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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 5 Nov 1971, p. 8

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PAGE 8-PLAINDEALER- T Muuuccxnw Helping Paws Bv Carol wuyai Four members of Helping Paws attended the workshop sponsored by the Humane society of the United States held in Chicago, and are more FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1971 convinced than ever that all have your females spayed! female animals must be spayed. There are countless numbers of kittens and puppies being thoughtlessly thrown by the roadside to either starve to death or be run over by cars. We were given two kittens last week that were found in a paper bag on the shore of the river These two escaped drowning and were luckier than their brothers and sisters who were found dead in that bag. Please Donations may be sent to Helping Paws, P.O. Box 263, Algonquin, Illinois, 60102 to help care for these unfortunate, unwanted animals. These are the pets up for adoption for a donation: We have kittens in McHenry that are desperately in need of homes. Call 459-0511 for in­ formation. Also at 459-5011 is a 4'^ month-old male tiger kitten completely litter trained, has had a permanent distemper shot, very good with children and an all around good house pet. Also at this number is a 4- week-old female kitten, black with an orange diamond on her forehead and a 9-week-old male golden kitten that is very good natured and loves to be held. A J-4-month-old female black with white on chest puppy is being taken care of at 653-4628 _(call after 4 p.m.). ThispujMs ll<7 SERVICES Mount Hope Church United Methodist . 1015 \V. Broadway Pistakee Highlands Hev. Willis H. Walker, Pastor Sunday Worship, 11 a.m. Sunday School, 9:45 a.m. Faith Presbyterian Church West of the Outdoor Theatre John O. Mclntyre, Pastor Church School, 9:15 a.m. for 1st grade thru adults and 10:30 a.m. for the pre-school children (3-5) Worship, 10:30 a.m. Nursery facilities available. Fiist Baptist Church 509 N. Front St. 385-0083 Virgle L. Chappell Sunday Services-Sunday School 8:30 and 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship, 9:30 Only. 6:30 p.m.- Training Union; 7:30 p.m., Eve ning Worship. Services for Spanish and Deaf. | Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Mark Acts Romans Ephesians Psalms Psalms Isaiah | 8l 1-9 27, 33-37 14, 5-9 5, 15-20 26, 1-12 50, 14-23 51, 1-3 DREAMS ARE THE DAWN 0F TOMORROW And like the first l ight of a new day they seem distant, unreal. Yet out of our dreams we often fashion tomorrow. The dreams of the daylight hours are not in the subconscious. Rather they project our hopes on a screen of reality. They grow into goals and. aims and ambitions. Whether tomorrow will fulfill those dreams depends on certain values which must be acquired today. Ideals, standards, moral principles, religious faith -- these inspire dreams worth dreaming, and help us to translate them to reality. Never worry about your daughter's daydreaming. Be concerned about her opportunities for spiritual development. The Church shares that concern. It can help you do something constructive about it . Ofcpvight 19-1 Keister ^dvc^^l*•ng Service Int. Stratburg Virginia Scripture* telected by the American Bible Society 4- St Paul's Episcopal Church 3706 W. St. Paul's & Green McHenry, Illinois Rev. Arthur D. McKay, Vicar 385-7690 Sunday Services-Holy Eucharist 8 a.m., Family Eucharist, 10 a.m Church School & Coffee Hour Wednesdays-Holy Eucharist 9:30 a.m. Friday-Holy Eucharist 9:30 a.m. Wonder Lake Bible Church Box 2 - Phone 653-7961 Rev. Richard Wright, Pastor Sunday--9:30 a.m. Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship. Wednesday--Evening Prayer Service-- 7:30 p.m. St. John the Baptist Catholic Church .lohnsburg \ .l.eo Hartel, Pastor Ifeciory Phono 3SS -1477 \cut Phone 385-.">363 •ipturday night-SMiO p.m. mass ilinday masses: 7:01), 9:00, 10:30 and l-2;00 St. Peter's Catholic Church j Spring (.rove, Illinois ^ Ke\. Kilduil. Pastor Stnda.s masses: »">:3<>, .s.-OO (9:1! summer oniy)10:30 and 11:45 First United Methodtst Church nunc : ra; s o na k e vlain street . hiinois . hue P; Phone: 3v>-135- hurch School; ursery; 9:45 A.M.,Worship rvice >S:30 a.m. and 11 a.m Wednesday W or ship Service;? :3C Nativity Lutheran Church 3506 F. Wonder l.ake lid. Box 157 Phone 653-3832 Wonder Lake, Illinois Sunday Worship s and 10:30 a.m Sunday school 9:00 a.m.' (Nursery 1 abilities Available'. St. Mary's Catholic Church Rev. Eugene Haumhofer sat. Eve. Nlass-8:00 p.m. Ful­ fills Sun. obligation. Sunday Masses--fi:30, 8:00, 9:30, 9:45, 10:45,11:00, 12:00 noon Christian Science Society Lincoln Road and Eastwood I.n Sunday Service--10:30 a.m. Sunday School -- 10:30 a.m. Wed. Evening Meeting Every Wednesday vat 8:00 Alliance Bible Church 38Rj W. John St., McHenry, 111. Kev. Gerald Robertson Sunday- 9:45 a.m. Sunday school 11:00 a.m. Worship Service, 6:00 p.m. Youth Service, 7:00 p.m. Evening Evangel. Christ the King Church 5006 E. Wonder Lake Road Wonder Lake, Illinois Sunday masses: 8 a.m., 10 a.m and noon Evening mass: 8 p.m.-Fulfills Sunday obligation. Ringwood Methodist Church Ringwood, Illinois Rev. Willis Walker, Minister Phone 675-2133 Sunday -- 10:00 a.m. Church Service. 11:00 a.m. Church School. Chain 0'Lakes Evangelical Covenant Church 4815 N. Wilmot Rd. Rev. Wesley R. Olson SUMMER SCHEDULE Sunday Worship and Sunday School 10:00a.m. Church Phone Parsonage Phone 49- 497 -3000 -3050 St. Patrick's Catholic Church Rev. Edmund Petit, Pastor Rev. John Cahill, Assoc. Pastor Sat. Eve. (Sunt.obligation fulfilled 7:00 p.m.) Sunday-7:15, 8:30, 9:45, 11:00 and 12:15 During Summer, 10 a.m. mass in Church Hall. Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church 404 N. Green St., McHenry Rev. Roger W. Schneider Phone 385-7786 or 385-4030 Family worship and Sunday School-8:30 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Nursery facilities avail­ able. St. Francis National Catholic Church Flanders Rd.,east of Ringwood Rd Sunday masses-10:00 a.m. Father John Strzalka, Pastor Spring Grove Church United Methodist, 8102 N. Blivin Spring Grove, 111. Rev. Willis H. Walker, Pastor Sunday W'orship--9:00 a.m. Sunday School --10:15 a.m. Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church (Missouri Synod) 4206 W. WaukeganRd.(W.Rte.l20 Reverend Herman F. Graef 385-0859 385-1616 Sunday Worship-7:$5 and 10:30 Nursery Services provided at 10:30. Education for Eternity Sunday School--Children and Youth, 9 a.m. Guettler's Service. Inc. \. 1 ront Street NL Henry, II!. 3*5-9831 McHeniy Garage W26 \. 1 ront Street McHenry, 111. 385-0403 McHenry State Bank 3510 W. Elm Street McHenry, 111. 385-1040 i Locker's Flowers i 1 13 Third St. McHenry, Hi. 385-2300 Tonyan Construction Co. 1309 N» Borden Street McHenry, 111. 385-5520 c" Brake Parts Co. P.O. Box 11 McHenry, 111. 385-7000 First National Bank of McHenry 381.4 W. Elm Street McHenry, 111. 385-5400 The Bath Shop 3012 W. Rte. 120 McHenry, 111. 385-0048 Peter M. Justen Funeral Home 3807 W. Elm Street McHenry, 111. 385-0063 McHenry Savings & Loan 1209 N. Green Street McHenry, 111. 385-3000 George R. Justen Funeral Home 3519 W. Elm Street McHenry, 111. 385-2400 Ace Hardware 3729 W. Elm Street McHenry, 111, 385-0722 friendly, very obedient and lovable. S Ther« are fiveMVfe-week-wd kittens at 459-8163. \Two grey and white tiger, male and female, one orang^ and white and the other two are black and white male and female with pretty markings. At 459-9426, is "Mopsy", a 3- month-old female shaggy pup that resembles a sheep dog, that loves everybody and a 3- month-old female part Cocker Spaniel, black with a white chest. Also at 459-9426 is a 8- week-old female puppy that resembles a Springer Spaniel "and has short hair, black and white markings. The kittens staying at 459- 9426 are two golden 9-week-old male and female and an 8- week-old female silver grey part Siamese kitten. There are three female 10- week-old kittens at 459-5184, completely litter trained. One is a black and white long haired kitten, one is black and grey tiger striped with white paws and chest and the other is black and tan with large owl-like eyes. There is a 1-year-old male Collie-Shepherd mix, black with white and very friendly with children and other dogs at 459-6325. At 385-4309 is an 8-month-old Cock-a-poo male puppy, all black has had shots and loves children. At 385-6041 are two 6-week-old orange, semi-long haired kittens. In Woodstock at 338-0132 are various pups and kittens at all times. In Cary at 639-5834 is a 1-year- old female mixed Labrador, housebroken, friendly and very well behaved. In Carpentersville at 312-426- 4736 is a Blue Belton English Setter, male under 1 year, white with black ticking and a pink and black nose. Also at this number is a 1-year-old male Beagle-Bassett mix, tri­ color, very friendly, all shots, and has passed the heartworm test. At 459-7064 is a 6-month-old male black puppy, part Spaniel and poodle - looks like a small sheep dog, very cute! Found Found and staying at 459-0317 is a Cross Collie pup, male black and white and is available if not claimed. Lost Lost, a 5 or S^mofrth-old male mixed breed puppy He is black with a black and white face and four white paws and is wearing a blue collar. Call 639-7514. fjs Lost in the Fox Lake area, reward is being offered, a 7- month-old male Siberian Husky, black and white with one blue eye and one brown, and has a large white maple leaf on forehead. Please call 459-6210 or 312-587-2909 if found. Lost at 653-4272 a Terrier- Shepherd mix, black with a little brown and wearing tags, name is "Minx". Lost at 385-4126 is a 1-year-old male white toy Poodle named "Mugsy". T)tie Wotty. I -- Clinic --"* Lawrence brings out a paradox. For Jesus told his Apostles they should rejoice at his death, yet Christ wept at the burial of Lazarus, his close human friend. When you lose a loved one via death, you sud­ denly become initiated into the "Fraternity of the Bereaved," so send for the booklet below. By - George W. Crane, Ph. D., MJ). CASE J-548: Lawrence D., aged 24, is a clergyman. "Dr. Crane," he mused, "I have been impressed recenUy by several older men who have lost their wives by death. "They seem self-possessed and previously never revealed their emotions at all. "But at the funeral service, they have cried like children! "What is the basic psychological reason for our tears when we lose a loved one?" TEARFUL PSYCHOLOGY Tears of grief are an in- trovertive sign of fear. "But, Dr. Crane," protested Lawrence, "these husbands were devout Christians and firmly believed their wives had gone to Heaven. "So**, why should they be afraid?^' "Well, you can best un­ derstand their poignant grief by going back in memory to your own childhood. * If your parents left you at home even with a baby-sitter, while they headed to a movie, you cried unconsolably. Why? Because you felt bereft and deserted! The focus of your attention was your own ego! And so it is at funerals. Our r tears indicate a throwback to that same toddler stage where we feel alone, bereft and deserted. Grown men will thus cry, though you may have seen them in all sorts of other emotional crises for 25 years, and never witnessed a tear. ( Jesus likewise wept at the tomb of his friend Lazarus! Yet Jesus certainly knew he would meet Lazarus in Heaven only a few months later. So Christ had a happy future expectation to buoy up his Spirit. But still Jesus shed tears at the burial of Lazarus until even the natives were surprised. A large German Shepherd, brown and black with no tail is lost, please call 459-0511 if found. A 2-year-old male black and white Cock-a-Poo pup is lost. His name is "Punky" and he was wearing tags on his flea collar. Call 459-0511 if found. Frididadre! re-invents the dryer Never before so many improvements a t one t ime. That 's why we say -- i t 's re- invented." StfM f|o°r FRIGIDAIRE Model DCDS Flowing Heat M8 Dryer has Fkbrics Selector. Just set the dial for the fabric. The selector auto­ matically provides the correct heat for the fabric being dried. Only 18 lb. capacity 27" dryer you can buy. Permanent Press Care. Safety Start button. limited Supply- Huffy- *169 95 In White & Colors LEE & RAY ELECTRIC 1005 N. Front St McHenry Ph. 385-0882 Yet Jesus also tried to cheer1 up his disconsolate Apostles when he warned them of this forthcoming death, for Christ said: "Ye should rejoice that I go to be with my Father in Heaven." Despite this forward looking thought he tried to use in buoying up his Apostles, Jesus still wept at the tomb of Lazarus. Why? Apparently because the human side of his nature made him akin to all of us, and we suddenly grow overwhelmed with loneliness when a loved one leaves us. You see a partial duplicate of this reaction when a mother or a girl friend bids a boy farewell as he heads for college or the war zone. For that situation shatters a very close bond of affection and we who stay behind suddenly have that throwback to our jtoddler stage when our parents^ left us for a movie date. But the condolences of friends and their inarticulate but fragrant evidences of sympathy via their floral tributes, buoy us up. When our oldest son, a handsome jet pilot, was struck from behind by one of his squadron mates and crashed to his sudden, totally unexpected death, Mrs. Crane and I felt desolated. But the flowers and personal handclasps, plus the sympathy cards and letters buoyed us up and really produced a strange aura of the Everlasting Arms. We felt almost physically uplifted as if by an anti-gravity force. It's a strange sensation to analyze, psychologically! So send for my booklet "So Long George IV, (Solace for Bereaved)", enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents. (Always write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper, en­ closing a long stamped, ad­ dressed envelope and 20 cents to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his booklets.) TELEVISION seems to be relaxing somewhatly in re­ stricting material released over the airways. Midnight viewers have long been ac­ customed to risque sugges­ t i o n s a n d a n o c c a s i o n a l four-letter word on witbhing. hour shows such as Johnny C a r s o n a n d D i c k C a v e t t . This was done in a sophis­ ticated way, for the most part, and the kiddies were in dreamland. Actually, the viewer expected it on occa­ sion. IN RECENT months more and more four-letter words have been slipping into the family living room, quite un­ invited. That's not all. Questionable personal scenes have also sneaked in. These scenes may be thrilling, but are out of place on television where the viewer is not advised that they are to be shown. ; FOR EXAMPLE, recently on "McMillan and Wife" the w i f e w a s s h o w n t a k i n g a shower with her undies hang­ ing on the door. The show ended with Mr. McMillan crawling into bed with the Mrs., and the sheets began to ruffle. The show was a good one. It is debatable as to whether the non-Puritan ending added to the enjoy­ m e n t . I f s o , a n d i t c o u l d have, viewers who choose not to get their thrills from viewing others getting theirs should be forewarned in some way. IF TV is going to slide toward the pace set in the movies and on Broadway, then a rating system similar to that used by the movies should be adopted. Such a system would make the ris­ que shows more acceptable on television. Lewdness, of course, should never be al­ lowed. More than 12Vfe million American school children are in need of some form of eye care, according to the National Society for the Prevention of Blindness. The Society advises periodic eye examinations for children throughout their school years to help assure good eyesight for their adult lives. Health Care Units In Battle Against Cancer McHenry county's efforts to whip cancer are being carried on locally in many ways, and among them is the battle within the health care establishments in the county, Dr. Robert Stein, pathologist at McHenry hospital, told board members of the McHenry county unit of the American Cancer society last week. Lung cancer, breast cancer and rectum-colon cancer are the three foremost forms of the disease, and he discussed the campaign under way nationally to make women more aware of the need for breast self- examination and other precautions to spot breast cancer at its earliest stage of development. New board members joining the board included Dr. Leonard Pawlikowski, McHenry, and Mrs. William Shipman, Woodstock. Reports on the state's annual meeting were given by several participants from McHenry county. Mrs. A.B. McConnell III observed that she was struck with the many-fronts where the war against cancer is being fought. "Many speakers were victims of cancer and they brought a special urgency and poignancy to their discussions. For me they gave this fight a distinctive perspective." Dr. C.J. Lockwood, Marengo, DENTAL MEETING The McHenry County Dental society met Tuesday, Nov. 2, for a 6:30 dinner meeting in Crystal Lake. Speaker for the evening was Dr. Frank Kerous, whose topic was "Periodontics in General Practice." DIAl-A-DEVQf fON PHONE reported as a new member of the Illinois Division board. The meeting was the first con­ ducted by Clarence Sisson, new county unit chairman elected at the summer quarterly meeting. Sisson said efforts to launch plans for the 1972 fund drive will begin at the next session, set for December or early January. POIITICAL CORNER Form Democratic Organization In McHenry County A new Democratic woman's organization in and for McHenry county is being formed. Jeanne A. Holm, Democratic State Central committeewoman for McHenry county, announced last week that a steering committee has met and a charter member meeting will be held Nov. 18. Members of the steering committee in addition to Mrs. Holm, a McHenry resident, are Phyllis Masters, Algonquin; Barbara McKee, Marengo; Linda Swain, Crystal Lake; Jeanne Ritter, Woodstock; and Nancy Nolan, Harvard. "I am encouraged by the number of McHenry county women who nave expressed an interest and a desire to become active in Democratic politics in the county." stated Mirs. Holm. The steering committee is working on a format which will include programs and events of interest to all. Some of their plans will be outlined at the Nov. 18 meeting which will be held at the U.A.W. hall in Woodstock. Coffee will be served from 7 p.m. to 7:30, with a short meeting to follow. Any interested ladies aire invited to attend. Hear God's Word Wherever You Are. SPONSORED BY: GUETTLER'S SERVICE STATION HAPPINESS IS: FINDING WHATtf YOU WANT IN THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER'S CLASSIFIED WANT1 AD SECTION TODAY !!!!

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