Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Jun 1961, p. 8

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

p'-s ? .. Eight • . J%w& ( . McHENRY .» • - / Child Drowns, Two Are Hurt (Continued from Page 1) Thursday, June 1, 1961 the past nine months he had 3^ lived at 3101 Hoyne avenue, Chicago. After a continuance of the inquest, his body, too, was removed to the Schiniit. chapel. Machnik Inquest An inquest is scheduled to be held at the George R. Justen & Son funeral home at 10 o'clock Friday morning in the death of Gilbert Machnik, 21. of Sunset Drive, Holiday Hill subdivision, four miles southeast of McHenry. He was apparently killed by the accidental discharge of a 1'2-gauge shotgun which he was cleaning in his home last Thursday afternoon, May 25. His wife, Maryls, an expectant mother, had been shopping that afternoon and returned home to find her husband dead on the1 living room floor. Coroner Ehorn estimated that death resulted within a few minutes after the shot entered the left side-^qf his body. Authorities found gun cleaning chemicals and cleaning rags on a table. A shell which had not been removed from the feun chamber is believed to have discharged as he was cleaning the weapon. The deceased was a collector for a disposal company. lie was born in Chicago Aur;. 10, 1939. The family moved to this area last November from Wheeling. Besides his wife, he leaves a daughter, Lorri Lee, 14 months old; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel Machnik of Wauconda; four sisters, Mrs. Lorraine Bestwick of Holiday Hills, Mrs. Joan Shotwell of Lake Zurich, Mrs. Marlene Shannon of Chicago and Sandra Ilancok of Wauconda; five brothers, Robert of Portland, Ore., Fred of Wauconda, Clarence of Wheeling, Don of Prairie View and Ralph of Mc- Fenry. Mr. Machnik belonged to the Holiday Hills Property Owners association. Services were held Saturday afternoon at 1 o'clock from Justen chapel, with Rev. Mc- Intyro officiating. Burial was in Rand Hill cemetei-y, Palatinc. Motorists Hurt Six persons were injured in a two-car accident which occurred between 5:30 an$ $ o'- c'o<-k Memorial Day afternoon two miles south of McHenry on Barreville road. Stale police said a truck driven by Theodore Laika of Earreville road started to make a left turn just as an auto driven by James Chadderdon of Orchard Heights, McHenry, started to pass. The latter vehicle struck the truck on the side, and flying debris damaged a third auto driven by Norman R. Talbow of West H i l l s i d e , C r y s t a l L a k e . A11 three vehicles were heading south on Barreville road. Laika and his daughter, Barbara Weber, 9, were taken to McHenry hospital for treatment, as were James Chadderdon, Mary Chadderdon, Jim Nielson of Crystal Lake and Pat Fisher of McHenry. The condition of the two who remained overnight in McHenry hospital was described as good on Wednesday morning. They were Chadderdon and Nielson. The Chadderdon car contained members of the Red Devils, V.F.W. drum and bugle corps, who were returing from a day of marching. A blow-out on the ca£ driven by Howard Pederson of Aurora just before 9 o'clock Monday morning resulted in his vehicle travelling off the highway into a ditch on Rt. 31, three miles north of McHenry. Damage to the auto was estimated^ at about $300. Mary L. McLaren of Rt. 21 and 59, Fox Lake, suffered injuries Friday morning which necessitated her being hospitalized. She was driving on Thelen road, in Pistakee Highlands, at 6:51 o'clock when her car left" the road on a curve and overturned. A Fox Lake ambulance rushed to the scene and re- "Search" State Of Project Talent Continues In City moved the injured woman to-.sity of Pittsburgh project staff the hospital. There were no accidents within the city over the long holiday weekend. In fact, police say the holiday itself was very quiet. Two Couples Obs©rv© Wedding Anmto@?ssi7fi®B (Continued from Page 1) Louis Hawleys Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Rein wall and Sgt. and Mrs. John wedding anniversary of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hawley of Ringwood, Sunday, June 4, from 3 to 5 p.m. at the Ernest Reinwall home, 3816 W. Idyll Dell road, McHenry. They request no gifts. Nutmeg is made from the inner kernel of a tropical fruit, while mace is made from the outer shell of the same fruit. Ninety thousand persons, a few dozen of themfr,living in McHenry county, are being "hunted" by a national research project, it was learned by Marvin C. Martin, principal, of McHenry Community high school. The "search" stage of Project TALENT, the national talent research program, was begun last week as the Univegr announced that follow-up questionnaires were being mailed out to ninety thousand persons, all former high school sjtudents, who took the tests of Project TALENT. In the TALENT project, more than 440,000 high school students were given two days of testing in their abilities in school subjects, their basic aptitudes and their general information and other subjects. This testing wa^-done in 1,- 353 high schools in the spring of 1960, tjje'purpose being to Woodward aire holding opgn^ measure jfhe abilities, not just house in honor of the fortieth^- of superior students, but of all kinds of students in all kinds of high schools throughout the country. These tests were given to students at McHenry Community high school. With the help of the school, the staff of Project TALENT is seeking to mail the follow-up questionnaire to each of the local students who were seniors at the time of the testing. In December, the headquarters of Project TALENT mailed to each high school the scores made by the students on the tests. These test results are being used by each high school in accordance with its own educational and guidance program. It is the plan of Project TALENT to locate the tested students one year after graduation and later at a five-yeaf period, in order to correlate the occupations and higher education records of young people with the abilities they displayed and the courses they took in high school. The ques tionnaire being mailed this week, therefore, seeks to find out how many people have gone to college, whether they have stayed in college, and what reasons they may have if they dropped out of college. The iquestionnaire also seeks to /find out information on these persons' military service, if they have gone to work, and if so, whether that work reflects the aptitudes and interests which they showed in the original testing. HUNDREDS OF YOUTH WILL GET DIPLOMAS (Continued from Page 1) da Low, Thomas Low, Donna Luciano, Jerry Luciano, Thomas Lunkenheimer. Others are Grace Mares. James Mars, Patricia Matt, Geary McClain, Danny Mc- Grane, Charles McPhail, James Meeker, Randall Mencel, Barbara Meyer, Linda Moore, Richard Moore, Candace Morgenson, Michelle Moriarity, James Morris, Patricia Morrison, Roy.lVIoss, Barbara Murphy, Janet Murray, Kathleen Murray, David Myers, Susan Nardi, Rebecca Oleyar, Judith Palmbach, Robert Palmer, Cynthia Pauley, Gregory Paulsen, Irma Pedraza, Susan Peterson, Karen Philippi, Elaine Piasecki, Richard Piatt, Judith Pope, John Pugh, Dale Rasmussen, Karole Reed, Barbara Regnier, Dorothy Rehberg, Lynn Reihansperger, Constance Ritter. Also George Sack, Judith Schmunk, Stephen Schneck, S h e r i 1 y n Schultz, Pafricia Schuppe, Carol y n Slusher, Gary Snell, Janice Sturm, Vernon Thomas, Faye Thompson, Kathy Thompson, Charlene Thornton, Terry Toepper, Dominic Tomasello, Christine Tiffany, Kathleen Vetter, Gaye Vinsik, Grace Vitale, Ida Mae Walkington, Linda Watson, William Weiermann, Sterling Weirich, Starr West, Vincent Weyland, Paul Wilkinson, Pamela Williamson, Richard Wolf, John Wright, Robert Zahn, Robert Zriny and Michael Zvonar. Senior Baccalaureate The first of two closing high school programs will take place next Sunday evening, June 4, when solemn Baccalaureate service is held in the McHenry high school gymnasium. The large class of well over 200 seniors will march in caps and gowns into the hall to the .processional, "Pomp and Circumstance" by Elgar, played by Judy Martin, The main address of the evening will be a talk by Rev. John O. Mclntyre of Faith Presbyterian church. A short musical program will follow. It includes "Now Let Every Tongue Adore Thee" and "Pines of Home" by the mixed chorus; "Jubilate Deo" by the girls' chorus and "Soon Ah Will Be Done" an "The Creation" by the a-cappella chorus. The audience and chorus will unite in singing "God Bless America," after which, the seniors will begin their recessional. The following Friday, June 9, commencement will be held on McCracken field in an imp r e s s i v e outdoor program which will feature four speakers from the senior class. Ever wonder why the sugar spoon is shaped like a shell?? Perhaps a shell was the first spoon, once upon a time. About 64 per cent of games manufactured in United States are for children, balance for adults. Your Advertisement TOPIC by Jim Wallace ENGINE MOISTURE VILLAIN Engineers e s ti m a t e that I about six pounds of water per gallon of gasoline is produced by an engine operating below | proper temperature. Because I the average drives makes less than six miles on most of his trips, the automobile motor never retains a high enough jheat factor to dissipate this moisture. This water runs | down cylinder walls and effects the oil. It also combines I With combusion gases, forming acids that attack critical parts | of the engine. This is the important rea-1 son that oil checks should be made with regularity, and the stop at WALLACE'S STANDARD SERVICE will assure you that this inspection is always accurate. You'll like our other maintenance services, too. | Drive over to Rt. 120 (East of McHenry), Eastwood Manor today. I in the *W>r- McHENRY PLAINDEALER ' -r reaches approximately 93% of the McHENRY Trade Ar$ with over 5; PAID Subscribers GENOA CITY. WIS. RICHMOND ( ) / SPRINGGROVE ^ wonder( LAKE RINGWOOD ( McCULiLOM. i LAKE PISTAKEE HIGHLANDS SUNNYSlOE OOHNSBURQ» LAKELAND PARK Mc HENRY LILYMOOlf viVOLO / LAKEMOOR ISLAND LAKE Spend Ymi Advertising Dollar Wi a Pai en Media MARTIN COONEY. AREA DEVELOPER. IS LAID TO REST (Continued from Page 1) ter, he sold the land and settled in Onarka, South Dakota, where he was married in 1916. For a time, he worked two sections of land in that location before returning to Illinois and to McHenry in 1936. In recent years, he owned the McHenry Manufacturing Co., manufacturers of piston rings. Survivors include three sens, John P. of Pocatello, Idaho, Martin R. of Fort Worth. Texas, and Lee J. of McHenry; also one sister, Mrs. Mary Heckmann, of McHenry. The body rested at ® e George R. Justen & Son funeral home until Monday morning at 9:30 o'clock, when a funeral Mass was sung at St. Mary's Catholic church, with burial in Hartland cemetery. *' * TRY A SOUTHERN style buffet dinner the next time you entertain. It's easy . . . and takes so little preparation that you'll be as fresh as sunshine when party time rolls around. The secret is in the use of frozen cooked foods, which do almost all your work for you, leaving you free to use your^j Imagination for the final presentation. Here's a delightful menu that's sure to please: baked breast of chicken, Southern style, served over wild rice, corn souffle, frozen fruit delight with fresh grapes; cheese and crackers, and a relish tray. The chicken breasts, corn souffle and fruit delight are frozen and need only be heated. The rest la simple. FATHER'S MY S U N D A Y. . . J U N E 1 8 T H TWELVE * OUT OF ElElt? ^ DOZEN FATHERS P11FER GIFTS FROM 9 % SHOES ... by FREEMAN Spice brown tones in smart mocc. tops. $14.95 COMFORTABLE SLIP-ONS in black or brown. from $11.95 Whether he's a sly old fox or }ust passing out his first cigars--he's bound to love one of our special Father's Day gifts. In case you're in doubt, our Gift Certificates are right for any man* SHIRTS ... Van Heusen VANGARI^ Wash and Wear Shirts. A luxurious blend of 65'/^ Dacron and 35'a combed cotton. Stays neat and fresh all day long. Short Sleeves .... $5.00 Regular Sleeves $5.95 SMART TIES ... • New colorings in popular tones to accent the new suiting shades. $1.50 - $2.50 - $3.50 HOOK-ON TIES . . . In already tied models, new colors. $1.50 _ BOW TIES $1.0^ BANLON SOCKS .. . Soft comfortable knits in a wide array of new colors. $1.00 Gift purchases boxed and wrapped with No Additional Charge. STORE for MEN 1245 N. Green St. Phone EV 5-0047 Open Daily 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday 9 a.m. 'til 12 noon USE THE FREE GREEN STREET PARKING AREA

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy