HOLIDAY HILLS NEWS INEZ YOUNG 385-4672 LIST CALENDAR OF IMPORTANT DATES TO RECALL Take out your calendar, because I am sure you will want to mark down the following important dates coming up soon. Saturday, April 20 is the Griswold Lake Athletic Club dance. Details will follow. The following Saturday, April 27 is the Scout-O-Rama at the Marian Central high school in Woodstock. Wednesday, May 15, is the Holiday Hills Women's Annual 'Nite Out'. Dinner and the theater - BUT - reservations must be made with Helen Boettclier or Mary Mahon by April 6. KNOW YOUR OFFICERS JIM AND ANN GRAFF This week we have a husband and wife team - both officers in our Holiday Hills Property Owner's Association. Jim Graf is the new vice-president, and Ann is serving her second term as recording secretary. Ann'a job requires her to attend and record minutes for all regular meetings as well as the board meetings and all special meetings. Anyone who has served on the board knows how long these meetings sometimes last and how detailed they can be. Jim, vice-president this year PUBLIC PULSE (The Plaindealer invites the public to use this column as an expression of their views on subjects of general interest in our community. Our only request is that writers limit themselves to 30(1 words or less signature, full address and phone number. We ask. too, that one individual not write on the same subject more than once each month. We reserve the right to delete any material which we consider libelous or in objectionable taste.) SCHOOL VIEWS "Dear Sir: "I read in the WaukeganNews Sun about the school board reaction to the defeat on the bond issue. First, I am the father of ttsix children and I am very con- " cerned about my children's education. I am also concerned about the way the tax money is being spent. The votes for the $3,100,000 bond issue were hardly counted when another bond issue was voted in for half a million to finish the high school. I later was told that nine rooms were eliminated from the school. The cost of building has gone up, but I don't think it has increased that much. "In the last ten or twelve years four schools have been built in McHenry area. Every time they are completed they are not large enough to take all the children in. Now the new 3y2 million dollar high school is not going to be big enough. I don't know who plans these sqhools, but they sure don't plan too well. The school board can project into the future to see how many children and classrooms will be needed. But yet they can't build for today. Schools are for education, to teach the children. They should not be monuments to anyone. "I am one of the 1,045 who voted 'no* on the last bond issue. I am concerned with my children's education." " Thank you "Lawrence Schuerr "412 N. Eastview "McHenry" served as director of unit No. 5 last year and is in his second year on the road committee. Beside these jobs, both Jim and Ann gave hour of work to last year's picnic committee. They built their own home on Park Terrace and moved here from Harwood Heights in October of 1959. They have a daughter, Nadine, at home and a sophomore in high school and another daughter, Christine, who is married. CUB SCOUTS VISIT FIRE HOUSE Tuesday, March 12, instead of regular den meetings the Cub Scouts went to the McHenry Fire station. There two volunteer firemen whose names I don't have, took the time to show the boys all the things that go on in a fire house; the telephone system to alert the volunteers and t$ll them where the fire is, the fire engines and even the ovens used for drying the hoses. Orchids to the firemen who showed sixteen wide-eyed Cub Scouts and two den chiefs a memorable evening, and to the Den mothers, Helen Boettcher Mary Mahon and Pat Hughes and Webelos leader, Jack Emerson who drove the boys there. GIRL SCOUT MOTHER DAUGHTER TEA Over 500 Girl Scouts and Brownies and their mothers gathered at the Johnsburg Community House for a Mother- Daughter Tea on Sunday March 10. Of that group, approximately thirty girls and their mothers came from our local troops 478 and 409. The Girl Scouts are under the able leadership of Phyl Harper and Leone Kathan and the Brownies by Jackie Bodenheim and Connie Catanzaro. BIRTH DAZE Happy birthday to little Jeff Smith who will be 4 years old on Thursday, March 28, and to Eunice Heise who celebrates her birthday on Wednesday, April 3. WOODSTOCK CLUB • MEMBERS GUESTS OF LAKE KSWANIS Woodstock Kiwanis club represented by Nelson Stork, Floyd Eckert, C.W. Coons and Rev. Beck were guests for an interclub meeting with Wonder Lake. Rev. Beck also was the speaker of the evening, reporting on his trip to Washington attending the Ministerial conference. His group was briefed on many of the hearings and progress of government policies. Lennie Freund again confirmed the Merit Award dinner date of May 6. Joe Sullivan reported on the contest between the City Slickers and the Friendly Fellows. Score is 1 to 1. Material on the National convention to be held in Toronto, Canada was given to Guy White and Art Lau, who will attend. Special - Special - Special 1 WEEK ONLY March 25th thru 30th bourne BUICK & OLDS, INC. 907 Front St. - Ri. 31 McHenry, Illinois FREE - Lub. Job with oil change Call For Reservation 385-7200 -- Bring the Ad with you. -- T)he C linic Bob's problem is shared by millions. Bosses and the people who shoulder responsibilities, are prone to develope Bob's complaint. But they are the real spark plugs of civilization so society would benefit greatly if such victims were twice as numerous! By - George W„ Crane, Ph. D., M.D. CASE F-531: Bob M, aged 24, is a worry wart. "Dr. Crane", he began, "P^e been diagnosed as having a peptic ulcer. "What causes such ulcers? Is it emotion? And thus psychological? "Or is it something such victims eat? "And does surgery cure stomach ulcers?" ULCER PSYCHOLOGY Perhaps you are familiar with TRUCK REGISTRATION Truck and truck tractor registrations and revenues for 1967 reached a new all-time high, Secretary of State Paul Powell has announced. Over 578,000 truck plates brought in over $65,350,000. Secretary Powell noted that 1967 exceeds 1966 by almost 10,000 truck plates and over $3,700,000 in revenues to the State of Illinois and the Road Fund. the psychological maxim: "It's not what you eat but what's eating you that causes ulcers!" A peptic ulcer is an eroded spot on the wall of the stomach. Ordinarily, our stomach secretes a mucus coating that^ paints the stomach so its gastric juices (hydrochloric acid) can't dissolve a hole in the stomach's wall. For the gastric juice willtake any piece of lean meat and soon turn it into a liquid! That is its chief function, namely, the dissolving of proteins so they can slip through the intestinal wall in liquid form and enter the blood stream. Alas, that same gastric juice can devour the stomach, too, if the latter is not insulated by its constant m icus coating. If a fishbone or other harsh, unchewed bit of food scratches the wall of the stomach, or if the steady drip-drip-drip of swallowed tobacco juice erodes a tiny spot, then the gastric juice immediately starts burning a hole in the stomach itself. And it is this resulting burn (which simulates hunger) that makes ulcer patients irritable and snarlish. Anything which will reduce the acid in the stomach will thus help relieve the symptoms of a peptic ulcer. Tense, executive types of personality who remain in fairly constant turmoil, simply cause a heavier secretion of stomach acid. v The person who flares up and' expresses his emotions, as in words or actions or even in tears, seems to relieve his inner emotional tension. In addition, alkaline tablets help neutralize the acid. So does a glass of milk or a glass of hot jello before bedtime. Caffeine, on the contrary, increases gastric secretion so the typical coffee break tends to produce more peptic ulcers. In bad cases of peptic ulcer, surgery is recommended to cut out part of the stomach. Alas, such surgery is not 100 percent effective, for the same tense office and home environment that produced your first ulcer may start another one later on. Dr. Walter Alvarez wrote a discerning article for one of our medical journals while he was still at the Mayo Clinic, and mentioned that the usual perforation of a peptic ulcer occurs between 2 a.m. and 5 a.m. So he suggested that everybody who has a crucial problem next day, could profit by setting his alarm clock and waking at 2 o'clock to drink a glass of milk and nibble on a few crackers. For the stomach secretes about a pint of acid during the night, which has no protein or alkaline tablets to neutralize it, unless we purposely eat before going to bed or take a tablet in the night. Send for my booklet "How to Control the Emotions" enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents for placid emotions also check ulcer. WED., MAR. 27, 1968 - PLAINDEALER - q INSURANCE DEPARTMENT, The Illinois Department oC Insurance collected and for-3 warded $43,601,443 to the State Treasury in 1967, Director Jdui F. Bolton Jr., has announced. The collections represent 22 different taxes, fees and charges administered by the department under the Illinois Insurance Code and related laws. The. department's operating budget was 5.8 percent of this amount. CO I If BillFS Appearing before Magistrate William J. Gleason in Branch 3 court last week, George P. Thompson was fined $100 and costs of $5 on charge of reckless driving, changed from driving while under the influence of liquor. BIG EMPLOYER The business of property and liability insurance in the United States provides employment for approximately 540,000 people, the Insurance Information Institute reports. like si sources of the spirit ar®[ savings: tHey must be ac-> cumulated before they are need-; edi 2 HUBY BECKER'S KEHMELS 1 Mile East of Skyline Drlve-Ir PHONE SSS-2438 BOARDING AND HMffllG Obedience -- Hunting Retrieving (Large Heated Kennels) 6.S.H. Pointer Stud Service - POODLE GIWMHSEM© WE DARE YOU TO . 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