McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 4 Mar 1954, p. 9

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rft t <m?- i K< V /"> %!« l' * u . ' t ^w * • « • - -•> ' * - *"*'• Thursday, March 4, 1954 Wonder Lake News The Red Cross drive at Wonder Lake got off to an amazingly good start Sunday with the workers turning in $558.35 at the end of the day. The quota at Wonder Lake is only $700. Branch Chairman Ruth Redman said that since Sunday donations have come in from the American Legion post and Woman's club, as well as from some of the workers, but the amount* have not yet been totalled. The drive Sunday started with a luncheon at Nativity Lutheran church, with the Rev. Burtoii Sohroeder aokihg the blessing. County Red Cross Drive Chairman James Irving said that it seemed particularly fitting for the drive to start from a church. Four sections of two subdivisions (Lookout Point and Indian Ridge) have not yet been covered because the workers were 11! and- unable to work Sunday. However, those who live in the areas will be visited within a few days. Mrs. Redman said .that any person "not visited, other than in the subdivisions not called on, should contact her directly to make a donation. Mrs. Redman expressed her appreciation pf the cooperation she received from her workers, from the chapter headquarters and the local deputies who aided in watching the money and checking on the workers. Deputy Ed Doutlich, also fund drive chairman for Wonder Lake, worked all day even though his wife was acutely ill with in attack of ptomaine poisoning. guest last week, at the meeting of the Woodstock Kiwanis club. nan's Club er Lake \ Woman' The Wonder Woman's club will meet March 12 at rhe home of Mrs. Victor Milbrandt. A£ the last meeting, held in the heme of Mrs. Karen Widen on Feb. 19, Indian affairs were discussed. Arrest Confidence Mil < Magistrates Elmer R. Murphy and Sigurd Jacotosen of Wonder Lake arrested a man who calls himself Albert or Allan Lundberg on Saturday night. The man has allegedly flooded the entire county with bogus checks, most of them in amounts under twenty dollars and moat of . them cashed in taverns. presented a very exceptional program of gospel music last Sunday evening, Feb. 28. Wm. Kerr was the guest speaker. Next Sunday, March 7, the monthly communion service will be held at the close of the regular morning worship service at 11 o'clock. In the .afternoon at 3 o'clock, we conduct our monthly service at Christian Haven, when the young people of our own church will present a program. Jack Loshbough being the speaker. At the evening service at 7:30 O'clock, a group from the Summerdale Evangelical Free church in Chicago will be in charge of the musical program. The pastor is attending and taking part in the dedication service of the New Evangelical Free church in Edgebrook, Chicago, this Wednesday evening. THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER -' V - ' . . *; > * v , , * .~« xr • / > j j - • , ,j •" i .• , • vW. Hospital Auxiliary Mrs. Lillian Belshaw was recently hostess for the Wonder Center oard group, who have a good social time and also con tribute to a worthy cause at one and the same time. Six dollars was turned over to the building fund flor the Memorial hospital for MicHenry county. While the $50,000 goal has been met there will always be a need for additional funds as cost of furnishings, decorating and maintenance Keep rising, so women all over the county are continuing to raise money for the hospital. Those who enjoyed the evening of cards were Mesdames Simone Fuller, Martha Thompson, Velma Sinclair, Freda Hoefler, Betty Miller, Neva Fuhrer . and Jean Motulewicz, as well as Aunt Becomes 111 , the hostess. The traditional All aunt of Mr. and Mrs. Gfeg cherry pie and coffee were serv- Mehling became suddenly ill last -Sunday while a visitor at their home. They rushed her Chicago hospital, where •till a patient to Lose Fine Dog Cal Ko!ar's fine beagle, Jackie, was killed Monday afternoon on the blacktop road in Wonder Woods near the Kolar residence. The dog was an outstanding hunter and devoted to his master. Attend Party Mr. and Mrs. A1 Huebner and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gamin were in (Chicago Sunday to attend a party. - • • 5 . -- v " f e e c o n W i * Mrs. Catherine Taylor, sister of Mrs. Justus Kellner and a resident of Indian Ridge, became an American citizen Monday. She took her oath of allegiance along with eight other county residents. Mrs. Taylor, a widow, and her son, George, came from Scotland several years ago under the sponsorship of Mr. and Mrs. Kellner. George is a student In the local school. Now Recuperating Bill Wright of the Handy Pantry, who has been a patient In a Chicago hospital for a number of weeks, is now recuperating in the Chicago home of a daughter. Friends may drop bim a card to cheer him up. Now In Hospital Mr«. Irene Benwell, a former resident of Wonder Lake, is a patient in the Memorial hospital at Woodstock. , Give Shower There were thirty women present at a shower for Therefte Brennan last week. Visits Kiwanis Club Horace Wagner of Wonder Lake, treasurer of the McHenry Township Kiwanis club, wis a CHOOSE YOUR CARPET AT HOME TIDY Floor Coverings (RC. 14) If a busy schedule keeps you -from shopping for carpet, one of our decorator trained carpet experts will be pleased to bring samples of heavenly Lees carpets to your home at your convenience. See how attractive your rooms appear with the carpet pattern and color of your choice. You'll find our "at home" shopping service quick, easy, and so smart. Naturally, there's no obligation. Call today for an appointment. WOODSTOCK 888 ' ed later in the evening. The next meeting will be the first Thursday in March at the home of Mrs. Jean Motulewicz. The annual St. Patrick's card party for everybody in the county, whether members of the auxiliary or not, will be held on St. Patrick's Day, March 17, at the Moose hall. Cards will be played both afternoon and evening so groups can make up their own tables and attend whichever session is convenient. This annual affair is put on by all the hospital auxiliary units throughout the county and the money raised goes into the general fund, -which in turn purchases equipment for the preset^ hospital, furnishing and decocting ' <*T ""the hurses ^it>fties, furnishings for the nursery, such as incubators, respirators, etc. It was out of these funds that the $1,700 dishwashing equipment recently installed was purchased. Make up your own tables and play whatever game you wish. Refreshments Will be served both afternoon and evening. The committee in charge will be glad of cake donations to be delivered the day of the party. Don't forget, Moose Hall, March 17. According to the change in by-law*, members will be sent only two notices of membership dues being payable -- one right after the first of the year in January and one a few months later. After that the names will be dropped. Gonpel Chnrch News A young people's group from the Villa Park Gospel Tabernacle BICYCLE Paga Nidi . iii i. McHenry County Through The Yean by Marie Schaettgen BOND SALES FOE 1954 EXPECTED T0t? TOP '53 TOTAL ' Savings Bonds sales are expected to top those of 1053, is the forecast of Earl O. Shreve, national director of the U. S. Savings Bonds division, treasury department. Mr. Shreve, recently appointed head of the U. S. Savings Bonds program, was president of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, and vu e-nresident of sales of the GeneiU Electric company. He further pointed out that the 1953 sales of E and H bonds set a post-war record dating back to 1946. "The fine sales record of 1953 was made possible by the patriotic service to the Savings Bonds program given by all Americans across the land," Mr. Shreve said. "And the volunteer workers and groups who contributed so unselfishly to make the program's success possible will be depended upon for an even greater effort by the Treasury in 1954." Labor and management, the media of advertising and communication, bankers, farmers, negro and women's groups, and organizations of all types played important roles in the program's success. The Savings Bonds program is essentially made possible by the public at large and the nation-wide volunteer organization. "Cash sales of Series E and H bonds, made wholly to individual citizens, will total' around $4,380,000,000 for the calendar year of 1953", Mr. Shreve said. "I am completely .optimistic about the increased sales of U. S. Savings Bonds in 1954", he added. "More and more America wi are discovering for' -them* Selves each day the tremendous advantages of savings with U. S. Savings Bonds. The payroll savings plan available to millions of employees throughtout the country, and the systematic bonda- month savings plan 1b available in all banks." .Chapter IS • Hartiand , In 1884 the board of supervisors voted to appropriate * $25,000 for the purchase, of land to be used as a "home." This amount, of course, to include the building and improvements .necessary. A 5 per cent boiid issue was floated to raise the money. The J. C. Allen farm wa£ finally purchased for $6,000. The remaining $19,000 was used for building. / . . , Resources and Industrie* * McHenry county is not, primarily, a manufacturing district since there are no large cities in the territory. As a farming region it now ranks among the best in Illinois. Fertile soil, good climate and proximity to Chicago markets makes it ideal for agriculture, dairying and grassing. Part time farmers, or "gentlemen farmers," are becoming more and more interested in cattle feeding in these later years. The easily accessible Chicago stockyards probably exerts a great influence on this phase of farming and ranching. Then? are no huge farms or ranches such as are found in the western states or in Texas, but the farmer with his 120 acres is generally prosperous and satisfied. He has all the latest equipment with which to carry on hi* particular kind of farming. The Farmer's Wife His children go to college. His wife belongs to the Home Bureau, various service organizations and cultural clubs. She has as many labor saving devices as her city sister boasts. Magazines, daily newspapers, radio and TV keep her abreast of the times. Current events is not, to her, a subject the children study in school. It is life in its many facets -- it is history in the making -- it is the meaning behind the headt lines. She knows what the world thinks as well as what it does. Yet with all of her cosmopolitan interests she is still a believer in the old adage that a "yroman's place is in the home." To her this does not mean she must never leave that home. It means, rather, that her family must be well fed and cared for even if she must borrow knowledge from some foreign country or read books oh how to understand her children. Her mind la open to receive the best of the world's knowledge and she possesses the ability to apply this knowledge to benefit her own family. Her husband, the McHenry county farmer, is fortunate in being able to run a successful farm without the necessity of isolating himself and his family from the rest of the . world. He is seldom more than a few miles from a town in the county and never much more than an hour from the second largest dty in America. NO WORRY A man was nearly bankrupt and sick with worry. His doctor told him he must stop worrying, so he hired a man to worry for him. His wife scolded him. Said she, "How are you going to pay him?" He replied, "His' Job is to worry about that, too." SOIL SURVEY TO BE CONDUCTED IN NORTHEAST COUNTY * Early this spring the McHenry county soil survey party will begin the third year of soil mapping. The western ha'f of the county is now completely mapped. This year the party will be working in Richmond, Burton, Hebron, Greenwood, McHenry, Dorr and Nunda township. Burton W. Ray of the University of Illinois Agronomy department, and Louis H. Pierard of the Soil Conservation Service, will be two members of the four-man team. Two new men have not as yet been chosen. The purpose of the mapping survey is to obtain information necessary for making a new soil mtp for McHenry county. The old map, published in 1921, has I been found to be much too generalized to supply an &>:cuiate knowledge of detailed land condi'ions. Such detaile-i information is needed today in order to take full advantage of new ideas brought about by recent agricultural experiments. The maps are also used by the Soil 'Conservation Service to h®lp farmei3 make conservation plans for their individual farms. The procedure followed by a soil survey party in mapping a county is first to outline two sections of land on an aerial photograph which Is approximately twelve square inches. This is the area that one man will work in for two or three days. Next, the soil mapper walks into the outlined area and begins to make borings with a soil auger to a depth -»f fortytwo inches or more. He examines the soil brought up by the auger and determines what soil type it is. Over one-hundred different soil types have been mapped in McHenry county. After determining the extent of that particular soil type, the area is outlined by a pencil-line 0:1 the photograph. The percentage of slope is then calculated by using a specially designed instrument. Then the depth of the remaining top-soil is determined by shallower borings. All this information is abbreviated by using a number to indicate the soil type, a letter to represent the percentage of slope, and another number to designate the remaining depth of top-soil. This combination of numbers and letters written within the outlined area and the operation is completed. Since farm boundaries 4re crossed many times during the mapping of two sections, the full cooperation and consideration of farmers and land owners is needed to get the job done well. So if you see a fellow J* aring light gray or tan work clothes and carrying a shiny soil auger walking through your back pasture, he's up to no mischief, he's only trying to get a job done. According to surveyor's ore, 36 square miles comprise township. HANS FLACH BODY & FENDER REPAIRS COMPLETE PAINTING FULLY GUARANTEED 10% DISCOUNT ON ANY JOB Discount Not Allowed To Dealers or Garages 609 FRONT ST. PHONE M4-B Authorized Schwinn Dealer £ MARK'S Sporting Goods - Marine Supplies McHenry, 111 212 S. Green St. Phone 1000 Head The Want Ada! Stop Taking Harsh Drags for Constipation Avoid Intastirui Upset! Get Relief This Gentle Vegetable Unthra Wayl Forconstiptdon, smrttkehmh drug*. They cause brutal cramps and griping^ disrupt normal bowel action, nuke ro» peatcd doses seem needed. When 70a are temporarily const), pated, get sure but gtmtk relief--without salts, without hush drugs. Take Dc CaldwsU's Senna Laxative contained ia Syrup Pepsin. The extract of Senna ia Dr. Caldwell's is one tf tbt fintst MterW l*xsti*ts known to medicine. Dr. Caldwell's Senna Laxative tasret good, gives gentle, comfortable, satisfying relief of temporary constipacioa for every member of the family. Helps - you get "on schedule" without repeated doses. Even relieves stomach sourness that constipation often brings. Buy Dr. Caldwell's. Money back if not satisfied. Mail botde to Box 28<^ New York 18, N. Y. Funds invested from now through the 10th of March will draw earnings from January 1st INVEST TODAY CURRENT MVIDEND f J** MA IE Nee rtLEEAH SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 102 N. State Street 4 Marengo, Illinois STEFFAN'S Jewelry & Records 514 Mate St. McHeai?, • PfiONl I2S-J th OWfceriM - Matt** ft fly Raymond F. OUSENBERRY OF MARENClO, ILLINOIS Is a Republican Candidate for the Office of McHenry County Treasurer | u His background for this responsible office te banking-, operation of his own business and eight years experience in the office of Supervisor of Assessments. His constant efforts in behalf of the farmer and an rural property owners has shown that this type of property assessment has not been increased but gradually reduced. Much greater and better work can still be done for the goqd and benefit of the rpra^property owners and here is:'V man experienced and qualified' to do it. In C&irness to everyone, rural property should carry no greater taxation load than city or urban property. Ray Dusetiberry is a charter member of the American member -«f--Riley Grange No. 68, has always been active in civic affairs, serving as alderman. City of Marengo; President (tf the Ortde School Board, past president of Commercial club and Marengo Kiwanis club. He is a man who haa tad bis own tax problems and bdlsw bhat he understands yours. If a caliber can be of amj help to you, he respaotfuBp Sottclts your vote at the primaries 00 April 13, 1854. . ' 1 (FlOd political edverUeemljl) • (Reprinted from the Feb. issue of the Illinois Oraager) tOO-Hbrs^pot^er P&fonrmdt TIT. TIm Look of Is in ovory '54 tUiCk Tttfciy comptotoly new "years-crwoy" styling --foynotttd by tha dreom-car dwign of thm panoroMk swsep-boc^«fcincUtir«M. * i (Imtretid it tha roJusfi •ilk* CsMiVtr tivjftra "hardtop' Come drive the CENTURY biggest horsepower RUSSEL and POWERS, Auctioneers Due to my help being placed in 1-A, I am forced to sen at public auction on the fawn known as the Henry Stilling farm located 2 miles north of McHenry on the old McHenry-John^burg Rtacktop road on SATURDAY. MARCH 13 at 12:S0 sharp 56 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK consisting of 20 Hi Grade Hohrteta Dairy Cows. 12 of these cows have freshened in the past 6 weeks and 8 are close springers. At the present time this dairy Is pioducang; 10 cans of milk daily. 2 Jersey dairy cows; 10 Hoistein hedfers, vaccinated, will either be fresh or close springers by day of sale; 1 Hoistein heifer, vaccinated, 1 year odd, open; 1 Hoistein heifer, vaccinated, 8 months old; 1 Jersey heifer, vaccinated^ 18 months old, open; 1 HoUMein bull, 2 years old, Registered; 2 Hampshire sows, 18 pigs. Surge Milking machines, 2 units; 1 Ritewwy milking machine; 14 milk cans, pails, strainers. FEED 260 bales straw, 500 bushel ear corn. ^ CHARLES J. MILLER TERMS: $29.00 and under cash, over that amount % down and ba4*> ance tot monthly payments plus interest. Buy what you want, afign your own note, no co-Bigners needed. Settlement mutft be made on day of arte. THORP 8ALE8 CORPORATION, CM Phone Woodstock, Illinois 110 THE invitation you see headlined here calls for action --Mid comparison. % For you have to see and drive the 200-horsepower CENTURY-- and check its local delivered price -- to know how it puts other automobiles in this Buick's dollar class on the spot. Look lor yourself -- and you'll see what we mean. Look at styling, new-day features, visibility, interior modernity, ride comfort, handling ease--we believe you will find nothing on the automotive horizon to equal the CENTURY on all counts. But what wit! prove to be the most eye-opening news of all is the power buy you make in this spectacular Buick. ., When you compare --when you check the facts --you find that you are buying more horsepower per dollar in a CENTURY than you get yov ctfiv fcvy fft# ; Wagon of n«w hw pricai--for ffcti ail-now, ofl-ttooI boovty i* now ovai'ob/o in Bride's hwtl-prictd Special Sori'os, and in Hio fmtmtimmmlly poworoW CMisir SaHafc in any other standard-production American automobile, bar none. And it is horsepower that gives you brilliant performance, greater economy, new safety--for here you get the highest power-to-weight ratio in all Buick history. Why not come !n and see the wholf •tory come alive when you tak& th£ wheel of a Buick CENTURY? We know of no better way to prove to you that this gorgeous, glamorous sweep of automobile is the power buy of the year --by far. BUICK: the beautiAil l>uy UNION UMC STARS K* MNCK-Soo *• Mek-i*lo *•» T«m*w twafc* * ' r •WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK W1U BUILD THtM' R. I. OVERTON MOTOR SALES *r- 403 FRONT STREET T L PHONE e McHENRY. ILLINOIS wmmmmmmmmmmrnrn ^ MS ' f * ' "

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