Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 Oct 1974, p. 7

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SNOWMOBILE NEWS For anyone of you that at­ tended last years FUN NIGHT and would like to attend again this year it is this coming Saturday, October 12th at the VFW from 7:00 to ??????. If you do not have your tickets you may purchase them at the door. There will be dancing, food, floor show, and losts of FUN, SOOOOOO do come and join us. Also there is to be a Safety Course given by HARMONY SNOWMOBILE CLUB so watch this column for more details. See you all Saturday night at the VFW. McHENR? TEACHER'S BOWLING LEAGUE 10-2-74 Four Hookers 7-1, 4598; River Rats £-3, 4579; Almosts %3, 4515; Flip Flops 4-4, 4594; Fearsome Four 3-5 and 4-5, 4590; Galaxy 3-5 and 4-5, 4487; The 2 Blc's 3-5, 4507; Movers 1- 7, 4411 Bill Landis: 456; Ron Glawe: 414; Lyle Luzum: 395; Don Seaton: 398; Dave Gratz: 400; Amy Street: 457; Ginny Fendt: 428; Carolyn Buittner: 428; Betty Thompson: 421; Shirley Blume: 398; Karen Lescher: 419; Char Collins: 429; Barb Blum: 365; Lee Estis: 354; Lisa Ross: 363; Lynette Beenken: 343; Carolyn Gratz: 356; Sandy Vitale: 325; Sherry Vogt: 306; Carol Fuller: 308. Splits: A1 Boeldt; 6-7-10, Barb Blum; 5-10, Sherry Vogt; 2-10, Amy Street; 5-8-10 and 5- 10. McHENRY RECREATION Wonder Lake Early Birds W L Spare Shooters 13 7 Stuck On Bowling 13 7 Swingers 124 7'2 Hi-Lows 12 8 Optimists 12 8 Classy Lassys 11 9 M&M's 10 10 Bloopers 10 10 Strikes & Spares Vz 1212 Streakers 7 13 Easy Pick-Ups 7 13 Happy Hookers 5 15 High Team Series -- Swingers 2087 High team game -- M & M's 729 High Ind. Series -- Joan Straulin 504 High Ind. Game -- Joan Straulin 194 CRYSTAL LAKE BOWL T & C NEWCOMERS 10-4-74 Mary Lou had high game 166 and high series 450. She also had a double. Won-2, Lost-1., Mary Ann had high game 147. Betty had high series 359. Boo!!! Won-1, Lost-2. Valerie had high game 129. Terr, had high series 352. Won- 1, Lost-2. Nancy had high game 155 and high series 396. Won -1, Lost-2. Thea had high game 158 and high series 394. Barb had a double. Won-1'2, Lost-1'2. Linda had high game 130 and high series 352. Won-2, Lost -1. Linda had high game 128 and high series 376. She also had a double Won-1, Lost-2. Jackie had high game 143 and Klgh aeries 402. She also had a double und a turkey. Won-2, I <OHt -1 Kva hud high game 179 and high series 490. She also had two doubles and a turkey. Won- l»a, Ix>st 1'2• Marily had high game 139 and high series 400 .She also had a double and a turkey. Won-2, Lost-1. Ask us about the .. Seamless Aluminum Gutters & Downspouts m Six uoiors • No more pfelinR oi (taking • Heavy, durable alumi­ num • ( ut down on maintenance problems • I xpert installation Call For Free Estimate 653-9720 385-9427 Slitters Unlimited McHenry Deaths WILBERTGAYLORD Wilbert Gaylord, 66, of 1008 Wicker street, Woodstock, died Saturday, Oct. 5, at Memorial hospital, Woodstock. He was born July 2, 1908 in Crystal Lake. Mr. Gaylord was the father of the Plaindealer photographer, Wayne Gaylord. Other sur­ vivors include his wife, Mary, nee Legler, whom he married Nov. 14, 1936; three other sons, Donald, McHenry, Lawrence, Richmond, and Jerry of Midway City, Calif.; two daughters, Mrs. Judith Miller and Mrs. Shirley Forman, Woodstock; twelve grand­ children; four brothers, Anton, Arthur, John and George Gaylord, Woodstock, two sisters, Mrs. Ruth Wiswedel and Mrs Alice Phillips, Woodstock. The body rested at the Schneider - Leucht chapel where funeral services were conducted Tuesday morning at 11 o'clock by the Rev. Irving Stangland, Grace Lutheran church, with burial in McHenry County Memorial Park cemetery. JOSEPH FMARAS Joseph F. Maras of 1503 W. Hickory, McHenry, died Saturday, Oct. 5, in McHenry hospital at the age of 43. Mr. Maras was born Jan. 12, 1931, in Chicago, son of Emanuel and Anna (Hlousek) Maras. A Korean war veteran, he was employed as a plumber for a construction company. The deceased was a member of the McHenry Veterans of Foreign Wars post and the Lakes Region Rescue squad. Survivors are his wife, Karen (Prehn); seven daughters, Mrs. William (Jeanette) Palh- man of Round Lake, Debra, Theresa, Barbara, Patricia, Tammy and Janice; three sons, Greg, Roy and Joseph, Jr.; four grandchildren; his mother, TOMASELLO'S T.N T. LEAGUE OCTOBER 3,1974 I. Stilling 159, 186, 176-521; M. Wakitsch 150, 187, 172-509; E. Mangold 167, 174-485; E. Shaefer 189 - 464; A. Ritter 162, 156-462; D. Hiller 162, 158-455; E. Rad 187; K. Bradley 171; C. May 171; L. LaBay 169, 153; F. May 168; M. Debrecht 167; J. Lindwall 164; B. Hettermann 162; L. A. Smith 162; M. E. Freund 162; B. Segermark 160; H. Swanson 158; D. Mortell 157; B. Greenwood 157; P. Schmitt 156; M. May 156; G. Rudolph 151; M. Frett 151. Railroads converted: E. Whitney 5-10; P. Schmitt 3- 7-10; D. Hiller 4-10. Anna, of Brookfield; two sisters, Mrs. Sylvia Wemisch and Mrs. Edward (Ann) Bauman of Cicero, and two brothers, Emil of Indiana and Frank of Brookfield. Funeral services were conducted at noon Tuesday at the George R. Justen & Son chapel. Burial was in Memory Gardens cemetery, Arlington Heights. ELIZABETH A HUPE Mrs. Elizabeth Dalling Hupe of 2910 N. Oakwood, McHenry, died Monday night, Oct. 7, in McHenry hospital. She was 79 years old. Mrs. Dalling was born Feb. 8. 1895, in Chicago, daughter of John and Louise (Yunker) Clinton. Survivors are a son, Frank Erklin, of Chicago; One granddaughter, Mrs. William (Donna) Corrigan of Aurora; and two sisters, Mrs. Mary Savitsky of Wauconda and Mrs. Louise Fowler of Westville, Ind. There will be visitation Wednesday afternoon at 2 p.m. at the George R Justen & Son chapel, where services will be conducted 8 p.m. Wednesday. There will be private in­ terment. In lieu of flowers con­ tributions may be made to the heart fund. \ RUBY E. CRAGO Last rites were conducted Monday at 11 o'clock for Mrs. Ruby E. Crago, 64, of 7608 Beach Road, Wonder Lake, at the Schneider, Leucht, Merwin and Cooney chapel, Woodstock. Mrs. Crago died Oct. 3 in Memorial hospital, Woodstock. Survivors include three sons, Leo, Crystal Lake, Leonard, Wonder Lake, and Curtis, Richardson, Tex.; seventeen grandchildren and two great­ grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, Theodore, in 1973; three sons, Duane, Charles and James, and a daughter, Virginia. ELAINE HARDING The daughter of a former resident of McHenry, Elaine Harding, 21, was killed in a one car accident Friday, Oct. 4, near Gurnee. Miss Harding's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Charles Harding, Gurnee. Mrs. Harding is the former Alta Mae Denman of McHenry. The deceased was graduated from the Warren township high school in 1970 and was em­ ployed as an executive secretary for Dexler Midland Paint Co., Waukegan. Other survivors include a sister, Denise of Gurnee; her grandmother, Mrs. Edwin Denman, Gurnee, a former McHenry resident; and an aunt, Mrs. Francis (Laura) Schmitt of McHenry. Last rites were conducted Tuesday afternoon at 1:30 p.m. at the Gurnee funeral home with Rev. McPeek officiating. Burial was in Warren cemetery, Gurnee. PAUL P. PISCHL Paul P Pischl, 74, 2812 N. Manitou Trail, McHenry, died Thursday, Oct 3, at McHenry hospital. Mr. Pischl was born Dec. 12, 1899 in Yugoslavia. A resident of this area for the past 10 years, he was a retired custodian for an apartment building. He was a member of the Flat Janitors Union Local No. 1, Chicago. His survivors include his wife, Barbara, nee Wester- mayer, whom he married Aug 22, 1925; one son, Valentine, Oaklawn, three grandchildren; nieces and nephews. Visitation was held Saturday at the Peter M Justen and Son funeral home. The body was removed to the Brady-Gill Funeral home at 2929 W. 87th street, Evergreen Park, on Sunday A funeral Mass was offered Monday at 9:30 a.m. at St. Germaine Catholic church, Oaklawn, with burial in St. Mary's cemetery, Evergreen Park. Memorial may be made to the American Cancer society. JOHN A. MONAHAN John A. Monahan, 52, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy V. Monahan, of Skokie died Sept. 29 at Ravenswood hospital in Chicago. Mr. Monahan was employed as a supervisor in the Bureau of Streets and Sewei^s for 29 years. He was a frequent visitor in the summer home of his parents at 205 S. Emerald Drive, McHenry. Other survivors include his wife, Betty, nee Long; four children, Michael, Kevin, Patrick and Bridget; three brothers, Robert of Park Ridge, James, Skokie and William of DesPlaines; three sisters, Sister Thomas Leo of Elmhurst, and Lois and Jean of Skokie. A concelebrated funeral Mass was offered Oct. 2 at St. Matthias Catholic church in Chicago with burial in All Saints cemetery, DesPlaines. GEORGIA C. DEMPSTER Georgia C. Dempster, 59, of 2346 Shag Bark Trail, Arlington Heights, died Oct. 4 in Nor­ thwest Community hospital, Arlington Heights. She was born Sept. 13, 1915, in Chicago. Survivors included two daughters, Mrs. Richard (Judith) Marquez, Chicago, and Mrs. John (Laurie) Masulunes, Arlington Heights; two sons, Fred G. Barage, Mich., and Paul, Waukegan, seventeen grandchildren. She was preceded in death by COME IN AND SAVE ON THESE TgHiTHL SOLID-STATE footba// DIAGONAL CHROAMCOIORII The STUART • F4025W - Brilliant 19" diagonal Solid- State Chromacolor II Decora­ tor Compact. Advanced Chromacolor Picture Tube. 100% Solid-State Chassis. Pat­ ented Power Sentry Voltage Regulator. Solid-State Super Video Range Tuning System. Chromatic One-Button Tuning. A C onlyQOG95 ' Featuring ZENITH POWER SENTRY , SYSTEM virtually eliminates eKects ot in-home voltage variations. The M A N E T • F 4 5 4 3 W - Modern styled lowboy console. 23" diagonal Solid-State Chro­ macolor II. Advanced Chroma­ color Picture Tube. 100% Solid-State Chassis. Patented Power Sentry Voltage Regula­ tor. Solid-State Super Video Range Tuning System. Chro­ matic One-Button Tuning. AFC. ONLY 23" giant-screen console Hospital Cost Pressure Told By Administrator (Editor's note: Among costs that are climbing, affected by many factors, are those in­ volved in health care. This is the third in a series prepared by Memorial Hospital for McHenry County to inform the public on aspects of those cost pressures and to report on what the Woodstock - based hospital is striving to do about main­ taining quality health care). "We're geared to keep patients out of the hospital as long as we can and to make their stay as short as we can," says Bert Hanson, ad ministrator at Memorial Hospital for McHenry County at Woodstock, as he discusses hospital cost pressures. "We've reduced the length of patient stay from an average of seven and one-half days five years ago to an average of just over five days now -- a reduction of two days which represents a sizable savings for patients." The inflationary pressures buffeting our nation strike the health care institutions par­ ticularly hard. Hospitals require highly skilled personnel that command sizable salaries. Medical supplies have in­ creased in cost at a rapid rate. Costs for food and for such services as maintenance of sophisticated equipment contribute to that inflationary pressure. "We are striving to keep our room costs and service costs under control. We have a careful analysis regularly, and we don't know how long we can continue without passing along the newest increases, including cost - of - living wage increases given employees." Hanson says the new budget under preparation will exceed $4 million, up from the present budget of $3.6 million. He said a major way the hospital is reducing cost to patients is by greatly increased tempo of outpatient services. A good new example concerns her husband, Frederick, in 1965 and a daughter, Arline Cooper, in 1970. Visitation was held in the George R. Justen and Son funeral home. A funeral Mass offered Monday at St. Patrick's church with burial in St. P a t r i c k ' s C o u n t r y s i d e cemetery. preparing patients tor surgery. Preliminary workups such as X-rays and laboratory tests are conducted 24-48 hours ahead of scheduled operation on an out - patient basis. Doctors admit only those that need acute h o s p i t a l c a r e , a n d a f t e r medical or surgical treatment, doctors are aware to get patients up and mobile --• and discharged as soon as feasible "It js a conscious effort to provide the best possible care. We have a utilization com mittee which examines cases to help keep the stay to a minimum In some cases the e v a l u a t i o n c o m m i t t e e recommends the transfer of a patient who no longer needs full time hospital attention to an extended care or nursing home facility," s^ys Hanson. Another significant way h o s p i t a l i z a t i o n ' c o s t s a r e trimmed is through the cooperation of area hospitals which avoids duplication of expensive equipment and the necessary skilled technicians to operate it. Joint purchasing is a n o t h e r w a y s - h o s p i t a l s a r e saving on supply costs. Four Detroit hospitals have saved $2 million for their patients in three years by taking under - utilized PAGE 7 /PLAINDEALER departments of the hospitals and' merging them at one location. For example, one hospital absorbed the pediatrics department of two others boosting the depart­ ment's occupancy rate to 90 per cent "I anticipate increased cooperation among hospitals in the area," summarizes Han­ son. "Right now we are con­ structing a laundry facility to be shared by seven area hospitals. It is located south of Rockford and will go into service in early 1975." Hanson cited the increased number in outpatients to accent the steady increase in this WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER •, 1*74 specialized service that lessons patient hospitalization cost#. Outpatients totaled 6,344 in 1970 and 10,763 for the 1974 fiscal year. Memorial hospital at Woodstock is active with a community health education program, too, to help inform the public ways people can help trim costs and improve their health Among them : Prenatal instruction for expectant parents, venereal disease education programs, diabetic instruction, cardiac care training programs, mastec­ tomy and colostomy care programs and physical therapy RARE FIND ... Dr. Jesse White (R) records the tempera­ ture of the pygmy sperm whale found on Miami Beach recently. Assistant Bruce Jaildagian applies a vasaline to protect the mammal from sunburn while Phillip Schaefer holds the tail. The Miami Seaquarium is attempting to save the whale, although none have ever lived once removed from the sea. m stNlOR FLOAT ENTRY--Second place among class floats in the MCHS homecoming compeUtkNi last Friday went to the senior class entry with its amusing Warrior Disposal Co. display and the slogan, "Smash 'em -- Trash ' em. That's Our Fashion". STAFF PHOTO--WAYNE GAYLORD CAREY APPLIANCE 1241 N. Green Street McHenry, Illinois G BUY EARLY $YEAR T SHOW TIRES FOR SUBURBANITE POLYESTER • Strong 4 p ly po lyes te r body • Rugged c lea ts bu i l t to handle Winter . • A pai r g ives you the t rac t ion you need to Go in Ice - Mud - Snow. Size A78-13 tubeless blackwall plus $1.78 per tire F.E.T., no trade needed. Blackwall . . 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J1, 1B74 ENGINE TUNE-UP $ 34 95 Add $4 for 8 cyI., $2 for air cond. • With e lec tron ic equipment our profess iona l s f ine - tune your eng ine , ins ta l l ing new po ints , p lugs & condenser • Helps mainta in a smooth running eng ine for maximum gas mi leage LUBE AND OIL *550 Up to 5 qts. of • Comple te chass i s lubr ica t ion & o i l change • Helps ensure longer wear ing part s f t smooth , qu ie t per formance • Please phone for appointment major brand multi grade oil FRONT-END ALIGNMENT *|095 • Comple te ana lys i s & a l ignment correc t ion to increase t i re mi leage and improve s teer ing sa fe ty • Prec i s ion equipment used by tra ined profess iona l s Most U.S.. some import cars - parts extra only if needed TIRE CHAHSE0VEII 99* EARLY BIRD SNOW TIRE SERVICE SPECIAL! • Place your two bes t regu lar t i res on front whee l s • Mount both your prtttnl snow t i res on rear whee l s 5 WAYS TO CHARGE • O u r Own C u s t o m e r C r e d i t P l a n • M a s t e r C h a r g e • B a n k A m e r i c a r d • A m e r i c a n E x p r e s s Money C a r d • Carte Ri. ir tr .ht> JIM FANSELOW Store Manager GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 3S57?00 4400 W. RTE. 120 - McHENRY, ILL. 815 DAILY 8:00 AM - 6:00 PM SATURDAY 8:00 AM to 5:00^^

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