McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 30 Aug 1972, p. 7

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Deaths JAMES G.KOZELL James G. Kozell, 67, of 521 Coventry Lane, Crystal Lake, died Aug. 26 in St. Joseph hospital, Elgin. He was born Nov. 17,1904, in Chicago. He was an executive director of the Samuel Mann Foundation of Chicago. On May 1, 1925, he married Grace J. Sullivan in Chicago. She died July 24, 1972. Among his survivors are two daughters, Mrs. Jack (Joyce) O'Keefe of Crystal Lake, and Mrs. Thomas (Norene) Benn, Hollywood, Calif.;' nine grandchildren; two great­ grandchildren; two brothers, George and William, of Chicago and one sister, Mrs. Frank (Mae) Tumpach, Chicago. The body rested at the Warner and Flagg Funeral home until Monday morning when Mass was offered at 10 o'clock at St. Thomas Catholic church with Rev. Fr. Leo Ambre officiating. Burial was in Crystal Lake Memorial Park. HARRY R. CRUM, SR. A resident of 8919 Woody Trail, Wonder Lake, Harry R. Crum, Sr., 65, died Aug. 27 at Woodstock Memorial hbspital. He was bom Oct. 5, 1906 in Pennsylvania and was a retired C.T.A. employee. He is survived by his wife, Nora, two sons, Harry Crum, Jr., and Bruce Crum, Wonder Lake; a daughter, Sandra Metropolis, DesPlaines. The body rested at the Peter M. Justen Funeral home until Wednesday morning when Mass was offered at 10 o'clock at Christ the King Catholic church. Burial was private. FRANK A. BADACH Frank A. Badach, 63, of 914 Briarhill drive, Island Lake, died Aug. 26 at McHenry hospital. Born in Chicago on Aug. 28, 1908, he had been a resident of Island Lake for 12 years. Before his retirement he had been employed by Stiger Precision Products Co. of Chicago as inspector. He is survived by his wife, Olga; four sisters, Oneila Suda, Chicago, Olive Krejnik, Ber- wyn, Clarice Andel and Frances Prochaska, Cicero. Services were held Tuesday at 11 o'clock at the Community Congregational Church of Island Lake with the Rev. Ernest Brickhouse officiating. Burial was in Concordia cemetery, Forest Park. MARGARET FUCHS Margaret Fuchs, 67, of 610 N. Mineral Springs drive, died Aug. 25 at Brookwood Nursing home, DesPlaines. Born Feb. 22, 1905, she had lived in this area permanently for thirty-four years, having been a summer resident for twenty years previous. She had been employed as kitchen help in various restaurants. Her survivors include two brothers, Richard Fox, r Cherokee Village, Ark., and Walter Fox, Glenview; three nephews and one niece. Private services and burial were held Monday. Arrangements were made by the Peter M. Justen and Son funeral home. BARBARA ANN WESTERBERG Mrs. Barbara Ann Wester- berg, 58, of 5316 N. Lake, Pistakee Highlands, died Aug. 26 at McHenry hospital. She was born Deer 13,1913, in Chicago and was a member of St. John the Baptist church, Johnsburg. She was an em­ ployee of Intermatic Corp. Spring Grove. Among her survivors are a daughter, Mrs. Edward (Suzanne) Justen of Crystal Lake^a son, Thomas, Chicago; two grandsons and one great- granddaughter; a sister, Mrs. Catherine Byrne, Chicago; a brother, Paul Cahill of Brook- field. She was preceded in death by her husband, Ralph, in 1963. The body rested at the Hamsher Funeral home until Tuesday morning when a funeral Mass was offered at St. John's church with burial in the church cemetery. Vision Exam Deemed "Must" On School List Parents, attention! Add a professional vision exam to the list of "musts" on your children's back-to-school list this fall. Their success in the coming school year could depend on it. "Vision is of critical im­ portance to a child's school work," declares Dr. Henry J. Luckhardt, president of the Illinois Optometric association. "An estimated 80 per cent of all learning during a child's first twelve years is obtained through his vision. Vision is the key to academic achievement, social adjustment, safety practices, recreational pursuits and total health." Despite the close relationship between vision health and school success, four of ten Illinois grade school children are visually handicapped, Dr. Luckhardt asserts. The problem, he adds, rests in the inconclusive results of the school-given Snellen eye chart test. "The Snellen eye chart only measures a child's ability to PAGE 7-PLAINDELAERrrWEDNE SDAY, AUGUST30, 1972 / POLITICAL CORKER Host Dinner For GOP Precinct Committeemen Congressman Robert Mc- Clory and Congressman John Anderson will host a dinner for Republican precinct com­ mitteeman and other McHenry county Republican leaders Saturday evening, Sept. 16. A1 Jourdan, McHenry county Republican chairman, an* nounced plans for the dinner which will be held at the Woodstock V.F.W. starting at 7:30 p.m. An expected 250-300 will attend the dinner and program. McClory has been the Representative in Washington for McHenry county since 1962. Re-dis.iricting places the northern townships of McHenry county in the district in which Anderson is serving and seeks re-election, the 16th district. McClory is seeking reelection in the new 13th Congressional district which includes nor­ thern townships in Lake and Kane counties and these seven McHenry county townships: Marengo, Door, Nunda, Algonquin, Grafton, Coral and Riley. The eleven other townships in McHenry county will be in the 16th district which includes Boone and Winnebago counties. Jourdan will serve as master of ceremonies for the dinner which will provide an op­ portunity for people of the county to become more familiar with Congressman Anderson and to renew friendships with the veteran C o n g r e s s m a n M c C l o r y . Musical entertainment for the hour before the dinner is planned. Program will include highlight reports by the two Congressmen and a look at the main issues of concern to the public as revealed in surveys and polls taken by McClory and Anderson. read a prescribed set of letters at a 20-foot distance," Dr. Luckhardt points out. "It does not test a child's binocular vision-the capacity of his eyes to work together - at near point, which is the process required for reading." Dr. Luckhardt adds that the Snellen chart also fails to measure a child's ability to see both sides up and down while focusing on a small target. 4 YOGA - FALL SESSION STARTS THURS. SEPT. 14 MCHENRY - Lakeland Park Community House 1717 Sunset Avenue Instructor: Mrs. Cleo Atwood CLASS SCHEDULE: 9 a.m. Beginning or Continuing 10:15 a.m. Continuing 7 Weeks - $10.00 Register By Phone 459-2301 New Students Welcome Any Class Year Schedule: Sept. 14 - Dec. 15 Jan. 11, 1973 - May 31 FEES PAID AT FIRST CLASS SESSION GLADSTONE'S M e n ' s \) PANT SALE ®Ff On Our New Fall Line Of Name Brand * JEANS * DOUBLE KNITS • DRESS SLACKS Thurs. Fri. Sat. Sun. 31 12 3 EaLnnSTCINE TTT NYE IS READY FOR.... SPECIAL SCHOOL OFFER! CIRCUS MATES VITAMINS Chewable Fruit-Flavor Animal Shape 2.69 value Plain or 2.87 value with Iron Limit 2 They're good for everyone...2 yr. olds to adults...it's all on the box label. Bottle of 100 tablets. SANF0RD WHITE .39 Value tZSoi* 139 Value FILLED 3-RING BINDER With 2 pocket dividers, 50 paper sheets. ( Vinyl cover, color choice. 1.29 Value Thermos Bfand 1.59 Value DESK TYPE PENCIL SHARPENER Color choice J®® SCHOOL BAG 2.69 value With handle or shoulder strap in 3 assorted designs. SNAK JAR Insulated to keep lunches cold, crisp for hours Color choce. 5^ oz: capacity. 77 2 1" 100 Brown Paper LUNCH BAGS 10%" high. 49* Value % x 1100 in. SCOTCH Transparent TAPE Never yellows - stays ( clear j J| 2.79 value SCHOOL SCISSORS ZT Blunt or pointed 39* Value 1.49 Value LABELMAKER Pi«ts QQ( 3/8" letters. PEDIGREE COMPASSES 12" Ball Bearing Reg. 39' IV Value Canvas Covers 14" Utility P 7IPPER BAG oice of plaid or jlack vinyl. Steel frarplB, 59* Values - Elmer's SCHOOL GLUE or GLUE-ALL oqt 4 oz. sizes CLIP BOARDS Reg. 89' 77 49' Value • Pk. 10 CAMPUS PENCILS IT No. 2 lead Limit 1 2 or 3 Ring BINDER WOODEN RULERS 10 CHECK OUR CIRCULAR! CHECK OUR STORE!... FOR MANY IN-STORf BACK-TO- SCHOOL BUYS! Reserve right to limit quantities TRU-VALUE <7 PHARMACY 815 385 0182 1327 N. RIVERSIDE DR. McHENRY V /

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