Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 17 Aug 1961, p. 3

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^trursday, August 17, 1961 THE WfcSJENftY PLAlNMALER Page ttoift News About Our Servicemen Mi R, J. MATHEWS First Lieut. Richard J. Mathews, of Lake Shore drive, Wonder Lake, has entered the undergraduate pilot training program at Williams AFB, A&lfi-put. Mathews, who attended Veniura college, Ventura, Calif., will remain at Williams for approximately fifty-three weeks for completion of his training in the T-37 and T-.T) jet aircraft. Lieut. Mathews, his wife, Bonnie, ami children, Richard, Renea and Roslyn, are residing near Williams AFB. \apt. Virgil Moore, Rt. 2, McHenry, is training here with the 404th Troop currier Wing of the Air Force reserve during its annual pummer encampment, Aug. 6 to 20, Captain Moore, an instructor pilot with the 404th, is taking part in the Wing's "Operation Readiness" during his fifteen-day tour of active duty. During this exe?| ttse, reservists are training in their, mililary job skills to maintain ton proficiency required of the Air Force reserve flying unit in Wisconsin. WALTER FOERSTER Walter C. Foerster, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer C. Foerster of 3014 W. Mourine Lane, McHenry, is now serving in the Navy, stationed at Great Lakes. F1®,]owing a fifteen-day leave which began Aug. 14, he will be stationed on the USS Lexington. Even a clock passes the time by keeping its hands busy. MILD RECOVERY IS OUTLOOK FOR BUSINESS IN '62 The level of business activity, is still an important force affect ing prices of many farm products. For example, the recent business recession was an important force in depressing the price of beef cattle. Three aspects of the recession cut into the demand for beef: (1) unemployment, (2) fear of being laid off and (3) a tightening of business expense : accounts. The unemployed had loss money to spend. They passed by the more costly foods like steak and roasts. Some who feared that they would be Inid off also tightened up on t'»rir spending in order to build up a little cushion for use in an emergency. As company sales volumes declined, many firmsbecame . vei.-y cost-conscious. Salesmen and other i-ompany officials were told to cut expenses. One way of dt.ing .-so was to pass up t'hf high-priced steak dinners for more economical meals -- chicken, for example. Of course, somebody ate all of the beef that wfi- produced. But not until prices v. ere cut, usually in special sa.es. Business activity has been increasing since last spring. Industrial output started up in April. By June it had increased about 9 percent, reaching the highest levels attained in 1960 and 1959. The flow of personal income began to rise in March. It surpassed the 1960 peak rate of $410 billion in April, but further increases have been slow. Businessmen talk optimistically, especially since the President announced plans for increasing military spending by $5 billion. But it takes more *han optimism to create a real boom. Much of this business recovery is built out of shortlived material. Businessmen have been building up their stocks of goods, but this cannot continue. Retail sales have not kept pace with the buildup of inventories. Increased federal spending is a "shot-in-the-arm" that wears off in a few months. We have already had one shot this year. We get the next from boosting military spending. Housing construction has recovered to 1960 levels. But over 8 percent of all rental units (apartments and houses) are vacant, and the vacancy rate is rising. This is not a good climate for a sustained housing boom. Spending for new plants and equipment is the foundation for strong economic growth. Such spending totals less than $35 billion this year, down from $36 billion in 1960 and well below the record level of $38 billion set in 1957. This kind of business investment is now increasing a little, and optimists hope for much larger increases in 1962. But many industries--steel and automobiles, for example -- already have more productive capacity than they can profitably use. Another dampening factor Is that much business expansion is financed out of profits. And profits have shrunk al-out onethird in the past twenty-four months. From the viewpoint of a cattle feeder or other farmer, the present business outlook is better than it was a year ago. Last fall we were entering a mild recession. Now we are in what appears to be a mild recovery. It seems likely to hold up through most of 1962. International developments drastically change the outlook at any time. On this point only one fact is clear: there will be no real peace in the year ahead. L. H. Simerl Dept. of Ag. Econ. COURT BRIEFS WONDER LAKE GIRL IS DELEGATE TO YCW STUDY WEEK Can the young person who is working and who is only 18 or 22 years old be effective in international affairs? Can the late Dr. Tom Dooley's Laos or the Congo struggle-, with freedom be affected by them? Two young people from the Rockford diocese this week are delegates to a National Study Week which is exploring affirmative answers to these questions. The Study Week, sponsored by the Young Christian Workers, is the begmnine of a six-month training and "doing something" program for young working people. The two delegates are Kathy Majercik of Wonder Lake, representing Woodstock and Wonder Lake's Y.C.W. and Pauline Caron, reperesenting Rochelle and Rockford Y.C.W. For the two delegates, "doing something" can mean anything from sharing a holiday or a friendship with a foreign student to preparing themselves for the Peace corps or the Young Christian Workers overseas extension program. At the Study Week, they have (he opportunity to meet foreign students and experts and to discuss the hunger in Latin America, the thirst for freedom in Africa and the conditions conducive to communism in Asia. Especially encouraged by the words ol Pope John XXIII's recent Encyclical, they will thus begin a deliberate effort to discover the problems of the peoples of the wdrld. Through weekly Young Christian Worker meetings in their neighborhoods, they will formulate personal and group actions based on the gaps they discover between "what is" and what >.*nuld or should be." On a personal basis, each has begun by contributing funds toward sending young workers from the Central American countries of Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama to the World Council Meeting of the Young Christian Workers in Rio de Janeiro this November. Old timers are all alike in one respect--youth is their favorite subject. z PA1« School ogoio 1roWte'\XoW.. tW* p «•<»»•' dr?" both odu»* ?nd childr." \ - > R«g. $3 00 r°% omclifflS 1 /I Fall is iu,t oroond, tta corner -- «•* your official »•*« and *°ot" ball with kicking tee nowl ft ssp'-sz *• _ ^ ^nk, °,r" e/„. '* «Po„. jifiiii VYCITALS Hdwe 1228 N. Green St. McHenry, 111. Phone EV. 5-0098 In the court of Police Magistrate Donald Howard last week Wednesday evening, three McHenry 'teen-agers were fined $10 each on a malicious mischief charge as the result of taking watermelons from the Jewel Tea store and other miscellaneous items from flit her places. Parenis of all three were present and promised cooperation with the court in administering punishment of theii own. Ronald Spooner of Spring Grow paid a $10 fine for disobeying a traffic signal. A nurriber of fines were also imposed in the Justice court of Charles M. Adams on Saturday. Four were charged with speeding and puid the following amounts: Edward Soback and Edward F. Kessner, both of McHenry, $11; Anthony Licari. Chicago, R i c h a r d Sehaefer, Deerfiela, and Wallace E. Matheson, Wonder Lake, all $10. George Rolick of -MeHenrs paid a $10 Sine for following too closely. In the justice court of Joseph Ritter in Woodstock on Monday of this week, Alan Povulh of 304 S. Highland, McHcnry, paid a fine of $23 imd costs on a reckless driving charge. ZONING CHANGE ASKED TO OPERATE LAKE DUDE RANCH OBITUARIES A $6 fine was paid by Terrence Connor of McHenry for having loud mufflers. Daniel Boland of Onk Park and Felix Stonis of Wonder Lake were each charged $30 for driving unnumbered boats. Dan Dipple of Chicago paid a $30 fine for water skiijig with one operator in the boftt. A petition has been filed bofore .ihe zoning board of ;ip perls for Hiram R. Bennett. Dorothy Alice Bennett, Arthur G. Schroeder and Ida F. Schroeder. The petitioners are asking for a zoning reclassification on three parcels of land located on the Bennett farm on ihe ea:-i side of Thompson road, on ihe west side of Wonder Lake awt approximately ll* miles north of Route 120. They are asking for a variation on one parcel 1o permit the operation of a dude ranch. On the second parcel they are asking for a B-l classification to permit the housing of registered quests, the operation of a restaurant and swimming pool. On the third parcel the potition'eis request a B-2 Classification to permit ihe sale ol alcoholic beverages. The hearing on the above petition will be heard on TUOMIU.N, Aug. J2, at 3:15 p.m..*on the Bennett farm premises. $50,(HH) DAMAGE St'lT A $50,000 damage suil was filed in Circuit court last week by Albert O'Neill against Walter Kalemba of McHenry as the result of injuries alleged to June 12. 1960. have been received in an accident on the Johnsburg roaii JAMES WARCZAK Graveside rites were held in St. John's cemetery, Johnsbuv?, last Thursday for James Robert. son of Mr and Mrs. Thomas J. Warezak of Pistakee Highlands, who died at birth at Vici i iiy Memorial hospitaH WM.iktv.an, Aug. 9. The body was. taken to the Peter M. Justen & Son funeral h<ni<\ where arrangements Acre made. The body rested at the George Justen & Son funeral home Tuesday night, after which it. was taken to the Joseph Schielka chapel at 2242 N. Levitt, Chicago. A Mass will be sung Friday morning at St. Stanislaus, B.V.M. church -in Chicago, with burial in St. Joseph's cemetery, River Grove. ter, Dorothy Scott,, and a brother, Carlton Prouty; also two grandchildren. Services were held Tuesday, with interment in Rosehill cemetery. LIST CHILDREN AS NO. 1 HAZARD AROUND KITCHEN Cl'RTIS ,1. LENVOX Curtis J. Lenox, 45, husband* of the former May Justen of McHenry, was found dead by his wife in their Downers Grove home last Friday afternoon, Aug. 11. Lenox was a stationary engineer for Hawthorn-Mellody Farina. Besides his wife, he leaves a sop., lohn. 9 years old; his father. Russell Lenox, of Florida; and a sister. Maxine Turvey. Services were held at 10 o'clock Monday morning from i ho Ad ims-Winterfield chapel in Downers Grove, followed by. 'interment in St. Mary's eernet (• t \. McHenry. Ti:i»I»Y Kl CZMIERCZYK Teddy Kuczmierozyk, who 'I'sidcd south of Volo on Rt. 12 for ihe past five years, died Monday, Aug. 14, at Hines veterans' hospital. He was 39 \ears of age. He i.s survived by his Wife; Helene: two children, Nancy and Daniel; and his father, Stanley of Chicago.' Kuc/niiotvzyk was employed as a m ichinist for the Frank G. Hough Co. of Libertvvil'e. GEORGE KIEHL Services were held from the Zimmerman and Sandeman chapel in Oak Lawn on Saturday for George H. Kiehl, 57, of Oak Lawn, brother of Cliffoid Kiehl of McHenry. He died in a Chicago hospital Aug. 8. ' His wife survives. . Burial was in Cedar Park Masonic cemetery. CHRIS FOSS Services were held Saturday in Our Lady of Mercy church. Chicago, for Chris C. Foss, fa- ! ther of Harold Foss of Lakej moor, who died Aug. 9 in Raj venswood hospital. Burial was in All Saints cemetery;' Mr. Foss Was a retired police captain of the33rd precinct in Chicago. j His widow, another son and two daughters survive. j RICHARD PROl'TY | Richard Prouty of Wilmette, ! n former resident of Indian ! Ridge subdivision, McHenry. j died Saturday, Aug. 12. His I father, the late Carlton Prouty, ! was one of the first residents of the subdivision. He is survived by his widow; a daughter, Marianne Steinei; two sons, Richard and Robert; his mother, Mary Prouty; a sis- The No. 1 hazard in the kitchen isn't a sharp knife or ! a hot burner. I "It's children." the National j Safety Council says. "Children j underfoot in a kitchen can cause all sorts of trouble, j "They have a habit of leaving marbles, crayons and toy ^trucks here and there on , floors. Such objects on the I kitchen floor are booby traps ! when Mom tries to carry a pan of hot liquid, for example, across the room. She may fall, !.spilling the liquid on herself or someone else." The kitchen, the Council ; says, is the third most dangeri ous room in the hoiise. | How- can you make your j kitchen safer? I 1. It possible, keep children | out of the kitchen. If not. teach I them to stay away from cords, j appliances and stoves, j 2. Turn in handles of utenj sils on stoves. I 3. Keep knives in racks -- ; and away from children. 4. Wipe up spilled liquids im- ! mediately from the floor. ' Crater Lake, Oregon, con* ' tains about 17 cubic miles of | water -- every drop of which fell there in form of rain or snow, as streams. it has no feeder f Can't it That National Meat mm t» * m Mfltuaiut Oar. Tmt Moan hck Tender ... Lean And Tasty ARMOUR STAR FULLY COOKED f Saves you two-thirds the cooking time na iasTy HAMS . So Delicious, so tender -- and so easy to prepare. Saves you money too - at this low National price. ARMOUR STAR WHOLE HAMS . g U. S. Choice . . . Lamb SHOULDER CHOPS . MICKEIBERRY'S -- Old Farm BOILED HAM u. lb. SHANK 4? PORTIONS 35° 69' u. 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