Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 26 Jun 1974, p. 14

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PAGE 15-PLAINDEALER-WEDNESDAV. .«ITNE 2t. 1*74 STORM DAMAGE - Probably the worst local damage in last by a sudden gust and blown a distance. City police said most other " Thursday night's severe electrical and windstorm occurred in damage consisted of fallen trees and wires. Electrical service was J ,> Whispering Oaks subdivision. The roof on part of this four-unit disrupted in a few locations. condominium at 4715 Oakwood drive was lifted from the building STAFF PHOTO-WAYNE GAYLORD IN LIlVE OF DUTY -- A fireman wipes his smoke-filled eyes during unsuccessful fight to save barn in Ringwood last Saturday. Framing the fireman is the charred truck that was also lost in the fire. Details are on Page I. STAFF PHOTO-WAYNE GAYLORD Toclo/s Health Nen/s Published by the American Medical Association SEVERAL HURT IN CRASHES r,*> (Continued from page 1) preparing to turn north onto Solon road. As he started to pass the vehicle on the right, the second driver stopped in the middle of the road and he hit the rfear of the car. The Richmond Rescue squad took {wo Schaumburg residents to NfcHenry hospital Sunday morang about 11:45 after their car Jfcras hit on Route 12 at Wili^ot road, north of Johnsburg. Gary M. Carpenter and Adith A. Carpenter, both of 1327 Yarmouth court, Schaumburg, were taken to the hospital for treatment of minor injuries. Driver of the other auto, Michael C. Phjlpot of 233 Woodstock street, Crystal Lake, told officers he was unfamiliar with the area and drove through a stop sign, hitting the Carpenter auto. He wasr ticketed for disobeying a stojksign. „ Iter A. Czarnecki of 8703 inset, W«4der> Lake, was ;ted for improper lane usage after he hit an auto driven by Daniel P. Stoehr of 726* Monroe, Evanston. The accident occurred on Route 120, just south of ' Charles road, north of Woodstock. Czarnecki bent down to pick up * book of matches from the floor and when he straightened up,, he was in the south-bound lane in the path of an oncoming auto driven by Stoehr. They were unable to avoid impact. Richard R. Brown of 1509 Sunnyside Beach drive, MtHenry, demolished his car M nday morning about 1:25 wl in he attempted to avoid hi ing a pedestrian. Brown told of cers lie was south-bound on R jner road when he saw a p< lestrian standing in the m idle of the road. He veered hi auto to the right to avoid irajpact and in doing so, struck a mailbox and sideswiped a tree. HO was not injured in the siopisii VAlt W. fur ticl«et< mjlshap. AIUSIN" MAKE 300 MILE DRIVE WITH BODY OF WOMAN FRIEND (Continued from page 1) Kenneth Thompson, 55, 300 miles in the front seat of his car. She was identified as Mary , Grace Rainey, 57, formerly of Princeton, 111. Ms. Rainey was found to have broken rite and internal injuries. Thompson claimed she was alive when the pair left a motel near Springfield, Mo., 300 miles from Springfield, 111 However, Sangamon County Coroner Norman Richter disputed this statement when he charged that she could not possibly have been alive at that time. Richter said he thought "she was dressed as a corpse Monday morning". The couple was reported to have moved about the country while Thompson took jobs in various towns as a steamfitter. Swing Choir Will Appear As Band Guests The same concert planned for last Thursday night by the city stage band will be presented this week, June 27, at 8 p.m. in the city park band shell. Last week's concert was rained out. The only change will be in the guest soloist. Mrs. Dorothy Hollander, who was scheduled to sing last week, will be featured later in the season. The West campus swing choir will appear this week. The sixteen-member vocal group has gained much popularity in the six months since it was formed and won a top rating in recent school music competition. The talented young singers will be heard in "Enter the Young", "I Found Love", "Alexander's Ragtime Band", "Tavern of Loving People", "Little Old Lady in Tennis Shoes" and "Hey Look Me Over". N' [EANDERIN" Continued from page 1) lrned at frequent intervals i what she was elected for - j-omote dairy products. ..ynn believes in her product, I anyone can tell after a short conversation, and her culinary fc lent with these products are a t sat not soon forgotten. Certainly this young A :Henry girl has added a new s ature to the position of » cHenry County Dairy. P incess. She has made people believe that beauty is not, in fact, always skin deep, but very often manifests itself in a young iy who also displays other eiviable attributes. Her sfccessor will find goals that be hard to equal. F ORNAMENTAL IKON Railings- Columns Custom Fabricating Welding & Structural Frozen Pipe Thawing STEEL SALES' ADAMS ̂ ROS. (Next to Gem Cleaners) TOP STUDENT | Donna Jean Rakowsky of 501 Mineral Springs, McHenry, irned straight A's during the >nd semester of the 1973-74 :hool year at Purdue |niversity, West Lafayette, id. Her field of study is Home Economics. She achieved stinguished student ranking long with a total of 3,459 tudents, 1,000 of whom ;ived straight A's. These POPULATION FORECAST Meetings have been scheduled by the Northeastern Illinois Planning commission (NIPC) to discuss forecasts of population and employment for the years 1980, 1990 and 2000. County board .chairmen, mayors, village presidents, and county and municipal planners have been invited to comment on the tentative figures produced by the NIPC staff fore each township. The preferences of these local public officials will be used to revise the figures, within the limits of the total forecast for the six-county region, and of regional planning policies. A date will be set. for a meeting in McHenry county, and one in the near west Cook county suburbs. students represented the top 17 per cent of the 19,799 undergraduates on the West Lafayette campus during the second semester. Lady Pilots Hurt Sunday During Landing Two women pilots were injured Sunday morning when the planes they were piloting collided on an air strip in Hampshire. Barbara W. Silagi of 153 Holiday drive, Somonek, received fractures and was reported in good condition at St. Joseph's hospital, Elgin. The other pilot, Arta M. Hansen of 1710 Melvina, Chicago, was taken to Sherman hospital, where she was placed under observation in the intensive care unit for a possible concussion. Witnesses told state police officers both planes were coming in to land at the same time on the same runway. Persons on the ground could forsee a collision and waved the pilots off. Ms. Silagi applied power to her aircraft but the propeller of the other plane hit the rear of her-craft.- HOSPITAL NOTES McHENRY HOSPITAL Patients admitted to McHenry hospital included Dean J. Pitts, John Long, Wonder Lake; Catherine T. Wieser, Louis F. Groth, Charles Kramer, Ronald Jensen, Brett Bender, Betty Bockman, Charles Coarie, Libby Benson, Jodi Lusk, Brian Sebesta, William Bridges, Ethel Green, Michelle Farr, Timothy Rogers, Monica Kennebeck, Gertrude Denemorle, Rose Schlieben, Evelyn Diedrich, Carl J. Freund; Walter Lewandowski, Island Lake; Terry Smith, Kent V. Thomas, Spring Grove; and Larry Oonk, Ringwood. MEMORIAL HOSPn.X WOODSTOCK Patients admitted to Memorial hospital, Woodstock, included Dorothy West, Edgar Fleming, Julia Seelinger, Gerlinda Flotz, Lady Crawford, Juliana Matheis, Debra Katzenberger, , Wonder Lake; Mildred Thulke, Joel Warren, Sue Werner, Frank Halaska, Joseph DeMarco, McHenry; Marian Winters and Marlene Witt, Ringwood. HARVARD HOSPITAL Jerry Sullivan, McHenry, was a patient in Harvard hospital. Deaths WILLIAM K. LENZ A funeral Mass will be offered at 10 o'clock Wednesday morning in Transfiguration Catholic church, Wauconda, for William K. Lenz. Mr. Lenz, 61, of Roberts road, Island Lake, died Friday, June 21, in Crystal Pines Nursing home, Crystal Lake. Before his illness, the deceased was employed by the Teletype Corp. of Chicago. Besides his widow, Santina, he leaves one son, Army Capt. William A. Lenz of Fort Sill, Okla.; a daughter, Mrs. Gloria Grim, McHenry; four grandchildren; a brother, Arthur, of Harvard and two sisters, Mrs. Marie McDaniel of Lake Zurich and Mrs. Ruth Zastrow, Wauconda. Burial will be in St. Joseph cemetery, River Grove. MARY O'MALLEY A funeral Mass was offered Monday in St. Viator Catholic church, Chicago, for Mrs. Mary O'Malley, 72, of Chicago, a summer resident of McHenry. Burial-was in Queen of Heaven cemetery, Hillside. Mrs. O'Malley was dead on arrival at McHenry hospital Friday afternoon, June 21. Double Duty A big roast that gives double duty is a good buy. Any leftover from a special dinner can be sliced thin, spread with a home­ made or commercial dip or spread, rolled up, secured with a small pick and arranged on lettuce for luncheon service. Or, secure the rolled slices with sev­ eral picks and cut each roll in two or three segments and serve as appetizers. Batter W. Rte. 120 McHenry Phone: 385-0763 dry power is better You can mow an acre of lawn for just a few pennies worth of electricity! ELECTRIC/TRACTORS FROM A/CO NEW IDEA Broobood GardenCenter 4505 W. Rte. 120 McHenry ,111. 815/385-4949 Mon.-Fri. 9-8; Sat. $-5:30; Sun. 10-4:30 ON DEAN'S LIST John R. McGowan of 1510 N. Freund, McHenry, was named to the Dean's list at Harper college, Palatine, for the spring semester of the 1973-74 college year. Students must earn a grade point average of 3.50 to 3.74 (3.00 equals B, 4.00 equals A) to qualify for honors. Students must carry a class schedule of 12 or more semester hours and there were more than 3,140 Harper students in this category which indicates full-time status. If you're a woman who is tired of dirty diapers, instant chauf- feuring, and supermarket carts, you could be a candidate for re­ cycling. The solution, according to one formerly discontent house­ wife, is getting involved in some creative work outside the home. "What many of us want is the Best of Both Worlds," adds ca­ reer counselor Fran Goldman plugging the title of the book she co-authored. "We want a close, loving rela­ tionship with our families," she explains further, "and we want to work at something outside the . home, something we can be good at." Mrs. Go 1 d m a n accomplished this goal by forming her own com­ pany, Distaffers, Inc., of Philadel­ phia, an organization that tries to find part-time work with flexi­ ble hours for housewives. Draw­ ing from ^frs. Goldman's and other authorities' experiences, Today's Health compiled the fol­ lowing suggestions to help other women considering the change from housewife and mother to wage earner. The first step is self-appraisal. Make a list of your skills, things you're particularly good at (work­ ing with children, writing, or even shopping with a sharp knowledge of pricing, brands, and other vital consumer data). An­ alyzing the things you do well might indicate a particular field of endeavor. Next, deal in the abstract. | Think of all your dreams, hopes, and desires. For instance, if you were good at organizing political campaigns or r a 11 ie s back in school, maybe you could work your way into the public-relations field. For those who have trouble de­ ciding what their own short-term and long-term goals should be, professional counseling may be in order. Your local universities, community colleges, and adult education programs are good sources. A few courses to publish some of those forgotten skills may be in order, but Fran Goldman wains not to copout with the con­ tinuing education route. "I've seen cases," she says, "where women keep dabbling in one course after another because they fear rejection and failure in the work world. "When you embark on a course of study, you should have a defin­ ite career goal, she advises. The following volumes offer additional tips on choosing a career: What Color Is Your Para­ chute? by San Francisco cleric Richard Nelson Bolles; You, Inc., by consumer advocate Peter Wea­ ver; and Man's Search for Mean­ ing: An Introduction to Logo- therapy, by Vienna psychiatrist Dr. Viktor E. Frankl. ' Tense. Nervous. Jittery. Unable to sleep. What's a person to do? Suddenly, a soothing voice from the TV set offers an answer: "Try brand X, tlftfflargest-selling non- prescriptioi^wdative for tempor­ ary relief ofpccasional, simple nervous tension." What that friendly voice over the tube doesn't tell you is that many of these over - the - counter (OTC) preparations, sold to induce sleep or ease tension, are nearly worthless. In fact, for some people, say drug experts, these drugs can be dangerous -- even deadly. Many sleep aids and tension re­ lievers contain such ingredients, as methapyrilene, scopolamine, various bromides, and salicyla- mide -- all of these can produce potentially dangerous side ef- fects when ingested. Methapyrilene, an antihista­ mine may cause restlessness or snervousness -- the opposite re­ action of what the consumer is seeking, says the American Med­ ical Association in its publication, Drug Evaluations. Other side ef­ fects include: mouth dryness, blurring of vision, dimness, ring­ ing in the ears, and even stom­ ach irritations. According to testimony before a Senate subcommittee investi­ gating OTC drugs, scopolamine, in the dosage found in nonpre­ scription medicines, cannot pro­ mote or maintain sleep any bet * ter than a placebo. And, in sus­ ceptible individuals, it can pro­ duce hallucinations and toxicity. CYCLONE IS COMING TO Jos.H.Huemann & SONS WELL DRILLING The Renault 12 five-door wagon. You can get a lot more into it because we put a lot more into it. When our engineers designed the Renault 12 station wagon, they figured out how to get a lot into it. Five doors for easy getting in and easy getting out. A feature not found on many wagons in its class. A full 58 cubic feet of cargo space, with the backseat folded down. Front-wheel drive and steel-belted radial tires for better traction. Rack- and-pinion steering so our station wagon would have sports car steering. Disc brakes for surer stopping. A 4-cylinder engine for economy car economy. A large capacity gas tank so you have to fill it up less often. Luxurious seats so it would have luxury car comfort. Even an optional exceptionally smooth, fully automatic transmission. And then we built one more thing into the Renault 12 station w agon. Perform­ ance and handling so noticeable that once we get you to drive any of our sur­ prising new Renaults, we know we can get v< iu tc i buy i me. The Renault 12 five- door wagon. The more you put into it, the more you'll realize how much more we put into it. 0 RENAULT 9 models from S2,675*-S5,210* If we can get you to drive one, we can get you to buy one. * Manufacturer's suggested retail price P.O.E. East Coast. Destination Charges, Dealer Preparation Charges, State and Local taxes not included. GOETTEL MOTOR SALES, Inc. Rt 120, 3 MILES EAST OF McHENRY^ (815)385-3330 Bromides, concludes the Amer­ ican Pharmaceutical Association, can accumulate in the body after long-term use, possibly causing such side effects as skin rash, problems with motor coordina­ tion, thick speech, doziness, foul breath, constipation, and flatul­ ence. William T. Beaver, M.D., as­ sociate professor of pharma­ cology at Georgetown Univer­ sity, points out one unfavorable side effect of salicylamlde. It has been implicated, says the doctor, as a cause of a blood disorder in which the blood particles that as­ sist in blood clotting decrease. Sufferers can "hemorrhage into their tissues and get bruises all over." A better suggestion than reach­ ing for one of these OTC prepa­ rations might be drinking a glass of something warm, such as cocoa or bouillon, says Richard P. Penna, Pharm. D., of the Amer­ ican Pharmaceutical Association. "Your body's natural response to these warm drinks," Dr. Pen­ na explains, "will be to pump blood into your stomach to aid in the digestive process. This re­ duces the flow of blood to other parts of your body and makes you sleepy." WANT MORE INFORMATION? Writ• Today'* H«olth Magazine CF. 535 North Daarborn Str--I Chicago. Illinois 60610 to'") •2'*d Hjrt 19V CLOSE OFFICE • '• The Department of Public^ Aid office in Woodstock will closed Thursday and Friday, July 4 and 5. » • K0ENEMANN Country Made Sausages, Hams and Bacon GERMAN IMPORTS AND CHEESES A Full Line Of Delicatessen -- Just east of Rt 12 815-385-6260 VOLO 3 THURSDAY JUNE 27 ONLY ifanxDKPiqpeqafc • • • • «* OPEN M0N-TM0KSS-fc/Fa<l-c?/SAT.<J-6 LiMilED 1220 N.G&EN ST M=HENfcf.ifc.6oo50 M4$reRCHA/?$-e. 8AA//C4M££/ - CAeo'AMEwcAN Express mane. T

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