McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 16 May 1957, p. 17

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MfcHENRY PLAINDEALER Page Fifteen RINGWOOD W.S;O.S. The Woman's Society of Christhan Service met at the church Wednesday evening, Mrs. Jane Reid pi'esided at the installation of officers for the coming year. The officers installed were president, Shirley Cristy; vice-president, Phyllis Rasmussen; secretary, Mertie Harrison; treasurer, Bessie Cruickshank; promotion secretary, Clara Cristy; secretary of Christian relations, Bobette Fossum; secretary of missionary education, Rose Walkington; secretary of youth work, Helen Hunt; secretary of spiritual life, Althea Walkington; secretary of local church activities, Jean Decker; secretary of student work, Florence Kane; secretary of children's work, Mary Butler; secretary of status of women, Doris j^jow; secretary of literature and publications, Ila Hogan; secretary of supply work, Iona Hood; publicity chairman, Alice Peet. The lesson, "We Give Because . We Love," was given by Bessie Cruickshank and Jean Decker, Althea Walkington and Bobette Fossum were hostesses. Round Up Club ,-A The Round-up club held its meeting Saturday evening, May 11, with a progressive supper. They had appetizers at the home of Rev. and Mrs. James Reid at Greenwood, salad at the Bill Bacon home, main course in the Frank Harrison home and dessert at the John Hogan home. Home Circle The Home Circle was entertained in the home of Mrs. Lena Peet Thursday, with Mrs. Roy Harrison as co-hostess. Luncheon was served at 12:45 and a fine program in charge of Mrs. Oscar Berg followed the business meeting. W.S.C.S. The Woman's Society of Christion Service sewing Circle will . j»meet at the home of Mrs. Coupe ^Thursday afternoon, May 16. 500 Club Mr. and Mrs. Ben Walkington entertained their five-hundred club at their home Tuesday evening. Prizes went to Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cristy, high; Mrs. B. T. Butler and Pete Sebastian, low. Mrs. Stanley Party Clara Durlin entertained at a demonstration party at her home Wednesday afternoon. Personals Mr. and Mrs. William Harrison and daughter of Round Lake called on his mother, Mrs. Flora Harrison, Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Ansel Dewey of Armstrong, 111., spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Walkington. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Aissen and family were callers at Elgin Sunday. Mrs. W. J. Mortimer, Sr., and Mrs. W. J. Mortimer Jr., of Barrington were luncheon guests in the Charles Anderson home Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Jepson and son are enjoying a two week's vacation at Chetek, Wis. Mrs. Ruby Shepard spent the weekend in the Alan Ainger home at Hebron. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Walkingt0n spent Sunday in the Harold Jepson home at Dundee. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Pettise and family, Mrs. Hattie Jencks and daughter, Nancy and Mrs. Mattison of Barrington spent Sunday with Mrs. Agnes Jencks. Mrs. John Woodward and sons left Wednesday morning to visit friends in Conneticut. They will then leave to join her husband in French Morocco. Sunday dinner guests in the B. T. Butler home were Mr. and Mrs. Ted Mikita and family of Elmhurst, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Mikita of Macomb, Mr. and. Mrs. Harold Stanek and family of Greenwood and Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Benoy and family of Mc- Henry. Mr- and Mrs. Cyril Pacey °of Wilmot spent Saturday evening with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Ehlert. - Mr. and Mrs. John Blackman of Antioch spent Sunday morning in the Dr. Hepburn home. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cruickshank, Jr., of Mundelein spent Sunday evening with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Cruickshank, Sr. Mr. and" Mrs. Clarence Harrison and family of Greenwood spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harrison. Webster Blackman and sons of Richmond visited in the Dr. Hepburn home Saturday. Duane Ehlert and son, Jeff, of Burlington spent Sunday afternoon with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Ehlert. Mr. and Mrs. William Pfeiffer and family and Mrs. Sicks of Crystal Lake, Mr. and Mrs. John Cristy and family of Greenwood, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Cristy and family and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Fossum and family spent Sunday in the Kenneth Cristy home. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harrison and son, Loren, were visitors at Waii-y kegan Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. John Finel of Gurnee called on Dr. and Mrs. Hepburn Saturday. Jerry Cristy will leave to join the Army Thursday. Mrs. Benson of Wonder Lake was a caller in the Dr. Hepburn home Saturday. Sunday dinner guests in the Beatty-Low home were Mr. and Mrs. Glen Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Olsen and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Frey of Richmond, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wilcox of Woodstock and Mrs. Walter Low and children. Supper guests were Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Olsen and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Low of McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hinze of Crystal Lake were Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Lena Peet and daughters, Alice and Marian. Afternoon callers were Mr. and Mrs. Earl Harrison and family of Burlington and Mrs. Chester Stevens of Spring Grove,, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Maganis of Chicago were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. a&d MrS. Pete Sebastian. Mrs. Clara DUrfih was a Sun? day dinner guest " of her daughter, Mrs. Regner, ancj family at Keystone. Mrs. Robert Woods and grand? daughter of Genera City speitt Thursday in the Pefe Sebastian home. Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Spencer and family of Champaign spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Byron Sowers. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hawley spent Sunday in the Ernest Reinwall, Jr., home at Cooney Heights. Mrs. Flora Harrison was a Sunday dinner guest in the Ardin Frisbie home at Greenwood. CLARENCE'S SHOP Lawn furniture, swings, tables, trellises, flower and sand.boxes, etc. All kinds of plywoods and 0 wall paneling, garage, house and combination doors. Colored patio blocks, splash blocks, chimney caps, cess pool covers, etc. CLARENCE J. SM Phone McHenry 1515-J Johnsburg, 111. Greenwood-Rlngwood Methodist Churches On the afternoon of Friday, May 17, eight youth from the Greenwood and Ringwood Methodist Youth Fellowships will travel to/fhe Newberry center, a settlement house near the Maxwell street market in Chicago. The high school age youth will spend the weekend wonting with eight other youth from the neighborhood and learn how such a house meets inner city needs. ^ On Sunday, May 19, the motion picture, "Fire On The Earth," the story of the Christian churches beginning and growth will be shown to the intermediate, high school and adult classes at both church schools. Church * school hours are 9:45 at Greenwood and 10:30 at Ringwood. There will be reception of members andstfa#1sacrament of baptism at 1>oth worship services. The hours of worship are 9:30 at Ringwood and 11 at Greenwood. 'After a service of dedication and a noon luncheon, teams of visitors Will visit the members and friends of both churches on Sunday afternoon, May 19. The callers will present the church's program for the year to come. tffP YOUR SEPTIC TANK WORKING SMOOTHLY Inexpensive- Easy to apply Stimulates Igtxtt*! Bacterial action Helps prevent Sluggish or clogged septic system! I0YKR lAC-TfVATOR ACE HARDWARE PHONE 722 ISO N. Riverside Dr. McllHUJ, NEW SERVICE PROGRAM A recent Air Force announcement has opened the six-month active duty program, formerly available only to 17,to 18*& years olds, to all draft age men who have no military service. The new program is designed to enable men over 18% to fulfilll their military obligations by joining the Air Force reserve for six years, only six months of which is spent on active duty. The active duty consists of four weeks of basic training at San Antonio, Texas, followed by a valuable education in the young man's choice of Air Force technical schools. TAX CYCLE between April 1 and June 1 the assessors are- supposed to view all real property, and receive declarations from all persons of their personal property subject to taxation. Because real property is assessed only once/each four years, in years other"fhan the quadrennial assessment year the assessors change real property assessments orily as parcels are divided or sold or new improvements added upon the parcels of real estate. The assessment books for real and personal property are supposed to be completed by the assessors by June 1 and returned to the supervisor of assessments. This deadline is one that is sometimes difficult to achieve. After the assessment books are returned to the supervisor of assessments, he may make revisions in the assessments so as to obtain uniformity between areas assessed by the separate assessors. This is the most important discre- Tower Grill On Rt 120 In Lakemoor Phone McHenry 161 FINEST FOOD ANYWHERE Dining Room for Small Open Daily 10 A.M. to 1 A.M. Parties . Fri. & Sat. Until 3:00 A.M. Large Parking Area CHICKEN Delicious "Swift's Tender-grown" Chicken, French Fried to golden brown, with Cole Slaw, Potatoes, Bread ana butter. A real treat $1.50 BAR-B-Q RIBS Large portion Bar-B-Q'd ,to a turn, Cole Slaw, Potatoes, Bread and butter. Deliciously tender $1.65 LEG & THIGH Chicken fried to a Golden Brown1. Large portion served with Cole Slaw, Potatoes, Bread & butter "... $1.25 SHRIMPS French Fried Jumbo's $1.65 Medium Sized, Large Order $1.25 Each served with Cole Slaw, Potatoes, Bread and butter. Snacks, Hot Sandwiches, Sodas,' Sundaes, Pies, Steaks, Chops, Bar-B-Q Spare Ribs -- Packaged lee Cream ft Toppings Carry Out Service -- Phone: McHenry 161 Pla.cj? your order and in 20 minutes your food will be cooked »#tb order, packaged to go. Piping hot and ready to serve. tionary power ^>f the supervisor of assessments. When the books are completed, the supervisor of assessments carries on two processes with the information contained in the books. First, he makes a preliminary abstract of the total amount of property for each taxing district and reports these figures to the state department of revenue. Second, from the assessment books he prepares lists o.f the legal notices in a newspaper in his county. On or before the third Monday in June the supervisor of assessments is supposed to deliver the assessment books to the board of review, the next agency involved in the process. This is another date that is sometimes not met because of the inherent complex* ity of the process.- ' "1' I' I . ! I COMPANY SALE*;, H. V. McNamara, president, National Tea company, has announced continued upward trend in sales for the fourth four-weei5> period of 1957, with total increase for 16^weeks to date in excess at $8 millioHr Consolidated sales of National Food Stores and subsidiaries for the four weeks ending April 20, 1957 totaled $49,199,062, which was an increase of $2,607,768, and 5.60 per cent ahead of the same period of 1956, when sales were $46,591,294. Buy your rubber stamps at tb» McHenry Platndealer. " i :....... - CO^o() mis Si 'Y'ES. the cost is high--a lot higher than any of us can afford to pay. Bat fortnoately one needn't drag along with "half-way" health. Call on your Doctor to help you. Accept his care and counsel. We'll play oar part, of course, by carefully compounding the prescriptions he writes. BOLGER'S Drug Store PHONE 40 103 S. Green St. McHenry, 111. Mercury sets the pace at $ « . Fox River Picnic Grove Opens May 18th Kiddie Park Family BROASTED CHICKEN, RIBS and SHRIMPS Broiled Steaks SCWED DAY FROM 5 TO 9 P.M. SAT. & SUN. FROM 12 NOON Dance Hall A ailable for Weldings, Parties and Banquets COMPLETE FOOD CATIitlNG ANY SIZE GROUP Telephone Mercury 9-3621 w •i4V --, -THI HONOR JUWAYS OOIS to the car that, in our opinion, shows the biggest advance in styling and performance." _ TONY HULMAN, Chairman of the Board, Indianapolis Motor Speedway. At right, F. C. Reith, Vice President, General Manager, Mercury Division, Ford Motor Company. At left, Tony Hulman. .sets the pace in size and low-cost luxury Hie choice of Mercury to pace the Indianapolis Classic dramatizes the fact that The Big M is the new yardstick of your money's worth. IN SIZE, Mercury brings you the biggest size increase in the industry--more room and comfort in every important dimension. IN STYLING, only Mercury offers Dream-Car Designcompletely different styling, shared with no other car. IN RIDE, only Mercury oifers you Floating Ride--the MERCURY -for 1 most effective combination of bump-smothering features ever put between you and the road. IN PERFORMANCE, Mercury leads with the highest standard compression in its field, highest torque for regular production engines, highest optional hp. Yet The Big M is priced just an easy step above the low-priced three. No wonder Mercury is setting the pace everywhere for style, size, performance, luxury-- and value! Why not stop in at our showroom today? with DMEMM-CM DESIGN THE BIG 171 Don't miss the big television hit, "THE ED SULLIVAN SHOW," Sunday evening, 7:00 to 8:00. Station WBBM, Channel 2. T& A Mercury Sal 16 Rand Rd. -- Route 120, Lakemoor PHONE 2669

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