McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 18 Sep 1952, p. 10

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r, 5 - W *"• :ff i - - sm*Lt * V • ~ 1 . * * * ' ^r •Igj; jfyTwW{**$T% McHENRY PLAINDEALER 1 «-«ft--; RINGWOOD By Mrs. George Shepard The Home Circle was entertained in the home of Mrs. Mabel Collins Thursday, with Mrs. Berg as co-hostess. A 12:30 • .luncheon was served. Mrs. Se- ' %astian opened the meeting with •the Lord's Prayer and pledge to the flag. The new officers were flamed as follows: President, frlora Carr; vice-president, Mabel Kawley; secretary, pearl Burg: r *nd treasurer, Bessie Cruickihank. A fine program in j Charge of Viola Low followed. " The W.S.C.S. will meet with . Mrs. Wolf Shadle Thursday, ; Sept. 18. Rev. and Mrs. Darrell Sample 0aVe a party Friday evening, •ept. 5. at their home in Greenwood for the young people of the Ringwood and Greenwood jbhurches who are to attend col- , lege this year. Those from here to attend Were Jerry Cristy. Charlotte Hogan. Ferol Martin and Audrey and Duane Andreas. The evening W.S.C.S. met at home of Mrs. Dorothy Smith Wednesday evening. Mrs. Bobtlie Fossum gave the lesson, "Proclaiming the good news." Mrs. Doris Low had the devotionals. Mrs. Myrtie Harrison 4nd Mrs. Doris Low went as tKlelegates to the 4-star W.S.C.S. -JBeeting at the Chicago Temple. ^Names were drawn for their secret pals. Mrs. Grimm of Wonder Lake is a new member. The Round-up club met in the church hall for a party Saturday evening. The W.S.C.S. will ' serve a cafeteria supper in the church hall Thursday, Sept. 25. serving to start at 5 o'clock. The menu Will be roast pork, meat loaf, mashed potatoes, baked beans, ftuit salad, vegetable salad, fies, cakes, coffee, tea and milk. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich. ..Jr., entertained at a farewell party for Leland Berg sit their home Friday evening, Sept. 5. Those to attend were, Mr. and Mrs. Don Smart and sons. Bob •nd Bill, of Waukegan, Mary Jean Ingdohl of Chicago. Mr. •and Mrs. Jack Lenard and children of Lake Geneva, Mr. anc Mrs. Louis Winn and daughter. Janet, of Richmond, Mr. and Mrs. P h e 1 p s Saunders and """"Tflaughter of Sycamore, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Brennan, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Brennan and children. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Brennan and •on, Mrs. Oscar Berg and Mr. '•nd Mrs. Wiedrich and- daughter, Jifry Ann. Mrs. Collins returned home Monday from a visit with her sister-in-law at Vanda'lia, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. t. L; Harrison rnjoyed a trip through Northern Wis., a few days the past week. Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard spent Monday afternoon and evening in the Alan Ainger home at Hebron. Mrs. Floyd Howe was a visitor in the Louis Hawley home Thursday. Miss Marian Hawley returned home with her for a visit. 4 " Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Raemaker and family returned to their home at Thor, Iowa, Wednesday after being called here by the death of *~her father, Roy Neal. John Neal also returned to Ft. Sheridan. Wm. Claxton, John Dreymiller. Orval Hutson and Mrs. Henry Seegert .were callers in the George Shepard home Thursday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs: <3.. Izard of Crystal Lake and Mr. and Mrs. Wm Pagni spent the weekend St Silver Spur Ranch at Gresham. Wis. • , Leland Berg left Thursday to join the" Armed Forces. ;His wife will make her home with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Glauser. while he is away. Mrs. Lester ' Carr, Mrs. Wni. McCannon and Mr$. Oscar Berg were visitors at Woodstock Friday. Mr. and Mrs, Paul Walking-ton. Mrs. Walter Low and Miss Alice Peet, with the Community Inquirers, met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Benoy, near Hebron, Thursday evening. They all went on a tour through the cabinet-making shop on Rt. 14, r^ear Harvard. Mr. and Mrs. Aire Weller and Mrs. C. Stekettee of Holland, Mich., spent the weekend in the Albert Oonk home. Mrs. Stekettee remained until Friday. Miss Marian Jean and Franklin Block of Sheboygan, Wis., spent Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday in the home of their grandfather, Dr. Wm. Hepburn. Mr. and Mrs. Wolf Shadle spent Sunday with friends in Chicago. Among those from a distance to attend funeral services for Roy Neal here Tuesday were Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Terrin, Mrs. Harold Terrin and Mrs. Wei^s of Sturgis, Mich., Mr. and Mrs. Pete Negri, Mr. and Mrs. Graves, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Negri, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Negri, Mike Negri, Mr. and^Mrs. Joe Carney, Mrs. Tony Mezzotti. Mr. and I Mrs. Jim- Appoto, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Corvino, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Appoto of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Neal and Mr. and Mrs. Chester Boddy of Oak Lawn, Mr. and Mrs. Bowman of Marengo, Le- Roy Neal of Los Angeles, Calif., John Neal, of Ft. Sheridan and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Raemaker and family of Thor, Iowa. Mrs. John Hogan accompanied her daughter, Charlotte, to C h a m p a i g n T h u r s d a y , w h e r e Charlotte will attend college. She returned home Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Alan Wagner are moving to McHenry. „ Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Butler, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Benoy and son and A. W. Smith were Sunday dinner guests in the Lenard Brown home at Clarendon Hills. Mrs. Flora Harrison and Stanley Jepson returned home Saturday afternoon from their trip to Wisconsin. Mrs. Fred Bowman, daughter, Nancy, and son, Fred, Jr., and Mrs. John Skidmore and son, Edward, spent Sunday with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Ehlert. at Wilmot. * / . . Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bruce and family attended a picnic given by the soil conservation service of Elburn, where Mr. Bruce is employed. On the way home they called on their unclc and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Glidden at Plato Center. Mrs. John Skidmore and daughter, Betty, spent Thursday in Chicago. Pvt. Charles Ackerman left for Seattle, Wash., Wednesday and expects to leave for Japan this week Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Adams and family attended the wedding of her sister, Joann Condon, and Philip Parfary at the Community church in Richmond Wednesday and the reception at th* Hunter golf course. Mrs. Adams was matron of honor. Mrs. Jack Lenard and daughters of Lake Geneva spent Sunday in - the Fred Wiedrich, Jr., home. For Applied Booting - Siding Tiling - Guttering - ^ip Material! Only CALL FRANK GANS HP RIVERSIDE DRIVE -- PHONE 767-W Representative for. Sears, Roebuck 8c Co. FREE ESTIMATES LOOKS LIKE MILK FEEDS LIKE MILK HALF THE COST f MILK FEEDING uujursuay, SBpiwaow «•» Mr. and Mrs. John Ehlert and daughter, Mabel, of Wilmot spelit Wednesday afternoon and evening in the Fred Boyrman and John Skidmore homes. Mr#. Agnes Jencks returned home Saturday afternoon from Barrington, where she spent the past week in the home of her daughter and family. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Normar. and family of Evanston spent the weekend at their cottage here. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Jr., and Mrs. Louis Winn spent Thursday at Belvidere. Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard were Sunday dinner guests in the home of Mrs. Georgia Thomas at Woodstock. Other guests were Mrs. Leone Arnold of Woodstock. In the afternoon they were all callers <on Mr. and Mrs. Adrain Thomas and daughter at their cottage at Powers Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Alva Herbert arid Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Fowler and son, Bobby, of Elgin and Mrs. Emily Beatty spent Saturday in the Irving Herbert home at Burlington. Miss Virginia J e ps o n of Bloomirigton spent the Weekend with her mother, Mrs. Ben Walkington. ,. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wilcox of Woodstock, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Low of McHenry and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Low and family spent Sunday with their mother, Mrs. Viola Low. Other guests were Charles Olsen and Mr. and Mrs. Qlen Jackson and Peggy Heelein of Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Pete Sebastian entertained relatives from Chicago Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Berg, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Glauser and family and Mrs. Leland Berg visited Leland Berg at Ft. Cierir dan Sunday and all enjoyed a picnic dinner. Butchie Lenard of Lake Geneva spent the weekend in the Fred Wiedrich, Jr., home. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hawley of Chicago and Mrs. PasScoe of Park Ridge were visitors tc the Louis Hawley home Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cristy took their son, Jerry, to Champaign Friday, whete he will attend college. TAX COLLECTIONS Collections from six Illinois tax sources yielded a total of $30,244,944 during August, an increase of $1,956,072 over the same month last year, according to a report issued by the state Department of Revenue. A substantial increase is shown in motor fuel tax receipts, which amounted to $8,896,829 as compared with $6,986,847 in August a year ago. This, together with larger retailers' occupation tax, public utility tax and petroleum inspection tax receipts, more than offset declines in revenue from cigarette and liquor taxes. HIGHLAND'S HI-NUTRA CONTAINS IMPORTANT ANTIIIOTIC T E R R A M Y C I H MAKIS CALVtS OKOW fASTlK WITH LISS SCOUKINQ = 25 POUND £ J i O f l 55 METAL PAIL 9AOU ' COSTS ONLY ™ GUARANTEED TO SATISFY OR MONBY BACKI McHENRY MILLS PHONE 815 ••IT *79BS | \ FULL SIZE, BIG CAPACITY P . GiMUINi I DUO-THERM fr rCIICULATIN© OIL HIATEft! \ Heat* plenty! Big capacity oil heater with genuine Duo-Therm beating efficiency! * Heats beautifully I Superb new styling, rich brown finish, brass door poll! Heat* clean 1 Exclusive Dual Chamber Burner is clean burn* log on high or low fire setting and gives more heat from every drop of oil* Extra value features Automatic Draft Minder ... Waste Stop- ' per . . . Coordinated Controls. FREBj - For limited time only •••» mechanical thermostat with each < stove. 4 VYCITAL'S •* Hardware Sheet Metal Shop IK Greea 8t. McHenry, 111. PHONE 98 "We Servlcei What We Sell." and BARNYARD PAVEMENTS • Sanitary • Economical • Labor Saving • Feed Saving • Last a lifetime made with READY-MIXED CONCRETE "COR dozens of other improvements tfoand the form, no other materiel offers the service and economy of fire- Slfe, enduring concrete. II yon are planning a new proof poultry house floor, sanitary dairy barn floor, a feeding floor or foundation--build it the convenient, low cost way with Ready-Mixed Concrete; McHenry Sand & Gravel PHONE McHENRY 920 606 FRONT STREET McHfiNRY, ILL. CLARENCE'S SHOP MADE TO ORDER Bird Houses -- Lawn Chairs -- Swings Picnic Tables -- Umbrella Tables -- Sand Boxes Cement Chimney Caps Cement Cesspool Rings and Covers Pier and Park Benches -- Flower Boxes Wheelbarrows -- Picket Fences -- Arbors Trellis, etc. Unfinished Kitchen Cabinets, Cupboard!. Chest of Drawers, etc. J CLARENCE J. SMITH TEL. 583-J-1 wm JOHNSBURG 40-HOUR NURSING w WEEK COMES UP AT SlrtCQNVENTlON • . ---- f .Action designed to speed the state-wide adoption of a 40- hour nursing work week will hold a high place on the agenda or the fifty-first convention of the Illinois State Nurses' association in Springfield, Oct. 8-11, officers of the association have indicated. Delegates to the Springfield convention--more than 600 will represent the I.S.N.A. membership from all parts of the state --will be asked to consider the resolution adopted in June by the American Nurses' association. The A.N.A. position calls for nationwide adoption of a 40- hour week with overtime pay for hours beyond 40, and urges that all Itate associations give vigorous support to the campaign for adoption. The historic "no strike" .policy of the nursing profession will not be changed in anyway, even though the IJ3.N.A. convention strongly affirms the national resolution. Action by the Illinois group will, rather, urge an intensified program of educational and bargaining efforts so that the general public as well as private and public hospital administrators may realize the benefits of the 40-hour week as demonstrated in all areas Svjiere it has been adopted for the nursing profession. I.S.N.A. officials, in outlining the situation, pointed out that all 40-hour week aretis have reported the following specificgains: 1. It affords realistic, economic fairness of treatment for nurses. 2. It greatly decreases the rate of turnover in nursing staffs. 3. It alleviates the shortage of nurses by keeping more nurses in practice, Interesting retired FRESH DRUGS PLUS PERSONAL CARE V Fresh drugs, plus personal care, are a winning combination when you have your doctor's prescription filled. In our prescription department, only pure drugs are used, carefully compounded by registered pharmacists with great skill. Fpr all prescription filling, see us. : t *" N Y E (f)alqr€£Ti cflt|€nci| OruSt(<r nurses to return to practice, and attracting more young women. tjg£ enter' nursing schools. J*- 4. It produces gains in staif morale and health, with consequent improvement of patient* care by the nurses. i At the present time in Illinoi^ only 20 per cent of the nurses on institutional staffs sre on a, 40-hour work week fcasis. Aft additional 7 per cent 41-43 houri, while 53 per cent work 44-4T hours, and 20 per cent work 4S hours or more per week. Of particular concern is the requirement in state hospitals in Illinois that registered professional nurses work % ^8-hour, six-day week. ' !•- HARDEST BUSIES# CHEAPESf WORKERS IN TOWN! PLAIN^DDIE ALER WANT ADS PRQFEfUOITRIi DIRECTORS' > 119 N. Riverside Drive Phone 26 » 4 YOUR TFOUC SHOULD BE THE BEST rt < SIGHT! W'PS Of yowr FREE copy of ffco now Lighting Recipo Book *• mmnd you'll bad a luightor YowH SO« your bom* in a new ligkt.. . H you follow the recipes for good lighting practice in this new book. You'll discover how to use the magic of tight to bring new comfort, enjoyment and eyesight protection to your home. Each recipe is simple, dear and easy to foNow. And eadi is based ill coreful scientific research... but the technical data hot been re-written into understandable recipes. Mow ffce reeves... apef youl fcove o fiyfcf tondlfemrf ftemef This recipe wM ted you where to place • wal lamp for reading wMte Mated in bed. specific to exact measurements, and correct rise biitfc Want to be sure yew have the right fight on kitchen work counter# follow this redpe and youH find meal preparation is easier anp Got your FREE copy of too lighting recipo book store Or your doalor'$ today I PUBLIC SI*YICI DR. C. R. SWAN809T Denftist 120 S. Green Street , Office Hoars: Dally. Except Thursday 9 to 12 -- 1:80 to 5:80 Mon., Wed. and Frl. Evenings A By Appointment Only Telephone McHenry 180 VERNON KNOX Attorney At Law Oor. Green and Eton Streets McHenry, 111. Tuesday and Friday Afternoons Other Days By Appointment ffione McHenry 48 •OBERT A. STUEBfElf ' Attorney At Law; 604 Center Street < Phone McHenry 268 McHenry, DL >ea0i------iQcaoi i WQJ4AM M. CARROLL, Jr.* ' Attorney At Law 110'/2 Benton Street . Phone Woodstock 1884 > Woodstock, Illinois JOSEPH X. WAYNNE Attorney At Law == 800 Waukegan Road (RFD Box) Phone McHenry 492-W West McHenry, 111. « FRANK S. MAY BLACK DIRT - Gravel - Limestone . Excavating Route 1, Johnshurg Phone: McHenry 580-M-t 7 Limesteae VERN THELEN Xrucklng Gmvet Black Dir^r;# Excavating Tel. McHenry 588-R-2 or 588-W-l Box 172, Rt. 1, McHenry, 111. PVOI Z0E301 't A. P. FVEyND & SONS Excavatiiig Con(tractors Tracking, Hydraulic and Crane Service -- ROAD BUILDING -- Tel. 204-M McHenry, I1L INSURANCE EARL R .WALSH Fire, Auto, Farm St Life Insurance Representing RELIABLE COMPANIES ./When You Need Insurance of Any Kind Phone~4t~4r 968 Green ft Elm McHenry 111. KOE aoi STOFFEL A REIHANSPERGER Insurance agents for ail classes of property in the best companies. West McHenry, Ilinois Telephone 800 S07 Main Stret McHenry, DL aoi SCHROEDER IRON WORKS Ornamental St Structural Steel . Visit Our Showrooms * 8 Miles South on Rt J1 Phone 990 X0E301 ** RING'S PLUMBING and HEATING BOB FRISBY, JR. Quality Fixtures-Radian^ Heating Gas and Electric Water Heaters Water Systems - Water Softeners Repairs - Free Estimates Phone McHenry 289-M •• loaoesaaaoao AX,*S W ELDINO »mj »«r»» A ni It SERVICE 801 Main Kreet, McHenry Electric Portable Welding Acetylene Welding and Cutting ALEX W. WIRFS, Operator Phone 615-W-l or 484 McHenry, Hi. •C101 1 iQBaocaaL-- -- WANTED TO BUY CALL AT ONCE ON DEAD HOGS, HORSES and CATTLE. • We pay phone charges; Pey W to $25 for Old Horses toss for down horses and cattle. MATT S MINK RANCH ***** " spring Grove Road Phoae Johnsburg 814 II I

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