The Huntley Farmside |
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m HUNTLEY ^"^^^ THURSDAY, APRU, «. 1961 VOLUME X—NO. 1 PHOMB mmMef SMI — C. L. 4W-W HOmS PHOMi: 4B9-4MS 6 FAGB» BIAILED AND DISTRIBUTED WSEKLT RECORD VOTE IN TOWNSHIP 8e Per Oopf HUNTLEY FARMSIDE ONE YEAR OLD The Huntley Farmside is one year old this week. One year ago Mr. Quin O'Brien, with the help of his wife (formerly Miss Suzanne LeGrand of Harvard, III.) started this business in the building which houses the Enos Conley and Sons Fertilizer plant. Through the help of the Conleys and other merchants and subscribers of Huntley, The Huntley Farmside has weathered its first year, thought by many to be the hardest. Now, according to chapter 100, Section 1 and 5 of the Illinois Post¬ al Statutes, the Huntley Farmside is a completely legal newspaper en¬ titled to all the privileges and rights of such newspapers. To celebrate our first annivers¬ arj-. The Hunlley Farmside will serv'e free rolls and coffee from 10 a.m. till 5 p.m. Saturday, April 8, in the Huntley Farmside office. Ever>one is invited to come. Music Concert Preparation By ROGER A. PERLEY Prc\ iously an article was pub¬ lished concerning the soloists and student conducatrs for the High Band, the Cadet Band, and the 7 and 8 Grades Mixed Chorus in con¬ nection with the High School Spring Concert of April 14, 1961, and the Grade School Spring Con¬ cert of April 12, 1961. The soloists selected for the Sen¬ ioi- Band part of the High School Spring Concert are Don Olson, trumpet soloist, and Nancy Urbach, flute soloist; the soloists for the Senior Chorus portion of the pro¬ gram arc Susan Plane, vocsal so¬ loist, and Marjorie Jensen, piano soloist. Students that tried-out for posi¬ tions of student director for the Continued on page Z MI SIC CONCERT . . . GAS Ml WORK TIL t-U 1. M. City Campaign A^^ainst Loose Stray Do^s April 1 marked the beginning of the city's campaign to keep dogs li¬ censed and tiede up. The Huntley police department has been kept quite busy this week picking up stray dogs who neither have li¬ censes or who were not tied up. To .Monday the village has picked up four dogs Two of these dogs were claimed by their owners and the other two are waiting to be clsiimed. There is a five dollar fine if a dog is picked up plus the cost of a license. The city will keep dogs for three days then they will be destroyed unJess they are claimed by their owners. No dogs have been destroyed prior to the printing of this ppaer, so if your dog is missing you had better contact tho police and make arrangements with them. No Water £or West End Thar. Last Thursday the Northern Illi¬ nois Gas Company, while putting in a new gas main crossing Route 47 struck the Huntley water main leading to Union Special. From 4 o'clock until 2 a.m. the gas com¬ pany and village officials worked to repair this line. Between these hours the west side of town was without water. The village board, however, supplied three tank trucks from Deans Milk Company to supply the residents in this area with water. The trucks were placed strateg¬ ically throughout the section to supply residents with needed wa¬ ter. One was placed on Lincoln Avenue, another on Bonnie Brae and the third on Main and Route 47 at George's D-X gas station. The Northern Illinois Gas Corn- pay was installing this new gas main to increase the capacity of gas to Huntley and as a safety check for the Union Special Ma¬ chine Company. P.T.A. Bake Sale April 8 The Annual PTA Bake Sale will take place Saturday, April 8, the School Board Election Day, at Heinemann's Hardware store from 1a.m. through 1 p.m. Donations of cash or bakery goods will be ap¬ preciated. Lee Lan^y Falls From Tree, in Fatal Mishap On Thursday, March 30, Lee Lang, 11-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lang, was accident¬ ally hanged while playing with a rope inu a tree. His companion, Bobbie Rousch, 10, panicked when he saw his friend's plight and raced two blocks to tell his mother, who summoned help. Christine Kahl, 20, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chris Kahl, cut the rope in a tree. His companion, ground. The Huntley Rescue Squad worked for half an hour attempt¬ ing to reviv-e him. Jim O'Connor's ambulance rushed him to the Mem¬ orial Hospital for McHenry County at Woodstock where he was pro¬ nounced dead on arrival. The boys, according to reports, were playing in a 15-foot tree next to a shed. Tlie lad's companion said Lange stepped from the tree to' the shed roof and then jumped to the ground, somehow entangled in the rope, which was wrapped around a branch about nine feet from the ground. The accident happened in the back yard of Mrs. Carl Rehberg, grandmother of the boy. He was born Oct. 19, 1949, in Woodstock, and resided in Crystal Lake until two years ago when the family moved to Huntley. Continued on page 2 LEE LANG . . . UNOFFICIAL ELECTION RETURNS TOWNSHIP SUPERVISIOR (1) Palmer Maekeban ASSESSOR (1) Greeter Ernesti Weltzine (a wright in candidate ) CLERK Enstrom AUDITOR (S) Zukouski Eisenmann Nelson Parker 482 545 367 178 391 818 602 598 599 358 PARE BOARD (2) 6 YEAR TERM Albrecht Loranne O'Brien Schmuch 4 YI^AR TERM (1) O'Connor RusseU Choclad 6M 558 379 303 598 309 160 The Judicial and the J. P. were as yet unavailable as we went to press. H H S Presents Spring Concert By ROGER A. PERLEY The Huntley Senior Band and Senior Chorus shall present their Annual High School Spring Music Concert on April 14, 1961, at 8:15 p.m., at the Huntley Consolidated School Gym, Huntley, III. An ad¬ mission charge shall be present; tickets may be secured ariy at tiie door the night of the concert. The program shall feature only musical selections. No awards shall be made upon the concert date; the awards will be made during the Awards Night of May 19, 1961. The program, under the direction of Mr. R. Perley, shall also feature solo selection performed by stu¬ dents, as well as student directors. Report on Heart Fund American Legion Auxiliary re¬ ports a total of $221.23 collected on the heart ftmd drive. Anyone who has not sent in their contribu¬ tion and would like to do so, it is not too late.
Object Description
Title | The Huntley Farmside |
Date | 1961-04-06 |
Month | 04 |
Day | 06 |
Year | 1961 |
Volume | 2 |
Issue | 1 |
Decade | 1960-1969 |
Creator | The Huntley Farmside |
Coverage | Huntley, Illinois, United States |
Description | Weekly Newspaper from the Huntley Area Public Library Collection |
Subject | Newspaper Archives |
Rights | This material may be protected by U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17 U.S. Code). |
Publisher | This Collection was digitized and loaded into CONTENTdm by OCLC Preservation Service Center (Bethlehem, PA) for the Huntley Area Public Library |
Source | Reproduction of library's print newspaper archives |
Contributing Institution | Huntley Area Public Library |
Language | ENG |
Collection Name | Huntley Area Newspapers |
Description
Title | The Huntley Farmside |
Date | 1961-04-06 |
Month | 04 |
Day | 06 |
Year | 1961 |
Volume | 2 |
Issue | 1 |
Decade | 1960-1969 |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archival Image is a 1-bit bitonal tiff that was direct scanned from original material at 300 dpi. The original file size was 142 kilobytes. |
FileName | 19610406_001.tif |
Creator | The Huntley Farmside |
Date Digital | 2007-05-07 |
Coverage | Huntley, Illinois, United States |
Description | Weekly Newspaper from the Huntley Area Public Library Collection |
Subject | Newspaper Archives |
Rights | This material may be protected by U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17 U.S. Code). |
Publisher | This Collection was digitized and loaded into CONTENTdm by OCLC Preservation Service Center (Bethlehem, PA) for the Huntley Area Public Library |
Source | Reproduction of library's print newspaper archives |
Contributing Institution | Huntley Area Public Library |
Language | ENG |
FullText | m HUNTLEY ^"^^^ THURSDAY, APRU, «. 1961 VOLUME X—NO. 1 PHOMB mmMef SMI — C. L. 4W-W HOmS PHOMi: 4B9-4MS 6 FAGB» BIAILED AND DISTRIBUTED WSEKLT RECORD VOTE IN TOWNSHIP 8e Per Oopf HUNTLEY FARMSIDE ONE YEAR OLD The Huntley Farmside is one year old this week. One year ago Mr. Quin O'Brien, with the help of his wife (formerly Miss Suzanne LeGrand of Harvard, III.) started this business in the building which houses the Enos Conley and Sons Fertilizer plant. Through the help of the Conleys and other merchants and subscribers of Huntley, The Huntley Farmside has weathered its first year, thought by many to be the hardest. Now, according to chapter 100, Section 1 and 5 of the Illinois Post¬ al Statutes, the Huntley Farmside is a completely legal newspaper en¬ titled to all the privileges and rights of such newspapers. To celebrate our first annivers¬ arj-. The Hunlley Farmside will serv'e free rolls and coffee from 10 a.m. till 5 p.m. Saturday, April 8, in the Huntley Farmside office. Ever>one is invited to come. Music Concert Preparation By ROGER A. PERLEY Prc\ iously an article was pub¬ lished concerning the soloists and student conducatrs for the High Band, the Cadet Band, and the 7 and 8 Grades Mixed Chorus in con¬ nection with the High School Spring Concert of April 14, 1961, and the Grade School Spring Con¬ cert of April 12, 1961. The soloists selected for the Sen¬ ioi- Band part of the High School Spring Concert are Don Olson, trumpet soloist, and Nancy Urbach, flute soloist; the soloists for the Senior Chorus portion of the pro¬ gram arc Susan Plane, vocsal so¬ loist, and Marjorie Jensen, piano soloist. Students that tried-out for posi¬ tions of student director for the Continued on page Z MI SIC CONCERT . . . GAS Ml WORK TIL t-U 1. M. City Campaign A^^ainst Loose Stray Do^s April 1 marked the beginning of the city's campaign to keep dogs li¬ censed and tiede up. The Huntley police department has been kept quite busy this week picking up stray dogs who neither have li¬ censes or who were not tied up. To .Monday the village has picked up four dogs Two of these dogs were claimed by their owners and the other two are waiting to be clsiimed. There is a five dollar fine if a dog is picked up plus the cost of a license. The city will keep dogs for three days then they will be destroyed unJess they are claimed by their owners. No dogs have been destroyed prior to the printing of this ppaer, so if your dog is missing you had better contact tho police and make arrangements with them. No Water £or West End Thar. Last Thursday the Northern Illi¬ nois Gas Company, while putting in a new gas main crossing Route 47 struck the Huntley water main leading to Union Special. From 4 o'clock until 2 a.m. the gas com¬ pany and village officials worked to repair this line. Between these hours the west side of town was without water. The village board, however, supplied three tank trucks from Deans Milk Company to supply the residents in this area with water. The trucks were placed strateg¬ ically throughout the section to supply residents with needed wa¬ ter. One was placed on Lincoln Avenue, another on Bonnie Brae and the third on Main and Route 47 at George's D-X gas station. The Northern Illinois Gas Corn- pay was installing this new gas main to increase the capacity of gas to Huntley and as a safety check for the Union Special Ma¬ chine Company. P.T.A. Bake Sale April 8 The Annual PTA Bake Sale will take place Saturday, April 8, the School Board Election Day, at Heinemann's Hardware store from 1a.m. through 1 p.m. Donations of cash or bakery goods will be ap¬ preciated. Lee Lan^y Falls From Tree, in Fatal Mishap On Thursday, March 30, Lee Lang, 11-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lang, was accident¬ ally hanged while playing with a rope inu a tree. His companion, Bobbie Rousch, 10, panicked when he saw his friend's plight and raced two blocks to tell his mother, who summoned help. Christine Kahl, 20, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chris Kahl, cut the rope in a tree. His companion, ground. The Huntley Rescue Squad worked for half an hour attempt¬ ing to reviv-e him. Jim O'Connor's ambulance rushed him to the Mem¬ orial Hospital for McHenry County at Woodstock where he was pro¬ nounced dead on arrival. The boys, according to reports, were playing in a 15-foot tree next to a shed. Tlie lad's companion said Lange stepped from the tree to' the shed roof and then jumped to the ground, somehow entangled in the rope, which was wrapped around a branch about nine feet from the ground. The accident happened in the back yard of Mrs. Carl Rehberg, grandmother of the boy. He was born Oct. 19, 1949, in Woodstock, and resided in Crystal Lake until two years ago when the family moved to Huntley. Continued on page 2 LEE LANG . . . UNOFFICIAL ELECTION RETURNS TOWNSHIP SUPERVISIOR (1) Palmer Maekeban ASSESSOR (1) Greeter Ernesti Weltzine (a wright in candidate ) CLERK Enstrom AUDITOR (S) Zukouski Eisenmann Nelson Parker 482 545 367 178 391 818 602 598 599 358 PARE BOARD (2) 6 YEAR TERM Albrecht Loranne O'Brien Schmuch 4 YI^AR TERM (1) O'Connor RusseU Choclad 6M 558 379 303 598 309 160 The Judicial and the J. P. were as yet unavailable as we went to press. H H S Presents Spring Concert By ROGER A. PERLEY The Huntley Senior Band and Senior Chorus shall present their Annual High School Spring Music Concert on April 14, 1961, at 8:15 p.m., at the Huntley Consolidated School Gym, Huntley, III. An ad¬ mission charge shall be present; tickets may be secured ariy at tiie door the night of the concert. The program shall feature only musical selections. No awards shall be made upon the concert date; the awards will be made during the Awards Night of May 19, 1961. The program, under the direction of Mr. R. Perley, shall also feature solo selection performed by stu¬ dents, as well as student directors. Report on Heart Fund American Legion Auxiliary re¬ ports a total of $221.23 collected on the heart ftmd drive. Anyone who has not sent in their contribu¬ tion and would like to do so, it is not too late. |
Collection Name | Huntley Area Newspapers |