Thursday. February 28. 1957 THE MeHENRY PLAINDEALEH mmm McHenry Plaindealer Phone 170 - 171 : Published eveiy ; Thursday at ^IcHenry, 111., by the McHenrv .Publishing Company, Inc. NAT j O N A l E_D IT O R I A L ASSOCITATI"©N ^ U I biwiinifHKM'.l H J W. BURFEINDT, Gen'l. Manager ADELE FROEHLICH, Editor ^ SUBSCRIPTION KATE In McHenry ^County 1 Year $3.00 6 Months ... $1.75 3 Months $1.00 Outside McHenry County i Year '! $3.50 6 Months $2.00 3 Months $1.25 1*57 y/jutnois^ Himiy? \ flSSflCIWTIBH / Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Mo- Henry, Illinois, under the act of May 8, 1879. Business Men's: (Feb. 21) F. Erkin, 220-559; J. Stone, 212; Joe Marsella, 213-561; D. Samuelson, 534; D. Wilhelm, 205-541; E. Buss, 200-556; F. Schmitt, 201- 563; A. Steinsdoerfer, 212; B. Doherty, 208-473; B. Voase, 223- 569; Wiser, 219-551; H. Blake, 548. Business Men's: (Feb. 24) J. Kline, 200; F. Erklin. 209- 202-590; E. Buss, 226-598. -- BOWLING BAR -- Thurs. Nite Ladies-- Stilling, 213-544; E. Smith, 201; J. Stilling, 215; R. O'Brien, 540; R. Nimtz, 535; D. Weber, 226-611; R. Low, 223-543. Monday 7:00 (last tveek) R. Nimtz, 235*568; M. Gath, 557; L. Thennes, 215-525; R. Gilliford, 542; J. Borre, 537; D. Weber, 536. Foresters^-- E. Freund, 206; A. Weingart, 201; A. Weber. 211; H. Steffan, 533: M. Foley, 236-554; J. Knox. 240,529; D. Jager, 203-536; C. Weingart, 204; D. Weber, 206-563 BALKY BRONCOS OF BARRIIRSTON BEAT WARRIORS High Scoring Game Goes To Conference Champions 96" To. 75 Tues. Sixty-Niners-- S. Sutton, 184-499; I.. Crouch, 447; M. Stoffel, 452; D. Freund. „Z. Maloc.h,le b, , 4.0803 ; S_ . S_p i.e l,m an, 441; E. Mndintjer, 484; T. Stilline, 10i n . , T Q-dftn- ivr 1m Mi;../, 181-456; V. Doherty, 194-526; L. I Cairns, 183; S. Low, 441. AMONG THE SICK McHenry Hospital Patients at McHenry hospital this past week included Rose Walinder, Mary Huemann, Laura Phannenstill, Minnie Vandenboom and Carl Freund, of McHenry; Janet Hicks of Rt. »5, McHenry; Glen Hannemann and Fred Gross ^pf Rt. 3, McHenry; Clarence Wil- ^terson Howard Thomas and Lola Schiller of Rt. 1, McHenry; Sigurd Knudsen and Joseph Kloeckner of Mounted Delivery; Geoffrey Houck of Rt. 4, McHenry; Rinaldo Rolla of Rt. 6, McHenry; Roy Moss of Mineral Springs; Minnie Stoewsand of Lakemoor; Jack Savini of Rt. 2, McHenry; Robert Svenson and Pamela Parker cf Rt. 1, Ringwood; Lyle Thur- 4j|ow of St. Charles; Byron Bart let t, Roger and Louis Zelus and Gloria Schimpf of Crystal Lake; Celia J. Wilewski of Wonder Lake. Memorial Hospital Patients at Memorial hospital, , Woodstock, from the McHenry area this past week were Arthur Miller, Esther Leckband, John Thies, William Marticke, Doretla Otto, Arthur Keevil, Mary Ken- ^nebeck and Peter Schroeder. - 179-460; M. Voase, 175; M. Wakitsch, l76-200-548; B. Meyers, 445; B. Hettermann, 216-491; B. Freund, 483;. M. Smith, 186-460; M. Hettermann, 476; M. Joyce. 485. -- Mc-HENRY RECREATION -- Thufs. 9:15-- Won Lost 1. F.M. Television 40 29 2f Old Bridge Tavern 40 29 3. Fitzgerald's Realty 36 33 4. McH. Auto Bodv 36 33 5. Blatz 35'i 33>2 6. Prager ' 35 34 7. Riverside Barber 35 34 8. Freund Oil Co. 35 34 9. Kent Corp. 34 34 10. Park Pub 32 37 11. H. E. Buch & Sons 2812 40 12. Clark Chevrolet 28 41 Kleinhuizen, 220-528; Krause, 211-594; Kreutzer, 548; Corso, 223: •F. Johnson, 236-583; S. Urbik, 529; R. O'Brien, 202-528; Steadman, 200-559: V. Freund. 222-528; E Koch, 200-205-599; M. Eichingor. 543; Kreier, 211-207-592: Qjizzardo. 543; Si^man, 212-551; McCarroll, 223-560; Tonyan, 210; Kinsala, 205-564; Crouch, 216-539. D. of A.-- M. Harrison. 459; J. Schmunk. 430; G. Barbian, 176; B. O'Brien. 184-447; J. Weyland, 177-456; B. Leight, 445; J. Weber. 177-438; A- Wilcox. 449: T. Steffan, 175- 461; E. Albright, 440; E. Buss, 459; R. Rourke, 430: A. Gaulke. | 4 4 9 ; V . D i e d r i c h , 4 4 5 ; D . R e i n - j boldt, 432; H. Webr, 457. Note- Annie Gausden picked the 4-7-610 rail Tuesday night. She always picks the hard ones. Good going, Angie! B. O'Brien. Sec'y -- PALACE -- The Harrington Broncos cftme to town last Friday night and showed us why they lead- the North Suburban basketball stand-, ings. The Warriors had the very nifty total of 75 points, but Harrington had 96 and tried like all get out to make it 100. • The home club took the play away from the visitors in the first quarter, but an unofficial count of two wild passes ai)d Tavern j three missed baskets from close R. Deskis, 224-565; Rosing, 227-1 in kpPt *he team from gaining an 601: H. Miller, 200-531; S. Miller. I earlY._ advantage. However. :t 216-575; Steffes, 205-549; Garner. ""Kht.be added that the B>oncos 547; N. Knaack, 202-544: B. Win- jwere missing by a country mile ters, 227-598kM. Weiser, 204; H. | at ,his s1a«° Behnke. 532; A. Tonyan, 527; W. j Barrington gained a 3-point Hagberg, 529. 'eaf* 'n the second quarter and led 37-34 at half time. Combining a neat passing game with sharp shooting by >Chuck Berg, 6'-2" Junior forward packing 188 lbs. and long arms, the champions showed they were on the way. Another Junior. Bill Th'orp. was the spark plug that sent Barrington off on a scoring spree M the 1hird quarter. Thorp sank fiv. Banks 4 5 3 13 Michael 0 0 1 0 berg 7 11 3 25 Walbaum 4 2 1 10 Brandt 1 7 5 9 Stirlem 1 0 1 2 Totals 32 32- 23 96 MeHENRY F.O. F.T. P.F T.P. Hugmann 10 7 4 27 McMahon 0 3 5 3 Cepulis 2 0 0 4 Justen' 5 4 3 11 Eichinger 8 1 1 17 Hogan 0 0 0 0 Useman 1 4 4 6 Bentz 2 0 4 4 Totals 28 19 21 75 Score by Quarters: Barrington 13 37 71--96 McHenry 13 34 52--75 LIST CASELOAD IN COUNTY FOR PUBLIC* ASSISTANCE • . MATURE DRIVING ! There are six occasions when \ you should never drive. The Institute for Safer Living says strains- and stresses, upset you. The Institute for Safer Living warns against driving after, a quarrel with husband or wife, an argument with a business asso- In a monthly report to Gov. I ">at you should nevei- drive after: t ciate or neighbor, sudden worry, Wiilllliiaamm G .St r a t t on, the I l l ino i s i ( a ) dr inking . (b) e a t ing a he a v y ; . f t h l v g . Public Aid Commission has reported that 280,885 persons were on public assistance rolls at the This figure represented a 4,439 increase over the December, 1955. 4-H NEWS C O F. 9:00-- A1 Schaefer, 534; J. Etten, 211- 206-611. C.O.F. 7:00-- B. Thennes. 526: D. Fredricks, 554: D. Heuser. 205-552. City-- Hagberg, 228-592; J. Cristy, Sr., 221-565; J. Cristy. Jr.. 211; i McHenry Rogers. 212-554; Schaefer, 546: : Quarter. B. Reid, 223-573; F. Matthesius. 535: J. Hollander, 543; V. Adams, 213-525: Joe, 550: Pete, 207-557; Andy, 611. 7:00 Ladies-- G. Smith, 210-481; A 438; M. Doherty, 456. Cherry Valley Club The Cherry Valley 4-H club met Feb. it at the home of Dor- . „ .... ^ * othy Adams, with sixteen mem- a,s„ jol!owf, t(\. d^ndent hers present children, 44, $1,294; disability asn,., t , , ; sistance, 9, $728.50; general as- Thomas l.eahy was '"t'ocWM sistance, 188, $3,928.16; old age (Iu'lsissiionn abho^uTt thh e w' infduorwth edris pdlaisy- ! assistance 200. $12,204.77. followed. i MINOR ACCIDENT Our next meeting will be held March 9 at the Cherry Valley I Cars driven by Lester Siedschool. The Party-A-Month com- ! schlag of Spring Grove and Albert mifloe led recreation for our Val- i Miller, also of that community, entine party. It was enjoyed by were involved in,a collision on Rt. .b as.k e.t s as 'h .i s tiena"mn ' o"u 'ts cored 1; all. Refreshments were also s.e..r.v.- ' 173, east of Richmo»n d, on Monday 32-18 in that third Glosson, Wed. Nite Ladies--, Jim Huemann scored 27 points in another never-say-die effort that stamps him as one of the best in the conference. Barrington made only., four more field goals than the Warriors, but dropped in 32 out of 41 free throws against 19 out of 38. E. Conway, 439; A. Hauck, 43.; Anyway you figure it, the Bar- N. Larkin. 182-503; T. Steifan, j rjngton team has championship 442; E. Mangold, 468; E. Meyers, j class with bench strength to back 453. 1 up the starting linp-yp. McHenry | fans have no complaints. The 9:00 Ladies 1 Warriors put up a good game M. Donnelly. 453. ; against the league champions. George R. Fitzgerald and family BARRINGTON FeCWe of Marycrest, Kankakee, spent a | 3uci<|ey 5 few days the past weekend with j$0hatka 2 Mrs. Ann Rodenkirch. j Thorp 8 F.T. 3 0 4 P.F. 1 3 5 T.P. 13 4 20 RINGWOOD CHlTRCH JVEWS High school age youth from both fhe Ringwood and Greenwood churches will journey to EvajiSton on Saturday, March 2, to attend the Conference on Christian Vocations. The conference will deal with the relationship between one's faith and his ^3llife work. Any youth wishing to aMond should contact the minister. ' , The Ringwood official board will meet on Monday evening. March 4, at 8:30 p.m. at the church. The finance commission and the memorial gift committee will meet before the regular meeting at 8 p.m. " " rA CONVENIENT HOURS FOR DEPOSITING YOUit SAVIN©! Fridays: f $ A.M. to 9 P.M. Other Week Days: 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Closed All Day .Wednesday Two Above- Average Dividends Paid Yearly Nite Owls-- L. Miller. 461; R. Kluk. 439; J,;i Diedrich. 433: F. Svitanek. 1R0. ^ 188-516; L. Bockelman, 458; J. Ros- j X ing, 443; V. Nemke. 456; E. | T Hoyte, 450: N. Bowman. 187-501; •> H. Miller, 430; G. Bradley. 441: j % G. Steinsdorfer. 445: M. Kelly, .443: L. Vacondio, 188-486; C. Cofman, 203-231-543; E. Koenemaon, 449; P. Schultz, 177-430. Note-- R. Kluk picked the 7-6-10 rail and L. Worts picked the 7-6. C. Colman rolled 231 for high league individual game scratch. E. Rand, Sec'y. Monday 7:00-- , L. Thennes, 200-209-558; Ray NOTICE Dr. John T. Gray, Optometrist, an- J nounces that,his office will be clos- J ed all day on Saturday March 2nd, due to his son's wedding in Chicago the same day. ed by the Party-A-Month com- , The Siedschlag auto slowed down mittee. in traffic and was struck in the Reporter,' Kathryn Curran rear by the other auto. 126 S. Green St. Phone 186 !! 3% .Current Rate MeHENRY SAVINGS and Loan Association PHONE 2 522 Main Street McHenry, Illinois WHITE'S FINAL WINTER Thurs. Fri. & Sat Only - Feb. 28. Mar, l& 2 : lc OUR REMAINING STOCK OF PLAIN COLORED for VALUES TO $4.95 „ EACH OUR REMAINING STOCK OF FALL ty WINTER port Sh Sfcr75 VALUES TO $5.95 EACH 4h A SPECIAL GROUP OF Slacks $095 WOOLS & GABARDINES -- VALUES TO $15.95 OUR REMAINING STOCK OF A SPECIAL GROUP OF Winter Jackets $795 VALUES TO $19.95 Regular $3.95 & $4.95 Value FLANNEL SPORT & WORK SHIRTS 2 for $5.00 Values to $8.95 WOOL OR ORLON SWEATERS Values to $16.95 57 PAIRS OF SHOES $3.95 $7.95 Values to $19.95 15 ROBES $9-95 WHITE'S MEN'S SHOP 208 So. Green St. PHONE 19 McHenry; Illinois r BOB CONWAY Buying a car? | STATE FARM BANK U MAY SAVE YOU *100 ON FINANCING AND AUTO INSURANCE fO Before you buy that car, just tell me on the phone the total costs of the car, the financing and the insurance you want. Within five minutes I'll call you back and tell you what it will cost you to buy, finance, and insure the same car through State Farm "Bank Plan." Chances are, for exactly the same deal, it'll be $100 less! I know it's hard to believe --but it's worth a phone call, isn't it? There is no obligation. • w i n im§w If Mi FARM Agent IAY j 812 E. Elm St. PHONES 285 • 763 McHenry, III. __ , . . . , i grief or other concern over a loved meal, CO becoming drowsy, (d) j a sudden financial blow. or becoming tired or road weary,! fear and stemming from (e) becoming emotionally upset, i „ ( f ) b e c o m i n g d i s t r a c t e d by p e r - an^ cause- Be sure you have calsonal affairs or actions of otheVs. "led yourself before getting be- -Are you an "emotionally ma- hind the wheel. total and 6,867 over November! ' ture" driver? If so, you will re- -- 1956. Expenditures totalled $13,- i ^ra'n from driving when emotional Lend iTncte s&ib Your Dollars 073,043 during December, an in- ! . crease of $221,514 over November j and $500,970 over December, 1953. | In a breakdown of public assist- l ance rolls rose to 77,857, an in- j crease of 6.300 over November. ! The December, 1955, total was I 8 7 , 4 8 8 . D e c e m b e r , 1 9 5 6 , e x p e n d i - j •ures totalled $2,966,724 as com- I pared to $2,790,048 in November ! and $3,292,719 in December a i year ago. The averse grant was $ 3 8 . 1 0 a s c o m p a r e d t o $ 3 8 . 9 9 i n j November and $37.64 for Decern- | ber, 1955. I McHenry county's caseload was II "MOVIE OF THE WEEK" Sun. thru Wed. -- Mar. 3-4-5-6 McHenry Theatre Teahouse of the August Moon' Starring MARLON BRANDO, GLENN FORD, and MACHIKO KYO, "Teahouse" comes to the screen as one of the year's most eagerly-awaited films. The comedy hit began as a BOOK, became a PULITZER PRIZE-WINNING PLAY by JOHN PATRICK, and then went on to become a staggering hit in over 30 countries. Audiences all over the world laughed at the plight of the Army Captain who is sent to teach democracy to an Okinawan village. Hie villagers, led by the roughish rascal, Sakini the Interpreter, wind up doing most of the teaching. Instead of building the "pentagon-shaped schoolhouse," the Captain lets them build their life-long dream ... a teahouse. The villagers win him over completely, thanks to Sakini and the geisha girl Lotus Blossum. Brando plays his most challenging role as 'Sakini. while Glenn Ford earns new honors in his first comedy role. Japan's number one motion picture star, Machiko Kyo, is ideally cast as the magnificent Lotus Blossum. Key supporting roles go to EDDIE ALBERT as the psychiatrist, Captain McLean, and PAUL FORD as the blustering Colonel Purdy. DANIEL MANN directed the JACK CUMMINGS production which was filmed in Nara, Japan and at the MGM Studios in CinemaScope and Metrocolor. -- Lou Consago At the meets... and on the streets... FORD IS AMERICA'S WINNINGEST CAR! For 1957, Ford's off to a flying start on the NASCAR Short Track, Convertible and Grand National Race Circuit--with more points than all other cars combined! And now--just in from Daytona--seven more Ford firsts! 0 A 300-hp 1957 Ford V-8 out-accelerated all other low-priced cars in the standing mile competition. % A 1957 Ford Sunliner outclassed all other low-priced cars in the 160-mile National Convertible Championship Race. % A modified Ford Thunderbird, running in the Experimental Class, outaccelerated every other car in NASCAR history. 0 A modified Thunderbird topped every American Sports Car, finished first in its class and placed second to Europe's fastest sports car at the National Amateur Sports Car Race. 0 A standard production Thunderbird took first place in the flying mileoutperforming all sports cars made in America. 0 A modified Thunderbird won the flying mile in the fastest time made by any car at Daytona this year. % And a Ford Thunderbird topped the field in acceleration from a standing start in Modified Sports Car Class B. It was Ford Thunderbird power that set a new stock car record at Indianapolis, too . . . and powered the '57 Ford to 458 world endurance records at Bonneville, Utah. • 4 PROVE TO Y0I1SELF flY FW1 @9ES FEIST AT THE MEETS AND ON THE SHEETS Ct j IN AC J TEST THE i KINO Ft JAY! <; BUSS MOTOR SALES :J 531 Main Street Phone McHenry 1 McHenry.