"ilaUil Fr ir1 CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE OH REN? -- 2 Br. house. Middle age or, retired people only.. Call 385- 4138. 1-9-64 THIS IS A GOOD BUY! One story brick and frame three bedroom residence. Carpeted Living room with draperies. Kitchen equipped with range and refrigerator. Backyard enclosed by kiddie-tight fence. Beach and flock rights. Suburban McHenry. William Tittle, Real Estate, 107 E. Judd, Woodstock. 338-3483 or 338- 1470. *1-9-64 "COMPLETELY RENOVATED Modern, furnished (optional) 2 bedroom home plus separrle large studio. View of lake. 1,400 gas ncated square ft., att. garage, additional workshop. Remote control 100 plus wiring. Open Kitchen: Wall mount GE refrigerator; 17 ft. freezer; peninsula stove; suspended hood and cabinet with built-in lighting; stainless sink; auto. Washer. Bath: Illuminated ceiling; ceramic tile lavatory; carpet. Parlor: 30 ft. illuminated valance; walnut panelling; bar. 35 evergreens, established garden, patio, walks $18,500 385-1778 1-9-16-64 ATTRACTIVE 4 room house. Ideal lor newly married couple or retired couple. Fully landscaped, 1 '/> car garage, paved driveway, water softener, close to beach area. Price $9,- 500. Phone 385-3582. *1-2-9-64 LAKELAND PARK -3~2 b«N room home, tile bath," garage, aluminum storms & screeps, landscaped. Must see. $H,95o! Low down pay men# HYatt 7- • I 1-9-64 LARGE BUSINESS lot|JH| highway 120. West of MclJBry 130 ft. on highway. 15u ft. deep. For information call 385-0852. 1-2-30-64-TF RENT OR SALE • 6 room ranch, full basement, cabinet kitchen, storm windows, 2 car garage, appointments 6:30 to 8 p.m. Friday. Saturday, 1 to p.m. 5202 W. Shore Hill, Lakeland Park. # 1-9-64 FOR SALE in McHenry -- 4 bedroom, 2 baths, utility room, basement, 2 car garage, fireplace. Write Box No. 149 c/o McHenry Plaindealer 1-9-64 FOR SALE HOMES -- FARMS CHOICE LOTS--BUSINESSES RESORT PROPERTY McHENRY REALTY 3317 W Elm Xtrn-t 385-5022 Day W53-6K62 Eve. FOR"SALE Colonial Style Executive Type Home Sacrifice $27,000.00 3 Bed. Home, Gar. Bas. $14,300 3 Bed. Home, Gar. Bas. $6,500 Vacant lot zoned for business on Rt. 120, price $2,750. Waterfront property in heart of town $13,90Q^5 FOR RENT 2 Bed. Like New $110 mo. 3 Bed. Clean $85 mo. 1 Bed. Furnished $75 mo. 1-9-64 MODERN 5 ROOM RANCH HOME -- 2 large br's.; large carpeted liv. rm., modern kitchen, full bath, att. heated garage with full utility room in back; gas heat, paved driveway with patio overlooking lake. Telephone executive being transferred. Under $13,000. Terms. T. P. MATHEWS Healtqrs Wonder Lake -- 815-653-3061 1-9-64 KNOX REAL ESTATE, 1513A N. Richmond Road I'HONE 385-0421 McHenry, Illinois 12-28-61-tf firfrut Richmond Pistakee Area Homes - Waterfront & Commercial Properties And Farms - Lots - Acreages SUNNYSIDE REALTY 1602 W. Channel Beach Ave. McHenry (Sunnyside), 111. 385-0162 1-2-30-64-TF Wrated im Beat $ WANTED 2 OR $ bedroom home with garage. Write Box No. 147 c/o McHenry Plai% dealer. •1-9-64 WANTED -- Pontoon boat; spinet piano and wrought iron breakfast set. 385-4105. *1-9-64 Ult aid Ftu4 LOST -- White bull dog -- in vicinity of Holiday Hills. Answers to name of Buck. Call 385-5051. 1-9-64 MERE AMU ltltHt, IN BUSINESS . the McHenry ^Savings an h^cia^prf paid "its li coifsec^mve ,semi-annua WILL DO BABY -sitting in my home by day or week. Call 385-5332, *1-9-64 WANTED BABY sitting day, night or weekends. Your home or mine. References. Call Mrs. Strodtman, 385-0492. "'1-9-64 WILL DO BABY sitting and ironing in my home days. Call 385^4140. *1-9-64 WILL DO STEADY baby sitting in my home. Excellent care. Reasonable. Call Wonder Lake, 653-3286. *1-9-64 W^isjlTo Buy WANTED TO BUY for cash-- 4 or 5 room house in Mcftehry or Crystal Lake. Prefer older section? Write Box No. 146, c/o McHeripy Plaindealer. *1-9-16-23-64 SMALL OLDER type trailer house. Must be reasonable. Call Kimball 6-1465. 1-9-64 Wmrmw* Maetet FOR SALE - 20 feeder pigs, average weight 50 lbs. Phone 815-943-5791. 1-9-64 McHENRY and Year Round Homes, Seasonal Homes, Farms Vacant. Home Sites. Income Properties. JOE NISCHAN REAL ESTATE In Johnsburg 2301 Johnsburg Rd. McHenry, 111. Ph. 385-0037 9-12-63-TF PISTAKEE BAY ESTATE 4 Fine waterfront ranch home. Luxurious modern 9 room, 4 bedrooms, 4Vu baths, den. Gorgeous patio. Gas heat, 3 fireplaces, 3 acres. Hilltop location. Blacktop driveway, Exquisite decor. Fabulous extras. Appliances, carpeting, drupes, tractor, mowers, play house, sprinklered, raft, steel pier. Entire grounds illuminated. An outstanding home and value. OWNER 815-385-2771 1-9-64 NEAR CRYSTAL LAKE Small restaurant, very modern, seats 30. On busy intersection close to town. Air conditioned. Owner will sacrifice for $6,500. Good opportunity for right couple. IN McHENRY Bedroofn home. Basement and 2 car garage, alum, siding, walking distance to stores, churches and schools. Owner will trade for smaller home near McHenry. Priced at only $21,900. Ideal for large family. EDGEBROOK HEIGHTS New brick 3 Bedroom home. Full basement and garage, 2 baths. Priced at $28,500 or best offer. ON FOX RIVER NEAR McHENRY Bedroom year around home on large wooded lot. Sea wall in; also garage. Owner will sacrifice for $16,900. FOR RENT 3 Bedroom brick ranch. 2% baths, full basement, 2 car garage. $150 per month. 3 Bedroom homes near McHenry $100 per month. YOUR PROPERTY FOR SALE OR RENT HERE LOST LADIES' wallet in vicinity of A&P store on Dec. 31st. Important papers needed. Please return. Call^385-1626. 1-9-64 FOUND -- in front of McHenry State Bank few days before Christmas a package containing articles purchased at Ben Franklin Store. Owner may claim by calling, McHenry State Bank and identifying articles. 1t9-64 LOST -- Between Pistakee Highlands & McHenry, Jan. 1st in evening, boy's hardwood toboggan, approximately 5 ft. Christmas present. HYatt 7- 3284. 1-9-64 Personal I NEED $1,000 to $3,000 -- Will pay 10'/ interest. Call Twin Lakes, Wisconsin, TRiangle 7-3169. 1-9-64 TO BE GIVEN AWAY ANNOUNCE DIVIDEND. E. Roger Collins, executive1 vice-president of * McHenry Savings and Loan association, states that as of^Dec? 28, 1963, McHency^Savipgs and Loan fifteenth annual dividend, either by check mailed to depositors, or dividends credited to" savings accounts. The total amount of dividends for the six-month period ending Dec. 31 amounted* to $117,- 688.82, an increase during the past year alone of $15,293.63. •This 'is the fifteenth semiannual dividend, the first being paid Dec. 31, 1956, when savings earned dividends of $5,480. Total dividends for the payments to date total $760,926.97. These dividends were computed on the basis of 4 per cent on optional savings accounts, and 4Vi per cent on investment accounts, which dividend rate is anticipated again for the first six-month'period of 1964. CHARGED WITH ASSAULT Arthur Krumsee of 4916 W. Route 120, McHenry was confined to jail, charged with as: saulting a police officer last Sunday evening. He was later released on bail. ^ I Legal* WHITE MALE collie dog. Call 385-2645 before 3 p.m. Price-- A good home for the dog. *1-9-64 PuMfle- Wo tie©© & MOM'S HOUSE... DAD'S PRICE 8 ROOMS 4 BIG BEDROOMS W2 BATHS ATTACHED GARAGE FINISHED FAMILY ROOM $19,250 $1,250 Down Built in CRYSTAL LAKE or McHENRY on lots IMPROVED WITH PAVED STREET, CONCRETE CURB, ^ CITY WATER AND SANITARY SEWERS Other JFJ&mes - From ^ $16,900 to $24,500 We will build on your lot or ..ours. Trade yofjr present home or lot. Two homes for immediate ** occupancy Models\at 189 Marian Parkway Crystal Lake Open Daily 10 a.m. to 7 p, -vThe entrance to Marian Parkway is on Rt. 17(? (Terra Cotta Ave.) in Crystal Lake FRETT Builders & Realty Phone 459-1939 1-9-64 THE K^NT CORPORATION McHenry's Oldest Real Estate Office Established Since 1923 v PHONE 385-3800 1311 N. Riverside Drive McHenry, Illinois 1-9-64 BAIRD & WARNER, INC. Established 1855 RIVERFRONT -- Very nice 2 br. fully panelled yr. around home. New sea wall. $21,000. RIVER RIGHTS -- Exceptional split-level with mafiy extras included, porch with Bar-B-Q, recreation room & bar on 2 lots. Full basement. Att. garage. A bargain at $26,500., LAKEFRONT BARGAIN -- 5 Br., 2 story home^vith 99 ft. on Pistakee Lake. Large L.R. with fireplace. Separate dining room, full basement. Owner transferred to California. $32,000. WALKING DISTANCE -- 3 very large Br's., 3 way fireplace in L. R. & D. R., built-in kitchen, ground level family room with fireplace. This is a beauty and must be seen. Upper 30's. MR. HEINEN -- 385-2527 1-9-64 NOTICE EFFECTIVE JAN. 1,- 1964 THE 120 SEA FOODS Route 120 McHenry, Illr WilT~'Be Closed to Jan. 30th And Will Re-open Fri., Jan. 31 1-9-64 AUCTION SUNDAY, JAN. 12th 1 p.m. 159 S. Rt. 12 Fox Lake, 111. • FURNITURE • TOOLS • HOUSEWARES And Other Items Anything of value sold •a'c auction for you -- Consignments taken daily. PAUL K. BREAK AUCTIONEER JUstice 7-7922 Home: 815-385-1450 *1-9-64 Ml»fcGHIlM©CCi£3 BY POPULAR REQUEST - 2 LBS OF SUGAR FREE w with \ $3.00 GAS PURCHASE On Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays Skelly Service Station Route 120 anch€hicago Northwestern Tracks ^ X 9-19-63-TF CHICKEN!? RESTAURANT 5000 W. Rt. 120 385-7161 FISH FRY This Friday and Every Friday -- BUCKET SALE -- Bucket Chicken (12 Pieces) , $2.50 Bucket Fries (5 orders) $1.00 Bucket Breaded Pork (8) • $3.25 Bucket Box Bar-B-Q Ribs (2Vi lbs.) $5.00 ! 1-9-64 WE BUY or BARTER USED SEWING MACHINES ALSO SELL NEW SEWING MACHINES Contact SAM NATHANSON Tel. 385-5900 1402 N. Riverside Dr. McHenry, 111. 1-9-64-TF McHenry Library Corner Main and Green 8tr HOURS Daily, including Saturday: 2 to 5 p.m. Friday Evenings: 7 to 9 p.m. He's the only STATE OF ILLINOIS ) )SS OUNTY OF McHENRY) *\ NOTICE TfX^Vhom It May Concern, you are hereby notified that Roland J. Heindenfelder arid Lawrence Dony havfe on the 6th day of January, "A. D., 1964 filed in the Office of the County Clerk of McHenry County, Illinois their certifi cates certifying that they are conducting and transacting a business in said County and State under the assumed bus* iness name of LITLE CHEF RESTAURANT and that its location is 1332 N. Riverside Drive, McHenry, Illinois. Dated: January 6 A. D. 1964 VERNON W. KAYS County Clerk Leroy,. J. Welter Attorney 1303 Richmond Road McHenry, 111. (Pub. Jan. 9-16-23, 1964) PT^TE OF ILLINOIS ) )SS COUNTY OF McHENRY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 19TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF McHENRY COUNTY IN PROBATE IN 'i HE MATTER OF THE) ESTATE OF GRACIA) MOSHER, deceased. ) No. 64P3 NOTICE TO: Winifield Pierce, William. Burfeindt and UNKNOWN HEIRS of Gracia Mosher, deceased. You and each of you will hereby take notice that an instrument purporting to be the Last Will of GRACIA MOSHER, deceased, has been filed in the office of "the Clerk of the Circuit Court of the 19th Judicial Circuit of McHenry County, Illinois, together with the petition oPWILLIAM BURFEINDT, representing among other things that the names of all the heirs, legatees and devisees of- said deceased, are as follows, to-wit: Winifield Pierec, William Burfeindt, and Unknown Heirs of Gracia Mosher; deceased, and praying that said instrument be admitted to probate as the Last Will of said deceased, and that the same be ordered recorded. You will also take notice that the hearings on said Petition and the proof of said purported Last Will has been set by said Court for the 6th day of February, 1964 at 1:45 o'clock P.M., in the Circuit Court Room in the City of Woodstock in said CountV, when and where you may appear and show cause, if any, you have why said purported Last Will should not be admitted to probate. MARGARET O'NEIL Clerk of Circuit Court of the 19th Judicial « Circuit of McHenry County, Illinois Looze & Kinne 3431 W. Elm Street McHenry, Illinois 385-1580 Attorneys for Petitioner (Pub. Jan. 9-16-23, 1964) who doesrif use 'the Yimm NOTICE OF CLAIM DATE Estate of FRED E. HAHNDORF Deceased Notice is hereby given to all persons-~Tftat_Monday, March 2, 1964, (is the claim date in the estat^ of FRED E. HAHNDeceased, pending in the Circuit Court of the 19th Judicial Circuit of McHenry County, Illinois, and that claims may be filed against the said estate on or before said date without issuance of summons. RICHARD L. HAHNDORF Administrator Looze & Kinne Attorneys 3431 West Elm Street McHenry, Illinois (Pub. Jan. 9-16-23, 1964) 'Tljjer TerwilJijjer" by James L. Summers. " ! Naturally, team buddies hate to see California "fallout flu" fell a fine old football coach, but at Carleton High the blow to competitive sports is pure theory. A fugitive from consolidation, dwindling little Carleton has maintained its place at the bottom of the league for eight years. Dazzled by that kind of past glory, who in his right mind can, worry about action in the living present? Lanetta "Tiger" Terwilliger can, which shows the true sluff of a " hard-subject English teacher. That iron"'1 woman takes yes from the school board just about the way you'd exr pect of a mentor who once taught sundry members their high regard for Shakespeare and other sterling literary characters. Even the team has to admit she's the only man on the faculty fit to substitute during Coach Blount's, disease. Half fit is Mr. Busch, appointed interim assistant coach mainly because a natural-born man-type is needed to supervise the locker rooms. What the 110-pound colleague from the science and math department doesn't know about football is matched by a vast knowledge of volcanoes. Busch research reveals that volcanoes affect weather. Weather, predicts the researcher dreamily twirling a lock of hair, is Carleton's secret weapon for the big end-ofseason game. Under "Tiger's" generalship, the team learns the genuine strategy--kilLor be killed. Unfortunately, more flu cases necessitate trolling the secondstring waters, a mere pond. Including Loren Wallace, the specimens brought up are slightly more reassuring thaii the odd tactics in which Mr. Busch secretly trains Loren and the other buddies of the backfield. How a meterological victory over almanac and weather bureau decides gridiron history is the theme of another uproarious Summers novel, one to give split-type sides to any reader. "The Dark Traveler" by Josephine W. Johnson. Josephine Johnson brings to her new novel, The Dark Traveler, the same quiet power and vivid beauty that distinguished her Pulitzer Prizewinning "Now in November." Paul, the "dark traveler," is a gifted, sensitive young , man who is driven to defend himself against a domineering family by developing a second personality. As he retreats into his strange and fearful limbo, the division within himself becomes more distinct and his intelligent and expressive self becomes haunted and hampered by the other Paul. It is not until a measure of love is introduced into his life, to balance the horror of reality, that he can begin to he called back from his shadowy imaginings. Despite the psychological basis._of the story, however, thisis irT^o sense a psychiatric case history. Rather, it is a prose poem about the climates of life: the shattering storms which can cause a nature to divide against itself; and the warmth and light which can, in time, restore it to health. "The Fall of the House of Hapsburg" by Edward Crankshaw. This narrative of seventy crucial years of European history makes outstandingly rich and rewarding reading. Built^around the long reign of the unfortunate Franz Josef of Austria, it follows the fate of the Austrian Empire through all its internal evolutions and all its involvements with its European neighbors, and offers a new interpretation of the course of those calamities that led to World War I and a new Europe. "The Hapsburg Monarchy," Crankshaw says in his introduction, "is gone and largely forgotten. The problems it tried to solve have survived it.: they are with us tod(£*y...:' Crankshaw goes on to say, "A restoration of the Hapsburgs is unthinkable; but a restoration of Europe as a complex of inter- dependent peoples is something to be .striven for by all decent means. To understand the nature of a Europe which must include, as it once did include, not only Poland and Yugoslavia, but also a great part of Russia, it is necessary to understand the special pari played for so long by the Hapsburg dynasty, and, above all, the reasons fnr its fall." From Franz Josef's accession during the 1848 Revolution to his death on the verge of Austria's defeat in World War I, Crankshaw traces what went, \&rong, step by step, with understanding clarity. He pictures an empire that was never a state but only an useasy conglomeration of peoples held together by the personal power of dynasty. Hevfollows its shifting internal course and the balances of power in the world outside, in which Russia, France, England, Italy, and the Imagine whrt youK$fe. would* be like if you did not know that1 the earth is round and,.that it. circles the sun once a year. For thousands of years mdn lived in an unpredictable and mysterious universe, until men of curiosity and genius revealed theories so fantastic they were accused of practicing magic and faced with death. This story pivots around the lives and times of the men who discovered the world we know today -- visionary men like Leonardo da Vinci, who, five-hundred years ago, drew I plans for' rockets,, ami helicop- ' ters, and Galileo, who shocked I scholars hy proclaiming that in a vacuum a feather would fall at the/same ..speed as, a onehundred- pound ball of iron. Through the centuries, (here was resistance to bold thinking, "The man is mad," people said, when Dr. Harvey announced that blood cir.cuta.tus. through the body. But experiments continued--the medieval alchemists' dream of transforming one element in1o another came true hundreds of rising German Reich jockeyed years later when Ernest for position. And ht shows ! Rutherford split the atom World War I as the senseless and futile sequel, leading only to a worsened world. The sweep of his political and social history is enlivened by vivid personalities: Franz Josef's famous ministers; some of his antagonists, including Bismark and Napoleon III; nationalists such as Kossuth and Andrassy; his romantic and domineering mother; his beloved but estranged wife, Elizabeth, stabbed by an assain; Carlotta and his brother, Maximilian, lost to him on the mad Mexico venture; his son Rudolph, dying with Marje Vetsera in the hunting lodge at Mayerling. Brilliant "set pieces" present the dramatic moments; social life in Vienna at Sarajevo, for example. But the outstanding portrait, is of Franz Josef himself--in the end a scapegoat, an Atlas bearing the ills of hisyworld, but before that a young Jove, a fatherfigure, the golden hope of his people. x Edward Crankshaw, who lived in Vienna for many years, has used many sources not available in English, aficTjdocuments little known except to scholars. From this background, in the b6st English literary tradition, he has given us an original, distinguished, and supremely readable book. It is a work of the caliber of Nicolson's "The Congress of Vienna," to which it might almost be called a sequel. "Man's Conquest of Nature" by Arthur S. Grogor. Complete "with imaginative art, as well as easy-to-follow, diagrams, this book conveys a - basic understanding and excitement about the development of science from antiquity to modern times. "All in the Morning Early" by Sorche Nic Leodhas. For her first picture book Sorche Nic Leodhas, author of "Thistle and Thyme," a runnerup for the 1963 John ^ewbery award, turns to her childhood an enchanting Scottish nursery tale that was passed down from her own grandfather. "There was a lac' in Perthshire &nd his name was Sandy." the tale begins, :nviting children into the picturesque world of old Scotland. With liting, infectious rhythms, Miss Nic Leodhas recounts what happens to Sandy when he starts out for the mill with a sack of corn, "all in the morning early." * Evaline Nes,s has filled .each page with illustrations that evoke the/Trtelightful collection of characters that join Sandy on his journey. The result is & picture book of timeless heauty, .flavored with Gaelic charm, that wBl delight the eye and warm the heart of any child. . Have you applied for a Charge Account at GLADSTONE'S, INC,? REMODELING Need a Room, New Kitchen, Garage? ' V Design Service & Guaranteed Work With Experienced Crews WREE ESTIMATES Phone: 678-2861 Evenings -- Richmond 678-6681 McHenry Representative 885-3294 BUSS Buys of We'r® selling mm® 9@4 (FORDS than ever before, so we have a BESiMfe©!' ®f tradei i i i i 1963 BUICK SPECIAL. 4-Door $1975 1962 FOHD FAIRLANE 500. 2-Door $1375 1963 FORD GALAX1E 500. 4-Door $2250 1961 RAMBLER STATION WAGON 1960 FORD- RANCH WAGON. 4-Door $875 1959 RAMBLER CUSTOM WAGON BUSS FORD SALES 3936 W. Main Street Ptione