BICENTENNIAL COMMISSION CALLS MEETING (Continued from page 1) at 8 p.m. This will include patriotic, service and fraternal organizations from the twenty- three municipalities within McHenry county. Pat Murray, regional director of the Illinois Bicen tennial commission, will unveil the newly released Bicen tennial film. He also will make himself available for a question and answer session for all those now involved in preparations lor celebrating the counties 200th birthday. EXPECT 1,000 STUDENTS IN 1975 SUMMER SCHOOL (Continued from page 1) selors, social workers, etc., with instructors working in a coordinated-integrated ap proach where their expertise will be shared not only with other special teachers, but also with the regular classroom teacher. The proposal will be sub mitted next October and acted upon in January. If funding is approved, it will be for the 1976- 77 school year. The tentative budget to improve the program lists $74,000 for personnel and material, fully funded the first year. The second year, 85 per cent, or $62,900 would be fun ded, and the third year, 50 per cent, or $37,000. An alteration of the school calendar was approved. One snow day remains, and if it is not needed for that purpose, May 26, the federal govern ment's observance of Memorial day, will be used as a non- attendance day, as well as the state of Illinois observance, May 30. Inservice half days were approved as Oct. 30 and 31, March 25, and 26 and April 30. In other business, Inlander Bros., Inc., Chicago, submitted the low bid of $1.29 a ream to supply mimeograph and duplicator paper. The board approved an ad ministration recommendation that book rental fees for Grades 1 through 8 remain the same next year. They are $13 for Grades 1-5 and $17 for Grades 6- 8. The board agreed to extra duty stipend recommendations offered. The only change in the elementary schools is that involving playground super vision. Only Edgebrook school utilizes certificated staff members as playground supervisors and there is a discrepancy between their stipend and that of the Junior high school staff on the same site for the same responsibility. As a result, an increase of $50 was made at Edgebrook, from $350 to $400. Another recommendation was accepted to increase the junior high chorus director's stipend by $50 for the reason that the number of students participating in this activity has increased greatly. Since the athletic directors at Junior high and Parkland schools have assumed greater responsibilities in athletic activities, it was voted also to increase their stipend by $50. Resignations were accepted from Aileen T. Claybaugh, who has been on leave of absence from Hilltop fifth grade, and Candice North, Hilltop third grade teacher. A resolution recognizing twenty-five years of excellent service to the district by Mrs. Claybaugh was approved. Jacklyn Allen was employed as an aide at Hilltop and Steve Toole as custodian at Junior high. Among non-certificated personnel, the resignations of Ruth Nordal and Kathleen Coles, aides at Hilltop, were accepted. A report was made on completion of the Master educational plan. The program is an effort of citizens, teachers and administrators to study priorities which will assist the board in budget plans. Following an. executive session, the board adjourned until April 16 at 7:30 at the central office, when votes from the April 12 election will be canvassed and the board reorganized. FOUR TEENS INJURED IN AUTO ACCIDENT (Continued from page 1) pulled off the road when he saw the Chumley car coming toward him at an excessively high rate of speed. Officers noted the car" traveled 568 feet from where it left the road until it came to rest. Chumley was ticketed for operating in violation of restriction and failure to reduce speed to avoid an ac cident. Steven L. Lawrenz of 2708 W. Myang avenue, McHenry, was ticketed by sheriff 's deputies for failure to yield to an authorized emergency vehicle after a collision at 3729 Elm street Tuesday afternoon. According to the report, Thomas L. Diedrich of 1208 W. Park street, McHenry, was enroute to a fire call with his blue rotating dash light in operation when Lawrenz pulled out of a parking lot into his path and impact occurred. Monday afternoon, two cars collided at the intersection of Deep Spring road and Hilltop, Wonder Lake, resulting in a ticket for unsafe tires being issued to James J. Stahl of 4402 E. Lake shore drive. Wonder Lake. According to sheriff 's deputies, Doris M. Barry of 7709 Deep Spring road, Wonder Lake, was crossing the in tersection when the Stahl auto came over a hill and impact occurred. A truck-car accident at the intersection of Main street and Wilmot road, Spring Grove, Tuesday night about 6:15 resulted in injuries to both drivers. However, neither required transportation to the hospital by ambulance. Matthew J. Nolen, Jr., of 1425 Primrose, Spring Grove, told deputies he was east-bound on Main when a car driven by George A. Lossmann of 4414 W. Ponca, McHenry, pulled out in front of him and they collided. Lossmann was ticketed for BURGLARIES, VANDALISM INVESTIGATED (Continued from page 1) The summer home of Charles Lebda at 5516 W. Lake Shore drive. Wonder Lake, was broken into recently. Neighbors discovered the burglary last Saturday morning. Several windows had been broken and doors damaged. It can not be determined what was taken until the owner arrives to take inventory. Martin Ryba of 7417 Mar- blehead road, Wonder Lake, reported extensive vandalism had been done to his car last Wednesday night. Because of the snow storm, he left his car parked along the road over night. When he went for it Thursday morning, he discovered the grill was bent, windshield wipers, antenna and outside mirror were broken, all four hubcaps were missing, the right rear tire was deflated and paint was scratched on the right side of the auto. Officials reported that sometime Saturday night, thirty window panes had been broken in an undetermined manner at the McHenry-Nunda library building, 809 Columbus drive, McHenry. CITY, VILLAGE ELECTIONS NEXT TUESDAY (Continued from page 1) party ticket. He will be opposed by George J. Mayer, Jr., running on the Independents ticket. McKim's slate includes Virginia L. Aalto, Eugene A. Huff, Ronald A. Krumsee and Donald J. Parenti seeking four vacancies for a two-year term as trustee. Running on Mayer's ticket ^are Donald A. Milbratz and William (Willie)Walter. Four of the six candidates will be elected. For a four-year term, Eugene F. Frost and Terry B. Jordan are running on the Progressive ticket and Monty F. Yates is a candidate on the Independents ticket. Two will be elected At McCullom Lake, the polling place is the beach house. Considerable campaign information is being circulated in one of the area's newest villages, McHenry Shores, where there are contests for president and trustee. A three-way race exists for president. Howard R. Bieritz is seeking reelection. He will be opposed by Rose Lillegard, who now serves as village clerk, and Jeffrey L. Hoffman, who heads the village's Plan commission. One will be named to a four- year term April 15. Five persons seek three vacancies on the board of trustees. They are Clarence V. Schweikert, John C. Novotny, Raymond R. La'Francis, Donald J. Zutaut and Robert S. Steck. Voting at McHenry Shores will be held at the village hall. The village of Lakemoor has failure to yield at a stop or yield intersection. only contests for trustees, where there are candidates representing four party names. Three will be elected for four- year terms. Earl (Tom) Reese is a candidate on the Independent party ticket; Edna Garbacz and Diane Madenis on the People's party ticket; Ronald Derengowski. Anthony Klama and Irene Milewski under the Liberal party name, and'Harold (Curtis) Freeman, of the Progressive party. - The community building is the polling place in Lakemoor. Six men and women seek to fill three vacancies for trustee in the village of Sunnyside. Candidates are Frances M. Dockham, Andrew Eichhorn, William Neumann, Jr., Richard Mickelsen, Gregory Nowak and Christine Williams. Terms extend for four years. Voting in Sunnyside will be at the village hall. Hold Twenty-Eighth Blood Bank Drawing • r iu i i Further information concerning candidates for the eity of McHenry and nearby village elections appears elsewhere in this issue. The Plaindealer office will be open from 7 to 8:30 Tuesday evening to furnish election returns to callers. The twenty-eighth drawing of McHenry Kiwanis Blood Bank is all set for Sunday, April 13, at the American Legion home. Ringwood road, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Any healthy individual may donate who is 17 years old, up to the end of their sixty-fifth year. Those .who cannot donate, may become a member by calling the chairman, Ed Guettler, at 385-8570. There are many donors who wish to give for those \^ho are unable. To date there are 822 actual donors on the Kiwanis records, with as many for whom there were subsitutions. Since 1967, 2,795 pints have been drawn through the McHenry Kiwanis club bank. New rulings have come from the American Association of Blood Banks which include 17 year olds. Malaria area travelers may be accepted six months after return to the U.S. if they are free of symptons and have not taken drugs; also, those who have had malaria may give again three years after cessation of therapy, and, those who have had injections for allergy (hay fever, ur ticaria, etc.) may donate after 72 hours. A beautiful piece of jewelry has been ad^ted by the American Association of Blood Banks to be presented to those donors who have given a gallon or more of blood so that others may live. Ed Guettler reports that fifty-four men and women are in that select group from the McHenry Kiwanis Blood Bank, and many more are anxious to get into the Gallon club. There are five members who have reached the Two Gallon club: Ed Stach with thq highest 23 pints; Elvera Justen, 21 pints; Joseph Prazak, 20 pints; and Harold' Ferwerda and Charleen Tonyan with 16 pints each. Chairman Guettler notes that there is no request for finances in the McHenry Kiwanis Blood Bank. He suggests that everyone contribute by backing the Kiwanis club in its projects. Deaths EDWARD M. SCHMITT Edward M. Schmitt, 71, 4610 Garden Quarters, McHenry, died April 8 at the Harvard hospital. He was born Dec. 24, 1903, in Chicago. His only survivor is his wife, Marion, nee Schmitt, whom he married Sept 4, 1946, in Chicago. Visitation was scheduled for Thursday from 3 to9p.m. at the George R. Justen and Son funeral home. Mass will be offered Friday morning at 10 o'clock at St. Mary's church with burial in the church cemetery. DOROTHY O'HALLERAN Last rites were conducted Wednesday in a Dixon funeral home lor Miss Dorothy M. O'Halleran, 28, of Dixon, for merly of McHenry. Miss O'Halleran died Sunday, April 6, in a Dixon hospital. Property Owners Will Elect Board Members On Sunday, April 13, the Lakeland Park Property Owners Association will hold its annual general meeting at 2 p.m., at the Lakeland Park community house, 1717 North Sunset drive. Four board members will be elected to serve for two years on the board of directors. The nominees, as reported by .James Blake, chairman of the Nominating committee include the following: incumbents seek re-election: Ernest Schooley, Dennis Storline and Lloyd Wagner. Other nominees seeking election are James Blake, Mrs. Carol Cynowa, Marvin Moore, H.F. "Patt" Patterson, Raymond Rode and Michael Wallace. Absentee ballots may be obtained from the clerk, Mrs, Helen Strandquist, 5119 West Shore drive, Saturday, April 12, from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. All ballots must be returned to Mrs. Strandquist in a sealed envelope no later than 7 p.m. the same day. However, those who will be absent for an extended period of time should contact Mrs. Betty Bockman, secretary. i • 'We love you andJERRY'S mechanic with all our heart." JERRY'S "66" AUTO REPAIR 4/13 W. Kt. 12IT uays 344-1278 Towing after 11pm 3854258 A-l HEARING AID SERVICE Free Loaners-Complete Service on all Makes Custom Earmolds-30 Day Trail on New Aids Try Before You Buy! Maico-Zenith-RadioEar Qualitone R0BT. STENSLAND & ASSOC. 3937 W. Main St. 385-7661 Behind-the-ear AID Reg. $239 *199 PEOPLE OF WARD 4 My thanks for welcoming me into your homes over the past month and a half. The hospitality shown me was typical of the people of Ward 4. I am grate ful for the privilege of meeting each and every one of you. I hope to see you at the Community House on April 15. Paid For By Walther Schaedel, 1613 Pleasant Ave - McHenry THIS DUDE CAME TKUCKIN IN TO OUR. YARD LOOKING FOR WORK HE'S A FRIENDLY 90CT40 WE PUT HIM TO WORK HELPtW(r CUST0MER5, MAKING DELlVE£- BS, eCARmOFF WOOPPBCKER.5 iOWER UJM6CRYARD TH/W(t5. TROUBLE I£ HE CAN'T REVI SER H/S NAME (MUSTHAVE BEEN HIT ON THE HEAP BY A FAUIfJfr PLYWOOD TREE). WE VE TRIE 0 NEWTAR'STOTT-E, BWANA.CHAW^, STUMBLING- BUFFALO4 BOB, BUT HE DOESN'T ANSWER. * MY NAME. LUMBER'S MY^AME/ CAN YOU HELP? DO YOU KNOW HIS NAME? rmrn TRUCKINTLUM6L ot Uve& BRAND NEW! 1975 GREMLINS • Full Factory Equipment* MITCHELL AMC-JEEP 907 N. FRONT STREET - MCHENRY 815-385-0403 PurrouR suggest/OA//a/the. OFFICIALENTRY BOX THE COi/A/TER. /A/ Ol/R OFE/CE BEFORE. MAY I, 1975-l/SE WF HANDY DANDY COUPON &ELOW Off OA/E </0 AT OVJZ OFF/CE. E/Y7TEAZ A3 OFTEA/AS YOU I./ACE. ALL EASTG/ES BECOME 7A/E FR/OEFl/L P/ZOPEAZTY- OF 7A/E /.C/Af&EJS. COArtPAASV WM/C/V W/LL P/CA£ A H//A/A/6A AA/0 LETA///Vt C A/EG. /CA/O W SO OA/ AFT£K MAY/. VO/O H/A/E/ZE P&OA//B/TEO, STAfOEF &ZASS GM /F^ SWALLOWED, C0/.L A PA4r3/C/AA/. assmrnmarrmm h i" in '» • • • Handy Dandy Coupon [ yiL i cur ALONG- DA9HE.D LJlNie . NAN\t. AOORESS Pt-totv»e. 1 SUGGEST THE NAME. FOe McHENf?Y LUMBER CO'S TKUCMN'LUMBIUK. VOTE FOR W. SCHAEDEL Alderman Ward 4 Thanks for your support! POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT PAID FOR BY FRANK HROMEC 1611 N. Pleasant, McHenry Public Hearing On Waste Plan The Illinois Environmental Protection agency will hold a public hearing Friday, April 11, in Elmhurst to discuss the possible designation of Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry and Will counties' as a area- wide waste treatment management planning area and the Northeastern Illinois Planning commission (NIPC) asvthe agency responsible for the planning. Under federal law, the "national goal," to be reached by 1983, is water quality that "provides for the protection and propagation of fish, shellfish and wildlife and provides for recreation in and on the water," according to LeVerne Hudson, Illinois EPA's manager of the Water Pollution Control division. "In this six-county jirea. municipal and industrial wastewater and stormwater and construction site runoff contribute to pollution of out- lakes and streams. In addition, septic tank drainage and farmland runoff may also cause localized problems," Hudson explained. He con tinued : "The problems here are serious and complex. We must develop economical and ef fective solutions for them. But, to do so in an area as large and complicated as northeastern Illinois will be a big job. "We feel that the best way to deal with this is on a six-county, area-wide basis. This planning . approach stresses analysis of region-wide problems by areawide planning agencies. It give agencies such as NIPC the opportunity to work with local governments to find solutions to the area's water quality problems. "Local electe be at the hearti we'll also see ml citizens and business and in dustry representatives," Hudson concluded.. * Following the hearing, should the designations be made, and should the U.S. EPA approve the designations, NIPC would be eligible for a two-year federal planning grant to prepare an area-wide waste treatment mangement plan for the designated area. The hearing will be held at the Science Center auditorium of Elmhurst college, Elm Park avenue and Prospect street, Elmhurst, beginning at 9:30 I officials will g. I hope that •ested private BANK NOTES Q BY DONALD DALEY PRESIDENT FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF McIIENRY " PIGGY There is little about our barnyard friend that should relate it historically to the little savings bank that has been around as long as one can remember . . . "piggy banks" to teach kids to "save for a rainy day" etc. They liave been made for years in a hundred and one shapes as well as in the classic image of a pig, but the "piggy bank" concept underlies this age-old me thod of saving . . . it is an "Old Master" among terms synonymous with thrift. How did it come about? Evidently a bit of coin cidence mixed with a dash of misinterpretation. In England during the late Middle Ages, metal for manufacturer into kitchen utensils was almost non existent, what was used for dishes, pots and jars was a clay that was commonly known as "PYGG". It was BANK" so generally used that a l l earthenware was referred to as "pygg". Housewives were not much different in those days . . . they "put a little aside" and in a natural storage place for keeping . . . a kitchen jar made of "pygg." This type of treasury became pop ularly known as the "pygg bank." No doubt, with the pas sing of generations, the term and its ' origin was forgotten but at some much later point in time, some one engagedanEnglishpot- ter to make an "old pygg bank" ... the potter must likely have been less than a historian because he simply interpreted the order to mean a bank fash ioned literally in the shape or image of a pig. Ob viously we havetopresume that the customer accepted the mistake and ultimately the institution for saving was born. Whether you are interested in saving money...or bor rowing, you' II find FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF McIIENRY most accommodating! You will also receive fast, per sonal service...with a smile! FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF McIIENRY, 3814 W. Elm St. Telephone 385-5400. This Week's Winning State Lottery Numbers WEEKLY LOTTO QDQDQDQDH WEEKLY BONANZA & MILLIONAIRE | 209 | | 697 | [ 5391 Drawing April 10, 1975 FIRESTONE 500 WHITEWALL . FREE MOUNTING! OFFER EXPIRES MAY 1, 1975 Don't Forget. . . . We Feature GRANT BATTERIES McHENRY TIRE MART 3931 W. MAIN 385-0294