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The Daily Sentinel from Woodstock, Illinois • Page 2

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Woodstock, Illinois
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2
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2-Woodstock (11I.) Daily Sentinel -Monday, January WOODSTOCK DAILY SENTINEL Established in 1856 Published Every Afternoon Except Saturday and Suriday By WOODSTOCK PUBLISHING COMPANY WILLIAM BURFEINDT, Publisher 109 South Jefferson Street Woodstock, Illinois 60098 "Second-Class Postage Paid at Woodstock, Ill." SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier- week 50 By Mail (Payable in Advance) In McHenry County six months $8.00 one year $15.00 Outside McHenry County one year $20.00 Not Available Where Carrier Boy Service Is Maintained Servicemenone year $12.00 HOSPITAL NOTES WOODSTOCK MEMORIAL ADMITTED: Mrs. Rhoda Coates, Mrs. Mamie Larsen, Mrs. Minnie Moore, Baby Michelle Burg, Mrs. Barbara Leisch, Miss Mary Frey, Floyd Foat, Ralph Church, Baby Victoria Heim, Mrs.

Margaret Herdklotz, Miss Dawn VanWazer, Mrs. Grace Harrison, Kenneth Huff, Mrs. Bernice Howell, Odis Moore, Karl Schroeder, Woodstock; Miss Diane Stroh, Sylvester Schuler, Mrs. Katherine Winters, Cary; Oliver Danis, Mrs. Florence McPherson, Mrs.

Anne Peck, Frank Barg, Paul Hassett, Norman Deckard, Mrs. Katherine Crawford, Crystal Lake; Mrs. Linda Ross, Mrs. Mary Harrer, McHenry; Melvin Solare, Mrs. Mary Slokin, Wonder Lake; Baby Tanya Finzel, Union; Joseph Molinaro, Richmond; Mrs.

Marlene Gavitt, Algonquin; Mrs. Irene Bowers, Harvard; Mrs. Andrea Raknes, Fox River Grove; John Selmarten, Huntley; Mrs. Agnes Ashbaugh, Hebron. DISMISSED: Mrs.

Barbara Peterson, Robert Leanna, Floyd Foat, Glenn Schiller, Mrs. Martha Kuntz, Mrs. Ronald Pinn and daughter, Gunnar Hanson, Russell Kelahan, Mrs. Edna Wolff, John Sirtak, Miss Kim Gaylord, Woodstock; Master John Cahill, Mrs. Alan Rice and daughter, Mrs.

Lynn Thomas, Mrs. "I hurt all over!" A Health-Accident Policy pays not only hospital and surgical expenses, but loss of income while disabled. Both individual and group insurance is offered by Woodstock Insurance Woodstock Insurance Agency thc. YOUR Insurance AGENT J. W.

Banker: K. P. Saladin 217 W. Judd St. Woodstock 338-5522 7 MEMBER 1972 NEWSPAPER Woodstock subscribers If you do not receive your Sentinel before 6:00 p.m.

please call your carrier. Florence McPherson, Miss Cathie Vought, Mrs. Anne Peck, Baby Coreen Witt, Crystal Lake; Mrs. Dieter Golla and Miss Jean Steinmeier, Cary; Leonard Fitch, Harvard; Mrs. Stanley Goscinski and son, Mrs.

Shirley Ozog, Mrs. Ernest Vidales and son, Baby Michele Cable, McHenry; Mrs. Eleanor West, Sparks, Joseph Huber, Round Lake; Eugene Kohl, Taylor Springs; Byron Sowers, Ringwood; James Lemke, Master Larry James, Donald McCollum, Mrs. Robert Paddock and daughter, Mrs. Ronald Heisner and son, Huntley; Mrs.

Elizabeth Stewart, Hebron; Mrs. Susan Mansfield, Harvard; Mrs. Theresa Webb, Carpentersville. BORN: Jan. 5 to.

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Zank, McHenry, a boy; Jan. 6 to Mr. and Mrs.

David Rower, Crystal Lake, a boy; Jan. 7 to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schintgen, Cary, a girl. McHENRY HOSPITAL ADMITTED: George Johnson, Myron Radloff, Charles Lindwall, Joseph Leopold, Mrs.

Frances Domick, Kerry Jernigan, Miss Susan Josa, McHenry; Mrs. Joan Wilson, Miss Marilyn Schink, Edward Houck, Mrs. Elizabeth Shales, Crystal Lake; Herman Youngman, Wauconda; Mrs. Wilda Stanton, Ingleside. DISMISSED: John Jones, Helen Widen, Doreen Patterson, Anne Marie Becker, McHenry; John Kasper, Island Lake; Otto Menolasino, Wonder Lake; Patrick Weston, Fox Lake; Doris Peterson, Round Lake; David Stackley, East Dundee; Mayme McLemore, Grayslake; baby Margaret Macon, Wauconda; Joseph Warden, Josephine Warden, Ingleside; Mrs.

Donald Jerousek and daughter, Crystal Lake. BORN: Jan. 3 to Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Watson, McHenry, a girl; to Mr: and Mrs.

Ronald Yanckowitz, Crystal Lake, a boy; to Mr. and Mrs. Paul Patterson, Crystal Lake, a girl; to Mr. and Mrs. Allan Etheridge, McHenry, a girl.

McHENRY HOSPITAL ADMITTED: Mrs. Wilhelmina Dierken, Mrs. Mary SNOWMOBILE PARTS' ACCESSORIES WOODSTOCK AUTO PARTS 101. So. Jefferson 338 3700 WiVS PRESENTS STAR KOERNER Fridays 1:00 P.M.

3:00 P.M. SWAP SHOP Saturdays 9:05 a.m. to 9:45 Star Koerner Show 10:05 to 11 "Ask Austin" with Austin Buttner 11:05 to 12 Swap Shop 850- THE OF YOUR AM DIAL 8, 1973 Truck driver escapes gasoline fire A ROCKFORD truck driver, George F. ignited the 8,400 gallons of gasoline, Traffic Holmes, 60, 11604 Florence Avenue, driver was tied up for more than two hours and the for Refiners Transport Terminal, Oregon, dense black smoke could be seen for more Ohio, escaped serious injury on Saturday than 15 miles. The driver escaped by afternoon on U.S.

route 20, east of Hamp climbing through the window of the cab, just shire, when the right wheel of the trailer before the trailer burst into flames. State went off the road causing it to overturn. The Police handled the accident. accident broke off a power line Sundell, Mrs. Clara Thurn, Mrs.

Margaret Major, McHenry; Mrs. Anna Krantz, Owen Lloyd, Spring Grove; Mrs. Paige Eagan, Barrington; Mrs. Virginia Schilling, Long Lake; Mrs. Virginia Hauck, Cary; Thomas Piotrowski, Wauconda.

DISMISSED: Shari Ketchum, David Pugh, Stanley Darmandy, Ann Kuczkowski, Jill Strey, McHenry; Lucinda Brown, Woodstock; Julia Kavanaugh, Fox Lake; Pauline Stibbs, Lake Villa; Mrs. Robert Messel, Round Lake; Mrs. David Rogers, Ingleside. BORN: Jan. 4 to Mr.

and Mrs. Brian Rhoades, McHenry, a girl. Dixon, John Payton, McHenry; John Severs, Spring Grove; Gregory Hickey, Round Lake; baby Angela Poco, Wauconda; Joseph Lorio, Crystal Lake; Mrs. Ruth Eckland, Barrington; Mrs. Swanson, Chicago.

DISMISSED: James McGaha, III, Charles Claypool, Debra Walter, McHenry; Mrs. Bruce Hoffmann and son, Island Lake; Francis Holden, Wonder Lake; Rev. Edward Houk, Crystal Lake; Michael Miller, Raymond Gore, Ingleside. NO BIRTHS. McHENRY HOSPITAL ADMITTED: Mrs.

Margie WORLD ALMANAC FACTS The World Council of Churches is a fellowship of 252 Protestant, Anglican, Orthodox and Old Catholic churches from 90 countries and territories throughout the world. It was founded in 1948 to promote Christian unity and to facilitate cooperation in mission work, doctrinal study and service projects such as aid to refugees, The World Almanac says. Copyright, 1972 Newspaper Enterprise Assn. DE DEATHS Minnie C. Koch Marengo Bernice Hercik Algonquin Fabian Pineoffs Park Forest Clarence Turner Park Ridge Irene S.

Moeller Huntley Henry F. Banach, III McHenry Nancy Banach McHenry Benjamin R. Kelley Marengo Arthur W. Seaver Poplar Grove Dale C. Griswold Genoa William E.

Killinger Cary Alfred A. Bossler McHenry Charles F. Hacek Crystal Lake MINNIE C. KOCH MARENGO Mrs. Minnie C.

Koch, 78, formerly of Marengo and Union, died early Saturday morning, Jan. 6, in Sunset Manor, Woodstock, where she had been a resident for about 18 months. She was born Jan. 5, 1895, in Chicago, the daughter of Henry and Josephine Hauschildt. She married William Koch in Marengo on Sept.

24, 1919, and they lived in Union until 1955 when they moved to Marengo, where he died in 1958. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Thomas (Lorraine) Anderson, Oceanside, three sisters, Mrs. Albert (Amanda) Tessendorf, Mrs. George (Laura) Renwick, and Mrs.

Lewis (Eleanor) Buhrows, all of Marengo; a brother, Henry Hauschildt, Tucson, and several nieces and nephews. In addition to her husband and parents, she was preceded in death by two brothers, William and George Hauschildt. Funeral services will be held at' 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Osborne funeral home. The Rev.

Russell Killion, pastor of the Zion Lutheran Church, of. which she was a member, will officiate with burial in Marengo City cemetery. Friends may call in the funeral home after 3 p.m. today. BERNICE HERCIK ELGIN Mrs.

Bernice Hercik, 54, 1224 Ratray Drive, Algonquin, died Sunday morning, Jan. 7, in Sherman Hospital, Elgin. She was born July 19, 1918, in Crystal Lake, the daughter of Albert and Bertha Haase Fritz. On Sept. 20, 1947, she married Frank Hercik, who died in 1970.

Survivors are three sons, Joseph, Crystal Lake, Frank, Lincoln, and Jack, at home; two daughters, Mrs. Kenneth (Joyce) Ross, Woodstock, and Jill, at home; seven grandchildren; five brothers, Harry, Robert and John Fritz, Elgin, Albert, Henderson, and Delbert, Geneva; and four sisters, Mrs. Louis (Gladys) Block, McHenry, Mrs. Clifford (Helen) Kahn, Greenfield, Mrs. Ralph (Doris) Wide, Elgin, and Mrs.

Charles (Betty) Bethke, Lake Havasu, Ariz. Friends may call after 2 p.m. today in the Wait-Ross-Allanson chapel, Elgin, where services will be held at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday. Burial will be in Algonquin cemetery.

FABIAN PINCOFFS Services for Fabian Pincoffs, 79, owner of an electrical contracting firm on the South Side, Chicago, and father of Mrs. Shandes Knell, Woodstock, were held at 1 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 2, at Piser Memorial Chapel, 6935 S. Stony Island.

Burial was in Waldheim cemetery. Mr. Pincoffs, 144 Indiana, Park Forest, died Dec. 31, 1972, in St. James Hospital, Chicago Heights.

He retired in 1970 as owner of the Hy-Power Electric 5918 S. Halsted. He was in the electrical business for more than 45 years and was credited with a number of inventions useful to electricians. He is also survived by his widow, Rose; another daughter, Mrs. Lolita Cohen, Park Forest; and a sister, Mrs.

Marion Kenigsberg. IRENE S. MOELLER HUNTLEY Mrs. Irene Sophie Moeller, 58, Freeman Road, R.F.D., huntley, died Sunday, Jan. 7, in Sherman Hospital, Elgin.

She was born May 18, 1914, in Chicago, the daughter of James and Anna Seminek. A resident of the local area for the past nine years, she was a member of the Kane County Home Bureau. On April 21, 1933, she married Arthur Moeller, who survives. Other survivors are a son, Wayne Elgin; four grandchildren; sister, Mrs. Leo (Mildred) Kruczek, Chicago; of the William Chandler Peterson American Legion Post 171, Crystal Lake, and and a brother, James Seminek, Chicago.

She was preceded in death by her parents and a brother. Requiem Mass will be offered at 11 1 a.m. Tuesday by the Rev. L.W. Day in St.

Mary's Catholic Church, Huntley, with burial in St. Mary's cemetery, Gilberts. Friends may call after 5 p.m. today in the JamesA. O'Connor funeral home, where the Rosary will be recited at 8 o'clock tonight.

Masses or memorials to the Parkinson's Foundation will be appreciated. HENRY F. BANACH, III NANCY BANACH McHENRY Funeral Mass was offered at 10 a.m. today (Monday) in St. Mary's Catholic Church, Lake Forest, for Henry F.

Banach, III, 20, and his wife, Nancy, 20, of 1015 Windsor Drive, Pistakee Highlands, McHenry, who were killed in an automobile accident, Dec. 26, 1972, in Thailand. He was born March 1, 1952, the son of Henry and Dorothy Banach and was employed by a travel agency. He is survived by his parents of McHenry; a brother, Robert; and two sisters, Jean and Laura. His wife was born March 13, 1952, the daughter of Norman and Joyce Kerr.

She is survived by her parents of Lake Forest; three brothers, Mark and Ronald; and two sisters, Lynn and Cindy. Visitation was held Sunday, in the Henicamp funeral home in Northbrook. BENJAMIN R. KELLEY MARENGO Benjamin R. Kelley, 75, 130 N.

Ford Marengo, was dead on arrival at St. Joseph's Hospital, Belvidere, early Saturday afternoon, Jan. 6, where he was taken by the Marengo Rescue Squad after suffering an apparent heart attack in his home. Born Dec. 10, 1897, in Marengo, he was the son of Abner and Caroline Kimball Kelley.

For many years he owned and operated the KB Chevrolet Garage. He was a veteran of World War a member of the American Legion, Kishwaukee Post 192; and a member of the Presbyterian Church. Mr. Kelley is survived by his widow, Gladys; two sons, Horace Marengo, and Robert, Dundee; two daughters, Morrison, Mrs. Theodore Quincy, and Mrs.

Mathias (Joyce) Frank, Algona, Iowa; seven grandchildren; two Pauline Fidler, Marengo, and Mrs. Robert (Caroline) Fry, Pompano Beach, and two brothers, Frederick and Theodore, both of Marengo. Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m. Tuesday in the First Presbyterian Church with the Rev. Larry Loffelmacher officiating.

Burial will be in Marengo City cemetery. Friends may call in the Cooper funeral home in Marengo from 7 p.m. today until 12-noon Tuesday, and after 12:30 p.m. at the church. Memorial gifts may be made to the Marengo Rescue Squad or to the Presbyterian Church.

ARTHUR W. SEAVER POPLAR GROVE Arthur W. Seaver, 21, Route 1, Poplar Grove, died early this morning in Rockford Memorial Hospital. He was born April 21, 1951, in Elkhorn, the son of Herbert and Violet Ruhff Seaver. Never married, he was employed at Sta-Rite, Capron; and was a 1971 North Boone High School graduate.

He is survived by his mother; a brother, Herbert, and a sister, Linda Lu, at home; and paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Seaver, Delavan, Wis. His father died in 1968. Friends may call after 7 p.m.

Tuesday in the Saunders and Hoffman funeral home, 107 Wo Sumner Street, Harvard, where the Rev. Dr. Luther C. Mueller will conduct services at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, CHARLES F.

HACEK CRYSTAL LAKE Charles F. Hacek, 63, 125 Mayfield Avenue, Crystal Lake, was pronounced dead on arrival Saturday, Jan. 6, at McHenry Hospital. He was born Aug. 21, 1909, in Chicago, the son of Charles S.

and Anna Rieha Hacek. He married Gladys Kunde on July 13, 1933, in Algonquin. He was a carpenter, a World War II Navy veteran, a member member of St. Thomas Catholic Church. He is survived by his widow; two sons, Charles McHenry, and Donald Aurora; daughters, Mrs.

Douglas (Diane) Koppen, Holiday Hills, McHenry, and Mrs. Robert (Judy) Gorskie, Burton's Bridge, McHenry; 14 grandchildren; a sister, Emma Suchy, Barrington; and a brother, Jerry, Eugene, Ore. He was preceded in death by a' son, James D. Friends may call after 7 p.m. today in the Querhammer funeral home, Crystal Lake.

Prayers for a Christian Wake will be said at 8 o'clock tonight, and a Mass will be saidat 11 a.m. Tuesday in St. Thomas Church, Crystal Lake, with burial in St. John's cemetery, Fox River Grove. WILLIAM E.

KILLINGER were at 1 p.m. today in CARY, Funeral services Chicago for William E. Killinger of Cary. Burial was in Oakridge Cemetery. He died Thursday, Jan.

4, and is survived by his wife, Leola Moore Killinger; a son, William; six grandchildren; six great-grandchildren; and a and a spark Illinois American Legion Scout scholarship rules Illinois seems to be the only state whose Scout Scholarship available Program is listed: scholarships as one in of the National Scout Directory of Scholarships. This year, the State of Illinois American Legion will award a $500 scholarship, which is to be used for educational purposes, to a qualified Scout or Explorer in Illinois. Four runners up also get a $50 award for participating. Appropriate plaques and trophies are also to be awarded to the winners. To qualify, the Scout or Explorer must be a resident of Illinois, a senior in high school and epitomize the best in Scouting spirit as evidenced by various records and affidavits.

The Scout or Explorer must also write a 500 word essay on the subject of the Illinois American Legion's Americanism and Scouting programs. Information and application forms may be obtained from the local Scout office or from the Illinois American Legion Scout Chairman of the Post, County, District, or Division. Applications must then be certified by the American Legion Scout Chairman and after completing all the requirements, the papers must be given to the local Scout office. (Do not send them to State Legion headquarters.) Deadline is March 15, 1973. The local Scout office will forward the papers to the East Central Scout Office in Oakbrook, for final judging.

Final judging and selection of the winner will be done by the Illinois American Legion's Scout Committee. Trophies and citations will be prepared for the winners. DAVID POLING, D.D. Does January Make Any Difference? By REV. DAVID POLING The New Year.

Just how different is our life and world when we turn the calendar from 1972 to 1973. Of course, there are tax considerations, birthdays to mark, annual requirements of all sorts. But the major trends, the shaping of history, the mood of society--how much do they even blink at the turn of the year, the unfolding of January? In the life of the church, certain movements began last year, even several years before, that remain as dominant themes for 1973. Perhaps the biggest happening in 1972 was the demise of the National Council of Churches. It had been fading for five years, running out of money and friends, and now it is all over.

A few offices remain, some programs endure, but the main thrust, dating back to 1950, is over. The ecumencial experience is taking a different turn. Last year the United Presbyterians cleared their throat and instructed their leaders (through the elected General Assembly) to back away from negotiations of 12 denominations looking toward merger (COCU). Instead, the prevailing emotion of many Christians seems to be aimed at more local cooperation, more regional relationships rather than one grand brokered religious body created by a dozen smaller ones. Church finance for.

1973 will be an extension of the 1972 experience: has Much more spent at home. Giving to religious causes taken a solid upturn. Yet the money is remaining more in the control and direction of local congregations and district and state bodies. Less to the national headquarters, much less for the "overhead church" which has already been greatly reduced. The issues confronting the church are those which face all of society: poverty, racism, pollution, housing, spiraling costs, the rights of women, the aging, and youth.

And the fruits of a warfare society. In our notebook from last year's travels we recall the several trips to the memorial chapel at Eagle Nest, N.M. Here at the edge of the Rockies, the Westphall family constructed a worship center to honor their son, Lt. Victor David Westphall III, and all others who have died in Vietnam. It is a fitting and enduring tribute to a young man who, within his own personality, absorbed all the conflicts and debates of the Vietnam issue.

He was against war, believed that war could not create peace, yet felt that he must serve his country in duty. One of his last comments, in writing, is mounted within the chapel: "At the sight of the Heavenly Throne, Ezekiel fell on his Face, but the voice of God Commanded, Son of Man, stand Upon your feet and I will Speak with If we are to Stand on our feet in the Presence of God, what, then, Is one man that he should Debase the dignity of another?" Peace and brotherhood are the first order for any religious community in 1973. CLARENCE TURNER Clarence Turner, Park Ridge, brother of Mrs. Everett (Frances) Kuhn and Mrs. Gene (Marguerite) Johnson of Woodstock, died Sunday night, Jan.

7, in Park Ridge. Arrangements are incomplete. ALFRED A. BOSSLER McHENRY Alfred A. Bossler, 72, 4818 Woodrow Avenue, Pistakee Hills, McHenry, died Sunday, Jan.

7, in Fair Oaks Nursing Home, Crystal Lake. Arrangements are being made in the Warner and Flagg funeral home, Crystal Lake. Offering free pilot's" clinic on Wednesday General Aviation pilots in northeastern Illinois are invited to a Federal Aviation Administration Pilot's Educational Clinic at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 10, at Woodstock High School, 501 W.

South Street, Woodstock. The free clinic, part of FAA's nationwide accident prevention program, a continuing effort toward a more positive program of light safety, will be conducted by Donald Muzeroll, accident prevention specialist at FAA's General Aviation District Office in West Chicago, It is sponsored by FrisbieOverly insurance, in Woodstock, and is part of the General Aviation Manufacturers Association Safe Pilot Program. Robert Talbot, director of aviation at Chicago's Southwest Junior College; Robert Blacker, maintenance expert at FAA's Great Lakes regional office; and Muzeroll, will speak at the session. The latest wake turbulence film, using the B-747 and the C- 5A, and an exciting hand prop accident film will be shown. Local pilots will be able to experience vertigo in a Barany chair.

Practical aviation weather, pilot vertigo, pilot sensory illusions and "AIM" for safety will be discussed. Q-Why were no players elected to baseball's Hall of Fame in 1971? A--No player achieved the necessary 75 per cent of the vote despite the heavy balloting. COLONEL'S INSIGHTS INTO. PSYCHOLOGY CARING FOR A PET CAN BE A CHILD'S PET PROJECT. TAKING ROVER FOR A WALK AT REGULAR INTERVALS BUILDS A YOUNGSTER'S SENSE OF RESPONSIBILITY!.

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