Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 29 Aug 1969, p. 4

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PG. 4 - PLAINDEALER - FRI. AUGUST 29, 1969 to SUBDIVISION SELECTS NEW OFFICERS FROM TWO SLATES * (Continued from page 1) the New Fuse, said this week that the reason the group was running an alternate slate was so the people would have a chance to select a board of di­ rectors that more equally re­ presented all viewpoints in the subdivision. The candidates offered for nomination by the group include vice-president, Elmer Raske; secretary, Chuck Terrell; Dis­ trict 1, Conrad Rupp, Sr., and Dorma Crowder; District 3, Harriet VanKanegan and Robert Biggers; District 5, Larry Wit- herbee and Terry Biroschik. Candidates selected by the subdivision nominating com­ mittee are vice-president, Hor­ ace Buttery; secretary, Mrs. Diane Rogers; District 1, Mrs. Helen Muchow and Conrad Rupp; District 3, Mildred Lundborg and Fred Sells; District 5,Carl Poedtke and Dick Yates. With both factions urging the people of the subdivision to at­ tend the meeting, Aug. 31 should be a date that is circuled on ev­ ery calendar in Indian Ridge. COUNTING THE DAYS TILL BIG BROTHER ARRIVES (Continued from page 1) are compounded by her belief that Neff is fighting "a useless war". Perhaps Neff finds a purpose for his being in the combat zone. He has written home, "If I fight here, maybe Denny won't have to fight somewhere else." According to the mother, Neff and Denny were always close. They are two boys in a family with five girls. A sixth female was added when Neff married; his wife, Sandy, is counting off the days with Denny. V^ith a group of draft resis- ters forming in various places throughout the country the Bec­ kers' placard stands out in sharp contrast. Why didn't Neff join the picket lines instead of the combat troops? His mother answered, "Jimmie said tome, Tm no better than any one else. If other kids are going out to war, my place is with them.' ' RECENTLY FREED MISSIONARY TO VISIT IN CITY SO NEED FOR CLOUDY TEA Refrigeration may cause iced tea to cloud. Keep it at room temperature until ready to ser­ ve; then pour tea into ice-filled glasses. If tea should cloud, you can restore its amber-clear color b> adding a little boiling water. Dr. Herbert Caudill, Ameri­ can Missionary recently re­ leased from prison by the Cub­ an government, will be in Mc- Henry on Sept. 3. The aging professor, missionary -pastor, recently returned to the United States after spending thirty- nine years in service to the Cu­ ban people. On April 8, 1965, Caudill, his son-in-law, Rev. DavidFite, and some forty other Cuban Baptist leaders were arrest­ ed by agents of the Cuban gov­ ernment. The Rev. Dr. Caudill who suffers from an eye ail­ ment, was released from pri­ son in 1966 to seek medical treatment. His release was te­ rmed " conditional" until last December when Fite was relea­ sed from confinement and the two families were permitted to leave the Island-Nation for the United States via Mexico. Dr. Caudill, who has served under the direction of the Home Mission Board of the Southern Baptist convention, will be speaking at the First Baptist church of McHenry at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 3. The public is invited to attend the service and hear the report of one of America's most honored mis­ sionaries. The missionary will also appear in a Spanish ser­ vice at the Spanish Baptist church at Foster road and Rte. 83 on Sunday afternoon, Aug. 31, at 2:30 p.m. The First Bap­ tist church of McHenry will pro­ vide bus transportation to this meeting for any Spanish-speak­ ing person wishing to attend. Those wishing to take advantage of this service are asked to call the church office. Tear-damp smiles and mur­ murs of " We are grateful" arti­ culated the depth of their exper­ iences as the Fites and Cau- dills were met in Matamoros, Mexico, by Arthur Rutledge of the Baptist Home Mission board. Caudill, 65 and Fite, 35 were free, and little else need­ ed to be said. They arrived in Matamoros on a Mexican gov­ ernment airline with fifty other Cuban refuges. Fite looked es­ pecially well, lean and tan from work in prison farms. Caudill, .* in his rumpled suit and hat and exhibiting a warming good hu­ mor, looked like an absent - minded professor cm vacation. They, with their wives and two of the Fite children, were qui­ ckly hustled into buses and taken to immigration authori­ ties across the border in Bro­ wnsville, Texas. Fite, receiving the paper granting Ids freedom only a short time before, had been gi­ ven civilian clothing, somemo- ney, and taken to the prison gate W I L L N O T P E E L O R B L I S T E R MOUSE PAINT DEAL FOX BOTH WOOD and MASONRY Q4JAU7Y OTOE* wMt MU C0V0O* JN$- Y*/*C i 5.19 WITH PURCHASE OF ELLIOTT'S HOUSC umr am m at** VYCITALS Hardware 1228 N« Green_Phonej85^098_McHen^ I a young soldier who said, "Good Luck". David Fite re­ plied, "Thanks, Where do I catch the bus?*' Two hours lat­ er he surprised his family, who had heard only that he would be released. Three-year-old Mark Fite ran to the neighbor's home shouting, "My daddy's home! My daddy's home!" Mark had been only a few weeks old when his father was imprisoned. "We left home and we left a lot of friends/' Caudill said. His wife added, "I love the Cu­ bans, and I love my work." Late in the fall of 1968, it became evident that Mrs. Cau­ dill also was developing eye tro­ uble. The decision was upon them as to whether they should seek permission to leave the country and return to the Unit­ ed States. However, if permis­ sion were granted, this would mean leaving the Caudills' dau­ ghter, Mrs. Fite, in Cuba with her children while her husband remained in prison. Mrs. Cau­ dill settled the issue when she told her daughter, "Td rather go blind than leave you alone now." Though reluctant to discuss their prison experiences in de­ tail, both men assured eager reporters that they were not discriminated against while prisoners of the Cuban govern­ ment. "There are about ninety Bap­ tist churches in Western Cuba, reported the missionaries, "with about 8,000 members which continue to function." i PIONEER CENTER RECOGNIZED FOR SERVICE RECENTLY & (Continued from page 1) ction, and an Extended Employ­ ment section. The purposes of the rehabil­ itation services for the mentally and physically disabled are: 1, to determine work skill poten­ tial, 2, to develop the execu­ tion of assessed work skills, 3 to make recommendations for placement in a job setting out­ side the Pioneer Center, 4 to set vocational goals, and 5, to employ those who do not qualify for independent employment in a Sheltered program at the Center. In order to qualify initially for application for enrollment in the Center, an individual must be 16 years old or older, must reside in McHenry county, can be of either sex, single or mar­ ried. If of school age, the ap­ plicant must have completed his educational experiences, or can no longer benefit from classroom experiences, and, if a minor, must have parental (guardian) consent and cooper­ ation. Once fee above qualifi- cations have been met, and a referral is received at the Pio­ neer Center, then further in­ vestigations will determine whether or not the individual making application for enroll­ ment will qualify for the vari­ ous programs. Anyone interested in obtain­ ing further information concer­ ning programs of service offer­ ed at the Pioneer Center for the Exceptional may contact the Illinois Division of Voca­ tional Rehabilitation at the Wau- kegan office: 312-623-5110;Lo­ uis F. Aiello, president of the McHenry County Association for the Retarded; or Robert G. Lambourn, executive director of the McHenry County Associ­ ation for the Retarded. SET TENTATIVE COUNTY BUDGET (Continued from page' 1) larly voiced by Supervisor s Bu­ ckley of Woodstock and Buss of McHenry. Buckley noted that there is five times as much traf­ fic past the Ware road site as the Flood property, which bor­ ings were unsatisfactory. How­ ever, Buckley claimed that if the board purchased the southern portion of the Flood property, on Rte. 14, it would be a consid­ erably more traveled thorough­ fare than the Ware site. Kee­ ping in mind that someone has an option on this particular part on the Flood property and pre­ viously refused to sell to the county, Assistant Supervisor Buss said he thought Buckley was impeding progress toward fee selection of any but a city location. DISTRICT 15 CALLS BUDGET MEETING (Continued from page 1) Members were in agreement that contractors and sub-con­ tractors on this project provi­ ded the finest service in acco­ mplishing a tremendous task in a short time. Dr. Griesbach, aboard mem­ ber, asked if anyone cared to make a motion to re-open or re-negotiate the dispute con­ cerning the Casey contract. There was no motion. Dr. Griesbach said he was dis­ turbed over newspaper publi­ city which appeared in regard to this dispute while it was still under study. Approval was given for sharing the cost, not to exceed $5,000 of preparing the north­ west corner of McCracken field for bus parking. This program is undertaken in conjunction with District 156. A long executive session fol­ lowed. Jewelry Gleams With Glow of Gold, Colors Everybody knows how to say nothing, but few know when. WANDA PRIES Mrs. Wanda Pries, 83, of 1632 Riverside Drive, McHen­ ry, died Tuesday, Aug. 26, at the East Haven hospital in El­ gin. Mrs. Pries was born Jan. 14, 1886, in Germany, but had made her home in McHenry for many years. The deceased was a member of McHenry chapter, Order of the Easter Star. * V Her husband, William, a pro­ minent local businessman for many years, died in 1964. She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Karl (Helen) Boettle of Waukegan and Mrs. Paul (Eli­ nor) Shadle of Miralest, Calif., one son, William A., of Mc­ Henry; seven grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren and one brother, Oswald Speichert, Chidago. Visitation at the George R. Justen & Son funeral home be­ gan at 7 o'clock Thursday night. Funeral services wil l be Friday at 1:30 o'clock at the Justen chapel, with Rev. Ray­ mond White of the First Unit­ ed Methodist church officiating. Burial will follow in Wood­ land cemetery. An Eastern Star service was read at 8 o'clock Thursday night. Fall lets a lady have her fling with fashion. What she likes is right, and there's plenty of downright excite­ ment to choose from. Fashion thrills appear in action-packed jewelry, a col­ orful, contemporary state­ ment on fall '68, observes the Jewelry Industry Council. Autumn is a brillantly plumed bird and so is the fashionable jewelry that co­ ordinates with it. A golden glow, brightly polished and hand-wrought, overshadows necklaces, pendants, earrings and bracelets. Turquoise, topaz, pictur­ esque enamel, combinations of deepest blues and greens are just some of the treat­ ments. Earrings make a big and bold fashion impression or a delicate and demure one, richly golden or covered with a lush veneer of colored stones. All kinds of animals strike a lighthearted pose for fash­ ion pin-ups. From backyard pets to jungle lords, there's a menagerie of pins to bright­ en fall wardrobes. Pins are a particular at­ traction as free-wheeling de­ signs of cabochon stones, as new shapes set with mock- precious stones. Necklaces go along with the "as you like it" philoso­ phy of the season, as long, )nng chains or short, short FLYER TRAP STOLEN FROM NEARBY CLUB Worth approximately $550, a trap flying machine stolen from the McHenry Sportsmen's club, 110 Rolling road, McHenry, was reported to the McHenry sher­ iff s department on Aug. 24. A white flyer trap, the mach­ ine was last seen in the early days of the month. Used for throwing clay pigeons into the air for targets, it was stored in a trap shed and kept as a spare. Thieves stole equipment from a boat owned by John Madden, 2003 Wilmot road, McHenry. The boat was docked at 1815 Sunny side Beach drive, Sunny- side, when the theft was dis­ covered on Aug. 25. Missing are a six gallon fuel tank, Ai­ led wife gasoline, and a yellow fire extinquisher. Sometime on the night of Aug. 24, thieves stole a boat motor from Ray DeWerdt, 3917 E. Lake Shore drive, Wonder Lake. Although he realized the motor was missing on August 25, De­ Werdt did not report the theft to the McHenry county sheriff's i department until two days later. After using his boat for a family outing on August 24 De­ Werdt docked the craft on dry land. When he returned to use the boat on the next day, he saw that the blue colored engine, a 7 horse power model, was gone. chokers. Delicate or heavy links are roped in imagina­ tive variety. Versatility winds them around the waist for a defining belt. Pendants, sometimes with matching earrings and brace­ let, take abstract and fantasy shapes in gold and silver. At the neckline, too, a Jewelry love-in flourishes under the magical sound of tinkling golden bells. The hand 1s a real charm­ er as It gracefully moves Handbags Expand In Size, Showing Softer Touches More feminine detailing in fall handbags follows the current trend to a softer, prettier feeling in fashion. The new handbags crane in a host of textures and are softer in construction but larger in size, for welcome space gains. Shapes vary from deep roomy pouches and swaggers to the flattest pancake totes. Supple leather textures in­ clude the grained, smooth, waxy, antiqued, saffian, em­ bossed and genuine patent leathers. Daytime looks take nicely to a pouch, satchel or tote with subdued trim and size­ able -- but not bulky -- pro­ portions. There is depth but trimness, and many bags are wide and flat. Touches that give these handbags their special qual­ ity include seamed dressmak­ er detailing, outside sections (with little or no hardware), intricate closings and skin­ ny or wide straps. Brass and gold ornaments are used with discretion. Smaller bags, of course, have not disappeared -- as witnessed by a group of com­ pact envelopes, swaggers, totes and satchels. The accent here is on straps, outer pockets, con­ trast leather bindings and less hardware. Casual handbags, mostly in maxi sizes, come in grained, antiqued, brushed and other rugged American leathers. The brass Is brighter and heavier in these styles. Also part of the picture are stitching themes, shoulder straps, and barrel and shop­ ping tote shapes. To accessorize after-flve finery there are cocktail and evening bags in an assort­ ment of leathers: metal- colored, smooth and lustre leathers, saffian, real patent leathers, turtle and reptile* embossed leathers. Little envelopes, box bags and totes are agleam with silver, gold or jeweled clos­ ings wrought in many de­ signs. Handles, too. are some­ times in gold or silver, elabo­ rately flllgreed or bejeweled. through fall in a many- splendored way. Rings do it. To encircle fingers are im­ aginative and extravagant shapes, from tiny clusters of bells to simply-carved bands of gold, from ancient serpent rings to antique fakey stone settings to elegant flights of fancy The wrist has its share of the romance, too. Bracelets may show up In clean, clear geometric shapes or they may have the grandeur of extra width smothered in jewel-toned stones and two- toned gold finishes. Evening glows with pearls, rhinestones, colored stones and sometimes enameling. CONTROL PICNIC BEETLES Ifs that time of the year for little black beetles wife four yellow spots on their back to invite themselves to your picnics. Picnic beetles are at­ tracted by the odor of food, especially overripe fruit or vegetables. To control them in your yard, use a spray of mal- afeion, diazlnon or carbaryl around garbage cans, shrubbery and tall grass. For picnics, take along a pressurized chem­ ical spray for a fast knock­ down of the pests. « OPEN On tho North Star* Of Long UM ROLLINS ROAD P. O. InflooMo. Illinois HOT POINT ONLY »20900 FREEZER CHECK THESE FEATURES Model FV515K 14.8 cu. ft. capacity Three refrigerating shelves, a huge re­ movable wire basket, and four door shelves provide 14.8 cu. ft. or 518 lbs. of storage in only 32 in. of width. Such deluxe features as the easy-to-clean por­ celain enamel liner, juice can shelves, interior light, defrost-water drain, and roll-out wheels make its use convenient and its upkeep carefree. • Rolls out for easy cleaning • Acid-resistant porcelain- on-steel interior liner • Removable wire basket . • 15.6 sq. ft. shelf area • Wide aluminum door-shelf | fronts • Juice can shelves • Inferior light • Defrost-water drain • Quiet, magnetic door clos­ ing • Flush-to-wall door hinges • Built-in door lock Jewelry complements the pretty look of fall -- witness this brace­ let of sculptured 18 carat gold, sparked with dismonds and star­ ring cream cultured pearls. LEE & RAY ELECTRIC 1005 N. FRONT STREET McHENRY, ILL PH. - 385-0882 SAYINGS ON SUMMER THINGS UP TO INSECT FOGGERS PROPANE...ELECTRIC...LAWNMOWER OPERATED GRASS SEED CASUAL.. R YE.. .F AMI LY...PLAY...SHOW... PERENNIAL RYE AIR CONDITIONERS...FANS BAR-B-Q KETTLES... BAR-B-Q TOOLS...OUTDOOR FURNITURE COVERS...THERMOS JUGS... PICNIC SUPPLIES...CAMPING ACCESSORIES...LAWN ROLLERS ...SPREADERS... LAWN AND GARDEN FENCING CHUC0U BMUEtTES 62' 96' 10 LB BAG 20 LB. BAG OPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDAY A SUNDAYS 9AM to 1PM SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE 1906 ROSENTHAL'S HOME PRODUCT CENTER Main and Crystal Lake Ave. CRYSTAL LAKE PHONE 459-2700

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