' Y^j;;r I rA:;-V:^ Thursday, September 1. 1955 THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER «r- RING WOOD By Mrs. George Shepard the chui New Church , Church services were held in new Ring-wood Methodist turch Sunday morning, with Rev. Charles Stephens, a former pastor, assisting ReV. Reid. The Uttle daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Samuelson, the little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ackerman, the little son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Low and the litle son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Winters were tyaptizecf. . Several new members were taken into the church. In the afternoon, consecration services were held, with Rev. Darrell Sample and Rev. Charles Stephens, former pastors, and Dr. Ray Bond, district superintendent, participating. The service was followed by an informal period of visiting and fellowship. At 8 p.m., there was an informal reception for the membership class and all the new -members. Centennial Saturday will be a day long to be remembered by the people of Ringwood for they celebrated their centennial. People from far and near were in attendance. An auction was held on the school yard at noon and various activities, such as horse shoe tourneys, and pony rides were enjoyed. At 2:30, a bridal pageant was held in the church, which was beautifully decorated with baskets of flowers. Supper was served in the new ddning room. In the evening, an old hymn sing was held, followed by the judging of .the whiskers and the play, "This is Your Life, Ringwood Church." ' Home Circle The Home Circle will meet at the home of^Mrs. James Reid Sept. 8. A pot-luck dinner will be served. George Joslins Entertain Mr. and Mrs. George Joslin entertained her family at a picnic last Sunday at their home. Visitors Were Mr. and Mrs. Edwin WicOc of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Van Dusen and sons and granddaughter of Elgin, James Laurence of Wonder Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Laurence, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Laurence and daughter, Janet, and Barbara Laurence and Miss Fran Zarndt of Elgin, Sandra • Lee and Billy Brennan of McCullom Lake. Personals Michael Meeker of near Mchenry spent a few clays the past week with David Davis. Nancy Ainger of Hebron spent Thursday until Sunday with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Peterson of Fontana, Calif., spent Monday and Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Anderson. Mrs. Glawe 6f Woodstock was a dinner guest in the Roy Harrison home Sunday. Frances Davis spent a few days the past week in the Wm. Meeker home. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hinze of Crystal Lake were supper guests in the Mrs. Lena Peet home on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Harkins of Waterloo, Iowa, spent the weekend in the Clayton Bruce home. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Pagni of Hobart, Ind., were callers in the George Shepard and Osca» Davis homes Sunday. Among the callers in the Dr. Hepburn home Saturday were Mrs. Tena Carlson of Sunland, Calif., Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ferris of Woodstock, Mrs. Katie Con- Pag« ThlriMD way of McHenry, Mrs. Raike and children of Wauconda, v Mrs. Philip Funk and son, Jack, of Kenosha /and Mrs. Wallet of Wonder Lake. Mrs. Frank and Mrs. Smith of Crystal Lake and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Glawe of Woodstock spent Wednesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harrison. Miss Agnes Anderson of Oconompwoc, Wic., spent Sunday evening in the home of her brother, Charles Anderson, and family. Mrs. Roy Harrison and son, Loren, Mrs. c. L. Harrison and Mrs. Flora Harrison spent Friday morning in Elgin. Mr. and Mrs. Alan Aipger and family of Hebron and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Heint of Chicago spent Saturday night and Sunday at the George Shepard home. Mrs. Charles RUsch of Richmond spent the weekend with her sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs. John Ehlert. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Aissen and family visited relatives in Chicago Sunday. Sunday dinner guests in the B. T. Butler home were Mr. and Mrs. Harold Stanek and family of Elkhorn, Wis., Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Benoy and family of McHenry, Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Smith of Pistakee Bay, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hawley of Fox River Grove, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Hopper of Chicago and A. W. Smith. Kenneth Cristy, jr., of Chicago spent the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cristy,' Sr. Elian Fernando of Garrelt Institute, Evanston, spent Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Fossum and family. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Reinwall, Jr., of Cooney Heights, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Reinwall, Sr., of Fernwood, Mr. and Mr| Leonard Carlson and son of Chicago, Mrs. Tena Carlson of Sunland,, Calif., Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Howe of Crystal Lake and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hawley of Fox River Grove were visitors in the Louis Hawley home Sunday. Miss Geraldine Cristy of Greenwood spent Saturday in the Wm. Cristy home. Mr. . and Mrs. John Smith of Matteson, 111., spent, the weekend with her parents, Mr. And Mrs. Weldon Andreas. • Mr. and Mrs. Frank Merges and son of Evanston and Mrs. Olivia Bauer of McHenry spent Sunday in the Roland Bauer home. ' Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Andreas and daughter, Margo, ppent Sunday in the Clifford Stock home at Wpodstodk. Mr. and -Mrs. George Bacon of Antioch were callers in the (JMrs. Emily Beatty home Saturday afternoon. Sunday guests in the Walter Low home were Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Reed and family of Riverside, Mr. and Mrs. Mardis Thomas and son of Westmont, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Thomas and son. I^arry, of McHenry, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Farnstrum and children of McHenry, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wilcox of Woodstock, Mrs. Viola Low and Mrs. Emily Beatty. Mr. and) Mrs. Marvin Ackerman of Elburn, 111., and Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bruce and family were Sunday dinner guests in the Charles Ackerman home. Supper guests were Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Ackerman a!^ family of Poplar Grove. \ . Mrs. Raymond Rattray and Mr. and Mrs. Albert EBel of Algonquin spent Saturday in the Weldon Andreas home. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Hopper of Chicago spent the weekend in the B. T. Butler home. Mrs. Darold Thomas and children of Sheboygan, -Wis., were callers in the Walter Low home Sunday evening. Donald Harrison of Greenwood spent Tuesday night with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harrison. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Harrison of Elgin were callers in the Mrs. Lena Peet home Saturday. Pastor Anderson called on Dr. Hepburn Wednesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Schrader of Elgin called in the Louis Hawley home Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Duane Andreas of McHenry were Sunday dinner guests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Andreas. Mr. and Mrs. Roland McCannon of Bloomington, Mr. and Mrs. Ansel Dewey of Armstrong. HI., and Miss Virginia Jepson of Chicago spent the weekend with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Walkington. Mr. and Mrs. Stephens and family of Ohio spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Paul Walkington and family. Mrs. Paul Norman andi son, Tommy, of Evanston spent Saturday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Walkington1. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Pettise and family of Barrington spent the weekend with her mother, Mrs. Agnes Jencks. Mrs. Wm. Cruickshank, Jr., and children and Mrs. William Cruicjjshanlk, Sr., spent Sunday evening in the Francis Costello home at Hartland. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Newlin of Hutsonville are visiting her sister, Mrs. Agnes Jencks, Wm. Cruickshank, Sr.. is on a business trip to Minnesota. Mrs. George Joslin and Mrs. AUCTION Due to ill health, tlve undersigned will offer the following personal property for sale at public auction on the farm located 3 miles west of Grayslake, 111., 9 miles East of McHenry, 111., 1 Mile South of Round Lake, at the intersection of Cedar Lake Road and Route 120, on SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3RD Conimencing at 1:00 o'clock DST 21 HEAD HOLSTEIN CATTLE -- 10 Milch cdws, 6 fresh, 4 close springers, 6 first calf heifers due to freshen in 30 days, '3 open heifers, 2 yrs. old, 2 heifers, 15 mos. old. (This is an outstanding herd of cattle). -=*• HOGS -- 15 choice feeder pigs, 12 weeks old. HORSES -- 1 team good farm horses. POULTRY -- 150 Yearling hens, 14 Japanese Geese, 15 ducks. PRODUCE -- 700 bales good alfalfa and timothy hay, 6 ft. silage. DAIRY EQUIPMENT -- 1 Surge milker, 10 mi4k cans, elec. hot water heater, 2 wash tanks, pails & strainers. TRACTOR & FARM MACHINERY -- John Deere M tractor with cultivator & mounted plow, like new; 7 ft. tandem disc, Rosenthal corn shredder, 4 bar side delivery rake, silo filler, 2 corn binders, manure spreader, 6 ft. mower, wagon & rack, bob sled, large quantity of scrap iron and many other articles. HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE -- Gas stove, oil burner, elec. heater, buffet and other household goods. Mike MIKUTIS. Owner ROBERS & BEHM, Auctioneers WISCONSIN SALES CORPORATION, Clerk Union Grove, Wis. Phone 195 VETS NO MONEY DOWN NONVETS $1,200 DOWN DO YOU KNOW you can buy a 3 bedroom home for $9,475.00 and up, lot included, with the following features: • Architect designed- • Carpenier-btrili • Grading & Seeding' • Gravel drive • Sidewalk from lot line to Front & Rear doors • Combination Aluminum Screen and Storm windows * Completely, decorated interior and exteriof • Plastic tiled bath • Exhaust fan in kitchen The home you select from our Architect designed plans can be built on: 0 Your paid up lot § A lot en which you have made a down payment f Anywhere In McHenry County Office Located: 682 W. Main Street, McHenry Phone McHenry 1907 Veterans and Non-Veterans can save additional money by doing some of the work themselves . . . Such as grading & seeding, etc. ROBERT HAY GENERAL CONTRACTOR New Construction & Remodeling Route 4 -- McHenry. 111. Home Phone: McHenry 622-W-t Joseph Wegn^r of McHenry were callers in Woodstock Wednesday afternoon. ' ; •> Mr. and Mrs. Wayne . Donahue and family of Huntley were' Sunday dinner guests of Wfir parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Harrison. Mrs. Jack Leonard and children of Lake Geneva spent Saturday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Jr. Mrs. Boto Brennan and children were Sunday dinner guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Schmitt, at McHenry. Mrs. James Wegener and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich spent Monday in the Jack Leonard home set Lake Geneva. 36,000 Persons Killed In '54 Vehicle Accidents ' Nineteen times as . many per- 1 sons were killed in motor vehicle accidents in 1954 as in 1910 -- but there were 123 times as many vehicles on the highways i and they traveled faster and far- | ther. I In addition to 36,000 killed, ! 1.250,000 persons were injured in I motor vehicle accidents last year. | The 1955 edition of "Accident Facts," the National Safety Council's statistical yearbook, which is just off the press, shows that Americans drove 560,000,- 000,000 miles. Industrialist Is Polio Chairman WANT to be a cool cook? Use canned beef gravy! It's hot in 3 minutes. Ready to be poured over hamburgers, saved-over ' roast beef, quick-cook rice, mashed potatoes (maybe frozen), or whole potatoes (perhaps canned). Here are "gravyglorified" menus for quick meals. Hot Beef Sandwichet with Gravy Tomato-Lettuce Salad Freth Peaches with Cream icebox Cookiea Iced Tea * Corned Beef Hath Pattiei Pear and Cottage Che^te Salad Buttered Hard Hollt Carrot and Celery Stickt Strawberry Shortcake Lemonade •Corned Beef Hash Patties: Slice corned beef hash (1-pound can) into 4 patties; brown on both sides j in 2 tablespoons shortening. Heat i a can (1% cups) beef gravy; serve I over patties. 4 servings. fNS COMPANY SALES H. V. McNamara, president of National Tea company, announced, i that the consolidated sales of , National Tea company for the I four weeks ended Aug. 13,- 1955, | amounted to $42,086,^94 as com- ; pared with $39,593,332 for the ( four weeks ended Aug. 14, 1954, ! an increase of 6.30 per tent. One of the nation's oldest polio- fighting volunteers, in point of service, has been reappointed to lead the March of Dimes in Illinois for the thirteenth Consecutive year. William E. Fay, Joliet industrialist, was renamed state chairman for the 1956 campaign against polio last week by Basil O'Connor, president of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. . Vernon L. Nickell, state superintendent of public instruction, will again team up with Fay as co-chairman, serving his fifth term in this volunteer post. The two chairmen will lead and coordinate the efforts of county campaign directors and other volunteers throughout the state during the campaign next January. "We are grateful for the con- j tinuing leadership .. of Mr. Fay • and Mr. Nickell at a time when j so much remains to be done in ' the polio fight," Mr. O'Connor said. "We must continue research for the best possihle vaccine and . better treatment methods and we must meet our obligation to the many for whom the Salk vaccine 1 has come too late." J Mr. Fay stated that "One of j the great satisfactions in beingj named state chairman of the March of Dimes comes from the I fact that the' dimes and dollars • we work so' hard to raise are j used to provide full patient care, as needed for our polio victims right here in Illinois. It's good to | realize that whenever polio j strikes the contributions of mil- : lions of Americans make it pos-, sible to provide the very best ; care available for every patient." j "The success' of the Salk vac-1 cine represents a "giant stride' forward in the polio fight but the war is far frpin over. There are approximately 5,000 Illinois polio patients being aided by °ur National Foundation chapters light now," Mr. Fay noted, "And we'll have many morp, . by the end of the present epidemic sea-' son. They need help froih all of:; us." . t Mr Fay is president of the Chaifipion Machinery company at Joliet and is a member of the national board of trustees of th£ National Foundation. Mr. Nickell has been state superintendent ot public instruction since 1043. Ha makes his home in Champaign. Shop at Home and SAVE! Home Improvements KARL SCHNABEL CARY, ILLINOIS Phone MErcury 9-7233 • Insulation • Storm Windows • Asbestos Siding • Fibre Glass Awnings • Ornamental Iron Worla • Fencing • Landscaping PR0FE«I0nfiL DIRECTORS' DR. J. C. GOETSCHEL Chiropractic Physician 25 Orehard. Beach Road Office Hours: Mon.. Toes., Thurs., ft' Fri. 10 to 12 - 1:30 to 5:30 - 7 to 9 Saturdays; 10 A.M. to 2 PJM. PHONE 74S B and B' EXTERIOR DECORATING Free Estimates . Fritzches Estates PHONE 560-R-2 DR. G. R. SWANSON Dentist Office Honrs: Dally Except Thursday 9 to 12 -- 1:30 to 5:30 HoDm Wed. and Fri. Evenings By Appointment Only Telephone McHenry 160 in V Convenience EAGLE - PICHER TRIPLE SLIDE AUu9U4U44f1, STORM WINDOWS and DOORS Unique ERAYDO metal tracks, of a special formula zinc alloy, assure easy, jamproof operation! Self-storing glass and screen panels quickly rearranged as seasons demand. ARTHUR BOGER PHONE 840-J 307 Waukegan Rd. McHenry Closed for Vacation September 4th til September 13th Riverside Bakery No. Riverside Drive McHenry, I1L We wish to thank all of the people for their kind patronage during the past year. DICK and BERTHA JAEGER FRANK S. MAT BLACK DIRT Sand - Gravel - Driveways Excavating Route 5, McHenry, HI. Phone McHenry 580-M-l VIRGIL R. POLLOCK Life Insurance and Annuities Representing Massachusetts Life Insurance Company 604 Court St. Phone 1168 McHenry, 111. Limestone VERN THELEN Excavating Gravel Black Dirt Dredging TeL McHenry 1336 Box 640, Rt. 1, McHenry, IIL A. P. FREUND ft SONS Excavating Contractors Trucking, Hydraulic and Crane Service -- ROAD BUILDING -- Tel. 204-M McHenry, IIL EARL R. WALSH . INSURANCE Fin, Auto, Farm ft Life Insdraace Representing RELIABLE COMPANIES When You Need Insurance of Any Kind PHONE 43 or 953 Green ft Mm McHenry, Dl. SCEtROEDER IRON WORKS Ornamental ft Structural Steel Visit Our Showrooms 8 Miles Souht on Rt SI PHONE 050 SHOOTtr FROM THE r.'.*?jr=r Classified brings action O IS--- • WANT ADS find places to live. • WANT ADS sell your used garden tools. • WANT ADS sell unneeded furniture for cash you need to pay the moving man. • WANT ADS find jobs for high school graduates. • WANT ADS locate articles that cannot be bought new. • WANT ADS rent summer cottages, cool rooms, and trailers. • WANT ADS sell used refrigerators, bikes, furniture, golf clubs, etc., for CASH. • WANT ADS empty attics and bring vacation CASH. • WANT ADS sell things you'll no longer be using. Cottage Furniture, Fishing Tackle, Porch Swings, Radios. hone 170, Brin Want Ads to McHenry m jra • B Mail Put a Want Ad in The McHenry Plairidealer It Will Put Dollars In Your Pocket