Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 6 Jul 1944, p. 3

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Thursday, July 6,19|| ^ *? y v w « > ^ P - ' * t ,\ fT'-tTm"y ; Jl i - ..-•' ; •Sr. THE MeHENKY PLAINDEAlJSt ~»*v« v.•M Wf fage Three;, McCULLOM LAKE =k. ** (By Marie McKitikV I'Sgt. Lang-ley Bennett, U. S. army*] is enjoying a long awaited fur-; lough with his parents. He was overseas twenty-three months, was in four; major battles in which he suffered some wounds. He has received four citations, among them the Oak Leaf Cluster and a medal for {rood conduct. Langley looks „6fie anct we are -all glad Id see him Mrs. Brocken returned recently from an extended visit with her son .Chuck, who is in the tank corps »t Camp Bovide^Texas. He is an expert on the rifle range. When Chuck left a year ago he weighed 137 a c,vc VOUR CHICKS ' ' IO* omWXINC WATlt) f «( P A*P 'MTrWIWls Bolger's Drug Store Green Street McHenry pounds, now he is 168 lbs. The lovely picture we received from him through his' mother proves it. He 1b perfectly contented and loves the army. On Saturday, July 1, Mrs. Lee Sawdo - was surprised by a shower given in her . honor at the Chas. Coles home. Mrs. Sawdo was presented with a pre-war baby carriage which was full of gifts, after which a very delicious lunch was served. < In the evening,, Mr. and Mrs. Coles entertained the wedding party of her sister, Rita Mae. Mr. Hoeft of Chicago, father of Mrs. Pyritz, spent the weekend at their home. • ; ' Some time ago .Dave Boyle Und Allan McKim agreed to meet when possible. This they did and .had a picture taken to prove it. ,Dave _i> stationed in No. Carolina and Allan at Norfolk. " •Lt. John Boyle of the army air corps and wife left Saturday to return to Texas by July 4. He is. an instructor in aviation there. He spent Friday out here visaing Langley Bennett and his mother. Callers at McKim's on Saturday were Mr. and Mrs, Geo Schroeder of Slocum Lake and Chicago. We were neighbors in Chicago before we moved here fourteen years ago.. The young Wildcats ball team has been asking the married men for a game. That game has been played. The sad news is that the old married men beat the young boys 20 to 10. was the umpire. i • • • • it it it -k m I Use Scouring Powder For galvanized buckets, tubs, and garbage pails, you can safely use coarse scouring piywder. Don't try to keep tin shiny because if you keep shining it, likely you will take off the thin coating of tin. That exposes the basic metal which may rust. Dry tin pans carefully for this reason. If yrj want to tak6 off soma particularly hard-to-remove burnt food, try boiling a little soda and water in the tin pan. But never boil it longer than five minutes at the most. . Deerhide Gloves Deer hides furnish the necessary leathers to make gloves and mukluks for cold climate use. These are needed by the armed forces. Double Pointed Needle The double pointed needle, barfic device ir. machine sewing, wa3 pat-; ented by Charles F. Weisenthal in 1755. • * Daily Menus Need • Changes to Fit Family's Wants ; Improve Mines Over $20,000,000 has been spent annually during the past 20 years upon mechanical equipment and facilities to make coal mining more efficient and safe. Bituminous coal is now extracted mechanically in mines. WAR BONDS--rwill preserve protect the American way. o GOOD CLOTHES GOOD CARE ®S3 Elm Street ^ Phone McHenry 104rM You'll be surprised at how little chicken is needed for Chicken Noodle Paprika, but how good the casserole can taste. It meets ail the requiremcaU tor i (tad, wartime dish. Do you plan your meals to suit the family's mood? In spring, for instance, do you sat- . * . , , . , isfy their hunger for foods crisp, nine of ^vcry ten mines, loaded | crunchy an(j light? Do you get away mechanically in two of every five ! from the t0Q hearty and heavy {oods ! of winter and** I heed the chiange and] in weather and [-appetite? If you u^m ' don't, then you | should! Every family requires a change in food as well as in dresjs. Food is more fun for both you and the family if you vary menus from time to time, weed out much-repeated recipes and add new ones to the family's collections. Do keep in mind the changes of season and their wealth of new foods and color schemes to add int^est to the diet. Sare Used fats! , • Vegetables herald the important coming of spring--and their use in meals should be more generous, even in the meat course itself where they will act as a meat extender; Meat Balls in Vegetable Sauce. (Serves 6 to 8) 44 pound veal s : H pound pork . 1 pound beef 1 small onion N 1 green pepper I carrot | 1 stalk celery ; j f -..'t; tablespoons [ H cup applesauce I ft cup moist bread enimb$ | 2 teaspoons salt ! Ij>>nt tomatoes 1 tablespoon Soar |I S5 potatoes, diced j H teaspoon pepper Chop parboiled or leftover vegetables. Grind meat and mix with applesauce, bread crumbs, salt, pepper and beaten eggs. Form into egg - sized' balls. Melt fat, brown meat balls, add chopped vegetables and tomatoes. Bake uncovered 25 minute? in a tnoderate oven. * ' / . S m t t U s e d F t U ! Asparagus and Spaghetti.: • (Serves €) Hi cups spaghetti, broken in pieces 1 pint canned or cooked asparagus and liquid 2 tablespoons flour 2 tablespoons fat 1 cup rich milk 3 to 4 drops tabasco sauc# H teaspoon salt 1 cup buttered bread craittha Cheese, if desired Cook spaghetti in boiling salted water until tender. Drain. Drain' the liquid from the asparagus, cut For Truck and Passenger Cars FIRESTONE TIRES AND TUBES We have * complete stock of both passenger and truck tires. - You can now have yottr tires retreated without an OP A order. Bring them in. f TIRE AND TUBE VULCANIZING Trade in your old battery on a new FIRESTONE. We allow $2.00 for your old one. Walter J. Freund OFFICIAL TIRE INSPECTION STATION MAIN ST., WEST M'HENRY PHONE 294 n • -- F R I T Z E L ' S -- RIVERSIDE HOTEL is now prepared 10 serve % appetizing meals, whether % j it is a delicious luncheon t or c. full course dinner. I Business people can be accommodated here for lunch at the time of day preferred. Make it a habit to eat at FRITZEL'S, the name that identifies good food. Lynn Says Mottoes: Produce and preserve, share and play fair are mottoes which should be in every household notebook. This is what I mean, so check yourself on the following points so that you can tell if you're doing the job on the home front: Save cans--to meet the iquota of 400,000,000 used cans every month. Save waste paper and collect scrap. Containers are made from these to ship supplies to iorces overseas. Start the Victory^ Garden „early --to produce more food than we did last year. • Store leftover food . correctly, prevent waste. Shop early in the day, early in the week. Accept no goods without stamps. Substitute for scarce foods, serve simpler meals to save time and leave you more time for vital war work. Lynn Chambers' Point-Saving Mens •Chicken Noodle J'aprika Broccoli Sliced Tomatoes Rye Bread Sandwiches Lemon Snow Pudding .Custard Sauce V V ; . Brownies ' •Recipe Given stocks in short pieces and prepare a sauce from the flour, fat, milk and asparagus water, then add the tabasco sauce and salt. In a greased baking dish, place a layer of the cooked spaghetti, then one of asparagus. Cover with sauce snd continue until all ingredients are used. Cover top with buttered crumbs. Top with grated cheese, if desired. Bake in a moderate (35<Wegree> oven until heated, about 20 minutes. Sat e L sed Fats! You'll be getting the most out of your money if you serve this low-onchicken casserole. It%» thrifty but full of nutrition: •Chicken Noodle Paprika. (Serves I to I) , :j pound medium-cut efg noodles 4 cups boiling water ^ 1 teaspoon salt '» cup diced carrots 'i cup diced celery Salt and pepper to tadit - >« cup onion, cut fine 2 tablespoons shortening IVi cups chicken stotck or pravy 1 teaspoon paprika !'i cup minced, cooked chicken To the boiling water add salt and egg noodles. Cook until all water is absorbed and noodles are tender. This requires £bout 10 minutes. Stir frequently during cooking period. Combine carrots, celery, onion and shortening and cook for a few minutes. Add chicken stock, paprika, seasonings and chicken. Cook slowly until vegetables are tender. Pour this mixture over the cooked egg noodles, place in buttered casserole and bake - *,2' hour at 350 degrees. Whole pieces of chicken may be used in place ">f the minced chirkrn'. Louis Pasteur Louis Pasteur, 1;>22-1395, was- a French scientist, whose experiments in the science of stero-chemistry and bacteriology have resulted inmntold service to humanity and industry the world over. The pasteurization of milk as a standard practice has saved countless lives. His treatment of hydrophobia through the use of anti-toxins has prevented many painf jl deaths. His experiments opened the way for unending advance in the field of preventive medicine and bacteriology. Pasteur was widely acclaimed as an international scientist and received many awards for his work, one of them being election to the American National A«%uemy ol Sciences. TRUCK OPERATORS' NOTICE " All owners or 6peratbrs of trucks in the state of Illinois are hereby notified that the new stickers are now ready. The old Stamps expired on May 1 We are prepared to make your inspection and issue the Sticker. Don't neglect this important matter. iCEMTRAt GARAGE . i FRED J. SMITH, Prop. ^ Phone 200-J . * Towing Johnsburg An inexpensive food is the salad, but it provides the mineral and vitamin riches necessary to good health and living, and satisfies the need for change if texture and contrast in menus. Ham Loaf. , (Serves 6) • /. 1*' cups ham, diced 1 package lemon-flavored geUttta 1 cup boiling water 14 cup vinegar teaspoon paprika 1 teaspoon salt °i cup water <*'i cup mayonnaise t tablespoons minced green pepper 2 tablespoons minced dill pickli Hi teaspoons dry mustard Pour boiling water over gelatin and stir until dissolved. Add vinegar and water and allow to cool slightly. Add the other ingredients and turn out into loaf pan. Chill until firm. Turn out on platter and garnish with lettuce, endive, sliced eggs and tomatoes. Smt* Used Fats! Vegetables should be cooked.until they are just barely tender--then no more. Then most of their vitamins are intact, and the color is glorious. Here's a casserole with a riot of i new spring color: Garden Casserole. ^ (Serves S) e*ps white sauce ^ ; 1 cup cooked new potatoes 1 cup cooked asparagus, caidl« flower or broccoli i cup cooked carrots I cup cooked peas M cup yellow cheese Make white sauce. Place vegetables in layers in buttered casserole and pour white sauce over them. Cover with finely cut cheese and bake in a moderate (350-degree) oven 120 minutes. J Get the most from yourmeat! Gatytmr meat matting chart from Wi« T.ynn'Chambprs bv urilinn to hrr in carp of Western "ft er< s/jn/wr ( niim, 210 South Desplnines Street, Chicago 6, III. I'lease tend a stamped, self-addressed envelope fof your reply. Released by'Western Newspaper Union. EVERY FRIDAY--All the Perct. you can CM $1.00 - SPECIAL EVERY SUNDAY . Home Cooltfd Chicken and Dumplings Marie McKim) THE OLD JUDGE SAYS.. "The men overseas don't mince any words about the way they want to find this country when they come marching home... do they, Judge?" "They certainly don't, Herb...and they shouldn t. They're doing a masterful job fighting over there to protect our rights and they have good license to expect us to protect theirs back here at home. One thing they're mitfity clear on is their stand on prohibition." "Their position on that subject was stated very empr among American service men in England, by the British Institute of Public Opinion. \Vhen hundreds of men were asked point blank how they would vote on prohibition, of them stated, in unmistakable terms, that they would vote against it. There's.no doubt about it. Herb...the men overseas don't want any action taken on that subject , while they're away.'^ "And they're 100% right. Judge, because I know how I felt when I came home after the last war--only to learn that we had been over there fighting for so impractical a tically in a poll taken recently thing as Prohibition." r*M mdmhimtnt ipMitrri »y Cmtfirmct of AMelu Jmran ln4*st'Ui. I POSH ON THE HOME FRONT, TOO! We also cater to Parties and Banquets A Good Investment In 1942 the Canadian National railways expended $683,000 to guard its vast properties from coast to coast against possible sabotage. On the National System's mileage basis, this protection, so essential to the lives of thousands of members of the armed forces and millions of dollars worth of war material in transit, cost the small amount of one and one-third : cents per mile per hour. Absentees High { That sickness, inefficiency, awamped communities and hardship must be reckoned as a cost of breaking ship tonnage records appears from the absentee record for the first nine months of 1918. An Emergency Fleet corporation study of 320,- 000 shipworkers showed that 17.8 per cent in steel shipyards and 13.2 • per cent in wooden shipyards stayed away from work, every day over that I period. I THIS IS IT! This is the big push you have been waiting for! Th is is the "zero hour"! Our fighting men are ready--ready to strike anywhere . . . anytime . . . anvhow v. . BAR NOTHING! What about you? Are you ready to match this spirit with your War Bond purchases? Every Bond you buy is so much more power behind the big push .. . the push that will send Hitler and Tojo into obliviou. Get behind the invasion drive! Invest MORE than ever before! Double . . . triple . .. what you've done in any previous drive. The job is big--you've got to dig! gattMeMxl'- BUY MORE THAN BEFORE JACOB NATHANSON &• CO. 129 RIVERSIDE DRIVE McHENRY

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