tPAGE 10 - PLAINDEALER - FRIDAY, OCTOBER tl, 1*77 gweffiuiA* (jte»d CHURCH SERVICES Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church MISSOURI SYNOD 4206 W. WAUKEGAN RD. McHENRY, ILLINOIS Sunday Worship 7:45 & 10:30 A.M.-Nursery Services at 10:30 A.M. Sunday School-Children & Youth, 9 A.M. Alliance Bible Church MIS W. Bull VolUy Rd. R«v. Gerald Robertson Sunday School - 9:45 A.M. Strvkt -11:00 P.M. Service - 7:00 . Wed. Bible Study B Pray»r 1:00 p.m. • Chain 0'Lakes Evangelical Covenant Church 4015 N. WilmotRd. Rov. Mitchell Const din* Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Worshla Sorvieo 11:00a. m Church Phono • 497-3000 Partonaao • 497-3050 St Francis National Catholic Church landers Rd.. east of Ringwood Rd. Sunday Mattes • 10 a.m. Father A. Wodko • Pastor St John the Baptist Catholic Church Johnsburg Rev. Leo Bortol, Pastor Rectory Phone 305-1477 Sat.-Sacrament of Roc. 5 p.m. 4 7:30 p.m. Sun.-Mass, 7-9-10:30-12 a.m. Weekdays Mass: Mon.-Fri. 7:30 0 9 a.m. First United Methodist Church 3717 Wast Main Stroat Church phone 395-0931 Ralph Smith, Pastor Parsonage Phone: 305-1352 worship: • 9:30 a.m. and 11:00a.m. Sunday School 10:50 a.m. St. Paul's Episcopal Church 3704 W. St. Paul's ft Green Rev. Arthur D. McKay, Vicar 355-7690 Sunday Services Holy Eucharist - 8 A.M. Family Eucharist - 10 a.m. Church School ft Coffee Hour Wednesdays- Holy Eucharist 9:30 a.m. Friday-Holy Eucharist - 9:30 a.m. Christian Science Society Lincoln Road And Eastwood Lane Sunday Service -10:30 p.m. Sunday School • 10:30 a.m. Wed. Eva. • a.m. Christ The King Catholic Church 5005 E. Wonder Lake Road Wonder Lake, Illinois Sunday Masses: 5, 10 a.m., and noon. Eva. Mass I p.m. Fulfills Sunday Obligation Nativity Lutheran Church 3506 4o*\ E. Wonder Lake Rd. 157, Phone 553-3532 Wonder Lake, Illinois Sun. Worship • ft 10:30 a.m. Sunday School • 9 a.m. (Nursery Facilities Available) St. Mary's Catholic Church Rev. Eugene Boumhofer Sat. Eve. Moss - 5 p.m. Fulfills Sun. obligation Sunday Masses - 6:30, 5, 9:30, 9:45, 10:45, 11, 12 noon. Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church (Missouri Synod) 4206 W. Woukegon Rd. (W. Rt. 120) Rev. Hemonn F. Groef 355-0559 355-1616 Sunday Worship, 7:45 ft 10:30 Nursery Services provided at 10:30 Education for Eternity Sunday School - Children and Youth, 9 a.m. Wonder Lake Bible Church 7501 Howe Drive Wonder Lake, Illinois Rev. Richard N. Wright, Pastor Sunday: Sunday School, 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship Service, 11 a.m. Bible Fellowship Hour 6:00 p.m. Wednesday: Midweek* Prayer and Praise Hour, 7:30 p.m. George R. Justen Funeral Home 3519W.ELM STREET McHENRY, ILL. 355-2400 Glaviano's Interiors & Palatine Millwork 355-3764 414 S. ROUTE 31 JUST NORTH OF McHENRY FLORAL Brake Parts. Co. P.O. BOX 11 McHENRY, ILL. 355-7000 Ace Hardware 3729 W. ELM STREET McHENRY, ILL. 305-0722 Tonyan Construction Co. 1309 N.BORDEN STREET McHENRY, ILL. 305-5520 McHenry County Friends Meeting (Quaker) 1st ft 3rd Sunday, 10:30 a.m. For information call: 305-3872 or 312-683-3840 Church of God Greenleaf Ave. at Fairfield Dr. Island Lake School Services: Sunday School, 10 a.m. Church Service, 11 a.m. Evangolistic Service, 7 p.m. Telephone: 312-526-8056 Mount Hope Church United Methodist 1015 W. Broadway Pistakee Highland* Rev. Ruth WTckorsham Sunday Worship 11 a.m. Sunday School 9:45 a.m. McHenry Evangelical Free Church 1309 N. Court St. Sunday School • 9:45 a.m. Sunday Service • 11:00 a.m. Home Bible Studies Available Rev. David Fogleboch 344-1111 or 728-0516 Ringwood Methodist Church Ringwood, Illinois Rev. James Segin Res. 648-2848 Church 653-6956 Sunday 9:15 a.m. Church Service Church School at 10:15 a.m. Church Of Jesus Christ Of Latter-Day Saints (MORMONS) 5209 N. Wolkup Ave. (across from Veterans Acres) Crystal Lake, Illinois Phone: 815-459-9702 Bishop: Alan Warnick Phone:815-455-3271 Meeting Schedule: Sunday School: 10:30 Socrament Meeting: 5:00 p.m. Sunday Except 1 st Sunday of the month Sacrament Meeting is held at 12 noon United Pentecostal Church 258 Sunnyslde-Lakemoor Rev. Dennis Danielson-385-4974 Sunday 10 a.m. ft 7 p.m. Wed. 7:30 p.m. Bible Study. Fri. 7:30 p.m. Prayer Meeting First National Bank of McHenry 3814W.ELM STREET McHENRY, ILL. 385-5400 McHenry Savings ft Loan 1209 N.GREEN STREET McHENRY. ILL. 385-3000 Halm's Wonder Lake Funeral Home 7611 HANCOCK DR. WONDER LAKE 1-728-0233 The Bath Shop 3012W. RTE.12# McHENRY, ILL. ( 385-0048 I McHenry State Bank 3510W.ELM STREET McHENRY, ILL. 385-1040 St. Peter's Catholic Church Spring Grove, Illinois Rev. Kilduff, Pastor Phone 815-675-2288 Masses: Daily 8 a.m. Saturday - 7:30 p.m. Sunday - 7 a.m., 9 a.m., 11 a. Faith Presbyteri Lincoln • Oiop«l H erian Church R*v. Eric J. Snydtr Corpora* Woriithlp • 10:30 a.m. Chvrch School: Nvreory I Pro-School • 10:90 a.m. Primary, Junior, Junior High and Young Adult - 9:00 a.m. Adult, Sacond S Fourth Sundays * t:1S a.m. Spring Grove Church United Methodist 8102 N. Blivin, Spring Grove, III. Rev. Ruth Wickersham-Pastor Sunday Worship • 9 a.m. Sunday School -10:15 a.m. St. Patrick's Catholic Church Rev. Edmund Petit, Pastor Rev. Raymond Kearny, Assoc. Pastor Sat., Eve. (Sun. obligation fulfilled 5 p.m.) Sunday 7:15,8:30,9:45, 11 ft 12:15 I Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church 404 N. Green St. Rev. Roger W. Schneider Phone 385-7786 or 385-4030 Saturday Church, 5:00 p.m. School, 5:45 p.m. Sunday Church, 8:30ftJ0:30 School, 9:15 Nursery Services Avoilable First Baptist Church 509 Front St. 385-0083 Rev. Marshall E. Worry Bible Study-Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Worship Service 10:45 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. Training Union: 5:00 p.m. Interpretation for Deaf at all Services. Special Spanish Services. Wednesday Prayer Service, 6:45 p.m. Peter M. Justen Funeral Home 3807 W.ELM STREET McHENRY, ILL. 385-0063 Guettler's Service, Inc. 818 N. FRONT STREET McHENRY, ILL. 385-9831 Mitchell Sales, Inc. BUICK--OLDS--OPEL 903 N. FRONT ST. McHENRY 385-7200 The McHenry Plaindealer 3812W.ELM STREET McHENRY, ILL. 385-0170 Coast to Coast Hardware There's An Answer (by Norman Vincent Peale and Ruth Stafford Peale) Study Reveals •. * Pumpkin Pie More American Than Apple Too Late to Change Q. I have a real bad problem. I just cannot snap out of my depression. It seems I am pretty good, then down I go in a rut again. I lost my husband last year and still live in the same house he built for us. He loved his home, and I cannot bear to leave it. I talk to him every day and find some consolation in that. I guess I'll never get over losing him. I have always been more or less hypo- making mountains of mole hills-and at 80 years old it is too late to change now. Is there anything you can suggest for me beside psychotherapy? That is one thing I do not want. A. Bear this in mind, and this is a fact: It is never too late to change. If a person has been having wrong attitudes, wrong thought processes, even for 80 years, that does not mean that these errors should continue to be compounded. The loss of a husband is indeed a grievous sorrow. But it is a tough, hard fact that you must get over this loss if you expect to live with any degree of happiness. That is not easy, but it is possible with God's help. Get your personality normalized. Give up your grief and get interested in something outside yourself. That is your one hope for peace of mind. We have a booklet, You Can Have a Wonderful Life, which has helped others with questions such as yours, and a copy of it is on its way to you. Apyone reading this column who wishes a free copy may write for one. Address your request to Dr. and Mrs. Peale, Box 500, Pawling, NY 12564. Is It Devil Music? Q. Could you please tell me if dancing is wrong in God's sight? I'm puzzled concerning this matter. I like to go dancing every so often. It's the only way I feel relaxed. In fact, it's the only way I receive exercise. My husband and I like to go dancing sometimes, but people say this is devil music. (Rhythm, blues and rock). Is it? A. Dancing as such is not, in our opinion, wrong in the sight of God. It is only as a person has wrong thoughts about it that it can be wrong. As a means of normal relaxation, exercise and a social good time, dancing can be a source of wholesome pleasure. Do not afflict your mind with unhealthy thoughts about it. t Do I dare to stop hoping? Q. Do I dare stop hoping and praying for my husband to come back? After 15 good years of marriage, which produced two children, my husband left us and obtained a divorce. I love him deeply and would like to have a chance to make a good home for the four of us. I just don't know how God feels about me constantly asking Him to bring my husband back. I do not feel God could have sanctioned such a thing as a breakup of a marriage and family. But yet, I'm afraid if the devil has his hand in this, and if I give up trying, then I'm a guilty party in keeping our marriage from having a chance. Please help me to understand the right thing to do. A. Certainly you can continue to hope and pray for your husband's return. Meanwhile you will be well advised to go with your own life, guiding your children, and living normally without any feeling of guilt. If your husband, now divorced, should return and you wish to remarry him, then you should give serious thought to overcoming any element of failure that you may have contributed to the relationship. Having done all that you can in a calm and sensible way, leave the matter in the hands of God and live with peace of mind. Perhaps you would like to find an answer for Yourself to a problem that you can share with others in There's An Answer! If there is something you Would like to ask Dr. and Mrs. Peale to discuss in this column, write to them in care of Box 500, Pawling, NY 12564. Pumpkin pie is particularly appropriate amid the priceless collection of 18th century tableware at Philadelphia's historic City Tavern, recently re-opened for authentic colonial dining. Come in and browse, you'll get ideas for furnishing your bath and discover many jcharming gifts. a 3012 W. Rte. 120, McHenry Eaat of New Bridge-Free Parking 3854)048 Mon.-Thura. 9-5:30, Fri. 9-9, Sat. 9-5 Complete planning and installation of fixture* and accessories. "As American as pumpkin pie" may not be as familiar as the long-standing cliche about apple pie, but, indeed, it may be more accurate. The truth is that apple pie may well be the nation's best- selling dessert pie, but its origin lies across the Atlantic; whereas, the pumpkin variety is truly an American Innova tion. So, it seems more ap propriate to coin the phrase, "as American as pumpkin pie," in honor of its domestic heritage. All this came to light in a research study just compiled for Mrs. Smith's Pie Com pany, Pottstown, Pa., by Dr. Jay Anderson, noted food his torian and university lecturer. In France, the cradle of cookery, the pumpkin is used for soup, jam and some des serts, according to its epicu rean bible, "Larousse's Gas- tronomique." It goes on to state that in the United States, pumpkins are used primarily as filling for pies. But what Larousse doesn't mention is that Americans have been baking and eating huge /quantities of pumpkin pie ever since 1621, when the Pilgrims were taught to grow the great orange fruit -- "cu- curbita," by family name. So important was this dish to the early New England settlers that one Boston wag proclaimed: "We have pumpkins at morning, pumpkins at noon. If it were not for pumpkins, we should be undoon." These pumpkins were espe cially valuable in the early American diet because, as a crop, $hey ripened early in the season when many other foods -- particularly grains -- were scarce. Colonial farmers learned quickly how to stag ger their planting to main tain a steady supply from August through October. In addition, pumpkins could be easily stored in root cellars and used during the wintry months when other foods were unavailable. It's not surprising, then, that the first recorded recipe for any American dish was for pumpkin pie. It was pub lished in the 1672 edition of "New Englands Rarleties" by Englishman John Josselyn, who had visited the colonies twice during the mid-1600s. 4400 W. RTE. 120 McHENRY MARKET PLACE 3S5-6655 A STRANGE IDEA OF HUMAN RIGHTS If you are an American, "hu man rights" means freedom. Freedom to worship as you be lieve, go where you please, vote for (or against) your representa tives in government -- in short, to make your own decisions about your own life. . But "human rights" means something quite different to the United Nations. The UN has never condemned the Commu nists for assaulting religious freedom in Latvia, destroying the sanctity of the family in China, abrogating property rights in Cuba, or abolishing free elec tions in Hungary. Instead, the UN has always ignored Commu nist violations of human rights. Even worse, the UN itself has a history of suppressing basic rights and glorifying tyrants. In 1961, for instance, UN troops in the Congo massacred civilians, bombed hospitals, de stroyed churches, and slaughter ed women and children. In 1971, the UN expelled the government of Free China and welcomed into its midst the bloody Communist Chinese, the murderers of mil lions of their own people. In 1974, Yasir Arafat -- the leader of the same terrorist P.L.O. that com mitted cold-blooded murder at the Munich Olympic Games -- addressed the UN General As sembly amid enthusiastic ap plause. And in 1975, the UN con demned our bases in Guam -- American sovereign territory. The UN hypocrisy on human rights is another compelling rea son why we should get out of the United Nations. And why Octo ber 24, the anniversary of the UN, should be proclaimed . . . a United Nations "Day of Shame." The John Birch Society Belmont, Massachusetts 02178 San Marino, California 91108 I would like to find out more about the United Nations. Please send me: • The United Nations Today (Booklet) for $1.00. • The United Nations Packet for $2.00. Name Address City State Zip Later, in the first truly American cookbook, "Ameri can Cookery," published in Connecticut in 1796, it's au thor, Amelia Simmons, con sidered pumpkin pie the ulti mate American recipe and of fered these directions for her custard-like filling: One quart of milk. 1 pint pompkw.4eggs. mobiles, al If pice and ginger in a craft, bake 1 hour. Then, for her crust: Rub one third erf one pound of butter, and one pound of laid into two pound of flour, wet with four whites well beaten: water q:£: to make a pafte. roll in the refiduc of fhortening in ten or twelve rollings- bake quick. In the 170 years since, no self-respecting American cookbook has been without a pumpkin pie recipe. One of the best reasons why, is de tailed in "The House Mother," a much-reprinted 19th cen tury cookbook: "A perfect pumpkin pie, eaten before the life has gone out of it, is one of the real additions made by American cookery to the good things of the world. For the first pumpkin pie of the season, flanked by a liberal cut of creamy cheese, we prefer to pit down, as the 998H8&' gourmand said about his turkey: with just the two of u»; myself and the turkey." Today, pumpkin pie tops the list as the unequaled fa vorite during the fall months. Prom September through De cember alone, Americans con sume an estimated half bil lion slices in homes and res taurants across the nation. After all, it's as American Courthouse Squares NT AS WE GROVJ OLDER, THE THINGS W£ OMCE WAtfTEp' 0UT C0ULPNT AFFORD SEEM MUCH LESS a iMpdraMrV A-l HEARING AID REPAIR SERVICE Fr** Loon*r»-Compl*t* S*rvic* on all Mokes •torn Earmolds-30 Day Trial on Now Aids NOMBSOMCS FOR SHUT-INS I TRY BEFORE YOUBUYI Ma icorOticon - RadiaJg^r -Qualiton* „ Audiotone Telex-Sono Ton* Custom Mad* All in th* fcm Models SBRVICi CSNTIR WEDS 1:00 TO 4:00 OTHER HOURS BY APPT. HEARING AID BATTERY SALE! MALLORY--EVEREADY f. . RAY-O-VAC 675-*2.00 312*2.00 76-*2.50 401 *1.10 41-!2.Q0 13*2.00 PROVIDER FOR CHRYSLER HEARING AID MBMslanP i ASSOCIATE 3937 W. MAIN ST. McHENRYJLL 385-7661 M» MT. PROSPECT 1M1 MAI II3S2-475Q