Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 4 Oct 1972, p. 9

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Open Swim Program Starts At West Campus PAGE 9- Starting this Thursday, Oct. 4, the swimming pool will be opened from 7 to 9 p.m. for family swim. This program will continue every Thursday until May of 1973. Young children must be accompanied by their parents. This night is recom­ mended for the family or adults beyond high school age. On Saturday, Oct. 6, the weekend swim program will begin. The pool will be opened every Saturday and Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m. Any child over six years of age or any adult may participate. A fee will be charged for each person. Residents of District 156 may purchase swim pat­ ches at Central Administration on Main street. Deaths JOSEPH W.LONDON Joseph W. London, 67, of John street, Solon Mills, passed away early Saturday, Sept. 30, at McHenry hospital following a short illness. Formerly of Marengo, he has been a resident of the area for 40 years. He*was born Nov. 17,1904, in Mafffigo, the son of Joseph and Daisy Ott London. He was married to Arline Merchant Dec. 21,1930, in Greenwood. He was the sexton for the four Richmond township cemeteries for the last 30 years, retiring in 1969. He is survived by his wife- Arline, three daughters, Mrs. Albert (Joan) Keller, III., of Plato Center, and Janet London of Solon Mills, who are twins and by Mrs. Henry (Carol) Metz of Richmond; one son. Lawrence, of Richmond; twelve grandchildren, one sister, Mrs. David (Adeline) McKee of Marengo, and three brothers, George and Charles of Clinton, Wis., and Robert of Marengo. He was preceded in death by a son, Edward. Funeral services were held 1:30 p.m. Monday, at the Ehorn-Adams Funeral Home in Richmond with interment in Cedarvale cemetery in Solon Mills. CLARIBEL (CLAIRE) TONYAN Claribel (Claire) Tonyan, 51, of 2615 S. Forest Wood drive, Griswold Lake, McHenry, formerly of the Ingleside area, died Tuesday morning, Oct. 3 in McHenry hospital. She was born July 2, 1921, in Chicago. Mrs. Tonyan is survived by her husband, Kenneth F. Tonyan of McHenry; one son, Keith (Dianne) Wheeler of Woodstock; two daughters, Patricia Mahoney of McHenry and Cheryl Ann Wheeler at home. Also by her mother, Helene Nadonly of St. Peter­ sburg, Fla. She was preceded in death by her father, Louis Nadonly in 1963. A funeral Mass will be celebrated at 11 a.m. Friday at St. Bede's Catholic church, Ingleside. Burial will be in St. Bede's cemetery. Friends of the family may call after 3 o'clock Thursday afternoon at the K.K. Hamsher funeral home, 12 N. Pistakee Lake road, Fox Lake. In lieu of flowers, the family requests Masses be offered. JOHN KOERBER John Koerber, 94, died early Monday morning, Oct. 2, at his home at 2207 S. Route 31 where he had operated a farm for many years. Born Nov. 14, 1877, in Ger­ many Mr. Koerber came to the United States in 1910. Survivors include two children, Matilda Koerber and Ray Koerber, both at home. He was preceded in death by his wife, Mary, in 1953. The body rested at the George R. Justen and Son funeral home until Wednesday morning when Mass will be offered at 10 o'clock at St. Mary's church with burial in the church cemetery. DENNIS O'BRIEN Dennis R. O'Brien, 19, 1219 Blackhawk, McHenry, died Saturday, Sept. 30, in McHenry hospital. He was born Dec. 15, 1953. Survivors include his parents, Robert and Dorothy McKeown O'Brien; a sister, Maureen; and paternal grandmother, Mrs. Mae Young, Chicago. The body rested at the John V. May funeral home, Chicago. A funeral Mass will be offered Wednesday morning at 11 a.m. in St. Cornelius Catholic church with burial in Mount Carmel cemetery, Hillside. Sophs Blitzed 40-7 By Ponies by Dick Rabbitt The undefeated and unscored upon Mchenry high Sophs took it on the chin Friday by losing 40 to 7 against the strong Barrington "Ponies": Frank Schellenbach and Steve Borrata a pair of Barrington halfbacks literally ran the young Warriors off the field in the first half, Running around and through the Warriors the Broncos scored the first three times they had the ball and before anyone realized it the score was ljKto 0. During the second quarter the same thing happened and at halftime Barrington led 34 to 0. The second half was dif­ ferent. The Warriors decided to play football and play they did. They out-hustled and out-fought the "Ponies" at every turn. Ev Klapperich scored on an 11 yd., run for the only Warrior T.D. and with a few seconds remaining Barrington did score for their final of 40. Maybe the helmet was a little too big for the young team. After this defeat, I look for the THURSDAY NITE CLUB VOLLEYBALL Thursday Nite club volleyball to start on Thursday, Oct. 12, at East campus at 7:15 p.m. Anyone is welcome who has completed high school. New members gladly welcome. Let's see some younger people turn out. John McGee can't last forever. ORNAMENTAL IRON Raillngs-Columns- C us torn Fabricating Welding & Structural Frozen Pipe "TJiawing STEEL SALES ADAMSBR0S. {Next to Gem Cleaners) i006 W. Rte. 120 Phone: McHenry 385.Q783 young "Warriors" to roar back and play the brand of football they are capable of playing. They showed class in the second half, and ^ hope it carries over the rest of the season. Y/MCA Presents Al Hauth, Black Belt Judo Teacher The Lake Region YMCA will present A1 Hauth, Crystal Lake, a first degree black belt Judo instructor. Mr. Hauth is a member of the U.S. Judo association. \This is the association that has as its president, Jim Bregman. Mr. Bregman was the only winner of a medal in the Olympics from the U.S. Mr. Hauth will be at the Crystal Lake high school wrestling room on Oct. 7, 10- 11:30 a.m. He will be ac­ companied by several brown belts. They will demonstrate what will take place in the YMCA Judo class beginning Oct. 14. Bowing in, break falls, judo techniques, falls, tumbling and how to protect one's self on ice will be shown; also learning how to fall, calesthenics and throwing techniques. Japanese terminology is used. The series of beginning Judo classes will be held Oct. 14 - Dec. 16. There will be in­ formation available concerning these classes for 9-17 year old youth on Oct. 7. Mr. ^Hauth is hoping that a large number of parents and adults will come for the demonstration. Any 9-17 year old who would like to learn something about Judo should come to the demonstration. The best lawns of all are fed both Spring and Fall! Turf Builder America's feroritc fertilizer for developing thick green b*m September Angus! The biggest single cause of disap­ pointing lawns is underfeeding. For your lawn's sake, replenish its food supply now even if you fed last spring. It will encourage fall's natural pro­ cesses of developing new blades, in­ tensifying color and thickening the weave. TURF BUILDER, Scotts lawn food, is ideal for fall feeding. Its high nitro­ gen content makes your lawn grow thicker, greener and sturdier this fall. And thanks to its prolonged release, TURF BUILDER helps your grass win­ ter better and get off to a faster start next spring too. 5,000 sq ft (19Vi lbs) 5.45 10,000 sq ft (39 lbs) 10.45 15,000 sq ft (581/2 lbs) 14.75 1/2 Off Scotts lawn spreader when bought with $9.95 worth of any Scott's products. All you do is buy $9.95 worth of any Scotts products -- fertilizer, seed or weed controls, and we'll give you Scotts best selling lawn spreader at half price. That's the lowest price ever on this sturdy spreader. Alone 19.95 SO Q"7 ^ Purchase "•7 / described above authorized (ScottsJ retailer A MM HI AIHIPIWI A'ThTI' I 3729 West Elm Street • McHenry, Illinois 60050 *-- C D. of A. Tuesday, 9-26-72,7 p.m. Team Position W L Koleno Water Softener 10 2 McHenry Disposal 7 5 Elm St. Service 7 5 PLAINDEALER-WEDNESDAY. McHenry Floral 7 5 Ex. Nat'l Ins. 6 6 Bernies Auto Body 6 6 Fabric Towne 5 7 No. Propane 5 7 Lakeland Const. 5 7 Havemeyers 5 7 MorriesCitgoServ. 4 8 Peter M. Justen 4 .8 Scores Carolyn Oetjen 495; Shirley Lossman 461; Sue Koleno 428; Lois Crouch 462; Betty O'Brien 462; Ann Dawson 426; Sue OCOTBER 4, 1972 Smith 472; Bonnie Segermark 507; Grace Steinsdorfer 427; Helen Spencer 442; Clarice Buenzli 434; Kitty Hendle 432; Cathy Boro 542; Dorothy Koleno 430; Shirley Kinley 430; Dee Overton 447; Evora Peterson 427; Cathie Freund 455; Lorraine Freund 447. Railroads: Carolyn Oetjen 5- 7 (two times). A compliment makes more friends than the troth. delighting children across the country and around the world. For youngsters the world over, the next best thing to "school's out" "chocolate cake," and "staying up late" are the fabulous Gobetrotters who will be at Crystal Lake high school fieldhouse on Oct. 18. G fYEAR T safety spike Famous quality Sure-Grip 1ST Tires with steel Safety Spikes to bite through packed snow and ice. A PAIR GIVES YOU THE TRACTION YOU NEED TO GO IN ICE-MUD-SNOW $ STRONG 4-PLY NYLON CORD BODY 192 RUGGED CLEATS BUILT TO HANDLE WINTER Sizes 6.00x13, 7.00x13 or 6.95x14 tubeless blackwall plus $1.61 to $1.95 per tire Fed. Ex. Tax and two old tires. * Use of metal studded tires is prohibited in some States. Check your local law. SIZE COMPARABLE SIZE PRICE FOR 2 TUBELESS BLACKWALLS PLUS F.E.T. PER TIRE AND TWO OLD TIRES 6.00-13 -- 2 for $40.00 $1.61 7.00-13 -- 2 for $40.00 6.95-14 C78-14 2 for $40.00 $1.90 7.35-14 E78-14 2 for $49.60 $2.00 I 7.75-14 F78-14 2 for $56.60 $2.12 §-25-14 G78-14 2 for $58.00 $2.29 8.55-14 H78-14 2 for $62.40 $2.46 5.60-15 -- 2 for $41.90 $1.73 6.85-15 C78-15 2 for $45.80 $1.89 7.75-15 F78-15 2 for $57.10 $2.13 8.25-15 G78-15 2 for $59.10 $2.34 8.55-15 H78-15 2 for $63.20 $2.48 LOW PRICE 4-PLY NYLON CORD "ALL-WEATHER IS" BLACKWALL • Clean sidewall design, radial darts on shoulder • Triple-tempered nylon cord construction Size 6.50x13 blackwall tubeless lus $1.75 Fed. Ex. ax and old tire. POPULAR SIZES ONE LOW PRICE 7.75x15 7.75x14 8.25x14 8.25x15 «|Q45 plus $2.12 to $2.34 Fed Ex. Tax. deoendinf on size, and old tire. Add $3.10 (or whit«walls. SLACKWAU. TUatUSS 3 WAYS TO CHARGE • Our Own Customer Credit Plan • Master Charge e BankAmerlcard PROFESSIONAL i no,s Any U.S. car plus parts if needed - Add $2 for cars with torsion bars. PROFESSIONAL LUBE AND OR CHANGE $FCf l M o s t J|JU U.S. Cars INSTALLED 4-WHEEL AMERICAN COMPACT CARS •2988 ADD $2.00 for standard & luxury* sized cars. Disc brakes sxtra. SEE WHERE YOU'RE GOING! Vinyl Dome Umbrella Plastic Handle with Carry Strap! Ji 99 Fall 28" with fl sturdy ribs. Choose from Black. White. Red. Yellow or Blue Protects from wind, rairrorsnow Low-priced Convenient carrying handlas 20-Gallon Trash Can $19$ With "Snap Lock" cover A trash can that won't rust, leak, crack, or freeze... fea­ tures "Snap Lock" cover, available in avocado. Windshield Washer Solvent & Anti-Freeze Ready To Use. Good To 25 Below GOODYEAR-THF. ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS' TIRES ^ C > ^-- MARKET PLACS McHENRY 4400 W. Rte. 120 815-3T85-7300 Open Daily 8:30a.m.-6:00p.m. Friday 'til 9:00p.m. Saturday 8:304:00 Sunday 12:00-5:00 p.m.

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