Thursday' Ocipber 28,: 1965 McHENRY PLAINDEALER i i Established 1875 West Elm Street Phone S85-0170 McHenry, Jftlnote -- 60030 Published Every Thursday at McHenry, Illinois -- Second Class Postage Paid at McHenry, Illinois fey McHENRY PUBLISHING COMPANY -tarry E. Lund -- Publisher Adele Froehlich, Editor THE McHENRY PLAMDEALER Sectionduo ms V imcm- i e i / NATIONAL E O I T O R I A I AS^)C0T|5N Him.ll.'IIJU.'.U'llJI Subscription Rates 1 Year $4.50 1 Year $4.00 6 Mos $2.50 6 Mos $2.25 3 Mos. $1.75 3 Mos $1.50 Outside McHenry County In McHenry County All during the Fall Football season, Jepsen Tire will be bringing you this Football Forecast. It is compiled by Joe Harris, leading iooiball forecaster who has better than a 82% •accuracy record. Look for this feature weekly. orecadt SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1965 •• Probable Winners & Seores - Abilene Christian 20 Alabama 10 Arkansas 24 Army 14 Carroll (Wis.) 20 •f^arfemouth 14 38$bard 17 Iowa 14 Kansas 20 Louisiana State ............. 10 Michigan State 28 Michigan 14 Nebraska • 14 North Central (111.) 20 "JSpjtce Dame 28 ©hio State 21 Oklahoma State 14 Oklahoma 17 Penn State 21 Pursue 17 Syracuse 21 Texas 21 U.C.L.A. 20 - Probable Losers & Scores - Drake 14 [Mississippi State 7 Texas A. & M. 7 Colgate 7 Lake Forest 6 Yale 7 Pennsylvania 7 Indiana 13 Kansas State 7 Mississippi 7 Northwestern 7 Wisconsin 7 MissQuri 13 Carthage 6 Navy 7 Minnesota 14 Iowa State 13 Colorado 14 California 14 Illinois • 14 Pittsburgh 14 So. Methodist 7 Air Force Academy 14 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1965 National Football League Baltimore 27 San Francisco 17 Cleveland 31 Minnesota 27 Dallas 21 Pittsburgh 20 Betroit 20 Los Angeles 17 Green Bay 24 Chicago 17 St. Louis 24 New York Giants 23 JVasj&ington 30 Philadelphia 28 I t American Football League puffalo 23 Houston 17 iKansas City 31 Oakland 24 New York Jets 24 Denver 23 San Diego 24 Boston 16 (1) FULL SERVICE guaranteed for life of original tread. (2) FULL ALLOWANCE granted on any unused service. See us for complete details today Cooper Tires New Bargain Price Here's the lowest price ever on all-nylon Cooper winter tires. Stocks limited. So see us soon. • Premium quality tread design. • Traction-powered for extra safety on ice, mud, snow. • Super strong Cooper "Hi-T" nylon cord body. • New Cooper Cooprene rubber gives super mileage. • Buns smoother, runs quieter. 2 for *27 6.50x13--Plus Tax WHITE WALLS ONLY $2.50 each more COMPLETE MOTOR TUNE-UP More power! Better mileage! We'll check, clean and adjust spark plugs, points, condenser, ignition wires. 6 . cyl. -- $6.66 8 - Cyl. $8.88 (Plus Parts) ATTENTION: Winterize Now! ilffiNfilRE AND tPhpiJe 385^24 • .. ' . Phono 385-042G by Paul Powell Secretary of State CAUSES OF ACCIDENTS "Failure to yield right-ofway" was listed as the greatest s i n g l e c o n t r i b u t i n g c a u s e -- 18.1% --of the 285,502 accidents reported to the Illinois Division of Highways for 1964. "Followed too closely" was the second largest driver er^ Tor -- 16% -- and "speed too fast" was third with 11.4% of the total. Stop sign and traffic signal violations were about even for fourth and fifth place. "Other improper driving" was listed at 23.5%, "They say that failure to yield right-of-way is the greatest 8in« gle cause of accidents." A majority of the two-car collisions (54.5%) occurred at intersections, while the greatest cause of single-car accidents. was recorded as running off a straight road. Two-thirds of all accidents occurred on dry pavement, and 62% of them happened during daylight hours. Parked motor vehicles were involved 40,851 times and 497 collisions with railroad trains were reported. Three hundred and seventyfour pedestrians were killed and more than 10,000 injured, half of them under the age of 14. Crossing the street at some place other than an intersection was the greatest single cause in this age group. McHenry Library HOURS thru Friday 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. 1 "THE SPACE AGE SPORT SKYDIVING" by Ray Darby Boys-Sports Sport( parachuting or skydiving, the new sport of the space age, has captured the imagination of the public by opening a new world of adventure and fun. The author traces the history of flying and parachuting. Mr. Darby describes how novices are trained to become sport jumpers, the equipment needed, what the sport costs. Included are the location of major sport parachute centers in the United States, stories about outstanding personalities national and international competitions, as well as a glossary of sport parachuting terms. "THE YOUNGEST CONQUISTADOR" by S. G. Mantel Boys Fiction Historical Pablo Oliva was barely 15 years old when he took part in one of the greatest events the world has seen, the capture of the powerful Azte^ Empire. This is the story of Pablo's great adveniure. xn u are found how it began and how it ended. Here, too, are the bloody deeds and the trachery that for best comfort might be forgotten, but that must be told. For his is not only the story of Pablo Oliva, but also of the Conquest of Mexico, as it is recorded in the books of the past. "BY THE GREAT HORN SPOON" by Sid Fleischman Junior-Fiction It was 1849 and the California Gold Rush was on. As the side wheeler Lady Wilma put out from Boston, for San Francisco, two stowaways huddled in potato barrels in the hold. One was Jack Flagg, an orphan bound for California to regain a fortune for his Aunt Arabella. The other was Praiseworthy, Aunt Arabella's loyal butler. Sid Fleischman tells the extraordinary adventure of Jack and the inimitable Praiseworthy with so rare a humor and vitality that they deserve to endure. "WHEN MOTI|fcR. WAS A GIRL" by Frano.es L'llmann DeArmand Teenage Girls--Short Stories Times have changed and fashions and ways of living. However, in fundamental ways people have not changed to any great degree. The stories in this book were chosen from hundreds that appeared in magazines published for teenagers and for their mothers in the J940's. Today young people live under threat of war rather than in a world actually at war. The world itself moves at a faster pace, but the hopes and the dreams, the delights, and the fears of young people remain much the same. These stories truly reflect how teen-agers of World War II days and soon thereafter felt and what they did about getting along with their tamii. es, about popularity and dating, schools and careers, about who they were and where they were going. The stories are certain to strike a responsive chord with those girls' teenage daughters. Timely, perceptive, understanding, most of the stories might have been written today. "THE DOORBELL RANG" By Re.v Stout This is, in the opinion of his publishers, the finest detective story ever written£ by Rex Stout, and therefore one of the very best ever written by anyone. A very rich woman comes to Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin, claiming that she is being harrassed by the FBI. She reports "that agents are following her and members of her family, her wires are being tapped, and her privacy is being otherwise invaded. She demands that Wolfe help her to find relief and offers him the largest retainer he has ever seen. Wolfe, with some hesitation, takes the case and quickly encounters a murder about which members of the FBI may know more than is apparent. He also finds himself in a direct encounter with FBI agents under h ghly questionable circumstances. Never before has Rex Stout written a book more perfectly plotted or one with a denouement so skillfully arrived at. "THE WIND'S WILL" By Gerald Warner Brae*' 1 "All human beings are cowards. That's our natural condition. We overcome it sometimes, by vanity or passion or what we call will. But the common condition is fear." During the long summer between high school and college, David Wayne passes through the rites of initiation that admit him to manhood. His growing up in a small river town in Maine involves women. As the summer moves along, David is forced to take stock of his fears and courage; of his capacity for hatred and compassion; and most important of his relation to his minister father and his father's implacable Go3. He begins to understand a little about the lovely battle of will against desire. In his novel, Gerald Warner Brace has taken as his theme the dark passions that flare between father and son, men and women, and between men and the God they have created to terrify themselves. This is a tense and dramatic tale of the< fall of virtue and the tesing of absolutes, set against the back drop of the river that mpves always away from town, running to the open sea. "Courage is what you show A L I T Y F O O D S A T L O W E S T P R I C E S US ertifled Store Only ^ THIS COUPON IS WORTH $1 TO YOU!! SPECIAL SAVE $100 WHEN YOU BUY Cigarettes Offer $20.00 or more $ *1 00 in groceries Excluded W ± • Clip this coupon, and present with your purchase C0UPM USE AS CASH fempm «•* mt/i* •/ tty Kioi innni h n lonnfwvirw unu irv\r»vwinnr\nfinnonnnr im™ ASSORTED FLAVORS HI -C Fruit Drinks 4-*1 iERBERS -- STRAINED I3ABY _ FOOD 6 reg. jars | RAGGEDY ANN jJellies or Preserves 10-oz. Jar] your choice 10-oz. jar STEAK SALE ->OC u-s- CHOICE onc /71b Club Steaks 0%, U.S. CHOICE SIRLOIN U.S. CHOICE T - BONE 89t U.S. CHOICE 0_£ Porterhouse 7Jnlb . Fresh Ground Beef it $1.47 59' Our J9wn Home Cured CORNED BEEF BRISKET 69'rb U.S. Choice Pot Roast 55 Lean Tender BEEF STEW 69 Wilson Sliced Crisp Rite BACON 59 Osear Mayer Mendota Weiners 49 CHASE AND SANBORN INSTANT 6-oz. COFFEE jar KERBERS HICKORY SMOKED P I C N I C H A M S 5-6 Lb. Avg. 39l'b OUR OWN Fresh Polish 79c lb. Bulk Pork Sausage 55c lb. Fresh Italian 79c lb. Fresh Brattwurst 79c lb. Country Back Ribs 59c lb. BANQUET FROZEN CHICKEN DINNERS 3 reg. pkg. $ 1 SANITARY NAPKINS MODESS KOTEX JLAR 33 REGULAR 12 ct. REGULAR 48 ft. $1.33 D-CON RIDS MICE 4r $i.49 WISK FOR DISHES Reg. -jce btl. COUNTRY'S DELIGHT MILK 69* Halloween Party FRUIT DRINKS HI-C 12 reg. 79c Chef Boy-ar-dee 40-oz. tin ! SPAGHETTI 25c CLOSE OUT HALF PRICE FRUIT JARS QUARTS 75* Case ELBOW CREAMETTES 2/19 Big Roll SCOT TOWELS Ass't. Colors 29' Chef Boy-ar-dee SPAGHETTI & GR. BEEF 15'/2-oz. 2/45* None Such MINCE MEAT 33c, 45c and 59c Iiraft - Deluxe Dinner macaroni 9 /Que & CHEESE Raggedy Ann BLACK RASPBERRIES White Cloud 6 Roll Pkg. TISSUE 65' Vets DOG |A FOOD reg. tins 99* Fopeye PUFFED 9 WHEAT " cello bags 35* Stewarts TEA PINTS Case 1266 SHOP CERTIFIED & SAVE Green Street Oct. 28 - 29 - 30 Cello Bag CARROTS 10* bag Red U.S. No. 1 Potatoes 10 lbs. 55c J OP Q U A L I T Y FO O DS AT LOWES T P R I C E S off with. Fear is think they'll find out you." The search for a passage between these two extremes is David's story, set down with candor and compassion by a minister novelist. "GIFT OF PROPHECY" by Ruth Montgomery The year was 1952, the scene was St. Matthew's cathedral in Washington, D.C., where Jeane Dixon goes for meditation every morning. She was preparing to kneel in prayen w>\en the White House suddenly appeared in radiant brilliance before her, the numerals 1960 above it. As she watched, a dark cloud spread from the numbers and dripped down over the White House and- the young man standing in front of it. That was Mrs. Dixon's' first intimation of the assassination of «John F. Kennedy. As the fateful time approached, she foresaw the day and place the tragedy would occur and took well documented steps to try to avert it. But long before that appalling event, Jeane-Dixon had become well known for her visions which seemed to lift the curtain on tomorrow in much the same manner as those of the Old Testament prophets. This fascinating book records her extraordinary predictions, past, present and future, which we shall leave for the reader to discover for himself. This is an extraordinary book about an extraordinary modern day prophet. FOR DEPUTIES Lt. Henry Nulle of the McHenry County Sheriff's depart' ment has announced that as a result of a meeting of all members of the Sheriff's department, plans are being formulated for a benefit and appreciation dance program to be held on behalf of Chief Deputy John Carroll and Deputy Sergeant Don Madsen. Nulle added that this program is to be cosponsored by both the McHenry County and Lake County Sheriff's departments. He and Lt. Jake Repp of the Lake County Sheriff's department have been appointed co-chairmen of this affair. A tentative date of Jan. 12, 1966, has been set. Nulle stated that |arrangements are new being rhade for ticket distribution and thie selection of a site will be announced shortly. He also said that several county civic organizations have indicated a desire* to participate in this affair. He believes final plans will be completed in the next few days. Anyone desiring to assist in the promotion of this worthwhile cause are requested to contact Lt. Nulle at the Sheriff's Department, Woodstock, or call 338-2141. USE CLASSIFIEDS! Raisin Bread In Aa Instant With Instants! Without fear of contradiction, we'd be willing to say that there is nothing quite so marvelous as the tantalizing aroma of baking bread. Agreed? As that very special fragrance wafta through the house, your admiring public is likely to drift even faster toward the kitchen for a first taste. And what a taste they'll enjoy when they bite into thift moist, rich Raisin Loaf! It's a quick bread in every sense: made in one bowl by a series of easy steps with, foods designed to work for you. Here's a chance for you to try out that new instant blending flour you've heard so much about . . . just'measure it from canister to mixing bowl. No sifting is necessary and what a fine texture it will give you! ' * r::i The raisin flavor comes from a can of raisin pie filling, combined with a little orange marmalade. The resulting bread is quite delicious, a treat you'll want to make often for brunch, the ladies' "salad luncheons" or a neighborhood kaffee klatsch. Raisin Brunch Loaf 1 cup brown sugar 5 cups instant blending flour V2 cup margarine 2 tablespoons baking powder 1 ' 3 eggs 2 teaspoons salt % cup milk v t 1 teaspoon allspice V% cup orange marmalade 2 teaspoons cinnamon \ 1 No. 2 can (2 cups) raisin ^ 1 cup chopped pecans pie filling Oven: 350°. Grease and. flour bottoms of two 9x5x3-inch pan*. Cream together brown sugar and margarine. Blend in eggs, milk, orange marmalade, and pie filling. Add flour, baking powder, salt, cinnamon and allspice; blend well. Stir in nuts. Pour into pans. Bake at 350° for 55 to 65 minutes, or until wooden pick inserted in mjddle comes out clean. Cool and remove from pans; wrap in foil to store or freeze. Makes two 1-lb. loaves. OFFERED TO YOU EXCLUSIVELY BY MAXUM LONG RANGE HIGH BASE SHOTSHELLS BY (Candian Industries Ltd.) I I BIG SUPPLY OF SHELLS FOR THE HUNTING SEASON -- • 22 RIFLE • 410 GA. SHOTGUN • 20 GA. SHOTGUN • 16 GA. SHOTGUN • 12 GA. SHOTGUN All Hunters Needs -- HUNTING LICENSES -- COAST - TO - COAST 1327 N. Riverside Dir.'/' McHenry, Illinois