Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 17 Jan 1973, p. 18

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PAGE I^PLAINPEAIER-WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17. 1973 \ MUS1N" N* \ MEANDERIN" (Continued from page 1) faring dollars. Any policy decision on the local unit level at this time concerned with local tax effort will probably not affect any revenue sharing dollars the government will receive (if at all) until 1975. Certainly, as taxpayers we shouldn't expect to see coun­ ties, municipalities and townships increasing local taxes in 1973 in order to get more Revenue Sharing dollars in 1975. This, it seems, would be like asking us to pay one dollar more in property taxes in order to get something* less than a dollar more in Jfederal funds. But some of iratill have faith in the majority of our public officials. We're sure they will agree that it would take far more sense 10 take equal federal dollars and use them either for needed services at the local level or to reduce local taxes. Government efficiency is still the name of the game. We are aware that there are many ethnic backgrounds represented in our community. But how to fill a particular need at a particular time is not easy. The most immediate is for someone of Latvian descent to translate a letter of importance for an elderly resident. Any takers? K.A.F. DONATE TO SQUAD The Whispering Oaks association has contributed $200 to the Rescue squad in its most recent donation. MOTORISTS' INJURED IN COLLISIONS (Continued from page 1) McHenry. Tne accident oc­ curred % Wednesday afternoon about l o'clock at the in­ tersection of 4 Lily Lake road and Wegner road, Lily moor. Smith was south-bound on Lily Lake road, attempting to turn east onto Wegner road, when the LaGray truck, which was west-bound on Wegner, stopped at the sign and pulled out in front of him. LaGray told officers he failed to see the auto until an instant prior to the collision. Both drivers were ticketed in a car-truck accident Friday evening about 8:15 on Route 12, a quarter mile west of Wilmot road, near Spring Grove. _ Donald S. Miller of Indian Hills, Naperville, was charged with failure to stop, exchange information and make a report. The other driver, (Frank C. Nosek of Route 1, Ingleside, was ticketed for failure to give a stop or turn signal. Miller was north-bound on the highway. As he started to pass the Nosek truck in front of him, the driver suddenly made a left turn and they collided. Nosek said he was ap­ proaching the driveway at Hidden Valley, turned on his signals and started to make a left turn when the car hit his vehicle. Man worked hard to develop cloth Then Nature came along with the moth. Deaths MARGARET CHADDERDON Mrs. Margaret P. Chad- derdon, 60, of 2717 W. Baldwin road, McHenry, • was pronounced dead on arrival at McHenry hospital early Friday morning, Jan. 12. She was stricken while working as an assembler at the Admiral Coi*p. Mrs. Chadderdon was born Aug. 26, 1912, in New York, daughter of Charles and Lettie Pratt Brown. Her husband, Farrel, died Dec. 4, 1965, and a son James, also preceded her in death in 1970. She leaves two daughters, Mrs. John (Shirley) Mikos of Chicago and Mrs. James (Mary) Nielsen of McHenry; a son, Charles L. of Hanover Park; twelve grandchildren; three sisters, Mrs. Eric Ely of Orange, Calif. Mrs. Joseph Posth, Monterey Park, Calif., and Mrs. Eleanore Bush of New York and a brother, Charles Brown, Olean, N.Y. Funeral services were conducted Monday morning at 11 o'clock from the George R. Justen & Son funeral hoi^ie. Burial was in Woodland cemetery. ELROY C. LEIGHT Elroy C. Leight, brother of Alfred Leight of 907 N. Allen avenue, McHenry, died Jan. 15 at Downey Veterans hospital. Services are pending at the Peter M. Justen & Son funeral home. JOHN PHOL John Photf 73, of 4401 Front Royal avenue, McHenry, died Jan. 15 in McHenry hospital. Mr. Phol was born July 27, 1899, in Foley, Minn. He cam^ to this community five years ago from Arlington Heights. The deceased was a retired joB" estimator for Luczak Bros. Plastering Contractors, Chicago. Mr. Phol was a member of Barracks 1315, Veterans of World War I, and McHenry Post 491, American Legion. During the first World War, he received the Purple Heart award. Survivors are his wife, Rose, nee Luczak; two daughters, Sister Mary Rosaire, Sisters of Mercy, Brooklyn, N.Y., and Mrs. Fred (Loretto) Composto, Ringwood, N.J.; three grand­ children; three sisters, Mrs. Agnes Appier of Wood Dale, Mrs. Eleanore Eick of Chicago and Mrs. William (Mary) Hubers of Chicago. A funeral Mass will be of­ fered at 11 o'clock Thursday in St. Patrick's Catholic church. After 3 o'clock Wednesday, and until the time of last rites, the body will rest at the Peter M. 'Justen & Son chapel. In lieu of flowers, con­ tributions are asked to the American Cancer society. SPURGEON A. BOLLINGER Pastor Roger H. Olson of Nativity Lutheran church, Wonder Lake, will officiate at last rites to be held Wednesday afternoon at 1:30 for Spurgeon A. Bollinger of 5810 Wbnder Woods drive, Wonder Lake. Mr. Bollinger was pronounced dead on arrival at McHenry hospital Monday, J[an. 15. The body is now resting at the Peter M. Justen & Son funeral home. Burial will be in Arlington cemetery, Elmhurst. Mr. Bollinger was born 90 years ago, Nov. 3,1882, in York, Pa. He was a retired metal lather in Chicago. The deceased had resided in Wonder Lake for the past eighteen years. . ' . His wife, Mabel M. (Wink) died in 1931. Survivors are one daughter, Doris V. Jordan of Woodstock; two grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. ELLA ANDERSEN Mrs. Ella Andersen, 93, of 810 W. Annabel, Pistakee Highlands, died Saturday, Jan. 13, at her residence. • Mrs. Andersen was born March 16, 1879. Survivors are two daughters, Mrs. Irving (Selma) Gun- derson of Waukegan and Bernice Birney of McHenry; two sons, Elmer of McHenry and Barney of Fox Lake; two grandchildren; three great­ grandchildren; three sisters and one brother resicling jn Norway and a brother, Arnie Wick, of Florida. The body rested at the Hamsher chapel, Fox Lake, until 11 o'clock Monday, when the Rev. Willis Walker of the Spring Grove Methodist church officiated at last rites. Burial was in Mount Olive cemetery, Chicago. FRANCIS N. MUZZY A memorial service was held Sunday at the Osborne funeral home, Marengo, for Francis N. Muzzy, 68, of 413 W. Grant Highway, Marengo, who died Jan. 9 in Highland hospital, Belvidere. His death followed a long illness. The Rev. Harry Miller, pastor of the United Methodist church of Marengo, conducted the service. His body was donated to science. Mr. Muzzy was born Feb. 6, 1904, near Union, son of Frank and Grace Warren Muzzy. After attending Beloit college and the University of Wisconsin, he taught school for twenty-five years. During the time he taught in the Ringwood school, the family made their home in this community. The deceased was a member of the United Methodist church, the National Retired Teachers association and the Illinois Education association. Survivors include his wife, Mary (Stanford) Muzzy, to whom he was married May 26, 1927, in Dubuque, Iowa. He also leaves two daughters, Mrs. Mary S. Neal of Venice, Calif., and Mrs. Carl (Jea) Timm of Marengo; eight grandchildren and a sister, Mrs. Mary Timm, of Sycamore. A son died in 1949. MARY WOLF Services were conducted in Fox Lake last Thursday af­ ternoon for Mrs. Mary Wolf, 76, of 716 Terrace lane, Spring Grove, who died Jan. 8. Burial was in Memory Gardens cemetery, Park Ridge. CARL CROSS Carl Cross of 1918 N. Oak drive, McHenry, died Sunday, Jan. 14, in McHenry hospital. He was 68 years old. OVER 1,000 REMNANTS AND MORE THAN 1,000 ROLLS ARE ON SALE! All ON DISPLAY AT TIDY-IN-WOODSTOCK TIDY HAS ALSO PURCHASED OVER 10 TRUCKLOADS OF REMNANTS AND ROLL BALANCES • TIDY WANTS TO OFFER YOU MORE SAVINGS, BUT ALSO THE BIGGEST SELECTION AND FINEST IN QUALITYI ALL REMNANTS 4' or less Shags, Sculptures, Plushes $199 SQ. YD. ALL REMNANTS 4' to 8' Wool, Nylon, Polyester, Acrylics, Herculons $099 J SQ. YD. OVER 500 ROLL BALANCES ON SALE '2.99 to '4.99 sq-yd- Some up to 20 ft in length THIS WILL HAVE TO BE THE BIGGEST SALE OF REMNANTS AND ROLL BALANCES IN THE FOX VALLEY AREA! SAVE ON WALL TO WALL CARPETING Starting From .... '3.99 SQ.YD. PLUS PAD AND INSTALLATION ALL DROP SAMPLES! 27" x 18" FOR* J00 limited offer SHOP AT HOME SERVICE.... Give us a call! It's as simple as that to take advantage of our 23 years of offering a shop-at-home service. Choose from the finest carpets from the following nationally-known carpet mills: *Karastan *Berven *Lees *Mohawk *Alexander Smith *Bigelow *Coronet* *Monticello *Masland * Evans & Black *Monarch *Trend *Jorges *Royalweve* * Armstrong *LaurcIcrest * Viking *Ozite * World * Burlington Industries* ... and many, many more!! 5 CARPETS & RUGS 200 WASHINGTON (JUNCTION RTS. 120 & BUS.14) WOODSTOCK, ILLINOIS (815) 338-1000 HOURS: MON., THURS., FRI. TIL 9 P.M. TUES., WED., SAT. TIL 5 P.M. SUNDAY 12 TO 5 P.M. Tax Assessing Process Subject Of Jan. IS Meeting There will be a meeting of the McHenry County board, Stanley Cornue, supervisor of assessments, G. Watson, Lowe, chairman of the Board of Review, and members of the District 47 school board Thursday evening, Jan. 18, at 7:30 p.m. at the Crystal Lake Junior high, 170 Oak street. The discussion will focuS? on the history and background of current tax assessing processes. The public is invited. MASONS - K. OF C. MEET Thursday, Jan. 25, at 8 p.m., the Masonic Order and The Knights of Columbus will meet at the K. of C. hall, 1304 N. Park street. Members are urged to assure a large turnout for an evening of fun and fellowship. Kenneth Schopp will entertaih. k McHENRY HOSPITAL Patients admitted to McHenry hospital included George Perrewe, Chris Walczynski, Theresa Sweeney, Hazel Wilton, Mary Smith, Alice Prorok, Serena Erjavec, Heidi Aissen, Richard Mer- cure, Jr., John Tumpa, Susan McAuley, William Clardy, Delores Woolwine, Kimberly Wallace, Douglas Pfau, Minnie Hapke, Margaret Dougherty, Gary Swanson, McHenry; Helen Leaveck, Antonj. Christensen, Charles Keitfe/,* Wonder Lake. MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ? WOODSTOCK Admissions to Memorial hospital, Woodstock, included Matie Langerbeck, Baby Nicoli Koehler, McHenry; William Housby, Marcella Klemke, Orlo Rossberg, Wonder Lake. HARVARD HOSPITAL Patients admitted to Harvard hospital include Mrs. Hester Crowley, Eugene Dowe, Mark Costigan, Mrs. Richard Ridout, McHenry, Mrs. Edmund Prushinski, Wonder Lake. SPACE-;** AERONAUTICS ̂ TIRE TESTER WASHINGTON--Today's tr a v e l i n g A m e r i c a n s a r e leading safer lives thanks to space technology applied to improving the tires they ride on. Whether they are airline passengers or motorists en­ joying a Sunday drive, many people will benefit from the ifer, longer lasting tires ide possible through a test­ ing device which uses NASA- developed technology. One of the nation's major tire manufacturers is using an ultra-sensitive fast-scan­ ning infrared optical device daily to test its new tire de­ signs. Many tire manufacturers and airlines are interested in the new equipment be­ cause it permits effective testing of tires without de­ stroying hundreds of expen­ sive samples. The device, an infrared fast - scanning microscope, was developed by an indus­ trial firm under contract to NASA in the mid-1960s. It was originally designed for automated, nondestructive testing of miniaturized elec­ tronic circuits. The new tire tester pro­ duces a "heat picture" of the tires as they generate their own heat while spinning rap­ idly in the testing equipment --up to 200 miles per hour in the case of automobile tires and as fast as 400 miles an hour for aircraft tires. Hot spots in a tire are viewed as bright areas in the picture, indicating design or construction flaws needing correction. More than 600,0t)0 indi­ vidual spots on the spinning tires are photographed each second. This new thermal evaluation tool is all elec­ tronic, weighs less than 40 pourtJs and is small enough to be mounted on test auto­ mobiles for use on outdoor testing grounds. Not satisfied with testing new products nondestruc­ tive^, NASA has pioneered in analyzing new structural designs by computer before even the first item is pro­ duced. NASTRAN, a com­ puter program designed to analyze the behavior of structures under stress, is now a design tool familiar to more than 600 engineers out­ side the space agency. Many industries, laboratories and government agencies are us­ ing it to solve structural en­ gineering problems. They use it to design safer automobiles, aircraft, bridges, and power plants-- virtually "anything that shakes, rattles or rolls." New computer analysis techniques result in an esti­ mated 60 per cent improve­ ment in predicting the be­ havior of components under stress and a time saving of two thirds in achieving such calculations -- as opposed to earlier trial-and-error, test- to-destruction methods. "When you can apply pounds of stress, bend shake and rattle the items you want to build, with the re­ sults plainly visible on the computer console before you even begin construction, lab­ oratory tests of the product are only supporting checks," a design engineer said. "If it is an aircraft or space ve­ hicle, for instance, we often know it will fly before it gets off the ground." Similar space - developed techniques are being used to design everyday, earthbound items with the same confidence. FULL BULL . . . Capt. John L. Welsh of Altamont, N.Y., shows Panamanian ranchers the correct way to extract a blood sample from an uncooperative bull. The U.S. Army veterinarian has been assisting Panama's ministry of agriculture and 4he U.S. Army School of the Americas in improving farm efficiency and combatting livestock diseases. „ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ V ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ , Are You New In McHenry Area ? I Do You Know Someone New? WE WOULD LIKE TO EXTEND A ROYAL WELCOME TO EVERY NEWCOMER TO OUR AREA ' 1 • I CALL JOAN STULL FRAN OLSEN DORIS ANDRES 385-5418 385-5740 385-4518 (*« •I -- t i ' Jknow your Lmmmmmm Mm WELCOME REA-ROYAL WELOOMF DOES IT BE K I C I ( t • K ( I I t I • I • I I < t I - t t t ST. | *5 X I

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