Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 5 Sep 1975, p. 14

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r U ; M I 1 * 1 V I M * K V I F R K H H V W . S K I ' I K M I U K » « » » ; . % o'clock at SI Ma r x ' s church. with burial in the church cemetery. Deaths GFRTRl'DF 1. SCTTON Gertrude I.. Sutton. 54. of Chicago, died Sept. 3 at Lake Shore Nursing Center. Chicago. She was born Sept. H. 1920. in Chicago, the daughter of Kobert E. and Hose Justen Sutton. Miss Sutton was a legal secretary. She had been a summer resident of Fair Oaks subdivision all her life. Her only survivor is a brother, Robert E. Sutton, Jr., of Davenport, la. ' Friends may call at the Peter M. Justen and Son funeral home on Friday from 3to9t) m. A funeral Mass has been ten- tP'.ively scheduled for Saturday MARIAN CENTRAL KICKS OFF M a r i a n C e n t r a l ' s Hurricanes, with head football coach Tom Parker at the helm, are busily preparing for their home opener this Saturday against the visiting Har­ vard Hornets. Parker greeted fifteen lettermen and 35 varsity candidates on Aug. 13 when practice began with two-a-day sessions. SUNNY The warm climate of Palm Springs, Calif, is great for sun wor­ shipers. Dana Schoenfield holds a branch full of ripening grapefruit to show that golden suntans aren't all that flourish under the sunshine. What price Freedom? OR HOWDOYOU payoff the^ZSR.qf Independence? Our horses were running out of oats. Our soldiers, out of bullets. And the revolution, out of steam. We needed some money fast, but the Continental Congress had no power to tax. So we asked investors to pitch in. And they did. With over 27 million dollars. Today, it costs even more to keep things running, to hold on to the freedom we won. And the way to pitch in now is through (J. S. Savings Bonds. And when you buy Bonds, you're not only helping your country, you're helping yourself. fust sign up for the automatic Payroll Savings Plan at work. Or buy Bonds at your bank. U. S. Savings Bonds. A great way to keep our country, and you, in the running. N o t F B o n d s p i v b r ' i n t e r e s t w h e n h e l d t o m a t u r i t y o f S v c i * % M ' ^ V e t h c f i r s t v c i f ) I n t e r e s t i s n o t s u b j e c t t o s t a t e o r l o c a l i n c o m e t a x e s , a n d f e d e r a l t a x m a v b e d e f e r r e d u n t i l r e d e m p t i o n Take . , .stock . inAmenca. 200 years at the same location. & POKOTIIA J. PKPLA Dorotha .1. Prdla. nee liurokcr. 74. of 520 K. Jefferson court. Ingleside. died Aug. 29 at Woodstock Residence. She was born Julv 23, 1901. in Nashva. Ia. She xvas a charter niemlier ot the Fox Lake Haptist church and taught Sunday school for many years. She was a former president of the Women's Christian Temperance Union. Survivors include three sons, Arthur, Ingleside, Theodore, Spring Grove, and Robert of Minnesota; eight grand­ children; three great­ grandchildren; and two brothers and two sisters. Her husband, Robert L., preceded her in death in 1962. Services were held Wed­ nesday morning at 11 o'clock at the Fox Lake Baptist church with burial in the Fox Lake cemetery. Memorials may be made to the Fox Luke Baptists church building fund. CHKISTINU LAY A funeral Mass will be of­ fered at 12 o'clock Friday at St. Bede's Catholic church for Christine M. Lay, 79, who died Sept. 2 in the home of her daughter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hamsher, 12 N. i'lstakee Lake road, fox Lake, where she had made her home for the past eighteen years. Mrs. Lay was born Apr. 10, 1896, in Ringwood, and operated Lay's Tavern in Johnsburg for many years. She was a member of St. Bede's church and the Blessed Virgin Sodality of St. John's church, Johnsburg. Besides fier daughter, Mrs. Kenneth (Thelma) Hamsher, she is survived by two grand­ daughters, Mrs. Dale (Debbie) Glen and Mrs. Jeff (Sharon) Michels of Pistakee Highlands; and a grandson, Kirk, of Fox Lake; two great-grandsons, Dale and Kevin Glen; a sister, Isabelle Miller of Richmond; and several nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her husband, George Lay; three sisters, Margaret Freund, Johanna Smith and Katherine Smith; three brothers, Benjamin, Frank and Ed Tonyan. Visitation was held at the K.K. Hamsher funeral home in Fox Lake. . ARE MAKING YOU AN OFFER YOU CANT REFUSE! IB permanently bound is(§ue of the cHenry Plaindealer'sl Centennial Issue 136 Pages of Mflenry History with pictures galord in your library as a convenient iference for years to cqpne. ONLY $000 GET Yours Today at the McHenry Plaindealer 3812 W. ELM ST. McHENRY • 385 0170 limited supply

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