rh~-^ 2^-Jgit ' \ < pit West Elm (9dti U*w*t* fr/V . ? IM-oiw Publi.she^T Every Thursday at McHenry, IUinoiTT* by McHENRY PUBLISHING COMPANY f^rry E. Lund Publisher Adele Froehiich, Editor Sefiaiad Class Postage Paid at McHenry, Illinois NATIONAL EDITORIAL dfel 1 a#c6t,4w \ assoctflTion / Subscription Rates In McHenry County Outside McHenry County 1 Year $4.00 1 Year <..$4.50 6 Mos. .$2.25 6 Mos. .$250 J Mos. $1.50 3 Mos .$1.7& mi\m m McHenry Recreation Monday Night Commercial League -- G. Freund 541; H. Weber 513; J. Kalk 501; D. Weber 516; E. Matthesius 190-523; John Piotrowski 224-554; John Gerth 519; Bob Becker 5Q5; Bob Schmuhl 236-574; Sam Buenzl 203-573; John Kuna 200; E. Amann 191-204-560; W. Garrelts 211-534; S. Marsella 503; R. Steege 508; Geno Viscounty 193; K. Oehmke 209- 516; Bob O'Brien 217-193-579. Nite Oivls -- R. Reiben 394; L. Miller 170; V. Groh 442; P. Hamil 281; P. Corso 366; J. Phannenstill 171; J. Schmunk 474; Grace Goffo 364; E. Roewer 393; S. O'Leary 374; E. Rand 443; P. Steege 474-201; D. Koleno 433-158; M. Venable 433; K. Mclnerny 336; M. Day 425; G. Hastings 434; Fuhrer 431; I. Kreier 201-161-152-459; F. Kuna 177- 166; S. Sutton 514; L. Recker 385; G. Wagner 165. Splits and Rails -- L. Ferwerda 2-7-10;. E. Rand 3-10; H. Solchenberger 5-10; R. Simon 3-10. Ten Pin Queens -- L. Burns 156; M. Doherty 165-153; L. Michcls 173; M. B. Fuchs 197-1K1-169-547; D. Gerstein 163; E. Wirfs 176; W. Gehrke 206; P. Kriegel 164-164-182-510; V. Steege 162; T. Olson 153; B. O'Brien 182; P. Steege 179; T. Meyer 165; E. Conway 180; E. Hester 164; E. Justen 189-176-497; T. Steffan 163; D. Overton 163; M. Donnelly 181; M. Supek 173; J. Lindgren 155-179. Palace 7 o'clock Ladies Joan Bucaro 479; I.. Freund 456; Betty Smith 151. TUCK. Nite League -- B. Miekels 507; M. Michels 508; J. Herdrich 507; J. Etten 525; Butch Leonard 509. Thurs. Tavern League -- Carl Behnke 515; Geo. Freund 203-543; Bob Beyer 210-549; Jack Worm 500; Geo. Jacques 226-542; Walt L. 557; Bill 516; B. Nolan 200-507; O. Thiel 213-562; D. Smith 223- 552; Rowe 200-554. C.O.F. Fri. League -- D. Rosing 202-215-566; Miller 527. Tomasello's TNT League -- Betty Hettermann 193-493; Marcella Wakitsch 193-485; Isabel Stilling 481; Connie May 189-469; Mabel Smith 466; Madeline Johnson 456; Jean Ciechon 453; Hilda Thelen 449; Eleanore Mangold 182-448; Doris Kibbe 441; Jackie Mortimer 437; Rails -- Isabel Stilling 6-7. MCHenry Recreation Tuesday Thirty-Nlners -- Dorothy Freund 460; Billie Mackinder 446; Dorothy Hiller 462; Donna Schaefer 186-469; Sandy Foley 434; Janet Heide 420; Judy Walsh 452; Mary Nowak 173-190-482. Railroads -- N. McAuliffe 5-10; R. Przetacznik 2-10. Sunday -- Nanci McAuliffe. 442; Grace Beritz 186-212-572; Sandy Foley 449; Lucy Harris 46b; D. Wall 447£ RosnA^^I44 McHenry Recreation Thursday Nite 9:15 p.m. Men's League A. Blake 193-201-566; Oldehberg 208; J. Wiser 203; D. Kleinhuizen 226-195-597; G. Rodenkirch 210; T. Sutton 194- 552; J. Larkin 256-597; M, Crouch 215-572; W. Coari 535; R. Boseberry 230-573; B. Sheriff 523; W. Pierce 203; B. Kreier 225-555; A. Otto 212; S. West 206-543; Dalby 217-563; E>. Buralli 200-200-160 560. C.D.. of A 2-11-64 LI Crouch 191-501; Clark 188- 529; V. Diedrich 199-493; C Wagner 161-395; E. Nimsgern 165-477; A. Vaupell 173-448; W. Aylward 181-437; G Sigman 197; B. Schmalin 177; S, Ballowe 189-496; D. Chelini 175- 481; L. Smith 181-498; E. Weyland 147; R. Mieritz 174; J. Pieroni 179; J. Buss 163; H. Donovan 451; P. Reumelin 473; C. Boro 479; J. Weber 448; S. Consago 148. RAILS - S. Ballowe 3-7-10. Wednesday Nite Mixed M- Hinspater 157; R. Freres 159; M. Rochelle 146; Lee Bryah 527; Ray Bryah 210-190-590; F. Klapprich 173; J. McNally 212- 181-577; R. Wagner 193-196- 531; Bill Rochille 177; Tony Rebel 207-538; P. Butler 138; V. Steege 155; Tom Cusak 149; D. Schwandl 167; M. Schwandl 170; Lucille Kleinhans 140-400; C. Bennett 189-414; G. Kleinhans 190-200-546. C.D. of A Pat Ruemelin 201-544; Barb Leight 216-531; Joyce Weber 202-509; Lois Crouch 193-503; B. Clark 189-495; H. Stahlman 201-470; M. Miller 163; C. Buenzli 165-466; L. Smith 179-470; G. Sigman 183-482; T. Garland 185; B. Justen 171; A. Hollander 174-444; E. Latimer 154- 403; C. Wagner 148-386; C. Owens 144-378; J. Blake 138- 372; D. Beckenbaugh 157-443; C. Boro 178; A. Gaulke 171-458. Thursday Nite Business Men's R. Kick 222-198-588; Geno Schaefer 193-190-580; Lee Mai 212-202-595; Bill Brennan 214- 202-588; W. Smith 200; N. Schmaling 221-573; R. Walinski 222- 525; G. Foszcz 506; P. Jensen 200-520; B. Haldeman 209-522; C. Phipps 201-526; J. Solchenberger 228-543; Q. Jandt 192-540; A. Jourdan 510; W. Groth 190-508; A. Rebel 193-540; "Doc" Sayler 509; "Rip" Peisert 203-561. Some 5% million school children, ages 6 to 17, are not in Judy any school. !R. siwseE SM22S HDA1? SffiEVICIffi OK O Service O USspalr Q Overhauling # Reconditioning ALL WORK MOST MAKJMS & MODELS O Eebuildlng © Cleaning Out © Installation ® Removal GUARANTEED TER SOFTENER SALf NEW -- USED -- REBUILT 3854 jci. enO WATER SOFTENER SERVICE/SALES McHenry, Illinois One in a series to help you enjoy better telephone service How to "get your money back" if you reach a wrong number / Here's what to do: Dial the Operator... Dial "O" for the Operator and tell her the town you reached by mistake. She'll see you are not billed for the call-and help you get the right number, too. There's no need to tell her about wrong numbers within your free-calling area; they carry no extra charge anyway. (The front pages of your telephone directory list the places within your free-calling area.) Coin Phone Calling ... If you called from a coin phone, either local or Long Distance, the Operator will connect you to the number you want or see that a cash refund is mailed to you. Write for free folder ... We hope you'll find this information useful. If you would like a folder with a copy of this and other helpful tips on telephoning, just fill in the coupon below. If you have any comments or suggestions for future subjects in this series, please send them along, too. ILLINOIS BELL @ TELEPHONE Box C, 208 W. Washington Street, Chicago, Illinois 60606 Please send me a free folder, "Helpful Tips for Telephone Calling." Name . Address - Citv ... Zone Slato I McHenry Library Corner Main and Green Ste. l.---I----T_-- Friday Evenings: 7 to 9 p.m, Dally, Including Saturday: 2 to 5 p.m. "THE GROVE OF EAGLES" by Winston Graham.. A major novel of Elizabethan times and of the Second Armada which sailed to conquer England in 1597. The time of the latler years of Queen Elizabeth's reign was one when England, still adjusting to Hc-nry VIlI's breaking away from the Roman Catholic Church, was in a state of constant fear of invasion frorn Philip II's Spain. The great Armada had been defeated in 1588, but by the middle of the 'nineties the Spaniards had come to hold Calais and parts of the Brittany coast, so that conditions for an attempt to conquer England were much more favorable to thorn than they had been earlier, and sooner or later another fleet would surely sail. In these circumstances the story Of such men as John Killigrew,, theS Governor of Pendennis C&stW, 'ce'mtiiahdlng the' most vital position on .the Cor-, nish coast, is the story not only of their lives but of the history ot the time. The mounting crisis of /these years is seen in this novel through the eyes of Maugan Killigrew, John Killigrew's oldest son. Winston Graham has produced an extraordinarily honest portrayal of a young man who is many times less than a hero but who emerges for all his frailities as a character in the round, believeabie, sympathetic, and, above all, a person tit his time. In this brilliant combination of the state of nations with the fate of individuals, Elizabethan England comes vividly to life, as do the Cornish men and women who play such a notable part. Much original research has gone into the writing of this novel, and there are many outstanding character studies -- not least that of Waller Raleigh, In "The Grove of Eagles," great events, great characters, and great narrative writing fuse into a huge and significant whole. It is an absorbing and completely authentic novel. Winston Graham draws on his knowledge of Cornwall, derived from years of residence there, for this, his fourteenth book. Now living with his family in Sussex, Mr. Graham spends much of his non-writing time at tennis and rose cultivation. "THE AMERICAN IRISH" ... By William V. Shannon. The election of John F. Kennedy as President of the United States awakened millions of Americans to the extraordinarily important role the Irish have played in the history of this country. Now the noted national columniat and political Wlffljiifn-1 v: Shanw*; I $1 the,; first time the full si the colorful contributions the Irish have made in every field, from religion to prize fighting. Of Irish extraction himself, the author paints the largescale portrait of more than a century and a quarter of lively American social history as it was'lived by the , immigrant Irish and their descendants. This genuinely extraordinary parade cf personalities ranges from the aristocratic Carrolls of Maryland to the millionaires of San Francisco and the great political chieftains of New York and Boston to the still' controversial Senator Joseph McCarthy. Citing as his precedent the Old Irish proverb "Contention is better than loneliness," Mr. Shannon is never reluctant to add his trenchant commentary to the mainstream of the events he describes. The result is a superbly documented pageant, with all the sweep and grandeur, pathos and humor ("blarney") that characterize America's Irish. . With a unique character forged by the Qre^t Famine and the savage Penal Code, the hundreds of thousands of Irish who emigrated to frontier America brought with them the seeds of political,. religious, literary and dramatic genius -- all of which found root and throve In the liberal climate of the ,New World. Their names, and those of their descendants, are legend : John Barry, a naval hero of proportions to match John Paul Jones; Mike Walsh, who took on an eventually whipped Tammany Hall (which, many readers will- be surprised to learn, once excluded the Irish); William March "Boss" Tweed, who iSiti^latofs ctftley,' dkd Jim Farted;1'aha JtJhp O'Hara; John L. Sullivan, the prizefighter; the giant of the Amercian theater, Eugene jO'- Neill; Father Coughlin and Father Ryan - and many, many others. To their stories are appended illustrations that capture the flavor of their time and place. William V. Shannon has been on the Washington staff of the New York Post since 1951 find is also correspondent for The Commonweal. He won the New York Newspaper Guild's. "Page One Award" for his Articles on Senator Joseph McCarthy. Mr. Shannon was co-author with Robert S. Allen of the "Truman Merry-Go-Round/' He resides in Washington, D. C. "TAKE HEED OF LOVING ME" By Elizabeth Gray Vining. This is a remarkable telling of a remarkable love story oi the great poet John Donne and Anne More, who defied her father and risked her inheritance to marry the man she loved. It is set amid the pageantry, the excitement, and the intrigue of Elizabethan and Jacobean England. John Donne was twenty-four when he returned to London from his expeditions to Cadiz and the Azores with the Earl of Essex. Handsome, ambitious, already a man of the world, Donne became secretary to the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal and was well on his way to success -- until he fell in love with Anne, his master's niece, while she was still in her teens. This re-creation of their secret betrothal and marriage, which brought on them the violent wrath of her father and ^employer and cost Don* j nodding cofMi;> wW for* . and of John Ddnne'i jo*«liey; from woridlinss^tP de* dfication is as beautifully writeen; as anything Elizabeth Gray Vining has done, Many noted individuals -- Elizabeth, Essex, Raleigh, Ben Jotmson, and James I 'amcmg them «- figure in the story, and the, whole historical background is * vividly drawn and as accurate' as careful research can make it. "Take Heed of Loving Me It a genuinely distinguished novel. "William Shakespeare" by mr- L. Rpwse -- a biography,; 5 ^ The qualification A. L. Rowie brings to the writing of this book are many and varied.. Foremost, obviously, is his standing as the greatest living authority on Elizabethan England, a trained historian wonderfully at home among the byways, the modes of speech and thought, the events great and trivial of the whole age; Secondly, he is a practicing poet, with a poet's informed intuition in reading another poet's "shorthand." Add to these the advantage of a country boyhood amid customs surviving from Shake* speare's day, an acyte knowledge of the ways by which iften seek power, the ability to feel and convey excitement, and his fitness for this great venture comes clear. For anyone who is at ail familiar with Shakespeare's plays, Rowse's analysis of them brings an incalculable extension of understanding and enjoyment. Public events and private experiences are significant here' not simply as references or clues but as they affected the mind and spirit of the poet, ais he felt them and reached to them. My son wanted a car with bucket seats. My daughter wanted a car with four doors. And I wanted a car with easy handling and a comfortable ride. We shopped around and found what we wanted in Ford-so we bought one? MRS. MARY HERTZKA. 1HIMSDALE, ILL. ^ ' PfiOOUUiS.QF Ford changed... so Don't take Ford's word for it. -- Read what '64 Ford owners say, then test-drive a Ford before you buy any new car. MR. SAM DATTILO, CHICAGO, ILL. "In trading another make far a new Fairlane . . .1 got an entirely different kind of car. Fairlane's got much more room. The styling is much more beautiful. The ride is smoother. My other car vibrated; but my new. Fairlane doesn't seem to 'feel* the bumps at all." MR. KENNETH B. MATTS, JR., CHICAGO, ILL. "I'm really in love with my new Falcon. The ride is great...and for a compact, it's really relaxing to drive. I got the V-8 for lots of performance and I'm really getting it!"' Before yon buy any new car... " Test-drive the Big Change in a total performance MRS. OTTO CESARIO, SKOKIE, ILL. "We had a lot of good reasons for choosing our new Ford. Now we don't have to fill the gas tank every other day. It's easier to drive and park. It's easy to look at, easy to handle. And the interior is very Iff clean--even witlrchi!direm,A w The only car» that have changcd as much as Chicago BUSS FORD SALES K*alron« F airlane • Ford •ThundcrbW" 3936 WEST MAIN STREET McHENRY, ILLINOIS .See "Arrest and Tiial"--7:30 P. M. Sunday--Channel 7,