McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 24 Mar 1971, p. 7

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• V • • • ' J, SPACE; RELIGION CLASS - Pictured above are students at McHenry high school, parishioners of St. Mary's and St. Patrick's parishes who were part of the religious education classes during the past winter. In the front row are Bill Barwig, John DeCicco, Kim Wilson, Mike McCormick, Anne Thennes and Karen Freund; second row, Mrs. Nancy Wilkins, Matt Oik, Barbara McDonough, Sharon Schmitt, Jim Walker, Mary Brown and Guy Justen; third row, Mike McGowan, Mark Justen, George Codotte, Tod Althoff, Ronald Miller, Sally Larkin, John Diedrich and Mark Steinsdorfer. Teachers were Martin Koleno, Jr., Nancy Wilkins and James Trosky. From The Farm STORAGE AND DRYING If you're planning a shift to grain sorghum take time now to preplan your storage and drying requirements. Drying capacity is reduced to less than one-half that of shelled corn because of the extra pressure required to force air through grain sorghum. FEED-GRAIN SIGN-UP Illinois farmers who want to participate in the 1971 feed- Deaths CALLA FREUND Mrs. Harold J. (Calla) Freund, a Ifelong resident of the McH«nry area, was pronounced dead on arrival at McHenry 'hospital about 11 o'clock Monday morning, March 22. She was 62 years old. Mrs. Freund was born Jan. 1, 1909, the daughter of Job and Mary Vasey. The deceased was a member of the Christian Mothers sodality of St Mary's Catholic church. Besides her husband, she is survived oy three daughters, Mrs. Leonard (Geraldine) Jensen of McCullom Lake, Mrs. Arnold (Jeanette) Kawsky of Dayton,( Ohio, and Carol at home; two sons, Gene and David, both of McCullom Lake; seven grandchildren; three sisters, Mrs. Donald (Laura) Hunter of Hartland, Mrs. Joseph (Bobbie) May of McHenry and Mrs. Mildred Brixon of Tucson, Ariz.; and one brother, Howard Vasey, of Lake Zurich. The body rests at the George R. Justen & Son funeral home until 10 o'clock Thursday, when a funeral Mass will be offered at St. Mary's church, followed by interment in the church cemetery. QUILLAR WAGNER • Quillar Wagner, 81, of 1612 Flower street, McHenry, died unexpectedly Tuesday mor­ ning, March 23, in the local hospital. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at the Peter M. Justen & Son chapel. : / MARTHA NOVAK A funeral Mass \lras offered Tuesday morning ki St. John the Baptist Catholic church, Johnsburg, for Mils. Martha Novak, 65, of 5305 Ljake street, Pistakee Highlands. Mrs. Novak died Saturday, March 20, in McHenry hospital. Born in Chicago! March 17, 1906, she had resided in this community for fiteen years. Her husbandl Frank, preceded her in ieath. Sur­ vivors include a ion, Bruce, and several grandchildren. The body rested at the Hamsher funeral Home in Fox Lake. grain programs have until April 9 to sign up. The 1971 program tentatively calls for a 20-percent set-aside for feed grains. Payment for 20- percent diversion will be 32 cents per bushel for corn and 29 cents per bushel for sorghum multiplied by the yield established for the farm, times one-half the corn and sorghum base. CALVES NEED COLOSTRUM Make sure that a newborn beef or dairy calf starts to nurse its mother within two hours after birth, warn University of Illinois Extension beef and dairy specialists. The first milk, or colostrum, from the cow provides an­ tibodies that help guard the calf against disease and infection. If a calf nurses its mother within two hours after birth, chances for survival and a vigorous start are greatly improved. GRASS WATERWAYS Pay attention to your grass waterways. They'll soon lose their effectiveness without proper maintenance. Careful handling of the plow, and proper use of the mower will usually provide the necessary maintenance. Lift the plow at the edge of a waterway. Avoid opening furrows alongside waterways. Neglect a waterway and it can fill with silt and tall grass until runoff water flows on each side. And thats when you're apt to have two groublesome gullies replacing your original grass waterway. MIX CORN WITH GRAINS Save enough corn1 to feed a mixture if you are thinking about buying milo, wheat or other grain for finishing cattle. Milo and wheat feed better in a mixture than as the only grain. Palatability problems are apparently reduced when corn makes up at least 25 percent of the ration. And avoid switching to another grain too abruptly or your cattle may go off feed. Remember too, that most grains available in Illinois will have more protein than corn and reduce your protein supplement accordingly. FERTILIZING FRUIT TREES You should fertilize fruit trees in the home orchard at least 30 days before bloom. A general suggestion is one-fifth to one-half pound of mixed fertilizer (such as 10-10-10) per year of age of the tree, but don't exceed 10 pounds per tree. Use the higher rate for weak trees and the lower rate for vigorous trees. Apply the fertilizer on the soil under the drip of the branches. DORMANT OIL SPRAYS Dormant sprays on apples and other fruit trees (except peaches) is mainly for control of scale insects. Apply the dormant spray before growth starts in the spring. But select a day when the temperature will not go below freezing that night. Use one-third cup (3 ounces) of dormant spray oil per gallon of water. PORK INDUSTRY DAY Reports on the effects of roasting corn fed to swine, protein and amino acid nutri­ tion for gestating and lactating sows, and the influence of en­ vironment of young pig perfor­ mance are among the research reports to be presented at Un­ iversity of Illinois Pork Indus­ try day, Urbana, March 13. Also on the program will be a report on management toward controlling colibacilosis and a three-speaker discussion of "The Hog Producer and His Environment." Pork Industry Day will start at 8 a.m. with a swine equip­ ment exhibit and coffee in the U. of I. Stock Pavilion. The research reports will start at 10 a.m. in the U. of I. Au­ ditorium. j> Plan to arrive early and stay all day. Lunch will be served at noon in the stock pavilion. Note that March 13 is a Sat­ urday, which means parking lots near the stock pavilion will be open to visitors. The Basque language (N. Spain) is related to no other known language. Its origin is a complete mystery. LEGAL NOTICE ELECTION NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,THAT ON TUESDAY, April 6, 1971, in the TOWN OF NUNDA in the County of McHENRY and State of Illinois, an Election will be held for HIGHWAY COM­ MISSIONER and CEMETERY TRUSTEE. The Polling Places are as follows: Precinct 1, Nunda Rural Fire Protection Dist., 2220 Rte. 176, Burton's Bridge. Precinct 2, Crystal Lake Fire Dept., Beardsley St., Crystal Lake. Precinct 3, Adept Tool & Manufacturing Co., 200 N. Walkup, Crystal Lake. Precinct 4, Island Lake Village Hall, Route 176, Island Lake. Precinct 5, Flowerwood, Routes 14 & 176, Crystal Lake. Precinct 6, Lakemoor Fire Station, 234 YV. Rand Rd., McHenry. Precinct 7 , Dispatch Pump Service, 105 State Rd., Island Lake. Precinct 8, Schroeder Metalcraft, Inc., 1519 S. Route 31, McHenry. Precinct 9, Oakwood Hills Village Hall, Oakwood Hills, Cary. Precinct 10, Nature Building, Veterans Acres, N. end of Main St., Crystal Lake. Precinct 11, Robert F. Olson Residence, 7812 Crystal Springs Rd., Woodstock. Precinct 12, Casey's Hall, 2601 S. River Rd., Griswold Lake, McHenry. Precinct 13, Public Safety Building, 121 W. Woodstock St., Crystal Lake. Precinct 14, Prairie Grove School, 3223 Route 176, Crystal Lake. The polls of said Election will be opened at Six o'clock in the morning, and will close at Six o'clock in the evening of that day. Dated: March 25, 1971 Anita Sherwood Town Clerk (Pub. March 24, 1971) What you don't know may not hurt you, but it often amuses others. AERONAUTICS. ̂ SPACE-AGE BANKING WASHINGTON--Here's a new space-age wrinkle in banking services: The Citi­ zens Bank and Trust Com­ pany of Riverclale, Md , a Washington suburb, is offer­ ing to introduce its patrons to the wide variety of tech­ nology developed in aero- . nautics and space research. The bank will serve as local focal point, in coopera­ tion with NASA, to get tech-, nical information into the hands of thos^ who need it. The bank will accept requests from its patrons and, in turn, transmit these requests to NASA Regional Dissemina­ tion Centers throughout the country. There is, of course, a serv­ ice charge by NASA for this • information inasmuch as the space agency has to search through some 700,000 ab­ stracts and related reference files to retrieve data for re­ questors. As part of its new service, the Maryland bank will also, collect the fee and turn it over to NASA. This innovation in fuller bank services may well spread to other banks. So if you wander into your bank one day and see a sign on one of the executive doors that reads: Technology Service Department, you'll know your bank is in the space business, too. V * * * * PAGE 7-PLAINDEALER-WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1971 CROSSWORD PUZZLE Siding Aluminum - Vinyl l^holesale 1000 sq. ft $279 . Installation Slightly Extra Alum. Storms $11, Doors $31 For Fre^Estimate Call 815459-8008 LONDON BLDG & SUPPLY CO REYNOLDS ALUMINUM Bui,ding Products OUR DINING ROOM OPENS... FRI-SAT-SUN. MARCH 19, 20, 21 & MARCH 26, 27, 28 HOURS: FRI. & SAT. 5:00-10:00 P.M. SUN. 2:00 • 10 P.f 2 WEEKEND l 1 FULL PRICED OR ANY ITALIAN STYLE DINNERS FOR THE PRICE OF (INCLUDES GLASS OF WINE) -ALS0- Fridays (19th-26th) m 50 FISH FRY ...all you 1 pei can eat for only per person REGULAR SCHEDULE STARTING APRIL 7: DINING ROOM Wed.-Sat. 5:00-10:00 P.M. _ WILL BE OPEN Sundays 2:00-10:00 P.M. SUMMER BOWLING LEAGUES NOW FORMING! 5- AT JOHNSBURG BRIDGE Phone: 385-1475 In, less than 10 days at Cape Kennedy recently, NA­ SA launch teams got off three major missions: Intel­ sat for the Communications Satellite Corporation on Jan­ uary 25, Apollo 14 on Jan­ uary 31, and NATO-B, a com­ munications satellite for the North Atlantic Treaty Orga­ nization on Feb. 2 . . . NASA is engaged in studies leading to a STOL (short take off and landing) experimental aircraft to develop the tech­ nology for short haul aircraft systems . . . A device de­ veloped in the space pro­ gram to separate gases from liquids in rocket fuel tanks is now being adapted as an oil-water separator to help fight pollution in natural waterways, and combustion techniques developed for rocket engines to land astro­ nauts ort the moon are being adapted to reduce industrial air pollution , . . fire depart­ ments across the country will -soon be testing protective gar­ ments developed by NASA's Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston for its rescue crews. The thousands of pits and tun­ nels, built by Indians or pre- Indians, in upper Michigan leads observers to believe their con­ struction would have required the labor of 10,000 men for 1,000 years. ACROSS 1. Long cut 5. ResoY"ts 9. Wireless 10. Fits of insanity 12. Range part 13. Hun 14. Torme 15. Cue 16. Music note 17. Factor 19. Cudgel 20. High card 21. Dainty 22. Edge 25. Persian prophet 26. Split 27. Fencer's cry 28. Gelid 29. California city 33. Exclama­ tion 34. Appoint­ ment 35. Ext.nct bird 36. Creation 38. Payment for Charon 39. Male duck 40. Fat 41. Perished 42. Telegraph DOWN 1. Mallet 2. Girl's name 3. Transgress 4. Exclama­ tion 5. Tilt 6. Football kick 7. Conjunc­ tion 8. Steamer channel 9. City of the Seven Hills 11. Lists of candidates 13. Climbing plant 15. Minced oath 18. Long hair 19. Storage place 21. To become bankrupt Today ' 22. French states­ man <1862- 1932) 23. Burton 24. Climb­ ing plant 25 Man­ ufac­ ture 27. Detest 29. Rowed 30. Shade of brown 31. Rope with running knot s Answer BE3BE Bggg BBBBB EEEF. iiEfflnnU dec: ebeh cr- GEEEEJEK OBO ODE EjDIIQ BEfZEtT DCEIIEE eranE bee DEB OEBEBKB EB OCI1H KE2 HEGEEGJ CrrEE 0BOB3B BDBEfT 0EP1B CJHEE \ 32. 38. 40. "Over hill and " Nobleman Indo-Chin. tribe Japanese sash Cry of pain % 2 3 A i <o 7 6 % 9 % 10 II \Z % 14- % IS % lb 17 15 % >9 % % % 20 % 21 ZZ 23 24 % 25 2b % % % % 2fc % 29 30 11 55 % 34 % 3S 5b Y7 % 56 5» i 40 % 41 % 42 % f? f ii23 r 5 [a)H A I G W/A$ CfiPTU&t-p ) 1711 // FOUR I 6.50xl3btackwa!l tubeless plus Fed. Ex. Tax $1.76 per tire and four old tires WH1TEWALLS $3.50 more per tira USE OUR RAIN CHECK PROGRAM. Because of an expected heavy de. mand for Goodyear tires, we may run out of some sizes during this offer, but we will be happy to order your size tire at the advertised price and issue you a rain check for future delivery of the merchandise. ANY OF THESE SIZES-ONE LOW PRICE WHITEWALLS $3.00 more each 7.75x14 7.75x15 8.25x14 Blackwall tubeless plus $2.14 to $2.32 Fed. Ex. Tax per tire (depend­ ing on size) and four old tires FREE MOUNTING ON ALL TIRES 3 WAYS TO CHARGE 1. 2. mm, 3. Customer Qtdit Haq, Customer Qtdit Haq, * Starred Locations Do Not Honor Bank Credit Cards. vi-; v. Dry charged for de pendable power • Solid cover construc tion gives efficient cranking power for sure start3 12-Volt with Exchange Group 24,24F "ALL-WEATHER" BATTERY NOT AVAILABLE AT LOCATIONS WITH THIS SYMBOL * NOW...GETFREE BATTERY TEST! GOODYEAR--THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS® TIRES Now at your nearby GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE lRKI IACI McHENRY 4400 W. Rte. 120 815-385-7300 Open Daily 8:30 A V -6 00 P.M. Friday 't i l 9:00 Saturday 8:30-4:00 GOODYEAR

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