\ ^ PG. 4- PLAINDEALER-WED. AUGUST 27, 1969 ARREST TWENTY IN NARCOTICS RAID (Continued from page 1) squad of ten sheriffs deputies and a sergeant. \\ hen authorities knocked on the door on the home's east side, an unidentified young man answered. He refused to admit the sheriff and his men. After their attempt to peacfully ent er, one of them kicked open the door. * . As the door slammed back, the party-goers fled to the rear door on the west side. There, they were met by the uniform ed deputies. Miss Reed and her guests surrendered without re sistance. Searching the house and its occupants, the raiders found two packets of marijuana, a hypodermic needle, a syringe, an assortment of pills and var ious capsules. Several of the party-goers had fresh needle marks on their arms and legs. Miss Reed was charged with possession of narcotics, poss ession of hypodermic needles, contributing to the delinquency of a minor, and disorderly conduct. All the other octupants of the house, except for the three juveniles, were charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor and disorderly con duct. HARRISON SCHOOL AWARDED CONTRACTS (Continued from page 1) The heating contract was awarded to William Ziegler & Sons, Round Lake. The contract amount was set at $64,287 after deductions. The contract for the electrical work was awarded to Lee & Ray Electric, McHenry, in the amount of $38,965 after deductions. Total cost of the four con tracts awarded by the board was set at $386,752. This„ fi gure, plus the various fees as sociated with construction, the cost of equipment for the new rooms and the contingency fund bring the total cost to $486,000. In other action the board ap proved a motion by Ray De- werdt, seconded by Bill Cristy, to employ Miss Chere R. Allen as a teach of Language Arts for the fifth grade. James Golden, assistant ad ministrator at Harrison, sat in for School Supt. Robert Bright, who was on vacation. Board President Dr. S.L. Ruggero is also on vacation and the board members elected Mrs. Maxine Bixby president pro-tern for the meeting. Robert Carington and Roland Kehe, architectural con sultants from the firm of Fitch, Larocca, Carington and Jones, were also present at the meet ing. A man i-eported to have liv ed in the cottage, Jack Malugen, was arrested with Miss Reed. Other young man taken into cus tody were William J. Roskopf, 1911 N. Highview, McHenry, 20 years old; Ronald D. Kranz, 322 W. Grant Highway, Mar engo, 18 years old; Robert J. Zahn, 806 W. Southside ave nue, McHenry, 22 years old; William L. Butler, 1306 N. Eastwood lane, McHenry, 20 years old; Terrance R. Green, 137 Hickory, Fox Lake, 21 years old; Stanley Madden, 7405Chip pewa drive, Wonder Lake, 20 years old; Philip Kraus, 409 Allen avenue, McHenry, 19 years old; William Pugh, 213 S. Emerald drive, McHenry, 19 years old; Steven Freres, 2524 Clara drive, McHenry, 19 years old; and Michael Pick- rum, 3204 E. Lakeshore drive, Wonder Lake, 18 years old. The girls arrested were Joy ce A. Buchert, 921 Front street, McHenry, 19 years old and Lan- ny Malugen, 156 S. Liberty, El gin, 19 years old. Miss Reed was held at$4,025 bond. Bond was set at $1,025 for all others except the juven iles. The adult offenders will appear in court on Sept. 4 at 10 a.m. The minors will be pe titioned into family 'court as delinquent children. Musin' & Meanderin (Continued from page 1) fifth wedding anniversary this weekend. The Webers and their three children inherited far more than one family's-share of musical talent, which they have generously shared with others through the years. We could not convey more sincere wishes than we feel for these very good friends. One nice thing about people is that so many thousands are brave when no one is looking! K.A.F. ZONING HEARING The postponed hearing for a sand and gravel pit on the Thom as Wilson farm, south of Bay road and east of Cuhlman road, filed by William M. Hamil and Donald Butler, will be held at 2 o'clock Thursday, Aug. 28, at the McHenry fire station. Why Not Take In A Movie Tonight? MOTORIST KILtH), ONE CHARGED i IN ACCIDENTS (Continued from page 1) ran his car into the rear end of Conforti's auto. Five-year-old Scott Berg was cut when the bike he was riding rolled into a truck driven by Richard Burke, 419 Greenwood, Round Lake, last Thursday. The accident occurred in front of Scott's home at 1224 Nipper- sink Terrace, McHenry. The truck driver rounded a curve in the road and saw the boy's bicycle skidding down to ward him. Burke stepped on the brakes and stopped his truck. However, Scott could not stop before his bike struck the front of the truck. A witness at the scene tried to pull Scott off the bicycle before the collision, but failed. Although he was bleeding, the boy was not injured seriously enough to require hospitaliza tion. McHenry county sheriffs deputies talked tb Scott in his home. Someone smashed the left side of a car driven by Irene McNish, 5206 W. Rte. 120, in McHenry, while she was work ing at Al's W hite House on Aug. 20. Mrs. McNish parked the car, owned by her husband, Ted, in the parking lot of the tavern VACANT LOT AND EMPTY BUILDING BURN THIS WEEK (Continued from page 1) At approximately 3:30 p.m., a grass fire burned through a lot at the intersection of Hill top drive and Dennis blvd., in Sunnyside. McHenry Fire Com pany II, Johnsburg, stopped the flames from spreading to the populated areas. The cause of the fire, according to McHenry Fire Chief Glenn Peterson, was undetermined. Deserted and crumbling from age, a vacant building was des troyed by a fire at 3:30 a.m., August 26. Located near 541W. Rte. 120, the garage-like shed was burning for a time before a neighbor awoke and saw the flames. Company III, Lake- moor, answered the neighbor's call within two or three min utes and began dousing the fire. Company I, McHenry, also arrived at the Lakemoor fire and helped control the flames. Although the building was des troyed, Chief Peterson does not believe it will be a large insur ance loss to its owner, Sam Baldino. The McHenry company was prepared for the building fire when it came. As a practice drill, members of Company I set afire, and then extinguished a junk car which was placed on Main street. The exercise took place on Monday at approxima tely 8 p.m. located two miles east of Mc Henry. She went to work at approx imately 4 p.m. When she re turned to the car at 11 p.m., Mrs. McNish found the damage. McHenry county sheriffs de puties can not locate the res ponsible vehicle. Although there were com paratively few accidents over the weekend, three car mishaps occurred on Monday, Aug. 25. No one was injured in these incidents, but all three cases resulted in charges being lod ged against drivers. At the intersection of Route 31 and Idyll Dell road, a mile south of McHenry, a milk truck driven by John Kabot, 135 Cora avenue, Fox Lake, crashed into the rear end of a car driven by Donald E. Henderlong, 3216 Vista terrace, McHenry Shores. Both Kabot and Henderlong were driving south along Rte. 31. When a car in front of Hen derlong began to turn right, he slowed. Kabot saw the other cars slowing down and tried to apply his brakes. However, the brakes on his company s truck would not hold on the wheels. Unable to stop, the truck dri ver struck Henderlong* s car in the rear. Sheriff s deputies cha rged Kabot with driving with unsafe equipment. Another two-car accident oc curred on Aug. 25 one - eighth of a mile from McHenry on Lin coln road at the old bridge which connects the road to Ri verside drive. Terry L. Har vey, 5206 Barnard Mill road, Ringwood, was charged with following too closely behind another vehicle after he struck the rear of the car driven by Laura H. Maynard, 703 W. Mc- Kinley, Harvard. Mrs. Maynard had stopped at the east exit from the bridge to allow traffic on Lincoln road to go by. Crossing the bridge be hind the woman's car, Harvey was looking into his rear view mirror. The man did not pay attention to the road ahead un til one of his passengers warn ed, ' Look out for that car". Skidding eight feet, Harvey's car struck the rear end of the Maynard vehicle. To avoid hitting another car head-on, Roy L. Ingram, 204 Lakeshore drive, Lakemoor, drove his car into a ditch along Route 120, one mile west of Lakemoor. Ingram was driving west along the highway when he decided to pass a slower-mov ing vehicle. After turning into the oppos ite lane, the eighteen-year-old boy saw another car headed to ward him. Ingram felt one of his front wheels begin to wobble as the other car approached him. Knowing that he could not pass or turn back into his pro per lane, the youth drove the car into the ditch on the south side of the road. Ingram was charged with im proper lane usage by deputies. Carpeting Floor Sakreto rete M Blacktop Mortar Full Service Lumber Yard with Consistant Quality D °# S Competitive TOP QUALITY PAMEUNG SO 95 ana up Prices See our wide selection pre-finished wood and Masonite Royalcote and Vinyl Coated Paneling Plan service and expert help available for your building and remodel - ing problems. AQUA SHIELD WATER PROOF CEM COATING. Phone 385-1424 HYDRO-PLUG for plugging holes and cracks in cement. mmm- i i I i i !, ALEXANDER LUMBER (0. THE BEST OF EVERYTHING FOR THE BUILDER On Highway 31 South of Main Street - McHenry. Illinois Con-Con The Illinois Cohstitution is an ancient document by con temporary standards. It^was written in its present form in 1870, Just one year following the completion of the first tran scontinental railroad and five years after the Civil War. Illinois was then an agricul tural state with but 2,500,000 people. Today, the state is a great industrial center with more than 11,000,000 people. Since our State Constitution was written, the airplane flew at Kitty Hawk and men have landed on the moon. Such com monplace necessities as the electric light, the automobile, radio and refrigeration were invented since the Illinois Con stitution was set to paper. Virtually every paragraph in the document reflects its 99 years. The words and many of the ideas are anachronistic. - The Constitution, for pxample, gives the General Assembly ta xing powers over "peddlers, hawkers, showmen, jugglers, and vendors of patents." It compels the General As sembly to pass "all laws nec essary to prevent the issue of false and fraudulent warehouse receipts." It states that "three-fifths of the voters of the county" must agree to moving the county seat, unless the new location is near er the center of the county, in which case "a majority vote only shall be necessary." It makes specific reference to what can be done by the city of Quincy 'to create indebted ness for railroad or municipal purposes.' It cites the limit on the a- mount of money to be expended "on account of the new capi- tol grounds, and construction, completion and furnishing of the State house." It is a cluttered document that we have as our Constitu tion. And, it slows the process of government in such ways as requiring that "every bill shall be read at large on three dif ferent days, in each house." This has been circumvented as There is much in the Illinois have so many other items cov- Constitution, as it is written, ered in the Constitution, by rea- that must be deleted. And, there ding only the number of the bill, is much that must be changed. j T>ke Woily •-- C linic -- Dr. Bob is leaning that glib talkers are often slow payers! The usual salesman is thus very likely to be in debt, un less he has a smart wife who acts as treasurer of their lit tle family corporation. Check among your friends and see if introverts aren't better credit risks than extroverts! By - George W. Crane, Ph. D., M.D. CASE K-592: Dr. Bob is a young dental surgeOn. "Dr. Crane," he asked while *1 was conducting a forum dis cussion at his state dental con vention, ' I occasionally mis judge patients. "By that, I mean I may think they will pay their bills, yet they leave me in the lurch. ' For example, an affable salesman in our town had me make him a full set of dentures. "When I had discussed the fee, he told me the sky was the limit and all he cared about was for me to make him the best set of false teeth avail able. "But he has ignored my bill for several months, though I had to pay about $90 out of my own pocket to the dental lab, to which most of us dentists send our impressions to be finished." . CREDIT PSYCHOLOGY Experienced doctors and as tute retail merchants have learned that glib talkers are often slow payers! If a patient comes to a doc tor and debates the fee or mulls it over for a few moments and asks about intallment pay ments, that person is more likely to be a good credit risk. For he is seriously consid ering how he can pay off his obligation. But beware of the breezy ex trovert, who says: ••Doc, the sky's the limit! Don't spare the horses! ^vant the best treatment there is for my wife and family." This type of patient often has a poor memory about the bill for such services. Introverts are generally bet ter credit risks than extroverts! For the introvert is often the oldest child, who has shouldered responsibility for his younger siblings. f "Junior," Mama warns nim, •Took out for your baby brother or sister." But baby brother or sister in such a situation feels he doesn't have to look after anybody; nei ther himself nor that older sib ling. Thus, the famous Prodigal Son of the Bible was a breezy salesman type who could talk a good line and even wangle his inheritance from his father. When he was broke, he felt no great humiliation about re turning penniless, hoping to wangle another handout from his dad. Not so that oldest son, for he was careful of his money and diligent in his farm duties. People who also keep diaries and a rigid budget and who out line their duties on a daily or weekly agehda, are also inclined to be more careful about pay ing their bills. So, too, are those who have worked for their spending mon ey all during childhood, as newspaper carriers, Boy and Girl Scouts et al. Children who grew up on the ; free "allowance" from papa • every week, are more like the ! Prodigal Son, always figuring * they can fall back on dad totally, them out of debts. For financial judgment is a ' learned" reaction and not n inherited. - So, too, is business acumen, so you self-made business ty coons must not expect your chil dren to inherit your practical judgment, which you learned via elbow grease, thrift and long hours. Most Americans obtain no training in our 3-part economic system, which consists of pro- ' duction, merchandising and credit. Since they take their full'i pay checks home, they imagine ' that merchants, doctors, far- - mers and other heads of bus- !• iness organizations do likewise. Alas, they don't dream of the high "hidden" costs of doing business! Send for my "Vocational >• Guidance Kit," (including - A Test of Horse Sense, Intro- " vert-Extrovert Test and Let- 1 ter of Application), enclosing a long stamped, return envel ope, plus 20 cents. (Always write to Dr. Crane in" care of this newspaper, en-'-' closing a long stamped, ad dressed envelope and 20 cents to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his booklets.) DON'T EAT THE POSIES" „ Because some houseplants are poisonous, it's important that you teach children not to| put parts of plants in their mouths. For instance, the leaves and branches of the o- leander are extremely poison ous. All parts of the Dieffen- bachia (dumb cane) or elephant ear will irritate the mouth and tongue. It's been known to cause the tongue of a tiny tot to swell: so that air passage to the throat was blocked. The seeds oftht rosary pea and castor bean can be fatal. So be sure to stress the possible danger from poi sonous plants. mm UtiUiSiii*****fa .. ***»••*FJ 4 * * **•». nnmp, mm siVi&jm '* **. If 2i T ** 4/ tiif* **:s* * * tMie + r*4 < '"k 04 pJM ,•4:4-4*" WSl 4*** * Either way-new straight leg (drops straight from the knee) or popular flare leg-- the look is Levi's. Pick your pairs from an outstanding selection of patterns and colors- all of them in no-iron Sta-Prest* fabrics. Nobody but Levi's makes Sta-Prest. 121? NORTH GREEN LRDBTDNE 815-385^0182