Muzzy, Weldon Andreas, Wayne Fostr, Mrs. B. T. Butler j Renew that subscription to the More notes on the I'rban& Conference-- J. A. Ewing, Springfield, agricultural statistician for the Bureau of Agricultural Economics, will soon be putting out a hay and pasture inquiry for 1961. He plans to sample farmers in each county In the stale to the tune of about 200 per county. If you get one, please be sure you ajiswer and return it to him; Illinois will be the only state, this Burvey is being run in. Lindane has proven effective on wireworms, contrary to previous denial by the college. It should be put. on.: the •' corn dry Itj" the planter box. > Spittle bugs (soapy mass on alfalfa leaves) will be worse in 1952. Lindane sprayed at the rate of two-tenths of a pound per acre will control them. People gripe about high food prices yet will spend millions on beer and liquor with no complaint of price. There are many times the nourishment, value *ler penny in food than in be'er. Don't gripe about the price of food unless beer is too high priced for you to buy. - One freedom we can do without is the freedom from responsibility. Rural romance- starts with a gallon of corn and ends with a crib full. - "Farmers are extremely ignor-J ant about the simple process of marketing grain" said Prof. L. J. Norton. Do people want to know about this simple process? Apparently ncJt in this area because there is very little orderly marketing of cash grain here, instead it is a simple horse trade. Helmuthisporium lust, the bugaboo of Yiokland oats a few years ago. attacked corn this year and caused a lot of damage in central Illinois by causing lower leaves to die. This prevalence was caused by high humidity aud cool weather this summer and the previous two years. It will continue to build up only if we have more years of the same kind of weather, i fits asked for by employees in- There is northern bromegrass elude--free hams, free lunch or and southern brome. In this area southern brome like Lincoln, EIlsbury and Achenbach should be used for best results. Northern brome quits like blue grass in dry weather. Ralph Ostrander, the secretarytreasurer of the National Farm Loan Association, says they are planning a good annual meeting Oct. 26 at Westwood school. Dessert at 7:30 p.m. and the meeting at 8:15 p.m. , . October 1 Reports U. S . -- M i d - S e p t e m b e r f a r m prices were 7 percent below mid- February. Crop prices were 16 percent below, while livestock and other prices were down only a little. Heavy production of farm and industrial products is expected to moderate upward price pressure. Hog njarketing will reach a peak in December. The corn hog ratio is average so the spring pig j crop is expected to be average. ' Feed concentrates are 3 percent below the last two years and increased livestock population will make them higher. ILLINOIS--^he corn crop slipped back to 494 million bushel during September, one bu'she.1 r/f acrfe. Last year it was 4.20 million bushel. Soybeans will top eightyeight million bushels. Beans are three-fourths harvested. Corn harvest is Well underway. » The 1951 hay crop was the largest on record. ^ Why is meat high? One packing company says "fringe" benea dollar to buy it, paid^for lunch time, two hours travel time daily, birthday holidays no charge for those born on Saturday or Sunday), reduced meat prices to employees, a social center paid for by the company. All these , plus u guaranteed wage of $3,000 per year. The work? Nobody mentioned that. They will probably let George do it. Athletic Field Thebaseball diamond at the Haryard Community unit liigh school will receive improvement to the amount of several hundred dollars in the near future, and it will bear a new name. The field will be called the Les Bourn Athletic Field, to commemorate the (unique position that Leslie S. Bourn held in Harvard's school life. A civic leader of the -city and a popular friend among the facul- | Consignment Sale | EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT I ' . 7:30 P. M. . v,-, I tw 8hlpper £own Weigh More When Sold Her% • Your Calves Bring More Here, t Tear JPalry and .Breeding Cattle can be tested at Our! Modern Sales Barn. Your Cattle and Hogs ea* b« sold br Of Dollar* *r bvj ! t|^^jpwi..:.v; .. ' ' ' r\:~ Co,ne an* See Your Stock Sold. . . V : ' ; . ' f ' We are here to serve yon. ' ; * WE Pil CONSIGNOR DAY AFTER THE SAIB. WE ARE BONDED Woodstock Comm. Sales Co* Inc. Phone 572 or 499 -- " Woodstock, ffl. mj ty and the student body, Mr. Bourn served as "math" teacherr, coach and principal in the £ChooLr "3fc BOAT ACCIDENT Paul Reynolds, 43, of Hebn lost his life in a boat a|cidc which occurred in Canada, near[ the Minnesota border, Monday afternoon of la£t week, according^-- to word received by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Reynolds -of Hebron. Reynolds is believed to have drowned. Playtex Baby Prod acts Wattles bray Mr Henry 111. jy "SPEEDY" By McHenry Garage LOV' AMD NO WONDEB WITH THESE LOUSY LIGHTS - WHY , DiDN T VOL) OO BY MICK MILLER'S *HENRY6MA6f B6FO(?E WE STARTED THIS CRUISE AND HAVE THEM FIXED so we COULD see WHERE WHAT DID IT SAY? THAT SlCiNl WET PAINT I AND WILLYS - OVERLAND SALES 404 FRONT STREET PHONE 403 and Mrs. J. C. Pearson attended a Plaindealer now, s m FAMOUS Chainless Paddleless . Easily Installed COSTS %/3 LESS! P0WERSC00P BARN CLEANER Operates This EASY Way I (1) Operator pulls start-stop cord which activates winch power unit. (2) This sturdy "power head'* activates both scoop and elevator. The hand-held Powerscoop (3) is drawn through the gutter to the central hopper (4) where it is elevated (5) to manure spreader out* •Jde of barn. 1 COME farmers prefer Open Center tires, O while others demand Traction Centcr. Regardless of the type you prefer, Firestone has it. No one else offers, yoin a choice, because Firestone alone provides both tread designs. -If it's Open Center ynn wanr, see the sensational new Firestone C^iam> pion Open Center, Curved Bar Tractor Tire. Try it--for traction, for cleaning, £qf smoothness on the highway, for al£ around performance? You'll fuuFTt's away" ahead of any open center tire ever made. If it's the Traction Center Tire you want, there's, only one -- the patented -Firestone Champion. This tire has long T>een recognized by thousands of farmers the country over as the top performer "tor year-around work. A test on your' own farm will show you. So again we say, regardless of your preference in tractor.tire tread design, see us. ' ~ WALTER J FREUND MAI3, STBBET THOSE McIIFARY 294 1VEST McHEKBY TIRES -- TrBES -- BATTERIES ACCESSORIES flBg and TP1B TTLCAMZIXG _ ALL WORK GUARANTEED c m and dependable operation make POWERSCOOP the perfect barn cleaner for your barn regardless of its size or the number and position of gutters. No chains or paddles in the gutters, no idlers or sprockets at the corners, the POWERSCOOP is simply a cable-drawn scoop which empties manure into a fast-moving, self-cleaning elevator. Operation is a&simple as A, B, C. Flip the main switch, walk the scoop back behind 3^or 4 cows, tug the overhead start-stop cord, and a winch operated steel cable attached to the scoop will pull the manure into the metal hopper where it's effortlessly carried into the spreader. Your barn is clean in a matter of minutes •.. without disagreeable, dirty, back-breaking work! N° chains, no complicated plans, no unfamiliar machinery to assem- y>SSSSSSSSSSSsSSSsSsSSSSSSSSSV£ ble, you can easily iri- > s t a l l a POWERSCOOP yourself and save an extra $100 to $300 on installation This is the hopper section showing the scoop and cable about to empty a load of manure. fhe "p ower head" unit drives both the elevator fnd the rotating drum ffr the cable. ^ AU PARTS GUARANTEED < '•£ UNDER A 5 YEAR WARRANTY & •jp Com* in TODAY for complete dctailt on th« barn cl*an«r ^ that'* practical, proven and ^ ^ economical. ^ &sssmssmvvssssw>sss^ - The elevator is well constructed and elevates c*ll liquids and solids at the rate of 45 feet per minute. Save an extra $100 to $300 on installation alone. Plans tp fit almost any barn--one# two or three gutters--even VI" shaped barns. See your local dealer or PUBUC SIRVICf CQMPAMY Of UQ*X££RN IUINOIS PROFIT Ionfll DIR ECTOR V , DR. C. E. SWAJTSON , Dentist' V UN) 8. Green Street Office Honrs fciuDelly Exeept Thnrsdsjt... 4 T » to 12 -- 1:80 to ^ W Mon^ Wed. and Fri. Evening* , • ' 7 to 9 Telephone McHenry 160 I' •!"!• 4"1'<W' - E. E. PEA8LEE, D.C. Chiropractor 120 8. Green St., McHenff Office Honrs . ' Dally except Thursday V 9 to 12 ~ 1:30 to 6 . >Vod. and Fri. ETentgg 7 to 9 Call McHenry 293-B For Appointment f ER>T0N KNOX Attorney at Law Cor. nn:l Elm 8ts„ Mrffonry Tnesday and Friday Afternoon? Other Days By Appointment tl Phone MoHenrv 48 ROBERT A. STUEBEN " Attorney-at-l»»w 604 Center Street Phono McHenry 268 McHENRY, ILLINOIS ^ ' WILLIAM M. CARROLL, Jr. # Aftoruey-at-Law llOyt Benton St. _ Phone Woodstock ltt4 Woodstock, Illinois 'JL^, JOSEPH X-'WAYNNE-- Attorney-bt-Law 40» I'oail (RFD Bex) Plionc McHenry 493-W WEST McHENRY. ILL. Sand LlecitoM ?ERJI THiX** Trncklngf ©raT. lilack Mi Truck tor 3r» Tel. >IcHenry 588-. * 588.W-? Box 172, Rt. 1, MeMenrr A. l». FREUKT* SONS Ercmatinar Contvuctor* tl Tnickliicr, H/draullc and Crane Service - ROAD nru>i»L\G - Tel. 204-M McHenry, 111. •<">< 4"t I H i i 1101 I1 ! 1NSIRAXCE EARL R. W\LSH Fire, Auto, Ftirm k Life Insnraae* Roj»r»'scnilnT RELIABLE COMPANIES • (then Ton Need Inserance ef $ Any Kind _____ Phone 43 or 118-M 1_ Green & Elm Nelttf) <• •{•*{• ••4^5' •{' •!' '> •!' •!' \-ip+ STOFFEL & RE1HAN8PERGER Insurance amenta for all classes ol property in the best companies West McHenry, Illinois Telephone No. 300 607 Main S^t j c t ^ j | ^ ^ SCnROEDER IRON WORKS Oreamental A Structural Visit Our Showrooms 3 Miles South on Rt SI Phone 950 B I N G *8 JPLUMBING AND HEATIftft ^ BOB FRISHT. JR. Qeality FixtureK • Radiant Hedtfef - Water Systems • Gas aatf Electric Wator Heaters . Water Softeners • Repaid . £g|j mutes. PHONE McHENRY 2ft».)f tt'S WELDING AND RVPAIB SERVICE' 001 Main S1^ Mcnenry Eicctrlc Portable Weldlnf Acetylene Welding and Cuttilf^ ALEX W. WIRFS, Operater . Phone «1»-W-1 or 464 Lv McHENRY, ILL. •M- I '1' '!• -4 Highest CASH PRICES paid fot Dead and Crippled Horses, CattL and Hogs--Sanitary Power Load 'n£--Tnnkiige and Meat Scraps fo« sale. Phones Arlihgton Height* 116 or McHenry 814. Reverjt Charges. Palatine Headering Service. •••I 1111111 : 111 m »f« v -- WANTED TO BUT .CALL AT ONCE ON DE 'HOGS. HORSES AND CA_. »e pay phone charges w* pay H to $2» for Old Horsee, less for down horses and eettta MATT'S MINK RANCH Johesbnrg . Spring Gw&f Mmf Phone Johnsburi^SM f r

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