Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 24 Mar 1960, p. 12

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A Pag# Twelve THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER Thursday, March 24, I960 Ringwood ENTERTAIN CLUB AT LUNCHEON IN SEBASTIAN HOME Baby Shepard Mrs. Pete Sebastian ehtertained her '500' club at her home Wednesday. A one o'clock dessert luncheon was served. High score went to' Mrs. E. E. Whiting and low to Mrs. Oscar Berg. Cancer Clinic Postponed The "Ladies Only Cancer Clinic" for all women in the area has been postponed until March 30 due to the weather. Rnmmage Sale Don't forget the rummage sale March 25 and 26. Church News , M.Y.F. ' 1 All'^teenagers in the area were invited to attend the Sentor: High M.Y.F. meeting at '^u™"Fri<tey. <4iurch Sunday evening. Their,h meeting included recreation, discussion, worship and refreshments in fellowship. James Gillette came home Sunday after a week of observation and testing at Waukegan St. Theresa's hospital. Study Course The next W.S.C.S course starts in anot weeks on April 4 with Clara Cristy. tudy two Mrs. Festival of Faith On next Sunday afternoon at 3 p.m. in the Woodstock high school, we are all invited and urged "to be present for the Mass Protestant worship service. Dr. Carl Winters, of Oak Park, world traveller, will speak to us: "A King With Three Kingdoms." Attends Missionary Tom- Mi ss Pat Hogan with sixty senior high girls attended a Rock ftiver Conference Missionary tour sponsored by the W.S.C.S. over the weekend. They went to the Chicago temple, then to Newberry Center, then to Marcey Center and had lunch. From there they went on a tour of Wesley hospital then to Esther Hall and had dinner at Kendal college. In the evening they were at Garrett biblical institute with some foreign students. They spent the night at the dormitory at Northwestern university. At 11 a.m. Sunday they attended church service at the Chicago Temple, then they had dinner at 12 o'clock at the temple. Births A son was bom to Mr. and Mrs. Larry Beaman on Tuesday, March 15. He weighed'8 lbs., 7 ozs. and has been named Daniel Leon. They have a daughter, Debbie. The Beamans formerly of Ringwood are now in Grand Rapids, Mich., where Mr. Beaman is attending school at the Grand Rapids school of the Bible and Music. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Bass have a new daughter, Susan Arleen, born March 5. This is their- second daughter. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ross • Bass of Nokomis and Mr. and Mrs. Tanguay of DesPlaines. guests Tuesday of Mrs. Ruby Shepard. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kunz and son, Roger, were dinner guests in the Robert Bishop home in Chicago, Monday evening. Miss Mae Wiedrich, Mrs. Lester Carr and Miss Lona Brever attended the card party at Spring Grove Tuesday. Mrs. Earl Kunz was a luncheon guest of Ann Haerle at Fox Lake, Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Marcirikus of Wauk'egan, Mrs. Mike Freund and Mrs. Radar of McHenry were callers in the Dr. Hepburn home Friday. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Evanson of Watson, Minn., spent Tuesday and Wednesday in the William Cruickshank home. Miss Nancy Ainger and James Hilton of Hebron spent Friday evening with her grandmother, Mrs. Ruby Shepard.. Mr. and Mi's. Kenneth Cristy returned home Friday from a month's vacation, in Arizona. Mr. and . Mrs. Johnson of DesPlaines called on Dr. and Bud Winters is on a business trip to Florida. Mrs, Ruby Shepard spent Sunday with her daughter and faimily. the Alan Aingers, at Hebron. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Thompson and son, Bobby, were Sunday dinner guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Hogan. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd"3fardley and daughter. Linda; of Woodstock spent Sunday in the Fred Bowman home. Mrs. Millie Rush of Richmond spent the weekend in the John Ehlert home. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cristy, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Cristy and Mrs.1' Gordon Fossum spent Sunday and Monday at New London, Wis., where they attended funeral services for Mrs. Gladys Cristy. On Monday Mrs. Leone Cristy and daughters, Pat and Nancy, and son, Jay, Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. William Cristy also attended funeral services. Webster Blackman and sons of Richmond called on his parents. Dr. and Mrs. Hepburn Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Dean Ehlert ar)d family of Kenosha spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Ehlert. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Low andlton of McHenry, Mrs. Walter Wilcox of Woodstock and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Low and family spent Sunday in the Beatty-Low home and celebrated the eleventh birthday of Susan Low, Mr. and Mj*s. Charles Frey of Richmond were callers in the afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harrison and son. Loren, called on Mrs. Flora Harrison at RoundfLake, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Fioyd Howe of Crystal Lake were visitors in the Louis Hawley home Sunday afternoon. PINE SEEDLINGS AVAILABLE FOR REFORESTATION A good supply of red, white, and jack pine seedlings are ayailable from state forestry Division nurseries^for wildlife coyer restoration and reforestation. according to Glen D. Palmer, director of the Department of Conservation. Hardwood seedlings, black locust, cottonwood arid soft maple.are available, as is black walnut se^d. Although orders for seedling trees will be accepted by the Forestry Division until April 15. Palmer urges landowners to order promptly. An order of 500 trees is the minimum that will be accepted. Trees may be purchased for wildlife cover restoration, shelterbelt planting, Christmas tree planting or reforestation and must not be used for ornamental purposes or home windbreaks. Order blanks and price lists may be obtained from county Soil Conservation district offices or from county farm advisers. Privately owned tree planters are available in many sections of Illinois. Approximately 1,000 trees an hour can be planted with a tree planter. Pines grow into Christmas trees for additional income to land Owners, Palmer said. He added that a good, heavy stand of pines can be a life saver for wildlife in winter weather, when there is a large accumulation of snow. niiiuiniHiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiuiniiiiiiiiiiimnniiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiinHiNiiiiniiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiHiHiiiniii^ VILLA NURSING HOME | ON PISTAKEE BAT NEAR McHENRY | 2= s Home for fhe Aged 1 SENILE BED PATIENTS Phone EVergreen 5-0461 = _ fi SMmiHHIIIIHIIIIIIHHIIHIIIIIIIIHIHIIIIIIUHHIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIinilHIIIIHIIIIHIIIimHHilllllHHIIIHHIHWtll^ This Business - Farming Facts resulting from years of experimental research by nutritional experts and livestock are passed on to you as feeders. Crops from soils that received heavy treatments of rogen fertilizer during q_«, growing season may cause nitrate poisoning when fed to livestock. Cattle and sheep are more susceptible to nitrate poisoning than other farm animals. Dairymen should use cornstalks only as > an emergency feed when other roughages are not available. They are not a substitute for . goOd-quailty roughages. Thirty years ago U.S. ranchers and farmers produced only enough cattle to provide 50 lbs. of beef per person in a year -rless than a pound a week.< There was much talk then about over production. Now U.S. cattlemen supply enough beef to provide 80-Ibs. per person. This amount is 60 per cent morp than in 1929. By increasing crop-producing efficiency through better management and the use of recommended amounts of fertilizer a farmer can cut down his cash crop acreage and still boost his net profits. There is hardly an expensive food that cannot be matched in nutritional value by an inexpensive one, say food specialists. Nu t r i t i o n authorities •agree that no one food is essential to health. The screwworm fly extends its range through livestock shipments as far north as the Dakotas, but the pest overwinters only in relatively warm areas. West Virginia has become the twenty-second state to achieve certification as modified- certified brucellosis free. It is the seventh state so certified in 1959. USDA received nearly 103,- 000 applications to place a total of 9;6 million acres in the Soil Bank Conservation Reserve beginning in 1960 -- almost twice the national acreage goal. Late grazing,' plus a ' hard winter, can knock the legume plants out of pasture stands. Alfalfa plants need to store up food reserves for winter survival. Dairy foods last year provided the nation with 77 per cent of Its calcium, 10 per cent of vitamin A, and 48 per cent of the riboflavin, while costing the homemaker only 20 per cent of her food dollar. For highest livestock profits, provide adequate protection of animals from weather extremes during shipment. Be sure of proper bedding and weatherstrip trucks and Milroad cars. Some breeds of sheep breed readily at any time of the year, while other breed only seasonally. Already keen . competition for land and water for agricultural, industrial, farm and city, recreation and other uses will become greater, not less, pointing up the need for continued emphasis of scientifically planned soil and water conservation programs. Grinding low-quality hay or other poor roughages is not recommended for two reasons, University of Kentucky specialists report: (1) Low quality hay or roughages contain very little net energy per pound; grinding doesn't increase (actually it decreases) the energy value to the cow; and (2) It is unpalatable. Cows don't like low-quality hay or roughages in the ground form well enough to eat sufficient amounts to meet energy requirements for high milk production. VOTE FOB 0EUGENE A, HECKATHORNE For. CORONER of McHenry County ASK FOR A - l-i DEMOCRATIC BALLOT PRIMARY ELECTION APRIL 12, 1960 Your Vote Will Be Appreciated It costs $5 to $10 per ton to grind such low quality roughages, says the University, and no increase in energy or nutrient value is obtained. Furthermore, feeding nearly all the roughage in the ground form may Cause fat tests of .the milk to drop to half the normal levels. "A cow needs a certain amount of energy to -maintain herself and produce milk up to her inherited ability. "Heavy reliance on poor roughage, whether fed in the long form or ground, will almost certainly result in the cow's producing less milk than she is capable of producing," these specialists caution. , Summing up research records for the past eight years for about-1,000 pigs of several breeds -and crosses, the North- Dakota Agricultural college concludes that pelleted feed has a substantial advantage when compared with rations in meal form. In the comparisons of pellets with meal rations, the pigs on pellets gained 8 per cent faster than those on meal rations. Calling attention to this research, it is pointed out that this advantage in favor of pellets is slight^3 less than that reported previously for barley rations. It is explained by the fact that the eight-year summary includes not only barley and oat rations, which respond very favorably i;o pelleting, but also rations based on corn and hulled oats as the main grains which show, little or no advantage to pelleting. This research has shown that •the value of pelleting is in proportion to the fiber content of the grains used. With low fiber rations there is little advantage, but the advantage goes up as the amoiint of fiber in the ration is increased. Pigs on pellets required about 16 per cent less feed per pound of grain. Pelleted barley in this area has done a good job in reducing feed costs per pound of gain for hog producers, according to these tests. Students. Invited To Attend Guest Day Your Income Tax Both junior and senior students in McHenry county high schools are invited to attend the University of Illinois college of agriculture student guest day on Saturday, April 2. Farm Adviser Ralph Burnett, says this Guest Day is planned for students interested in attending the college of agriculture. The Greeks had a word for it -- "phthisis". Modern doctors call it tuberculosis. It's the same chronic, debilitating disease that strikes 100,000 Americans a year. SPRING SPECIAL! ALUMINUM DOORS AND WINDOWS 1" Aluminum Doors S0050 (Installed) 3-Track Aluminum $1095 Windows Ifc WM. W. ALBERT «a. PHONE EV 5-0901 Rt. 8, Box 282 McHenry, 111. - The Internal Revenue Service is tightening its controls on the reporting of dividends and interest income by taxpayers, Harold R. All, Chicago district director, said this week. He pointed out that all payers of $10 or more in dividents to an individual during a year are required to report such payment to the Internal Revenue Service on Form 1099. Payers of $600 or more of interest also must/ report such payments. Mr. All announced that the Internal Revenue Service is now engaged in a program of matching the Forms 1099 to the taxpayer's individual return to see if the taxpayer has reported all dividends and interest he received. "The Internal Revenue Service is striving to reduce the estimated five billion dollars of. unreported income from dividends and interest," said Mr. All. m f •HE FREE FREE FREE FREE For a limited time only, w® are offering FREE, a private lesson on the organ, piano or accordian. Don't miss this golden opportunity to leam M you are musically inclined. Just clip out this ad and bring it to the Music Manor, and wt shall set up an appointment for you. Children must be accompanied by a parent. No obligation -- Beginners and advanced students welcome. 2 blocks East of UM bfidf* on Route 120 GET THE JUMP OK SPUING!! Let Us Recondition Your Power'Rotary Lawn Mower Special Price of ^6^ Includes: • New spark plug • New gasoline tube • Thorough cleaning • Reel type mowers ($10.00) Broken parts replaced upon request, at list price Call EV 5-2916 United Rent-CUt*. Cleanout of carbon deposits Lubrication of all moving parts Oil Change Cutter blade sharpened and balanced Ml Main St. Open Daily 8 to 6 -- Wednesday and Sunday 8 to 12 Pickup and Delivery -- Small Extra Charge McHenry Birthday Dinner Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Oxtoby entertained Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Oxtoby. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Oxtoby and family and Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Thomas and family of Spring Grove at dinner Sunday in honor of the birthday of their father, Arthur Oxtoby. • Junior Police All young men and boys who would be interested in joining a junior police group please contact Sigurd Jacobsen. Community Club The Community club will meet at the school house Mon day evening, March 28. They will hold their annual cake walk that night. Come out and enjoy the evening. Personals Mrs. Charles Anderson and daughter, Tena, were luncheon I'M SO GLAD TO OCT OUT OP DRAB COLORS INTO THE NEW SPRING SPRING DRUGS MAKt SPRING ClOTHl* EVEN MORE SECOMlNG/, © LOCAL (AADtMARKb. Inc. THOSE WERE THE DAYS By ART BEEMAWT NOTHING BUT THE TRimr~ By^Arnold] LONG U SHORT AkE, AND YOU'LL NEVER BE ANY PZSTTIBRi- SO STOP WASTING YOUR TIME / WANT JUST, RIGHT/ When the bodtf of a drowned girl could not be located in the Alleqhamf River, a LOAF of BREAD with 3 CANDLE Stuck in the top was set afloat... On tue spot where THE BREAD TILTED OVER, a hook W3S lowered-BODY WAS FOUND J/ (MTSBUFC&H ,PV, MAY 5,1952) HOSSFACE HANK By FRANK THOMAS a U IPOR. Mfre SAKE I . 01 ON'T YOU SEE THAT MUD HOLE? HERE COMES THAT VI LET'S DANCE HALL HUSSY,) CROSS DIAMOND LU' rfs* THE STREET I YES-THEN \NB WON TO BRUSH AGAINST HER YOuRE A SWEET CHILD TO STOP AND HELP US> NOR SMELL THAT d BRA"2BN PERFUME SHE USES! OH..NO, WE DIDN'T, OIAMONO LU ! -I ,o9 NewViall, Iowa, MOVING ~and taking alonq his THRBB 38-y<&ar old MAPLE TREES with Wm // bob Christopher o* Chicaqo, Illinois WENT AROUND THE WORLD IN SO DAYS -- AND SPENT ONLY $80.!Z SONNY SOUTH 7 By COURTNEY ALDERSON THAT NEW CHICKEN READV T' LAV - AH "THINK AH'LL PLAN ATRICK ON MERAH'LL PUT THIS DOORKNOB IN HER NEST INSTEAD OF rLUCk. CLUCK. m , RURAE DELIVERY* By AL SMITH ye 6ADS, WHY DID I MARRy JULIET? THE GIRL HE LOVED JILTED HIM AT THE ALTAR/ JULIET, OH, JULIET, WHERE ART THOU? I LOVE SBTL.MV JULIET/ I WHY DID VOLFL LEAVE /WE? OH, WHV DLD SOU LEAVE ME FOR ANOTHER MV JULIET P SEE THAT GUV OVER THERE? TEN VEARS AGO HE WENT OFF THE BEAM AND THEY HAD TO PUT HIM AWAY./ WHY? YOO (JAoeUT A P1VE POUND BASS THAT VOU LEPT IN THE LAKE ALL NIGHT TO KEEP PRESRT AND SOME ANIMAL ENJOYED A MID NIGHT SNACK i

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