SPRING CIOVE NEWS EVA FREUND PHONE 675-2138 MOTHERS SOCIETY ENJOYS PROGRAM BY 4-H GROUP Members of the Christian Mothers Society of St. Peter's met at the parish hall on Thursday evening. The program was presented by the Four Corners 4-H group under the direction of Beverly Schmitt. The narrating and introductions were made by Mary Ellen Miller, president of 4-H. The girls gave interesting talks on baby sitting, sewing, knitting, kitchen aids and dining room etiquette. 4 Demonstrations were given , on Christmas decorations, how to measure ingredients, how to set a table and a cheese cake was made. Cakes from this recipe were later served for lunch. A business meeting was held and plans for a Christmas party were made, the date set for Dec. 14. A pot-luck buffet simper will be served, there will be a musical program and a one dollar gift exchange. A collection will be taken up for the missions. An announcement was made on the Deanery meeting at Mc- Henry for Nov. 28. Cleaning of the church will be Dec. 12 and members volunteered to help pack clothes for the Thanksgiving drive on Nov. 21. Reports were given by commission chairman. An interesting talk was given by Father Kilduff and he closed the meeting with a prayer. LCWC ENJOY DINNER Twenty-two members and eleven guests of the Lotus Country Woman's club enjoyed dinner and cards at Joe and Helerfs in Loon Lake, Wednesday, Nov. 15. A short business meeting was held after the dinner. President Beulah Karls read a Thanksgiving poem from the "Illinois Club Woman". Reports were made from secretary, treasurer, corresponding secretary and sunshine chairman. Donations for club philanthropies were voted to be paid. The remainder of the afternoon was spent at cards. BIRTHDAY PARTY Mrs. Flo Freund, I^r. and Mrs. Jack Freund and daughter from McHenry attended a birthday celebration for Vicki Hudson Tuesday evening, Nov. 14, in the Frank Hudson home. DIES IN MINNESOTA Weird has just been received of the death of Alex Schabold at Minnesota Nov. 15. Last year he spent the winter months here with his daughter, Mrs. W. Lutz, and returned to Minnesota in June. When he became ill hisdaughter and her husband went, to Minnesota to live with him and to care for him. Mrs. Lutz was the Methodist church organist and her father was a familiar figure at church. He was brought here for burial. Visitation was at Hamsher Funeral home, Fox Lake. BRIDAL SHOWERS A buffet supper was served in the Ray May home on Sunday, Nov. 12, when Miss Cheri Janquart was guest of honor at a shower. Thirty relatives and friends were present and showered Cheri with many beautiful and useful gifts. The playing of bunco furnished the entertainment. Miss Janquart will become the bride of Jerome May on December 2 at an afternoon ceremony in St. Peter's church, Spring Grove. She was also honored at a shower on Nov. 6 when fifteen friends gathered at the home of Mrs. Harvey May on Spring Grove road. She was the happy recipient of many lovely gifts. Cake and ice cream were served.' BIRTH Mr. and Mrs. John Rinda are the happy parents of a 6 lb. 14 oz baby girl born Nov. 9. Little Kimberly Ann was welcomed home by her Uttle brother, Eddie. BIRTHDAY CLUB Members of the birthday club were entertained in the home of Mrs. Frances McNally on Tuesday afternoon, Nov. 14. Prizes in cards were won by Minnie Pierce, Emma May, Tillie May and Hattie Harms. MAIL EARLY Suggested mailing dates for holiday gift parcels are:. Gifts of five pounds Or less to U.S. servicemen and overseas Airmail... Dec. 1; gifts to distant states sent by surface mail... Dec. 4; Overseas airmail... Dec. 10; Airmail to members of the Armed Forces overseas... Dec. 11; Domestic airmail... Dec. 13. i®r's ©i to the permanently-pressed Traditional L©@k Or: How to see the obviously authentic Look with the added miracle of no-iron ease-of-care! SPOT the classic styling pi in the softly rolled button collar, box-pleated back, and tapered body. BEHOLD the wide array of new solids obviously correct stripings, and chalk white. ^ CynariAa/fa/t - LOOK at the smooth, wrinkle free luxury fabrics as they wash 'n dry automatically. Staunchly traditional, always correct MANHATTAN® "UNIVERSITY ROW"® in wrinkle-free oxford weave of 50% Kodel® polyester and 50% luxury cotton. The Classic-Look in a modern mood. $6.00 WONDER LAKE GAIL WILLIAMS 653-5371 Big Betsy --History's costliest recorded catastrophe, according to the Insurance Information Institute, was Hurricane "Betsy," which swept across Florida, Mississippi and Louisiana in September, 1965. "Betsy" caused damage estimated at more than SI billion, of which about S715 million was insured. USE THE CLASSIFIED NATIVITY CHURCH OBSERVES 1STH ANNIVERSARY The anniversary banquet will be Saturday, Dec. 9, ait 6:30p.m. at the American Legion hall, Ringwood road, McHenry. Dr. Robert Marshall, president of the Illinois Synod,\will be the speaker. The Rev. Burton Schroeder, Portland, Ore., a former pastor of Nativity, will also be at the banquet. BIRTHDAYS Happy belated birthday to Lynn Kolar, daughter of the Cal Kolars, Wonder Woods, who turned 11 years old, Nov. 20. Also, on Nov. 26, Miss Diane Kinzie, Wonder Center, will turn 19 years old. BIRTHDAY PARTY Mark Beise, son of the Cal Beises, Wonder Center, celebrated his fifth birthday, Nov. 13, by having his friends over for an afternoon of games,prizes and refreshments. The "little ones" attending were Jane and Cheryl Bigger s, Kenny Schroeder, Donnie and Connie Manke, April and Jamie Williams and Mark's sister, Donna and baby brother, Larry, also joined in the festivities. The birthday cake had a toy tractor on it. Mark, later in the evening, celebrated with his grandparents, the George Sorensons, his great grandparents, the Fred Hansens, the Norm Williamses and his family. HOME FROM HOSPITAL William (Bill) Melvin, Deep Spring Woods, is at home now recuperating after a 2% week stay at Harvard hcpital. Take care, Mr. Melvin!!! KIWANIS CLUB --Nov. 13,1967 Ron Carlson of the Crystal Lake Kiwanis was a welcome visitor. Phil Kinzer had dollar signs in his eyes as Joyce was the fortunate winner of the battle ax award which has been accumulating for the past few weeks. Pastor Johnson of Nativity showed us some movies of the Chippewa-Cree Indian Reservation high up In the Montana Mountains near the village of Box wilder. He and other dedicated young men, had volunteered to spend some weeks on the reservation helping paint the mission school. Of course, the main object was to work with the feeling that he had learned heap much more than the Redskins. Bill Cristy and Bill Decker attended a leadership training session at the Edgewater Beach hotel, Chicago, Sunday, Nov, 19. MUNSON - LUCEK WEDDING Miss Cathryn Munson, niece of the Jack McCaffertys, Wooded Shores, and who had been recently residing with her maternal grandparents, the Carl Gulgrens, Crystal Lake, was united in marriage to Mr. Thomas Lucek, Crystal Lake, Saturday, Nov. 11 at St. Thomas Catholic church, Crystal Lake. Cathy's sister, Joan Munson, was the maid of honor. The wedding reception was held at the Labor Ten . le in Crystal Lake after which the couple left for a trip to St. Louis, Mo., and upon their return will make their home in Crystal Lake. YOUNG AT HEART Don't forget the date of the Young at Heart bazaar, Sunday, Dec. 3, starting with the bake sale at 10 a.m. at Christ the King hall. Because of the early Holiday deadline, the news is even briefer this week. I would appreciate calls on meetings and coming events for the column. Bye for now, see you next week. NOVEMBER 1967 - PLAINDEALER - PG. 9 LEARNERS . . . Driver training for high school students is provided by a mobile classroom in a specially outfitted trailer. Computer monitors student performance as they react to on-the-road situations. SHOP IN MCHENRY OPEN "COME INTO MY PARLOR ... A man caught in the web of a huge spider? Nope, it's a workman clamoring over a scaffold being used to erect the roof of a new 100,000-barrel petroleum storage tank under construction at British-American Oil's refinery in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The 120-foot diameter tank is one of the first to be built in Western Canada under new thinner-wall specifications made possible by better quality steels. m MUStOf fi r ry sua alt its ROLLINS RD. 134 1 2 •VOLO 120 MC HENRY FRI., SAT. & Sl'N. Fri.. Sat. - li p.m. Sunday - Noon RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED FOR: Private Parties Harvest Dinner I>ance November 18th Thanksgiving Day New Year's Eve Pinners Served in The Roman Style F O R R E S E R V A T I O N S JUatice 7-0741 ON ROLLINS RD NORTH SHORE OF LONG LAKE CATCH US WHILE WE'RE CATCHING UP! We lost 61 days of business due to the strike. We're going to make up for lost time with Better Deals on Better Idea Fords! 1965 Ford showed quieter than a $17,000 Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud III 1966 Ford showed its quiet strength against Europe s finest luxury cars 1967 Ford showed itsrugged durability bysoaringofl an Olympic ski jump Quiet. Strong. Beautiful. A great road car 21 models, headed by LTD's, XL fastbacks, and Country Squires --only cars in their class with strong die-cast grilles and disappearing headlamps standard. Power front disc brakes when you order power brakes, and SelectShift Cruise-O-Matic-- theonly 3-speed transmission that works automatically and manually with every engine. 1968 LTD by Ford . 2-Door Hardtop makes it happen! Mustang, the great original! In three fabulous versions -- hardtop, fastback, and convertible. Only Mustang gives you all these standard features: bucket seats, stick shift, new louvered hood with integral turn indicators. Plus options that let you design your own sporty car or luxury car. 1968 Mustang Hardtop Ford's newest bright idea! TOP Six racy new intermediates featuring a fastback GT that seats six! A whole new series. Six! 2-door hardtops with a choice of formal or fastback styling. 4-door sedans. GT's. Convertible. Each with the luxury ride of 116-in. wheelbase. Plus a Torino wagon and eight other Fairlanes withTorino-inspired styling. You won't find all these Better Ideas anywhere else! Better.ideas for Thun'derbird: Choose a 2-door Hcd'op 2 door Landau, or the first 6-passenger Thunderhird c-vr-t. thf 4 iioor landau! Better ideas for Falcon: Room foi six, (men; roan- nan .my other compact b u i l t ] , power to spare, real l ( . nk mxico vwhii models. Better ideas for convenience. Option,, ':ko an ante ride control system. All-s.- ison SelectAire Conditioner. > pes-'or- T i l t Steering Wheel. Better ideas in style: Only Ford in :is class has as standard equipment a <i e-cast grille for XL, LTD am i Fo* d Cow'::; y Squire, with disappearimj headlamps And lots mo'o Better ideas 1968 Torino GT Fastback FALCON FAiRLANE MJSTANG • Ik)RING FORD • THlNL'ERBIRD for performance: V-8 power from a new 302 to a whopping 427 en m. with hydraulic valvgolifters. A 3- or 4-speed stick shift on most V 8\ Se'octSFiit on all engines. Better-ideas for wagons: Ford, the Wayonmaster, has the widest choice of wagons, and all the better -vago'i ideas ' he two-way Magic Doorgate. Built-in rear window air deflect'-': Doa' facing rear seats. And there's still more, tike Fora's l'xc s' v > ' » Twice-a-Year Maintenance, and a wide or'uy o' • t-A Ford M- -O' Company Lifeguard Design Safety Features See /ou Fo-a Deale' now. i has a better idea 1219 N. Green, McHenry 385-0182 S^LES • 3936 W. Main Street, McHenry, I1L