McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Apr 1970, p. 15

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

PETS THAT NEED A HOME OR ARE y«aT * 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: The animals are to be given away to good homes without charge or you are trying to And the owner of a pet that tars strayed into your possession. ifii? miitfi i tVWVft'"* 1 Malt Help Wanted ROUGH CARPENTER Specializing in pole barn construction work. Year around employment. Many company benefits. See or call A.N.MAY - BUILDERS, INC. Richmond, 111. 815-678-2861 41-41770 LICENSED plumber for ex­ panding operation. See or call A. N. May Builders, Inc., Richmond, HI. 815-6T8-2861. 41-41770 HELP WANTED SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS Earn money In your •pare time. We have one route open. Worts Transit 385-1500 4-170TF12 FOR FAST R E S U L T S PHONE 385-0170 HELP WANTED WED. APRIL I, 1970 - PLAINDEALER - PG. 15 TEACHERS' SUMMER OPENINGS Training seminar given at no cost to those interested in openings with a Marshall Field Family owped enterprise. PART OR FULL TIME POSITIONS AVAILABLE Information interview will be held Saturday morning APRIL 4 10 A.M. Suite 928 800 E. Northwest Hwy. Palatine, HL or call Dorothy Virgens 815-385-4382 327-4170 ANNOUNCEMENT .."RONNIE" has arrived at the Pin Curl, the complete beauty shop. 41-4 3 70 RESTAURANT for sale, in town location. Cash or terms. Money maker. Call 385-7368 after 7 p.m. 4-1-70TF12 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED MALE AND FEMALE HELP WANTED o 1st SHIFT POSITIONS JOB SECURITY - INCENTIVE EARNINGS - EXCELLENT BENEFITS Apply to Personnel Department 385-700? OFFICE HOURS Monday thru Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m, BRAKE PARTS CO. WE CARE ABOUT PEOPLE 1600 N. INDUSTRIAL DRIVE McHENftY an equal opportunity employer * ' 4-1-70 Now Renting: Spacious two bedroom apartments with pri­ vate patios, electric heat, refrigerator, stove, garbage disposal. Se­ lect your colors. May Development Co. 8716 N. Route IS Richmond, Illinois 68071 818-878-8881 3184370 I »nV GERMAN4 Shepherd puppies, AKC registered, 7 weeks to 5 months. If we don't have what you want, no one has. Call 815-385-7648. 325-417 TO FURNISHED and unfurnished .apartments. All utilites in­ cluded. Suitable for bache­ lor or couple. Call 385-0176. - 4370 3 BEDROOM, 8 room house, fireplace, private, near Lily Lake. Available May. Lease and references, security de- ;-v posit or 1st and last months v rent. $180 per month. Reply > - to Box 291, c/o McHenry Plain- ; ' dealer: 4-1-70TF12 /V - "X 2 BEDROOM bungalow with >2 fireplace? 2 car garage. In t rural area, $175 per month, ft All, utilities furnished. Call BOATS * MOTORS WANTED 815-459-4777. 41-4 370 • WW SOUP'S on, the rug that is, % clean with Blue Lustre. Rent - electric shampooer $1. Ruck's 111° 2 AS LONG AS the supply of £ pandora wigs last, one free % with any $20 permanent wave. 3 Only at the Pin Curl. 4-1-4370 ri--' • -- £ I WILL NOT be responsible ig for any debts other than my r-; own as of March 25, 1970. ANTHONY T. FINO. > 4170 To Late To ClaMlfy CHARLES SIRENO and le Farmers Insurance group. Unless office furniture at 2006 N. Oak Dr., McHenry is picked up by April 10th it will be sold for storage charges. 4170 GERT'S a gay girl -- ready for a whirl after cleaning car­ pets with Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer $1. Ace Hardware. 4170 PERSONALS TREAT rugs right, they'll be a delight if cleaned with Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampo­ oer $1. Hornsby's, McHenry Market Place. 4-1-70 "RONNIE" loves hair, long or short. Call the Pin Curl for appointment, 385-7112. 41-4 370 SAVE during our sale. about discount prices on every­ thing for the home. Island Lake Furniture Mart, Rt 176, Island Lake, m. Call 312-528- 2210. 4-1-70TF12 FOR FAST RESULTS PHONE 385-0170 Census Facts The women of the nation will play a large and vitally impor­ tant role In the 1970 Census of Population and Housing, whether doing the counting or being counted. Of the 160,000 enumerators (census takers) the Bureau of thf Census, U.S. Department of Commerce, is hiring for the census, about 90 percent are expected to be women. Of the 12,000 crew leaders and the 13,000 office trorkers staffing the temporary local census of­ fices across the country, well over half will be women. And according to calculations by Bureau officials, there will be more women than men counted in the census itself. Among the adult population (18 years and older), women may outnumber men by as much as 5 million. In the past, it was usually the woman of the house who greeted the enumerator at the door and answered the census questions for her family. Even when the husband was interviewed, a common observation of enum­ erators was that the wife was better informed, more know­ ledgeable about family matters than he. One enumerator com­ mented: "There was not a single instance where the husband was able to answer all the ques­ tions without calling his wife." But in the 1970 census many households will never see an enumerator. If you live hi one of the larger metropolitan ar­ eas, you received the question­ naire for your household in the mail a few days before April 1, Census Day, asked to fill it out and mail it back in a postpaid envelope provided. If you have filled out the ques­ tionnaire completely and legibly and mailed it back on Census Day or within a few days af­ terwards, no enumerator need call on you. If you live in a rural area or in a smaller city or town, you will also receive your ques­ tionnaire in the mail, and will be asked to fill it out on April 1 but you will be asked to hold it for pick-up by a census taker. The Census Bureau has planned the 1970 census this way so that the questionnaire can be in the home for a few days and give everyone the op­ portunity to provide the cor­ rect answers about himself. Filling out the census ques­ tionnaire can be a joint fam­ ily project, if husband and wife are so inclined. The questionnaires have been iKitiiaii iiTi 11 » especially designed so that when correctly filled out, most of the answers can be processed di­ rectly by the Bureau's elec­ tronic devices, thus elimina­ ting much costly and time-con- suming work required in pre­ vious censuses. After the names of all house­ hold members are listed answers to most other ques­ tions will be made by black­ ing in small circles with a pen­ cil. These black dots, rather than customary writing, are what the machines read and transfer to magnetic tape ready for the computers. About 75,000 enumerators will be needed to work in the areas where the questionnaires are picked up. The remaining 85,000 enumerators will be needed to work in the areas where the questionnaires are to be mailed back. This latter group will check the returned questionnaires to see that all questions are ansW&red; they will telephone or visit homes to obtain any missing infor­ mation, and call at homes from which no questionnaires have been returned. Enumerators will work out of the 395 temporary census of­ fices set up in the fifty states to take the census locally. They will be local residents, and so far as possible, they will be assigned work areas near where they live. The Census Bureau has found that many women who do not work at regular jobs, especially housewives, welcome the chance to earn some extra mon­ ey, and past experience has shown the Bureau that women are particularly well adapted to census work. In 1960, one enumerator was so determined to complete an interview she was conducting by phone she would not let a tornado ripping into her house stop her. The lights went out, the roof was blowing off, the windows blowing in. Her hus­ band took the children and fled to the storm cellar, but she stayed on the telephone, shield­ ing the questionnaire with a piece of plastic, until she fin­ ished with the questions. Then she joined her family under the house. Another determined enum­ erator in Nevada, snow up to her eyelashes, borrowed a snowcat, a powerful vehicle with cater­ pillar tracks, to reach a moun­ tain cabin and enumerate the couple living there. It is a common experience for an enumerator to be invited DEDICATED SEARCHERS -*• Among the hundreds of dedicated searchers looking for 8-year-old Paul Tackett and his 5-year- old foster sister, Simone Niemo, in the Wonder Lake area were operators of these snowmobiles. The marshy area was includ­ ed in 180 acres covered by a record number of volunteers. v(ho joined in efforts to find the children. Both were found drownfed, the girl on Wednesday night and the boy Friday noon. PLAINDEALER PtfOTO to stay for a meal. One woman said she had been invited to dinner nine times and asked by several families to come back for a visit after the census. "One lady was especially glad to see me. I was her first vis­ itor in more than two years," she said. Most enumerators thoroughly enjoy their work, finding it a rich and rewarding experience. One woman said she would not take a million dollars for her experiences: "I met all kinds of people, 99 percent very co­ operative and helpful in every way." What kind of a woman makes a successful enumerator? The Census Bureau says she has a warm, friendly nature, takes pride in doing a job well, is attentive to detail, and has the perseverance to stick to a task until it is done. If you are free to work for a few weeks during April and maybe into May, and you would like to earn some money do-7' ing an important job for your country, contact your local cen­ sus office. LADIES LEAGUE < All ladies interested in play­ ing golf in the Crystal Woods Thursday morning ladies' r&T- gue are invited to attend a meet­ ing on April 2. at 9 a.irt.^rt the Crystal Woods clubhouse, 5915 S. Rte. 47, W'oodstjpiv Coffee and rolls will be ved. Weather permitting, t{ie ladies will play golf after Jhe meeting. I See the McHenry Plaindealer today and HoHdi iv Hills Inez Young 385-4672 17 FT. Thompson Lapstrake, fully equipped with convertible top and mooring cover, 70 h.p. Mercury motor and tilt gator trailer. Asking $900. Call 312- 526-2109. 320-415 70 PUPPIES, litters only, for pet shop. Will pick up If brought to McHenry area. Good home guaranteed. Call 385-7897. 4-1-70TF12 Wanted To Buy 16 OR 20 INCH girl's bike, for beginner. Call 385-1502 after £ p.m. 3 25-70TF12 USED GUNS. Must be reasonably priced. Phone 385- 5839. , 327 70TF ̂Wanted To Beat RESPONSIBLE couple of 4 desire 2 bedroom home in Crys­ tal Lake or McHenry area. Call 459-7208 after 6:30 p.m. or week-ends. 4 1-4 3 70 Property Owners Meet April 3 At Hale Home The Holiday Hills Property Owner's Association will meet at the home of John Hale at 1504 West Elm this Friday eve­ ning, April 3, at 8 p.m. The first meeting under the direc­ tion of Joseph Maras the new president for the coming year. Let's all get ou$ and see what we can do to help the new of­ ficers and board. PINEWOOD DERBY Cub Scout Pack 458 will hold its Pinewood Derby at the Mc­ Henry VFW Post 4600 at 7:30 p.m. on April 3. CONDOLENCES Sincere sympathy is extended to two families in Holday Hills. Sisters Joan Laskowski and*Jo­ sephine Janik lost their mother, Mrs. Aniela Partyka, on Thurs­ day, March 26. Sh£ was laid to rest on Monday, March 30. Mrs. Partyka was preceded in death by her husband 30 years ago and is survived by five chil­ dren, Stephanie, Anthony, Joan, Josephine and Adele. PJ-POOL PARTY Cathy Connell's recent birth­ day party, held on Friday March 20 and Saturday the 21st lasted almost 24 hours with the girls enjoying a pajama party on Friday evening and then go­ ing to the McHenry pool for more fun on Saturday afternoon. The girls who helped Cathy cel­ ebrate were Doreen Miller, Denise Hughes, Karen Lanway, Mellody Buchert and Cathy's sister, Eileen. GREETINGS A happy birthday to Eunice Heise on Friday April 3 and to Nancy Foreman on April 9. Anniversary greetings go to Midge and Don Teubejf on Sat­ urday, April 4. FOUND FOUND In Country Club subdivision. Black, part Labrador and Springer dog. Black yith white markings on chest. Dog at Dr. Fike, 385-0031 «•. . 4170 TO BE GIVEN AWAY TO BE GIVEN AWAY LIGHT TAN, male, dog, 6 months old. 'cell 653-98887 ADORABLE PUPPIES to good home. Six weeks old, only 3 left, hurry. Call Ted Pierce, 338-1279. 4 1 70 Also Call 385-0170 ploce your Ads...

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy