Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 Aug 1964, p. 5

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Thursday, August 27, 1964 THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER Section One -- Psge Five McHENRY PLAINDEALER 8812 West Elm Street Established 1875 Phone 885-0170 Published Every Thursday at McHcnry, Illinois by McHENRY PUBLISHING COMPANY. Wry E. Lund -- Publisher Adele Froehlich, Editor Second Class Postage Paid at McHenry, Illinois 1964 ' P R B 1' V y ( UMICIHTIOVI NATIONAL EDITORIAL Tl 4N Subscription Rates In McHenry County Outside McHenry County 1 Year $4.00 1 Year $4.50 6 M6s. $2.25 6 Mos. $2.50 3 Mos. $1.50 3 Mos $1.75 HUNTING IN 12 MSERVAHON AREAS IN '64 Springfield, 111., Aug. 11 -- Hunting will be permilted on 12 conservation management areas during the 1964 season William T. Lodge, director of the Illinois Department of Conservation, announced today. Hunters will be required to report to chock stations at nine of the- areas. Those areas are: Hamilton County Area, 7 miles east of McLeansboro; Lake Argyle State Park Area, north of Ramsey in Fayette County; Randolph County Area, 4 miles north and 1 mile east of Chester; Red Hills State Park Area, east of Lawrcnceville in Lawrence County; Saline County Area, 2 miles south and 8 miles east of Harrisburg; Stephen A. Forbes State Park Area, 2 miles east and 1 mile north of Omega in Marion County; Washington County Area, 4 miles south and 1 Vi miles east of Nashville; Wayne County Area near Johnsonville. Hunting season dates and hours on these nine areas are as follows: Squirrels -- Sept. 15 through Oct. 15, from sunrise until noon, CST. Doves - Sept. 15 through Nov. 9, from 7 p.m., until 4 p.m., CST. Quail Nov. 14 through Dec. 31, 8 a.m., until 4 p.m. CST. Rabbits -- Nov. 24 through Jan. 31, 1965, from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m., CST. On these areas all hunters except squirrel hunters must chock in before they begin hunting and check out before they leave the area at the headquarters building. They must wear a back patch on their hunting coats while In the field. Squirrel hunters do not have to check in or wear back patches, but they must report their kill and check out before they return home. Only shotguns may be used on these areas. All Illinois Game Code regulations will apply unless area restrictions are more restrictive and in that case the area regulations will be enforced. Check stations will be in operation at the following areas open for hunting: Douglas County, 5 miles east of Hindsboro; Jaseph County Area, 1 mile east and 1 mile north of the intersection of Routes 33 and 103, near Newton; Pope-Massac Area, 2 mlies west and 2 miles south of Bay City. These three areas will open for squirrel, dove, quail, rabbit, and pheasant hunting during the regular season. Shotguns are the only firearms legal for hunting on these areas. State and federal hunting regulations will be enforced on these areas unless area rules are more restrictive. The Washington County, Saline .County, Hamilton County, Pope-Massac, Lake Ramsey, and Lake Agyle areas will be closed to all small game hunting during the deer season, Nov. 20, 21, and 22, and Dec. 4, 5 and 6. Deer hunting will be permitted on the Saline, Pope- Massac, and Hamilton County Areas during the shotgun season. Deer hunting will be prohibited on all other areas. » Duck hunters who had blinds in navigation Pools 21, 22 and 24 in the Mississippi River may register their sites from Friday, Aug. 21 to Sunday, Aug. 23 inclusive. COURT BRIEFS Norbert H. McDaniel of Wonder Lake appeared in court before Judge Cooney Aug. 21 and pleaded guilty to driving while his license was revoked. He was sentenced to seven days in jail and fined $100 and costs. BROILil CORNED BEEF SANDWICHES Sandwiches and teenagers make a winning combination. For hot open-faced sandwiches with a hearty flavor teenagers love, try these Broiled Corned Beef Holiday Sandwiches. This tangy mayonnaise, relish, and corn mixture, topped with canned corned beef is great eating at any time. Give the sandwiches a holiday air by cutting the sandwiches with a bell or star-shaped cooky cutter, if you like. With mugs of marshmallow- topped cocoa and some bowls of nibblers, you're set for a party. For easy slicing at a moment's notice, keep several cans of corned beef in the refrigerator ... but don't expect them to stay there long. Once your youngsters (and your husband) find how easy it is to make the best-tasting sandwiches . . . both hot and cold . . . witli canned corned beef, they're sure to come back for more. Keep some extra cans on the pantry shelf. You'll find each can is an excellent start for an easy-to-fix, nourishing dish ... a wonder* fill time-and-budget-saver for the holidays and throughout the year. BROILED CORNED BEEF SANDWICHES Ucan (12 oz.) corned beef, Vi cup mayonnaise chilled I teaspoon prepared mosttrd 1 can (12 oz.) whole-kernel V\ cup pickle relish corn, drained 8 slices bread Cut corned beef into R uniform slices. Combine corn, mayonnaise 'mustard, and pickle relish. Toast bread on one side in oven. Spread tintoasted side with mayonnaise mixture. Top with corned beef slice. Broil on ungreased baking sheet at 450 degrees for three to five minutes, or until hot. Use cooky cutters to cut holiday designs in meat and bread, if you wish. Chop any remaining meat and blend with corn mixture. Makes b saudwichcs. UNDER 21 A column for ieen-agera By Dan Halligon DEAR DAN: I'm home on leave from the Navy and last night when I told my parents I'd probably re-enlist when my hitch is up, you would have thought I had told them I was going into a life of crime. Mom started crying and Dad blew his top. It boils down to them thinking I can do better with my life than make a career out of the Navy. Dan, I like the Navy and I'm really enthused about my Job In radar. What else do they expect? -- Gob. DEAR GOB: Your mother was probably crying because you'll be away from home so much and your father probably blew his top because your mother was bawling. Being a career man In the military service Is something you can be proud of, especially In tills day of cold war, hot war and so-called "police actions." DEAR DAN: My boy friend and I have been taking marriage instructions together in my church for the past five weeks. Everything seemed to be all right but now his parents have said that if we get married in my church and not in theirs, they won't come to the wedding and we won't be welcome in their home. This isn't fair and I'm really upset. I've never especially cared for K.'s parents but ,1 thought they could at least be reasonable. K is 23, not a child, and I'm 19. What are we expected to do at this late date? -- K.'s Girl. DEAR K.'S (ilRL: Apparently this is a "mixed marriage," a girl of one religion marrying a young man of another. If this is true, tills parental boycott won't be your only msjor problem in the time ahead. Why don't your boy friend and you talk this over with both clergymen? In the meantime, I don't think you should lose sleep over whether or not the parents will come to the ceremony. DEAR DAN: My boy friend was killed Christmas week in a car accident in which two of his friends were hurt. I wasn't in the car. I was in shock and a state of depression for a few weeks but gradually I'm coming around and don't miss him like I did at first. Since the accident I haven't done any dating. In fact, I haven't even gone out with my girl friends. I've been spending a lot of my spare time with my boy friend's parents, especially his mother, because we seem to have a link together. Dan, here's my problem: My mother wants me to stop seeing these people as much as I'm doing and start going out. Maybe that's, what I want to but I feel s«> helpless about all this. I feel like I would be doing wrong by dating so soon and I don't know if my boy friend's parents would understand. I'll always remember B. but more and more I realise T have to live my own life too. What should I do? -- Still Mourning. DEAR S. M.: I don't know whether or not you feel you have to explain to your dead boy friend's parents. All yoQ have to do is start spreading your visits farther and farther between without explanation. But if you are asked "how come?", you can say you're beginning to date again. I'm sure these parents will understand. This would be an entirely different situation if you two had been married but you weren't married and you can't be expeeted to isolate yourself for too many months. DEAR DAN: In your opinion would it be all right for a sophomore girl to take in some high school basketball games away from home? I don't mean I want to follow the team 100 and 200 miles away but wouldn't it be all right to see them play at schools 20 and 30 miles away? There are always dozens of kids going to these road games and I'll have rides to and from the games. DEAR TEAM ROOTER: The road games you mentioned would be fine with me if the drivers got the okay of your parents. There would also be the little matter of being home on time too. • DEAR DAN: My friends think I'm crazy because I'm going steady with a boy three years my junior, 19 and 16, but my boy friend is one in a million. We don't intend to break up over these silly remarks because we're really in love and don't care what anyone says. Isn't it possible we're right and my friends are wrong? -- S.O. DEAR S.O.: It's possible, of course, but since your boy friend is his parents' son, I frankly don't see how he can be so serious at 16 when his parents in their adulthood are so silly in letting him go with a girl of 19. DEAR DAN: I'm a young wife of 19 with a serious problem. My husband hasn't worked in quite sometime and we've been living on his unemployment compensation and the few dollars I pick up working as a part-time waitress. I can't work steady because we have a young baby and my husband refuses to stay home and mind her. My parents coulti help us with a little money now and then but my husband won't let me ask them because Ihey opposed my marrying him. Well, I guess he has his pride but does that mean our baby should go without food? I want to apply for welfare aid but again, he won't let me. He's so proud -- but broke. We owe everybody in town and even had our lights turned off for a day and a half before we got the money together to pay the bill. What am I expected to do? Hope for a miracle? Should I go ahead and ask my parents anyway? -- Worried and Young. DEAR WORRIED AND YOUNG: Your marriage needs help as much as your purse does, and now, while you've still got some income, take action. Lay your troubles on the lino to your clergyman and find out in which direction your husband and you are bending. Pride is one thing but going without the necessities of life is something else again. DEAR DAN: I live in a very small town and the boys here are pretty independent because wc outnumber them. They know they can take their sweet time in asking for a date. In other words, they've got us on a leash and some of us don't like the idea. How can we at least get back on an equal footing with them? -- Sharon. DEAR SHARON: If enough of you girls work together, you can be as independent as the boys. I don't know quite what the problem is but no one ever wins in the battle of the sexes. Didn't you know? HILARIOUS STAGE PLAYS PERFORMED BY A TOP FLITE NEW YORK CAST • NOW THRU SEPT. 6 • "COME BLOW YOUR HORN" ^ f SEPT. 8 THRU SEPT. 27 Love & Kisses ^ Locate! 3 Ml. W. of Mirmi* en U.S. 50 • Pli. •lS-56»72Tt Cartaia 8:45 Sat. 7 A 10 fa*. *15 W«d. t Thn.ltMS $1 .69 Dcjjooft Rcqptpcd Fe? AfJ Dsacrecd SeoSn Shop*, Rastouraitf and leoogo ©poo c3 toon. Sicocd Don. Come early! Enjoy one of our famous • country style dinners. Then broyvse through our auaint aift shoDi nr a rol3v!nn SOFTBALL NOTES Men's 16" Softball League Final Standings Hcttermann's 13 1 Old Bridge .... 11 3 Jake's 8 6 Doghouse 8 6 McHenry Recreation. 5 9 Burton's Bridge .... 4 10 Bimbo's 4 10 Freeway S. & 3D Bowl 3 11 Top 15 Hitters Ave. Bud Lawrence .649 Denny Freund 641 Mel Bergloff i 620 Art Beek '... .614 Lloyd Freund 604 Don Bentz 581 Ed Migon .564 Bill Huff 525 Bob ('oinstock 522 Tom Spas 519 Tom Ooffling .511 Chuck Cuda 500 Gene Schaefer .500 Wayne Frantz 481 Gib Kurtz .473 Bob Nolan 471 8-18-64 In the first game of the playoffs Ih'ttermann's beat the Doghouse 18 to 1. R H Doghouse 1 6 Ilettermann's 18 19 Top hitter for Dodhouse: A1 Thiel 2-3. Top hitters for Hettermann's, Bill Oefflimg 4-4, Carl Neiss Tom Oeffling 2-3, Don Bentz 3-4, Lloyd Freund 2-3. Home runs: Dick Hiller, Don Bentz. TOP RECORDS Watch this space every week for the Top 5 Records in McHenry. 1. Everybody Loves Somebody by Dean Martin 2. Hard Day's Night--The Beatles. 3. Rag Doll--The Four Seasons. 4. Where Did Our Love Go The Supremes 5. Wishin' And Hopin' -- Dusty Springfield. Taken from a survey of last week's record sales at TONES MUSIC 3719 W. Elm McHenry PHONE 385-4646 In the second game Old Bridge beat Jake's 11-10. R H Jake's 10 14 Old Bridge 11 17 Top hitters: Jake's: Dave Hansen 2-3, Steve Laing 2-4, Bernie Buss 2-4, Ed Migon 2-4, Dick Tyk 2-4. Top hitters, Old Bridge: Denny Freund 3-4, Paul Freund 3-4, Tom Spas 3-4. Home runs: Ed Migon 8-20-64 In the first game Old Bridge iliminated Jake's from the playoofs by the score of 26 to 9 R H Old Bridge . Jake's . . . . 26 26 9 13 Top hitters, Jake's: Dick Tyk 3-4, Dick Gudgeon 2-3, Bernie Buss, 2-4. Old Bridge: Bob Freund 4-4, Paul Freund 4-5, John McGee 3-5, Bill JBecknell 3-5, Bill Huff 3-6. Home runs: Bill Huff, Bill Becknell, Dick Gudgeon. In the second game Hettermann's were beating Doghouse 22 to 1 when the game was called at the end of 3% innings due to rain. 8-24-64 In the make-up game from Aug. 20 that was called due to rain, Hettermann's beat Doghouse by the score of 13 to 4, thus eliminating the Doghouse from the playoofs. R H Hettermann's 13 16 Doghouse 4 6 Top hitters, Doghouse: Jim Pinkstaff 2-3. Top hitters, Hettermann's: Lloyd Freund 4-4, Dick Marsh 3-4, Tom Oeffling 3-4, Dick Hiller 3-4, Jack Schaefer 2-4. Home runs: Dick Hiller, Tom Oeffling. In the championship game which will be the best two games out of three, Old. Bridge played Hettermann's. Population of Africa (negro and white) doubles itself each 36 years, thanks to what medical and hospital care has trickled in. READ THE CLASSIFIEDS Robin Hood's * Dpst-lllold. soles RICHMOND BOWL 28, 29, 30 Carnival Rides and Games FREE Prizes Given Away Each Night First 500 Registrants Each Night Receive 1 FREE GAME Coupon! -- Jamboree Location -- North End of Richmond, 111. on Route 12 refuse to wear out Made of the toughest polyvinyl material, Robin Hood's Dyna-Mold soles will last and last and last. In fact, your child will probably outgrow the shoe before the sole wears out. See our many Dyna- Mold styles now. 'Robin Hood's name for poly* vinyl chloride soling material Robin, ®Hoodi Shorn* ROTH 1246 N. Green St. McHenry PHONE 385-2027 SPEND LESS, GET MORE You can depend oh the best in Top Quality Meats from Bill Pries Certified --r for over a quarter of a century. U.S. CHOICE ROUND OB SWISS STEAK 79* FRESH SMALL SIZE P©1K HOI COUNTRY FRESH 2-3-lb. avg. FRYING msfmt CHICKENS ... 29 !t> Chicken Legs 45?\k Chix Breasts * tt> OUR OWN OH SO GOOD BULK PORK SAUSAGE 59 4-6 LB. AVG. ROASTING CHICKENS Freshly GROUND B. KRAFT JET PUFF ' '.J'WjJJWU • Marshmallows • .TV". • • • KRAFT SALAD B^WL Sandwich Spread. • • • • • KRAFT Apple Jelly••••••••• KRAFT . Blackberry Jelly .•••••• KRAFT ~ Grape Jelly O PILLSBURY or BALLARD, SWEETMILK or. Buttermilk Biscuits. . • . O PILLSBURY -ALL FLAVORS Refrigerated Cookies. • . • KRAFT American Slices RAGGEDY ANN Pork & Beans. •••••• O RAGGEDY ANN STUFFED THROWN Manzanilla Olives. • . . • • RAGGEDY ANN PLAIN THROWN Queen Olives RAGGEDY ANN CUT ^ Green Asparagus. ,. , JL RAGGEDY ANN GARDEN FRESH _ P e a s . • • • • • • • • • • • * '•£•39' KRAFT 18-Ox. $100 300 Tint #" 35 V 29c 300 Tint 303 Tint 49c 33= Household Delight Pink Lotion DETERGENT l,2 Gal. 79* Peperidge Farm Party Shells 3 $1.00 Gaucho Sliced Beef & Gravy .... 2 lbs. $1.59 Fox Deluxe Meat Pies 6 $ 1.00 Kelly's Sliced Strawberries 10-oz. 2 39c * Icelandic Ocean Perch 1-lb. pkg. 45c While Cloud Tissue White Pine Towels Patrician Facial Tissue 6/69c 2 roll pkg. 25c ... 400 ct. 2 35c WISC ONSIN NEW WHITE POTATOES 10-lb. bag .49 ft> CALIFORNIA FREESTONE PIACHiS . . . 2 lbs. 29'| KJ FANCY FRESH SOLID CABBAGE OF THE WEEK. RAGGEDY ANN CERTIFIED RED LABEL Phone Sale Dates Corner Elm 38r>-00«n> Anjr. 2~ - 28 - '»<> & Urwu Oycn Sundays 9 to Noons Hit I S BROS Instant Coffee 99° PFC-ULAR or DRIP--15c Off, You Pay Folger's Coffee. . • • . 3-Lb. $OI5 Tin Mm

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy