McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 Apr 1953, p. 12

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Grove Mm, Oiarlea Freuad iBraeat Blake and Francis JlMSfer of Waterloo, Iowa-, visited , the Clarence Miller and George Firsching families on Saturday. George Wagner of Chicago vteited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wagner, on Saturday. Miss Lillian Sanborn returned home this week having spent the winter months in Florida. Hie Tuesday Evening club met at the home of Mrs. "William Britz. Games of five-hundred were played and prizes were won by Mrs. Prank Tinney, Mrs. Paul Lewis and Mrs. Frank May. A lovely lunch was served. -r The firemen were called out twice to fires on Sunday, Both were grass fires and not fhuch damage was done; Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Meyer of Chicago visited his sister, Mrs. Elmer Smith, and family on Sunday. Our sympathy is extended to Wade and Lillian Sanborn on the loss of their brother. Henry W. Sanborn died at his home in Lake Geneva at the age of 82 on March 23. Funeral services were held from Hadecker and Derrick funeral parlors on Saturday afternoon. Those from here who attended were Mr. and Mrs. William Shotliff, Mrs. Alice Wagner, Mr. and Mrs. John Sanborn, Miss Lillian Sanborn, Wade Sanborn. Mrs. Harriet Gross and Mrs. Mary L. Harms. Mr. and Mrs. Rcger Mayfield and family of New Rochelle spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Anton Meyer. Mr. and Mrs. A1 Wirtz and children of McHenry visited her mother, Mrs. Joseph Brown, Sunday afternoon. The John Ward family have moved from the Ben Smith flat to Springfield, Ohio. TOP HARDWOOD DESIGNERS RATE NEW RECOGNITION Want Ads, like freedom, •verybodj '* business. Read the Want are Frank S. May BLACK DIRT Gravel - Driveways A "corner of fame", honoring the nation's leading designers, architects, and firms of outstanding work done in hardwoods is part of the newly opened "World of Hardwoods" exhibit at the Museum of Science and Industry 57th and Lake Michigan. Each year the five top award winners and their entries will be honored* in the permanent exhibit which is sponsored by firms representing all segments of the hardwoods industry. The five top awa:ds in 1953 for "Designs in Hardwoods" go to Paul McCobb and William P. Wachsman in the furniture design classification; to Milton Horn and Wachsman in architectural interior design; and to George Nelson in the industrial product design category. Wachsman, recipient of two tbp awards, is a Chicago designer heading the firm of Wachsman Associates, Inc. McCobb, who also received two honorable mentions ia a New York designer; Horn is a Chicago sculptor and Nelson a New York designer. The five top award winners and their work are pictured in the "designers section" of the Hardwoods exhibit, a permanent exhibit in the Museum. The work of the top winners are: in furniture--modern dining room set in birch using a new tobacco finish, by McCobb; modern coffee table in charactermarked American walnut with natural' finish and flared brass legs by Wachsman; in architectural interiors--a relief mural of basswood and oak carved by Horn for the library of Blythe Park school,0 Riverside, 111., a Chicago residence dining room with walls and ceiling of American walnut in a dull rubbed finish by Wachsman; in industrial products--a portable electric' clock in natural birch and brass or walnut and aluminum by Nelson. Freight Cars Give Heat -r And Headache \ Pennsylvania has no seacoast, yet has a navy yard. The Army engineers on the Alcan highway were snu, and warm despite the frigid weather. They had come upon an unexpected supply of wood and their fires crackled and roared as they fed it to them." * It was a few short hour* of solid comfort for the engineers-- followed by a three-year headache for the whole railroad industry. . The men, it developed later, had ripped apart three wooden boxcars that had brought in construction supplies and used the pieces for their firewood. The vanished freight cars unbalanced the railroad car accounting system for thirty-six. months before their movements were tracked down and the cause of death established. This happened during World War II. Fortunately, it doesn't happen often, or the small army of bookkeepers who keep track of the nation's 2,000,000 freight cars would be living on aspirin. These are the folks who know why a string of Western Maryland freight cars is standing on a siding in Peoria and why you see Chicago, Indianapolis & Louisville cars passing through Connecticut. To them It all seems simplo. To the layman it is sometimes incomprehensible. The answer lies in an intricate system of interchanging, designed to allow the movement of freight from coast to coast without removing it from the car into which it was originally loaded. It was not always thifa. In the early days of American railroading, freight shipments had to be transferred from one car to another every time they moved from one railroad to another. With the adoption of a standard track size and width between rails >{iear the end of the last century it became possible to switch cars between railroads-- and the interchange system was born. YOUR . 4 Excavating Rout* 5, J&hnsburg Phone: McHenry 580-M-l BUTCH'S SAVE MONEY ON YOUR CAR licKihr.. check., ups. and nihtmice by oar experts means lewer ear costs for fee! We Do Compltto Motor Overhauling. 309 W. Elm Street McHenry, I1L Phone 811 Residence 91-R 24 Hour Towing Service -- ^ -i •• • JDwrt Let .Vitamin-Deficiency Gel You "Old including dynamic new fatigue-fighting CKYSTAUIHE ITAMIN 1 'V9I in TRIPLE-microgram ' potency I 0LA-BER0N-12 ) --With High Quantities of 10 POTENT VITAMINS plus Blood-Building Elements: LIVER-IRON-COPPER Now Thrill to N*«r>fontitf t Youthful Vitality 1 Yes, when vitamin-hanger tape your strength you can be "ouf --worn-out--while you should be enjoying the prune of lift. fight it' Get OLA-BERON-li •--get vitamin energy--and s4|. taw healthy you can be. r € : > ) Be PUN to be^Wm#* You can't be good company if you're always tired, just not interested in anything. You can be fun if you "energize'" with the vitamins and : buildini needs. »g factors your body GetOLA-BERON-12-- 100POTHI} ? a-j, IKore CO MPifTf.T. More POTENT 0LA-BER0N-12 Olo-teron-12 Bolsters Wot with 10 Vitamin* plus High-Potency Blood* ^ Building Treatment { ThU powerful new vitamin far* ttula gives you sensational new Vitamin B12, Vitamin C, eight more important B*Complex vitamins. Combines anemiafighting B-12 with liver, iron, capper and folic acid to build lien, red blood. Get OLA-BERON-12 TODAY and see how healthy you can be! Railroad Industry Today the system has been worked out. to, the point where the owner of a freight car never sees it from one end of the year to the other. As a matter of fact, one railroad recently figured out that in the course of four years one of its cars had through the hands of e^rhtythree different railro&a*--some as many as te'h times--and had traveled through every state irt the Union, plus Mexico and Canada. One of the big intricaciea of the system comes when a raiK road has to pay for the use of til car belonging to another road. The charge is a surprisingly nominal $2 a day--far less thai* it costs the average citizen to* rent an autompbile. Here's where that small army-, of bookkeepers comes in. One of| the larger Eastern roads keepsfj over 300 people busy on car records--even though they use? the most modern bookkeeping^ and sorting machines in their work. ^ As a glimpse of the complexity of this operation, the conductor of every freight train must mike out a "wheel report," listing all cars in his train. These reports go to a central office each day, where the complicated process of keeping track of the cars is a never-ending operation. When you consider that even a medium-sized Eastern ' railroad often has as many as 12,000 of it^ own cars operating on other roads and up to 10,000 "foreign" cars on its tracks, the efficiency^ of the -railroaders who always, know where their freight cars are assuihes staggering proportions. Sometimes they lose * couple, but seldom for lbnger then a day. Unless, of course, they get chopped up for firewood--which isn't likely to Hfcppen again. ' TIMES HAVE CHANOBD ^ There Was a time when a fellow wanted 'k vacation he asked the boss--now he asks Uu finance company, too. wvsmmt cHEAnmT women* or toWsi PUOnMEAXJER WAN* ADS IAW CHANGES ON VEHICLE LIGHTS ARE RECOMMENDED Changes,'in the Illinois traffic law pertaining to lights on moving vehicles have been suggested by the Chicago Motor club. At present, Illinois law requires that between sunset end sunrise every motor vehicle shall display two lighted lamps "visible at least 500 feet in the direction" the vehicle la proceeding. This requirement is intended to enable pedestrians and other motorists to see the >car approacMhg. »lt doe* not keen that the lights on en automobile shall aid the driver to see Objects ahead of him. Two car.dlcs casting their light for 500 feet would fulfill the requirement of the present law. The changes proposed toy the Chicago Motor club will require motorists to drive with lights of such intensity that they would be able to see at' least 200 feet ahead. This means that the present practice or driving with parking lights would be prohibited. Today, driving with parking lights does not conflict with the law. » - . Another portion of tftfc'. bia would make it mandatory to have lights not bnly dtferiljtfs the period from sunset to sSftrfse, hot at any other time When there is not sufficient light to provide visibility for 800 feet ahead, such as during rainstorms fogs, drizzle or other adverse weather conditions. DEFENDING GO Apt. IlfeEff We can be thankful that for the most part Anjerican youth are defending goal lines, rather than border lines. No species birds now living have teeth. t# titusm #St:s .8 /mid* '• t • Ik'&tx, ,n';v •" t'lri £ N « WARD NO. 1 :-r.; •;"V • CVj. • To be vot^d at the regular city election in the City of McHenry, County of McHenry ariij of I11ir.nist tQ Tii^Rfjay^ April EARL R. WALSH. >Reed Hie Want Ads! PROGRESSIVE PARTY , ?etiUoA) •>» •%M>areeett%s<•» GEORGE P. FREUND ii,-,X "• ••tf • "v*z? d • O Y t l • -Citjr -Clerk EABL SL WA1SH For Aldermen EDWARD L. BUCHERT For City Treasurer • M * - t ' . i:>£- W*or u.; ii-.-iFor MayoW:j ' v , --K .vtnar- - \Use<i si *^s-gw• "•its*' j'asci,/ City :Ctaiiit'*;i- •; 1 i y %ti» ' • ;• 'Sfcfc r; 'A-ytSn't .^#>1 -aetiis „• : . •fvj.v.v • '.-v.-assfr For Alderraain •••' .. , • .-For City Treasurer THOMAS F. ROLGER : Hut. i?ii ,/fi' Nye Drug Store 1^9 N. Riverside Drive > f McHenry, Til. PHONE 28 •5 IVa£g Wrl (Ljcticij DRUG STORE 16 TROPHIES MB MEMiS TWQ Att (ROUPS , We or* iperaoring another of the popular Monogram Model Building CtnMi. Come in and g«t one of (Iwm 28 famous model* -- Flying and SoM AWutanil, M Power Rao* Can And FighNne SMpt. Build a Monogram Modal and win a boautiful award with your handiwork. ENTRY BLANK FREE with each kit. Juniors, up to 13 yean old. Soniort 13 yean and older. It's easy to win with th*w oaJy-to-buBd models. Models will be judged lor appearance only, Your model does not have to fly or operate. Come k and get bwoib a--n.--a.j nt ienlftAt mpHjr and medal awards. Ceme le Tedsyl Contest Closes SaiM April 28, 1953 Albert Kr^nse ft Son NEWS AGENCY STATIONERY - ICE CREAM 806 Elm St. McHenry, m. '•'"If ^ ' t i. »,> ' •»» SPECIMEN ' BALLOT ' WARP NO. 3 To .be voted at the regular ciity election in the City of McHeniy, State of Illinois^ to be h^d Tuesday, April 21,1953^ ^ *^^ .i.' PROGRESSIVE PARTY (By Petition) * •" ' . rv j. t ;* GEORGE P. FREUND ' For CSty Cletlt EARL R. WALSK For Alddhnin C. BOTHERMBi For City Treasurer THOMAS F. BOLGER of1 McHenry and EARL - "A V. S :.rrt t>vi rx HS^'i 'tit#'?' Rftii.v i'"** * r'flt: ' '•'m lpj* : Ot ••••i •: ; P. ® bw* wit .. "MUM: •2 4$ •~i v f . A R. City Clerk. Svj'a-T.v -tC'.f v*1' .$• r si kti; Urg. For Mayor For" Aidsnnpe • M, * ,«*?.»' T f ,? ,f * For'caty " ^e*surer' # t SPECIMEN BALLOT ' WARD NO. 2 " . To in the City of. MoKtoy, two# of State of Illinois, to be held Tuesday, April 21, 1953. ? t r ^ u ' o PROGRESSIVE PARTY Petitum) O EABL R. WALSR • CUy Clu-k. INDEPENDENT PARTY 4 For Mayer GEORGE P. FREUND • • Clerk EARL For Aldenapa DONALD JOHNSON For City THOMAS F. BOLGEK • • • • m,. City rssaer GLENN D. DIXON i.- For Mayor at/ aty TTeuanr I .

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