Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 24 Jan 1968, p. 9

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HELP WANTED BRAKE CO "Formerly Automotive Controls" WE OFFER JOB SECURITY •'!-. IM THESE .^EXCIFTIOHAL OPPORTUNITIES MALE MOLPERS 1st Shift Maintenance Electricians 1st Shift TOOL & CUTTER GRINDERS 1st & 2nd Shift FEMALE MACHINE OPERATORS 1st Shift TOP BENEFITS INCLUDING: * Insurance Package includes major medical plus life Insurance * Holiday Pay * Liberal Vacation Pay * Progressive rate ranges, * Choice of shifts, * Plus shift premiuih * Promotional opportunities, combine steady employment and offer real opportunities without commuting. OFFICE HOURS Mon. thru Fri. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday 8 a.m. - noon (815) 385-7000 BRAKE PARTS "Formerly Automotive Controls" 1600 N. Industrial Dr. McKENRY 1-24/1-26-61 THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER JANUARY 24, 1968 - £LA1 NDEALER - PG. 9 Female Help Wmted Female Help OAK Needs Women for GENERAL ASSEMBLY. SOLDEIMG & LIGHT MACHINE WOBK. Days 8 A.Mi to 4:30 P.M. Nights 5:00 P.M. to 1:30 A.M. Join the OAK family and enjoy the best of company paid benefits which includes: free insurance and profit sharing, paid vacations, jury duty pay, paid holidays, night shift premium, modern low cost cafeteria, on the job training, educational assistance, credit union and others. -- Apply In Personnel Office -- Daily 8 A.M. to 4:45 P.M. Saturday 9 A.M. to 1 P.M. AK <3©c A DIVISION OF OAK ELEGTOO/NETICS CORP •owth CJtoOn 0&?@©i 09fo©G3O G59-S000 IliKIr G[LMC3©D# AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER 1-24-68 Female EMp W&aied READY TO WEAR Saleslady. Part time or full time. Experience preferred but will train. Discount on purchases. All fringe benefits. Good pay. Apply in person only. Towne and Country Shoppe, Fox Lake, 111. 1-24/1-26-68 BABY SITTER. High school Junior or Senior. 5 days a week. 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Call after 7 p.m. 385-4813. 1-24/1-26-68 HELP WAITED OPERATORS DRILL PRESS $1.60 - $2.63 per hour MILLING MACHINE $1.60 - $2.86 per hour BURRING $1.60 - $2.25 per hour Experienced or will train. PI ENTElPfflSES Jolmsburg McHenry, Illinois 1-24/1-26-68 WANTED Real Estate Salesmen or women for McHenry, Piste kee Bay, Ingleside, Fox Lake and Antioch area. CHARLES J. CERMAK REALTOR Call 312-395-3585 f 1-10/1-31-68 • Coil Inserters • Light Assembly • Machine Operators Beginners Welcome Clean Work Steady employment Air conditioned factory Employee" benefits GEARMASTER INC. 1809 S. Rt. 31 McHenry. M. 1-24-68 F©mal® Help WgmSsd Mature Women for » ASSISTANT C0OK MWRSES AIDE ' and part time REGISTERED NUBSE Experience not necessary. Steady work with fringe benefits. Apply In Person VALLEY HI NURSIHG HOME 2406 HartlaM Rd. Woodstock, Illinois CALL. 838-0812 1-19/1-24-68 LIGHT Excellent company benefits i n c l u d i n g : p r o f i t s h a r i n g , hospitalization and life insurance, paid vacation. Apply In Person BIG BEAM 290 E. Prairie St. Crystal Lake, Illinois 815-459-6100 "an equal opportunity employer" 1-24/1-26-68 WOMAN to work in nursing home on Pistakee Bay near McHenry. Full or part time. No experience necessary. Will train. Call 815-385-0461. l-24/lr26-68 SALESLADY wanted. Willingness to learn a more important than experience. Excellent opportunity for right person. Own transportation. Commission. Call 385-7624 after 6:30 p.m. . 1-24/1-31-68 OFFICE HELP WANTED Receptionist with shorthand and typing skills essential. All facets of office work involved. For interview call MR. KINNE 385-1580 Looze & Kinne Attorneys 8431 W. Elm . McHenrv. Illinois 1-19/1-24-68 HELP WANTED HELP WAITED i DODGE INC. ' • World's Largest Trophy Manufacturer RT. 14 & 31 , CRYSTAL LAKE, ILL. • GENERAL OFFICE Male and Female General Factory • JEWELRY POLISHER • EXPERIENCED WAREHOUSEMAN * • TORCH SOLDERER -- APPLY IN PERSON -- 8 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. Monday thru Friday "An equal opporunity employer" Female Help Wanted EXPERIENCED bookkeeper for hardware store, capable of handling complete bookkeeping system to include payroll, salps tax and billing. Stop at A.N. May Builders office Richmond, Illinois or call 815-678 2861. 1-3-68TF 1-2 At A icers Elected City F, 1-2J/1-26-68 SEVENTY COURSES WILL EE OFFERED AT NIGHT SCHOOL Registration for the spring semester of the adult night school program in the McHenry public^chools will be held Wednesday, Jan. 24, and Thursday* Jan. 25, from 6 to 9 p.m. in the Junior high school. This semester over seventy courses will be offered, including several new courses: Ceramics, Leathercrafting, Community Public Speaking, Exploring Literature, Medical Terminology and a Curses' Refresher course. The course offerings from the first semester will be available again this term. In the Creative Leisure section of offerings, popular courses first semester were General Drawing and Painting, Creative Writing, Guitar, Organ and Beauty on a Budget. Foreign Languages included Conversational French, German, and Spanish. Popular selections in the Home and Family courses included Interior Decorating, Beginning Sewing and Selection, Advanced Clothing, Furniture Upholstering, Real Estate and Insurance for Home makers, Basic Auto Mechanics for Women, Cake Decoration, and Gourmet Cooking. Preparation for Citizenship is offered under this division free of charge to participants. Business Skills courses, perenial student favorites, include Reading Improvement, Record Keeping, Beginning Typing, Typing II, Investments and | Securities, Bookkeeping, Shorthand I, n and in, and Data Processing Basics. Technical j courses offering improve# skills and new knowledge in**;, elude Welding, Aviation, Blue Print Reading, Electronics I: and n, and Drafting. In sport# courses, a popular class first Newly elected officers of District 6, Pure Milk association, are shown at the annual meeting held in McHenry last Friday. Seated, left to right, are R&lph Nichols, president; Ferol Tomlinson of McHenry, secretary; Charles Weingart of McHenry, Avery A. Vose, nationally prominent dairy farmer and Pure Milk association president from Rt. 2, Antioch, was re-elected to a two-year term as director of PMA district 6 at the district's annual meeting at McHenry, Jan. 19. Other officers re-elected tor the year ahead are: President, ttalph L. Nichols, Rt. 1, Hebron; vice-president, Charles P. Weingart, McHenry; secretary- treasurer, Mrs. Ferol Tomlinson, McHenry; re-districting committeeman, Norman E. Heinrich, Crystal Lake; resolutions committeeman, Ferdisemester was Slimming through ^^le, Rt. 1, Walworth, Dance and Exercise. ? OTHER COURSES High school credit cotfrseisi offering one half credit and lasting for fifteen weeks inclu ^ General English," Sociology ternational Relations, Algebra, Psychology, American History, World History, and General Science. Many other courses in all areas are offered also. All courses, with the exception of high school credit courses, last for ten weeks, meeting each week for two hours. Book fees, laboratory costs, and other expenses will be paid hy students in addition to course costs. This is a splendid opportunity to open new interests, develop new skills, and make new friends. The pleasant atmosphere of the adult night school makes for an enjoyable evening of learning, and opens new vistas one progresses through the course. For more information on one of these courses, contact Gene Little at the Junior high school. He will answer' any questions. Also, brochures describing Wis., and inter-cooperative relations committeeman, Ralph L. Nichols. Walter C. Kirchner,treasurer of Pure Milk associatiortand principal speaker, said PMA is Supporting the U.S. Department of Agriculture's recommended Chicago regional federal milk .market order with two exceptions. The first exception is that the minimum Class I price proposed by USDA is too low. The other is that the Northwestern Indiana market order area should not be included. APPROVES ACTION He said PMA heartily approves the department of agriculture's inclusion of filled mi lk as a Class I product in the Chicago regional order, and its elimination of the supply-demand adjuster which had consistently lowered the producer Class I price by .24 cents per cwt. Fortunately for dairy farmers, he asserted, a strong m?rcourse offerings completely are being presently circulated inthe community. Pets That Need A Home OR ARE Looking For Their Master As a public service of the McHenry Plaindealer all ads run under "Pets That Need A Home" are Free. The only requirements are: The animals are to be given away to good homes without charge or you are trying to find the owner of a pet that has strayed into your possession. TO BE GIVEN AWAY TO BE GIVEN AWAY PUPPIES 6 - 8 weeks old. Mixed bred. Call 385-6137. 1-24-68 6 WE|£KS OLD German Shepherd and Collie mixed. Must be to good home. 7605 Arbor Rd., Wonder Lake, 111. Before 1 p.m. week days or any time weekends. 1-24-68 3 MONTH dren's pet. OLD all black Call 385-5114 . puppy. Trained. Good chil- 1-24/1-26-68 1 TRI COLORED female cat. -8 months old. Box Call 385-7542. trained. 1-24-68 MOVING to city, must give away 1 year old Child's pet. Call 385-7533. female cat. 1-24-68 4 PUPPIES, 7 weeks 385-5370 after 7 p.m. old. Mother black labrador. Call • 1-24-68 3 MONTH OLD male puppy. All black with white feet- Trained. Good children's pet. Cadi 385-5114. 1-24/1-26-68 keting agency, Central Milk Sales agency, has been established by Pure Milk association and the Association of 0- perating Cooperatives to bargain for higher producer prices and sell milk through the PMA Chicago market pool. The effectiveness of this agency has released farmers from complete dependence on the poli- 4 tics of government pricing, he declared. CMSA, he emphasized, is in a strong bargaining position to i m p r o v e p r o d u c e r p r i c e s through superpool negotiations under a market order. He said this bargaining strength can be increased to the degree that dairy farmers throughout the recommended order area forget the differences which separated them in the past and bargain together. , , <£ : ' - 4 ' ' ' 1> - COOPERATION NEEDED £ ""Evidence of what can be don© through farmers working together is the current Chicago m irket price of $5.40 for Class I milk~35 cents per cwt. higher than the price recommended hy USDA in the new order. We believe this $5.40 price can be maintained or improved, if the pooling provisions of Nurse Course Unique Offer A Nurses' Refresher course is being_offered in the adult night/schobl program of the McHenry public schools this semester. This course is the first one of its type to be offered through an adult education program in the state of Illinois. The j:ourse is available to registered nurses who have been away from the profession for several years and who would like to return into nursing. The purpose of the course is to prepare inactive nurses to return to active practice through an updating of skills, knowledges, and understandings in nursing and nursing practice„ Applicants must present evidence of current registration as a professional nurse in the state of Illinois, or must show that they have made application for this license. Also, applicants to the course must provide evidence of good physical and mental health, including negative chest x-ray during the past six-months,, A letter to the Department of Registration and Education, Springfield, Illinois, will reactivate registration. The program will include classroom instruction, demonstrations, and practical work with a team of nurses in the McHenry hospital; with six hours of classroom work and four hoars * of clinical work a week; ten hours of work a week for ten weeks. A small tuition is charged. , Anyone wishing to apply for admission to this course may do so by registering in person at the McHenry Junior high school, 3711 West Kane in McHenry. Registration for the spring semester in the Adult ' School program will be Wednesday, Jan. 24, and Thursday, Jan. 25, from 6 to 9 o'clock p.m.-More specific information about the Nurses' Refresher ctiurse wili be availabie'at' the time of registration. vice-president; and Avery Vose, president of the Pure Milk association; standing, Ferdinand Dahle, resolutions committeeman; Joseph Kayser, district commissionerfand Walter Kirchner, secretary of PMA, guest speaker, pLAlNDEALER PHoTo PMA Chicago market pool will contribute to a $1 millioht^: year fund for expanding the a<$f; vertising of fluid milk on,-the the recommended decision are put into effect," he stated. Kirchner then commented that more stringent supply plant pool qualification provisions should assure less "Pool riding" than was evident in the old Chicago order. The new proposal requires that in order to qualify for pooling, a supply plant must ship from 30 to 40 percent of receipts to a bottling plant during certain months. Previously, plants could ship only 20 percent for a few months and then participate in pricing without shipping milk. He emphasized that the recently developed standby pool now operating in Midwestern and Southern markets already has provided alternative opportunities for many Grade A reserve supply manufacturing plants to participate in fluid milk markets. FUND CONTRIBUTION Kirchner announced that the Chicago market. The program is scheduled to begin in February- S3*}.-. He also pointed out that PuifcX Milk association and Associate ed Dairymen are forming plans for a hearing to propose a Gra$£ B or manufacturing milk mjajfcv keting order to improve prices for Grade B producers, Mr. Vose presented lapelpin awards to members tor long-time membership in PMA. Seven members received twero* ty-five year pins and thirtyfour members were recognized for thirty-five years of service in PMA. $ Mr. Nichols presented a plaque to Mr. and Mrs. John W; Pfingsten of Crystal Lake, rp^ ' cognizing them as the 196fr. outstanding young dairy couple of PMA District 6. Outline Conservation Aims At Annual Meeting operators planted 126 acres of trees, 13,800 miltiflora rose and bush honeysuckle, improved 182 acres of pasture, planted 659 acres of minimum tillage row crops, and established conservation crop rotations on more than 2630 acres. Fifteen ponds were stocked with ba& and bluegills and 170 acres*bf wildlife areas improved. Technical help was offered in the construction of 28 farm ponds, 10 acres of waterways and 18 acres of contour strippcropping. Aside from the basic technical assistance to individual cooperators, there are also the many programs involving participation with the Crystal Lake Outdoor Education center, the Northeastern Illinois Planning commission, and supplying conservation materials to the county teachers for classroom use. To date nearly 1,200 portfolios The purposes of the McHenry County Soil and Water Conservation district are: 1. To develop leadership in bringing about a public realization of the need for the preservation and improvement of our natural resources - soil, water, woodland and wildlife; and 2. to provide technical information, advice and assistance to all users of the land so that the basic objective, "Use each acre of land within its capabilities, and treatment of each acre according to its needs", can be achieved. That these two objectives are continually being emphasized by the district will be demonstrated Saturday evening, Feb. 3, at the district's twentyfirst annual meeting at 7:30 in the United Church of Christ the Congregational, Huntley. All land owners and/or operators outside any urban area in McHenry county are urged to attend the roast beef dinner ' and materials have been supat 7:30 and short business meeting and program at 8:30. It is the responsibility of all district members to attend and vote, at this annual meeting for three directors to be elected for two-year terms. Those whose terms expire are Henry MaFkison, Myron Pi hi and Arthur Hoppe. Serving with them las? year were Chairman Kenneth Fiske, and Howard Ruth. Associate directors were Donald Barrett, William Harris, James McCulloh, Donald McKee and Harold Rowe. Soil Conservation Service technicians assisting the district were Sam Haning and Clayton Bruce. The' program will include highlights of last year's district program as well as plans for 1968. With McHenry county fast becoming more and more urbanized, the district board and the technicians find it necessary to spend more and more time on urban problems and planning for the future growth of McHenry county in terms of the development and use of each acre of land. During the 1967 fiscal year agreements with sixty-two cooperators were approved, "brrrigtng the total active cooperators to 1,025. District co- . J plied to the teachers, and a set of 120 slides illustrating conservation of the basic natural resources has been purchased and is available for classroom use upon request. Work with the series of five colored interpretive soil maps in continuing,*-These maps indicate the limitations of the various land areas for agriculture use, urban use as septic tank disposal .fields, suitability for building foundations and water hazards. The district board and technicians have been hard at work during the year. Come to the annual meeting and hear, in detail, of their accomplishments. For tickets and reservations call the district office. COUNTY COLLEGE ( Continued from page Is) mation foLder describing the educational program of the college ' are now being prepared and will be available in the next few days. Persons desiring further information should contact the college offices at the LIT building, 6200 Northwest liighrvva^ -CFi'EtaL L^ke; III., or telephone 459-6800.

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