McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 Feb 1973, p. 9

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

A PAGE 8-PLAINDEALER-FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1973 Ringwood News Mrs. Hepburn Hears Carthage Choir Concert Mrs. Nellie Hepburn recently spent a few days with her sister and brother-in-law, the Rifssell Soddys of Kenosha, and while there attended a concert presented by the Carthage choir. This group had spent part of January on a European concert tour and Mrs. Hepburn thoroughly enjoyed the per­ formance presented in Kenosha. While at her sister's, she also visited Miss Mary Swenson with whom she had attended school in second grade. Another friend called on was Mrs. Ann Caddock at the Woodstock Home in Kenosha. CHILI SUPPER On Saturday, Feb. 24, the parish UMYF will serve a chili supper from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Ringwood church. There will be an advance ticket sale. In the Ringwood area they may be obtained from the following - Bill Baker 653-9291, David Christopher 728-0295, and the Walkingtons 728-0222. UMYF •. The parish UMYF will meet Saturday, Feb. 10, 2 p.m. at the Ringwood church to finalize plans for the chili supper. tftve Q t̂fend Mount Hope Church United Methodist 1015 W. Broadway Pistakee Highlands Rev. Willis H. Walker Sunday Worship 11 a.m. Sun­ day School, 9:45 a.m. Faith Presbyterian Church West of the Outdoor Theatre John O. Melntyre, Pastor Church School, 9:15 a.m. for 1st grade thru adults and 10:30 a.m. for pre-school children (3- 5) Worship, 10:30 a.m. Nursery facilities available. First Baptist Church 509 N. Front St. 385-0083 VirgleL. Chappell Bible Study - Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Worship Service - 10:45 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Training Union; 6:30 p.m. Interpretation for Deaf at all Services. Special Spanish Services. Wednesday, Prayer Service, 7:30 p.m. Beehive Tier upon tier, window by window, modern apartment and office buildings are like human beehives. The people who live and work in them are often as busy as bees, too. Each day rushes by, each hour is filled, and when morning comes, it starts all over again. Monotonous? Well, sometimes it is both mo­ notonous and discouraging to live and work in a beehive. It seems as if you're just a drone, as if individuality has flown out the window. But is this true? Whether you live in a palace or a penthouse, a hut or a one-room efficiency, you are you. Your uniqueness is your God-given gift. Your potential to be different, your capacity for accomplishment, is infinite. If you've lost sight of that fact, you've been for­ getting something -- like going to church, maybe? Copyright 1973 Keister Advertising Service, Inc., Strasburg, Virginia St Paul's Episcopal Clurch 3706 W. St. Paul's & Green Rev. Arthur D. McKay. Vicar 385-7690 Sunday Services - Holy Eucharist - 8 a.m.. Family Eucharist, 10 a.m. Church School & Coffee Hour. Wed­ nesdays - Holy Eucharist 9:30 a.m. Friday-Holy Eucharist 9:30 a.m. Wonder Like Bible Church 7501 Howe Kd.. Wonder Lake Rev. Richard Wright, Pastor Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday School - 11 a.m. Morning Worship. Wednesday Evening Prayer Service - 7:30 p.m. Phone 653-7961 Scriptures selected by the American Bible Society Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Genesis N Genesis Genesis II Samuel Jeremiah Isaiah Mark 3: 14-24^9: 1-19 12: 1-9 7: 8-17 23: 1-8 52: 13-53:12 1: 1-11 St Patrick's Catholic Church Rev. Edmund Petit, Pastor Rev. John Cahill, Assoc. Pastor Sat., Eve., (Sun., obligation fulfilled 5 & 7 p.m.) Sunday - 7:15, 8:30, 9:45, 11 and 12:15. m mzil ffiriTi rrtTi&t; fTt 71 rciTi m 7i St. John the Baptist Catholic Church .Johnsburg Rev Leo Bartel, Pastor Rectory Phone 385-1477 Convent Phone 385-5363 Sat.. night-8:00 p.m. Mass Sun , Masses: 7, 9,10:30,12:00 St. Peter's Catholic Church Spring Grove, Illinois Rev. Kiiduff, Pastor Sunday Masses: 6:30, 8:00 ( 9:15 Summer only) 10:30 and 11:45 First United Methodist Church 3717 West Main Street Church phone 385-0931 Raymond L. White Pastor Parsonage Phone: 385-1352 Worship Service - 9:30 a.m. Church School - 10:15a.m, Faith Baptist Church Sunday School 9:45 Preaching 11:00 Kvening Church 6:00 Johnsburg Junior High Pastor John Nativity Lutheran Church 3506 E. Wonder Lake Rd. Box 157 Phone 653-3832 Wonder Lake, Illinois Sun ..Worship 8 and 10:30 am Sunday School 9a.m. (Nursery Facilites Available) St Mary's Catholic Church Rev. Eugene Baumhofer Sat., Eve., Mass - 5 p.m. Fulfills Sun., obligation. Sunday Masses - 6:30,8,9:30 9:45, 10:45, 11, 12 noon. Christian Science Society Lincoln Road and Eastwood Lane Sunday Service - 10:30 a.m. Sunday School -10:30 a.m. Wed., Eve., Meeting Every Third Wed., - 8 p.m. Alliance Bible Church 3815 W. John St Rev. Gerald Robertson Wednesday Eves. 8 p.m. Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Sun. Worship Youth Service, 7 p.m. Evening Christ The King Catholic Church 5006 E. Wonder Lake Road Wonder Lake, Illinois Sunday masses: 8, 10 a.m. and noon. Eve., Mass: 8 p.m. Fulfills Sunday Obligation. Ringwood Mefiodist Church Ringwood, Illinois Rev. Willis Walker Ph. 675- 2133 Sunday - 10 a.m. Church Ser vice. 11 a.m. Church School. Chain O'LakesEvangefical Covenant Church 4815 N. Wilmot Rd. Rev. Wesley R. Olson Sunday School - 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship - 11 a.m. Church Phone - 497-3000 Parsonage - 497-3050 Shepherd of the Hill Lutheran Church 404 N. Green St. 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 available. St Francis National Catholic Church Flanders Rd., east of Ringwood Rd., Sunday Masses - 10 a.m. Father John Strzalka, Pastor Spring Grove Church United Methodist, 8102 N. Blivin Spring Grove, 111. Rev. Willis H. Walker, Pastor Sunday Worship - 9 a.m. Sunday School - 10:15 a.m. Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church (ivussouri Synod) 4206 W. Waukegan Rd (W. Rt 120) Rev. Herman F Graef 385-0859 385-1616 Sunday Worship -7:45 and 10:30 Nursery Services provided at 10:30. Education for Eternity Sunday School - Children and Youth, 9 a.m. wscs The regular meeting of the WSCS will be Wednesday, Feb. 14, with a tour of the Pioneer Center in McCullom Lake and the Day Care Center at Christ the King church in Wonder Lake. We will meet at Christ the King Church at 10 a.m. to see the program they have set up there and then proceed to Pioneer Center to view the facilities and learn more about their purpose and plans. Following the tour, dessert- coffee will be served at the home of Mrs. Earl Ogden on McCullom Lake road, with a business meeting following. There will be a nursery this day for pre-schoolers at the church in Ringwood and if you plan to leave your child through the noon hour, please send a sack lunch with them, milk will be furnished. We would ap­ preciate knowing how many children to plan on so would you please call Doris Low 653-9262 or Katy Christopher 728-0295. BUSY THREE 4-H CLUB On Feb. 12, we will have a guest speaker, Tammy Hobeck from Damascus, Syria. We hope all members will be there and welcome all parents to come. At the Jan. 8 meeting, Share- the-Fun got underway. The committee has been meeting weekly with Mike Etten and Sandy Rudolph as co-chairmen. Talks were given by Joanne Gillespie - Horses; Kathy Eppers - Beef; and Mark Gillespie - Horsemeat. We had five new members and seven guests present. Our next meeting will be Feb. 12 at 7 p.m. in the Ringwood United Methodist church. George Madden, Jr., Reporter POT-LUCK DINNER Last Sunday afternoon, about fifty folks gathered at the Ringwood church for a delicious pot-luck dinner and to hear two interesting young people tell us about their homelands. We were fortunate to be able to have the AFS students, Kristine Guillermou from Normandy, France, and Larry Isaacs from Johan­ nesburg, South Africa, as our guests. Kristine is making her home with the Joseph DeMarco family and Larry is with the Charles Frantz family. THIS WORLD! OF OURS ABOUTTOWN Mrs. Hepburn and Mr. Ketel called on Mrs. Josephine Schuetze who is a patient in St. Joseph hospital in Milwaukee. Mrs. Lethia Glorch and Mrs. John Neuharth of McHenry, and Mrs. Nellie Hepburn called on Mrs. Ruby Shepard a week ago Saturday. Recent visitors in the Brennan-Hepburn home were Mrs. Arthur Laursen and Mrs. L. Johnson. The regular dance for the first Saturday of the month for the Checkerboard Squares was attended by the Dave Millers and the Dick Crosbys of this area. RETURN HOME Sue Erwin and children, Donna, Eddie and Marcey, returned home from Germany on Monday of this week. They have been in Germany the past nine months with husband and Dad, Ed Erwin. They will be with Sue's parents, the Walt Lows, temporarily. Ed will be home from Germany in April. Sorry folks we've gotten behind again. Sure wish you'd call us Sunday evenings or on Mondays as our time seems never to go around. So we'll double up on the birthdays and anniversaries next week. Sorry fellows if we've neglected you. Take care and have a good week. DIAL-A-DEVOTION PHONE George R. Justen Funeral Home 3519 \V. Elm Street McHenry, III. 385-2400 First National Bank of McHenry 3814 W. Elm Street McHenry, III. 385-5400 Peter M. Justen Funeral Home 3807 W. Elm Street McHenry, 111. 385-0063 Ace Hardware 3729 W . Elm Street McHenry, 111. 385-0722 McHenry, Savings & Loan 1209 N. Green Street McHenry, 111. 385-3000 Guettler's Service, Inc. 818 N. Front Street McHenry, 111. 385-9831 Brake Parts Co. P.O. Box 11 McHenry , III. 385-7000 Locker's Flowers 1213 Third Street McHenry, 111.-385-2300 Mitchell Sales, Inc. Buick - Olds - Opel 907 N. Front McHenry 385-7200 McHenry Garage 926 \. Eront Street McHenry, 111. 385-0403 The Bath Sho 3012 W. Rte. 120 McHenry, 111. 385-0048 'P Baron of Beef, Inc. 3709 \V. Elm Street McHenry. 111. 385-8380 Tonyan Construction Co. . 1309 N. Borden Street McHenry, III. 385-5520 McHenry State Bank 3510 U . F.lm Street ' McHenry. III. 385-1040 Coast to Coast Hardware 4400 W. Rte. 120 McHenry Market Place 385-6655 Hear God's Word Wherever You Are. SPONSORED BY: Gl'ETTLER'S SERVICE STATION ^£AN-UP CAMPAK3U Anti-litter cleanup campaigns arp.iorip of the most effective and satisfying forms of positive en­ vironmental action open to con­ cerned individuals and community groups. The popularity of clean­ up campaigns is based on several factors. Most important are the readily apparent and rapid results of clean-ups. They show sharp contrasts between littered land- capes and those that have had the burden of ugly litter removed. They offer participants a strong feeling »/ accomplishment and provide positive results within a very short time. Finally, clean-up campaigns are open to individuals of all ages, community and civic gfoups, sportsmen and service clubs • anyone or group interested in positive ecological action. W hy not start a clean-up campaign in your community? BIBU VERSE " . . . L e t t h e r e b e n o strife, I pray thee, between me and thee." 1. Who is the author of this request? 2. To whom was he speak­ ing? 3. What was the question between them? 4. Where may this statement be found? *8:SI sisauao •Siq3lJ SuizbjS J8A0 uauispjaq pue spiaqdaqs Jiaqi uaaM^aq jajjunt) v "8 • j o " ! " M a q d a u s i q o x ' Z •ureiqv *1 CORN CROP DOWN The Agriculture Depart­ ment has reported the na­ tion's com crop last year totaled 5,473,727,000 bush­ els, Down 3 per cent from the record harvest in 1971. The harvest was up 73.3 million bushels from esti­ mates two months ago. The Bible Speaks Virgje L. Chappell, Pastor First Baptist Church, McHenry WHO IS JESUS The Nation of the Jews had, for centuries, been looking forward to the coming of a Messiah. He was to be the liberator of Israel. John the Baptist had identified Jesus as being that One. The Twelve had accepted that identificati<^&>, though there was much about the ministry of Jesus which they could not understand. The approach and action of Jesus just didn t concur with what a liberator would do. And now, after onlyiihree short years, with not even the semblance of an army formed, ne informed them that his death was imminent. As Jesus observed the bewilderment on the faces of the apostles, he said, "Ye believe in God, believe also in me" (John, 14:1). Jesus was encouraging his disciples not to change the raith which they had been three years in developing. Just because* something was to happen which they did not un­ derstand, they were to jealously guard that confidence which they had acquired in Jesus after three years of observation. Upon reflection, each apostle could have identified Jesus in at least three ways. Jesus Christ is the one who came down from Heaven. No other human type being has this unique character. Jesus told Nicodemus that "No man hath ascended up into heaven, but he that came down from heaven, even the Son of Man which is in heaven." (John 3:13). The prophet Isaiah foretold centuries before that Jesus would come and that his name \ -ould be "IMMANUEL" (God with us) Isaiah 7:14. He was not to be just another man. He was not to be even a special man. But He was to be the God-man from Heaven. The Apostles also learned that Jesus Christ is the one who provides access to the Father in Heaven. Jesus said, "I am the way, the truth and the life. No one cometh unto the Father but by me." (John 14:6). "I am the door; by me if any man enter in, he shall be_§3ved." (John 10:9). But the most comforting and even astounding truth which Jesus revealed at this time was that he is the one who is coming again! "I go to prepare a place for you, and if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again." John 14:2-3. Jesus reassured the apostles that even though he was leaving them, he would indeed come to them again. Paul tells of His coming when the "Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the ar­ changel.." (I Thessalonians 4:16). Scoffers soon arose after the ascension of Jesus. Peter speaks reassuring words to believers today as well as those of two millenniums ago, as he reminds us, "But the day of the Lord will come" (2 Peter 3:10). Who is Jesus? He is the one who came from heaven and entered our world. He became the one to provide the Way for men to return to God. He is the one who is coming again. "Therefore be ye steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch as ye know that your labor is not in vain in the Lord." I Corinthians 15:58. <S» Using the McHenry Service Center GET ATTENTION ...PHONE 385-0170... Farm Equipment George P. j Freundjne. j Case - New Holland 4102 \V. Crystal Lake Rd. McHENRY Bus. 3854420 i Res. 385 0227 Jim Thompson's Elm Street Service •Complete Lube *Wash *Tire Repair "Same good gas, same friendly management... since 1953." 385-9749 3603 W. ELM - McHENRY AIR CONDITIONING SALES & SERVICE U-HAUL Trailers & Trucks COMPLETE AUTOMOm® TRUCK REPAIRING^ ARC & GAS WELDING Guettler Service, Inc. 818 N. Eront Street 385 9831 l lREHLI RADIAL TIRES FOR ALL CARS j insurance & Real Estate | jEARL R. WALSHi I I Europa Motors Inc | 3 3 1 8 W . P e a r l | 8 I 5 3 8 5 - 0 7 0 0 > |A JACK I 1. i! e I Auto I l iability Monds H ork men's ( ompensation Office 3S5-33H0 3429 U. Kin Street Mcllenry, Illinois 6111)50 WALSHi I l l I Accident and | Health I ED'S STANDARD STANDARD SERVICE I ire Homeowners Plate (.lass Marine EXPERT TUNE-UP ATLAS Tires, Batteries, Accessories QUALITY American Oil Products PH. 385 0720 3817 W. ELM STREET I T I I I I I I I McHENRY HOBBY SHOP FOR ALL YOUR MODELING NEEDS 3318 W. Elm (NEAR RIVERSIDE DR. McHENRY) 385-7122 BIMMNT-HIRE /%* i ValTBim •k RADIATORS • Cool ing System Specia l is ts • A/f? CONDITIONING • Trai ler Hi tches Fabr icat ion • STEEL SALES • Welding $ Ornamental Iron • Frozen Pipe Tha\m t - 3006 W. Rte. 120 McHenrv ADAMS BROS. (Next to Gem Cleaners) Phone 385-0783

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy