Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 19 Mar 1964, p. 3

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afiga|gpfi» 2>nwd«y, March 19, . * liuariei :• j if i. "J. ' ' •/? I EARL COLBY Earl Colby, 82, of 45 Wqfol- *tock street, Crystal Lake, a native of McHenry, died in Me*- morial hospital, Woodstock, lost Monday, March 15. He was born here Feb. 15, 1882, son of Ora E. and Emma Colby. \Besides his widow, Hazel Fryer Colby, he leaves two sons, Lester of Crystal Lake and Laverne of Evanston, a daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Feltz, of Crystal Lake and nine grandchildren. A son, Paul, was killed in action during World War II. Funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock Thursday from the Querhammer funeral home, with burial in Crystal Lake Union cemetery. HERE AND THERE IN BUSINESS EMIL HORN Emil Horn, 75, of Round Lake, died Sunday, March 15, enroute to Memorial hospital. Death followed a few days' illness. Services were held Wednesday in the MacGillis funeral home. Round Lake. Mr. Horn was a brother of Albert Horn of Wonder Lake, Mrs. Frieda Anderson and Miss Elsie Horn of McCullom Lake, Mrs.. Caroline Teschner and Mrs, Emma Lieser of McHenry. FLOYD GIBBONS Funeral services were held Thursday in the Island Lake funeral home for ir.fant Floyd William Gibbons, so.i of M/. and Mrs. Floyd Gibbons of Rt. 176, Island Lake, Private burial was in Wauconda cemetery. The baby died March 12 in McHenry hospital four hours niter birth. He is survived by his parents a sister, Cathy, 8; two brothers, Lon, 6, and Joseph, 3; and his maternal grandmother, Mrs. Edith Reitzel, of Terre Haute, Ind. ANNA D. BARDEN Mrs. Anna D. Barden of 7416 Wooded Shore Drive, Wonder Lake, died Wednesday, March 11, •about 7 o'clock in Memorial hospital, Woodstock, she had been confined there for twentysix days following a fall in which she sustained a broken hip. Mrs. Barden, 80 years of age, was born in Chicago Dec. 28, 1883, and had resided with her daughter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Edward (June) Raske, at Wonder Lake for the pas|t ftix years. Before that time she made her home in Chicago^ She was preceded.. in death by her husband, Harry W., in 1956, and also by a son, Harry W.., Jr. Besides the daughter, she leaves three grandchildren. The body rested at the Peter M. Justen & Son funeral home, where' services were held Saturday morning at 10 o'clock. Burial was In Wonder Lake cemetery. BEULAH VACHET Mrs. Claude (Beulah) Vachet, a Lakemoor resident for twenty-five years, died in her home at 518 N. Tiajuana Drive Wednesday evening, March 11. She was 75 years of age and had lived in Lakemoor for over 25 years. The deceased was active in Fox River Post, No. 4600, Of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Auxiliary and also Legion Auxiliary Post 491. Mrs. Vachet was born June 16, 1888, in Butler, Pa. Survivors include the widower; two grandchildren and a great-grandchild. A son preceded her in death. Last rites were conducted at 1 o'clock Saturday in the George R. Justen & Son funeral home, with Rev. Carder of the Community Methodist church officiating. Burial was in Woodland cemetery. DISPLAY AT SHOW Triton Marine Service, 1208 North Riverside drive, McHenry, will be among the leading marine dealers displaying their products at the 1964 Chicago National Boat, Travel and Outdoors show March 21 to 29 in Chicago's McCormick Place. Triton Marine was established in 1950 and is managed by the owners, Bill and Bea Goettsche, with the assistance of their son, John. Bill Goettsche is prominent in marine circles and is commander of the Chain- JOrLakes Poweff squadron, a unit of the United States Power Squadrons. The company has recently made substantial improvements in its plant, more are in progress at this time and still others are planned for the future. --A new show room and a customer lounge are now under construction. Additional storage facilities are planned for future development. CARD OF THANKS In this manner I wish to thank all those who sent gifts, flowers,, fruit, cards and visited me while I was confined in the hospital and since my return home. I am especially grateful to Father Raymond Holmgren for his kindness to me. Eddie Miller *3-19-64 JAMES CRAIG James W. Craig, district superintendent in this area for Northern Illinois Gas company, recently observed thirty-five years in the utility business. Craig has held many service and supervisory responsibilities in the north suburban area since starting with tbe company in 1929. He assumed his present position at the NI-Gas Crystal Lake headquarters in 1959. He and his wife, Hallie, have two sons, Norman of Cary, and Richard of Grayslake. The Craigs' home is at 239 Ridge avenue, Crystal Lake. Craig serves as chairman on the board of trustees for the First Methodist church and chairman of the district organization and extension committee of the Blackhawk area council, Boy Scouts of America. He is also a member of the Crystal Lake Chamber of Commerce and past president of the Kiwanls club. His leisure-time interests include boating and gardening. Marks Marina, 3620 West Elm, McHenry, will also be among the marine manufacturers displaying their new products at the 1964 show. ATTENDS SEMINAR Bill Dumalski of Chain-OLakes Travel Service recently attended a seminar on steamship companies in Milwaukee, Wis. He also attended two seminars in Chicago, one on Far East travel and another on Alaska. These seminars are held for key personnel of travel agencies to keep them current on travel information. Have you ever seen a bronze statue in any public park, of a man seated at the wheel of the family car?* Pttypstuate the memory of a dear departed one with a beautiful Oil Painting on canvas. RimM.ide RUail OutUt 1402 Riverside Drive McHenry, III. Phone 385-5900 Ponderosa INTRODUCI LITTLE GUSTO-WIND PRIZE WINNING BLACK MINIATURE POODLE NOW AT STUD Reasonable •STUD SERVICE • GROOMING # PUPPIES /AVAILABLE Phone: 385-5970 Mrs. Roger Crokin McHENRY WOMAN ATTENDS ANNUAL# UCP CONFERENCE .Mrs. John L. Boehm, McHenry, has just returned from Dallas,, Texas, where she was a delegate to the United Cerebral Palsy association's fourteenth annual conference. Although the first day of the conference covered mainly the election of new officers and board members at the national level, the balance of the threeday affair covered reports by members of the Medical and Scientific A d v i s o r y board. Whitney Kerschner of Pennsylvania was elected president for the coming year, succeeding Wendell Brown, who has been president for four years. Doctors from all over the world were present to report on their findings in connection with Cerebral Palsy disfunctions, and it was at this time that it was made public to all attending that it was money collected in door -'to - door marches which paid for the research which discovered the German measles virus which is a major cause of Cerebr.il Palsy in new born babies. U. C. P. is continuing the flow of money to this research team until they discover the serum which can be used to combat this disease in pregnant women. Mrs. Boehm was also approached by a national committee working on next year's campaign, to cubmit her human cannister for possible manufacture for Use in the Telethons held in all large cities for the benefit of Cerebral Palsy. This would indeed be a feather in the cap of the McHenry County United Cerebral Palsy association. PUBLIC PULSE (The Plaindealer invites the public to use this column as an expression of their views on subjects of general interest in our community. Our only request is that writers limit themselves to 300 words or less signature, full address and phone number. We ask, too, that one individual not write on the same subject more than once each month. We reserve the right to delete any material which we consider libelous or in objectionable taste.) COMMUNITY SERVICE For a number of years the McHenry Kiwanis club has assisted in sponsoring the After- C>lo party following the proin. We feel they have done the community a great service in showing their concern for the safety of the high school students by this type of entertainment after the prom. This year, however, by linuiual agreement, it has been decided to a, seme : dinner dance instead. Fred Kusch, President, of the class of 1964 MARIAN FATHERS CLUB The monthly meeting of the Marian Fathers club will be held Tuesday, March 24, at 8 o'clock at Marian Central Catliolic high school in Woodstock. vt£eat&to&itftiEKilli Present Words ar soon. U Rudi J. Photo Members of Nativity Lutheran church in Wonder Lake who are participating in the presentation of "The Seven Last Words of, Christ" March 22 and 23 are Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jacobson, William Moore, Mrs. Rudi Jirousek, Mrs. Sam Yoklcy and Mrs. Louise Hansen. Auxiliary Newt News About Our Servicemen Army \ 1st L't. Richard C. Herd rich," son of Mr. and Mrs. John T. Herdrich, .1019 N, 'fti* ver road, McHenry, was assigned March 2 as commander of Battery A, 1st Howitzer Battalion, 83rd Artillery hear Schwabiseh Hall, Germany. Lieut, Herdrich entered the Army in August, 1962. The 23-year-old officer, a 1959 graduate of Campion high school, Prairie di|pGhien, Wis., is a 1962 graduate of Marquette university, Milwaukee, Wis. Pvt. James D. Houdek, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vincent J. Houdek, 4710 N. Gregory, McHenry, completed an eightweek personnel administration specialist course at the- Army Arjnor cenMr, Fort Knox, Ky., March 13. .During the course HoudCk received training in the use of business machines such as addressographs and calculating machines and in facets of the Army personnel management program. The 18-year-old soldier en tered the Army in October, 1963, and completed basic training at Fort Knox, Houdek is a 1963 graduate of McHenry high school. Army Specialist Five Phillip E. Bartmann, son of Mrs. Veronica Fraunhoffer, 405 N. River road, McHenry, qualified as expert in firing the carbine at R i c h a r d s - G e b a u r A i r F o r c e Base, Mo., recently. Specialist Bartmann, an electronic technician in Headquarters, 2d Region U. S. Army Air Defense Command at Richards- Gebaur Air Force base, entered the Army in September, 1961. The 21-year-old soldier is a 1961 graduate of McHenry high school. David R. Miller, fireman, •s DAIRY, Sne. Complete Line of Dairy Product* -- FREE DELIVERY -- Locally Owned and Operated 95 or 3854)232 USN, son df Mr. and; Mrs. Thane Miller of H710 Ramble rood, Wonder Lake, is serving aboard the anti-submarine aircraft carrier USS Essex presently undergoing overhaul in the New York Naval shipyard, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ujjon completion of the overhaul, Essex, which normally ojierates out of Quonset Point, R. I., will again join the Atlantic Fleet. Essex is the hub of an antisubmarine hunter-killer group consisting of surface, sub-surface and air units designed to find and destroy enemy submarines. Pvt. Nicola F. X. Pintozzi, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pintozzi, 4913 Home avenue, McHenry, completed an eight-week course in public and troop information activities at the Army Information School, Fort Slocum, N. Y., Feb. 28. During the course Pintozzi received instruction in journalism, public speaking, international relations and completed basic training at Fort Knox, Ky. The 21-year-old soldier is a 1961 graduate of McHenry Community high school and attended Loyola university, Chicago. Pvt. Paul P. Karls, 18, son of Mrs. Adelia C. Karls, 3709 W. Grand avenue, McHenry, completed a fourteen-week tracked and wheeled vehicle engine maintenance course March 6 at the Army Ordnance center, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md. Karls was trained to maintain and repair various Army vehicles. He entered the Army last September and completed basic training at Fort Knox, Ky. Karls is a 1963 graduate of Marian Central Catholic high school in Woodstock. Richmond, Wonder Lake, Genoa City, Hebron and Spring Grove church choir members will join together in the Choral Union for the presentation of the DuBois cantata, "The Seven Last Words of Christ," on Palm Sunday, March 22, at 8 p.m., in the Genoa City Congregational church, and on Monday, March 23 at 8 p.m., in St. John's Lutheran church, Hebron. The public is invited. Officers of the Choral Union are Dr. M. D. Savage of Richmond, chairman; Peggy Kautz of Genoa City, secretary; and Virgil Popenhagen of Richmond, treasurer. Mrs. W. S. Boedecker of Route 1, participated Feb. 29 - March 9 in an extensive simulated desert warfare exercise called "Operation Winter Night" at the Marine Corps base, Twentynine Palms, Calif. The exercise, a combined operation of the First Marine division based at Camp Pendleton and the Third Marine Aircraft Wing at El Toro Marine Corps Air station, involves all types of Marine equipment and every phase of combat skill. Emphasis was placed on counter - guerrilla operations, helicopter team troop movements, and day and night air support. Marine Lance Corporal Steve M. Boedecker, son at Mr. and Richard Lundborg will graduate on March 19 from the U.S. Department of Language Institute at Monterey, Calif., where he has sudied Chinese for the past year. Immediately after graduation, he will leave for Pensacola, Fla., where he will enroll in an additional course in radio, to supplement the schooling received in his first year of Navy training. His mother, Mrs. Joseph Lundborg, of Wonder Lake is hoping to be able tp fly to California for his graduation. Wanes Beauty f]ooL 140 Rand Road 885-3663 Pl&IMTER SftOM. fMearch 12 to 21st For Children up to 13 Years Old Permanent Wave - 8.50 complete -- Closed Mondays --- Marie Beranek, Prop. Viola Bodenstab, Mgr. 7-passenger "town car"...%-ton "pickup truck": Same 1964 SAAB station wagon. a *.* It's not a box or a bus... arid ft deasn't sto @p par* like one. Whether it's hauling cargo or cruising along In the 70's, a SAAB station wagon always looks and handles like a safe, handsome, practical car* Ex* tremely European. Here's what you get: 1 • an unusual 3-cylinder engine that gets 25*35 mpg, • a virtually uncrushable unitized body. ! • front-wheel drive for sure traeta on snow. Ice and corners. j • a 4-speed synchromesh gear box that makes even women love to shift for themselves,, * • a slotted roof that washes the rear tA alte, • a 2-year or 24,000-mile wanogiity mission and differential. Test drive our 1964 SAAB station wagon. You*9 discover its delightful dual personality. On|y . SMB.ST WDY • 9TYU&H • 3WtDaM EUR0PA MOTORS 3318 West Pearl Street Phone 385-0700 Open Dally 8:30-6 '-- Fridays till 9 -- Sundays 12 to 4 pjn. McHearyy, I1L The board meeting** of the woman's auxiliary to McHenry hospital was held on March 10, with Mrs. Wm. Strout "of Crystal Lake presiding. Mrs. Fred Fradinardo, treasurer, gave the financial report. She spoke of the success of the-coffee-shopr-but-Jioted that. -- weekend help 'is needed. Mrs. Claude McDermott and Mrs. Lou Consago reported on their field trip to various hospitals, in which many excellent ideas were discussed and exchanged concerning auxiliary management. Mrs. William Fowler has been named assistant manager of the Pink Lady shoppe. She will also" represent the auxiliary as a model in the May Grant hospital fashion show, one of the most important North Shore affairs. The Sewing guild gave a sucseccful silertt auction at the home of Mrs. Harold Kelly: Mrs. George Alvary and her telephone committee have begun calling members for reservations for the spring card party and fashion show, to be held April 8. Five members and two professional models will show the latest in spring and summer fashions. Those chosen are Mrs. Harry Eckland, Mrs. Lou Consago, Mrs. H. M. Engdahl, Mrs. Claude McDermott and Mrs. Diane Armstrong. The auxiliary has been asked to expand their work to include direct patient service and duties in various hospital departments. Mrs. Fred Bond will attend a three-day seminar on volunteer supervision sponsored by the American Hospital association. In her Art Fair committee report, Mrs. Lee Gladstone said that this year, for the first time, students may exhibit atlarge. Registration blanks will through school art also continue. tration for McHenry county resident artists will Jjfegln Shortly. Those intereatacTmay contact Mm. Richard-Tade, ?2(> Woodland, Cr^lJXfe ~:;r- Mrs. Henry Tonyan said fhnt th£ temporarily cancelled*flecture series rwill, be ^jmumed sopn, •• In Branch 3 of the Circuit i Court, held In McHenry, the following dases Syejfc .' jrecently: p •;>> Kathleen A. mClu£*fridy owl; Marjorie G. Fernstrom, both of McHenry, were fined $i0 and $5 costs; Donovan "E. Bjoring ttf Waukegan, James W. Hutehinr son of Arlington Heights tind Timothy J. Ballowe, McHenry, $12 and $5 costs; and Edward R. Sibiski of 'McHejury, $1$ $5 costs, all for speeding. < ;. Eugene Stedleckl Grayslake paid a fine of ^5 and^SS costs for driving Arithno&tate license plates. • A fine of $10 and $5 costs was assessed to Larry J. Feezel of McHenry for failure to. have car under control. Robert E. Miller of McHenfy was lined $5 and costs for improper mufflers. PRESENT PLATS " The Harrison school eighth grade is presenting two plays on Friday, March 20, under the direction of RandalJosserarid. The plays are entitled "Hilly- Billy House" and "Witch*Ha« zel." MARRIAGE! LICENSES Joel Tinch, Jamestown, Tenn., and Judith Seifert, Mc* Henry. | Lawrence Cynowa, McHenry* and Kathleen Anne Hunt, He* bron. 'inni'iiif* CHOOSE Route 14 ^Jke C^zecki oCodt 9e Crystal I«ke, m. For Four l*radittonaJ EASTER FEAST Enjoy Oie Famovi' COMPLETE , : FAMILY STYLE DINNERS tap Tteough Dessert AH you can eat and so ecouoxnlcall priced too. Regular dinner menu also. Early Reservations Recommended Ph©a© 459-Olgg &RAY (THE ELECTRIC PEOPLE) HAVE TRIC RANGES All Styles -- Sizes -- Colors Choice of Free Standing or Buili-lns PLUS THE ALL NEW LUXURY RANGE Twin 30 Fla BY FRI ID IRE J' BUY A NEW ELECTRIC RANGE NOW AND GET THE WIRING FREE " Glmftof Mm c.zCo In eMpmtlM wW» F© cuom Stop Today and Visit Our Showroom rJlee & t^ay. £(eclric (McHENRY'S LARGEST APPLIANCE 8TORS) 1005 N. Front St. FREE ' McHenry, III. PAWlffO & : j ,r4 w . 'ft 4

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