<* Wednesday, November 21, 1962 THE McHENEY PJJUNDEALER Pago Ftoo OBITUARIES EMMA BERTRANG Funeral services will be held at 10 o'clock Wednesday in St. Josephs Catholic church, Aurora, for Mrs. Emma Schmitt (£ Bertrang, 79, of that city, who died Monday, Nov. 19, in her home. She was a native of Johnsburg, where she was born Sept. 27, 1883, daughter of Jacob and Mary Schmitt. .Mrs. Bertrang is survived by her husband, Nicholas; a son, John, of Port Washington, Wis.; three daughters, Anna Moxey of Santa Fe. New Mex- £ ico; Mary Poss and Mrs. Regina Steil of Aurora; twelve g r a n d c h i l d r e n ; f o u r g r e a t g r a n d c h i l d r e n ; t w o s i s t e r s , Catherine Schmitt, Chicago, and Mrs. John (Agatha) Thel- ^ en, Johnsburg; four brothers, Joseph and Ben of Johnsburg, Steve of St. Petersburg, Fla., and John of McHenry. Two brothers. Matt N. Schmitt and the Rev. Nicholas 0 Schmitt, preceded her in death. The body rests at the Daleiden funeral home in Aurora until time of last rites. THERESA STOLLER Mrs. Theresa Stoller, 82, died in Pompano Beach, Fla., last Friday, Nov. 16, following a two-week illness. The body has been returned to the George R. Justen & Son fu- £ neral home. A funeral Mass will be sung at St. Patrick's Catholic church at 10 o'clock Wednesday morning, with burial in the church cemetery. Mrs. Stoller and her husband. Howard, had been married for sixty years. They came to McHenry from Chicago and made their home on Fourth street twenty years ago. Held in high respect by those W who knew her, Mrs. Stoller's chief interest was in her large family. She is survived by her husband; one daughter, Mrs. Helen Jacoby, of Florida; three sons, Warren of Chicago, Irving of Park Ridge and Robert of McHenry; sixteen grandchildren; thirty-four great-grandchildren and five sisters. Property Owners association, died .Tuesday morning, Nov. 20, in Harvard hospital, where he had been confined for only a week. He was born March 9, 1887, and before coming to this area five years ago lived in Chicago. He was a retired jeweler. Survivors are the wife, Ann; one son and one daughter. The body will be at rest at the Peter M. Justen and Son funeral home after 7 pjn., Wednesday. Funeral services will be conducted by Rev. Ernest Carder of Community Methodist church Friday at 1:30 p.m. Burial will be in Mount Emblem cemetery, Elmhurst. WILLIAM HERZOG William Herzog, 75, president of the Lakeland Park RANDY SCHAEFER Services were held Tuesday afternoon from the George R. Justen and Son funeral home for the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack B. Schaefer, 3005 Emily Lane, McHenry. Randy was born Nov. 19 at Memorial hospital, Woodstock, and died several hours later. Interment was in St. Patrick's cemetery. Wheat Agreements Are Different Next Year Farmers who are going to take part in the 1963 wheat s t a b i l i z a t i o n p r o g r a m s h o u l d indicate as near as possible the exact acreage they intend to divert, Bert Bridges, chairman, McHenry County Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation committee, said this week. Changes in intentions can be made until Dec. 14. The wheat acreage on the farm must not be more than permitted by the agreement and the diverted area must equal the acreage the producer agreed to divert. However, immediately following measurements by the farm reporter, each farmer will have an opportunity to adjust the size of the areas. If the final acreages are not in compliance with the agreement, all payments will be forfeited including eligibility for price support loans. The sign-up under the 1963 w h e a t s t a b i l i z a t i o n p r o g r a n i for winter wheat is now under way at the McHenry county ASCS office. It will continue through Dec. 14. mmwm 1.& K S U C C E S S S T O R Y MA/OR JOHN COLLINS OR BOSTON HAD POUO K /A/ I9SS AND DESPJTB \SEVEQE CQ/PPL/NG WON THB MAYORALTY /A//PSPF ®°jsD™"r week '5 M4Y 6H2 , rowA^^lf000 WV,LL T(0 HELP THEM - THBMSEL I/RC TOES REPLACE FINGERS ALTHOUGH HIS APMS APE YALMOST USELESS BECAUSE OF CEQEBPAL PALSEY, JAMESENS/GN, OF BE EN EL EY, CAL.T /S A W/DELV EXHIBITED AQHSR,* WHO PAIKJTS WITH HIS TOES/ NORMAL L I V E S ! PEOPLE WITH HANDICAPS VVAMF oppocruMirv GOODWILL IKJDUSFCIES GIVES THEM A CHANCE TWPOUGH A NON-PROFIT PROGRAM OF TPAIKilNG, EVALUATION AMD EMPLOVMEWr. THROUGH THE AGES SIGHT IS ONE OP MAN'S MOST PRECIOUS POSSESSIONS--AMP THROUGHOUT HISIDRT THE EVE HAS FIGURED PROMINENTLY IN THE ART AND SYMBOLISM OF RELIGION, WISDOM, WELL-BEING AND MAGIC-- THE MAGIC THE EVE OF BUDDHA THE SYMBOL OF SUPREME KNOWLE06E AND DIVINE BEN£VDL£NCE A3 PICTURED ON THE TOWER OF THIS PASORA IN NEPAL. THE DSBN OF THIS ESKIMO MASK FROM ALASKA PORTRAYS THE EYE A9 THE SPIRIT OF THE SALMON* THE EVE OF HORUS M THe EYe OF THIS 66YPPAN FAICON* HEADePSOP WAS REPUTEP TO SAFEGUARD HEALTH AND PROTECT VISION-- IT ALSO WARD6P Off TH6 "EVIL CVS". THE MOST PRECIOUS EVES me Mosrmcious €vss in me w>«u> vmiiw. ' PONT GAMBLE WITH VtXJR VISION. A COMPUTE EYE EXAMINATION EYCTY TWO YEARS 19 THE fl»T MEANS Of POOTECnNS YOUR FRK&ESS EVKHSHT FOR A FRtf ftUWMUT ON EYE HEALTH, WRITE t> THE NATIONAL. SOCIETY FOR THE PREVENTION OF tUNDHESS, 0ETT M£, 80K 42«, NEW XOSST ItyW? COURT BRIEFS Karen Hay of 906 Wood, McHenry, paid a $10 fine for disobeying a stop sign and the same amount for not having a valid driver's license when she appeared in the court of Police M a g i s t r a t e D o n a l d Howard last Saturday. Robert John son of 9401 Crystal Lake road, McHenry, was fined $12 for speeding, and Louis Pierpaoli paid $10 on the same charge. A $50 fine was imposed on Richard M. Blake of 2612 N. Richmond road for reckless driving and $15 for not having a valid driver's license. William P. Horyn of 1907 S. Fernwood, McHenry, had a $10 fine imposed for driving with defective exhaust. In the court of Justice of the Peace Charles M. Adams last week Wednesday. Robert E. Boyle of Lakeland Park was fined $55 for having open liquor in his auto and $42 for being drunk and disorderly. Another charge was continued until Dec. 12. Carol E. Dewart of Richmond was fined $13 for speeding and Gerald S. Westerfield of Libertyville paid $8. also on a speeding charge, on Nov. 14. Jack A. Christie was fined $73 for driving without a driver's license. On Nov. -17, Judge Adams heard a large number of cases regarding speeding and the following fines were paid: Richard H. Brefeld of McHenry, $15; James G. Archibald. Waukegan, $13; Edward J. Tweedie, Elgin, Leo J. Hall and Kenneth G. Schauer, Union, and Wilbut J. Wickman. Woodstock, all $10; and Thomas Ballowe, McHenry, $12. David Stanbery of Morton Grove paid a $105 fine for shooting a hen pheasant. A $30 fine was imposed on Calvin Stanbery of Morton Grove for having an unplugged shotgun. Viola Bodenstab of Huemann's subdivision paid a $12 fine for improper lane usage. Donald L. Justen of Ringwood was fined $6 for driving with a defective muffler. Martin McCauley of Bensenville and Donald Dusthimer of Wonder Lake each paid $8 on charges of making improper left turns. NATIVITY CHURCH MEMBERS TO ENJOY POT-LUCK NOV. 27 In con.i unction with the stewardship program at the Nativity Lutheran church of Wonder Lake, a pot-luck dinner will be served Tuesday, Nov. 27, at 7 p.m. at the church. Guest speaker at the congregational fellowship program will be George McDonald, evangelical committee director of 1he Illinois synod. Members and friends and their families are invited to attend. Three times as many people In the upper brackets commit cuicide. as those in the lower brackets. Tdpt\ By: Russ Emerson, R.Ph. Mankind owes a great debt to Joseph Lister, for it is very possible that the lives saved by this brilliant surgeon's work are numbered in the millions. It was Lister who introduced antisepsis less than a century ago, and this means of preventing infection removed the final great stumbling block to modern surgery. In Lister's day, surgery was a chancey and discouraging proposition in that no matter how fine the surgeon's talent and despite careful planning, patient mortality was alarmingly high due to post-surgery infections. There is no element of chance, however, in having prescriptions filled at MILLSTREAM DRUGS, INC. Top quality drugs and exacting care go into all prescription work at "MILLSTREAM DRUGS, IXC., Jewel Shopping Plaza. Also carrying a complete line o t cosmetics, sundries, and greeting cards. Phone 385-5057. We give S&H Green Stamps with prescriptions. If you have any questions regarding pharmacy or public health which you would like to .have discussed in this column, write to Russ Emerson, c/o this paper. McHENBY PHONE USERS MAY CALL MOST OF WOULD How many telephones in the world can you reach, if you want to, from your own phone? The answer is more than 140 million -- a staggering figure! McHenry customers can call 97.6 per cent of them, and can talk to people in any one of 170 countries. The United States with nearly 80 million, has over half of the telephones in the world. E u r o p e ' s t e l e p h o n e s a c c o u n t for another 30 per cent. .The U.S. has 40.7 telephones per hundred population, as opposed to Russia's 1.9. ' Telephone ope rators will turn down calls to the Aden Protectorate, Bhutan, the Maldive Islands, Nauru, Nepal, Pitcairn Island or the Tokelau Islands for one sifnple reason. These places have no telephones at all. But the three phones in the United Kingdom's portion of the Virgin Islands are connected to the Bell system network. When McHenry's rural telephone customers get Direct Distance Dialing service on Dec. 15, they'll tie in with more phones in the U.S. and Canada. Over 77 million phones in more than 40,000 communities can now be dialed direct. What's the next step? Perhaps w o r l d w i d e d i a l i n g t h r o u g h space via satellite. News About Our Servicemen Robert W. Gates, son of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamen I. Gates of 5208 West Fountain Lane, McHenry, is scheduled to complete recruit training Nov. 21, at the Naval Training center, San Diego, Calif. FARM NEWS Farm Adviser Burnett Says: Trying to operate too man> milker units, priming too long before putting machines on cows and keeping cows in stalls too small for them were the most serious milking problems uncovered in a recent University of Illinois survey of milking machine practices in 60 Illinois dairy herds. U. of I. dairy scientists Leo Fryman and Jack Albright say the most common problem found among dairymen in the study was the tendency to operate too many milker units. As a result, machines were not taken off the cows as soon as they were milked out. This led many cows to develop slow milking habits. Time studies by the U. of 1. scientists showed that the average man operating three bucket milkers in a stanchion barn could not milk as many cows in an hour as a man using two units. One man using three machines milked an average of only 6.3 cows per machine per hour compared with 9.7 cows SAFEGUARD YOUR HEALTH than 92 per cent of th^tefe^ per hour for men using two Terry F. Hales, son of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Hales of 4905 East Lake Shore drive. Wonder Lake, completes recruit training Nov. 21 at the Naval Training center, San Diego, Calif. PRESENT DREYER SCHOLARSHIP AT HONORS PROGRAM machines. W h e n one man handled only one machine, the average jumped to more than 12 cows per machine per hour. The study showed that the length of time milking units were on a cow varied from farm to farm. The average for all farms was 5 minutes and 50 seconds. Economist Sinirrl Says: Dry weather after midsummer cut crop prospects in many ports of the county. In August. estimates dropi>ed 2 percent for corn and 5 percent for soyr beans. On Sept. 1. large drouthy •"•pas ranged from Texas to Missouri and across the southern states to the Atlantic coast. Severe drouth also con-, hjs nosp fJis coURh tinued in the east, especiall> in Pennsylvania, New York and adjoining a r e a s. The d r o u t h i n M i s s o u r i s p r e a d across the Mississippi River into southern and western Illin o i s . T h e c a s t - c e n t r a l a n d northwestern parts of thi.> state were more fortunate. They had good to excellent conditions on the first of the month. PASTURES. pasture condition in Illinois was ASIAN FLU If you haven't as yet had your antiflu shot this fall, you'd better make an appointment with your family doctor today. For if warnings of the U. S. Public Health Service prove correct, American! are in for their third Asian flu epidemic in five years this winter. Though Asian flu -- also called A2 -- is not highly lethal in itself, it does produce n rundown condition which makes its victims susceptible to pneumonia and other serious diseases. Since it first appeared here in 1957, it is believed to have contributed to the deaths of perhaps 90,000 Americans. What is Asian flu? Generally regarded as the most serious type of influenza (there are at 'east four different types), Asian flu is a fairly brief, severe sickness that has proved $.ery catching. It is spread from one person to another by one of a family of viruses. Though an attack of Asian flu seems to come on very suddenly, it actually takes one to three days to develop. When it comes out in the open, you may notice headache, backache, fever. chills, muscular pains and lark of'appetite. Other common discomforts may include a cold in the head, sore throat, dry cough, weakness and pain or burning in t lie eyes as well as possible nausea. Temperature goes up quickly during the first day -- usually to 101 or 102 -- and reaches a peak probably not higher than 103. Though fever usually lasts about thre^ days, it may go on for as lortg as a week. ^ As his temperature begins to <ro down, the patient will probably notice more stuffiness in may get worse. And there may be crusting in the discharges from his nose or throat. From that point on, he'll probably f«t well fast, Like nearly all virus diseases, there is no cure for flu. Anti-biotics, such as penicillin, have no effect on the virus once it's in the body. We can, however, prevent Asian flu through immunization. Large stocks of antiflu vaccine have been built up and physicians are alerted to the danger of a possible epidemic. One and preferably two antiflu shoti should be had before December by everyone, especially those over 45, pregnant women and victims of chronic weakening diseases. Since flu shots are 70 per cent effective, some people are bound to get it this winter. CAR KILLS DEER Gerald Ryan, 17, of 405 Briar, .court, Rt„$r McHenry, struck and killed a deer while driving on Robots' road, near River road, AT., 7 ;03 o'clock last Thursday evening. He told state fiolice th^d^er ran across the highway* into the path of his vehicle. Jffaff ^ag" not Kurt. Unenlightened people are al ways sure th£ir \v&y is the be0? way --and are ready to back t up with fists or clubs, at the drop of a hat. Women with brains can earn their own living, but sensible ones let some man do it, instead. Last Thursday, Mr. and Mrs. ' rated 73. far below the 89 list ed for the year before. The national average for pastures and ranges was 72. also well below the 83 listed a year earlier. CORN. On Sept. 1 the u. S. corn crop was ofticially estimated at 3.485 million bushels. 4 percent less han last yeai. The Illinois crop, however, was listed at 651 million bushels, 4 percent more than in 1961. SOYBEANS. The U. S. soy- W. E. Dreyer of MeCullom Lake (Germantowni drove to River Forest in response to an i n v i t a t i o n f r o m C o n c o r d i a Teachers college, to attend the fourteenth Honors Convocation the awarding of scholarships and grants to a large uumber of students, these included the W. E. Dreyer scholarship given by the St. John board of education of Forest Park in honor of Mr. Dreyer for his thirty-nine years of service in the teaching ministry of St. John Lutheran "hurch of Forest Park. ) Mrs. Dreyer is the fo^e' Elfreda Block who spent her childhood in McHenry, and is a graduate of McHenry hitrh school with the class of 1918. The Dreyers have been spending their retirement in their MeCullom Lake home since the summer of 1960. million bushels, down nearly 4 percent from a year ago. The Illinois crop, however, is expected to be 1 percent bigger, at 161 million bushels. Iowa and Indiana reported that their crops would equal those of 1961, when Iowa had 98 million bushels and Indiana 77 million bushels. CAR KILLS DEER Gilbert E. Haggenjos of 3708 W. High street, McH?nry, struck a deer which jumped in front of his car as he drov«? on Rt. 120, a block west of Lilymoor, early Tuesday morning. The deer was killed instantly. The Haggenjos auto was damaged to the extent of about $400 but the owner was able to drive it away from the acbean crop is estimated at 669 cident scene. Fishing is a disease with some men, but it isn't always catching. 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