Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 11 May 1961, p. 5

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Thursday, May 11, 1061 PERSONALS TUB Mc&ENRT PUUNDEALER '• Out of town folks here to attend the wake and funeral Of Mrs. Ernestine Schade, last . Week, included Mr. and Mrs. William B. Eaton of Princeton, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Gunderscn tWalworth, Wis., Mr. and rs. Ray KLassen of Maywood ..and Mrs. Ernestine Christian ©f Glen EUyn. »• John Bolger has returned to his work at Syracuse, N. Y., after spending a few days with his mother, Mrs. John Bolger. He came here to attend the wedding of Miss Kaaren Olsen and Charles Gies, on Saturday, Shere he served as an attendkt. Dr. and Mrs. C. W. Klontz spent a few days at Louisville, Ky., where they attended the Derby. Mesdames Francis Widhelm, Ann Rodenkirch, Evelyn Freund, Elizabeth Thompson, Bobby May, Helen Heuser, Irene Guffey, Rose Staines and Misses Judy Diedrich, Laura Weber and Bertilla Freund, r e p r e s e n t i n g t h e C a t h o l i c . Daughters of America, entertained the boys at Downey Wednesday evening. Mr. and -Mrs. Herbert Engdahl were weekend guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Engdahl, Jr., in Detroit, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Jolm Iandolo of Urbana called on her grandf jot her, Mrs. Kathryn Conway, aturday. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Koerner of Naperville, former Mc- Henry residents, called on old friends here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. William Sprouse and their guest, her sister, Mrs. Elsie Merservey, of Atlanta, Ga., were dinner guests in the Robert Thompson home Thursday evening. |pr. and Mrs. Sprouse are Spending a few weeks in Crystal Lake enroute to their home in Stanwood, Wash., from Florida, where they spent the winter. Mrs. Kathryn Conway was a Saturday visitor in the home of her daughter. Mrs. 'Gerald Winters, in Grayslake, where she attended First Communion services at St. Gilbert's church. 0er granddaughter, Terri Lee Winters, was one of the First Communicants. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Steber and son, Harry, of Milwaukee, were Sunday visitors in the Joseph Williams home. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Frost and Mrs. Louis Stoffel were guests in the home of the hitter's daughter, Mrs. Roland Etel&QSlJn, EJgfo Sunday, and ^w Suzanne Ekstrom crown the May Queen in services held at St. Mary's church that evening. Mrs. Joe May, daughter. r&fflenry Plaindeale* EV. 5-0170 or EV. 5-0171 102 N. Green St., McHenry, 111 ^Published every ThurvJay al ffcHenry, HI., by the McHenry Publishing Company, Inc. RATION Al EDITORIAL P0Q88 ISStCIITIII 111'WWtf W. BURFEINDT, Publisher A DELE FROEHLICH, Editoi SUBSCRIPTION RATE In McHenry County : 1 Year 9 $3.50 6 Months $2.00 j. 3 Months $1.25 w Outside McHenry County . - I Year $4.00 € Months $2.25 3 Months $1.58 Second Class Postage Paid at McHenry, Til. Lois, Mrs. Irene Guffey, Mrs. Joseph Glosson, Mrs. William Staines, Mrs. ,Fred Brenapfl and; Mrs. Dale Dixon accompanied by Mrs. Richard Sedar of Waukegan, attended a miscellaneous shower honoring Miss Patricia DeCicco of Scarsdale. N. Y., at the Elmer Smalfelt home in Kenosha, Wis., Sunday with Mrs. Joe May and Mrs. Ray Heniken, of Woodstock, as co-hostesses. Miss DeCicco, who will graduate from Madison University this year will be united in marriage with James Smalfelt, son of the Elmer Smalfelts, in Scarsdale, N. Y. on June 10 and they will make their home in Winston, N. C., where he is employed as an electrical engineer. Mesdames Mabel Johnson, Beatrice Peterson, Susan Olsen and Agnes Wissell of Fox- River Valley Camp, R.N.A. and Mesdames Ethel Holly, Alpha Pedersen and Kathryn Worts, of Riverview camp attended the, May meeting and luncheon of the McHenry County Past Oracles club held at the Odd Fellows hall in Harvard Tuesday of last week. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thompson spent the weekend at S t a r v e d Rock L o d g e , a t Starved Rock State Park. Mrs. Earl Seepe of Mundelein called on McHenry friends Monday. Mrs. James Cornue of Hebron was a guest of Mrs. William Wissell Monday. Mrs. Catherine Tillman has returned to McHenry after a few weeks visit with relatives in Wisconsin. Mr. and Mi's. Louis Girding and children, Karen, Joan, Barbara, and Mike of Glandorf, Ohio, were weekend visitors of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Blake. Other guests on-{Sunday were the John Wolowic family of Druee Lake. Mrs. Mary Elverman of Kenosha, Wis., and three daughters, Mrs. Gerald Siebert, of Salem, Wis., Mrs. Larry Selear of Kenosha and Mrs. Roman Terry of Brighton, Wis., visited in the home of the former's sister, Mrs. Louis Althoff, Wednesday. The William Morgan family of Elkhorn, Wis., spent a recent lay with Mrs. Morgan's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Miller. While here Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Morgan called on relatives in Crystal Lake. The first known cook book in the U.S. was printed in 1796 in Hartford, Conn. Americans spend about $375 million .yearly on disposable paper items--towels, hankies, plates, etc. QUALIFICATIONS FOR NEW tSRAIN , PROGRAM LISTED Some details of the new feed grain farm program are still being worked out, but the gen-' eral rules are set. The program is voluntary. It applies only to 1961 crops of field corn and grain sorghum. PARTICIPATION. In order to participate in the program a corn grower will reduce his 1961 acreage 20 percent (or more if he chooses) below his base acreage (which is the average acreage grown in the past two years). The acreage thus diverted from corn must be used for soil conserving purposes. It cannot be harvested or pastured, and it must be in addition to the average acreage used for soil conservation in the pest two years. BENEFITS. A participating corn grower will be eligible for a price support loan at $1.20 a bushel (national average) on the normal production of the acres planted to corn. In addition he will receive a government payment equal to the support price times 50 percent of the normal production of the diverted a£re$. One-half of this payment may be paid as soon as possible after the farmer signs up, and the other half after compliance is checked. Acreage bases and normal production for each farm are being computed by the county ASC committees. When these calculations are com p 1 e t e d each farmer will be informed by mail. ADDITIONAL DIVERSION. A farmer who has a corn base of more than 100 acres can di vert up to 40 percent of it to conservation uses. For the first 20 percent diverted, his payment will be the support price times 50 percent of the nonnal production of these acres. But for the additional acres diverted he will be paid the support rate times 60 percent of the normal production of the land The situations for farmers who have corn bases of less than 100 acres are not quite so simple. They can receive payments for diverting as much as 20 percent of their bases plus 20 acres. For the first 20 percent diverted the payment is the price support rate times the regular 50 percent of normal production of the diverted acres. For the second 20 percent the payment will be figured on 60 percent of normal production. But for additional acres over 40 percent of the base, the payment will be at the regular rate of 50 percent of normal produc tion times the support level. BEHIND EVERY SAVINGS ACCOUNT -SAFETY- • Assets insured up to $10,000.00 • Strong Reserves over $1,000,000.00 • Proven Performance -- for over 30 years • Resources over $13,000,000.00 • Investment -- Prime First Mortgage Loans Currctiff Dividend R®f@ 4% Plus l/2% Extra Per Annum AND LOm ASSOCIATE©!! JOrdaa 8-7*58 MARENGO. ILL! 102 N. State St. A Mutual Company Serving Northern UlWlEcib Since 1124 Total Assets Over $13,000,060.00 t^/lnnouncing... WORLD'S NEWEST SPORTS COUPE I Slide inside this fiery new glamor coupe! Lean back in comfortable bucket seats--standard at no extra costI Feel the thrill of its new Rockette 185 h.p. Engine . .. four barrel carburetor, dual outlet exhausts, high-torque rear axle I You can be among the first to own Oldsmobile's action-packed Cutlass • . . newest and sportiest of the smaller cars! YOU* OLDSMOBILI QUALITY DBALBRIR. J. OVEETON MOTOR SALES, 1109 N. Front Street •<SK3§3 tOOt YOCa E323V»M . . . Take far example, a farm with, a corn base of 80 acres. This farm can qualify for price support by diverting only 20 percent, or 16 acres. But if the fanner wishes to do so, he can divert an additional 20 acres, or 36 acres in all. In this case he will be paid at the 50 peicent rate on the first 20 percent 16 acres), 60 percent 'Si the second 20 percent (16 acres) and then 50 percent on remaining 4 acres. , MARKET PRICE. The big uncertainty in the outlook is the market price for corn. Under the new law the CCC will be authorized to sell up to about half as much as fanners reduce production. These sales would be in addition to normal sales of corn for export and sale^ of corn that is in danger of going out of condition. L. H. Simerl Department of Agricultural Economics COURT BRIEFS In a hearing last Saturday before a Round Lake Park justice of the peace, William Kunz of Rt. 6, McHenry, was fined $5 on a charge of improper passing and the same amount for having an expired chauffeur's license. On a third charge, he was bound over to the state's attorney's office on request of the latter. CHARTER GRANTED A charter has been granted by the state to West McHenry Recreation, Inc., naming Earl C. Sarner, Glenn K. Sarner, and Samuel Schmunk. The charter was given for holding, owning, leasing, managing, operating, handling, supervising or dealing in billiard, poolrooms, bowling alleys and other recreational and amusement devices and to carry on the business of a tavern and restaurant. NOT MISSING MUCH: After reading the average headlines, we often conclude that the feller who can't read may not be too bad off, after all. TAX FACTS Governor Otto Kerner's emphasis on the need of submitting a. revenue article amendment to the State Constitution in his recent message to a joint session of the General Assembly has prompted the Taxpayers' Federation of Illinois to present a review of the amendment proposals presently before the Legislature. SJR 14, supported by the Taxpayers' Federation of Illinois, provides for the classification of property for taxation purposes. Real property would be ohe class and taxed by valuation; tangible personal property would constitute another class, taxed by valuation, but the tax levied would be no greater in proportion to the value of the property than that levied upon real property. Intangible personal property would constitute one or more classes as the General Assembly directs by general law. The General Assembly, under this proposal, could impose nonproperty taxes in lieu of property taxes on automobiles and could abolish property taxes on all classes of personal property. The General Assembly could levy occupation, sales, use, privilege and franchise taves. The proposal prohibits the Gen-v eral Assembly from levying a graduated income tax, but they could levy a flat-rate income tax providing the law levying the tax, including the maximum rate of tax, shall have been approved by the voters of the state at an election. The resolution allows a unit school district a bonding power of 7 Mi per cent of '.he valuation of the district's taxable property. SJR 19 provides that the General Assembly may classify property for taxation, with any tax imposed being uniform as to any class of property. This resolution allows the legislature to levy an income tax, uniform as to all net income of the taxpayer in excess of reasonable exemptions and not to exceed 6 per cent of such income. The proposal allows a unit school district a bonding power of 8 per cent of the tax- YOUR DRUG STORE IS HQTRS. FOR Low prices ore our slock fn trade, so when you shop at BOLGER'S you're sure of savings, Ccjbq see for tow much you save at this store. DRUG STORE GREEN ST. McHENRY, ILL. able property of the district. In the House, HJR 11 allows the General Assembly to levy or authorize the levy of such taxes as may be needed. The proposal also allows the General Assembly the power to classify by general law the subjects or objects of taxation, but all such classifications to be reasonable. HJR 12 grants to the voters in each county the power to choose by referendum to exempt from taxation residential household furnishings and motor vehicles devoted to personal use. Americans are paying $1,200 each second of the day on installments and mortgages. Half of all blindness is needless and preventable, according to the National Society foi the Prevention of Blindness. €ARD OF THANKS My husband and^would like to take this, ^p&rttgnity to publicly expr^s our Thanks to the Merchants of McHenry for the gifts we received when we had the first baby bora in the McHenry Hospital. We would also like to thank the Welcome Wagon hostess, Mrs. Martha Morton Fisher, who delivered them to us. Merchants we would like to thank are: Ace Hardware, Hester 0:.i Co., Ed's Rental Inc., Kleinhans Building Service, Lee & Ray Electric, Ludwig Milk Co., McHenry Bakery, McHenry State Bank, Nye Drugs, Rainbow C l e a n e r s , S n u g - H a r b o r Boat Club, and DeWane Studio of Woodstock. Also our Thanks go to the' Toddler Shop and Vycitals for, their gifts. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Cornstock 5-11-61 MOTHER'S DAY COMES ONCE A YEAR Make it a Special Occasion at the FOX HOLE Open for Dinner at Noon Our Usual Fine Menu Plus Roast Chicken with Dressing Roast Turkey -- Prime Rib THE FOX HOLE Under The Riverside Hotel COMPARE AN® SAWE - SHOP THE THRIFTY CERTIFIED WAY Hi *• tc Bfifl m From Our Service Meat Counter No Guessing What The Other Bid© Looks like ft % o LEAN TENDER Short-Cut PORK TtNDERLOH 79 OSCAR MAYER 1 lb. Package RK LIN 6! U. S. GOVT. INSP. Choice Cuts 1 STEAKS FAB&M FRESH Whole mns CHICKENS 79* Each D. S. GOVT. INSP. Boneless DEL MONICO STEAKS 98' WILSON CERTIFIED Fresh Sliced * Hall Pound WILSON CORN MN© :u HAMS 3 Bn $239 5 ?in *Zm 6 Tin Lb- Tin ** No Charge For Slicing WILSON TID-BIT SLICED BACON (Ends & Pieces) 3 Lbs. I98 KRAFT GRAPi JELLY 20 Jar KRAFT Italian, Oil & Vinegar Catalina DRESSING 8 oz. Btl. 3 For $' |00 HILLS BROS. 1FFEE 2 Tin Lb. $ miTA 29* Vz Lb. Pkg. FARM FRESH PRODUCE PLASTIC TUBE TOMATOES 14 oz. Ctn. U.S. NO. 1 Texas Clipped CORN 5C Ear 5 oz. Ctn. Mushrooms 19' LORNA DOONE or m NEWTON Cello Wrapped VV Pkg. BALLARD SWEET MILK or PILLSBURY B. ft BISUUITS I Oz. SPkg. B Oz. Pkg. 43 RED LABEL Whole Unpelled APRICOTS t2Va Jin* Tins 49 HIRACLi WHIP Quari Jar RED LABEL s 16 Pkg. 2 26 Oz. RED LABEL FBUIT con?* 3 Si'™ RED LABEL -- 6 oz. Tin 6 For ORANGE JUICE. . S1.00 COUNTRY DELIGHT -- Reg. Pkg. 6 For PEAS or Gr. BEANS SI.00 COUNTRY DELIGHT -- Reg. Pkg. 6 For t BEANS »f CORN SI .00 ORE- Crinkle Cut 2 lb. Pkg. . 39c MRDSEYE HALVES -- 10 oz. Pkg. 5 For STRAWBERRIES. . M Chicken Turkey or Beef -- 8 oz. Pkgs. FOX DELUXE 6 For PIES. ICELANDIC -- 8 oz. Pkg. 4 For mess. . .si.® > RED LABEL Hv. or Sli. -- 2fz Size 4 Fori Y. C. PEACHES. . $1,001 5 € Rl U> RED LABEL -- 2 '/2 Size S For ET PEARS'.. RED LABEL -- SOS Tin SWEET P1AS. . . 4 For RED LABEL -- 2Vt Size 2 For SAUERKRAUT. . . Ifc RED LABEL -- SOS Tin 4 For 49c RED LABEL -- SOS Tin 4 For PLESAUCE . . 49c LABEL -- 5 Lb. Bag M R . . . . 3 9 c BOB'S SPECIAL of the Week PERFECT NYLONS SAVE IS 29c Pair with purchase of a pair at Reg. Price of $1.29 COMPARE AND SAVE THE CERTIFIED THRIFTY WAY Corner of Green & Elm Steeeis In The Heart Of Downtown McHenry (We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities.) s s 30 uv„:-;yE AND SAVE - SHOP THE THE

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