McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 Apr 1969, p. 10

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<APG. 10 - PLAI NDEALER - WED. APRIL"?, 1969 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED PETS FOB SALE ASSEMBLERS Days SHIPPING & RECEIVING Days ELECTRONIC TECHNICIANS Days UNSKILLED WORKERS Days TURRET LATHE OPERATORS Days or Nights OFFICE CLERK (Male) Days High starting rates, complete insurance programs, paid vacations and holidays, pension plan, automatic increases. SATURDAY INTERVIEWS 9 a.m. to 12 noon -- Apply -- AEROQUIP CORP. BARCO DIVISION 500 N. Hough St. Barri; <jton DUnkirk 1-1700 "an equal opportunity employer" 4-9/4-11-69 SMALL standard Poodle, charcoal. Good with children. Reasonable to a good home. 3 years old. Call 385-0758 after 6 p.m. 4-9/4-11-69 MALTESE at stud. Beautiful show type son of late Champion Lestino of Villa Malta. $75. GUARANTEED. Call 385-2662. 3-19/4-11-69 GERMAN SHEPHERD puppies. AKC registered. Very good disposition, black and silver, black and cream. Call 815-385- 764a 3-19/4-11-69 COLLIE PUPS. Call 385-5636 3-28/4-9-69 HELP WANTED Waitresses and dishwasher. Full or part time. . Apply in person. Al's White House, 2028 W! Rt. 120, McHenry, 111. 385-9892. 4-4/4-9-69 BUS DRIVER Needed Immediately to transport clients to and from Pioneer Center for the Exceptional. Call 385-3310 4-2-69TF1-2 CARD OF THANKS Male or Female Several openings now exist in ASSEMBLY and LIGHT MACHINE WORK. Apply in Person 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. RAE MOTORS CORP. 5801 W. Boat© 110 McHenry, 111. 4-9/4-11-69 THANK YOU for your votes and support in the township election. Charles Weingart, Harold "Harry" Freund, H. Walter Anderson, Edward O'Brien. 4-9-69 WE WISH to thank our neighbors, friends and relatives for their kindness shown us during our recent bereavement. We are especially grateful to Father Rudden. The family of BETTY WOLDT . 4-9-69 4 MONTHS old AKC registered black standard Poodle. Loves children and is house trained. Champion blood lines on both sides. Has shots. Doggie extras included. Owner leaving town. $40. . Call 385-5549. 4-9-69 © I RtMtMBER BY THE OLD TIMER « THE THOUGHTFULNESS and sympathy extended by our friends, relatives and neighbors during our recent sorrow will always remain with us as a precious memory. Our sincere thanks to all who cared. Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Engels and Sandy. 4-9-69 SUN ELECTRIC CORPORATION Due to expanded production needs we are looking for people to do: * SPOT WELDING Days & Nights * MACHINE ASSEMBLY , Only * WELD GRINDING Days & Nights Will train qualified applicants Excellent Company fringe benefits to include: • Free Life & Health Insurance • Paid Holidays and Vacations • Company Paid Pension Plan Openings on Days & Nights with PLENTY OF OVERTIME and NO LAY-OFFS. Interviewing Hours: 8:00 a.m. to 4 :30 p.m. Monday through Friday 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Saturday An equal opportunity employer CTTTVT ELECTRIC O U IN CORPORATION Aero-Space Division 3011 East Route 176 Crystal Lake, 111. 60014 815-459-7700 4-9/4-11-69 MY SINCERE THANKS for cards, visits and the many other kindnesses extended during my illness. I am especially grateful to the nurses at McHenry hospital. WALTER HOJNACKI 4-9-69 FOR FAST RESULTS PHONE 385-0170 SITUATION WANTED * REGISTERED LABRATORY TECHNICIAN * REGISTERED X-RAY TECHNICIAN FULL TIME Ultra modern lab and x-ray department. Many fringe benefits including: Hospital Insurance, retirement plan, call pay. Apply MRS. LUETH McHenry Medical Group 1110 N. Green McHenry, 111. 815-385-1050 4-4/4-9-69 Shop n» McHENBY The McHenry Plaindealer will not be able to accept ads from people who want to do baby sitting in their homes unless the individual person has obtained a license from the State Department of Children and Family Services. This means that anyone providing day care for youngsters in their home for more than 10 hours a week must have a license. If, however, the individual wishes to go to the youngster's home to baby sit, no license is required. This ^license is at No Charge to the individual, and information regarding it can be obtained through the McHenry Plaindealer Office. From Beatrice Herman, Arvada, Colorado: I remember that in 1894 my widowed father took my little brother and me to the "North Woods" of Missouri. We were bedded down in straw in a wagon pulled by a mule team. Taking the ferry across the river was the most exciting part of the trip. A two-room log cabin became "home." There were places yOu could see "outside" where the chinking had fallen out, and the snow would sift through. The bedroom door was kept shut, but even then the cook stove and the large fireplace failed to keep the kitchen warm. Since I was only six at the time and not very well, I was not able to be of much help. Having no doll or other toy, except for a rocker, I spent a great deal of time in my rocker before the fireplace, roasting my shins and freezing my back^or vice-versa. My little brother slept between dad and me. -He would put his head under the covers and in the morning his little black head would be covered with frost from our breath. The molasses in the bupboard would be so stiff you could hardly dig it out of the container. THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER Pets That Need A Home S OR ARE Looking For Their Master As a public service of the McHenry Plaindealer all ads run under "Pets That Need A Home" are Free. The only requirements are: Hie animals are to be given away to good homes without charge or you are trying to find the owner of a pet that has strayed into your possession. ' TO BE GIVEN AWAY TO BE GIVEN AWAY REGISTERED German Shepherd, 7 months old, with papers. Call 385-0126. 4-9/4-11-69 SHOP IN MCHENRY •S? SALES CARPENTRY WORK and remodeling. Call 385-1523. 3-28/4-9-69 NOTICES SORRY SAL is now a merry gal. She used Blue Lustre rug and upholstery cleaner. Rent electric shampooer $1. Ace Hardware. 4-9-69 Garage Rummage Backyard .1st your Garage, Rummage iasement or Backard Sal< n the McHENRY PLAIN DEALER Want Ads and you •vill receive (FREE) 2 printer ;igns to identify your property as the SALES location. Th( jd must run in two issues of (he McHenry Plaindealer to qualify. When planning a SALE of your own stop in at the Plaindealer office for a Free brochure of helpful hints that will enable you to gain more revenue from your sale. Som« who have never conducted a Sale of this type will find thik brochure helpful. •SMITTY'S SINCLAIR SERVICE under new management. George D. Haines will be responsible only for his debts after April l, 1969. 385-98C i. 4-9-69 GARAGE SALE Friday, Saturday & Sunday April 10, 11 and 12 All day Dutch Creek Subdivision, Countryside Dr., Johnsburg. Twin beds and matching dresser, $15; Singer sewing machine, $20; Antique bed and dresser, $30; wringer washer, $20; doors, $3 each, outboard 5 h.p. motor. All kinds of baby equipment. All kinds of household items. Children's clothing from infants to size 5. Women's clothing sizes 10 -14. 4-9/4-11-69 NOTICES NOTICE The Law Serves You BUY A BOAT AND GO AFLOAT BUT PAY PROPERTY TAX TOO Cruising down the river on a Sunday afternoon in Illinois may get you away from everything except the tax collector. According to the Illinois State Bar association, any person who owned a boat of any shape, size or description as of April 1 must include it in the report of his personal possessions for State personal property tax purposes. < Under the law, inventories of personal property are required of all citizens "of full age and sound mind" and should be in the hands of the county tax assessor no later than June 1, if penalties are to be avoided. The tax assessor doesn't have to rely entirely upon the honor system if he feels that the boat population in his county exceeds the number being reported by the taxpayers. Most water-born properties of any substantial value must be registered either with the Illinois Department of Conservation or with the United States Coast Guard, and the assessor can inspect these registration lists. Under state law, every owner of a sailboat that is 12 feet or more in length or a motorboat -- including outboards -- must register his craft with the Department of Conservation. The law exempts from state registration any craft that is registered with the U.S. Coast Guard, so the assessor must check the federal registration as well. An inspection of Coast Guard registration can be especially fruitful for the tax assessor, since registration as a pleasure craft is limited to boats measuring at least 5 net tons or more. Luxury cabin cruisers and the larger houseboats and sailboats fall into this category. According to the ESBA, more than ninety-nine percent of the State's 200,000 motorboats and sailboats are registered with the State. However, some 1,700 boats registered with the Coast Guard represent some of the most expensive property afloat along the Lake Michigan shore, and on Illinois waterways, including the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers. In a pamphlet dealing with "Yacht Admeasurement and Documentation" the Coast Guard states that registration of itself does not exempt the yacht owner "from any applicable State or Federal taxes." The publication can be obtained by writng to the Commandant (MVD), U.S. Coast Guard, 1300 East Street NW. Washington, D.C. 20591. FLYING HIGH . . . This daring young eirl on the trapeze is suspended by magnetic material Raytheon Company says is the world's strongest Fashioned into magnets the size of afterdinner mints and inserted between the metal plates to which the swing is fashioned, the material can lift up to 1000 times its own weight Initial applications will be in micro-wave tubes. Beef Cobbler Delicious, Easy SMITTY'S SINCLAIR SERVICE UEider new management. MECHANIC ON DUTY 8 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. GEORGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 3602 W. Elm McHenry, 111. 385-9894 4-9-69 The Drivers Seat A drunken-driving conviction in traffic court carries the most serious penalty of any traffic violation, in most states. It is usually the only violation for which the offender can be im<- prisoned, even if he caused no accident on the road. And, it is true, the drunken driver is perhaps the most serious hazard on the road, Che accounted for 25,000 deaths and 800,000 crashes last year) so it would seem that the heavy penalty is warranted. But have the stiff fines and threat of imprisonment solved the drunk-driver problem? "No!" is the resounding answer from law enforcement and traffic safety authorities across the nation. And the reason, they are learning, is because the largest part of the driuik-driver problem is the alcoholic who drives -- not the "occasional" drinker. Since mpst psychologists agree that alcoholism is a disease, imprisonment and heavy fine do little to cure the cause of the problem -- the drinking, itself. If anything, they may aggravate the problem. Until recently, there were no programs in the county in which any attempt was made to rehabilitate an alcoholic person convicted of drunken driving. But now there is one -- in Wyoming. The state's "Alcohol Involvement Referral Program" is a cooperative venture between judges and regional mental health centers throughout Wyoming. Here's how it works,; When convicted of drunk driving, the offender is asked if he would submit to a psychological test to determine whether his drinking "problem", if he has one, can be helped by treatment. If he refuses, he receives the normal fine and/or jail sentence. If he accepts, however, and the test is made, the judge and the mental health officials must decide whether the person would respond to treatments. If yes, he is then asked whether he would accept treatment and a sentence of probation, in lieu of the normal penalty. If he again answers "yes", the mental health department cooperates with local AAA, religious and community agencies to "cure" the person's sickness. The treatment may involve individual and group therapy, occupational therapy, even hospitalization. The whole program is based on acceptance of the fact that the alcoholic can best be handled in his local community with a minimum of disruption to family life. Driver's Seat applauds the Wyoming program as a truly positive step in relieving a driving menace. It may also provide some of the rehabilitory help so desperately needed' by the families of alcoholics. OttlTAL Slo&i McHENRY HOSPITAL Patients admitted to McHenry hospital Sunday and Monday included Minnie Hapke, Annie Tatro, Maurice Granger, DuWayne Parker, Rita Djubenski, Sandra Norton, James Zahn, Robert Joyce, Sr., Nancy Hupe, Gilbert Congdon, Kimberly Francke, Helen Schmitt, Edith Blake and Charles Brody, all of McHenry; Elizabeth Coleman of Wonder Lake and Earl Hede of Spring Grove. BIRTHS McHENRY HOSPITAL A boy was born Aprils 6 to Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Carlson of McHenry. A daughter was born April 6 to Mr. and Mrs. Roy Schipley of McHenry. OTHER BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Keenan of Middlesex, N.J., announce the birth of their third child, a son, Lee Daniel, on March 15. Their other children are Jeff and Pamela Sue. The new mother is the former Joan Blake, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Blake of McHenry. The paternal grandmother is Mrs. Jack Keenan of Pompano Beach, Fla. Mrs. Blake has just returned from a three weeks visit in the Keenan home. Beef-Cobbler is the kind of dish which, if made "from scratch" using beef stew meat and fresh vegetables, would require considerable preparation time for the vegetables and long slow cooking for the meat to become tender. Not so this Beef Cobbler, however! It features canned and packaged convenience foods, put together in the heartiest, healthiest, most delectable and easiest fashion. Lean meaty chunks of roast beef with gravy, canned and ready to use, are the flavorful start. Mixed vegetables and button mushrooms are there, too, at tha/flick of a can-opener. The attractive topping of pastry cut-outs is made from packaged pie crust mix. The casserole bakes just long enough to heat the beef mixture and brown the pastry topping. Time enough, however, to toss a salad of mixed greens with French dressing for accompaniment, and to whip up a package of dessert topping mix to spoon over chilled canned fruits for dessert. BEEF COBBLER 2 cans (1 2 ounces each) roast 1 can ( 5 /4 ounces) brown beef with gravy gravy 1 can (1 pound) mixed Vi package (11.25 ounces) pie vegetables crust mix (about 1-1/3 cups) 1 can (4 ounces) button 1 tablespoon sesame seeds mushrooms, drained & Combine roast beet with gravy, mixed vegetables, mushrooms and brown gravy in a shallow 2-quart baking dish. Prepare pastry mix according to package directions adding sesame seeds. Roll into.a rectangle and cut into desired shapes. Place pastry cut-outs on roast beef mixture. Bake in a 400 degree oven 2 5 minutes or until hot and pastry is browned. NEED CASH ? MS/' JUST CALL US . . Let our Readers Call you 385-0170 MCHENRY f PLAINDEALER

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