McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 May 1964, p. 5

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gaayv MayK 1584 The McHENHY PLAINDEALER McHENRY PLAINDEALER f81S Wert Elm Street BataMahfd fBlfi Phone 885-0170 Published Every Thursday at McHenry, Illinois by McHENRY PUBLISHING COMPANY. Larry E. Lund -- Publisher Adele Froehlich, Editor Stjcaid CJflss Postage Paid at McHenry. HMnoia 1164 iSSifcl NATIQNAl I p i T O R i A L cjfel lA#e8T'4w Subscription Bates In McHenry County Outside McHenry County J Year ..$4.00 1 Year . .. $4.50 ® JJos $2.25 6 Mos. .$2.50 $ ^os $1.50 3 Mos $1.75 ELECT McHENRY MAN TO COUNTY TB GROUP BOARD The McHenry County Tuberculosis association held its annual meeting in Crystal Lake Wednesday evening, May 6, with fifty seven members and guests in attendance. Ed Gross, assistant executive director of the Illinois Tuberculosis association, Springfield, was a special guest. Officers for the ensuing year were elected as follows: Mrs. Robert Lounsbury, president; Mrs. Orville Kerns, first vicepresident; Mrs. Stanley Chapman, second Vice President; Mrs. Peter Cassiani, secretary; and Miss Zelma Hutson, treasurer. The members of the board of directors who were also elected at the Wednesday meeting included H. Walter Anderson of McHenry. Mrs. Robert Lounsbury presided at the meeting and introduced the guests. Mrs. Claribel Naylor, R. N., executive director and tuberculosis nurse, gave the annual report for McH e n r y c o u n t y . M i s s Z e l m a Hutson presented the annual financial report. Dr. O. E. Nelson, Woodstock, gave a talk and showed colored slides of his work and travels in the Philippines where he served as a medical missionary for some six months. He spoke of the prevalence of TB on the islands and how it is being treated. Dr. Nelson concluded his pictures with slides of the temples of Thailand. CARD OF THANKS I would like to express my sincere appreciation and thanks to my family, wonderful neighbors and friends for their prayers, cards and well wishes I received during my stay at McHenry Hospital. I r.m especially grateful to Father Baumhofer, Father Holmgren, Father Paddock and my son, Father Zimmerman. 5-14-64 Frank L. Zimmerman Newt About Our Servicemen M/M/I Richard Schaffer is spending a 21 day leave with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schaffer. He has just returned from Hawaii and the Far East. He will report back to his home base in San Diego, Calif. KORNWESTHEIM, GERMANY-- Army Specialist Four Lawrence R. Stilling, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Stilling, 4302 W. Ringwood road, McHenry, participated in the 24th Engineer company championship bowling tournament held at Stuttgart, Germany, April 20. Specialist Stilling, a mechanic in the company at Kornwestheim, Germany, entered the Army in January, 1962. The 22-year-old soldier is a 1959 graduate of McHenry Community high school. Marine Lance Corporal Richard J. Polka, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Polka of 8712 Shady lane, Wonder Lake, completed intensive training exercises April 16 with the First Marine division's Seventh regiment, First battalion at Camp Pendleton, Calif. The training, called "lockon" is designed to prepare him for duty with the Third Marine division on Okinawa. The training included small unit tactics, escape and evasion from enemy forces and weapons indoctrination. The Third Marine Division is the sea assault force of the Seventh Fleet in the Far East. Pvt. Jerry J. Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Miller, 4204 W. Lake Shore drive, Wonder Lake, is scheduled to complete advanced training as a fire direction specialist at the Army Artillery and Missile Center, Fort Sill, Okla., May 22. Miller is being trained to operate equipment to employ ar- Radios THE PERFECT GRADUATION GIFT from to ? ? Also SEE OUR SPECIAL TABLE on TRAMiilTOR ISAilOS SELLING FOR COST OR BELOW AT & HAY ELECTR (Mellenry's Largest Appliance Store) 1005 N. Front St. McHenry, 111. Phone 385-0882 Free Parking McHenry Library Corner Main and Green St*. 2 to 5 p.m. HOURS Friday Evenings: 7 to 9 p.rtu Daily, Including Saturday: "THE FIFTH QUEEN'* by Ford Madox Ford Of Henry VIII's many wives, history has generally assigned the role of wanton to the fifth, Katharine Howard, the girl to whom Henry said, "I love thee so that . . . were thou the Woman of Sodom, I would have thee to my Queen! "In Ford Madox Ford's brilliant trilogy, "The Fifth Queen" (actually the three novels, "The Fifth Queen, "Privy Seal," and he Fifth Queen Crowned"), a different Katharine emerges a young girl of a proud, noble, and impoverished family Who engages in fatal combat with a salvation of her husband's foul and England's return to" the Church of Rome. * Katherine is only 19 years "old when, at the novel's beginning, she arrives at court. Two y&ars later Thomas Cromwell, Lord of the Privy Seal, with the aid of his seven thousand spies throughout the kingdom, has emerged victorious not only over the Queen but over the King as well. Through plot and counterplot, "The fifth queen races to its inevitable end -- Katharine Howard's beheading. With her dies the small voice of human aspiration at odds with human reality. This is a breathtaking and unforgettable story in which Ford Madox Ford has chosen to "seek out the mysteries and depths of the heart" -- a dipry that Graham Greene has cabled "a magnificent bravura piece." It brings once again to Ai#£ritillery fire upon a given The 21-year-old soldier en* tered the Army last Decemberand completed basic combat training at Fort Knox, Ky. can readers a writer who, according to Mr. Green, "in jan age of increasing carelessness among good writers, was an artist. No one in our century extept James has been more attentive to the craft of lett e r s . . . " "I WALK WITH LIONS" by Mervyn Cowie In Africa, hunting is a sport, exciting if dangerous. But to Mervyn Cowie, son of a biggame hunter, killing for sport was senseless. He came to believe that the hunt was destroying not only wild life but also a . majestic kind of beauty and a positive value to mankind. This is his own dramatic story: how he became a leader in the establishment of the national parks system. With humor and feeling, he describes the opposition of neighbors and officials--the woman who petitioned the queen because the park boundaries interfered with her riding area, the official who refused to sign an important document and would give no explanation, and many others. The author also tells of the "interruptions" of his work by Mau Mau terrorists. "I Walk With Lions" is an absorbing book, teeming with the bizarre and beautiful sights of Africa: elphants shuffling tht-ough the night, hordes of hyertaa • scavenging for food, a liori prowling in the darkness, vultures claiming the carcass of a once powerful beast. Ertchanced with many superb photographs of wild animals, "I Walk With Lions" offers a vivid account of one man's efforts to sdve a priceless remnant of our heritage. In the great tradition Of the widely popular booka on a still untamed continent, it is also an important add/tiQn to the literature of wildlife conservation. "THte MINT" by T. E. Lawrence. --is the story, alternately gripping and pathetic, bitter and humorous, a group of nten anxious to lose themselves as Individuals and to became a functioning military unit. All the. barracks -- room bawdy talk, the staggeringly hard training, and the exhausting boredom of military life are in this book by the author of "The Seven Pillars of Wisdom" and Revolt In The Dessert." T. E. Lawrence. . .' . notes made in the R. A. F. Ddpot between August and Pecember, 1922, and at Cadet college in 1925 by T. E. Lawrence, author of "The Seven Pillargt of Wisdom." 1 "describes the process of1 moulding recruits into the approved stamp. Lawrence's unvatnis^ ed picture oi tne R.A.F. may give offense, but" there is no denying its authenticity-- The texture of the writing is hard and rough, but this -- has produced a precise account--as interesting as a work of fiction WEEKLY SCOTSMAN Edinburgh "SHEPHERD OF MANKIND" by William E. Barrett 'A biography of Pcpe Paul VI) ' Here are intimate gimpses of the early years of the boy who was to become Pope, his family and. friends, the places he lived and the schools he attended. As a young pi lest his intellectual prowess led him early into the diplomatic corps of the church, where he served in the Vatican State department under Pope Pius XII. In time, Msgr. Montini became Pro- Secretary of State for Ordinary Affair^, and the Pope's closest and most trusted confidant. In 1954, he was made Archbishop of Milan, a hot-bed of Communist activity, where he courageously faced open hospitality to spread the teachings of'the Church among the workers. He became an intimate frienU. and adviser to Pope John XXIII (he was the first Cardinal appointed by that beloved pontiff) and was one of the principal architects of the renowned Ecumenical Council which he was destined to direct as Pope. Writing in the popular, readable style for which he is so justly famed, William Barrett captures the full stature of this extraordinary man, as he tells Pope Paul's life story against the background of the momentous world events which affected his life and the role of the Church in modern times. The result is an inspiring biography of a man who is fulfilling hs manifest destiny as a great spiritual leader. "I WALK WITH LIONS." by Mervyn Cowie. In Africa, hunting is a sport, exciting if dangerous. But to Mervyn Cowie, son of a biggame hunter, killing for sport was senseless. He came to believe that the hunt was destroying not only wild life but also a majestic kind of beauty and a positive value to mankind. This is his own dramatic story: how he fought to protect the animals in Africa, and how he became a leader in the establishment of the national parks system. With humor and feeling, he describes the opposition of neighbors and officials-the woman who petitioned the queen because the park boundaries interfered with her riding area, the official who refused to sign an important document and would give no explanation, and many others. The author also tells of the "interruptions" of his work by Mau Mau terrorists. "I Walk with Lions" is an absorbing book, teeming with the bizarre and beautiful sights of Africa; elephants shuffling through the night, hordes of hyenas scavenging for food, a lion prowling in the darkness, vultures claiming the carcass of a once powerful beast. Enhanced with many superb photographs of wild animals, "I Walk with Lions" offers a vivid account of one man's efforts to save a priceless remnant of our heritage. In the great tradition of the widely popular books on a still untamed continent, it is also an important addition to the literature of wildlife conservation. "THE LAND BREAKERS," by John Ehle. Mooney Wright was the first man to arrive in the valley. He was a big man, strong, eager to accept the challenge of the wilderness mountain country, willing to pit himself against its seen and unseen threats, its wol- Hush Puppies Shoes NEW -- USED -- REBUILT Featured at etlO WATER SOFTENER SERVICE/SALES 1246 N. Green Street McHenry McHenry, Illinois ves and bears, its terrifying nightime forest noises, its bonebiting cold, its lonely quiet edged with fear. It took a man of Mooney's strength and spirit to chop down trees, build a cabin against the coming winner's mountain storms, burn off the brush, scratch some planting room for crops. Tinkler Harrison was , the second man, and he was a different sort: older, autocratic, stubborn, and selfish--yet, like Mooney, a believer in the valley. Harrison brought with him wealth, and slaves, and a new young wife, and he regarded them in that order. He also brought, his daughter, Lorry Pollard, and her two sons, abandoned some yaers ago by the wandering Lacey Pollard. In the spring there were others come to settle, including the shiftless but proud Ernest Plover and his brood of girl children, and soon there were many distractions for Mooney not the least the song and laughter of Ernest's lovely daughter, Mina. ^• 'But it is Lacey Pollard's return that triggers # person " crisis for Mooney and Lorry and Mina;, and it is in their hunt for a massive tear and their efforts to drive their livestock to market ovet the mourfr. lains that the story of thes# powerfully realized n^cft , und women -- their conflicts, their pain and hope, their rough-hswtt humor and their battle tQ tfimB a hostile land--reaches a climax. i Readers of "Move Ovdr, Mountain and Lion on the Hearth" are familiar with John Khle's exception.il talents and his enormous skill at weaving an enthralling, compassionate taie. in "Tne L,and Breakers," he has vritten an exciting, moving and authentic story which vividly re-creates the opening of the wild Southern mountains two centuries ago. '4 J i '0 Q. How can I renovate er;*ckcd chinawarc? A. Cracked ehinawaro can often bo saved by boi'ing it Sn nii!k fcr a half-hour or so. Auto jmsyranee Cancelled? NO ONE REFUSED -- ANY AGE Reasonable Rates Financial Responsibility Filings Stay out of "Pool Insurance" and have Full Coverage TEENAGE INSURANCE -- Full Coverage JAN-MAR INSURANCE 385-7667 WATER SOFTENER SERVICE SAME DAY SERVICE ON MOST MAKES & MODELS • Service • Rebuilding • Repair • Cleaning Out 9 Overhauling 0 Installation • Reconditioning • Removal ALL WORK GUARANTEED Three ways a lacty ean,|0S: sWiefe she's going easier, surer, cheaper! New 1964 with simple 3-ipeid gear §8M! Why go through four steps when three will do the job-nsnd do it better! SAAB'S simple Rspeed gear shift gives you more performance with less shifting. And you still get the precise control of a manual shift, SAAB also offers instant starting, easy handling, and an uncanny ability to slip into tiny parking spots. Even the price makes sense: only $2,000 in McHenry. T O P Q U A L I T Y F O O D S A T L O W E S T P R I C E S EXTRA TEMBER EXTRA TENDER EXTRA TEMBER' EVER MM SO d leaf We have the best beef in town & we can prove it Pleasure packed with goodness, tenderness & natural beef flavof I GUARANTEED TENDER Or DOUBLE Your MONEY BACK I You too can be tne best cook in town -- try some soon CASH Nothing to Buy Ask for Details in Our Store Last Week's Winner -- Marie Gorgo. of Pink Lady Shoppe m U. S. CHOICE TENDER POT MAST SOLD AS ROASTS ONLY KATH SMOKEDLiver Sausage 49* LEAN BONELESS BliF SH 59 tt> Fresh Polish .... 69c lb. Bulk Pork Sausage 49c lb. Fresh Italian .. 69c lb. Fresh Braiwurst .... 69c lb. Fresh Thuringer .... 69c lb. SAAB world's only car engine*r«<l to aircraft standards Look M'iSSffJO Will Seiy (YOUR CHOICE) 1961 V.W. Tudor Sedan $1,175.00 1961 Volvo-544 Tudor $1,175.00 1960 Chevy Park wood Station Wagon, V-8, 4-door $1,275.00 Prices listed above are the current Red Book Prices. *1360 ONE-OWNER SPECIALS! SAVE $255.00 -- 1963 "JEEP" WAGONEER, J-100, 2-whl. dr. L<*ts of extras. Red Book Val. $2850.00 SAVE $200.00 -- 1963 M<; 1100 Sedan, Front Wheel Drive Red Book Value $1560. SAVE $100.00 -- 1962 FORD Fuirlaine Fordor, R-H, StK. Shift Civap Red Rook Value $1225. R0PA MOTORS 3318 W. Pearl Street McHenry, III. Open Daily 8:30-6 -- Frl. til 9 -- Sun. 12-4 p.m. Phone 385-0700 Special of the Week Raggedy Ann Fruit Cocktail 2 /2 Tin 20 lb. bag Friskies $2.29 Kraft Miracle Whip For That Oh So Good Potato Salad Qt. Jar 47* Hills Bros 2-lb. -- 3-lb. Coffee ... $1.59 -- $2.35 U. S. CHOICE ROASTS ROUHP B@ME . .49 tt> CHOICE TENDER CHUCK STEAKS ... 55 LUNCH MEATS MIXED cm© ey?s .... 79?, RATH l'/2 LB. TIN CAiWID HAMS .. $1.69 RAGGEDY ANN Who!. Or Sliced- Mushrooms 3 9C RAGGEDY ANN Grape Jelly or Jam • • RAGGEDY ANN Strawberry Preserves • RAGGEDY ANN * Preserves 35® 2"/^45* »9b 3|C Jar ,*32*45' Nestles New Instant Soft Drink 5 Flavors 12-oz. Jar 39= Instant 10c off Sanka 5-oz. $1.05 KRAFT MIRACLE French Dressing • • • • SOUTHERN STAR B o n i t o • • • • • • • • • • 2 *& 49' % si. 2j< Shoppers Bonus Town & Country ICE CREAM 5 Flavors 2 Half Gallons For $1.00 Daisy Brand Butter \'i lb. Pkg. 39c Chase & Sanborn Instant COFFE loo off - 6-oz. Jar Certified Red Label Full Qts. Beverages 2 25c Fresh Produce Daily Washington Tomasello s Florida PIZZA Full Ear Sweet Corn 29* California Cello Cauli flower Winesap Apples Plain ( lieese 5 For 3 Lbs. Cheese <v Sausage 79c Plione Sale Dates Corner Elm 885-0080 May 14-15-16 & Green A l l S w e e t Margarine I -lb. Pkg. 2 39c T O P 9 U A L I T Y F O O P s A T L Q W E S T P R I C E S

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