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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 11 Nov 1970, p. 5

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r PAGE 5-PLAINDEALEfc-WED., NOVEMBER II, 1970 McCullom Lake Betty Kamin 385-7368 Margaret Letson 385 0475 Children Wear\ Hallloween Prize Winning Costumes The Cullom-Knoll Associa­ tion sponsored a Halloween par­ ty for the children of the vil­ lage; and you wouldn't believe the turnout! The costumes were absolutely fantastic! A bonfire was started, games were play­ ed and afterwards, the children were served hot chocolate and donuts. Winners for. the best cdstumes were: 4 and under;f Tom Wunder, Ken Mass and Jeff Carlson; 5 to 8; Michelle Bailey, Steve Huff and Lisa Walter; 9 to 12; Tom Damiano, Susan Penny and Bill True. Many thanks to all the people who took the effort to do something great for our children! REMINDER The next board meeting will be next Wednesday, Nov. 18, at 8 p.m. at the beach house. ; LADIES OF THE LAKE The Ladies of the Lake will meet Thursday, Nov. 12, at the ugual time of 8 p.m. at the ' ich house. A reminder to the »s to bring the staples (Can- goods) for the food basket, members are asked to ise attend, this meeting will icern the Christmas party. CIVIL DEFENSE DIRECTOR There hasn't been any re­ sponse yet for a Civil Defense Director. If you are interested call Carol Perschke and talk to her about it, or if you know someone who would be good in this position, suggest them. The director would be an organizer, instructed in what to do in case of a disaster. There is one meeting held every two months. Courses are available to the director at no expense. This volunteer could be filled by any interested member of our com­ munity, man or woman. Without this program, we would not receive aid from the government. Each member would have to secure his own loans in case of a great loss because of a disaster, there would not be any Federal loans or grants. BIRTHDAYS A belated birthday is wished to Dorothy Simmerman whose birthday was Oct. 31. A happy birthday is wished to Gail Glee- son whose birthday is Nov. 14. Happy birthday! HOSPITAL STAY Floyd and Eva Peisha of 5301 Fountain Lane are in the Mc- Henry hospital following a car accident on Monday, Nov. 1. We wish you both a speedy recovery! Dr. Benjamin Massouda, his wife, Jearmette, and wounded sol- diers at the Hadassah hospital at Ein Karem, Jerusalem, Israel. Dr. Massouda Will Address Hadassah Unit m This is the last of three re­ ports taken from my recent re­ view of key issues of the 91st Congress in the Congressional Record in October. I We are a people involved. This is a time of dramatic in­ terest by. and activity on the part of, the citizens of this na­ tion. Improved communica­ tions, increased leisure time, growing educational opportun­ ities, all have combined to make the American citizen more re­ sponsive and more vocal on matters at national concern. *5 This Congress has seeitwd to lend itself to addressing is­ sues which have been discussed (or years. A dramatic example Was the legislation to provide for the direct papular election Of the President and Vice-Pres- ident - which I supported. If passed by the Senate, this meas­ ure would have extended the one man-one vote principle to election of our President and Vice-President. No legislation, however, points up this contention more than the Legislative Reorgani­ zation Act of 1970, of which the Congress can be justly proud. It has been twenty-four years since the Congress last amended its ways of doing bus­ iness. Hie legislation - for which I have worked since 1965, and which I supported by testi- finony, amendment, Floor Ipeeches, and finally, my vote W has significantly improved the operations of both the House and Senate. Minority interests are protected, procedures are streamlined --including the ac­ ceptance of my amendment per­ mitting electronic voting to re­ place the arduous roll call sys­ tem which has occupied fully tone-fourth of the time of the Congress in any given session- and, most importantly, a great *deal that was previously se­ cret will be made public. Vir­ tually all committee meetings Iwill be opened; public television icoverage of committee hear­ ings will be permitted; andpre- Hdously unrecorded votes in the i House and in committee will now be recorded and made pub­ lic. There are great and critical t issues before us - and because ICEPTIONS DANCES ION ,MITCHELL ARTISTS Entertainment to meet your requirements and your budget DANCE BANDS ENTERTAINMENT Division of TONES Inc., 3719-23 W. Elm Strwt McHenry, III. 60060 (815) 386-4646 McCLORY REPORTS From Washington the problems are great, the challenges are great. The ex­ citing opportunity for extraor­ dinary achievement, involve­ ment, and change is with us. It is indeed a time for great­ ness if we but rise to meet the challenge. The Congress has sought to rise to that challenge. Because of the divergence of political control, there is also a diver­ gence of philosophy and ap­ proach. The art of compro­ mise involving a President of <me party ard a Congress of the other, tends in some in­ stances to neutralize what might have been dramatic results. The 91st Congress has set a record for length. It will re­ convene Nov. 16 to continue the work it started in January, 1969! IN COLLEGE CAST Richard Looze of McHenry was a member of the cast of the Milton College Players pre­ sentation of the Tony award- winning play, "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead", by Tom Stoppard. The comedy- drama was presented Oct. 29, 30, 31 and Nov. 1, in Allen- Bradley auditorium in Milton, Wis. Richard portrayed the Player. Dr. Benjamin J. Massouda will be the guest speaker at a regular meeting of the Elgin chapter of Hadassah on the eve­ ning of Nov. 18 at 8 p.m. at the Congregation Kneseth Is­ rael. The topic will be "Had­ assah Hospital and Its Effects on the Medical Care in Israel and the Middle East". The meeting will be in charge of the Hebrew Medical organization chairman, Mrs. Benjamin Mas­ souda, who with her husband visited Israel last March on a Hadassah medical tour. Dr. Massouda is a graduate of the Cairo University Medical school in Cairo, Egypt, and has interned at the Cairo university hospitals through the year 1954. His impressive and extensive Curriculum Vitae includes a teaching residency at St. Luke's hospital, New Bedford, Mass., chief resident of Internal Medicine at the New Mt. Sinae hospital, Toronto, Canada, and at present he is an associate in medicine and instructor at the Chicago Medical school, Chicago, and at Northwestern University Medical school. His offices and practice are in Mc­ Henry, in association with the McHenry Medical Group. Dr. Massouda plans to participate in a volunteer program at the Ha­ dassah-Hebrew University Medical center at Ein Karem, Israel next year. He resides in McHenry with his wife, Jeannette and four daughters. The meeting is open to Ha­ dassah members, their hus­ bands and friends. DECLARE DIVIDEND At a meeting of the board of directors of National Tea Co., Nov. 2, the regular quarterly dividend of 20 cents per share was declared, payable Dec. 1, to shareholders of record Nov. 13. Miles South on< Between McHeniy & Crystal Lake for the Traditional and Unusual Christmas Decorations Lights - Garlands Ornaments - Wreaths Candles Electrified 7-fbot Scotch Pine Tree ... Now so Realistic. SALE '19.99 by Mr. Christmas The tree is electrified with a 6* UL cord built into the trek Lush and beautiful, this tree, made of durable PVC improves (Hi nature because you don't toss it out after the holidays; you store it away in its own compact carton and use it year after year. And there's no wilting, no watering, no needles to sweep up; it's fire retardant, takes minutes to set up, comes with tip-resistant stand. Decorations not included. /> BEN ARVIDS0N & SONS INC License Fee) Reasslgnments Over Si Million Reassignment fees for 1971 continue to run in excess of $1 million over last year's end of October total, Secretary of State John W. Lewis has an­ nounced. • Fees deposited in the state treasury have reached $17,- 374,020, or $1,237,098 more than the $16,036,922 figure re­ corded at this time a year ago. The number of applications for reassignment is running 42,335 ahead of the comparable figure for last year. Currently, 650,252 reassignment applica­ tions have been received in the Secretary of State's office, as compared to the 607,917 appli­ cations received at this time last year. Hybrid animals seem to take the body of the mother, the head, Snd tail of the father. Ex-: mule, body of mare r, appendages of donkey father. Patrol Installation I Deadline For Display Of '71 Licenses Set Midnight Monday, Feb. 15, will be the deadline for dis­ playing 1971 motor vehicle license plates on all vehicles licensed on a calendar year bas­ is, Secretary of State John Lew- is has announced. Secretary Lewis emphasized that this deadline is for having the plates mounted on the ve­ hicles, not merely for having submitted applications, having the plates resting on a desk at home or being carried in­ side the vehicles. »' Processing time for appli­ cations, plus delivery time by third class mail, may mean a period of two or three weeks between receipt of the appli­ cations in the Secretary of State's office and their arrival at the owner's home or business address. Because of the time element, Lewis urged those mo­ torists planning to apply for their plates by mail to sub­ mit their applications no later than January 25 to be assured 1 of having their plates in time for the deadline. Issue Tickets The following tickets were is­ sued by the McHenry Police de­ partment: Joseph P. Justen, 3907 W. John street, McHenry, driving while license revoked or sus- pended. Arthur J. Keevil, Jr., 4313 Crystal Lake road, McHenry, failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident. Marie Lyons, 1007 N. River road, McHenry, improper lane usage and driver's license not op person. AGRICULTURAL SPEAKER Featured speaker at the 1970 annual meeting of the Illinois Agricultural association will be Thomas A. Foran, Chicago law­ yer and prosecutor in the Con­ spiracy Seven Trial. The meet­ ing will be held in Chicago's Sherman House Nov. 16-19. Foran will speak in the evening general session Wednesday, Nov. 18. H^s subject will con­ cern law and order. % 8 Valley View school recently had an installation program for the new patrols. During the program, Mr. Anderson and Mr. Benjamin, teacher supervisors, spoke about leadership, responsibility and purposes of the program. Pictured above are the sixth grade patrol captains and the fourth and fifth grade patrol lieutenants. From left to right, they are: Cindy McDonald, Mr. Anderson, Bob Hermes, BarbieShafer, John Bierman, Julie Brooks, Mr. Benjamin, and Charlynda Johnson. 3209 S. RTE 31 CRYSTAL LAKE The NEW WIDE "500 FOR DEPENDABLE CAR SERVICE «:««• iff COUPON OFFE-R^' - REPACK FRONT WHEEL BEARINGS ! SEALS a ST IM I $988 i ThU coupon AND INSTALL NEW Wa'll repack ou*«r and inner bearinq. DUc briVts excluded. I I I L L. COUPON OFFER This coupon expires j| CJ Nov J C O U P O N O F F E R I Front End Alignment I ^ ' ' , 0 M © 1 Moit American Cart. Excluding Some Luxury Car. ^ fcxtre cherq* for cart with toni6n | ^ j^«^^ondltioninq j Lube & Oil Change Includes up to 5 quarts of premium oil and expert lubrication. ($388 MON. 8:0n to 8:00 TUES.-FR1. o:ii0 to 5:30 SAT. 8:30 to 5:00 1 I I I I I I I I for your complete car service m c h e n r v J€£5JWA£KEGA^»OAD(IUJE^ie) T i r e $ t o n e Over-the-counter sale of li­ cense plates will begin Tuesday, Dec. 1, at two Secretary of State's office outlets in Spring­ field, the three Motor Vehicle facilities in Chicago and at nine­ ty-two banks throughout the state. Registrations for 1971 now total about 800,000, an increase of about 50,000 over the total at the same time a year ago, Lewis said. For 1970, regis­ tration of vehicles licensed on a calendar year basis is expect­ ed to be about 4,700,000, he said. County Life Underwriters Will Organize The new McHenry County Life Insurance Underwriters asso­ ciation will hold its organiza­ tional meeting at the Timbers restaurant, Rt. 14 •> by-pass and Rt. 47, Woodstock, at noon on Thursday, Nov.12,announc­ ed J. Will Keiley, interim pres­ ident of the group. "The purpose •< of this meeting", Keiley stated, "is to develop the necessary membership to obtain a char­ ter from the national board of directors for the McHenry county association. Attending this meeting will be the state of Illinois mem­ bership chairman, Robert Beadles, C.L.U., Springfield, Marshall Grans, C.L.U., Rock- ford, the regional vice-presi- dent, and Gary Myer, C.L.U. president of the Rockford as­ sociation of Life Underwriters. They will discuss the activities of the Life Underwriters as­ sociation and how it is involved at local, state and national lev­ els. They will also discuss how the association influences the life insurance industry. Keiley stated," the commit­ tee has tried to contact all li­ censed life underwriters who reside in McHenry county to invite them to attend this meet­ ing and become charter mem­ bers. We may have overlook­ ed some agents accidently, but we want it known that every life underwriter is eligible for membership and is urged to attend this meeting." S Self-Cleaning! Low Cost! Baked-on oven grease and grime simply vanish! Electrically cleans the ... oven ... bv^n shelves . . . inner door . . . and the surface unit reflector pans PHONE 385-2323 NeHENBY # ® m AUTOMATIC SELF-CLEANING OVEN SYSTEM Only MODEL J329 *279* CLOTHES ARE DRIED JUST RICHT AUTOMATICALLY! m 0 1 MODEL DDE7100L HIGHSPEED I DRYER • 3 automatic-dry cycles. • Automatic Permanent Press Cycle with "Cooldown". • 3 Heat Selections. • End-of-cycle signal can be set to sound or not. • Porcelain enamel top and drum. • Fluff setting. Prices start at 139* m nm miaul t**t M--b ft .to*/ fM *nu wticm mmsat w CAREY Appliance 1241 N. Green McHenry 385-5500

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