Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 21 Jan 1972, p. 3

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PAGE 3-PLAINDEALER-FRIDAY, JANUARY 21, 1972 Luncheon, Card Party Planned A tasty salad-luncheon and card party will be served in St. Patrick's church hall Wednesday, Feb. 2, with serving from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Explaining plans for the event, for which all proceeds will go to the Sisters of Mercy of McHenry, is Mrs. Lee Estis, left, co-chairman, shown with Sister Paulina, principal of the Montini primary school. PLAINDEALER PHOTO Tips For The Homemaker Comparison shopping is one way homemakers can keep budget limitations from resulting in poor nutrition for their families. Today, many homemakers find that they have to pay more attention to the nutrition they get for each food dollar, says Pat Sullivan, McHenry Ex­ tension adviser. A key word in this process is "comparison". Comparison shopping involves many facets. For Example: - Comparison between sale and non-sale items. Most stores advertise low prices on certain items each week. The smart shopper checks these ad­ vertised bargains for nutritional value in relation to price. For example, Miss Sullivan explains, a sale on frozen dark green vegetables is a good nutritional value because foods in this group provide large amounts of vitamin A in ad­ dition to other nutrients. In contrast, a sale on sweet foods provides mainly calories. - Comparison between forms of food. Do you want to pay for added conveniences when you buy food? When money is more scarce than time, you may want to do more preparation yourself, Miss Sullivan adds. Some convenience foods, however, cost no more than fixing them yourself. The nutritional differences among fresh, frozen or canned fruits and vegetables are usually small - but the price differences are sometimes substantial. Comparison between brands. Many times stores have their own brand names, and their prices will be lower than those of nationally- advertised brands for similar items. Sometimes the opposite is true, however. - Comparison between sizes. Sometimes you save by buying a larger size of an item - and sometimes you don't. Many stores now use unit-price labeling to show, for example, the price-per-ounce of the various brands and sizes available. Taking time to read the unit price labels can help a lot. But remember, buying the large size of an item will not always be the wisest decision, Miss Sullivan cautions. If part of the food spoils before you eat it, the purchase was not a bargain, regardless of the price. - Comparison between foods. You may be used to eating foods that have no nutritional advantage over cheaper foods. An expensive steak or roast gives you protein, but so does chicken, hamburger, pork, fish, eggs, cheese, peanut butter and dried peas or beans. And each of these food items are inex­ pensive protein foods. All of this comparison will mean a little more time and effort in your food shopping, Deaths MARTHA LONGFIELD Martha Longfield, 87, of Glenview, formerly of Chicago, died Jan. 16. Her husband, William A., preceded her in death. She is survived by four children, Margaret Haug of McHenry, Elmer C. of Berwyn, William A. of La Mesa, Calif., and Herman H. of Glenview; seven grandchildren and twelve great-grandchildren. Services were conducted Thursday afternoon at the William H. Scott chapel, Glenview, with interment in Memorial Park. ROY A. NIELSEN Roy a Nielsen, 61, of 710 Oeffling drive, McHenry, died in the local hospital Wed­ nesday, Jan. 19. Arrangements were incomplete at press time. JOHN HRUBY John Hruby of 7716 Beverly way, Spring Grove, died in McHenry hospital Jan. 19 at the age of 77. Funeral arrangements were not complete when the Plaindealer went to press. ANNA LEONETTI A Mass will be offered in St. Patrick's Catholic church Friday morning at 10 o'clock for Mrs. Anna Leonetti, 80, of 1102 W. Northeast Shore drive, Griswold Lake. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Mrs. Leonetti, a long time resident of the area, died Tuesday, Jan. 18, in McHenry hospital. She was born May 27, 1891, in New Jersey. The deceased was a member of R.N.A. Camp 9701, Chicago, and V.F.W. Auxiliary 4600, McHenry. Marriage Licenses Steven S. Rietesel, 1201 N. River road, McHenry, and Carole L. Beck, 113 S. River road, McHenry. James Patrick Knight, McHenry, and Nancy K. Adams, 302 W. Lincoln road, McHenry. Terry R. DeMarco, 4108 Jewell drive, McHenry, and Deborah R. Lynch, 1759 N. Talman, Chicago. Pat Sullivan says. But if your budget is tight, and you don't want your family to be poorly nourished, it is a worthwhile effort to make. Her husband, Michael S., died in 1964. She is survived by three daughters Mrs. Harold N. (Elizabeth) Weyland and Mrs. Ronald J. (Virginia) Schisler of McHenry and Mrs. William B. (Evelyn) Steans of Liber­ ty ville; one son, Michael L., of Buffalo Grove; twelve grand­ children and seventeen great­ grandchildren. Trauma Abraham Lincoln Memorial hospital at Lincoln has been designated a local trauma center in the statewide system, Gov. Richard B. Ogilvie an­ nounced. This is the first of 26 local trauma centers, which the governor said "serve as the first line of defense in cases of accidental injury." He ex­ plained that five areawide centers and 10 regional centers back up the local centers by (Growth A house is buil t brick by brick, plank by plank. I t docs not grow from the acorn l ike a tree So is the child born, an infant , helpless, needing care and at ten t ion to reach maturi ty and the useful days of l i fe. There are many steps along the way, many needs and require nients. Nourishment, love, guid­ ance, protection, each in some way helps to shape and mold Foolish is the parent who be l ieves that the child just "grows up", l ike the tree from the acorn Some acorns never take root, but wither away on the ground Some do not receive proper nourish­ ment and cannot reach upward, straight and,tal l , toward the sky. Growth is a natural develop ment for al l l iving things, but al l things grow best under proper condit ions. providing specialized* care for those patients who cannot be cared for at lcxsal facilities. The name "witch hazel" probably comes from the fact that the forked twigs were once thought to have magic power in pointing out hidden springs of water. Mf.Hf NRY PLAINDEALER loeal ] POETS CORNER i [ ~}}lcf{rnry ' 'P I at njealt Established 1875 3812 West Elm Street er Phone 385-0170 WINTER Gosh, it was cold this morning The birds are hiding their tiny feet. It looks as though they are tired But they're using their body heat. Would you like to expose your "pinkies", Without your thermo socks, When the thermometer is touching zero With wind fluffing your feathered locks" T'was yesterday, it looked like spring And the grass was still green Even heard a redwing singing Now the snow has shown its sheen. Maybe winter has really come, It sure took its time. The frozen lake with ice fishermen Amid snowmobile motors whine. by George Pittner McHenry, Illinois 60050 I Published Every Wednesday & Friday at McHenry,Illinois Second Class Postage Paid at McHenry,Illinois by McHENRY PUBLISHING COMPANY | Larry E. Lund - Publisher I I | ' MEMBER \dele Froehlich-Edito MEMBER 1 Year P E R Association - Founded 1885 SUBSCRIPTION RATES $7.50 1 Year $9.00 In McHenry and I>ake Outside McHenry and County Lake County THE QUEEN . . . Lovely Janene Forsyth, a 17-year-old senior at Washington Lee High School, Arlington, Va., is the new Miss American Teen-Ager. She won in competition with 41 finalists selected from 250, 000 girls between 13 and 17. Awards included 1972 automo­ bile, trip to Hollywood for small TV parts, and a trip to Hawaii. NOW OPEN • CITY-WIDE'S NEW LOWER LEVEL DO-IT-YOIJRSELF CENTER! PAKtl.IlVC SALE PRICE An invitation to visit our New ORGANIC HEALTH F00D| CENTER WINTER TEAK Regular Price $6.25 Valley Forge NUTMEG Regular Price $6.45 PARCHMENT Regular Price $8.25 *4 *4 *G Yes! We now have NATURELLA vitamins, .deli­ cious organic foods, natural cosmetics ... all high quality products at low cost, by U.S. HEALTH CLUB. Try our sun­ flower seeds, fruits, cereals, organic honey, cosmetics, herb teas. Complete selection of natural vitamins and food supplements. BOLGER'S drug store 1259 North Green Street KITCHEN CARPET Rubber-Backed DO-IT-YOURSELF 4 colors to choose from ONLY $929 C# Sq. Yd. Rubber-Backed SHAG CARPET THE MalBellairs SPOT! CITY WIDE/ 3609 *3 99 Sq. Yd. 1 'm w-ELM st V j H U c H E N R Y 3Bu>ltfltc.r20<£J/ |ivi,,u,i;ii Tel. (815)385--8000 CASH & CARRY 1000 Rolls of other Luxury Carpet Bridal Gown and Matching Attendants' Gown modeled by Sue and Barbara ^oq an's d i s t i n c t i v e a p p a r e l a n d I ) , 1 ! i f / f l f i f H o i ( ( ( Y j U f < Presents their Spring and Summer collection of Bridal designer fashions Store expans ion has doub led our fac i l i t i es , p rov id ing more p r ivacy and g rea te r se lec t ion . Our Bridal Consultants will be proud to show you t h e s t u n n i n g c o l l e c t i o n o f B r i d a l G o w n s . . . S h e e r s . . . Lace Dotted Swiss. many new fabrics. hMats are great for Attendants . . the new gowns ire beautiful . . . make your^selection early! BUY T0DAY...WE WILL INSTALL TOMORROW OPEN DAILY 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. MONDAYS & FRIDAYS 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. SUNDAYS 11 to 5 *Mothers of the Wedding are our specialty too! *A selection of Bridal Gowns in stock for immediate purchase1 *Wedding Invitations and Announcements Phone 815-338-1210 for your appointment X t t o q a R ' S R . t i d f l f T iCmdquf i i \ ( l u 118 N. Benton »* **« H MM M 19^

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