McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 21 Oct 1965, p. 5

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

m mm m Thursday. October 21,1965 THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER! ' • £ vf fP f 'il;!r'ii.,!% ftiiu IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE All during the Fall Football season, Jepsen Tire will be bringing you this Football Forecast. It is compiled by Joe Harris, leading football forecaster who has better than a 82% accuracy record. Look for this feature weekly. JE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1965 -Probable Winners & Scores- - Probable Losers & Scores - Atr Force Academy 20 Pacific (Calif.) 6 California 14 U.C.L.A IS Clemson 10 Texas Christian 7 Cornell 7 Yale 6 Drake 12 Western Kentucky 6 Georgia Tech 17 Navy 14 Illinois 21 Duke 14 Indiana 27 Washington State ........ 13 Kansas 17 Oklahoma State 14 Miami (Ohio) 14 Ohio U 7 Minnesota - 14 Michigan 13 Mississippi 14 Vanderbilt 7 Missouri 17 iOWa State 7 Nebraska 24 Colorado 7 Northwestern 14 Iowa IS Notre Dame 24 So. Carolina 14 Ohio State 17 Wisconsin 7 Oklahoma 17 Kansas State 7 Oregon State 17 Utah 14 Penn State 24 West Virginia 14 Pittsburgh 17 Miami (Fla.) 14 Princeton 2a Pennsylvania 7 Purdue 17 Michigan State 14 So. Methodist 17 Texas Tech 14 Stanford 14 Army 7 Texas A. & M 10 Baylor 7 Texas 41 Rice 0 American Football League San Diego 30 New York Jets 24 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1965 Buffalo 23 Denver 13 Kansas City 24 Houston 23 Oakland 27 Boston 20 National Football League Baltimore 27 !Los Angeles 10 Chicago 17 Detroit 16 Cleveland 20 New York Giants 13 C.rern Bay 31 Dallas 13 Minnesota . 27 S in Francisco 24 Philadelphia 24 Pittsburgh ' 17 St. Louis 30 Washington . 20 MEETING Author Toffler Addresses Session At Crystal Lake "The United States suffers from an inferiority complex about its cultures." With these words, Arthur Alvin Toffler will open a full scale intellectual assault on the popular idea that Americans are "coarse and uncultured" when he .comes to McHenry County next week. Ths American social critic, author of the much talked about book, "The Culture Consumers", which became a Literary Guild selection last July, will bo in Crystal Lake next Monday afternoon, Oct. 25, to address the teachers in grades 10 through 14 of Kane and McHenry counties of the Northeastern Division of Illinois Education association. Earlier, he will talk to teachers grades 7 through 9 of these counties in Larkin high school, Elgin. Mr. Toffler's topic at both sessions will be "Education in the Future Tense." Second Speaker Dr. James A. Smith will address teachers of kindergarten through third grade in Kane and McHenry counties in the morning at East Aurora high school, and teachers of grades 4, 5 and 6 in St. Charles in the afternoon. H:s topic is "Creativity -- It's Nature and Nurture". Dr. Smith is director of teacher preparation in early child and elementary education of Syracuse university school of education. The educational sessions have been changed somewhat this year. Outstanding resource persons have been secured for each location for the workshop portion of the program, when the various areas of the school curriculum will be discussed. BENEHtSFROM NOV. 2 EVENT Foremost Speaker Engaged For Fund Raising Dinner The McHenry County Mental Health center is now making plans for their fall fund raising d'nner dance. Joe Gitlin. Woodstock attorney, is this year's chairman of the event, which will be held at McHenry Country club Tuesday, Nov. 2, at 7 p.m. Dr .Carl S. Winters, a modern jet circuit rider, will be speaker for the evening. He has achieved an international reputation as one of America's foremost inspirational speak- CRASHES RESULT IN INJURIES TO LOCAL MOTORISTS ii i 8.23-14 *jpa Full 4-Ply Tyrex Rayon Constructr• tion -- Safer . . . Stronger! • Highest Quality and Service! • Premium-Built-- NEW Chlorobutyl "Safety-Liner" Holds All* 0 Times Better! NEW Wider "Wrap-Around" Tread--Better Control ... More Tractionl NEW "Powersyn" Rubber--Gives You Up to 3373% More Milesl NEW "HI-T" Tyrex Rayon Cord--for Greater Strength . . More Stability! Original Equipment Quality Black Tubeless Tyrex Rayon $23 26 COMPLETE BRAKE INSTALLATION JOB NO MONEY DOWN Easy Payment Plan All Chrysler Products, Cadillac, Thunderbird 3995 $ 4ges Buick, Oldsmobile, Pontiac, Mercury, Rambbler, Studebaker $ 4295 Ford, Chevrolet All Domestic Compacts Don't be confused by ads quoting prices for just linings and labor. Jepsen does the complete job. You get heavy-duty bonded linings on all 4 wheels. We clean and rebuild the brake cylinders; turn and true the drums; re-pack wheel bearings; precision grind the linings for total contact; inspect master cylinder and all grease seals. Come in today . . . get your brakes relined. LUTHERANS TO SPONSOR FINE ARTS FESTIVAL An Orchestra Hall evening concert and a Sunday afternoon chorale concert will be two of the principal events of the 1965 Lutheran Fine Arts Festival scheduled for the week of Oct. 31 through Nov. 7 and sponsored by Nativity Lutheran Church and the more than 550 Lutheran congregations in the Chicagoland area. "Our primary purpose in these concerts," said the Rev. Thomas L. Johnson, pastor of Nativity, "is to bring to the Chicago'land area some of the finest masterpieces from the Christian heritage of sacred music. "Our secondary purpose," he added, "is to give emphasis to the rebirth of comb ned vocal and instrumental church music in the 20th century." Mr', and Mrs. Alfred Weingart returned home this past week after being hospitalized as the result of a two-car accident near Point Pleasant, W.Va. They were enroute home from a trip when the crash occurred. Fifty stitches were required to close the cut in Mr. Weingart's face, and his wife suffered a chippcd bone in the ankle and lacerations of the knee. One motorist was still reported only in fair condition in McHenry hospital on Tuesday, where three others were also taken following a one-car accident last Saturday night. He is Ernest Valle, 20, of Carpentersville, who was riding in a car driven by Gregory D. Conant of Wauconda. Conant told sheriff's deputies he was driving north on River road, three miles south of McHenry, when he lost control as the auto rounded a curve. It spun around and came to rest on its top in a ditch after striking a tree. Conant and two passengers, Herman Curtis and Donald Wirth of Wauconda were taken to McHenry hospital, treated and released. Three drivers escaped injury when their cars collided in the fog of last Friday morning on Crystal Lake road, a quarter mile south of Bull Valley road. They were Ruth A. Seeman of Crystal Lake, Gaby Braem of 5218 W. Hunter, McHenry, and Raymond Widhelm of 3309 W. 3rd avenue, McHenry. Sheriff's police said the Seeman car was travelling north and the other autos were south - bound when Widhelm passed Braem and found the Seeman vehicle emerge out of the fog. Widhelm then drove off the left side and Ruth Seeman, attempting to stop, spun around and struck Braem. Cuts and bruises were sustained by the first two drivers. w-. ers a jnor QjjkJ pMloi»phJf~|*e you laugh and he makes =yoij think IN BUSIN Rich Background Dr. Winters speaks - from a rich background of human experience as former crime commissioner in Michigan and also Skid Row chairman in Chicago. Dr. Winters is on the lecture staff of General Motors Corp., and has given the keynote addresses for more than 800 state .national and International conventions on four continents in the past few years. . Larry E. Lund, publisher of the McHenry Plaindealer, will act as master of ceremonies. Tickets can be obtained from Miss Lilian Barrett in Harvard, Joe Gitlin in Woodstock, Virgil Pollock in McHenry, Arnold May in Richmond, Harry Beck in Crystal Lake, and Dorothy Nichols, Hebron. The Mental Health center in McHenry serves as an outpatient clinic for the entire county. McHENRY PLAIND5&LE3 ,:, Established 1875 ¥ 5812 West Elm Street >P*one 885-0170 McHenry, Illinois -- 60050 '>*- Published Every Thursday at McHenry, Illinois Second Class Postage Paid at» McHenry, Illinois by McHENRY PUBLISHING COMPANY Larry E. Lund -- Publisher Adele Frdehlich, Editor McHenry Junior High School Library The McHenry Junior high school library has grown in the past ten years from a roomful of books to a center for all instructional materials that aid the' students and teachers in achieving the highest educational goals. This growth in boLh amount and depth of materials has been necessary to keep pace with the changing concepts regarding the library's place in _education. Along with the books in the Junior high library one will find pamphlets, magazines, films, filmstrips, maps, pictures, transparencies, records and tapes. The current operating budget of $1,900 provides for the many demands by today's students for a variety of educational material. The library has 3,500 books and is add:ng new titles at the rate of about 250 per year. Library facilities are open from 8 to 4 each day. About forty seventh and eighth grade girls serve as student library assistants and aid in checking and shelving books, processing new materials, and helping students. Henry Kenyon is the librarian. | , s -- N A T I O N A L E D I T O R I A L HAROLD HOBBS A ' EMPLOYEE RETIRES Harold R. Hobbs, 3613 W. Maple avenue, McHenry, recently terminated a career of more than thirty-eight year;* with Commonwealth Edison company. Starting as a groundman in 1921, he has spent all of his service in overhead line work in the Crystal Lake-Mc- Henry area. He has been a crew leader since 1954. A communicant of St. Patrick's church, he has been a resident of McHenry sinre- 1935. He has served as a local deputy sheriff and spent thirtyfive years, as a member of the volunteer fire department, ten of them as chief. Hobbs and his wife,' Miry, have a daughter, Laverne (Mrs. Robert Lamz), and four grandchildren. The Hobbs intend to continue res:dcnce in McHenry. ACQUIRE COACHES The completion of deliveries of ten new double-deck commuter coaches to the Chicago and North Western Railwayto meet the needs of its growing commuter rider volume was announced this week by the railroad. Ben W. Heineman, the North Western's chairman, said that with the acquisition of the new coaches, which cost $1,750,000, the road's investment i:i suburban equipment alone rrow totals almost $50,000,000. WINS HIGH AWARD Marvin Chandler, president of Northern Illinois Gas com- #c6t,5m Subscription Rates 1 Year $4.50 6 Mos $2.50 3 Mos $1.75 Outside McHenry County 1 Year $4.00 6 Mos $2.25 3 Mos $1.50 In McHenry County GRAND OPENING The Plum Garden SATURDAY, OCT. 23rd FREE -- TEA TO BE GIVEN AWAY. CHOP SUEY TO TAKE OUT. 8917 W. Main Street McIIenry, Illinois PIIONE 385-1530 ' T O P Q U A L I T Y FO O D S A T L 0 W E S T . P R I ^ C E S Meat makes the meal. At Certified you can depend on top quality meals. We ase only U.S. Choice Grade "A" Meats. Kerber Tendered PICNIC HAMS S - 8 LB. AVG. 39 C lb. BONELESS -- ROLLED Rump Roast Round or Sirloin Tip 46-OZ. TINS HI-C FRUIT DRINKS five 4/$l FLAVORS */ * NKSTI.ES -- MIX KM K E E N 4/$l 3oneless Lean I3EEF STEW 79 c lb. U.S. Choice ROUND STEAK FOUR FLAVORS I OSCAR cello pkg. IAYER H • t Weiners,i 55* FRESH Pork Steaks 55 Tt> I C UT UP Frying each WILSON (JE* Liver 3hickensOO Sausage III-C -- Assorted Flavors Beverages 10 FOR 55 79* Seamless NYLONS By Perfect Plus 39* Latest Shades ONLY WHITE CLOUD TISSUE 2 ROLL Household Delight lg. box DETERGENT .... 49c END OF SEASON All Flavors FLA-VOR-AID pkgs. 2mm5 w* 12 PKG. 17 KRAFT 1-U>. pkg. HOFFMAN PARKAY . .. 2/49« HOUSE FRENCH 12-oz. ITALIAN or htl. FIESTA J* /$• DRESSING *»/ * Goldin Horn 1-lh. pktr. MARGARIN 2/49? BOWL CLEANER SANI FLUSH _ Z 29* SAWS FLUSH :! 39* NONK SUCH MINCE MEAT 33* 69* CLABBER GIRL BAKING POWDER 15* 10 o/.. can Chef Uov-ir-rlee SPAGHETTI 40-oz. can 29c any cents off label "ha,se and Sanborn 6-oz jar INSTANT :OFFEE D9 CLOSE OUT ON MASON JARS 20 cents off PINTS | QUARTS $1.09 | $1.29 I SHOP CERTIFIED & SAVE 12(56 N. Green Street Oct. 21 - 22 - 2.1 Golden Yellow FIRM MEAT B A N A N A S Fresh Crisp HEAD LETTUCE 19?,, T O P Q U A L I T Y , F O O D S A T L O W E V T P R I C E S pany, last week received the American gas industry's highest award. Chandler was one of two executives to receive the American Gas Association's Distinguished Service Award at the A.G.A.'s annual convention in Bal Harbour, Fla. For the first time since the award was established in 1929, it was presented to two individuals in the same year. Sharing the honor with Chandler was Donald S. Bittinger, president of Washington Gas Light Co., Washington, D.C. OPENS DENTAL OFFICE Dr. Eugene Unti has o|>enpd a dental office at 577 Pennsylvania avenue, Glen Ellyn, it was announced this week by the Chicago Dental society. A native of McHenry, he was graduated from the University of Illinois College for Dentistry in 1953 and joined the dental staff of the Veterans Administration hospital in Wadsworth, Kan. He transferred to the VA hospital at Hines in 1960. Dr. Unti is a veteran of World War II and resides with his wife and three children in Elmhurst. ENLARGE FACILITIES An enlarging and remodeling program is nearing completion at Port-O-Call on Riverside drive, according to the owner, Ed Turkowski. A new dining room, complete with new furnishings, carpeting and Chinese decor has been added, seating fifty. A new chef, Tim Wong, and his wife, Lily Wong, have been engaged to prepare culinary treats in keeping with that decor. The exterior is also getting a new look, with neon lighting extending completely around the building. Read the Classifieds lf^eautifi * +J9r ncrea4ie Protect The Value of Your WATERFRONT PROPERTY Install Sea Walls & Piers of Steel -- Wood -- Concrete GUARANTEED WORKMANSHIP Pile Driving -- Sheet Bearing -- Concrete VALLEY PILING CO. Box 237 A., Antioch, Illinois Phone: 312-395-0933 A Family ~ a Home WITH FEATURES FOUND ONLY IN HOMES AT TWICE ITS PRICE . . . • In city limits near schools and shopping • Over acfe of land • Surrounded by stately pine and shade trees • Walking distance to Train Station • LARGE Living Room, Fireplace • Formal Dining Room • Wall to Wall Carpeting • 3 - 4 Bedrooms, IV2 Baths • Recreation Room • 21/2 Car Garage • Aluminum Siding CALL LEE COONEY -- PHONE 385-4345 • -.1 4

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy