Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 24 Nov 1959, p. 8

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Pag© Eight THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER Tuesday, November 24, 1959* Lakeland Park THIRD QUARTER SCAVENGER DUES PAYABLE NOW Vlckey Bottari - iV. 5-2262 in bundles, as the papers have to be sorted according to size. If you still owe on'your third quarter scavenger dues, please gel il 111 as This is long overdue as it is right now. Gel in touch with .your respective block captains and get it taken care of. Women's Club Meeting; The regular monthly meeting of the Lakeland Park Women's Club will be held next Thursday, Dec. 3 at the Rizzo home, 332 Home avenue at 8:30 p.m. Snow Ball Dance Gosh, the time is sure flying fast and before you know it it will be Dec. 5. the night of the Snowball Dance start ills' at 9 p . m . a t i c a n / l > e g i o n hall, McHe?fry\ If ycrrThave not as yet purchased you tickets, do so real soon and you can do this by getting in touch with the following girls on the ticket committee: Flo Root EV. 5- 2693, Jessie Matthews, EV. 5- 6042, Ann WohnrOdc. EV. 5- 3088 and Donna Rode, EV. 0377. Luncheon % On Thursday afternoon I served luncheon to several girls here at my home (oh yes, jwith the help of Elaine Jett preparing some of it and having a grand time with the buttons on ni\ electric stove'. The ones attending - were Lee . Glorch, Jean Parisi. Fran Cina, , Marge Franklin. Esther CTygan. Rita Zimny. Ruth Roach, afid j Elaine Jett and Dorothy I-Ium- /phreys who joined us later for 1 coffee and cheese cake. Cub Scouts Den 4 -- Pack 361 I Last Thursday evening Pack : 361 held its regular monthly , pack meeting at which time I am real proud to say my son, ! Raymond, was awarded his wolf badge, a gbld arrow and ; his denners stripes, and these j were presented to him by his I father who is the Cub Master. Sympathy is extended to Ed. Glorch on the death of his Aunt Louise Moreau who died on Saturday, Nov. 14 at the Elmhurst hospital after quite an extended illness. She is survived by a sister (Ed's mother) Mrs. Decker of Villa Park and two nephews and one niece. Lynn. This is the first grand- ! child for Mr. and Mrs. William Bradley of Pleasant avenue, : and also the first great-grand - j child for Mr. and Mrs. Noel, ! Sr., who live on Meadow Lane. Happy Birthday ! To Dotty Becker who eele- 1 brated her birthday on Sunday, | Now 22 with several members ! of his family. Paper Drive The Viscounts from t h e American Legion will hold a paper drive on Saturday, Dec. 5. Save all your'old newspapers and then you can call Ernie Zimny at EV. 5-1104 and he will make arrangements to have them picked up. It is not necessary to have them tied up Mobile Library They are trying to start P mobile library which would come in here twice a'week and at this time you could pick out some very good reading material. Anyone interested in having something like this get started and would like more information can go to the Lakemoor fire department No. 3 on the second floor on Tuesday or Thursday (preferably on a Thursday) to sign the petition they have there and it will all be explained to you in further detail. Sympathy Holiday Entertaining SsS The traditional Twelve Days of Christmas, famed in song and story, have generally come to mean the six weeks at the end of each year. During these weeks friends are welcome to drop in casually, with or without a special invitation. Keep on hand several varieties of interesting snack treats and a generous jar of real mayonnaise. With these basic ingredients, plus a little of this or that to be found in the refrigerator or on the emergency shelf, it is easy tqgbrepare in minutes a colorful tray of pass-around goodies to go along with tea dtrtioffee, cold drinks or a sparkling punch bowl. Here are a few suggestions, and many others will come to mind. 1 Roquefort Cheese Balls Vi cuj*Jjpuribled Roquefort 1 tablespoon real mayonnaise^ crjeese Paprika 1 3-o&. package cream cheese Combine.all ingredients, except paprika. Shape into balls. Roll in paprika 'and chill. To serve, pierce with very thin pretzel sticks. Yields: 24 cheese balls. Mustard Franks Cut cocktail frankfurters into quarters lengthwise. Arrange into triangles on Shredded Wheat Wafers. Combine 2 tablespoons real mayonnaise with 1 tablespoon mustard-with-horseradish and 1 tablesopon pickle relish. Spoon into center of triangles. At serving time, broil until frankfurters are brown. Yield: 24 canapes. Egg-Mayonnaise Dip 3 hard-cooked eggs y4 teaspoon grated onion 1 3-oz. package cream cheese 1 teaspoon paprika cup real mayonnaise Salt and pepper to taste Press eggs through a fine sieve. Add remaining ingredients and blend well. Chill. Serve as a dip with potato snack crackers. cM edicafl irror :zy Spins • Alcohol and Blood Pressure (?• How do ballet dancers and ice skaters spin around without getting dizzy? A. Rotation dizziness is due to the displacement or rocking of fluid within the organ of balance, a structure located within the inner ear. Ballet dancers execute turns by reducing the time of fluid displacement to a minimum. They do this by whipping the head around in a start-stop fashion. They call it "spotting." Skaters spin much too fast to "spot" and apparently develop the ability to suppress or disregard disturbances set up within the balance organ. Doctors have studied the reaction of dancers and skaters to spinning in investigating certain diseases of the middle car which cause dizziness. 0. Should a person with high blood pressure drink whiskey, trine or beer?--Just a reader. A. rson who has high blood pi. j would do well-to live nodei ately in all things. What we eaj^ and. djrink can affect the Health Kmmitdqe .,/"'////• Teen Club Dance The 'Teen club will hold a dance on Dec. 18 at the Amer- :can Legion Hall in McHenry starting at 7 p.m. and ending it 12 pm. The dance will be properly chaperoned by adults. A1 'teen-agers are invited to attend. Further information on the pickets will be forthcoming in fufbre issues of the paper. 1 Return From Vacation Joan and Bill Krater and their two children, Billy and Dianne, returned Friday morning from their Caribbean cruise where they spent three weeks and hearing parts of it told by Joan it sounded like they had one, of the best vacations ever. HOLD FALL DAIRY SHOW, LIVE STOCK EXPOSITION SOON Baby Girl , Mr. .^nd Mrs..G. Montgomery (the former Lynn Bradley > are the proud parents of a baby girl born Nov. 1 in the Woodstock hospital. The little miss tipped the scale at 6 lbs. 2 ozs., and has been named Janet BEETLE THREAT The Japanese beetle has infested 3,100 acres of land in Mattoon and 2,900 acres in Joliet. The pest is a serious threat to all agricultural and horticultural p'ants and crops. Control operations were to get 'underway immediately, according to Stillman J. Stanard, state director of agriculture. The battle of the beetle consists of treating the soil with Heptachlor granules prepared especially for the purpose, Stanard said, and is applied with lowflying. multi-engine aitp«ane The insecticide is harmless to | humans and animals. blood pressure. A moderate amount of alcohol can increase the blood pressure, regardless of, whether the alcohol is in the form of whiskey, wine or beer. In * many cases of high blood pressure the doctor will prescribe a lowsalt (sodium) diet. Since beer contains some sodium, its consumption would add to the body the very substance which the doctor is trying to reduce. Safeguarding the potency of certain biologicals, antibiotics, insulin and other drugs requires that they be kept under correct temperature control. To provide this essential safeguard, a glistening electric refrigerator is an important part of our prescription room equipment. DRUG STORE GREEN ST. McHENRY, ILL. By Chic Young ( Two of the foremost livestock events in the United States will be combined into one huge exhibition by merger of the International Dairy Show with the sixtieth annual International Live Stock Exposition. Each ranks at the top in its field, one as a continental showing of the dairy breeds and the other the world's leading exposition of the meatmaking breeds of farm animals. The merger brings the five breeds of dairy cattle -- Ayrshires, Brown Swiss, Guernseys, Holsteins and Jerseys -- into the competitions of the International Live Stock Exposition the first time in its sixty years history. The combined exposition will be held here in the International Amphitheatre Nov. 27 to Dec. 5. This year's Exposition 'takes' on added international pdlor with the entry of Canada^ top dairy animals, Us ytoeli '"as beef cattle, sheep andi, horses. The management reports $130,000 offered in cash prizes in the competitions of 39 breeds of fanm animals that the show will feature this year. Save More Shop at Home ED'S HAL RENTS Always First For The Holiday Feast 6 to 8 lb 8 to 12 lb 12 to 16 lb Blondie DAG WOOD, WAKE UP/ ARE you POSITIVE you PUT CHRISTMAS SEALS ON ALL THOSE LETTERS N/0U MAILED? O SEgZEOn Floor Sanders to Rotary Tillers EVergreen 5-4123 Help Fight TB / 5 '.:<3 _ ' > i959 £ttRiSTMA$ I Greetings ihiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii CREED CAHILL With over 40 years' experience in job printing gives each order prompt, careful attention. Roast turkey for holiday dinners is traditional. The fragrance of the succulent bird with spicy stuffing never fails to put-the appetite of friends and loved ones in a speciaf whirl. Platter garnish is appropriately simple . . . spiced whole pears and salad greens complement the turkey in color, texture and flavor. With tQday's high quality bird grown especially for flavor, tenderness, juiciness and meatiness, even the inexperienced can be assured excellent results if these easy steps are followed.' If the turkey purchased carries handling and cooking information on the wrapper or insert sheet, follow those instructions. To Roast Turkey Choose a shallow open pan which allows the heat to circulate around the bird, roasting it evenly. A rack at least */2-inch high raises the bird off the bottom of the pan, keeping it out of the juices. 1. Have bird completely clean, inside and out. Rinse with cold water. Pat dry. (Turkeys may be roasted unstufifed or stuffed.) 2. Turn on oven at 325°F to preheat. 3. Rub cavity of bird lightly with salt. Omit salting if turkey is stuffed. 4. Fill wishbone area (neck) with stuffing, if used. 5. Fasten neck skin to back with skewer. 6. Stuff cavity lightly, if stuffing is used. 7. Push drumsticks under band of skin at tail; or tie them to tail. 8. Brush skin with fat. 9. Place on rack in roasting pan and place in preheated slow oven. Do not sear, add water, or cover. 10. If desired, baste or brush occasionally with pan drippings, fat or oil - especially any dry areas. When turkey is % done, cut trussing cord'or bridge of skin at drumsticks. Roast until tender. Turkey is done when meat at thickest part of drumstick feels very soft when pressed between protected fingers. This timetable is a guide to the approximate total time for stuffed turkeys. If turkey is not stuffed, allow l/2 to 1 hour less total roasting time depending upon size. Always complete roasting in one continuous cooking period. TIMETABLE -- 325°F (slow) Oven 3»/a to 4 hours 16 to 20 lb 5V2 to 7 hours 4 to 4Y2 hours 20 to 24 lb 7 to 8V2 hours 4l/i to 5V2 hours ELECTRONICS TRAINING IN AIR FORCE AVAILABLE li * Electronics training in the Air Force is now available fot qualified men from the Mc* Henry area, according to Tech<« nical Sgt. Morris L. Raines, AcS cal recruiter. He said qualifica.- tions for this field are determined by aptitude testing prio£ 1 to enlistment. £ T h e e l e c t r o n i c s f i e l d in* eludes: Radio 'and radar syd| tems; aircraft electronic navip gation equipment; guided mis* sile systems; missile test equips m e n t specialist; armament systems maintenance and gun^ ner; atomic weapons, and mety? other electronic specialists. ;* A course at ^ a technical school in this field usually re* quires from twenty-four t<| «ixty weeks training depending ~>n the complexity of the jolf 'ieM. * Further information car obtained by contacting SirtJ Raines at the city hah m Henry on the first Wednesd-i^ of each month between fe; iou^s of 1 and 3 p m„ or by writing to the Air Force Re-' cruiting Office, 8 S. Spring St.,; Elgin, Illinois. Some people prefer to be counted out when the time' comes to give an accounting. McHenry State Bank Phone EV 5-1040 THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER dquarterA ^~or QUALITY PRINTING ince 1875 . TICKETS # FOLDERS . PAMPHLETS # POSTERS . ENVELOPES . LETTERHEADS . BUSINESS CARDS . BUSINESS FORMS .BOOKLETS Ivy Trimness at its Best! There's nothing smarter than this Ivy style suit. And there's nothing finer than the Curlee line. We have just received a wide range of exciting new patterns. And the fabrics are fabulous Come in and see for yourself. Curlee Suits S41S0 to S65 McGee's store for men I 117 S. Green St. Phone EV 5-0047 v McHenry, HJ. I Open Daily 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. - Fridays 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. ! Sundays 9 a.m. 'til 12 Noon K, USE THE FREE GREEN STREET PARKING AREA I IHIIIIIIIilillilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllilllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllliiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiii COMPUTE FMflUI AVAILABLE TO FILL ALL Y0UI PRINTING NE ^ and (llconomu 102 North Green Street McHEMRY, ILLINOIS Phone EW<8B*qreen I <

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