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CARVING HIS NICHE Illinois artisan crafts a career in woodworking KNEADS & WANTS Homemade food gifts a treat to give or receive CROPS, CRITTERS IN THE CLASSROOM Fabric Shepherdess weaves agricultural upbringing with a love for fiber arts ® WINTER 2010-11 ILLINOIS FARM BUREAU A QUARTERLY MAGAZINE FOR MEMBERS ILFBPARTNERS.COM The of Her Life

Winter 2010-11 ILFB Partners

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ILFB Partners highlights what’s good about Illinois – from the best travel destinations and recipes to articles about important agricultural issues that face every Illinois resident. This magazine is produced quarterly for Illinois Farm Bureau members by Journal Communications.

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Page 1: Winter 2010-11 ILFB Partners

Carving His niCHeIllinois artisan crafts a career in woodworking

Kneads & WantsHomemade food gifts a treat to give or receive

Crops, Critters in tHe Classroom

FabricShepherdess weaves agricultural upbringing with a love for fiber arts

®

WInter 2010-11

illinois Farm Bureau

A quArterly mAgAzIne for members IlfbpArtners.com

The

of Her Life

Page 4: Winter 2010-11 ILFB Partners

Partners Goes Social

Sharing Illinois travel ideas, gardening tips, recipe ideas, food facts, festivals and much, much more!

ILPartners Illinois Partners

What’s your favorite activity to do during Illinois winters?

ILPartners Illinois Partners

A warm and tasty way to eat carrots – our #recipe for Carrot Ginger Soup: http://bit.ly/carrotsoup

armsnfarms Becky Finfrock@ILPartners Snowmobile... or travel to a place where it’s warm!

DarrenBodine Darren Bodine@ILPartners Fighting Illini basketball games...and not shoveling snow.

Follow uS on TwITTer

twitter.com/ilpartners

FInd uS on Facebook

facebook.com/illinoispartners

An offIcIAl member publIcAtIon of tHe IllInoIs fArm bureAu

illinois Farm Bureau

Publisher Dennis Vercler

Editor Dave McClelland

Associate Editor Martin Ross

Production Manager Bob Standard

Photographic Services Director Ken Kashian

President Philip Nelson

Vice President Rich Guebert Jr.

Executive Director of Operations, News & Communications

Chris Magnuson

Managing Editor Jessy Yancey

Copy Editors Lisa Battles, Joyce Caruthers, Jill Wyatt

Proofreading Manager Raven Petty

Contributing Writers Rebecca Denton, Charlyn Fargo,

Jessica Mozo, Jan Phipps, Karen Schwartzman,

Joanie Stiers, Jessica Walker, Lorraine Zenge

Media Technology Director Christina Carden

Senior Graphic Designer Laura Gallagher

Media Technology Analysts Chandra Bradshaw,

Yamel Hall, Alison Hunter, Marcus Snyder

Photography Director Jeffrey S. Otto

Senior Photographers Jeff Adkins, Brian McCord

Staff Photographers Todd Bennett, Antony Boshier

Web Designer Leigh Guarin

Ad Production Manager Katie Middendorf

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Accounting Diana Guzman, Maria McFarland, Lisa Owens

Sales Support Manager Cindy Hall

Sales Support, Custom Division Rachael Goldsberry

County Program Coordinator Kristy Duncan

Office Manager Shelly Miller

Receptionist Linda Bishop

Chairman Greg Thurman

President/Publisher Bob Schwartzman

Executive Vice President Ray Langen

Sr. V.P./Operations Casey Hester

Sr. V.P./Sales Todd Potter, Carla Thurman

V.P./Custom Publishing Kim Newsom Holmberg

V.P./Visual Content Mark Forester

V.P./Content Development Teree Caruthers

V.P./Content Operations Natasha Lorens

Controller Chris Dudley

Marketing Creative Director Keith Harris

Distribution Director Gary Smith

Advertising Sales Manager, Custom Division Tori Hughes

Illinois Farm Bureau Partners is produced for the Illinois Farm

Bureau by Journal Communications Inc., 725 Cool Springs

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Volume 3, no. 4

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Illinois Partners@ILPartners Illinois

Magazine for Illinois Farm Bureau members featuring farm, food and finds

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Every Issue5 PRAIRIE STATE PERSPECTIVESledders take advantage of pasture perks

6 AlMANACLearn how to make a pine cone bird feeder

17 COuNTRy WISDOMAre you prepared for your retirement?

20 RECIPESHomemade food gifts are a treat to give and receive

24 GARDENINGDelve into houseplant history with decades of plant fads

30 WINTER EVENTSSee impressive snow sculptures at Snow Days Chicago

ON ThE COVER J. Kyle Keener

Natasha Lehrer, owner of Esther’s Place Fiber Arts Studio in Big Rock

Features

8 Crops and Critters in the Classroom

Teachers use agriculture to teach core subjects

12 The Fabric of her lifeBig Rock shepherdess weaves agricultural upbringing and love for fiber arts

18 Carving his NicheRick Frels found his calling in woodworking

26 Travel Illinois: NapervilleCozy up to Naperville this winter

26

20

MORE ONlINEWatch videos, read stories and browse photos at ilfbpartners.com.

CONTENTS

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Food FeedbackHave you tried any of our recipes? Share your thoughts – including any tweaks – with us in the comments section of our recipes, and you may help out another cook!

Say Cheese, PleaseRead about how Ropp Farms in McLean County is breaking the mold with its flavorful Jersey cheese and farm tours.

Julmarknad Christmas MarketIf you’re looking for a more out-of-the-ordinary holiday shopping experience, plan a trip to the Julmarknad Christmas Market in the Village of Bishop Hill.

| FOOD || FARM | | FINDS |

ThREE WAyS WITh SOuPWATCh A VIDEO

1. Curried Cauliflower Soup

2. Creamy Tomato Basil Soup

3. Squash and Sausage Soup

Cinnamon-Cranberry Granola recipe

Web Exclusive

IllINOIS PhOTOS, VIDEOS, ARTIClES, blOGS AND MORE

Watch Natasha Lehrer spin wool into fiber for apparel at Esther’s Place Fiber Arts Studio in Aurora. See this and more Illinois videos at ilfbpartners.com.

4 Illinois Farm Bureau Winter 2010-11 ilfbpartners.com 5

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AbOuT ThE AuThOR Joanie Stiers writes from Williamsfield, where Grandpa’s cattle pasture contains the family’s favorite sledding slope.

prairie state perspective

Contrary to non-Illinoisan belief, our state can roll like Wisconsin in a few places. And in those locations, generations of sledders likely have gathered for hours of winter thrills.

Illinois’ biggest country hills often are in cattle pastures, designated for grazing livestock as opposed to hillside crop production. My grandparents own a resort-caliber slope where my mom, uncles and their friends slid away winter, as did the family that lived there before them. Younger generations have continued the tradition.

The lengthy slope on Grandpa’s hill prompted sledders to hitch a pickup truck or snowmobile ride to return to the top in order to maintain their sledding energy. The most inexperienced among us made a single attempt to hike it, only to surrender to automation halfway or take a break at the top.

Meanwhile, the sleds slid, bounced and raced down the snow-covered pasture grass. Dad or an uncle would press your back as he gave you a running start down the main track.

Frozen cow pies delivered a notable thump to riders of the thin-bottomed sleds. My cousins and I laughed at

each strike, even though we anticipated the brief bounce at three spots down the primary path. By the end of those childhood winter days, these pasture pies had joined the gallery of cherished memories from that hillside.

At the top of the hill, the oldest cousins would decide the best combination of relatives to travel together for either rider excitement or spectator humor. We would take turns trying the speedier tractor tire tubes. And the most competitive would keep track of who coasted the farthest without paddling using snow-packed gloves.

All the while, a few adults chose to watch the event, a symbol of how life turns simple in winter. Better yet, they knew that Grandma, who stockpiles for natural or manmade disasters, always was prepared with refreshments after those impromptu sledding parties.

After a couple of hours, we piled in pickup trucks and chuckled over the most memorable wipeouts of the day. We returned to Grandma’s house with flushed cheeks and stocking-hat heads to be welcomed by both homemade and powder-mix hot chocolate, whichever appealed to your taste, paired with store-bought powdered donuts or the glazed ones that resembled tractor tires.

Sledders, cattle gather where the prairie slopes

Pasture Perks

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Home gardeners know it’s time for the arrival of seed catalogs. Here are three quick tips to help make sense of them:

● Find out what zone you live in and which plants grow best in your area.

● Decipher the lingo: For example, disease tolerance and disease resistance mean two different things.

● Learn which plants need to be replanted each year (annuals) and which ones remain year-round (perennials).

uNDERSTANDING SEED CATAlOGS

Old Newspapers Go Digital

The University of Illinois library is making history more accessible by digitizing its collection of farm newspapers from the late 19th through the early 20th centuries.

The actual newspapers, very brittle and bound in volumes, were difficult to peruse before the digitizing began. In addition, the papers were not indexed, making information hard to find.

Now, anyone with Internet access can read the newspapers by visiting www.library.illinois.edu/dnc and clicking on the Farm, Field and Fireside collection. The papers can be browsed by dates, and articles, advertisements and photo captions can be searched using keywords. Articles can also be printed, e-mailed or downloaded.

AlMANAC

Farm FocusDid you know that farm products are found in a variety

of everyday items? That’s right – agriculture isn’t just responsible for meat, milk and eggs. In fact, farm animals and plants contribute to many things Americans rely on or come into contact with nearly every day. From medicines to musical instruments and everything in between, agriculture impacts our daily lives in ways many people may not realize. Farm products can be found in:

• Natural clothing materials

• Cold and allergy medicines

• Vitamins and mineral supplements

• Sporting goods, including baseballs and bats

• Plastic and rubber

• Fire extinguishers

• Household cleaners and polishes

• Photographic films

• School supplies, such as crayons, colored pencils and textbooks

• Instruments, including drums and pianos

• Construction materials

• Medical supplies, such as heart valves

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Track how much you spend on gifts this holiday season by using COUNTRY Financial’s Holiday Gift-Giving Worksheet. Available as a download at www.ilfbpartners.com, the worksheet allows users to organize their shopping lists while keeping track of finances with spaces for names, desired gifts, budgets and actual costs.

An Herb for the HolidaysOnce as essential to the holiday season as holly and mistletoe, rosemary again is

growing in popularity. The herb frequently is used in wreathes and other decorations, and also makes for a tasty addition to certain foods.

Rosemary, a perennial evergreen shrub, can easily be grown in a home or garage during the winter months. The key is to make sure the area is cool and moist. If the plant is located indoors, the temperature should be between 63 and 65 degrees Fahrenheit. However, if it is stored in a garage, the temperature is only required to be above freezing. In addition, rosemary should be exposed to plenty of light.

Rosemary also can assist with improving digestion and increasing circulation. It adds great flavor to soups and sauces as well as chicken, lamb, pork, salmon and tuna dishes.

For the Birds

It’s important to remember to feed your feathered friends this winter. Recent research has shown that providing garden birds extra food during cold months helps ensure a more successful breeding season in the springtime.

To create a natural pine cone bird feeder, gather a pine cone, paper plate, butter knife, smooth peanut butter, birdseed, ribbon or yarn, and scissors.

Cut a long piece of the yarn or ribbon; this will be used to hang the bird feeder. Tie the ribbon in a knot around the top of the pine cone, as well as another knot at the end of the ribbon.

Next, use the knife to spread the peanut butter on the pine cone and around the edges.

Sprinkle birdseed over the pine cone, hang it on a tree and watch the birds enjoy your creation!

ShOPPING SIMPlIFIED

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Three minutes from the Chicago

city limits, fourth- and fifth-graders learn

as much or more about agriculture as their

counterparts in a downstate farming

community.

The class writes to pen pals in South

Carolina about Illinois agriculture for their

literary and social studies lessons. They

read an agriculture fact and refer to the

agriculture calendar daily. And they grow

plants from seed in shoes, hats and

whatever else makes an acceptable pot.

“What they don’t understand in depth is

how food gets from the farm to their table,”

says Debbie Jimenez, a fourth- and fifth-

grade teacher at St. Albert the Great School

in Burbank.

However, Jimenez and her agriculture-

enriched lesson plans are working to change

all that.

Teachers use agriculture to teach core subjects

lEARN MOREIn 2009, 33 Chicago-area

classrooms participated in IAITC’s Adopt-a-Classroom program, which initiates correspondence between a classroom and a downstate farm family. Farmers often share photos, videos and seed samples. Learn more about this and other IAITC programs at www.agintheclassroom.org, or visit the national site at www.agclassroom.org.

IAITC is able to provide free materials and teacher training thanks to the IAA Foundation, the charitable foundation of the Illinois Farm Bureau. IAITC is the foundation’s top funding priority. To learn more or to provide support, visit www.iaafoundation.org.

crops

in the Classroom

& critters

cultivating a statewide program

Jimenez’s 35 students are among more

than a half million in Illinois benefiting

from Agriculture in the Classroom (AITC)

annually, says Kevin Daugherty, education

director for Illinois Agriculture in the

Classroom (IAITC). The program touts an

active presence in 61 percent of all schools in

Illinois, thanks in part to its county-level

presence. The program, based at the Illinois

Farm Bureau Building in Bloomington,

includes coordinators or volunteers at county

Farm Bureau offices throughout the state.

AITC is a f lexible educational program

that uses agriculture as a springboard to

teach core subjects including math, science,

social studies and language arts at all grade

levels. The U.S. Department of Agriculture

established the program in each state nearly

StorY BY Joanie StiersPHotoGrAPHY BY Todd Bennett

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30 years ago to give students a greater

awareness of agriculture in the

economy and society. Illinois

resources include lesson plans that

meet learning standards, colorful

magazines of activities for children,

teacher training, an adopted

classroom program and more.

outside the textbookThe dedication to agriculture in

Jimenez’s classroom began in 2004

when she attended a Summer Ag Institute, a series of ag-focused workshops that teachers attend to receive college or professional development credit.

Summer Ag Institutes, offered by IAITC in partnership with various colleges and county Farm Bureaus since 1991, have helped more than 7,500 teachers of all grade levels discover unique ways to use agriculture to teach all subjects.

“It’s a different way to teach than using a textbook, which can get so monotonous,” says Jimenez, who has taught for 20 years. “Kids are different today than they used to be. You have to channel them in different ways, and I think that is what Ag in the Classroom has done.”

She incorporates agriculture into her lessons daily, one reason she was named the 2010 Teacher of the Year for the IAITC program. She regularly

Teachers Learn, TooBurbank, Ill., elementary teacher Debbie Jimenez has attended three

teacher training courses and two national conferences to learn about agriculture from production to consumption.

“Agriculture in the Classroom has given me a whole new insight into the relationship between us and agriculture,” Jimenez says.

Survey results for the program show notable changes in teacher viewpoints about agriculture and the industry’s significance. In fact, 63 percent of teachers surveyed strongly agreed that agriculture should be taught at all grade levels, regardless of students’ career interests. Only 27 percent believed it before.

“The biggest impact I’ve seen is the change in attitude of teachers about what agriculture is,” says Kevin Daugherty, education director for Illinois Agriculture in the Classroom.

The survey results also revealed a more positive view of agriculture and its impact on the environment, the education level of its work force and the safety of the food supply.

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uses “Illinois Ag Mags,” children’s magazines with themes such as pork, poultry, energy and water. She stresses nutrition and eating healthy and cooks vegetables and makes fruit salads in the classroom. Students identify the origin of every food on their Thanksgiving table. They discuss sustainable agriculture, the environment and learn about the climates around the country and how they impact crop production.

The district’s third-graders excitedly anticipate the next grade level, knowing Jimenez grows Soil Sams in her windowsills and invites the entire elementary school to her class’ Ag Fair each spring.

All the while, Jimenez correlates agriculture-enriched lessons to the Illinois State Learning Standards and Assessment Framework.

“The importance of agriculture to their lives and the world is

astronomical,” says Jimenez, whose only connection to agriculture prior to the IAITC program was a late aunt who owned a farm in Wisconsin.

“My love of agriculture comes from the knowledge and how I feel about it,” she says. “If I can instill that knowledge into the children – the role of agriculture in their everyday lives – I must have done something right.”

Debbie Jimenez leads her students through a lesson on nutrition at St.

Albert the Great School in Burbank.

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When most people get dressed, they don’t think about where their clothes came from or how they were made.

Natasha Lehrer, on the other hand, appreciates every thread and fiber running through them. And she should. After all, she’s one of few Americans today who regularly sits down at a spinning wheel.

business of a bygone era

The 22-year-old from Big Rock in Kane County is the owner of

Big Rock shepherdess weaves agricultural upbringing and love for fiber arts

StorY BY Jessica MozoPHotoGrAPHY BY J. Kyle Keener

FabricThe

of HerLifeEsther’s Place Fiber Arts Studio, a business she started in a restored Victorian home when she was 18.

“It’s nontraditional in today’s world,” admits Lehrer, who opted to start the business right after high school instead of going to college. “But fiber is a thread that runs through all cultures. Women used to take their babies on their back and their spinning wheel on a horse and go to their neighbor’s house to spin and enjoy the company. In South America, people even based a

woman’s rank in society on her (fiber arts) skills.”

You might say Lehrer was destined to become a lover of fiber arts. When she moved to Big Rock from suburban Aurora in 2000 with her mom, dad and brother, a neighbor gave her a spinning wheel. Tucked away inside the family’s new home, she discovered a loom and several books about spinning left by the previous owner.

“Everything fell into place,” she says. “It was meant to be.”

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spinning dreams into realityLehrer taught herself everything from

spinning and weaving to knitting and dyeing wool sheared from her family’s small f lock of sheep.

“There’s a huge amount of change from the animal to the finished product, and you can feel every step of the process,” she says. “It’s neat to see it pass right through your hands.”

Lehrer dreamed of pursuing a career in fiber arts, but she didn’t know how to make it a reality being from a small, rural farm.

“I prayed about it, and one day, I opened my Bible to Esther 4:14, which says ‘Who knows if you have been put in this position for such a time as this?’” she recalls. “I realized if God wants something to happen, He always makes a way for it.”

The same day, Lehrer found an application in her mailbox for a U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) value-added grant.

“We hadn’t even requested it,” she says. “But our goal was to take raw fiber and add value to it by creating something artists can work with.”

Lehrer and her mother, Donna, applied for the grant, competing with giant companies such as Del Monte and Sunkist. Six months later, they got incredible news: they were awarded a grant in the amount of $24,000.

“It was pretty amazing,” Lehrer says. “It was a huge push forward.”

With the help of her parents, Lehrer opened a combination retail store, art studio and learning space with an upstairs bed-and-breakfast in a 19th-century Victorian home three miles from the family’s farm. The first-floor retail store sells raw fiber and fiber that has been spun into yarn, woven into cloth, organically dyed, knit into scarves and crocheted into sweaters. There are also classrooms where Lehrer teaches weaving, dyeing, knitting, spinning, felting

and other techniques.Upstairs, a quaint bed-and-breakfast is

an inviting retreat where guests can spend a weekend eating local produce and working with local fiber.

“Overall, we’re a place to relax, de-stress and make memories,” Lehrer says. “We get a lot of mothers and daughters and multigenerational groups. One family came and wove a rug for one of the daughters who was getting married.”

Lehrer named her business after Esther in the Bible, who served as her inspiration, as well as for a sheep named Esther on the family’s farm.

“It has brought about a lot of great opportunities,” she says. “I was awarded a trip to a spinning conference in 2005, and I just got a piece juried into a show in Albuquerque. I’ve met two U.S. secretaries of agriculture. We were even invited to speak at a USDA conference in (Washington) D.C.”

intertwined with other artists

Esther’s Place has been a blessing for other Illinois producers, too. In 2006, the Lehrers formed the Illinois Green Pastures Fiber Cooperative, which allows them to sell fibers from 30 other local producers in their store.

“We wanted more variety to offer our customers and to give other producers access to a great market,” Lehrer says.

One of the things Lehrer enjoys most about the business is seeing people realize how much time and effort goes into working with raw fibers.

“I’ll say, ‘That’s a sample – you can’t buy it off the shelf. But come sit down, and I’ll teach you,” she says. “We focus more on the process than the final product. It’s a lot of blood, sweat and tears. But it’s definitely worth it.”

IF yOu GO ... Esther’s Place is located

at 201 W. Galena St. (Route 30) in Big Rock; (630) 556-9665; open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. 

To sign up for classes or special events, visit www.esthersplacefibers.com.

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Warm Fuzzies

Curious about the materials used to make your favorite sweater? You probably won’t find many details on the tag. “Most garments don’t label what breed the fiber comes from – they just say ‘wool,’” says Natasha Lehrer, owner of Esther’s Place Fiber Arts Studio in Big Rock. “There’s such a disconnect between consumers and fiber education. Our goal is to give people information about the fiber they’re wearing.”

Sheep are the most prevalent wool producers, though it also comes from rabbits, goats and alpacas.

According to the Illinois Green Pastures Fiber Cooperative (www.

illinoisgreenpastures.org), here are some commonly used types of wool:

alpaca fiber is considered luxury

material because it is soft and fine. It is popular for spinning and knitting, and is also used for hair on dolls and figurines.

angora rabbit wool is known as one of the finest fibers, prized for its softness and fluffiness. Typically mixed with silk, cashmere or sheep’s wool, it is used to make sweaters.

cashmere goat wool is very soft and tends to be expensive because the combing and shearing of Cashmere goats is time consuming.

cheviot sheep wool is the foundation fiber of the famous Scotch Tweed industry. It is also used for outerwear, socks and needle felting.

columbia sheep wool is known for light shrinkage, softness

and length. It is an excellent all-purpose fleece that is soft enough to wear next to the skin.

dorset sheep produce very white f leece that is strong and free from dark fiber. Dorsets are the No. 1 white-faced breed in the United States.

friesian milk sheep are large-framed sheep with white wool that makes lofty, warm quilt batting and is good for needle felting.

hampshire sheep wool is used for hard-wearing elastic yarns, felting and quilt batting and is a good needle felting wool.

lincoln sheep grow long, heavy wool used for specialty knitting yarns, upholstery yarns and hand-knitted carpet yarns. It also provides shiny hairpieces for people and dolls.

merino sheep wool is the finest and softest of all sheep wool. It is used in intense cold-weather applications for its breathability, temperature regulation and moisture control. It is also used for felting of purses, bowls, slippers and scarves.

montadale sheep produce fleece popular with hand spinners that is used for sweaters, socks, scarves, hats and needle felting.

romney sheep are known for heavy, lustrous fleece that grows up to six inches per year. It is popular for needle felting.

� –�Jessica�Mozo

Wool comes from an array of different animal breeds

16 Illinois Farm Bureau

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country® wisdom

AbOuT ThE AuThOR Lorraine Zenge, ChFC, is a senior advanced planner for COUNTRY Financial. Visit COUNTRY on the web at www.countryfinancial.com.

Are you preparing for your retirement? This may seem like a silly question – especially if you are a young person just starting your career. However, no matter how far you are from retirement, it is important to start planning and saving now. This way, you can begin working toward a financially secure retirement and do what you’ve dreamed of doing in your golden years.

have much will you need in retirement?Regardless of your planned retirement date, it is

important to look at how much you will need to retire. Start by establishing an annual retirement spending goal. I generally recommend that your retirement spending goal be approximately 70 percent of your current after-tax income. By establishing a retirement spending goal, you will be able to work toward the next part of the retirement plan – which is how much you need to save.

calculating your savingsAs a first step, I suggest you start with one of the many

free calculators available on the Internet. You can enter keywords such as “retirement calculator” into any search engine to find a variety of these tools.

Do not hesitate to consult with a competent financial adviser for this part of the process, especially if you are over the age of 40. A competent financial adviser will help you review your retirement spending goal, your available

assets, income you expect to receive in retirement and the impact of inflation. The adviser may also suggest how your retirement accounts should be structured to ensure that you have sufficient income for retirement.

take the free moneyIf you are not doing so already, make sure to contribute

the amount needed to take full advantage of your employer’s matching contribution to your retirement savings plan. Taking advantage of this benefit will help your retirement nest egg grow much more quickly over time.

After taking maximum advantage of your employer’s matching contribution, you should increase your contribution to your retirement fund every year that you work. One easy way to do this is to contribute part or all of every raise or bonus that you get while you work to your retirement plan. If you have managed to live without the raise in the time preceding the raise, you can usually afford to increase the amount that you are saving.

get a reality checkEvery year, you should check your progress in meeting

your retirement savings plan. Conduct a financial review and consult your financial adviser as needed so you can determine what adjustments need to be made to your retirement savings plan. Frequent financial reviews will help ensure that your golden years are financially secure.

Prepare for your golden years now no matter how far away they seem

Get Ready for Retirement

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Rick Frels found his calling in woodworking

StorY BY Karen SchwartzmanPHotoGrAPHY BY Todd Bennett

carvingHis Niche

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llinois artisan Rick Frels has carved out an impressive career in woodworking. But his calling didn’t strike in a lightning bolt of inspiration. Rather, his creative streak sprang from a little logic.

Frels recalls his first foray into the art of woodcarving. “I just saw something I liked and thought, ‘Well, I could make that instead of buying it,’” he says. Thirty years later, Frels has turned his initial test into a lifelong hobby, business and favorite pastime.

Of course, most would have simply purchased the carving rather than attempt Frel’s do-it-yourself method, lacking either the innate talent or extreme patience that such a task demands. Luckily for Frels, he happened to have both.

“My dad was a carpenter, so I worked with wood all my life,” Frels says.

But it wasn’t until his mid-30s that he found his calling in wood carving. He recalls one of his initial carvings was of a buffalo, no more than 10 inches tall, that took him more than two months to finish.

Flash-forward to the present, where Frels has just completed a four-foot statue of Uncle Sam for the American Cancer Society to auction off. It took him a little more than two weeks.

“Carving can take anywhere from one to 100 hours,” depending on the size, he says.

Frels focuses mainly on animals and people, though his impressive portfolio also includes eight-foot Native Americans and large totem poles.

“The most memorable ones are sentimental. I’ve done some family portraits, and those stick with me the most,” he says.

Frels considers woodcarving more a hobby than a business, though he does sell some custom creations for those who hear about his artistry. He also works part-time at the Woodcraft Shop in Bettendorf, Iowa, just across the border from his Northwestern Illinois home of Hillsdale.

Frels admits that while sometimes carving can feel like a chore, his work is gratifying. “It’s relaxing; I just forget everything and

bang away with nail and chisel.” Before the nails come into play, Frels has

to find the star of his piece – the wood. He often uses basswood, which he describes as a “soft wood that’s hard enough to take detail.”

To obtain his medium of choice, he relies on the old neighborly cup-of-sugar method. “Sometimes a neighbor will give me a little wood after a tree falls,” he says.

The exchange soon finds its way to his studio, set in an old two-bedroom house, f loors strewn with wood and walls adorned with photos of current projects.

“I set up my workshop in the dining room of the house, so it’s got nice big windows and lots of space,” Frels says. While he admits it may not be the cleanest space, it’s the perfect place to whittle away at what he loves.

“I’m at peace when I carve,” he says, “and if I didn’t like it, I wouldn’t do it.”

IN ThE ClubFrels found his place with the Mississippi Valley Woodcarvers club, which he’s been a part of since the mid-1980s. Along with teaching both beginner and intermediate lessons, Frels participates in “wood carves” in which members get together and carve for a few hours. Learn more at www.mvwoodcarvers.org.

hOW TO GET STARTED

Woodcarving 101 is where the greats get their start. Frels recommends all newcomers try to find a local woodcarving club and take a few lessons. After carving for years, Frels says he still learns things from lessons. “It makes you a better carver,” he says.

His NicheI

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&Homemade food gifts are a treat to give and receive

Kneads Wants

MORE ONlINE

There are lots of helpful resources on the Web for making successful yeast breads and coffeecakes – from blogs to videos.

King Arthur Flour has a recipe on its site called The Easiest Loaf of Bread You’ll Ever Bake. The name doesn’t lie. Go to www.kingarthurflour.com/recipes/the-easiest- loaf-of-bread-youll-ever-bake-recipe.

For links to more useful baking resources, visit ilfbpartners.com.

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& Not so many years ago, it was customary to bring a gift of food when paying a visit to a neighbor or sharing holiday joy. There’s something extra-special about a homemade food gift, especially during the busy holidays. And yeast breads give that added special touch. They need not be daunting with a bit of practice. We hope this will inspire you to revive the art and custom of gifts from the kitchen. There’s a wonderful satisfaction knowing that you made it yourself.

From kneading the silky dough to watching it rise before your eyes, making yeast breads can be a satisfying experience for you and your friends. And for those of us in the Midwest, if we can add a bit of Illinois to the process, all the better.

Hodgson Mill in Effingham uses Illinois wheat in its stone-ground blends. The mill was started by Alva Hodgson, a pioneering Missouri millwright whose name later became synonymous with Effingham’s water-driven grain mill. He started in the heart of the Missouri Ozarks in 1837. A second mill, built in 1861, burned down as Missouri passed through the chaos of the Civil War. By 1882, Hodgson made his way to Effingham and founded the stone-ground mill pictured in the company’s logo and still standing today. He and his brother, George, joined forces and eventually incorporated new machinery into the business.

Though Hodgson Mill expanded and modernized its milling facilities again in 1976 to keep pace with demand, the company still uses the same process Alva developed (and the image of the mill) to promote healthy whole-grain products and packaged mixes for home bakers.

“I can’t say that it’s strictly Illinois

AbOuT ThE AuThOR Charlyn Fargo got her start in food by baking yeast bread in 4-H. Her love for the culinary arts helped her land a job as food editor of the State Journal-Register, a daily paper in Springfield and eventually a master’s degree in nutrition and registered dietitian from Eastern Illinois University. She is passionate about healthy eating, teaches nutrition and baking at Lincoln Land Community College and consults as a dietitian.

Kneads Wantswheat,” says Perry Propst, creative arts manager for the company. “But we do utilize Illinois wheat. Everything we sell is whole grain – along with a lot of f lax, a lot of gluten-free and everything healthy.”

The company uses the stone-ground process, which keeps the grains from being crushed, preserving more of the healthy germ, bran and endosperm. The grains f low gently down into the top of the mill and, in one simple operation, are ground between two stones into whole-grain flours and cornmeals. Stonemilling also gives the f lour a distinct texture that makes baked products more interesting, with greater eye and taste appeal.

And lately, they’ve seen an upswing in business.

“When the economy started turning bad, people started doing more baking, not going to restaurants. And we saw an increase in business,” says Propst.

One of the company’s biggest sellers is graham flour, also known as stone-ground whole wheat. Hodgson Mill recently redesigned the packaging to move the graham reference to the back, however.

“People were getting confused, thinking graham flour was just for graham crackers,” Propst says. “Stone grinding is specifically for graham flour. We pride ourselves on being stone-ground.”

We’ve developed a few recipes using stone-ground (or graham, if you promise not to just think of s’mores) f lour to give as food gifts during the holidays. Mary’s Dark Bread is a family treasure from my sister-in-law, Mary, and the Sunburst Coffee Cake is one I’ve given as a gift many times, after learning the technique in a baking class.

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For dough, mix shortening, sugar and salt. Add potatoes and milk. Let stand until lukewarm. Meanwhile, dissolve yeast in lukewarm water. Add yeast mixture and eggs to milk mixture. Add the whole-wheat f lour and 1 cup of bread flour and beat until smooth. Stir in remaining bread flour to make a thick, slightly sticky dough. Place in large bowl, cover tightly and place in refrigerator for 6 hours or overnight.

In the morning, dough will have risen and be ready for shaping. For Sunburst Coffee Cake, divide dough into thirds. Melt butter. Roll one-third of dough in circle to fit a pizza pan (14 inch). Put first layer of dough in pan. Spoon melted butter to cover; sprinkle with cinnamon/sugar mixture. Roll next third into same size circle. Place over first layer and repeat layers with butter and cinnamon/sugar. Repeat third time.

Invert glass in center. Cut dough into 16 wedges. Twist each wedge four times. Remove glass. Cover with plastic wrap and let rise for 20 minutes or so. Bake in a 350-degree oven for 30 minutes or until lightly browned.

To package for a gift, place on purchased cardboard pizza round. Surround with heavy plastic wrap. Tie top with ribbons.

Sunburst Coffee CakeDouGH:2/3 cup shortening

1 cup sugar

1½ teaspoons salt

1 cup mashed potatoes

(or instant potatoes)

1 cup milk, scalded

1 package active dry yeast

(or rapid rise yeast)

2 eggs

1 cup lukewarm water (110 degrees)

2 cups whole-wheat or stone-ground flour

4-5 cups bread flour

CoFFee CAke:

1 stick butter

1 cup cinnamon and sugar mixture (3 tablespoons cinnamon and 1 cup sugar)

TIPS FOR SuCCESSFul bREAD MAkING

• Use a very large bowl and a sturdy wooden spoon or a heavy-duty mixer.

• Add non-sifted flour in small amounts, about half cup at a time.

• Butter gives the best flavor, but other fat can be used.

• Grease baking pans with unsalted fats (not butter).Salt will cause browning.

• Bread should be baked near the center of oven for even heat distribution.

• Bread is done when the loaf begins to shrink from the sides of the pan. A thermometer through the bottom side will register 190 degrees.

• Immediately after baking, remove breads from pans and allow them to cool on racks, away from drafts.

• For a tender crust, brush tops of loaves with melted butter, either before or after baking.

• Yeast is a living plant that makes breads rise. Cold temperatures retard the growth of yeast, while warm temperatures stimulate growth. Provide a warm environment for dough to rise. Warm the bowl with water before mixing dough.

• Check expiration dates on yeast. If it’s close to the date, dissolve it in a half cup warm water and stir in 1 teaspoon sugar. Let stand five minutes. If the yeast is still active, bubbles will appear on the surface as the mixture swells.

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Mary’s Dark Bread2 cups boiling water

1 cup packed brown sugar

2 cups graham (stone-ground) or whole-wheat flour

1 teaspoon salt

2 tablespoons margarine or butter

1 package active dry yeast

¼ cup warm water

1 tablespoon sugar

½ cup milk

5-6 cups all-purpose flour

Pour boiling water over the brown sugar, graham flour, salt and margarine in a large bowl. Cool the mixture to lukewarm. Dissolve yeast in the warm water and add sugar. Add milk to yeast mixture. Add to the first mixture. Add all-purpose flour gradually and knead until stiff. Let rise until double. Shape into two loaves. Bake 1 hour at 350 degrees in two regular-sized loaf pans.

For gifts, wrap bread in plastic wrap or foil and tie with a big red bow.

MORE ONlINEGet Charlyn’s recipe for another healthy holiday gift, Cinnamon-Cranberry Granola, at ilfbpartners.com.

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ads come and go in American culture, and houseplants are no exception. Something new springs into popularity, is overdone, becomes passé, and is replaced with the next great thing. However, we gardeners sometimes become attached to plants nurtured in our living rooms, and they get to stay while we add the new arrival.

Probably the oldest houseplant fad was growing citrus trees in special glass orangeries in Mediterranean climes, but how about something Illinoisans can relate to?

Walk into any gardener’s house in the 1950s, and small pots of African violets lined north-facing window sills. They bloomed year-round and had interesting fuzzy leaves. In the ’60s, we yearned for the tropics and set about growing potted palms in both office and home. The palms thrived with the indirect light found in most homes.

Ferns, spider plants and Swedish ivy decorated our homes in the ’60s and ’70s. To appear really trendy, they were displayed in macrame slings, preferably handmade from rope or gaudy yarn. Growing your own sweet potato vine was also fun. Many a kitchen window had a Mason jar full of water with a sweet potato suspended by toothpicks stuck

GARDENING

AbOuT ThE AuThOR Jan Phipps farms, gardens, writes and podcasts near Chrisman. She’s been a University of Illinois Extension Master Gardener for 10 years.

Determine the decade by plant fads

GARDENING

HouseplantHistory

in its sides. The ’60s and ’70s have a lot to answer for when it comes to aesthetics.

In the 1970s, we also became concerned about our environment and planet. This led to self-made miniature ecosystems on our coffee tables in the form of glass terrariums. The trick was getting the moisture perfectly balanced so the plants grew well without the sides of the terrarium fogging up.

Bonsai hit the scene in the ’80s. It was a houseplant, hobby and objet d’art all rolled into one mini plant. That was followed in the ’90s by topiaries, both inside and outside.

We’ve already had several floral fads in the 21st century. Orchids used to be hard-to-find exotics grown only by experts. Today, they are in every garden center, florist shop and even some grocery stores. Little patches of wheat grass grown indoors made a brief flash, but interest died quickly once people realized they only looked good for a week. Next came lucky bamboo grown as a single spiraled stem in water. Never mind that it is not bamboo at all, but a type of Dracaena. Bromeliads, with their prehistoric-looking blooms, are the latest trend.

What’s next? I don’t know, but I can’t wait to grow the next houseplant du jour. p

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ASk AN ExPERT

Q How often should I fertilize my

houseplants in the winter?

answer With reduced light, the plants aren’t growing much. They won’t need fertilizer until early spring.

Q Do you have any gift ideas for

a gardener?

answer A good pair of hand pruners, with the emphasis on good. Other ideas include a glazed, decorative pot or a subscription to a gardening magazine.

E-mail your gardening questions to Jan at [email protected].

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Naperville{Travel Illinois}

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aperville may be a Chicago suburb, but it exudes a culture all its own. The city lures newcomers and visitors with its cheerful catchphrase, “big city styles with small town smiles,” and they come by the thousands. In fact, Naperville was one of the 10 fastest-growing communities in the United States during the 1990s.

Today, Naperville is the fifth-largest city in Illinois with a population around 150,000. It has a bustling economy, thanks to the multitude of retailers, restaurants, shopping centers and automobile dealerships that have set up shop here. Large corporations such as OfficeMax and Allied Van Lines also have headquarters in Naperville.

Visitors love Naperville for its proximity to several major interstates, free parking throughout the city and plenty of green space, with more than 130 parks, four sports complexes and two golf courses.

a hometown holidayCome November, Naperville spills over

with festive decorations and holiday-themed events and attractions.

Ring in the holiday season at Naperville’s spectacular Electric light Parade, held annually the day after Thanksgiving. The parade features floats and live music and culminates with Santa Claus flipping the switch to more than 300,000 twinkling lights. Expect to see kids dancing in the street with Santa at this family-friendly event.

Naperville StorY BY Jessica MozoPHotoGrAPHY BY Todd Bennett

TOP 10 NAPERVIllE MuST-SEES Millenium Carillon in Moser Tower

Naperville Riverwalk

Naper Settlement

DuPage Children’s Museum

Downtown Naperville

Naperville Public Library

Dandelion Fountain

Naperville Century Walk

Fifth Avenue Station

Wentz Concert Hall & Fine Arts Center

Stroll along the Naperville Riverwalk to see fountains, public art and covered bridges.

N

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bEllS WIll bE RINGING

Get a bird’s eye view of Naperville by climbing 253 steps to the top of the 160-foot-tall Moser tower, which houses the Millennium Carillon along the riverwalk. the 14-story structure is 10 feet taller than the Statue of Liberty, and on a clear day, you can see the Chicago skyline from its open-air observation deck. the Millennium Carillon is one of only four grand carillons in the world and has 72 bells spanning six octaves. Concerts played by carillonneurs from around the world are held at the carillon on tuesday nights during the summer. A complete recital schedule is online at www.naperville-carillon.org.

Board the Santa Train at the Fifth

Avenue Train Station for an experience you won’t soon forget. Sponsored by the Naperville Jaycees, the one-hour train ride is a much-loved annual tradition and includes holiday characters, games, Christmas carols and a visit from Santa Claus. The Santa Train typically chugs through Naperville the first Saturday in December.

Downtown Naperville is the perfect place to find holiday gift ideas. The downtown district is home to hundreds of shops and more than 40 restaurants and kicks off its hometown holidays month-long celebration the day after Thanksgiving. Downtown businesses feature special holiday offers, such as free gift-wrapping.

Tour elegantly decorated homes, shop at the Holiday Market, and sip tea or coffee from collectible china cups and saucers at the Naperville Garden Club’s annual Cup of Cheer House Walk, held the first Friday in December. The Cup of Cheer house Walk

and holiday Market attract more than 1,200 participants each year, and the money

10 TASTy FOOD FINDS

The White Chocolate Grill

Tango

Meson Sabika

Portillo’s

La Sorella di Francesca

Lou Malnati’s Pizzeria

Wild Tuna Restaurant

Café Buonaro’s Italian Restaurant

BlackFinn American Saloon

BD’s Mongolian Grill

the Horse Market Days sculpture at Naper Settlement

raised at the holiday market goes back into the community.

calling all history buffsGet a glimpse of what Naperville was like

100 years ago at Naper Settlement, where costumed villagers portray the story of how life changed throughout the 19th century for people in Midwestern towns. The 12-acre outdoor living history museum has 30 historic buildings, and admission includes a self-guided audio tour of the grounds and Visitor Center.

The cornerstone of Naper Settlement is an 1883 Victorian home known as Martin

Mitchell Mansion. The mansion opened to the public in 2003 after a $2.8 million renovation that restored it to the time period of 1890 to 1907. In December, the 12-room house celebrates Christmas with a 19th-century twist and is decked out in traditional Victorian holiday splendor.

Clang, clang, clang through the streets aboard a Naperville Trolley, and see some of the city’s most elaborate light displays. Reservations are required for the Holiday Light Tours, and the trolleys are heated.

The Naperville Trolley also offers one-hour historic tours of the city on select dates that include a number of destinations.

paint the townDon’t miss the opportunity to see a show

at the spectacular Wentz Concert hall &

Fine Arts Center, located at the gateway of North Central College and downtown

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MORE ONlINELearn more about the farm-focused foods of SugarToad by calling (630) 778-TOAD or visiting www.sugartoad.com.

Toads, Anyone?The fact that one of Naperville’s most unusual upscale restaurants

shares its name with one of nature’s ugliest creatures might sound like an oxymoron. But Sugartoad restaurant at Hotel Arista certainly doesn’t lack originality.

Customers who dine at the farm-focused American restaurant are welcomed for dinner with a crispy, complimentary bite of a sugar toad, which – sigh of relief – isn’t really a toad at all.

“It’s a sweet puffer fish from the Chesapeake Bay, and it kind of tastes like flounder. It’s like a nugget of fish,” says SugarToad Chef Geoff Rhyne. “Everyone who comes in at night gets one, and we also serve it on our lunch menu. It’s called a Crock of Toads.”

The daily menu changes to reflect what’s in season, but customers can always expect fresh seafood, meats and produce harvested from their own garden. “We also buy from farms in the area, from Southern Illinois to Wisconsin, and we get deliveries every day,” Rhyne says. “When soft shell crabs are in season, we get them the very next day off the boat.”

Lunch at SugarToad might feature made-from-scratch lobster bisque or cream of mushroom soup with a creative sandwich, such as lobster salad on a croissant, the SugarToad Po’ Boy or SugarToad’s signature BLT, topped with a fried egg and a fried green tomato. Dinner may include grilled mahi-mahi, blackmouth chinook salmon or crispy pulled goat with red cabbage. Seasonal vegetables are a perfect complement to any meal at SugarToad, but they serve up veggies with a twist, such as roasted beet salad or heirloom sweet potato and hedgehog hash.

That being said, rest assured you won’t need a translator to understand the menu. “We’re fine dining, but we’re not stuffy,” Rhyne says. “I always say I’d want my 86-year-old grandpa to come in and feel comfortable and understand the menu.”

Check out the Naperville Public Library, which has been ranked the best library in the nation among small cities by Hennen’s American Public Library ratings. the Library Journal also gave it a five-star rating.Naperville itself is nationally lauded.the city has made CNN Money’s list of the top 100 Best Places to Live three times, ranking as high as No. 3.

SuPERIOR RATINGS

LOCAL FLAVOR

Naperville. Celebrated for its world-class acoustics, said to be comparable to Carnegie Hall, Wentz Concert Hall regularly showcases concerts by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

Other theater venues in Naperville are The Comedy Shrine, which hosts improv comedy every Thursday, Friday and Saturday; the Madden Theatre, popular for film screenings, jazz and dance shows; and the Magical Starlight Theatre, which presents family-oriented performances such as Peter Pan and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.

Stroll along the Naperville Riverwalk, often called the “Crown Jewel of Naperville” for its covered bridges, fountains and lush landscaping. Built by residents in 1981 to honor the city’s 150th birthday, the Riverwalk has won state and national awards and draws visitors from near and far for its beauty.

Got kids? Let them touch, experiment and release their inner scientist at the DuPage Children’s Museum. The museum’s mission is to stimulate curiosity, creativity, thinking and problem solving in young minds, and its three floors are jam-packed with hands-on ways to explore art, math and science. Even the tiniest tots can join the fun, thanks to Young Explorers exhibits designed for children under age 2.

There aren’t many problems a little cocoa can’t fix. Pop in to Naperville’s le Chocolat

du bouchard, a cozy chocolate bar and bakery, for gourmet hot chocolate and a slice of rich Chocolate Mousse Cake, and you’ll be in seventh heaven.

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GET MORE ONlINELearn more about the event atwww.explorechicago.org.

Snow Day Times ThreeJAN. 28-30, CHICAGO

Hosted by the City of Chicago and the Mayor’s Office of Special Events, Snow Days Chicago is a free three-day winter festival. The event, which takes place on Michigan Avenue in Grant Park, features a snow-sculpting competition, dogsled and snowboarding demonstrations, and a variety of activities for children. In addition, food and hot beverages are available.

Attendees can vote for their choice of best snow sculpture, created by teams of artists from the Chicago area and other states. Teams of students from Chicago Public Schools also can participate in the competition.

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NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING

Illinois Agricultural Association

Notice is hereby given that the

annual meeting of the members of

the Illinois Agricultural Association

will be held in the Renaissance Grand

Hotel, 800 Washington Avenue, St.

Louis, Missouri 63101, on Saturday,

December 4, Sunday, December 5,

Monday, December 6 and Tuesday,

December 7, 2010, with the official

meeting of voting delegates

convening at 8:00 a.m. on Monday,

December 6, for the following

purposes:

To receive, consider and, if

approved, ratify and confirm the

reports of the officers and the acts

and proceedings of the Board of

Directors and officers in furtherance

of the matters therein set forth

since the last annual meeting of

the Association.

To elect nine (9) members of the

Board of Directors to serve for a term

of two years.

To consider and act upon such

proposed amendments to the Articles

of Incorporation or to the Bylaws of

the Illinois Agricultural Association

and upon such policy resolutions as

may be properly submitted.

For the transaction of such other

business as may properly come

before the meeting.

James M. Jacobs

Secretary

This listing includes a few events to add to your calendar in November, December and January from around the state.

Dates were accurate at press time but are subject to change. Please check with the contact listed before traveling long distances to attend. Additional information on Illinois events also is available online through the Illinois Bureau of Tourism’s website, www.enjoyillinois.com.

All Aboard the Polar Express!NOV. 26-27 AND DEC. 3-4 MONTICELLO

Beginning at the Wabash Depot in downtown Monticello, the Polar Express consists of a 60-minute train ride inspired by Chris Van Allsburg’s award-winning novel of the same name and the subsequent movie featuring Tom Hanks’ voice.

The family-friendly event involves a round trip to the “North Pole,” caroling, hot chocolate and various surprises. In addition, each child receives a special gift and the chance to meet Santa Claus.

Parents are encouraged to dress children in pajamas, as the children in the original story were awakened from their beds on Christmas Eve.

Tickets, required for attendees over the age of 2, can be purchased by visiting www.mrym.org.

A Night by CandlelightDEC. 3 LERNA

Take a trip back to 19th-century America during the Christmas Candlelight Tours in Lerna. The tours, taking place Dec. 3 from 5 p.m. until 8 p.m., cover the Lincoln and Sargent Farms and are free and open to the public.

Visitors can see how Christmas was observed in the past. At the Lincoln Cabin, a family can be seen socializing while completing small tasks such as knitting and spinning wool. At Sargent Farm, a family will be celebrating with food and simple decorations, which

demonstrates how the holiday became a family-oriented event. Find out more at www.lincolnlogcabin.org.

Catching the Holiday SpiritDEC. 3 GODFREY

Glazebrook Park in Godfrey will shine brightly with holiday lights during the Snowflake Festival.

The free, old-fashioned event will feature carolers, horse-drawn carriage rides, hot cocoa and pictures with Santa Claus. The festival takes place on Dec. 3 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.

For more information, contact Glazebrook Park at (618) 466-1483.

A Grand Ball With the GrantsDEC. 4 GALENA

The Mistletoe Ball in Galena includes a Victorian holiday dinner and dance, both of which take place at historic Turner Hall on Dec. 4 from 6:30 p.m. until midnight. Period and holiday attire are appropriate for the ball, as President-elect Ulysses S. Grant and his wife, Julia, will be in attendance.

Before the catered dinner, guests may enjoy champagne and hors d’oeuvres. In addition, ballgoers can have professional portraits taken against a holiday backdrop and participate in a raffle and silent auction.

Tickets can be purchased by calling (815) 777-9129. For more information, visit www.galenahistorymuseum.org.p

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ON A WINTER AFTERNOON in Marshall, Ill., the sun is shrouded in clouds overlooking Saint Mary’s Catholic Church. STAFF pHOTO

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IllINOIS IN FOCuS