McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 26 May 1955, p. 16

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Sixteen ' - ' r • ' " ( ' •• * • THE MrfJKNHTf PUUNDEALER ' '"' M """' 1 " ' ...... " , ^UL V• J I,I . - "^7^' M-. ThuMday^Jiay 26, 1355 Johnsburg News By Bin. Betty Hetterrojuin' May Procession Last Sunday evening- many persons witnessed a beautiful May procession at St. John's church. The school children, the First Communion class and the forthcoming graduates of next month formed a very impressive living rosary. The Sisters are to be complimented on the beautiful job of helping the children to practice, thus making it such a perfect May procession. The children were rewarded with a school free day on Monday. Residence Changes Mr. and Mrs. John Thelen have recently moved into their new home on Church street from Pistakee Highlands. The Bernie Kennebeck family is now occupying the home vacated) by the Thelens. The Norb SmitSi family moved into thoir newly completed home. The George Oeffling. famiiy purchased the Smiths' former home. On Recuperation List Mrs. Harry Crowiley is now recuperating at 'tfte home of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Crowley after being hospitalized in Chicago and Woodstock, undergoing surgery. I*m sure she is especially grateful for all her friends who remembered her with cardsj gifts and prayers. ^ Welcomes Son j Mr. and Mrs. "Bud" Miller f welcomed .a .son .last M4y ; 2P, at St. Therese hospital. The ; little fellow will have two sis« j- tiers, Georgette apd, Naopy Kay, to welcome him home. Maternal gjrandpaaents ace Mr. and. Mrs. Ijfeter Preund and paternal grandmother is Mi's. Delia Miller. daughter of Fort Worth, Texas, were visitors at the home of his parents recently, as were Mr. and Mrs. Roman Schmitt. Sandy and Kathy, daughters of the Gerald Hebtermanns and the Ed HeMermanns, were in a dance recital at the American Legion '.:ome last Sunday afternoon. David Abbihil and Donna Jean an3 Marylou Olszewski were guests at the Cyril Heim home last weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Carney of Elm wood Park , and Mrs. Elsie Zarnet of Richmond were Sunday dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Adams. Mr. and Mrs Earl Ross, Mr. and Mrs. Hank Hokstadit, Mr. and Mre. Fred Huemann, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Tirhrti and Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Meyers enjoyed dinner at the Red Star Inn last Saturday evening. The ladies were all members of Tirnm's bowling team last year. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Brand, Mr. and Mi's. Harold' Voss and Mir. and Mrs. Gerry Wakitsch journeyed to Milwaukee last Saturday to witness the Cubs defeat the Braves. Trips on raffic Safety CHARLES F. CARPENTIER Scerct.iry of St-ifc Next weekend will bring Memorial Day, the first big holiday of the approaching summer season and a three-day weekend. Patriotic programs, picnics, visits to relatives and friends, golf games and drives in the country will put thousands more cars- on our highways than they usually carry. If you and your family are going to be in one of those cars, take it MEMORIAL OAV Enters Hospital Mrs. Kenneth Zeller, Jr., entered *St. Francis hospital in Evanston earlier this week as a medical patient. Mrs. Zeller's^ children will spend tftls time with their maternal graodjnpther in Chicago. Visits Son Mr. and Mrs. George Hiller spent last weekend in St. Paul, Minn., visiting their son, Charles, who is in college tfnere. The George- Wagners of Chicago accompanied the Hitlers on their short trip. COLLEGE COSTS The cost of a college education is- going up. Students and their parents had better steel themselves for the shock. By next fall tuition costs will be raised from fee present fee of $800 to $1,000 in a few schools, and other schools are likely to increase their charges proportionately. Tax-supported colleges will also increase their tuition fees, primarily for out-of-state students. Birthdays and Anniversaries Lots of birthdays and one anniversary thia week so I will say congratulations to all. Teddy Stilling has a birthday this week, as did Joe Hettermann on May 21, Dicito Hiller oh May 29, Robert Miller on June 1 aad Hairy Hettermann on June 3. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Dehn will celebrate their sixth year of wedded bliss on May "28. * " Wisconsin Visitors Mr. and Mrs. Joe Adayis and Mrs. Alice Larsen of Sunnyside Beach were in Madison, Wis., last Thursday. They visited Brother Jacob Freund at the Pallotine Fathers Monastery, Here 'n There Mr. aftd Mrs. Paul Schmitt and "out softener need* regenerating... the water's hard again" Sure it i»... hpme owned water softeners frequently need regenerating just when you've got a golf date. Home owned water softeners require attention every other week at best. It's not necessary to spend your precious leisure time regenerating your home owned water softener. Avoid this annoying task that interferes with your week-end golf and pleasure* Call SERVISOFT today! ' r ^ for dependable a u t o m a t i c soft water service In your home Read the Want Ads K£EP HIM OFF THE ROAD! easy. Despite all warnings, despite good intentions on the part of most drivers, despite good cars a#d good roads, it can bo predicted --and probably with horrifying accuracy-- that some 300 persons in our country will lose their lives in traffic crashes during those three dsyk, and that about 30 of those deaths will occur on Illinois streets and highways. • Don't drive either too fast or too slow. Keep your eyes on the road, y.our mind on driving and your temper under control. If the other fellow wants to be a "stunt man," just gpt out of his way, don't try to match him. If he persists in being discourteous, let him. Don't try to get even. Lets you and your family still be together on next Tuesday. Lend Uncle Sam Your' Dollars Buy U.S. Savings Bonds ALFALFA m ARTHRITIS? URGE USE OF CAUTION WHEN v HITCHING TAi^TOj^ S When hitching your tractor to an implement, your place is on the seat -- not between the tractor and the machine. For disobeying this rule, many a farmer has paid with smashed fingers, a crippled ileg or even his life, says O. L. Hogsett, extension safety specialist at the University of Illinois College of Agriculture. In some cases the farmer blames a grabby ©lutdlii for his accident. Ofr maybe he thinks a hand clutch is meant to be operated from behind the tractor while he juggles the implement tongue. But the manufacturer didn't make^ the hand! clutch for that purpose. If you get hurt or killed by misusing it, it's your fault t-- not the tractor's. You don't have to get off tl'ie 1 tractor to (hitch a wagon, plow I or other implement with a light tongue if you have a hook that | lets you lift the tongue while you stay on the seat. ; >'v | For discs, manure sprejuders J and "other hard-to-hltch %t>ols, i take the time to jack tfoe implement to the right height Rafter stopping the tractor a few QtCTtes frorh the' machine. If you think you don't have •time to take this precaution, you'd better get out of the i&rming business before an puts you out. > c& DIAMONDS ARE PRICELESS Most of us see in a deck of playing cards an inexpensive, wholesome way of spending.a few relaxed hours with friends. In addition,"some famous Americans have found even greater and more ingenious uses for the paste- • boards. Benjamin Franklin, in addition to • being, statesman, author and inventor, was one of the first m a n u f a c t u r e r s of p l a y i n g •wr-,. cards in the United States, vjBfe even'used cards irt some otilhis «6rly electrical experiments. In 1731, Franklin made a "friction machine" which created friction by means of a belt connecting two wheels, over which hung a silk curtain. On a revolving rod at the top were eight discs cut from old playing cards. Around 1750, it was the style to send invitations written on the backs of playing cards. There is one such card in a collection of historic playing cards at the Cincinnati Museum. On the back of the card is an invitation written to the granddaughter of the first mayor -of Philadelphia. In lovely old script it says, "The gentlemen of the Army present their compliments to Mrs. Jeykell and beg the favor of her dbmpany to a ball at the Statehouse on Monday next." The well-known Lord Geoffrey Amherst was another .famous person whp^ followed this custom by using playing cards with plain backs for the handwritten invitations he sent out, for some of his famous parties. In his time it was popular to cut cards into quarters and to use the sections as visiting cards. This may well have b^en the origin of our modern visiting cards. In 1765 playing cards were used as admission cards to the classes at the University of Pennsylvania. One of the most unusual uses for cards and certainly the most expensive one ever made was ? single playing card that sold at public auction in 1880 for $13,750: The card was a five of diamonds, appropriately, which contained a miniature painting by Hans Holbein, the famous Germ an painter who lived in the 15th Century and who was one of the foremost artists of his time. Paintings on playing cards are rare nowadays but rpany people find that it is fun to trim up their old. decks and fasten them together in unusbal table decorations for parties, or to cut up the face cards and paste the heads on paper matchcases. ROAD CONTRACTS „Two additional concrete lanes on 7.63 miles of U.S. Route; 66 in .Madison county ore among the 12 million dollars worth of road building projects on which itbe state Division of Highways opened bids in Springfield, Friday, May 20. During the first two , years of Governor William G. Stratton's administration, contracts were awarded for 114 miles of his program to modernize Route 66 into a four-lane divided ^expressway from Chicago to St, Louis. Thus far in 1955 approximately 42 additional miles of the route have been placed under contract for such modernization. 8PJEED tJONTROL All Illinois sl\pcjffs are -being asked to assisfc a highway speed control piogrffihv*SM>.ich will be carried out' in .Illinois ami . throughout the nation from May# 27 to .midnight-o^-Sept. 5 (Labor Day). During these 101 days, publicity and, K 7lfwJ7 enforcement will concentrate on excessive speed, speed too fast for conditions, improper ' passing, following too closely a/nd failure to yield right-of-way. "This program, called "Slow Do.wn and Live," has been designates! by the 46th annual Governors Conference as the official traffic .safety prograin for the ijEnited States •dluring 1955. SHOP AT AND SAVE , iinaiiii:ii!iii:ij|'i>Miii!i:i!l!iiii|;iiH Why buy a Model T" when . automatic ILNAisthe Mode? CLARENCE'S SHOP Redwood or Pine - Chaise* longues Bird and Dog Houses, Lawn Chairs and Swings, Picnic and Umbrella Tables. Pier Benches, Window Boxes, Flower Wheel Barrows, Rose Arbors, Trellises, Picket Fences, etc. Children's Swings, Sand Boxes, Play Pens, Tables, etc. Made to Order: Cabinets, Chest of Diawefi, Screens, etc. Cement Cesspool Rings and Chimney Caps. CLARENCE J.aSMITH JOHNSBURG, II.I. MCHENRY ISIS-J t Can you get something for hbthing? NO. He who says so is in error. We charge you a fair rental cost and. the actual installation cpst. We classify these items as such, as proof of our integrity.'We do not hide the rental of Bulk Service Tanks in the cost of fuel. No hidden tax, no hidden costs incorporated in your purchase price when you buy your Dri-Gas fuel requirements from Service Inc. 403 FRONT STREET McHENRY, ILL. ALPHA TABLETS containing concentrated powdered extract of the amazing vitamin and mineral rich ALFALFA plant plus fast working pain relieving agents offer effective same day relief from the agon&ing pains of arthritis, rheumatism, neuritis, and neuralgia. ALPHA TABLETS are sold on a money back guarantee. 100 Alpha Tablets $2.49 -- 300 Tablets $5.95 |OLGER'S PHONE 40 108 S*. Green St. s o f t WATER s o v i e t fbSj As Low As *2.75 Woodstock 428 Each 28 Days R.& m Ttre$fone Liberal Trade-in Allowance Call or VU1I for FREE Demonstration FREUND<S Sewing Machine Sales & Service 6.00-16 PLUS TAX EXCHANGE / If Your <!>l<l Tire Is Recappablo Across From Hunterville Subdiv. Phone 1590 McHenry, 111. McHenry, HI Super CHAMPIONS ftr*$ton* OILUXI . 1 >3; --f • Blowout and Puncture PreticUM • Nlw Silent-Ride Safety-Qrip Tnsd • Great?)- Riding Comfort ^ SIZE sum mem C > PUIS fix EXCHANGI If Yow Old Tirol* OTHER SIZES ALSO REDUCED Gives you If your hot water tap ever runs cold#lf's time to replace your old water heater. Replace it ' with a modern automatic GAS water heater designed to keep pace with today's Increased demands. Then you'll be sure of a fresh, abundant supply of hot water whenever you need it... even for those "thirsty" appliances, the automatic clothes washer and dishwasher. GAS water heaters turn on full-flame automatically to replace the water as it's used . .. and since GAS is so fast, you don't need a big, space-taking tank. Enjoy a/f the hot water you want . . . any time! . . . for just pennies a day! IX . . . w i t h G A S t h a r a ' s n o e x pensive installation necessary... your pres* •nt service connections are more than ade* quate! ©•# tho propor size water heofer for YOUR needs •. . see your plumber-dealer or visit our nearest store. Phone Enterprise 1441 AS LOW AS $116 A WEEK ftlHAZlN6 OFFER ith hanging Yowr >ro«ont Whoeb M ifie Unused MM*»»0 in Your i<res«nttires Wh«n Yoo TNHfo for Now OHM. " „ -• *w TREMENDOUS SAVINGS ON ALL TIR1S...ALL SIZES1 GOOD USED 6:00 X 16 Farm Wagon Tires Also large selection of all other sizes BATTERIES fer all makes CARS ft TRUCKS Up to $5.(J0 trade-in for your old Battery WE INSTALL LIQUID IN TIRES On Your Farni or in Our Shop EXPERT tire Repairs Re-Capping Re-Treading Vulcanizing McHENRY TIRE MAR J 526 Main Street WALT FREUND and BOB THURLWELL, Props. Phone: 294 or 295<J McHenry, 111.

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