*1 Thursday, March 5, 1959 THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER IWlllHiHtl J!l'|i|t 'li'tii<l|'li|i| |!| t III IIMIilllii i i The Page fire * Great Outdoors By Jack Walati Milium 111 Kill I ill Ml |>lii it 11111II1111 > 11 This winter has really been a rough one and many of the lakes in our area are expected to have suffered a "winter-kill" of fish. In the winter, when the lakes are completely covered with i<$0 production of oxygen must come from water plants under the ice. Plant growth will continue as long as sunlight is available. Under a clear ice condition, sunlight can penetrate into the water sufficiently to maintain plant growth and its resultant oxygen production, which is absolutely necessary for the fish to maintain ttoir normal respiration and nWabolism. As we all know, the overabundance of snow we experienced this year permitted very little sunlight to penetrate the ice. Lakes especially susceptible to "winter-kill" are usually shallow and fertile with mucky, highly organic bottoms. Now we are not trying to say tj£t all the fish in all the shallow lakes are dead, but there is no doubt that Old Man Winter has taken its toll. To prove that not all the fish are dead, we have some report ss of very good catches in Channel Lake and Petite Lake. Things have been at low ebb at Meyer's Bay and all over Pistakee Lake, but we can expoct a lot of action just before tra ice goes out. Good luck and good fishing. ASK ZONING CHANGE FOR SLAUGHTER HOUSE A public hearing is scheduled for 3 o'clock on the afternoon of March 31 in McHenry's city 1^1, concerning a petition of three persons for permission to re-zone the idled slaughter house just south of Johnsbuig on the blacktop road. The county zoning board of appeals will act on the request. ^The petitioners are Marie and Ernest Malsch and Joseph Beranek. who are asking for •••special classification for the Me, necessitated because the sraughter house not been used for the last few years. SHOP IN McHENRY Twice Told Tales FIFTY YEARS AGO Taken from the files, of March 4, 1909 Mrs. Sallie Cotting, undoubtedly. the oldest women in 1 northern Illinois, died at h^r home in Richmond last Sunday, aged 103 years and six months. Death. followed an illness of the last six weeks which was due to old age, and ; which was the first illness she j had known. The weekly Inter-Ocean and I the McHenry Plaindealer will | now be delivered for one year at our "special deal" price of $1.75 for the two. or the Plaindealer will be sent to any j address, on trial, for three j months for twenty-five cents, j Martin Stoffel. who has been i employed as meat cutter in the | Charles G. Frett, market for | the past nine years, has pUrj chased the Elgin meat market on Chicago street in the watch I city, taking possession this I week. ] A woman in a nearby town recently sent $2 in answer to an advertisement of a sure method of erettina; rid of superj fluous fat, and received the i reply to sell it to the soap man. I From the Wauconda Leader I comes the news that Frank B. Martin, following the example ! of four other members of his family, who have wedded with- , in a year, took to himself a [ wife Monday, February the I twenty-second, the bride being Mrs. Cuddy of Chicago. The Bachelor Girls enjoyed the hospitality of Miss Myrtilla Stewart at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Simes. last Thursday evening, when an interesting program was presented by members. By special request, Mrs. H. M. Chuharoff favored with two well-rendered solos. An irate citizen says that hereafter he wants the editor to mind his own business. My dear Christian friend, did you ever reflect, in your contemplative moments, when the moon is beaming, when the whippoorwill sings in the tree, when the hired man snores in the loft, the yellow dog sleeps on the lea and the mosquito gets in his work--did you ever reflect in such times upon the idea that a paper containing only accounts of the editor's own private business would prove monotonous to the general public. They might stand it for a while, but in the end it would be a thorn in the side and a weariness to the flesh and all that sort of thing. No, brother, the true editor's busi iness is to make everybody's J business. That's business. So 1 there's no use in making a ; chronic kicker of yourself for I anyone. FORTY YEARS AGO Taken from the files of i Feb. 27, 1919 j A pretty wedding took place | at St. Mary's church on Wed- • nesday morning, when Miss j Katherine Freund, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Martin S. Freund, ' was united in marriage to John ' J. Scheid by Rev. Fr. Edward Berthold. The McHenry Pleasure club i will give a masque ball at the | Central opera house next Monday evening, March 3, when i music will be furnished by Hauswirth's orchestra and sev- ! eral prizes will be awarded. | Admission, 80 cents; specta- ! tors 30 cents. A bunch of jolly neighbors surprised Mrs. J. B. Buss at ffrr home on .Waifkegan street i Tuesday evening. They came i rigged out in old fashioned ' dress, as children, and in comic I costume, and a hilarious eve- ; ning was spent. j The military event held at I the high school Saturday evei ning was very well attended. 'The feature attraction was the tCrirrie of basketball between the high school boys and a team composed of members of the McHenry high school aJum- ; ni, all of whom have been in I the service of Uncle &am. Af- ! ter the game, a couple of hours ; were passed at dancing, most of the players as well as the | fans remaining. Miss Lillian j Heimer furnished the music. Mrs. Jacob M. Freund will give a public card party for the benefit of St. Mary's church at her home in West McHenry Tuesday evening, March 4. A bedspread made by Mrs. George Steinsdoerfer will be raffled off during' the evening. The eighth grade pupils of the McHenry public school tendered Miss Clarabel Adams a surprise at her home on Waukegan street last evening in honor of her birthday. In behalf of the guests. Miss Greeta (!hamberlin presented Miss Clarabel with a pretty hair ribbon. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Mrs. Mary Miller, 85 years old, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Theodore Kaeiin, Friday, Feb. 23. D£ath resulted from pneumonia, which developed following a fall in which she sustained a fractured hip the week before. Frank Smith, one of the oldest residents of this vicinity, observed his eighty-ninth birthday on Wednesday, Feb. 28. at the home of his daughter. Mrs M. J. Freund. Taken from the files of March 1, 1934 This Business - Farming McHenry Was on the edge of a snowstorm that swept the central west Saturday night and Sunday with about an inch of snuw reported as near as F.igin. Six to eighty inches were reported in Springfield and in Centralia they had the heaviest snowfall in four years. Zero weather has been recorded here every night for more than a week and a new low for February has been established. Sister Mary St. Bride (Margaret Sutton) 53 years old. of Mary Queen of Heaven parish, Cicero, died Friday morning at St. Joseph's Health resort, Wedron, 111, after a lingering illness. The Peter W. Freund farm home, west of McHenry, burned to the ground Wednesday forenoon, as the family was packing in readiness to move to the John R. Smith farm. The fire, which started under the roof, completely destroyed the house but the furniture, which was packed for moving, was saved. Dairy cows go for and do well on high moisture corn providing it is not too wet. That's the conclusion reached by dairy and agricultural engineering research at the Michigan Agricultural experiment si at ion after one year's test. Scientists Charles Lassiter compared dried corn and wet corn containing vary amounts of moisture in the form of ground shelled" corn, shelled whole corn and ground ear corn. The high moisture corn was stored in a conventional upright concrete silo and was sealed on top "with a sheet of plastic. In noting results, s Lassiter reports, "Butterfat production of the cows in the groups stayed about the same. Milk production, however, did vary and cows fed the corn containing the most moisture dropped the most in production. During the 112-day feeding j trial, milk production for the ! cows on dried corn declined 29 'percent; cows on ground shelled corn which contained 26 per cent moisture went down 24 1 percent in milk production. The group on ground shelled corn containing 40 percent moisture dropped 46 percent in milk production and the cows on ground ear corn declined 36 percent in milk production. "As of now," Lassiter summarizes. "it looks like a moisture content of between 25 and 35 percent appears to be about the best for feeding to dairy cows." The researcher also checked <o see how much of the high moisture corn passed through the cows without being digested. Almost none of the whole shelled corn pass. Cows got the best batches of wet corr. in winter and heat of the summer. They lapped it up without hesitation. A second test is underway this year. Scientists a che6king ear corn put up at the same moisture content and will compare it with shell corn. j There is no law of God or I : man which suggests that j • wealthy criminals should not j I pay the full penalty jfor their I ! crimes. I Not so many kids are runn i n g a w a y f r o m h o m e a n y more. The average tefeyision set is too heavy to carry. AlcHenry Plaindealei Phone 170 - 171 ; Published every Thursday at j McHenry, Til., by the McHenry : Publishing Company, Inc. READ THE WANT ADS. Claire Beauty Shoppe 200 S. Green St. McHenry 10 Call Us For Your SPRING PERMANENT Swedish Massage -- Steam Bath PATRICIA STEVENS COSMETICS NATIONAL EDITORIAL A s(Tb C£& T i(oW vV. BURFEINDT, Gen'l. Mgr. 4.DELE FROEHLICH, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATE In McHenry County 1 Year $3.5C 6 Months $2.00 3 Months • • • $1.25 Outside McHenry County 1 Year $4.00 6 Months $2.25 3 Months $1.50 Entered as second-class mat ter at the post office at McHenry, Illinois, under the act if May 8. 1879. SAVE BY MARCH 10th r EARN FROM THE 1st Money placed in a savings account with us on or before the 1 Oth earns dividends as of the first of the month. ACT NOW! Open or add to your account today. Declared Dividend Rate for 1959 SAFtTT SAVINGS MARE FEDERAL AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Marengo, Illinois JOrdan 8-7258 A Mutual Company Serving Northern Illinois Since 1925 :R SMI DAN POWERS - LARRY DE MANE -- Auctioneers Being unable to rent a farm the undersigned will sell on the farm known as the McGee farm located 2 miles Northwest of Woodstock on U.S. Route 14 on WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11th At 12:00 O'Clock 27 HOLSTEIN COWS ^ 9 of these cows have been fresh in the past 30 days and 3 are close springers; 2 Holstein Heifers -- 2 years old (Bred); *1 Holstein Bull -- 2 years old; 6 Holstein Heifers -- 8 mos. old (Vaccinated)-; 2 Holstein Heifers -- 5 mos. old; 6 Holstein Heifer Calves. MACHINERY 2 AC Model HC Tractors; AC Tractor Cultivator; AC Mounted Corn Picker; JD Model A Tractor; McD Model B Tractor & Cultivator; JD 3-14 Plow; McD 2-16 Plow; McD 8 £t» Tractor Disc; 3 section Steel Drag; 2 section Wood Drag; 2 :SeCtion Spring Tooth Drag; JD 290 Corn Planter; McD Side 0$ce; 2 Rubber Tired Wagons & Racks; 30 ft. Elevator; NH Model 76 Baler; Gehl Hammer Mill; NI Manure Spreader; Hog W&terer; Steel Hog Feeder; 50 ft. Drive Belt; Surge Milker P&np & Pipeline; 3 DeLaval Milkers; Pails, Strainers, etc. 1947 Chevrolet % Ton Truck. 15 tons Mixed Hay. r>- USUAL THORP SALE TERMS ^ t NORMAN BROWN THORP SALES CORPORATION -- Clerk ^oodstock, 111. Phone 110 NOW! You'll Buy Ai Lower Prices CEILING TILE BIGGER SAVINGS ON BETTER FOOD V 12x12 Plain White 1 2 x 1 2 D e c o r a t i v e 1 2 V a < 1 2 x 1 2 A c c o u s t i c a l 1 4 V i c 12 x 12 Classic 17c 1 2 x 1 2 T e x t u r e d 23c 1 x 2 F u r r i n g S t r i p s 2 c L i n . F t . FREE USE OF STAPLER FOR INSTALLATION PLASTER BOARD 4x8 3/8- _ L44 41/ 4x10 %" -- 1.80 * ' ^ 4x12 3/a" -- 2.16 sq. ti. 4x8 W ~ 1.76 TI/ 4x10 Vi" -- 2.20 4x12 V2" -- 2.64 sq. ft PHILLIPINE MAHOGANY PANELS 4x8 VA" V-Groove ALUMINUM COMBINATION DOORS 1" Thick • Piano Hinge t Complete Hdwe. $29.50 I s PAINT with VELVET Velvet is so wondrously simple to use . . just stir, dip your brush or roller and start painting. Velvet flows on easily, dries in minutes with no painty odor . . . and brush or roller washes clean in water in seconds! 22 COLORS TO CHOOSE It's Washable, Too! " -'Itv WMt »«• "Mo* wrm •*"* SPRING GROVE CASH & CARRY LUMBER CO. EASY PAYMENT FINANCING SPRING GROVE, ILL. RICHMOND 2732 HAULING AT VERY REASONABLE RATES CHOICE MEATS CUT TO YOUR ORDER HICKEN BREAST U.S.- GOV'T. GRADED BONELESS RU ROAST CENTER CHOPS INCLUDED -- LOIN HALF PORK ROAST 45 lb. ARMOUR STAR -- U.S. GOVT. GRADED Round or Swiss STEAK 69 lb. CENTER CUT PORK CHOPS 55 lb. Y DELIGHT •• jk «• >/2 GALLON MILK 3 hr $r REGULAR 37c EACH Country Delight CHEESI SP 2 lb. loaf 59< Vets D0IFOI Red Label TUNA Thos. J. Webb COFFEE 13 for ?1 Zt size tin 5 for 2 lb. tin *1.43 f-^roduce EXTRA FANCY -- GRADE A D Anjou P 2 EXTRA FANCY -- CELLO SPINACH 5 USE OUR FREE CUSTOMER PARKING AREA MiW SUPER CERTIFIED Cor. Green & Elm Sts. Phone 80 McHenry. 111.