Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 Jun 1975, p. 7

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I'AUfc 7 - FLAINUfcALfcK-K KI1MV, JUNfc zt, una lUe PH/LADELPH/A PHILLIES HAVEN'T WON A PENNANT H SINCE /950. LAST YF SEASON! THEY MY LACKED REL/EF H PRRTHTNGR. THIS YEAR. THEY HAVE tug mcgraw AN OFF-SEASON TRADE WITH N.Y. METS BROUGHT THE "YOU GOTTA BELIEVE" MAN TO PHILADELPHIA, FOR DEL UNSER. PHILLIES FOLLOWERS BELIEVE HE'LL MAKE A BIG DLFHMMHCE BEFORE THE 31-YEAR OLD LEFTY RELIES HEAVILY ON A SCREWBALL PITCH WHICH EX- YANKEE.\ RALPH TERRY TA UGHT HIM. M C QRA W IS EFFECTIVE WITH IT AGAINST BOTH RIGHT AND \EFTHANDED BATSMEN, M- Y : ( "MEANWHILE BACK AT THE COURTHOUSE" BRANCH COURT Associate Circuit Judge Conrad Floeter Anthony G. Zelasko, 1516 Catalpa, McHenry, bound over to the Grand jury on a charge of aggravated battery. Jesus M. DeLeon, 5213 Or­ chard, McCullom Lake, guilty of disorderly conduct, fined $50 and costs. Another charge of resisting a peace officer was nolle prossed on a motion by the State's Attorney. Bruce S. Bright, 701 N. Lillian street, McHenry, guilty of reckless driving, fined $50 and costs. Associate Circuit Judge Leonard Brody James J. Kubalewski, 8203 Gerson, Wonder Lake, guilty of criminal trespass to land, fined $15 and costs. Ronald E. Margason, Ringwood, guilty of criminal trespass to land, fined $15 and costs. Associate Circuit Judge Roland Herrmann James A. Preston, 3718 Filmore, McHenry, guilty of disorderly conduct, fined $100 and costs. COMPLAINTS Spring Grove Chief of Police Willard Bychowski charges that on June 9, Tony R. Christensen of 1921 Main street, Spring Grove, committed the offenses of leaving the scene of an accident involving damage to another vehicle, driving with suspended or revoked driver's license, resisting a peace of­ ficer, disorderly conduct and reckless driving in that he did operate his vehicle on East court and Main street in Spring Grove with a willful and wanton disregard for the life, limb and safety of the public. Bond set at $3,025. Court date July 29. Deputy Sheriff Merton Jones charges that on June 14, Hans Bjorkman of 2515 N. Regner road, McHenry, committed the offense of possession of am­ munition without the requisite firearms owners identification card. Bond set at $1,000, court date July 8. Deputy Sheriff Merton Jones charges that on June 14, Hans Bjorkman of 2515 N. Regner road, McHenry, committed the offense of disorderly conduct in that he did create a disturbance at Swanson's Chalet, 1211 N. River road, McHenry, although he had been requested to leave by the management and later returned to the scene after having been escorted home by said deputy. Bond set at $25, court date July 8. Deputy Sheriff Robert L. Joosten charges that on June 14, Raymond White Jr., of 1336 Stubby lane, McHenry, com­ mitted the offense of criminal damage to land in that he remained upon the land of Bar­ bara Clary at 1406 W. May, McHenry, after having received notice from her to depart. Bond set at $1,000, court date July 29. Deputy Sheriff Eugene Kalinowski charges that on June 24, Michael F. Pearson of 3915 W. Waukegan, McHenry, committed the offense of disorderly conduct in that he "Don't worry Martha. We'll telephone JERRY'S and they'll come right out." JERRY'S"66" AUTO REPAIR 4713 W. Rt. 120 Days 344-1278 Towing after 11pm FINP THE LETTT*S IN THIS PICTURE fiUTSPeLU ,* McHenry * ; Pigtail League * did use obscene, foul and abusive language in a loud voice and threatened harm toward all police officers present at the scene and did act in an unreasonable manner, bond set at $25, court date July 22. Deputy Sheriff Eugene Kalinowski charges that on June 24, Thomas M. Pearson of 3915 W. Waukegan road, McHenry, committed the of­ fenses of resisting a peace officer and disorderly conduct in that he did refuse to cooperate with police officers and had to be forcibly hand­ cuffed and restrained by complainant and other officers. Bond set at $1,025, court date June 26. Deputy Sheriff Eugene Kalinowski charges that on June 24, Kurt W. Bullis of 8703 Sunset drive, Wonder Lake, committed the offenses of resisting a peace officer and disorderly conduct in that he did refuse to cooperate with officers and had to be forcibly handcuffed and restrained by said deputy and other officers as well as by members of the rescue squad. He also became belligerent and abusive toward the doctors and nurses at Woodstock hospital and at­ tempted to escape from police authorities at the hospital. Bond was set at $1,025. Thomas Vetor charges that on June 21, Kurt Bullis of Wonder Lake committed the offense of battery in that he did hit the complainant thereby causing him bodily harm. Bond set at $1,000, court date'July 1. Deputy Sheriff John Bognar charges that on June 24, Gary W. Gabriel of 2809 S. Tower drive, McHenry, committed the offense of unlawful possession of cannabis. Bond set at $1,000. Deputy Sheriff John Bognar charges that on June 24, Richard S. Halcom of 1402 Pine, McHenry, committed the of­ fense of unlawful possession of alcoholic liquor. Bond set at $1,000. Weekly Standings June 22, 197.t \ Junior Division . . W L State Farm Insurance 6 7 Riverside S A C. 4 3 Miller Formless 2 4 St uc's Pizza 7 5 Senior Division Dan's Food Mart 5 7 Jim Adams Auto Body 4 4 Snug Harbor 4 3 Adams Radiator Serv. 7 6 Note: The pictures of the six teams that have not been taken of the pigtail teams will be submitted by July 10 from Hank Miller. Wayne Gaylord made arrangements with him to develop the taken pictures of these*six teams. ummoT! RACIflO EVERV fAT. OITC SUPE* MODIFIED AND SPORTSMEN CARS FEATURING THE MIDWEST'S TOP DRIVERS • P.M. of the Fairgrounds ~ Wilmot, Wit. ^ % OLD TIMERS RACES " PLUS REGULAR PROGRAM PRAIRIE JOURNALISM: THE NINETEENTH CENTURY Nineteenth-century journal­ ism was colorful, partisan, and popular. National circulation jumped by 222 percent while population increased 63 per­ cent between the years 1870 and 1890, for example, and that pattern was reflected in Illinois. Part of the rise in readership came with an in­ crease in the literacy rate from 80 to 87 percent, while the rest came from a noticeable lower­ ing of the literary pretensions of the papers themselves. In die post-Civil War years, the most influential paper in Chicago and perhaps the state was the Chicago Tribune, under the leadership of Joseph Medill. Assuming a conserva­ tive Republican stance, the Tribune was anti-labor and a vigorous defender of the status quo. With ever-expanding inter­ ests, the Tribune opened a London Bureau in 1877, sent reporters to represent both sides of the Russo-Turkish.War, and in 1891 assigned a reporter to accompany Admiral Perry to Greenland. Sports and wom­ en's pages were added and the paper amply illustrated with pictures. Adding to the proud­ ly partisan tone of the Chicago press was the Chicago Intro- Ocean forever attempting to live up to its motto, "Republi­ can in everything; independent in nothing." The chief competitor of the Tribune in Chicago, however, was the Chicago Daily News. Founded in 1876, it followed the Pulitzer pattern of expos£ and spectacular detective work. Usually Republican, .it was moderate on labor issues, and labeled the Tribune "The Chi­ cago Daily Nuisance." It con­ ducted a spectacular campaign against traction magnate Charles Yerkes, and introduced a colorful style in sports re­ porting, originating the base­ ball term "southpaw," for in­ stance. In 1892, the Chicago Daily News was the only Illi­ nois paper among the top 10 circulating papers in the country. Newspapers downstate were oftcr family enterprises, per­ sonal and closc to their readers' lives. In their pages one could find out who had Sunday din­ ner with whom or which son or daughter was visiting hack home; and while the inside might be boiler plate, rural papers carried all the local news on page one. Railroad wrecks made particularly good copy, especially when a local citizen was involved. Flamboy­ ant styles and moralistic edito­ rials sold papers in those Victo­ rian years. In the days before TV, jour­ nalism provided a real presence to its readers. For example, the Chicago Press, adopting no pretense at balance or fairness, reported one incident of the UNDERSTANDING ALCOHOLISM a health column from the Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health Administration U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare Teenage Drinking (First of two columns on this subject) Is there a teenager in the house? If so, chances are that he or she has at least experi­ mented with drinking some alcoholic beverage^ According to recent studies for the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare and the Department of Transpor­ tation, half of America's high school students drink once a month or more, and about 61 percent of those young drinkers have been drunk on at least one occasion. Preliminary findings from a 1974 national survey indicate Great Strike of 1877 as fol­ lows: The pale air was streaked with blood. Huge, bloated women at the windows yelled encourage­ ment and defiance. Pistol balls shrieked as they flew. The clash of sabers and shouts of mad­ dened men made the hot air hideous. Horses were spurred into the mob, and swords rose and fell with cruel significance. Alleys were gutted Of molten masses of enraged humanity. Great massive blows fell on their passion-stained faces, and tore the rage out of them. Shrinking figures darted behind boxes and fired upon the cavalry. The pris- soners shrieked for rescue and sank quivering in the wagons under the cut of clubs. Stones rattled on the streets and from the windows came showers of missiles. Competiton among editors was vigorous, described by one writer in the Chicago Evening Journal: And when. . .we feel con­ strained to call a contemporary a "measureless liar," he knows we mean business, and if he is a man who will get mad at a little trivial thing like that, he comes over with a club and mashes us and that is the end of it. We may have occasion to denounce him. in the heat of the conflict, as a "moral hyena. . .and (' stroyer of the truth, upon whose lips the dear, pure truth, if ever it could spring from a heart so blackened and stained with crime, turns to ashes and bitterness before it can be uttered." We may feel it our duty to call an esteemed contemporary a "pattering slave to a gang of petty tyrants," an "unprincipled scoundrel whose groveling carcass, wallowing in the cesspool of corruption steeped to its thieving eyes in abhorrent partisan infamy, pur­ sues its nefarious traffic to the very shadow of the mocking g.illows it lias cheated too long." We get mad at these llunjis sometimes, dreadful mad, awful mad. Hut we get over it, especially if the other man is the biggest. By I*>00 journalism in Illi­ nois was alive and well, as diverse and raucous and ex­ pansive as the state itself. that even among seventh graders, 63 percent of boys and 54 percent of girls have had at least one drink. The proportion of teenage drinkers increased with grade to 93 percent of senior boys and 87 percent of senior girls having had at least one drink. In view of the known im­ portance of drinking in the American lifestyle, it comes as no surprise that such a vast majority of teenagers haVe been introduced to alcohol. Teenaged drinkers also have fallen prey to the same myths as adult drinkers. For exam­ ple, although beer is by far the alcoholic beverage teen­ agers drink most often, many young people do not under­ stand that beer is as intoxicat­ ing as distilled spirits. For the average teenager, for example, driving impairment occurs after consuming four 12-ounce cans of beer within a 12-hour period. Many parents today have a misconception about their children's drinking. They are often relieved that their teen­ ager is using alcohol rather than another drug. They do not fully realize- that alcohol also is a potent drug, and that teenage alcoholism is increas­ ing. According to Dr. Morris Chafetz, Director of the Na­ tional Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NI&AA), a part of HEW's Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health Administra-. tion, "If you figure that there are 22 million young people in this country between the ages of 12 and 17, and 5 percent get drunk once a week, that's 1,130,000 kids overdosing on alcohol once a week." Drinking among adolescents is complicated by teenagers' tendencies to socialize in groups, to hang out at school or shopping center parking lots, and to structure their free time around the automo­ bile. The lethal combination of drinking and driving re­ sults in 60 percent of traffic fatalities in the 16-24 age group occurring under the in­ fluence of alcohol. For some suggestions from the National Institute on Al­ cohol Abuse and Alcoholism concerning what adults can do to help teenagers learn re­ sponsible drinking habits, see the next column on "Teenage Drinking." * * * * Health is as important as brains, if you know what we mean. READY FOR DOG SHOW - Darrel Bowen, son of Mr. and Mrs. * Arnold Bowen, Union, prepares his dog for the 4-H dog show at this . year's McHenry County Fair. Darrel is a member of the Buds of .i Promise 4-11 club. The fair will run from July 30 through Aug. 3 * with the 4-H dog show set for Aug. 1 at 9 a.m. (DON PEASLEY PHOTOGRAPHY BY KAAREN DODGE) CROSSWORD PUZZLE T O D A Y ' S A N S W E R ACROSS I Moroccan city S One kind of flood II Nimble 12 Bronco- busting show IS Separated, as combatants (2 wds.) IS Indian cymbals IS Street in Paris 17 Caution 19 Rim 22 Mexican inn 25 Alleviate 26 Where not to be caught (3 wds.) 28 Portico 29 Carpenter's need 30 Blue the Night" 31 Undersized 32 Netherlands river 33 Floating zoo 36 Intervene (2 wds.) 41 Overhead 42 Ghostly 43 Send back 44 Expiate DOWN 1 Engrossed 2 Tequila chaser 3 Coo's partner 4 Wholly 5 Foursome's meeting place 6 Impostor 7 Bounding gait 8 Oklahoma city 9 Sunday talk (abbr.) 10 On a winning streak 14 Unsubstantial 17 How funny! 18 Nigerian city 19 He was "Shane" 20 Key 21 Equal O I V A 3 3 3M13 9 3 >13 1 (a;N 11M a a i vi3 V 22 Nonsense! 23 Wise about 24 Put away, as cargo 25 Small whirlpool 27 Form of John 31 Jewish month 32 Dolly of "Hello Dolly" 33 Concerning aircraft 34 Check; halt 35 "Bury My Heart at Wounded --" 36 Word with horse and hand 37 Greek clan division 38 Household figure 39 Oolong or tsia 40 Moisten Police Radio is the busiest network ^ in town! Give the gift of excitement this year •ec-enc^ Action Radio All new. this fascinating little 4-channel performer permits him to hear rnmute-by- minute action as it happens in the city . . . automatically. Slide-switch controlled, it searches for a signal... stops to hear the live action ... then resumes the search for another signal. A convenient, slide-out panel provides amazingly easy crystal access. And this highly styled, heavy-duty plastic case fits any decor . : . home or office. Come in today and hear the live sound of the city. It's not just a great gift for Dad. it's fun for the whole family. Carey Appliance only $8995 suggested retail, plus crystals 1241 N. Green St. McHenry, III. Ph. 385-5500 We have a mode! for every purpose... every purse. w " I HI' liUUiu Fido, man's best friend, gets his name from the Latin word f»>r "faithful": fidus. RESURFACE NOW WITHOUT REMOVING "Lectroglaz" is the name of a new process for resurfacing old built-in bathtubs and ceramic tile. It can also be used for repairing chips Incurred in installation of a new tub, or to change the fixture's color. It can be done on location, without removal. Its process merges compounds to the original bathtub enamel, thus developing a permanent molecular bond, reportedly more acid and chemical resistant than the original finish. IU manufacturers say that the "lectroglazing" process will cut down on staining effects of water-dissolved minerals, one of the major causes of bathtub deterioration. H. E. Buch & Sons, Inc. PLUMBING - HEATING - AIR CONDITIONING COMPLETE BATHROOM fl> KITCHEN MODERNIZING Largest Select ion of Vanitiet in Northern III. VISIT OUR BATH BOUTIQUE 3012 West Route 120 McHenry, III. (815) 385-0048 STOP RAISING YOUR HEAVY GARAGE DOOR BY HAND INSTALL A MOORE n MAT I C AUTOMATIC GARAGE DOOR OPENER Enjoy your home more with a Bilco Basement Door Whether you're going to build a new home or stay in your present one, a Bilco Door will help you to enjoy it more. It makes your basement just as convenient and useful as the rest of your house -- easy to furnish and safe for your family's enjoyment. If your home was built without an outside basement door, adding one now will open up a whole extra floor of valuable space. Space for recreation, hobbies and storage. Bulky articles move directly in and out; no tracking through upstairs rooms. As a replacement for a wooden door, the rugged all- steel Bilco Door will add beauty and value to your home -- while paying for itself by saving repair costs. AMERICA S FINEST BASEMENT DOOR Stop in and see our display. We'll give you free literature on how to do it. Or, suggest a man to do it for you. A ^ ALEXANDER ^ LUMBER 909 North Front St McHeniy 385-1424 (

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