] Ifinttsday, October 1, 1959 AMERICAS DEPENDABLE FOOD MERCHANT tHE McHENRY PLAINDEALER SAVE EXTRA CASH EVERYSHOPPING DAY IN OCTOBER! IT'S P 100th Page Eleven MONTH! SURE TO TASTE BETTER... IT'S CUSTOM GROUND FOR YOU! Coffee that's ground right tastes right. If coffee is iTcHT^i too fine, you get a bitter brew... if it's too coarse, you get weak coffee. A&Ppremium-quality Coffee is Custom Ground before your eyes to give you coffee that's "Alive with Flavor" every time! MB. BAG MILD AND MELLOW EIGHT O'CLOCK 55c 3-s159 MB. BAG RICH AND FULL-BODIED RED CIRCLE 59° 3-LB. BAG •1.71 VIGOROUS AND WINEY BOKAR 1 -LB. BAG 63 >3-LB. BAG SI .83 muM GOODS! ^ \ ••' vXv/X; JANE PARKER 8-INCH SIZE Pumpkin Pie REG. 49c 43- Here's pie to please everyone with its golden filling... nicely spiced and satin smooth... in a flaky, delectable crust. Thrifty, too! JANi PARKIER REG. 27c EACH i6-oz. ^nc «Raisin Bread 2 LOAVES JANE PARKER, GOLDEN, SUGARED or CINNAMON Cake Donuts K" If Pound Cake 3f # Crisp Cookie Fresh Butter Rolls Firm Bread Chocolate Chip 27^ Jane Parker pkg Sweet & Tasty White or Whole 16-oz. Wheat. Sliced loaf 29 25- fOODSi ANN PAGE fire PINEAPPLE or P1ACH Preserves 6* OFF Rej. Prlce-You Pay Only ANN PAGE Tomato Soup 29* ANN PAGE NEW AND IMPROVED CREAMY-SMOOTH Peanut Butler 'is' 55' ANN PAGE Egg Noodles ««• 25® ASSORTED FLAVORS Sparkle DESSliT 4PKGS- 25* fin^ A&P INSTANT COFFEEyg, SPECIAL SALE! ,2-OI. All ptmrs fresh . coffee Jar MERRIMOOD NYLONS 30< OFF REGULAR PRICE 51 GAUGE I 60 GAUGE SEAMLESS STRETCH 2TAIS? I 2 PAIR 2 "PAIR 2 PAIR 9gepi09S139St29 Prices Effective Thru October 3 NEW dexo SHORTENING 3 LB. TIN Shortening rfte* Twice Told Tales FIFTY YEARS AGO Taken from Files of Sept. 23. 1909 Starting from an unknown cause, fire totally destroyed the barn and most of its contents on the John Kennebeck place on Maple avenue at the noon hour last Saturday. The horse and one buggy were saved but a quantity of hay, grain, garden tools, a surTy and harness were destroyed. , Nearly eighty children arc now enroled in St. Mary's parochial school. Mrs. Rebecca Curtis, Wife of the late C. B. Curtis and well known hoie. passed away Friday evening. She leaves one niece and two nephews: Harriet l:;;mphere. Elgin; Charles Lainphcrc. McHenry and William. of Waueonda. Miss Elizabeth Turner of this city and Edward Brahan* of Elgin were united in marriage by Rev. Fr. Lehane at SEARS WAFKEGAN FREE ESTIMATES On Alum. Windows and Doors Railing Gutters Roofing Siding Wall Tile Floor Tile Call FRANK GANS Representative 300 Riverside Drive EVergTeen 5-1878 McHenry EASY PAYMENT PLAN St. Patrick's at 12:30 Saturday. Attendents were Miss Vera Adams and brother, George of Ring wood. Henry Spoo of Chicago, a frequent McHenry visitor died very unexpectedly Saturday afternoon while enroute to McHenry from Chicago on the Lake Geneva flyer. The Rev. Fr. Wolfgarten officiated at the marriage of Miss Emma Tonyan and Mr. John Freund. which took place at St. John's church. Johnsburg, Wednesday morning. Miss Florence Howe., who has been assisting in the F. A. Bohlander store, has resigned to again tak? up her duties as teacher in the Hard Scrabble school, north of Ringwood. FORTY YEARS AGO Taken from the Files of Sept. 18. 1919 Two weddings of interest took p'aee the past week: Miss Rijhv Florence Claxton of this village was quietly married to George Shepard of Ringwood at the Methodist church in Woodstock' at 8 o'clock Tuesday morning, Rev. Graham, pastor of the church officiating. Announcement was made on Monday that Miss Elsie Smith of Ringwood was united in marriage to Rev. John Ratoliff of Greenup. Ill: in Chicago on that day." Rev. Ratcliff is in charge of the Universalist church at Macomb, where they will reside. A few of our people were over at the county scat last Saturday. where they witnessed the public destruction of the beer that had been takb\ oil" coir^iv sheriff and his deputies throughout the county during the past few weeks. F. V. Cobb a former McHenry resident, now bookkeeper for the Borden Milk Company of Hebron, returned to his home in that village Monday, following an operation in West Side hospital, Chicago. He is recovering nicely. A late edition of the Chicago Examiner last Saturday night contained an excellent picture of the Victory bell at St. Mary's church, and also Misses Lillian and Annabelle Heimer were pictured as two of the taggers who assisted in the work of securing funds with which to pay for the bell. Deaths reported the past week included Mrs. Henry- M e y e r s o f < M c H e n r y t h i s (Thursday) morning. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Taken from the Files of Sept. 20. 1934 E W . Johnson, McHenry's prpular manager of the Empire theater, has sold out to R. J. Miller of Quincv, who took over the theater this week. William Lorimer, 73 years old. one of the earlv settlers of j Pistnkee Bay and former Unitled States senator, died of a I heart attack in the Chicago j.ind Northwestern depot in Chicago, wheo he had just arrived from hi* summer home in Crystal Lake. John Oeffling, 46. passed away Wednesday morning after a lingering illness. He | leaves a wife and small children. ; Miss Cara Kennebeck. daunrh- |.tor 4>f the Nick Kennebecks, l was united in marriage to Mr. |F'\in Nester of Woodstock at St. Man's churc/i :n that citv Sept. 15, Rev. Fr. Voet officiating. The woods on the Sutton homestead were an apropriate location for the family reunion Sunday. A picnic dinner was served, various games played and singing enjoyed to the accompaiwjnent on the banjo by Mrs. Can Weber. STEEL STRIKE MAY HAVE EFFECT ON STATE ASSISTANCE Peter W- Justen & Son | OXYGEN EQUIPPED AMBULANCE SERVICE Plane EVergreen 5-0063 The overall public aid recipient rolls continued to decline in July although at a slower pace, Peter W. Cahiil, executive secretary of Illinois Public Aid Commission, reported to i Gov. William G. Stratton. The I five public aid rolls totalled ,,367.593- persons, a drop of 1184 j from 368,777 in June. Overall jJuiy cost was $1.7.623,383, of which $9.5 millions were frorr^ j state funds. June expenditures came to $17,178,748. July 1958 cost amounted to $15,526,088 | for 345.029 recipients. j The relief load in Cook counj ty absorbed $11,558,471 of the I $17,623,383 overall July cost. 1 Recipient rolls in general assistance were almost at a standj still in July. Cahiil expects efifects of the steel strike, felt now mostly in Chicago, to rej verse the downward trend of the past few months and fail I to be offset before the start of 'the seasonal uptrend, usually in October. In Julv 1959. 126.- 1015 persons were on the rolls: j in Ju-ie. 126.329; July 1958, , 113.266. July expenditures were $5,092,843 for an average of $40.41 in comparison to I June's cost of $5,005,418 and an average of $39 62. July 1958 cost was $3,649,804; average j $32.22. | Old Age Assistance dropped I to 77,817 persons from June's 78.175. July 1958 rolls carried 82,067 recipients. July cost was $5,399,661; average $69.39. June cost was $5,424 185: average $69.39. July 1958 cost $5,- 425,189; average $66.49. They conquer who believe they can. He has not learned the lesson of life who does not each day surmount a fear. Your new Direct Distance Dialing Equipment in action! Voice Mirror" and hear how you sound on the telephone inside a telephone cable. SEE -- where your telephone wire goes the machine that placcs your call -- the one that rings your phone AT THE McHENRY TELEP 111 NORTH COURT ST. Mon. thru Wed. OCTOBER 14 - 16 1 to 4:00 p.m. 7 to 8:30 p.m. ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONI V