WET PAGE 16- PLAINDEALER - WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1975 f but . . . a barrel of fun WET it was, but the large crowd for the opening event of McHenry Marine week enjoyed theifiselves as they viewed the annual water fights on an overcast and rainy Sunday afternoon. Twenty-two water fight teams from various fire departments vied for the championship as they matched their wits with the bouncing barrel. Woodstock City captured the top spot as they eliminated the Woodstock Rural team in the finals. A tough team from West Dundee took third place award and fourth went to Burlington, 111. Marine Day Queen^, Marissa Pace presented the firemen with their trophies. STAFF PHOTOS BY WAYNE GAYLORD Wet, but with eagerness, Woodstock Rural fought hard only to lose to their city companions. The barrel rolls by a team, eliminating them from further competition. „ • Woodstock City (foreground) battles Woodstock Rural for the championship. % The dry look. Deaths IRVIN JENSEN Funeral services were conducted Thursday morning at 11 o'clock for Irvin Jensen, 62, 524 Clay street. Woodstock, who died June 30 in St. Francis hospital. Evanston. Rev. Irving E. Stangland officiated afi. the services in the Schneider,fLeucht, Merwin and Cooney chapel, Woodstock. Buria1r~was in Oakland cemetery. Mr. Jensen was born Aug. 9. 1912, in Lake Geneva, Wis., the son of the late Thorvald and Johanna Rose Jensen. TFT? ik survived by two daughters; two brothers, Ray, T Vista, Calif., and Harold, McHenry; and a sister, Mrs. William (Laura) Clancy, Brewster, Mass. GEORGE F. DUERR GeorgeF. Duerr, Lt. Col. (R) of the Salvation Army, 75, 1004 W/Oeffling drive, Whispering Hills, died July 2 in Gottlieb Memorial hospital,, Melrose Park. He lived in Whispering Hills for 64 years, until 1974. The deceased was born March 11. 1900, in Columbus, Ohio, the son of Salvation Army officers parents. He spent his childhood in Racine, Wis., from where he went into training school for officers in Chicago in 1921. He was commissioned a lieutenant in 1922. Most of his career was spent in an cecutive position at divisional ^and territorial headquarters. Among his survivors are his wife, Ellenor; three daughters, Evelyn Duerr Soliday, Coon Rapids, Minn., Elizabeth Duerr Graf, Antioch, Tenn., Ruth Tfiomas Richter, Elmhurst; a son, Ray E. Thomas, Chicago; eleven grandchildren; two brothers, Arthur G., Racine, Wis., and Harold W., Santa Cruz, Calif.; and a sister, Mrs. Grace Duerr Thomson. Racine. Wis. Visitation was held at the Wold and Wold Funeral home, 238 Chicago avenue. Oak Park Last rites were held Monday, July 7, at the Salvation Army Montclaire Corps., *7225 W. Belmont avenue. Chicago, at 2 p.m. Memorials may l5e made to the Salvation Army Children homes in Mexico, in care of Majbr-Harold Shoults, 860 N. Dearborn. Chicago. 60610., MICHELE ANN BECKER Michele Anne Becker, 18, 1807 N. Woodlawn Park road, was found dead July 4 in the. Nipcersink creek, 3949 E7 Solon Road. She was born June il. 1957, in Chfcago. Miss Becker, with her parents, Gerald Becker, Sr., and Anne Marie Hanecker Becker, was a resident of McHenry for four year^» Her Tf>fhor hurl hppn a summer resident for the past fifty years. Other survivors include ya \ brother. Jerry Jr., 17. two j sisters,Susan, 15,and Elizabeth, 7, at home; her maternal grandparents, Michael and Ann Hanecker, New York City, N.Y. Private visitation was held at the Peter M. Justen and Son funeral home. A funeral Mass was offered Monday morning at 11 o'clock at St. Patrick's church with burial in Coun tryside cemetery. WARREN P. HEISER Warren P. Heiser, 82, a recent resident of Valley-Hi Nursing home, who formerly made his home with his son, Robert, in McHenry at 3104 Victoria avenue, died July 5 at Memorial hospital, Woodstock. Mr. Heiser was a member of the V.F.W., American Legion and Brotherhood of Railway, Airline and Steamship Clerks, Lakeside Lodge No. 2219. He was retired after 35 years as an express messenger with the Railway Express agency. He is survived by six children. Edward W., Harvard, Mary Alice Williams of St. Charles, Robert J., McHenry, Jean Plazin, Maple Park, Catherine Seeley, High Lake, and Ellen Bergeson of Batavia. He was pre^ded in death by his wife, Regina; a son, kno'w{^\. ± S T H £ Does the height of clouds in summer tell us anything about possibili t ies for rain? The height of summer cu mulus definitely is a weath er sign to be watched. These li t t le white cumulus clouds we see so often on summer d a y s ^ b u i l d u p a t v a r i o u s levels depending upon the amount of moisture in the air . They are caused by rising warm air condensing and if the rising warm air con d e n s e s a t a l o w a l t i t u d e there is quite a bit of mois ture in the air--thus chances of. rain are quite good. If , however, the clouds form high up the rising air con tains l i t t le moisture and chance^ of rain are not so good. ' Thus the l i t t le white sum mer puffs that are called by many people--weather signs --are not necessarily signs of fair weather. They are t h e f i r s t s i g n s o f r i s i n g thermals and quite, often t h e y a r e f o l l o w e d b y a thundershower in the after noon--in summer. That is especially true if they begin to form at low alti tudes early In summer momines. Richard; a daughter, Barbara, his father, Joseph M., a former sheriff of DuPage county in 1906; and his mother, Johanna Carey Heiser. Funeral services were held Monday, July 7, at St. Mary's church, West Chicago, with'*, interment in Calvary cemetery, Chicago. EVELYN R. SIDES Evelyn R. Sides, 921 Wilt shire drive, Whispering Oaks, died at her home, July 6. She was fifty-eight years old, born in Chicago, Nov. 12, 1916, the daughter of George and Edna Beck Klipp. Mrs. Sides had been a resident here for six months, having lived previously in Chicago and Tucson, Ariz. Survivors include her husband, Joseph G., whom she married in 1937 in May wood; one daughter, Mrs. Paul E. (Donna) Peterson', McHenry; a son, Stephen, Tucson, Ariz.; six grandchildren; her mother, Edna Klipp Madden and step father, Daniel Madden, Downers Grove; one brother, Martin Klipp of Crestwood. She was preceded in death by her father, George Klipp. Visitation was scheduled for Tuesday after 4 p.m. at the Peter M. Justen and Son funeral home, where services will be held Wednesday at 11 o'clock. Burial will be in Oakridge cemetery, Hillside. Memorials may be made to the St. Matthew Lutheran church building fund in Lake Zurich. Pathologist To Present Course At ASRT Meet Robert J. Stein, M.D., director of Laboratory Medicine at McHenry hospital and pathologist with the McHenry Medical Group, will present a graduate course, "Forensic Pathology," to registrants at the annual meeting of the American Society of Radiologic Technologists in San Fran cisco, July 9-10. Dr. Stein's course, open to 140 participants, will emphasize the principles of forensic pathology as they relate to radiology. Dr. Stein is professor of Pathology at the Stritch School of Medicine, Loyola university, and serves as a coroner's pathologist for McHenry county. Assisting with this course will be Dewey Lytle, R.T., of McHenry. Mr. Lytle is president-elect pf the Illinois State Society of Radiologic Technologists. About 2,000 radiologic technologists from all fifty states are expected to attend the scientific and business sessions^. 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