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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 22 Feb 1962, p. 16

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cr Page Sixteen THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER Thursday, February 22, 1962 Legal* NOTICE STATE OF ILLINOIS ) )SS COUNTY OF McHENRY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF McHENRY COUNTY General No. 3906$ HENDRIKA ANNA ) FLIEGE, I Plaintiff,) vs. ) ARTHUR FLIEGE, ) Defendant.) The requisite affidavit for publication having been filed no lice is hereby given to you, Arthur Fliege, that a suit has been filed in the Circuit Court of JIcHenry County, Illinois, by the Plaintiff against you, for divorce and for other relief; that summons duly issued against you as provided by law, and which suit is still pending. Now, therefore, unless you, Arthur Fliege, file your answer to the complaint in said suit or otherwise make your appearance therein, in the said Circuit Court of McHenry County, held in the Court House, in the City of Woodstock, Illinois, on or before the second Monday" of March, 1962, being the 12th day of March, 1962, default may be entered against you at any time after that day, and a decree entered in accordance with the prayer of' said complaint. LESTER EDINGER Clerk R. A. Stueben Attorney for Plaintiff 3317 W. Elm St. McHenry, Illinois (Pub. Feb. 8-15-22, 1962) NAME TOP HONOH ROLL STUDENTS AT JUNIOR HIGH . MASTER IN CHANCERY'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE STATE OF ILLINOIS ) )SS COUNTY OF McHENRY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT THEREOF IN CHANCERY • Gen. Mo. 38634 FIRST FEDERAL SAV- ) INGS & LOAN ASSOCIA-) TION of Des Plaines, a ) corporation organized under) the laws of the United ) States of America " Plaintiff) vs. •*" ) UE ROY" J. PAPINEAU ) and SARAH P. PAPINEAU,) his wife; and FIRST FED-) tRAL SAVINGS AND ) LOAN ASSOCIATION of) Chicago, a corporation ) / organized under the laws of) the United States of ) America ) Defendants) PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Decree made and entered by the said Circuit Court of McHenry County, Illinois, in the above entitled cause on the 29th day of December, 1961, I, ROBERT J. LEALI, Master in Chancery of the said Circuit Court of McHenry County, Illinois, will on the 8th day of March, 1962, at the hour of 10:30 o'clock in the forenoon thereof, Central Standard Time, at the East front door of the McHenry County Courthouse in the City of Woodstock, McHenry County, Illinois, sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash all and singular the following described real estate in said Decree mentioned, or so much thereof as shall be sufficient to satisfy said Decree, all situated in the County of McHenry and State of Illinois, to-wit: Lot Two (2) in Block Ten (10) in Unit No. Nine < 9) Lake in the Hills Estates being a Subdivision of part of Section Twenty (20*. Township Forty-Three (43), Range Eight (8), as shown in the Plat recorded in the Recorder's Office of McHenry County as Document No. 245262 in McHenry County, Illinois. The list of "A" and "B" honor roll students at the Jun ior high school was released this past week. On the "A" list were the following: Eighth Graders Carolyn Anderson, Kathy Beck, Susan Bockman, Mari lyn Cima, ' Roberta Counley, Linda Davis, Sally Dresdow, Sherry Gehrke, Ginny Grek, Geoffrey Houck, Becky Kissling, , Lynn Krebs, Linda LapinskvxLinda Larson, Phillip Miller, ^GJlenn Olson, Susan Richards, Kathy Thomas and Tom Tomlinson. Seventh Graders Jean Anderson, Ronald Behnke, Sandy Bejison, John Carter, Terry Cerny, Nancy Jone, Diane Cook. Mike Doherty, Bruce Domoto, Lynn Farm, Loma Gladstone, Sail} Guettler, Carol Johnson, Karen Johnson, Nancy Kralowetz Donna Lamberg, Ruth Light ner, Sandra Lindgren, Richarc" Looze, Louise M a t t h e s i u s. Kathleen Moriarity, Terry Morrison, Jeffrey Nellis, Judy Nosal, Jody Oppenheim. Janice Palmbach, Alan Palvic, Rand.v Phillipi, John Reihansperger, Dale Snell. Donald Stinespring Steve Thomas, Shirley Vilini and Sam Winters. Sixth Graders David Backhaus, Kim Davis, Diane Dimon, Jean Dixon Lynne Dixon, Kathleen Eternick, Steven Kutnick, Jackie Pribvl, Susan Pries, Barbara Redetzky. Leota Stinespring, Lee Varese and Barbara Wertke. Those named to the "B" honor roll are the following: Eighth Graders James Arbogast, Laura Christensen, Bob Dowe, Diane Dyslin, Christy Fossum, William Hanson, Terry Herdrick, Jacqueline Jacques. Debbie Kuhlman, Michael Kutnick, Bob McGee, Alan Olsen, Brace Potratz, Donna Schmelzer, Shirley Schuringa, Audrey Stateczmy, Bob Townsend, Marlene Viita, Jani£ Wetzel and Patricia Gray. Seventh Graders Harold Aeverman, Mark Alderson, Gayle Anderson, Karen Anderson. Michael Anderson, William Bates, Kathy Blair, Bonnie Bonder, Peggy Ca-nady, Kit Carstens, Bill Chadwick, Dorothy Conrad, Richard Dickson, Ella Dietzel, Linda Dolatowski, Tom Evans, Maria Fisher, Nancy Grek, John Hale. Janet Hansen, Richard Hansen, Debbie Harkins, Richard Heckman, Arlette Johnston. Randy Karls, Virginia Karls, Jennifer Krickl, Stephen Kreier, Dan Lange, Tom Lawrence, Gisela Maier, Wendy Markgraff, Marilyn Martle. Linda Meyer, Mary Moll, Lynne Munroe. Sharon Myers Nels Nielsen, Barbara Olsen Darlene Palis, Francis Piatt, Julie Rode, Connie Sallman Kathy Smith, Mike Sobacki Clarence Sossong, Alan Spencer, Kandy Thompson, Paul Tihenen, Gregory Uhles, Forrest Viita, William Voeltz and JoAnn Weichmann. Sixth Graders. Ann Marie Alexeyuk, Vin ton Alderson, John Anderson Lynn Anderson, Pyithy Bolger Dennis DePauw, Mark Domo t o, Katherine Francke .Charmaine Galion, Lora Hackmeister, Rosalyn Hammershoy Jennifer Kuhlman, Sue Lundy, Jarianne Mazur. Dawn Parenti, Laurie Sanford, Paul Schwegel, Bill Smith, Ardelle Voeltz, Tony Wagner, Nicole Wirtz and Dan Wolf. M. I. BALDINGER'S FEDERAL TAX HORIZONS 1--YOUR 1961 INCOME TAX Income Tax Forms Individual taxpayers should be fully acquainted with the forms available to them in the preparation and filing of their 1961 income tax returns. Don't forget that the Government is stepping up its procedures of auditing returns. It is making more and more "efforts to close the holes through which income which should be reported and taxed goes unreported. New Form 1040 is a two- •>nge form, printed on both ides of a single sheet. It can be used by any individual vhose income is from wages or alary and who has no more han S200 in taxable dividends md interest. It is to be used whether you take the standard deduction or itemize your depletions. For a married couple piling jointly, the $200 test applies to iljeir combined incomes. Schedule B must be usee' ilon% wilh basic 1040, (1) if •ou have more than S200 in axable dividends and interest, ir (2) if you have any income ?ven just one dollar from ents. royalties, a pension, an innuity. a trust or an estate. This Schedule is like pages 3 -md 4 of last year's 1040. Schedule C must be used if you operate a business or profession. Schedule D is to be used it vou have gains or losses from <he sale or exchange of property. The Intern:.1. Revenue Servce has changed the form in iany places and you will have -> follow it carefully. Card Form 1040 A has not been changed very much. This unch card can be used if you are a wane earner with income under $10,000. including not mere than $200 in dividends, nterest. and wages not subject 0 withholding AND you want 1 use the slandard deduction, besides being simple, if vour nrome is leSu than $5 000, you can leave it to the District Director to compute the tax and send you a bill. Remember, you cannot use the card form if you have any other type of income or you want to itemize your deductions or claim certain credits. Think hard before using this form. We repeat, there are certain disadvantages to using the card form 1040 A. (1) xou eannot itemize deductions. (2T As an employee ycU cannot deduct unreimbursed travelling or expenses in connection with your work. (3) Sick pay exemption is not available under wage continuation plan. (4) No claim for credits for payments of estimated tax or I960 over payment. (5) Head-ofhousehold rates and surviving spouse benefits are not available. (6) You don't get the 4 per cent credit for dividends received. (.7) You don't get a retirement income credit. (8) You can't claim an exemption for a person you are supporting with others under a multiple support declaration. Don't forget to put your Social Security number beside "our name at the top of page i of Form 1040 or 1040 A. This will be your identification lumber for Internal Revenue Service's electronic equipment. If you don't have a Social Security number, an identification number will be given you sometime this year by IRS. Employers, ba n k s, corporations, etc. who make payments to you are going to be required to report the payments with your identification number to enable the Government to '•heck up on taxpayers. One Senator recently described the law which authorizes IRS to assign an identification number to every taxiktver ^ "The Biggest Loophole- Closinc Bill Ever." By a'l means, read the intrue'ions furnished by the '"lOrernment carefully. They Me most helpful. Light Refresher For Late Evening ' _ _ Guest, or family, will enjoy this Banana Orange Mold aftei cards, television, or an evening's visiting. The combination of fruit flavors, molded attractively in lime flavor gelatin is light and refreshing . . . just perfect as a late evening dessert or salad. Of course, it's always suitable for luncheon or afternoon refreshments. Note: If your kitchen doesn't boast a one-quart mold, use a loaf pan or metal mixing bowl ... or just spoon it into dessert dishes: it's delicious and pretty that way, too. Banana Orange Mold 1 regular size package 1 cup cold water (3 ounces) lime flavor */2 cup orange sections, free gelatin of membrane 1 cup boiling water 1 banana, sliced Dissolve gelatin in boiling water. Add cold water. Chill until •lightly thickened. Fold in fruit. Pour into a one-quart mold. Chili Until firm. Unmold and garnish with watercress. Serve with whipped cream dressing, or sweetened whipped cream, if desired Makes 5 servings. SUNDAY, FEB. 25 "TAKING OFF HUMAN SHACKLES" Dated at Woodstock, Illinois, j Grand Rapids, Michigan, womthis 6th day of February, j an relates healing of arthritis 1962. ROBERT J. LEALI of the spine Radio: Master in Chancery WAIT (820 kc) Sun. 9.00 a.m. Attorney for Plaintiff WCLM-FM (101.9 mc) 10:15 Kenneth G. Meyer 1 a.m. Des Plaines, Illinois , WJJD (1160 kc) 8:00 a.m. last (Pub. Feb. 15-22, Mar. 1. 1962) ' Sunday each month. ar Robert Taft, Jr. - SAVE - SAVE - Fuel Oil BIG CASH DISCOUNT OF OHIO 12th DISTRICT CANDIDATE for Congress, Republican Primary AT WAlMi©AN 200 North Green hay Road Reception, 7 p.m. . . . Dinner, 8 p.m. Tickets: $5.00; at Wildman Headquarters 80 Seranton Ave., Lake Bluff, Illinois Ho. 2 F i ;L OIL No. of Gals. Price qal. Save qal. Up to 149 17* ---- 150 - 399 1 S[h* Save M/2* 400 - 750 15* Save 2* Over 750 l4'/2* Save 2,/2* Oil Co SCIENCE FAcTAND FABli TWt MISERY OF A SORE THROAT IMS 8«N TACKIED VWITH MAM OOP REMEDIES OVER TWE YtARS. IN ANCIENT EMOLAND, A SUREFIRE REMEDY WAS TO flET A CHARM ANPTD WEAR IT IM AREP BfiOr AROUND THE THROW. TUB IRISH MA© A*«M»r6 CPNYHOL"THROAT REMEDY. TMEV GCT A SALT HERRING AMP APPtlEP IT TO THE FffiET. 11= THAT PIPN'TJ«ORK,THEY TIEtf CABBAQE'LeAVKt (WITHOUT THe^pRMEB AROUNP THE THROAT. HOWEVER, A SORE THROAT CAN BE A WARNING SIGN OF A IMPENDING COLD, INFLUENZA OR PNEUMONIA A"*STREPrTHRCAT, WHICH CAN LEAP TO A SERIOUS PISEASE, SUCH AS RHEUMATIC FEVER, IS SOMETIMES MISTAKEN FOR A SIMPLE SORE THROAT, f E SURE TID SEE YOUR FAMILY DOCTOR POR EXAMINATION. ERTISE - IT PAYS!! KNOW YOUR USS TRITON (SSN 586) THE TRITON... AN UNDERSEA GOUTH WITH A CRUISING RANGE OF ABOUT 112,000 MILES... WltHOUT REFUELING. THE WORLD'S LARGEST SUBMARINE, TRITON IS ACTUALLY A THREEDECK, 6,000 TON, 447 FOOT SUBMERSIBLE CRUISER. THE SSN-586 IS THE FIRST "SUB" TO BE POWERED BY TWO REACTORS WHICH GIVE HER A TOP SPEED ABOUT EQUAL TO THAT OF A FAST CARRIER TASK FORCE. OUTFITTED WITH THE LATEST RADAR GEAR, TRITON IS ALSO THE FIRST NUCLEAR SUBMARINE DESIGNED FOR PICKET DUTY. i ©<«Sf SrfAUfthy SAFEGUARD YOUR 'HEALTH A Public Service of the ois State Medical Society D AND ITS COMPOSITION The' function of the blood in the human body has many purposes, all of which are geared to keep the body alive and in good health. Constantly circulating, the blood carries oxygen, water and food to all cells of the body. When something happens to disturb the blood machinery, disease and illness result. . Sixty thousand blood channels comprise the circulatory system. Acting as a pump, the heart sends the blood through this system to feed the body. Blood- htfjtes body cells to breathe b^bringing them oxygen from the lungs and by taking carbon dioxide from the cells back to the lungsv where it is expelled. It carries food from the intestines to the cells, takes waste products to places where they are removed from the body. It furnishes water to the cell tissues, and distributes heat produced by the working muscles and internal organs Serving as a temperature regulator for the body, the blood, through its own chemical and cellular composition, acts as a bodyguard against infections. The blood consists of a liquid called plasma and blood ctlls which float in it. Normally a man has more blood than a woman, the average being ibout 12 pints in the man and 10 in the woman. Not all of hhis blood is circulating^at-^ne time. Some is stored in various "eservoirs of the body, the two Tiost important of which are the spleen, which is located below the ribs on the left side of the abriqmen, and the liver which is situated on the right °.ide of the ahdomen below the ribs. Red blood cells, formed in red bone marrow, pick up oxytbn in the lungs and carry it to tho tissues. This ability is provided by hemoglobin, or red coloring matter. White celis. made in the bone marrow and certain glands of the body, act as "scavengers." des t r o y i n g germs or bacteria in the body. The coagulation, or clotting ability of the blood, is provid- • ed by other constituents called platelets and fibrinogen. About ^2 per cent water makes up the blood plasma, but the remaining 8 per cent contains solids such as proteins, chemi- ** cals, hormones, and other important substances which help protect the body against disease. The typing of blood is most important, for, if a transfusion is necessary, it is essential that the blood types are compatible. There are four main types of blood -- A. B, AB and O. Many sub-groups have been identi- m fied, such as the Rh factor, all - of which are important. In a state of good health the blood forming organs are all working in unison. But when the normal teamwork is inter-! rupter, blood diseases develop such as anemia, pernicious anemia, or leukemia. Some persons whose blood does not clot normally suffer from a condition called hemophilia, -- while others whose blood clots® too readily develop a thrombosis. an obstructing clot. Laboratory measures help to determine the status of an individual's blood. A blood count involves four different procedures: one specimen is tested to learn the number of red blood cells; one for the white cells; one for the hemoglobin, and ono for th6 examination of the stained blood film under the microscope. The eating of good wholesome food is necessary to build nourishing blood. This starts the assembly line of body mechanics which involves the digestive syslem and other organs that make up the factory to create normal blood. SHOP AT HOME Symptoms of Distress Arising from STCHS1CH ULCEUS DUE TO EXCESS ACID f]Uic&4 tflLiEFun rtu CvST Ask About 15-Day Trial Offer! !> Over five million packages of the WILL ARB TREATMENT have been sold for relief of symptoms of distress arising from Stomach and Duodenal Ulcers due to Excess Acid--Poor Digestion, Sour or Upset ™ Stomach, Gmslneu, Heartburn, Sleeplessness, etc., due to Excess Add. Ask for "Willard's Message" which fully explain* this home treatment--tree--at BOLGER'S Drug Store Machinery Moved All Types and Sizes (No Job Too Large or Too Small) For Prompt, Fast and Efficient Service call EV 5-4645 Al's Weiding & Repeir Service 4021 W. Main St. McHenry, 111. • at size to ve m you want on? 704 S. Front Si. EV 5-3232 JP & CHEVROLET IMPALA Room, refinement and riding comfort. ForegroundfAhe Impala Sport Sedan. CORVAIR MONZA Sports Car spice without a sports car price. At rear is the Monza Club Coupe. CHEVY II NOVA The frisky family-sized Chevrolet with a low, low price tag. Above right, Nova Sport Coupe. Like your driving sporty, with quicksilver steering, flat-as-a-pancake cornering, sure-footed traction? Then a Corvair Monza's for you. Or maybe the new-size Chevy II is more to your liking. Built for big families and still slips neatly into small parking places. And, with this, the kind of ingenious engineering (new easyriding Mono-Plate rear springs, for example) that CHEVROLET won this year's coveted Car Life Magazine Award for Engineering Excellence. But say you want to go all out--to get the fall treatment in space, spirit and splendor. Then there's nothing like a Jet-smooth Chevrolet. Makes paying more pointless. So size 'em up--then save it up--at your Chevrolet dealer's. See the new Chevrolet, new Chevy II and new Corvair at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's CLARK CHEVROLET 3609 W. Elm Street McHenry, 111. EVergreen b-0277^|

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