as® Game Technicians Tell How To Save Wildlife crop production be delayed until Aug. 15. Spot mowing or herbicides applied at recommended rates may be used to control weeds in nuisance areas. © "(MMtMBtR] BY THE OLD TIMER £ FRI. APRIL 11, 1969- PLAINDEALER - P< McHENRY PLAI NDEALER Established 1875 S812 Weftt Elm Street Phone 388*0110 McHenry, Illinois -- 60050 Published Every Wednesday & Friday at McHenry, 111. Second Class Postage Paid at McHenry, Illinois by McHENRY PUBLISHING COMPANY Larry E. Lund -- Publisher 1 9 6 9 NEWSPAPER •^1 MEMBER^ 1 Year In McHenry and Lake ^County Adele Froehlich, Edit MEMBER 'AMB>nal ew/WpMlper Association - Founded 1885 SPRINGFIELD, ILL. -- Spring, the season of birth for wildlife, may also be the time of sudden death. Information gathered by game technicians shows that mowing destroys 40 percent of the pheasant nests in hayfields. Mowing may injure or kill one out of five nesting pheasant hens. Quail, prairie chickens and songbirds consider hayfields and grasslands a nursery. Mowing operations destroy their nests. Cottpntail rabbits, just old enough to leave their nests, are extremely vulnerable to mowing machines. Even deer may be killed. Jack Calhoun of the Illinois Department of Conservation said he has seen dead fawns with missing legs or feet in newly mowed fields close to woodlands. Deer born after the peak of the fawning season are most likely to be killed. Game technicians realize that much of the wildlife loss is inevitable in an intensively farmed state like Illinois. But the toll would be reduced if grassy areas not devoted to crop production were left undisturbed until after the nesting season is over. Hillsides, road shoulders antj^, forest glades shoQlQ not be mowed until after midsummer. The U.S. Department of Agriculture recommends that the mowing of lands diverted from LEARNING . . . Tory Gr e n i e r , 9, A d e l p h i , Maryland, feels a rotted log during e x p l o r a t i o n of a "Touch and See Nature Trail" in Washington, D.C. The trail was developed at the National Arboretum to enable blind people to see and enjoy nature. From C. William Nunsber: ger, Souderton, Pa.: C rossing the threshhold of another Lenten Season as marked in liturgical churches such as St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Telford, Pa., my thoughts are aroused to the days of my youth. I recall long ago days when the church of my confirmation, St. John's Lutheran, Sumncytown, I'a., observed the seven Wednesdays before Master as the Lenten Season. In ^ mystical way the aromatic odor of fastnachts (doughnuts) baked by my mother returns to fill my nostrils. There was nothing special about them except they were homemade and a taste treat to a. generation not used to so much production line baking. I recall, too, how it seemed to me young people had little or no role at all to play in the life of the church, much less in its services. Young people were not challenged to take an active part in the life of the parish. This was the responsibility of the pastor and a few older men. Today this role is reversed and young people are being encouraged to direct their energies, talents, enthusiasm, into channels of church life. Without the participation of youth in the Lenten services at St. Paul's Lutheran in Telford the aura could well be that of a long past time. However, as they give of their time as ushers and choir singers, especially, there is a vibrance of life, a pulsating of futurity. The church is alive because it stays young! Offshore Wells In the effort to reap underwater riches, man has sunk nearly 9,000 offshore oil wells in the world's continental shelves. FIRST LAW SIGNED Illinois' new governor signed the first bills of the 78th General Assembly into law Wednesday. Gov. Richard B. Ogilvie's first signature was put on Senate Bill 124, which increases the Advisory Board of Livestock Commissioners from 17 to 19, new memebers will be the dean of the agriculture school, University of Illinois, and a representative of pork producers. Another of the new laws, Senate Bill 77, appropriates $110,000,000 to the Department of Public Aid. The money is for aid to the aged, blind or disabled, dependent children, medical assistance andgeneral assistance local aid to the medically indigent. Shop In McHenry Subscription Rales • • $7.50 1 Year $9.00 Outside McHenry and Lake County BOWLING NOTES TOMASELLO'S THURS-NITE LADIES T.N.T. LEAGUE ~ 3-27-69 M. Hettermann 176; M.Johnston 183; I. Stilling 176-180; V. Smith 480; L.A. Smith 171; J. Filip 171; L. Anderson 200; E. Sandell 181; M. Freund 173; B. Greenwood 171-481; C. May 177-170-506; M. May 173; A. Oeffling 172-178-483; D. Hiller 172; J. Kennebeck 170; L. La Bay 182-500. 4-3-69 J. Kennebeck 191-503; L. La Bay 200-171-511; H.* Thelen 487; D. Hettermann 174; M. Hettermann 171; B. Peckous 178; B. Greenwood 187; C. May 206-537; J. Fischer 208- 493. MINOR CRASHES ARE REPORTED Only minor accidents occurred in the city over the Easter weekend. John D. Dardella of 4104 Spring Grove road and Virginia L. Blake of 724 Country club drive were parked at Green street meters. Dardella pulled out, striking the fender of the other auto. Kavin J. Lavin of 1606 N. Pleasant avenue, leaving a parking lot, passed behind Judy A. Gavin of Alton, 111., and the vehicles collided, causing damage to the Lavin auto. Bess F. Velden of 3804 W. Waukegan road stopped at the intersection of Waukegan and Front street and her auto was struck in the rear by Ann C. Yedman of Crystal Lake, who also stopped but whose car rolled into the other, causing minor damage. BOOKS OFFICE SOME JET . . . One of 26 stewardesses who helped christen the world's largest commercial airliner, the Boeing 747 superjet, holds a gaily decorated bottle of champagne. Sports Fans Help us keep our sports page the bright one that it is. Do you know of a sporting event that merits a photo? If so, call our photgrapher, Wayne Gaylord at 385-0170. SUPPLIES OFFICE furniture Riverside Books & Stationery 1325 N. Riverside Dr. Ph.385-7140 McHenry 1" X 1 " CERAMIC Vinyl Asbestos Floor Tilo 1/16" 12 X 12" sq. *l9e SPECIAL Solid Vinyl Tile sq. ft. 24< Kodisak s,ip%* 5002 W. RK 120, McHenry 385-7310 VOTE! Tuesday, April 15 Donald P. Doherty MAYOR Earl R. Walsh CITY CLERK Thomas F. Bolger City Treasurer for CONTINUED PROGRESS we ask for YOUR SUPPORT Eight years ago in April, 1961 we asked you for your vote and promised in return an administration of vision, hard work and integrity. We feel that in those eight years we have kept our promise Theodore N. Piizen Alderman -- 1st Ward Joseph A. Etien - Alderman -- 2nd Ward the City of McHenry an administration of " the new library, street improveand that we have given accomplishment in many areas: ments, public works, police department, new band stand, planning, zoning, annexations, availability of industrial sites, and many other plans for future development. And so we are asking for your vote again and promising in return a continuous effort toward progress in new areas as well as old, with the same ideals of vision, hard work and integrity. VOTE A STRAIGHT TICKET N Raymond L. Smith Alderman -- 3rd Ward mm. Frank S. Hromec Alderman -- 4th Ward for the Progres Party Tuesday, April 15 th