ill "MEANWHILE BACK AT THE COURTHOUSE" BRANCH CallllT Associate Circuit 4, •Judge Conrad Floetter Dennis W. Macaluso, 9019 Memory, Wonder -f^ake, charged with4 drag racing, amended to reckless driving, lined $250 and costso. Randall I). (Jlosson, 1003 Plymouth. McHenry, bound over to the Grand Jury on a charge of unlawful possession of controlled substance. Another charge of unlawful possession of cannabis was dismissed. Roger A. Rairie of 4112 W. Crystal Lake road, McHenry, found guilty of disorderly conduct and not guilty on a charge of criminal damage to property. He is to be sentenced in August. John R. Strobel of 1706 Indian Ridge, McHenry, guilty of disorderly conduct, fined and costs. Aleda Strobel, 1706 Indian Ridge. McHenry, charged with disorderly conduct, case nolle prossed on a motion by the State's Attorney. COMPLAINTS Paul D. Birdwell charges that on July 12, Roger A. Rairie, 4112 W Crystal Lake road. McHenry, committed the offense of battery in that he did cause bodily harm to the complainant by hitting him in the face with his fist. Bond set at $2,000. Noretta M. Johnson, agent for Cardinal Liquors, Crystal Lake, charges that on July 12, Roger A.s. Rairie of 4112 W. Exciting Events Set For Senior Citizens At Fair Senior citizens visiting this year's Illinois State Fair on Golden Age day, Friday, Aug. 15, will find a pleasant com bination of exciting events and convenient facilities. A record 7,500 senior citizens attended the fair on Golden Age day last year, and this year's attendance is expected to reach ^jji*#wn^arcording to State Fair Special Events Director Bruce Rubenstein. Senior citizens 60 and over will be admitted to the fair free until noon on Golden Age day. As they enter gate 12, they will receive special ribbons to designate them as Golden Age day participants. The Illinois building, near gate 12, is the headquarters for senior citizens, where maps, schedules and other in formation will be available throughout the ten-day run of the fair, including Golden Age day. The agenda for Golden Age day includes a kitchen band competition to be held in two tents on the east and west lawns of the Illinois building. One hundred dollars, $50, $25 and $15 will be given as first, second, third and fourth place prizes. Sixty dollars in prize money will be divided among remaining kitchen bands; Other scheduled events in clude a waltz contest and awards for "best in show" items, such as woodcarvings and afghans, as well as oldest mementos, oldest school class picture, oldest Bible and oldest valentine. The couple married the longest will receive a prize for their perseverence and the couple married the shortest length of time will be awarded s p e c i a l " n e w l y w e d " recognition. Considerable work has been done to make the fairgrounds more accessible to senior citizens. A trackless train, donated by Southern Illinois University, will transport senior citizens along a scheduled route to areas of special interest. A bus equipped with .a hydraulic lift, also donated by SIU, will take persons confined to wheelchairs wherever they wish to go at the fair. Area agencies on aging may be contacted for further in formation on contest registration, application fees, updated schedules of events and general fair information. Crystal Lake road, McHenry, committed the offense of theft in that he did take a bottle of liquor from the store. Bond set at $1,000. - i • Officer Thomas Murrey, Fox Lake Police department, charges that on June 5, Richard A. Woolwine of 509 N. Mineral Spring drive, iftcHenry, committed the offense of possession of firearm without requisite firearm owners identification card. Bond set at $100. Don Carey, manager of Hornsby's department store, McHenry, charges that on July 22, Jerry R. Mathieu of 3524 S. Laramie, Cicero, committed the offense of theft under $150 irt that he did take unauthorized control over growing plants and peat moss from the store. Bond set at $1,000, court date July 31. Sgt. Robert Zujewski charges that on July 21, John J. Spears, 4113 W. Waukegan road, McHenry, committed the of fenses of aggravated battery and disorderly conduct in that he did cause bodily harm to the complainant and did act in an unreasonable manner. Bond set at $2,525, court date July 31. Officer Gary Wigman charges that on July 21, John J. Spears of 4113 W. Waukegan road, McHenry, committed the offense of aggravated battery in that he did cause bodily harm to said officer while he was in the execution of his duties. Bond set at $2,500, court date July tyr\ HELPING PAWS by: Linda Keyfauver 459-2641 Pets and children are a wonderful combinatibn, if the children are taught kindness. Parents should understand that animals may bite or scratch in defense against rough han dling; in such cases the blame often belongs on the child, not the pet. Nevertheless, a pet that bites or scratches a child or adult is always held guilty under public health laws and must be quarantined or otherwise placed under ob servation for rabies. Never underestimate the value of a license. It is to a dog what identification papers are to you; and it is not enough just to buy a license - be sure it is on the dog's collar at all times. In addition, it is ad visable to get a tag that shows your name plus address or telephone number, and attach that to the collar, too. Unless you are in position to guard a female dog or cat constantly, you owe it to the animal and to yourself to have her spayed. The spaying operation prevents females from coming in heat and, prevents breeding of unwanted litters. It does not change a sweet-tempered dog into a disagreeable one, nor does it lead to overweight if diet is regulated. A dog is an extremely sen sitive creature, capable of much suffering. It needs af fection and companionship as much as it needs food and shelter. Before you get a dog, or any other pet, be sure you can give it the care it needs and deserves. Please call our office at 459- 2641 if you have lost or found an animal or if you wish to adopt one. Our hours are Monday-Friday 10 a.m. to noon and 1 to 3 p.m. DOGS UP FOR ADOPTION At 338-2543 is a female Airedale mix, 3-4 months old, sandy color with white paws, good with children, and a very nice disposition. An Alaskan Malamute, spayed female, 2V2 years old, housebroken, and good with children, all shots, needs room to run is at 31^-658-6496 after 6 Shepherd, housebroken, and good with children, all shots, obedience, trained, needs room to run is at 459-4683. • ^ At 338-3784 is a female Irish Setter, l'/2 years old, outside dog.4 not housebroken, good wilhfchildren, must be tied or fenced in, shots due, summer of 1975. FOUND DOGS A Toy Collie or Sheltie, male, about 112 years old, brown, black, and white, long fur. small, no collar, hit by car at Randall and Route 72 on July 7. 312-428-4254 or 312-428-5252. Possible Lab mix, female 5-6 months old, black with little white on chest, about 18" high. Found July 11 near Three Oak road in Cary, 312-639-2961. A Labrador Retriever, female, 4-6 months old, black, no collar, found July 8 on Collins road in Marengo. 815- 568-6314. A Collie-Shepherd, female, approximately 6 months old, brown, white spots, with tips on paws, brown and black tail. Found July 16 behind drive-in, Crystal Lake. Wearing brown plastic collar. 455-1433. CATS UP S FOR ADOPTION Two Persians, both spayed females, housebroken, and good with children, need booster shots, one is a red cream tabby, 3years old* very sweet, quiet and shy, a lap cat. The other is all black, declawed on front paws, 6 years old, very friendly and sweet. 312-658-6496 after 6 or weekends. Three female kittens, 8 weeks old, 2 solid white, one black and white, all long-haired, bue eyes, housebroken. 312-381-1980 extension 556 or 815-338-5658 evenings. LOST CATS A domestic torn cat, 4 years old, dark and light gray, tipped with brown and white marking on stomach and back, small, wearing yellow collar with bell. Lost July 9 in Woodlawn Park area of McHenry. 385-4391. V "L Police Tickers Scott A. Moore, 2932 S h o r e w o o d , M c H e n r y , ' i m proper passing. Wayne C. Miller, 3156 Howden, Twin Lakes, improper right turn. George Kunzer, Jr., 1102 S. Hollywood, McHenry, speeding 52 in a 40 mph zone. Robert J. Merrill, 1615 North, McHenry, speeding 40 in a 25 mph zone. Steven Koenig, 912 Mall road, Ingleside, driving while in toxicated, open liquor in_ a motor vehicle and improper lane usage. Robert J. Mullen, 3320 Skyway, McHenry, speeding 38 in a 25 mph zone. Colleen Miller, 219 S. Baiyeville, McHenry, speeding 53 in a 40 mph zone. Frank Leary III, 514 N. Clement Lodge, McHenry, unnecessary noise (Peeling tires). Kenneth A. Ehredt, 3220 W. Idyll Dell, McHenry, speeding 60 in a 40 mph zone. Kenneth T. Shannon, 3308 Northside, McHenry, speeding 63 in a 40 mph zone. Joseph A. Konecny, Route 2, Maple Park, speeding 46 in a 30 mph zone. Edith J. Bogdan^ 504 Nor- thlake, McHenry, speeding 51 in a 40 mph zone. Raymond E. Chapman, 5221 W. Shore, Mchenry, driving while license suspended or revoked. X LOUISA'S LETTER RECIPE By Sarah Anne Sheridan Elvene's Pie Homemakers welcome easy pie recipes for summer des serts. Keep a supply of pre pared pie crusts on hand. 1 can condensed milk Juice of 1 or 2 lemons 1 9 oafcarton Cool Whip 1 l a rge can c rushed p ine app le (d ra ined ) 2 prepared pie crusts condensed milk and lemctoluice until thick. Fold in COol Whip then drained crushed pineapple. Pour into the two baked (and cooled) pie crusts. Keep in refrigerator until served. Oatmeal Pie 3 eggs, well beaten . 3/4 c. granulated sugar 1 c. light brown sugar 2 T. butter 2/3 c. dry oatmeal 2/3 c. coconut 1 t. vanilla pinch of salt Mix ingredients in above orde r g iven . Bake in unbaked Dear Lou i sa , I have been l iv ing wi th , my daugh te r who i s mar r i ed and has two ch i ld ren . Her husband has been n i ce to me - - in f ac t , a l l o f t hem have gone ou t o f t he i r way to make - me f ee l a t home . Bu t I know tha t 1 i n t e r f e re w i th . the i r s ty l e o f l i f e--the ch i ld ren ' s f r i ends a re no t i n and ou4~a*-~ much a s be fo re I c ame and when the o lde r one ' s en te r t a in they f ee l t ha t t hey mus t - i nc lude me among the gues t s - . I have -on ly one room and have had to s to re mos t o f my th ings because 1 was no t su re tha t t h i s way o f l i f e wou ld su i t me . I am f inan c i a l ly ab le to r en t an apa r t men t bu t I ha t e to hu r t my peop le ' s f ee l ings by t e l l i ng them tha t such a p lan wou ld su i t me be t t e r . Wha t doyou th ink I shou ld do'> - ; Grandpa--Va. Answer : I f t he lo t on \Vh ich t hey l ive i s l a rge enough andyou a re f inanc ia l ly ab le to do CONSUMER GUIDELINES Save energy and money by operating your range or oven economically. Use only as much heat as n e c e s s a r y f o r so , i t s aems to me tha t a good so lu t ion wou ld be to bu i ld a ga rage apa r tmen t in t he i r ya rd . These can be qu i t e a t t r ac t ive and conven i en t and wou ld a l low bo th Vou and your f ami ly t o have the p r ivacy tha i makes l i f e so much s imple r when d i f f e ren t gene ra t ions l i ve c lose toge the r . . I f t ha t i s no t poss ib l e the re a re many homes fo r o lde r peop le where mea l s can be se rved and where you can keep your ca r . You cou ld spend weekends wi th your ch i ld ren bu t be c lose enough to he lp them o r ge t he lp when i t i s needed . . • - > ." Lou i sa . 1 1' \< !: PLAINDE. Dear Lou i sa , I wou ld l i ke t o s top . co l l ege and go the ' t e chn i ca l -voca t ion schoo l in my s t a t e . 1 unde r s t and i t i s eas i e / t o ge t a job a f t e r f in i sh ing the re than i f you a re in one o f t he p ro fes s ions . Wha t i s your i dea abou t th i s 'M am a young man n ine t een yea r s o f age . Tom--S.C. Answer ; I t depends on a g rea t many th ings . One o f t hese i s wha t vou do ,bes t and an o the r i s wha t you en joy do ing . A pe r son who l acks pe r seve rance and love o f r e s ea rch has no bus iness t ry ing to become a l awyer , doc to r o r ed i to r because a l l o f t hose th ings t ake s tudy and«$ t ime be fo re a pe r son has the p repa ra t ion fo r mak ing a l i v - , i ng . On the o the r hand , i f a pe r - ALER-FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1975 son l i kes to work wi th h i s hands o r has a mechan ica l tu rn o f mind o r a t a l en t fo r cab ine t work , can p repa re h i m s e l f a t a v o c a t i o n a l s choo l and usua l ly has l i t t l e t roub le in f ind ing work . I t h ink i t depends on wha t a pe r son l i kes to do and wha t he has a t a l en t fo r do ing . And in wha t he wi l l be happy in do ing , l a t e r on in l i f e . ' Lou i sa . CROSSWORD • By A. C. Gordon | cooking jobs. Turn r a n g e o f f t h r e e minutes, and oven off 15 minutes before end of cooking time. High schoo l s tuden t s , i n d iv idua l ly , o r in adve r t i s ed g roups (wi th p rope r i den t i f i ca t ion ) , can f ind summer work . i n homes , ya rds and ga rdens . Co t ton d re s ses and p la .v c lo thes a re mak ing a come back . They can ' t be bea ten fo r coo lness when worn in the summer hea t . Kn i t t ed o r c roche ted wa l l deco ra t ions r e sembl ing t ap e s t r i e s a re qu i t e popu la r now. Pa t t e rns can be o r ig i na l o r choose one f rom cu r ren t magaz ines . To Much Don't worry about our Government being over thrown--there's too much of it. -Times, Marshalltown, la. pie shell for 30-35 minutes at*350 degrees. Filling will be unusually thick before baking. A C R O S S 1 - Musical Instru ment 11 - Conforms 12 - Everyone Indi vidually (abb.) 14 - To schedule 16 - Emergency Service (abb.) 17 - Paired 18 - Tease (slang) 19 - A brace (abb.) 20 - Yearn 21 - A visionary 23 - British award (abb.) 24 - Circle segment 26 - Tree 27 - Bulgarian city 28 - Greek letter 29 - Petty cash (abb.) 30 - Transport Ship (abb.) 31 - Preposition 32 - A fabric 33 - Man's name 3 4 - . . . B a b a 35 - Preposition 36 - Vibrating 38 * Short, blunt object 39 - Co liege degree 40 - Manpower 42 - Evict 43 - Metric unit of area 44 - Brazilian state 45 - Abraham's birthplace 46 - To turf previously 48 - A token of regard D O W N 2 - Of a type of poetry 3 - Literary composition 4 - Musical note nnUGJEEOEEEE il yaUfeJIUEJ LH [ti •BQCJ EQ HJEBJUEJ rams: be bhhb is 3 EEDU3[i]fcJ£JU SlU DBQ EEB aUHUHJ QD EQ EQ EC nnnraR uifcia MEQ ran HHonnEiisiD 0 51 0HUH EH EDE atDEQti EE (0CEDES E B0 feEIEJHtaa K muiijfcisiiJiiiuiiua 5 - Musical • dramas 6 - Ljnjfr*letter8 7 - Cafftwl Stock (abb.) 8 - Rough sheds 9 - Recent 10 - Modernized 13 - Promoting intelligence 15 - Roman deuce 17 - To relate wrongly 19 - Tranquil 20 - Greek letter 22 - Literary Hour (abb.) 23 - Small vessel for liquids 25 - Destroy 29 - Inferior racehorses 33 - Gold (chem.) 34 - Military fleet 37 - Weight unit 38 - Pour forth (var.) 41 - Suffix of comparison 43 - Fortify 44 - Hawaiian dish 46 - Greek letter 47 - Tin (cbem.) DO IT VOurscT WITH STeaMex- RENTAL CARPET CLEANER Get professional results for far less than professional costs Hourly Daily Weekend Rates PCM DRIVE-IN Utlvl CLEANERS McHenry's Finest Fabric Care. Specialists 3004 W. Route McHenry, III 385 Z231 120 or on weekends. A 2-year-old tan German BIBLE VERSE "A good name is rather to be chosen than great riches, and loving favor rather than silver or gold." 1. Where is this verse found in the Bible? 2. Who is the author? 3. Who was his mother1? 4- In what language was it written? Answers To Bible Verse 1. Proverbs 22:1. 2. Solomon. 3. Bathsheba . 4. Hebrew. 7 ̂ EXCITING CHOOSE ZM-COLOR FROM M. BACKGROUNDS PLUM BLUEBERRY SKY SMOKE INSURANCE BID NOTICE Johnsburg Rescue Squad, accepting bids on their insurance. Companies qualified to bid on entire package, Contact Gerald Wakitsch 385-1277 a* UARESE'S STEAKH0USE & LOUNGE INTERSECTION HWY. 120 & GREEN ST. McHENRY, ILLINOIS 385-3120 A / \ A /\ /\ A A n A A A A n P A ID FULL COURSE DINNERS SERVED.. 11am to 12am 11am to 10 SUNDAYS TAKE OUT SEfiUICE ON EUEftVTHINC • Steaks Lobster • Surf & Turf • Pasta • Shishkebab HUE ENTERTAINMENT DANC1NG FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT . NO COVER • NO MINIMUM •SMORGASBORD* Mon. thru Thurs. 11 am to 2:30-5 to 8:30 pm Fri. & Sat. 11 am to 2:30-5 to 9 pm Sun. 1 to 8:30 pm UMESTC Call Us For Party Or Banguet Reservations Ph. 385-3120. 8x10 COLOR PORTRAIT All ages Babies, children and adults One sitting per subject Additional subjects --Groups or individ uals in same family -- $1.00 per subject No proofs--Choose from finished profes sional portraits (poses --our selection) You may select additional portraits offered at low prices Guaranteed to give complete satisfaction or motiey cheerfully refunded No handling charge THUR FRI JULY 24 25 THUR-FRI: 10AM-8PM / SAT: SAT 26 9AM-5:30PM Photographer on duty (Hours) 9 national 3750 W. Elm, McHeniy "T7TT" w" THE ̂ FAIR'S COMING TIME FOR YOU TO ENTER FIRST FAMILY OF THE FAIR CONTEST OBJECTIVES To encourage total family part ic ipat ion in the McHenry County Fair. To draw parents and their chi ldren closer together. To develop family pr ide and unity. RULES AND QUALIFICATIONS The 1975 First Family Award wi l l be made to that area family which part ic ipates most convincingly in the Fair 's various act ivi t ies. A family is defined as the immediate unit comprising parents (or parent) and its children, up to 21 years of age. Any family wishing to compete must pre-register at the Fair Office, beginning 30 days prior to the opening of the 1975 Fair and ending the day prior to the opening Family entrants must signify the exact events in which they wil l compete. No changes may be made after the Fair opens. Judges wil l be chosen by the McHenry County Fair Board, and their decisions wil l be f inal. Employees of McHenry Savings and Loan Association and their famil ies are not eligible. At the conclusion of the Fair, family scores wil l be compiled according to the Fair 's published l ist of events. The family compil ing the highest number of points wil l be declared the winner. In case of t ies, duplicated prizes wil l be awarded. Presentat ion of the First Family Award wi l l be made the last evening of the Fair. This trophy wi l l become the permanent possession of the First Family. YOUR FAMILY MAY BE THIS YEAR'S WINNER' Sign up now at the Fair Off ice. I t costs nothing to enter. Sponsored as a Public Service by McHENRY S A V I N G S I * tita MMCiatiiiJ ki-Lll McHenry Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 1209 North Green Street • McHenry. Illinois • 385-3000 10520 Main Street (Rts. 12 & 173) • Richmond Illinois • 678-2061 SERVING ALL OF GREATER McHENRY COUNTY