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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 22 Feb 1974, p. 4

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/ PAGE 4 - McHENRY PLAINDEALER - iFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22,1974 Jim and his companion are airborne again as they lift off for a new, unknown destination. "J F 0" Invades McHenry The IFO is a ba!!«fm and gracefully glides with the wind. • With the aid of field glasses, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Martin of Fairway drive spot the IFO (Identified Flying Object) high over McHenry Shores. Spectators rush in for a closer view as the pilot brings the craft down in a vacant field near McHenry Shores. Staff Photos By Wayne Gaylord Jim Berry, owner and pilot, chats with the crowd. Jim told the curious onlookers that he started his journey just north of his home city of Crystal Lake. Enjoy A Rewarding Food Trip iMl Pas for Tells Fast Pace Of Life With Friends To Your Nearby Jewel! PRICES IFfiCTIVI, UNtfSS OTHERWISE INDICATED, THURS. FEB 21 THROUGH SUNDAY. FEB 24 AT ALL JEWEL STORES IN COOK. LAKE. DUPAGE AND MC HENRY COUNTIES (EXCLUDING RIVER OAKS) 3718 W. ELM STREET McHENRY, ILLINOIS Jewel does more than you'd expect NEW STORE HOURS: :hru Saturday 8 Sunday 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. ONLY SMOKED MEATS. LUNCHMEATS POULTRY AND FROZEN FISH AND SEAFOOD AiiE AVAI1 XiLE 4.u_„ o « ™ 1 n _ _ AFTER six p M WEEKDAYS AND ALL DAY SUNDAY Monday thru Saturday 8 a.m. - 10 p.m. AND HOLIDAYS. U S O A GOLDEN, RIPE U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEFROUND CHOICE Bananas Riimp or Rotisserie Roast U.S.D.A. GRADE "A" POPULAR BRANDS (EXCLUDING SELF-BASTING) 10-13 LB. Hen T urkeys GOV'T. INSPECTED PORK LOIN CRISP Center Chops Fresh Carrots CORN KING Sliced Bacon TREAT YOUR FAMILY TO •ORIENTAL DINNERFL ORIENTAL Snow Peas LB Perk up appetites with a delicious Oriental menu this week. You'll find snow peas, bok, choy, lo boc, napa, bean sprouts and more favorites in the Produce Market! ESS W7iti B ' . • mmwtt w. xa mimim C A S H - S A V I N G C O U P O N GOOD THRU SUNOAY. FIB 24. 1974 SAVE 20* ON A 1 IB. PKG. OF HYGRADi'S Ball Park Franks or Oscar Mayer Wieners WITH THIS COUPON (GOOD THRU SUNDAY. FEB 24, 1974 SAVE 20 CALIFORNIA Rhubarb ON A 1 LB. PKG OF OSCAR MAYER. ARMOUR OR C.hvfCut Sliced Bacon WITH THIS COUPON AVAILABLE ONLY IN JEWEL'S WITH CHEF'S KITCHENS COMPLETE YOUR DINNER HERE OR PICK UP A COMPLETE PINNERiB IMPERIAL! Onion C A S H S A V I N G C O U P O N GOOD THRU SUNDAY. FIB 24. 1974 GOOD THRU SUNDAY, FEB 24, 1974 -jf"3 SAVE 10 SAVE 10 ON ANY 3 OZ. PKG OF ON ANY 8 OZ PKG OF OSCAR MAYER OR ECKRICH Sliced Lunchmeat WITH THIS COUPON^ ^ BUDDIG - ANY VARIETY • 151 Chipped Meats V * WITH TRTRS COUPON Bread "REAL PIZZERIA" - 1 V CHEESE 4 SAUSAGE 24 OZ Pizza C A S H S A V I N G C O U P O N GOOD THRU SUNDAY. FEB 24. 1974 SAVE 50' ON ANY BRAND 3 LB. OR 5 LB Canned Ham OVREG •1.19 GOOD THRU SUNOAY, FEB 24, 1974 SAVE 25c ON ANY $150 OR MORE PURCHASE IN | Jewel's Sausage Shopi WITH THIS COUPON I I FRESHLY BAKED Cherry Pie SAUSACE 6BurnuGBros WITH THIS COUPON BREAKFASTIME, SNACKTIME, BURNT BAKED FOODS ARE ALWATS A TREAT! BUTTERCRUST OR - 24 OZ. LOAF Mellocrust Bread GOOD THRU SUNDAY, FEB 24, 1974 SAVE 50 GOOD THRU SUNDAY. FEB 24, 1974 SAVE 20 ON A 4-5 LB U.S.D.A. GRADE "A h.fiut« OR SWIFTS PREMIUM ON A 1 LB. PKG. OF OSCAR MAYER w • Duckling Pork Links WITH THIS COUPON N 12 OZ. PKG. OF CHOCOLATE ICED Donuts WITH THIS COUPON weastOCHickiJ UCHI TUNA IN WATER BREAST OF CHICKEN Tuna FOULD'S - MACARONI OR RICELAND - EXTRA LONG GRAIN BELMONT Spaghetti Bread 32LOZ. 16 OZ LOAF 6'/a OZ CAN (by Father Wm O. Hanner) While we were at the Roberts home fun never stopped. We went out a lot but life in the house was rapid. When you sat down to dinner there were eight of us and if Mark was home there were nine. Sally often made the salad and papa Jim served. If there was a roast he carved just as the head of the house used to do. How necessary meals together are for a family. Then the day's doings are discussed and each one gets caught up on the other's doings. The groceries faded away too. It is quite a trick to keep calories flowing into a teen age family. We went to church in body on Sunday. The church was always well filled. We helped by taking a whole pew. We marched in and sat up under the preacher's nose. We all like to know what is going on. In fact, we even went to the an­ nual meeting of the parish, St. Edmund's. When you get a retired clergyman going to an annual meeting you know there was pressure put on somewhere. It was a good meeting. The rector preached well. At the annual meeting he was decked out like a summer garden party back in Illinois. Red plaid trousers and patent leather shoes he was a clerical peacock. A block or two away from the Roberts lived other former parishioners, the Charles Perrys. After church on Sunday we drove out to their country club and were entertained at a champagne breakfast. It was indeed a very fancy brunch. There are magnificent private clubs all over the area. These are hard days for private clubs but some of the old and better ones ( still seem flourishing, certainly in the Los Angelos area. Breakfast is a wonderful meal to entertain at. President Ceolidge, or maybe it was Hoover, used to entertain at breakfast. Another time we went, just Jim and Charlotte and Rose and I, to the Padua Hills restaurant. Maybe I should say theatre. For you went way out in the hills near the foot of Mount Baldy and here was a Mexican hacienda that served fine Mexican food. While you ate, the waiters and the senoritas who waited on you at table sang and danced. This is a part of the Padua institute which is a non profit group that seeks to present and preserve the amenities known to their area when it was under Spanish and Mexican rule. There are shops too, and the entire in­ stitute is in an old olive grove on a hillside. Another day I went to lunch with Jim at the Dartmouth club. They get together regularly to keep alive the experiences of their days at Dartmouth. Here was a club in California dedicated to a college in New Hampshire. School spirit, it stretched clear across the continent. Los Angelos is a rare city, so new, so old, so modern so still bearing the marks of Father Juniper Serra's work. We visited the San Gabriel mission. It was founded in 1771. There was a wedding going on. Once the mission was the center for great activities. The largest winery in old California was here. The trunk of one old grape vine was 8 or 9 inches in diameter. Los Angelos has no systems of transportation like Chicago or New York. It does, however, have freeways in excess of anything we know here. But with the energy crisis they were often empty. Los Angelos is more dependent on cars than any other of our major cities. There is an old section of town down around Olvera street. In this vicinity the city was founded about 1781. It is thus nearly 200 years old. Once this was the city's finest residential area. Here was built the first hotel, the old Plaza church, the first fire stationM^ is now a center of Mexican culture, art, business. There is an old iron work bandstand in the district, of a sort, familiar to all who visit Mexico. There are topiary trees cut into comic form of animals. Another night we went out for dinner where I was served the largest cut of beef I have ever been served in my life except at a famous eatery in Boston. This meal was expensive. But friends it was worth it. Many thanks to the Roberts one and all. Next week we will run down to San Diego. That is an exciting place too. Payroll Savings. The cold, hard, calculating way to get a nice, warm feeling of security. You can plan your future avings you specify will be automati­ cally set aside each payday to buy U.S. Savings Bonds. With Bonds what you save is what you get. Plus interest. Nothing s more secure and dependable. Ask your payroll people to get you started right away. You'll be richer later. And feel good. And warm. And secure. Thke . stock in^merica. Join the Payroil Savings Plan. ©I | Th#u S Gov«fnim vwvpvriuvii n*l Th« Department of th« Tr«Mwry a nd Tf c # A t f w t i t . n g C o w k . i

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