Thursday. September 22, 1960 THE McHENBY PliAINDEALER Board Briefs At a meeting of High School Board," No. 156, held Tuesday e\«uing of this week, the teaching contract of Miss Helen Sanders was approved. She will replace Miss Charlerje Glabowicz, who resigned, and will teach English. The board approved a bid of Cyclone Fence Co. to put up backstops on the baseball- diamonds on McCracken field*; 4ble mbers established a policy on attendance at educational meetings. The varsity coach and one assistant will be permitted to attend one educational meeting annually. DISCOVER NEW HIGH SUGAR SWEET CORN An accidental discovery by a University of Illinois plant scientist has led to the development of a new "super sugary" sweet corn. It could be a dream come true for the corn-on-thecob connoisseur. Although the new corn lookp like any other sweet cora growing /in the field, it has 4 And another important quality s«§ar content about twice a$ high as that of ordinary corn.' that gives this corn great future prospects is its ability to hold this sugar without loss. Ordinary sweet corn carries about 20 percent sugar, but much of it changes to starch shortly after harvest unless the corn is cooled quickly and kept refrigerated. That's why l^ae gardeners w ho pick their corn and put it into boiling w a t e r i m m e d i a t e l y u s u a l l y have the best tasting corn on their tables. £itxt this new "super sugary" com' contains about 45 percent sugar. Even after 48 hours at rqom temperature, it still retains 40 percent sugar. Ordinary sweet corn would haVe ojj^v one-fourth this much. SERVICE NEWS William J. Martinec, -radioman seaman apprentice, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Martinec of Route 5, Mc- Henry, returned to Norfolk, Va., Sept. 1, aboard the destroyer USS Du Pont after a seven-month cruise with the Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean. During the cruise the Du Pont participated in NATO and U.S. air defense and antisubmarine warfare exercises. As a result of her performance, the de&troyer received awards for excellence in gunnery, engineering, "and anti-submarine warfare. The Du Pont visited ports in Italy, Greece, France &nd Spain. McHenry Plaindeale Phone EVergreen j-0170 5-0171 Published every ThurwJay at McHenry, 111., by the McHenry Publishing Company, Inc. l l f r T I O N A l EDITORIAL >S^C0TI0N 'N'lUl ini mi \ flssociflTion / yk, BURFEINDT, Publisher A DELE FROEHLICH, Edito SUBSCRIPTION RATE In McHenry County 1 Year $3.5C 6 Month? $2.00 3 Months $1.2? Outside McHenry Conntv 1 Year $4.00 6' Montns $2.25 3 Months $1.50 Jntered as second-class mat at the post office at Mclenry, Illinois, under the act »f May 8. 1879. THE FASHION FOR FALL! PRINCE MATCHABELLI'S COLOG N E *2" plot tax Golden Autumn...fragrance as crisp and refreshing as Autumn Itself...you'll love the exciting scent and the packaging so reminiscent of Fall--flame colored waves silhouetted against white. Also in Cofognt Spray Mitt, Bubbling Bath Oil, .. $20® Dulling Powder, $2*0 Skin Per/urn*, $20® BOLGER'S S. Green St. EV 5-4500 DENNIS HANSEN Airman Dennis J. Hansen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lenard K. Hansen of 153 Mill Lane, McHenry, has completed his initial course of Air Force basic military training at Lackland AFB, Texas. He has been selected to attend the technical course for radio and radar maintenance at Keesler AFB, Miss. Airman Hansen is a graduate of McHenry high school. PISTAKEE HILLS GIRL ENTERS CONVENT LIFE A McHenry resident and June graduate of Nazareth academy, LaGrange Park, entered the Sisters of St. Joseph as a postulant last week. She is Georgianne Staeben, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sarran Staeben, Rt. 7, Memory Trail, Pistakee Hills. There are thirteen girls in the postulant class; nine are graduates of Nazareth acad- ^.^^t^ugf.^t, Jpseph high school in LaGrange Park. The postulancy is the first year of a sister's religious life. It consists of a year of collegiate study at the college department, located on the seventy- four acre wooded campus at Our Lady of Bethlehem m o t h e r h o u s e i n L a G r a n g e Park. Scientists estimate that a ton of water is needed to prod u c e t w o p o u n d s o f t r e e growth. Page Five How Can I ? Q. How can I give the rungs or steps on my ladder a slip-proof treatment? A. Apply some shellac or varnish to these steps, allow to dry to the sticky or tacky stage, then sprinkle over them with coarse sand or sawdust, and let harden before using the ladder again. This treatment should insure you against slipping. Q. How can I remedy a sink-drain that has become stopped up with grease? A. Put one cup of table salt and one cup of baking soda into the drain, then ppur in a kettleful of boiling hot water. .Usually, this dissolves the g r e a s e accumulation very quickly. -- • Q. What is the best way of laundering corduroy garments? A. You should hang them on the line soaking wet so that they' will drip-dry. This eliminates ironing, and also insures their nap staying fluffed out. Q. Hbw can I make a lessmessy and dirty job of cleaning out my fireplace? A. If you'll keep a piece of newspaper burning in one corner of the fireplace while you're removing the ashes, the cloud of dust you raise will then be drawn up the chimney in the draft created by the flames, instead of blown all over the room. Q. How can I "revitalize" my tape measure, which has become too limp for easy use? A. Place the tape between two sheets of waxed paper and press it with a moderately hot iron. The wax from the paper will provide just the right amount of stiffening. Q. Can you suegest any use for fermented jellies? A. Try cooking them with a little sugar and water, adding cornstarch for thickening, and then using them for hot dessert sauces. Q. How can I improvise some finger paint for my children? A. Boil some laundry starch and a few soap chips to a paste, tint with some food coloring, and add a small amount of glycerin to keep the mixture moist. Place each color in a bowl or dish and, of course, be sure the paint has cooled before giving it to the children to use. Q. My oven doesn't seem to turn out baking, powder biscuits with the golden brown top I like. Is there anything I can- do about this? A. Try adding a teaspoonful of sugar to the dry ingredients the next time you make these biscuits. When baked, they should have a lovely color. Q. What can I do, if an envelope refuses to seal tightly? A. Use a bit of colorless fingernail polish as glue for your envelope. And incidentally, a letter sealed with polish cannot be steamed open. OBITUARIES CARL HOFFMANN Services were held Thursday in Chicago for Carl Hoffmann, 67, of rural McHenry Who died in Condell hospital, Libertyvilie, on Sept. '12. Burial was in Acacia Park. He is survived by his widow, Mary; two daughters, Doris Fischer and Evelyn Mahlke: four grandchildren and a sister, Frieda Klotter. MRS. CLYDE MAGNESEN Death came to Mrs. Clyde (Marian Jackie) Magnesen, 51, at her home at ' 5§ Orchard Beach, McHenry, Saturday, Sept. 17, at 5 p.m. following an illness of two years. Mrs. Magnesen was bom Nov. 29, 1908, iW Green Bay, Wis. She was the secretarytreasurer of' the Certified Personal System, an Employment agency, in Chicago. She had been a resident of McHenry for the past five years. Besides "her husband, Clyde R., she is survived by three brothers and four sisters. She was a member of St. Mary's Catholic church. The body rested at the Peter M. Justen and Son funeral home Sunday from 2 to 6 p.m., when it was removed to De- Pere, Wis., where services were held Tuesday morning at 10 a.m. at St. Francis Catholic church, with interment in Mt. Olivet cemetery in that city. Read the WANT ADS Change of Address Of JAMES M. MclNTEE Aliorney-Al-Law New Address 105 West Elm Street Phone EV 5-2440 State Princess Candidates For the first time in three years, McHenry county failed to win the state dairy princess contest, but her representative, pretty Jeanette Seaman of Richmond, shown at left in front row above, was one of the. most attractive candidates in the contest. Winner was Christine Harrison of Princeville, Shown in front, center, with crown. She was crowned by the 1959 princess, Dorothy Olbrich of Harvard. Miss Mary Ann Granger of» McHenry was the 1958 state winner. Alternates were Jean Cohenour of Sterling, to the right of Miss Seaman, and Beverly Ann Buzzard of Quincy, shown alone in center of top row. POPULATION TRENDS FAVOR BIG CITY AREAS Since 1960, fifty-one Illinois counties have dropped in population while the other fiftyone have gained. The shift has been from farm to city, according to University of Illinois rural sociologist: C. L. Folse, who cites preliminary- figures from the 1960 census. The state's largest cities and surrounding counties have l-eceived 96 percent of the total population increase. Illinois population is now estimated over 10 million, says Folse. That's a 15 percent gain from 1950. Here are the counties that accounted for most of the increase: Champaign, Cook, Du- Pace, Kane, Lake, LaSalle, Macon, Madison, Peoria, Rock Island, St. Clair, Sangamon, Tazewell, Will and Winnebago. Folse believes that the continued shift from rural to urban poses problems in both types of communities. In general, the losses have been determined by the extent to which communities depend on agriculture. A corresponding decline in number of farms and farmers has probably occurred in those communities, Folse thinks. As for the increases in the other, more urban half of the state, Folse cites two major reasons: Continued high birth rates all through the 1950's and a substantial migration into the state, particularly of negroes from the South. The ancestors of Lincoln came from HSngham, Norfolk County, England. Poison Control Center Report McHenry hospital has been officially designated as a poison control center by the Illinois Department of Health. Objective of the center is to help save lives through dissemination of data on safeguards against deaths due to accidental chemical poisoning and to treat cases which arise in this area. Readers are urged to study reports in this series. Report No. 1: 1. A total of 92 percent of all accidental chemical poisonings occur in children 5 years of age and under. 2. In 1955, 68 per cent of the accidental poisoning cases in New York City occurred in the one jto two-year age group. 3. At least 93 per cent of the time, an adult member of the family was at home when these accidents took place. In 76 per cent of the cases, it was a mother. ^ 4. More than 50 percent of accidental chemical poisonings in children result from common household products generally regarded as safe. Little children are insatiably curious; they pry and poke, taste and try anything they,, can find. And too many Of them all too frequently find and swallow too many thingfc that are poisonous. Here's a partial list of common household products that are most responsible for poisoning accidents and fatalities :; 1. Cosmetics, 2. Baby and regular aspirin, 3. Barbiturates, 4. Bleach, 5. Benzine and turpentine, 6. Rodenticides, t. Potassium permang a n a t e, 8. Pine oil disinfectants, 9. Sanitizing agents, 10. Cleaning agents, 11. Furniture polish and floor wax. 12. insecticides -- roach paste and moth balls. McHENRY BAKERY 124 S. Green St. Ph. EV 5-0190 OPEN MONDAY 6:00 A.M. CLOSED ON WEDNESDAYS OAK PARK HOTEL West Shore Pistakee Bay -- Open Year Round Phone McHenry EV 5-0176 Smorgasbord .... $1.50 Every Friday -- 5-10 P.M. TtiJikiM ,Ev«riL Sunday -- Noon - 7 P.M. Wednesdays . Charcoal Broiled Steaks $2.50 Charcoal Broiled Chicken $1.75 Daily Specials ... Pot Roast & Potato Pancakes (Complete Dinner) $2.50 Sea Food Platter $2.50 Lobster Tail - Shrimp - Perch French Fries - Cole Slaw -- Children's Portions Served -- STEAKS -- SHISHKABOB -- CHICKEN -- SEA FOOD -- BAKED HAM -- ROAST BEEF -- AT ALL TIMES -- LOOK -- Low - Low prices on Young, Tender Armour Star FRESH Lamb at its finest. Give your family a real treat. U.S. Gov't. Inspected Choice Fresh LEG Of LAMB 59 c lb. Lean Meaty Tasty LAMB PATTIES 2 Lbs. $100 LAMB Shoulder Rib LAMB CHOPS 59 Round Bone LAMB STEAKS tb LAMB CHOPS Extra Fancy -- Loin LAMB CHOPS 89- Always at your thrifty Certified Store -- Top quality foods at everyday low, low prices! Compare and SAVE! SPRY 5c Off Label Lb. Tin 69 Maxwell House INSTAHT COFFEE > Oz, Jar 6 0z* 69° SANKA 5jZ* 89* FRESH pbo5S2 NftJuw BIGGEST VALUES-Youx BEST BUYS U.S. Grade A No. 1 Red POTATOES 25 89« U.S. No. 1 Fancy CELLO ONIONS 3 "»• 15« Golden Yellow BANANAS 2 "»• 19c Country Delight Assorted COOKIES 4 ifc.„kp. $100 Campbell's TOMATO SOUP No: 1 Tin 10* Country Delight Dairy Fresh MILK 47* 1/2 GaL » Red Cross SPA6HETTI or MACARONI 2 7 °*- IQ< Pkgs. 19 N.B.C. Premium SALTINES 25* W?- Del Monte SWEET PEAS 2 £37' Starkist CHUNK TUNA 89c 1/2 Size Tin Reynolds Aluminum FOIL 3 H00 DEL MONTE TOMATO JUICE 29* Del Monte Halves or Sliced Y. C. PEACHES Raggedy Ann PINEAPPLE SPEARS 3 Z $1°° Raggedy Ann MIXED VEGETABLES 303 2^Tins2 9° 2Vi Size Tins 79 Del Monte Cream or Whole Kernel CORN 2 t" 35* T.V. SPECIAL Raggedy Ann SALAD DRESSW6 39c Qt- J31" OWNED AND OPERATED BY LOCAL FOLKS THE FRIENDLIEST FOOD STORE IN THE TOWNSHIP Use Our Free Customer Parking Area Or The New Free Green St. Parking Area Corners Green & Elm Sts. McHenry. M. i