SfK'W * m f^ WW McHENRY PLAUfDEAXXH :•> ? 4 ." "St V '»" m?r ""V,' JpSjwS^ , .. ~ v. if T X A fcaUiaiMriMMft }. *<p- • ® > * '*§#*• iJThuriday. M«y 27.1954- 1 FOR CONTROL Continued From Page 1 PLEASANT MEMORIES OF POST-PROM PARTY LINGER WITH MANY ^Wl the disease. The last case in this community occurred south of the city when a yearid bull contracted rabies and | be~at and funniest entertainment "I enjoyed myself immensely at this party and I hope they are made an annual affair." "Wonderful, the beautiful ^Country Club, the good dinner, the News About Our Servicemen Danny Cartan, stationed at Fort Ord, Calif., has been Plan Summer Speech Cli ' * 5pyw».-«n to all the physicians asking fbr referrals. U a person's speech la such that "we pay more attention to how a person says something, rather than to what he This summer, McHenry county j says, that speech is defective." <j tesidents will sponsor their fifth' Speech problems include: Cere- Kiwanis Hold Initiation Rit4 Cied. It was later learned that ; you could want made this an I screened for the counter intellian ailing muskrat had been | evening 1 11 never forget." "My j „ence corpg ^ wlu soon start found in the barn shortly1 bbee--! -.nininn is thp fMllb Aftpr-Oln li. for®, able under its own power, the animal •va» shot. It was believed that he muskrat had the disease and 'Transmitted it to the bull. opinion is the Club After-Glo |jjs training When the farmer was un- w-as a wonderful success. Keep1 to encourage it to leave, it up in the future." These were just a few of the inswers to "opinion" cards pass- Danny graduated from the local high school in 1951 and studied chemical and electrical engineering at Indiana Technical Expect Speed To Cause 126 Deaths Over Weekend Excessive speed and alcohol will be responsible for 210 of the predicted 380 highway accident deaths in the country during the three-day Memorial Day weekend starting tomorrow night. Of this number. '26 will die in speeding accidents and 84 more, both motorists and pedestrians, because of xcesslve use of alcohol.' These figures were released as an estimate this week by the Association of Casualty and Surety companies. Other main causes contributing to the 380-victim total are expected to include failure to keep to the right of the centerline, 38 victims; failure to observe the right of way, 27 victims; and over-fatigue or sleeping at the wheel, 24 victims. Accidents caused by miscellaneous factors will kill the final 81 of the predicted total. No better time to heed the warning of the National Safety Council: "Drive with care, the life you «av« may ,.fre your own." ed out by the sponsoring Riwanis i college at Fort Wayne, Ind. He club to junior and senior stu- entered service April 27, 1954. The young man has a wife and 8-month-old son residing St Port Wayne. dents and their guests who at tended the first post-prom party ever held in McHenry. They are'typical of the answers given by the great percentage of those who filled to the cards at the close of the evening. The young people arrived at the Country ciub shortly after midnight and enjoyed a delicious chicken dinner before ' three top professional acts made their appearance and kept them royally entertained until morning. Much of the time consumed by the entertainers was taken up with audience participation and kept the young folks interested and active until allout 5 o'clock. "At that time, they were taken to the V.F.W. clubhouse for breakfast and the conclusion of as nearly perfect an evening as one could ask for. Hosts and hostesses describe everyone attending as well mannered and cooperative in taking part in the program and with such a spirit hope to offer as fine a post-prom party another year. 1 * The retail committee of the Chamber of Commerce recommends that McHenry stores be closed all day Monday, May 31, in observance of Memorial Day CASE BEFORE JURY James Garrity of Chicago was one of twelve people named in eighteen indictments returned by the grand jury before Judge William M. Carroll on Monday. He was named in a true bill charging burglary and larceny, having been arrested on an alleged break-in into the Mark's Sporting Goods store in McHenry and taking a number of items valued at considerably more than $1,000. WHEAT QUOTA PENALTY SET AT UNIFORM $1.12 PRICE The marketing quota penalty on "excess" wheat of the 1954 crop is $1.12 a bushel, Bert Bridges, chairman of the county ASC committee has announced. The rate is uniform throughout the country and as directed under law represents 45 per cent of the wheat parity price aa of May 1, 1954. Farmers who do not comply with their wheat acreage allot ments are subject to marketi quota penalty provisions on "excess" wheat except that there is no "excess" wheat on any farm with a wheat acreage of 15 or less. Their wheat crop also is ineligible for government price supports if the wheat acreage is in excess of the wheat allotment acreage. - The first buyer of the wheat becomes liable for the penalty if the farmer at the time of marketing is not able to present a wheat marketing card Or wheat marketing certificate as evidence that his crop is penalty free. In such a case the buyer should collect the penalty and transmit it within fifteen days to the treasurer of the county ASC committee for the county in the wheat was produced. .Read The Wast Ada! ^ Every ELGIN REDUCED 20% RIGHT AT THE HEIGHT OF THE GIFT-TIME SEASON! annual summer speech clinic in cooperation with School District No. 72. The clinic is niade possible by the Easter Seal agency, McHenry county Association for the Crippled. \ The speech day clinic will run from June 21 through July 30 and will be held at the Clay street school in Woodstock. Two outstanding speech therapists have been hired to co-direct the clinic, Miss Maijorie Butterworth and Irving Friberg. Miss Butterworth is a speech therapist in Racine, Wis. She jBpent last summer as a graduate therapist at the Summer Speech Workshop in Cleft Palate and Delayed Speech at the University of Wisconsin. Of local interesti to theatregoers is the fact that Miss Butterworth is a graduate of Goodman Theatre, Chicago, and that she spent several seasons acting with various professional stock companies. In 1947. *he was' a member of the Woodstock Players. J "N r. Friberg is a speech theraand director of special education for Bethalto public schools Bethalto, 111. He attended Illinois State Normal university and Cornell university, but received his undergraduate degree from Augustana college and his graduate degree from Northwestern university. Mr. Friberg directed the Woodstock summer speech clinic in 1952. Letters have been sent to all the schools in the county and Control Garden Pest* VYCITAL'S Hardware Sheet Metal Shop LS2 8. Green St. ; McHenry PHONR t» bial palsy, stuttering, deaf and hard-of-hearing, voice disorders, cleft palate, Relayed speech, aphasia and severe artlculatory disoiders. It sometimes happens that certain diseases or traumatic conditions also affect speech, thus making that person eligible for therapy. A special attempt was made this year to reach the pre-school age child who would otherwise go unaided until his fifth or sixth year. Referrals can be made to Mrs. W. H. Tammeus, phone 893, Mrs. Milton Derr, 5&3-M, or Easter Sc-al Therapy Center, 1707, all Ideated in Woodstock. Any Mc- Henty county resident, regardless of age, is eligible for speech therapy. . . CARD OF THANKS The School Sisters of St. Francis of St. Mary's school wish to take this opportunity to extend their sincere thanks to all those who have the compatience of the new Atverno College at Milwaukee. May God reward and bless our many friends who have so nobly and generously come to our assistance. *3 pany, delivered an inspirational talk on re-establishing the values for normal living. The talk dealt with alerting Kiwanians to their duty of informing young people McHenry Township Kiwanis of the sig- nificance o--f vu-nderstandclub held initiation ceremonies j ing these values and t^ieir place and received the travelling 1 in a normal era, without war or plaque from the Crystal Lake infintinn Correct your faults by observing those found in others. club in a ceremony at the V.F.W. clubhouse on Monday, May 24. Ken H. Greenaway, director of field service, delivered the principal address. Lt. Gov. Joseph X. Waynne officiated at the initiation ceremonies. The evening began with dinner served by the V.F.W. auxiliary, the initiation ceremony followed and the balance of the evening was spent in dancing and visiting. The following new members came into the McHenry Township Kiwanis ranks: Rev. B.f Schroeder, Thomas P. Mathews, Frank Schroeder, James Bell. Steven A. Duttko, Elmer Murphy, Homer G. Fitzgerald, Dr. J. E. Sayler, Ken Leibaeh, Donald Johnson, Sigurd Jacobsen, William Mann, Stanley Wilson, Leonard Freund, Ralph Samsel, Charles Adams, William Goettsche, Roy Dodd, Harry Brady, Joseph Gilmore and Arnold Rauen. Absent were Andrew Worwick, John E. Nett and Harry Hans. Mr. Greenaway, who before taking the field service office for Kiwanis International was associated with W. T. Grant com- Youth today does not seem to stop to think how industry % came about and puts it on trial with challenging demands; youth needs to stop to think that industry and business did not just happen but was developed by people like themselves who built it by work and study as they climbed the ladder of their own success and thajt 'of industry, rung by rung. " * James Althoff presided over the meeting attended by about 100 Kiwanians and their wives. Among these was the Crystal Lake delegation headed by their president, Charles A. Porter. The ,»• M l 1 1 I I I 1 1 H I > » • FINER FOOD! * For i Finer Meal Announcing our membership in the Central Wholesale Grocery Corp., we will now be known as the Centrella Food Mart* As a member of this organ- " ization we will enjoy the 4 combined buying power of some twenty-two thousand ^ ^ retail stores throughout' the nation, four hundred «,j and fifty within the Chi- I cago area. The result of t h i s e n o r m o u s b u y i n g 1 power can mean but one \ thing --- lower food costs, i ,E™er tte„^ving °* which we ^ shall be very happy to pass i along to our customers. ' Now, just a word about ^ quality, you may rest assured that the outstanding from club. FOR ATHLETE'S FOOT USE A KERATOLYTIC BECAUSE-- It SLOUGHS OFF the tainted outer skin to expose buried fungi quality of Centrella brand and kills it on contact. Get this foods is surpassed by none STRONG, keratolytic fungicide, j J T-4-L, at any drug store. If not j • pleased IN ONE HOUR, your 40c back. Now at Bolger's. FRESH CANDY HEADQUARTERS! Our Whitman's retrfgeratsr fives you kitchen-fresh candy all year 'roani^.. Get some today I pf f&slt HA 0$tr ,1m\ CHOrCCfLATES BOLGER'S store 103 S. GREEN STREET PHONE 40 McHENRY. ILL. I*»Y ||«m COMMA II M 14K told AIM, ft«f. Prict . . (71 SO MORON 1) Jewtk Expansion bract- M. Re» Pnct . $65.00 0ARIA 17 Domed c nowoniy*573 now only $5292 Jmls erytftl. fttg Price .. . $42 50 NOW ONLY *3492 Priest bid. F«d. To* F |0t0 H6IN PtENTKX tl JeweIt 14K (old MM. tof. Price . . $71.90 AMHERST It Jewell Expansien b*M lef. Price ... 167.50 NOW ONIY *5729 NOW ONLY *5492 I r ONLY / * $#lf-Win4in| HENDRIX SWknasfer R*0. Price $65.00 CARLSIAD SMOCKMASTIR M ktoelt. Curved crystjl. a* Price . . $47 50 NOW ONLY *3892 ELGIN THt WATCH W I T H D U R A P O W E R MAIN SPRING . . . The H«crrt That N*v*r ah II MIT ED TIME ONLY.. . FIRST JIME IN ELGIN'S 90-YEAR HISTORY. . . EVERY ELGIN INCLUDED IN THIS SWEEPINQ OFFER AIL 1954 MODELS) Tak«YourChoifj§ AND THEN ^ Tak® Your 20% SAVING FROM ORIGINAL FACTORY PRI68 TICKETS... 20% OFF and Credit/ Too! PAY AS LITTLE AS •1 A WEEK! ELGIN SPRING TIMI SAVINGS Offer good oWy mM S New driving ease! SPECIALS For Friday & Saturday. May 28 & 29 Hills Bros. Coffee per ib. *i , j > Lb. Limit OSCAR MAYER'S BACON Extra Lean 79 OSCAR MAYERHi Summer Sausage < v 79l!ib OUR OWN BONELESS CORNED BEEF 49|;n > CHOICE -- BEEF POT ROAST Best Cuts v 49 J CHOICE - BEEF - Standing RIB ROAST 59 New Chevrolet Trucks . cfo more work per day • • • more work per dollarl LEAN -- SHORT RIBS OF BEEF 3 ^ 9 9 ' OUR VERY BEST -- LEAN GROUND BEEP per lb. 49c 2f t*95F *52® 17 Jewels. Water- resistant* original i«al <» propariy nttor*4 after opMing lor W STEFFAN'S Jewelry & Record Shop PHO?, E v 123-J 514 Main St. McHwiry, I1L Ym MM time In frttflBe. New truck Hydra-Matic transmission gets you off to smooth, time-saving starts without shifting or clutching. Imagine how easy this makes driving in traffic and on delivery routes! It's optional at extra cost oa V5-, % - and 1-ton models. You save time on the highway. New high-compre»- sion power gets you up to highway speeds from a standing start in less time, and saves you time on hills, too. You make trips faster--and the new Comfortmaster cab makes them seem shortdr. It's got everything! You save extra trips, too. That's because of the extra load space you get in the new Advance-Design bodies. New pickup bodies, are deeper . . . new stake and platform bodies are wider and longer. Also, they're set lower to the ground for easier loading. You save on operating costs. High-compression power sav£t£ou awfpgfl XhC^Thriftmaster 235" engine. the "Loadmaster 235," and the "Jobmaster 261 ** (optional on 2-ton models at extra cost), deliver greater horsepower plus increased operating economy. You save with lower upkeep. New Chevrolet trucks are built stronger to last longer and save you money oil maintenance. There are heavier axle shafts in two-ton models . . . bigger clutches in light- and heavy-duty models ... stronger frames in all models. And your savings start the day you buy. In fact, they start with the low price you pay-- and they never stop. Chevrolet, you know, is America's lowest-priced line of trucks. And it's also the truck that has a traditionally high trade-in value. Come in and see how much you're ahead with America's number one truck. You'll like the way we're talking business! We shall have our Ceijtrella Food SpeGials listed beginning with next weeks adv. Some honest to goodness real money saving buys -- don't miss 'em. Most Trustworthy Truckc on Any Job! / CLARK CHEVROLET SALESii 204 W. ELM STREET PHONE 277 McHENRY, ELL. THE Centrella Food Mart Formerly Johnsburg Food Mart Corner Main and Church St|k Johnnburg, III. Phone 906 M H1 H-1 t -H M l» l l