I •<* s IEGA1N0DCE LEGAL NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 19TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS PROBATE DIVISION ESTATE OF JOHN J. STACY Deceased, FILE NO. 68-P-223. Notice is hereby givenpursuant to Section 194 of the Probate Act, of the death of the above named decedent and that letters of Administration were issued on September 16, 1968, to Margaret Kerr Maul, 868 Ford, Elgin, Illinois, whose attorney of record is Richard C. Lindberg, 8324 Lincoln avenue, Skokie, Illinois 60076 and that the first Monday in the month of November, 1968, is the claim date for the estate. Claims against said estate should be filed in,the Probate Office of the Clerk of said Court, County Court House, Woodstock, Illinois, and copies thereof mailed or delivered to said legal representative and to said attorney. MARGARET O'NEIL Clerk of the Court Publish: Sept. 20,27,0ct.4, 1968 1 The Drivers Seat TO., SEPT., 27, 1968 - PLAINDEALER - PG $ #v p Head football coach Bill Day took time out this week for special instruction and coaching for his three varsity quarterbacks. The signal callers are from left, Kurt Knaack, 6-1, Harriet?"Keep Streak Alive With 15-50 170 lb. junior; Don Reinboldt, 6-0, 180 lb. senior; and Gary Fairchild, 6-1, 175 lb. junior. PLAINDEALER PHOTO ffljAl NOTICE N O T I C E Sealed bids will be received by the City of McHenry in the office of the City Clerk on or before October 21, 1968 for furnishing a new police car with trade-in of one car now in use. Specifications may be secured in the office of the City Clerk. The Mayor and City Council reserve the right to reject any and all bids or to waive any informality in any bid and to accept any considered advantage to the city. , CITY OF MCHENRY Earl R. Walsh, City Clerk (Pub. Sept. 27, Oct.2, 1968) Excessive wealth will never plague men who have taxes, wives and/or children. in Over Elg by Bert Hagemann The undefeated Warrior cross country squad kept its unbeaten record intact last week on the rugged home course with a smashing 15-50 Victor over the Maroons of Elgin. In recording their perfect score, the Warriors took the first seven places before an Elgin performer came struggling in. It was truly a sight to see as about ten minutes after the race began, the runners came out of the woods and over the hill towards the final half-mile. First over the rise was Glenn Hampton who held on to win handily by 21 Seconds over second place finisher Brad Pictor. Pictor was followed by Mark Smith, Don Schubert, Mike Freund, Wayne Smith and Bruce Davis. The hilly, rugged terrain was evidently too much for the hapless Maroons as they struggled in almost two full minutes behind the first Warrior finishers. Meanwhile in the preliminary contest, the little Warriors once again showed their winning form With a 17-46 win. Eric Weiss, John Oeffling and Jerry Mc- Gibbon finished 1-2-3-and Ray Cbfck and Burt France rounded but the scoring. Tomorrow, Saturday, the Warriors will have to perform at peak capacity ias they travel to run in the Crystal Lake invitational. Some fan support for a fine group of athletes would really be appreciated. Illinois has 122 institutions of higher education. Only three states have more colleges and universities. More students attend colleges in Illinois than in the United Kingdom, Sweden, Norway and Denmark combined. h. E U SOT r.. Look around you! Ask yourself if you've done all you can to protect your home against the threat of fire. Think about increasing property values and home improvements or additions which may have seriously outdated your present home insurance protection. Then, find out how State Farm . . . the number one company in home insurance . . . can give you alt the' protection you'll probably ever need for your home. DENNIS CONWAY §t 3315 W. Elm St. Phone 385-7111 STATE FARM FIRE AND CASUALTY COMPANY Home Office: Bloomington, Illinois OH-WAYNES A REAL NICE GUY. YOU CAN SPEND AN ENTIRE EVENING WITH HIM WITHOUT BEING A KARATE EXPERT/ THE TALL STATE CROSS-YOUR-HEART sllgnviy paoaea ora adds shaping without adding inches Just of an inch of soft lining.. gives you wonderful shaping without adding inches. It combines with the famous "Cross-Your-Heart" design to lift and separate Only $3.50--with lace cups. Only $4 .00--with lace cups, stretch straps. A. (Shown:) $5.00--with elastic t>ack . and sides, lace cups, stretch straps. White, sizes 32A-40C as seen 1219 N. Green St McHenry III. If you've seen the 1969 model cars, you may have noticed that one manufacturer seems to have forgotten to install any radios in their top-of-the-line model. Not true. Most, if not all cars are equipped with radios. It's just that that company's engineers have finally succeeded, they say, in finding a workable substitute for the outside, whip like radio antenna -- something Detroit has been trying to do for about 40 years. v-- IMs car's antenna consists of two pieces of wire five thousandths of an inch thick, sandwiched between the two layers of glass in thfc windshield. These copper wires -- slightly visible run 19 the center of the windshield and bend outward just below the top of the glass. Hie connection to the radio is under the hood. As advantages to this type of antenna, the manufacturer lists cleaner lines on the car, less chance of breaking or being bent, always fully extended for top reception and, eventually, lower expense. Although the relatively high price of the car and its prestige indicate that most of the cars sold in that model will have radios, even those that don't will have the antenna in the windshield, for purposes of standardization. The concealed radio antenna idea is not a new one. The longdead LaSalle car supposedly had its antenna under the running, board. Various manufacturers experimented with other concealed antenna locations - in the roof, under the hood, in the trunk and strapped to the car's frame --but none of them worked. In all cases, the problem was the same: The car's metal lured too much of the radio transmission signal away from the antenna. But this new antenna has been adequately isolated from the rest of the sheet metal on the car, say the engineers, and now they're worrying that the reception will to too good. They're afraid that the alwaysfully- extended aerial will bring in too many stations at once in some "fringe" areas, and that customers are liable to gripe. The manufacturer claims that although the antenna is slightly visible, it does not in any way cut down on safe driver visibility. If it doesn't it has a definite safety advantage for pedestrians. If s one less automotive exterior fixture to spear, slap, cut or kill them. About one-fourth of all children born in India die at birth - another one-fourth die before EASY DOES IT Sp5 Daniel Kolarsky the way across a bamboo bridge built over a tributary of the Saigon River. Soldiers of the 1st Infantry Division were on a recon- 3r one naissance-in-fo rce mission their lOth lbirthdsy. near Saigon. RT YVtEADER OF All A.P.I PASS deceive/?5 ># '68 mmRD E'AAtR?AN!EEDD TU£ HKrHESr P/?A>SE POSSiBlE VVtJEAj WS MATES y&7&> tJ/M THE J£73' MOST VAlUABlE PL AYE#,.. M£ S M JSCOA/Ml*., EXTREMELY FAST, CAUMT 7/ PASS£3 >434 YARDS. H'S OtTtH AM££46eD JO.2 YAKD&, /}MD7ye& L&A60ECEAPWCr MARX... L? VIDETE, QUAESO, QUID POTEST PECUNIA.* --Plautus tried to tell us, 2,000 years ago! 1 This great dramatist of pre-Christian Rome knew the power of money. "See, I pray you," he said, "what money can do."* What Plautus was driving at was not the excess of money some of us dream of--not the windfall, like winning a lottery. What he had in mind was the sound and wise management of money. Good use of whatever money comes our way is indeed power--power over ourselves, our needs and wants, our aspirations. The best use of money is to put some of it by, regularly and systematically. A savings account with us has all the features desirable in such a program--flexibility, availability, convenience, and insured safety. • n 1| 1 ill i IIIiHililililli WW WW WW WW WW .W W MEMBER Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation Federal Home Loan Bank System Savings and Loan Foundation United States Savings and Loan League Illinois Savings ar»d Loan League our .age O'fik J?"-* misHIIlNIilf NSUREO 8 g L Q i N ASiSe iAYf l iN I 1209 N. Green Street, McHenry, I l l i n o i s 60050 Phone: 385-3000 m