t Tips For The Homemaker Spring fix-up and clean-up means you may purchase poisonous materials such as turpentine, weed killer, garden products, paints, cleaning supplies, polishes, and medical items to ward off muscle fatigue and other aches and pains. BEWARE! Watch where you store them. Little hands of little people are curious, wandering, discovering. In addition, complete discovery includes tasting. To get at the item of interest, they are ingenious; they will fiddle with a container until it opens and then the first thing they do is taste whatever spills out. To protect children, keep dangerous substances out of reach of little hands. Keep potentially poisonous sub stances, such as drugs and drain cleaners in a place that can be locked. Dispose of old, unused medicines and household products by emptying their contents down the toilet or drain. Then rinse the container before discarding it. Also keep in mind that medicine may become useless or even dangerous because of chemical changes that take place over a long period. Never tell your child medicine is candy or like candy. Avoid taking medication in front of a small child. He may try to imitate you sometime when you are not there. When possible, purchase poisonous materials in "child- resistant containers". These containers cannot be opened by most children if they cannot read the instructions. Remember - the best way to prevent accidental poisonings is to prevent getting at such substances. Selecting the right dry- cleaning service for different kinds of clothing assures good results as lowest cost. Pat Sullivan, McHenry .county home economics Ex tension adviser suggests that you consider these four kinds of services when getting winter clothing ready for storage during the warm weather: -Economy service is satisfactory for skirts, slacks, sweaters, simple dresses and children's coats. Because this type of service does not usually include pre-spotting, it may not prove satisfactory for clothing that contains oily stains. However, the service does include the normal cleaning cycle, steaming, and sometimes, touch-up pressing. -Coin-operated or self- service dry cleaning is a great money saver. It is especially satisfactory for garments that don't need a final pressing. Coin-operated machines use the same cleaning solvents that commercial dry cleaners use, and the standard machine cycle will remove most oily stains. In general, garments need little or no pressing if you remove them from the machine and place them on hangers as soon as the process has been completed. -Regular cleaning service usually includes pre-spotting, dry cleaning, machine finishing, some hand finishing and free simple repairs. When you select regular service, your garments get more in dividualized spotting and finishing attention that is customary with economy service. Miss Sullivan recommends it for delicate or difficult to clean fabrics and also for garments with intricate design details. Garments given custom ser vice receive the regular cleaning service plus a final careful inspection. In addition, the garment will be stuffed with tissue or packaged to retain the careful workmanship of the cleaner. The various sizes of eggs often confuse shoppers, but it's really a simple matter. Two key points need to be remembered. First, the size of the egg (small, medium, large) does not indicate the quality of the eggs. It only indicates how large it is. Second, the difference in price indicates which size is the better buy. The important thing to remember here is 7 cents. If a dozen large eggs cost from 1 Community Calendar MAY 23 McHenry Senior CitTzens Club Bus Trip to "Old Town" Wells Street, Chicago - Bus Leaves the McHenry State Bank Parking Lot at 9:30 a.m. Annual Salad Bar Lundheon and Style Show - Noon -- Sponsored by Zion Lutheran Church Ladies Aid - Church Hall. / Free Seminar, "Problem Parent? Problem Child?" - Family Service and Mental Health Clinic, McHenry -- 8 to 10 p.m. MAY 24 McHenry Garden Club - Mrs. Herbert Bothering Home - 315 N. Timothy Lane, McHenry - 12:30 p.m. McHenry Woman's Club - Board Meeting -- Home of Mrs. Leonard Nelson, 307 S. Emerald drive -- 1 p.m. MAY 25 "The Sun Company" Gospel Folk Music Group - Chain O'Lakes Evangelical Covenant Church, 4818 N. Wilmot Road - 8 p.m. -- Public Invited. Ringwood-Wonder Lake Unit of Homemakers Extension Bake Sale -- Eagle Store - 9 a.m. to Noon. MAY 26 St. Margaret Chapter of NAIM -- Cards at 7:30 p.m. -- George Hartman Home, 7417 Back Bay Road, Wonder Lake Bake Sale - Ladies of the Lake McCullom Lake Beach House - 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. MAY 28 McHenry Senior Citizens Club Meeting -- 7:30 p.m. -- East Campus Cafeteria - Program -- Square Dancers. JUNE 2 St. Margaret Chapter of NAIM -- Bowling - McHenry Recreation -- 7 p.m. JUNE 4 McHenry Senior Citzens Club Executive Committee Meeting - 1 p.m. -- Landmark School. JUNE 8,9,16 and 17 Townsquare Players, Inc., Presents "Harvey" - Wood stock Opera House, Woodstock - Curtain Times, Friday and Saturday, 8:30 p.m., Sunday, 6:30 p.m. -- Call 815-675-2066 for Reservations. JUNE 15 St. Margaret Chapter of NAIM -- Regular Meeting - Oak Room - St. Mary's - 7:30 p.m. JUNE 30 St. Margaret Chapter of NAIM -- Card Party -- Home Of Julia Karpinski, 3308 Weingart Road -- 7:30 p.m. MICKEY'S DELIVERS! Two radio-dispatched cars now deliver our tempting food to your door in heated containers. 11:00 A.M. - 9:00 P.M. Daily 11:00 A.M. - 10:00 P.M. Fri. Phone 385-1600 385-9743 or MICKEY'S VIENNA RIVERSIDE & PEARL in McHENRV^ LAWN-BCDY Sales & Service BR00KW00D GARDEN CENTER 4505 W. Rte. 120 McHenry (just across from Foremost) Phone 385-4949 Here And There In Business REALTORS MEET -- Beverly Ebert, left, secretary, and Steve Crnkovich, president of the McHenry County Board of Realtors, with guest speaker, Mrs. Lydia Franz, director of the Illinois Association of Realtors. Mrs. Franz addressed the May general membership meeting of the board on the subject of FISBO's, an every day phenomenon in the life ota-pedWr. A FISBO (For Sale By Owner) was described as a homeowriCT attempting to earn a commission on the sale of his home with very little idea of what is involved and with little chance for real success. Deaths ANTHONY G. PALUCH Anthony Paluch, for many years a Green street business man, died in Manatee Memorial hospital, Bradenton, Fla., Saturday, May 19. Mr. Paluch, 70 years old, had resided at 1409 13th street, Brandenton, in recent years. He was born Feb. 9, 1903, in Chicago. The deceased operated the Palace bowling alleys until transferring business interests to Crystal Lake. Survivors are his widow, Loretta (Weadley); two sons, Donald of Scottsdale, Ariz., and Anthony of Elgin; two daughters, Mrs. Winifred Young of St. Petersburg, Fla., and Mrs. Ann Marie Pickett of Tucson, Ariz.; thirteen grand children and a sister, Clara Paluch, Chicago. The body rested at the George R. Justen & Son chapel. A funeral Mass will be offered at 10 o'clock Wednesday in St. Mary's Catholic church, with burial in the church cemetery. EDWARD J. CHRAMOSTA Edward J. Chramosta, 68, of 1012 Jasper drive, McHenry, died May 17 in Memorial hospital, Woodstock. The body was taken to Chicago for services and burial. MARY A. KLOMANN Mary A. Klomann, 82, of 712 N. Green street, McHenry, died May 20 in McHenry hospital following a month's illness. Mrs. Klomann was born June 9, 1890, in Chicago, daughter of the late Patrick and Mary Neary Hagerty. She had resided with her daughter, Mrs. August (Dorothy) Uttich in McHenry for about two years. Her husband, Joseph S. died Nov. 4, 1967. Besides Mrs. Uttich she is survived by one son, William J., of Wood Dale; three other daughters, Mrs. William (Lorraine) Cagle of Woodridge, Mrs. Leslie (Lucille) Palmer of Plain, Wis., and Mrs. Glenn (Patricia) Palmer of Kenosha, Wis.; thirty grandchildren; twenty great-grandchildren; one brother, the Rev. W. Hagerty, S.J., of Indianapolis, Ind., four sisters, Mrs. Hattie Casey of Chicago, Mrs. Ann Kennedy of Berwyn, Mrs. Margaret Walsh of Chicago and Mrs. Helen Pierce of Freeport. Mrs. Klomann was preceded in death by a daughter, Evelyn, and a brother, James. The body is resting at the Peter M. Justen & Son chapel. A funeral Mass will be offered at 10:30 Thursday morning in St. Patrick's Catholic church, with burial in Ml. Carmel cemetery, Hillside. McHENRY HOSPITAL Patients admitted to McHenry hospital included Carl Thompson, Wesley Hendersen, Herman Smith, Elsa M. Saure, Sandra Smith, Edward Garvey, Margaret Reining, Virgie Yates, Denis O'Brien, Mary Etten, Melvin Hamaker, Joseph Leone, Fred J. Bole, Jr., Sally C. Miller, Betty Gladman, Lena Ab- binante, Robert B. Barhyte, Bertha Burger, Frances Huizinga, John O. Ottoson, James F. Pokorny, McHenry; William Soehrman, William Schriber, Spring Grove; Fran Mechan, Wonder Lake. McHENRY HOSPITAL Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Waychunas, McHenry, are parents of a daughter, May 16. A son was born May 16 to Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Komar of Spring Grove. Mr. and Mrs. Steven Duffy, McHenry, became parents of a son, Jason Patrick, May 18, weighing8 lbs., 11 oz. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ainsworth, Rockford; paternal ones are Mrs. Barbara Duffy, McHenry, and Gene Duffy, Calistoga, Calif. The paternal great-grandmother is Mrs. Elsie Johnson, DeKalb. Other children in the family are Mark, 9, Melissa, 10, and Michele, 7. to 7 cents more than dozen medium eggs, the lange eggs are the better buy. But if the price difference is more than 7 cents, the medium eggs are the better buy. FIREMEN'S DANCE - Final preparations go forward in an ticipation of the eighteenth annual dance sponsored by the firemen of Company I, McHenry Township Fire Protection district. Above, Mayor Joseph B. Stanek, right, purchases the first ticket from Wayne Amore, a Company I member. A fine ten-piece band will furnish music for dancing, which starts at 9 p.m. at the V.F.W. clubhouse Saturday, May 26. Proceeds will help firemen buy uniforms and miscellaneous needs of the company. 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