The Huntley Farmside |
Previous | 1 of 6 | Next |
|
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
Large
Extra Large
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
'^' HUNTLEY ^"^^^^ VOLUME S — NUMBER 48 THURSDAY FEBRUARY 28, 196S PHOME: 312-669-8621 (any ttane) (If no answer) 816-4584)998 SCHOOL FILE {•UNTLEY HIGH SCHOOL HUNTLEY. ILL 6 PAOES MAILED AND DISTRIBUTED WEEKLY 7c PER COPY Adult Farmer Courses Dr. J. P. Ostrader will discuss "Herd Health as related to Pro¬ ducing Quality Milk" at the 9th meeting of the Adult Farmer class Dr. Ostrander has done an ex¬ cellent job in our community, dis- cu.ssing and helping dairy farmers solve Quality Milk Producing Problems. The meeting is Thursday, Feb. 28th at 8;00 p.m. at the Huntley High School Agr. Dept. Jr. Class Play March 29 The Junior Class will present their class play onjttg-ch 29. The play is entitled "Cn^Per By The Dozen." It is a three act comedy that is sure to delight everyone wJto comes to see it. It has an out¬ standing reputation and is highly recommended by many people. "Cheaper By the_Dozen" has been made into a h^fcselling nov¬ el, a technicolor i^Hon picture and now into a play. The novel was written by Frank B. Gilbreth Jr. and Ernestine Gilmreth Carey. The book was condensed by the Read¬ ers Digest, selected by the Book of the Month Chih and serialized by the Ladies Home Joumay. Car 39 Calling $1,(X)0.00 has been turned into the Village by the Police Depart¬ ment for 1%3 Vehicle stickers up to this date. After March 1st, the price of these license stickers will go up $.50 as a penalty for delinquent payment of the tax. More than 45 tog tax tags have been issued at the present time. Owners have until April 1 to sec¬ ure the required dab tax tags. Used Clothing Project The Use clothing project of the United Church of Christ—Congre¬ gational in Huntley is facing a shipping deadline on Monday, Mar. llth. Any who have gifts of cloth¬ ing, blankets, shoes, or money which they wish to send to needy Refugees overseas should have their gifts at the church by Sun¬ day, March 10th. Blanket Sunday, sponsored by the national council of Churches as an Inter-denomi¬ national project is to be observed in the United Church on that Sun¬ day. Each worshipper is asked to bring a blanket and a quarter for some shivering refugee from man- made or natural disasters. The participation of the entire com¬ munity is invited. Huntley Chapter F.F.A. Members F.F.A. Banquet The Huntley F. F. A. C^iapter held their annual banquet last Sat. night at the Lutheran Ci^urch with 110 people in attendance. The Ladies Aid of the Lutheran Church served a delicious family style roast beef dinner. Terry Henning, President of the F. F. A. then called the meeting to order. Progress reports were given. Terry Henning gave the progress report on hog loans. AUen Heimsoth gave a report on dafry loans. Mike Zemla then gave a re¬ port on the Freshman hog project. Following this Gary Borhart gave a report on the F. F. A.'s land project and Dennis Budsinski gave a talk on carcass grading of hogs. Mr. Joe Hemmer then gave a talk on scholarships set up by the F. F. A. Advisory Board. Next on the agenda was the presentation of awards for out¬ standing work by individual mem¬ bers. A911en Heimsoth received tho dairy award, Terry Henning the hog project award, and Alan Avang the mechnics award. Honary Chapter Farmers A- wards were then presented to Miss Martin, Harry Isenhart, and the Percy Swanson Family for all their help during the past years. In attendance were school board members, past honary members, and members of the F. F. A. Ad¬ visory Board. Mr. Kelly was also in attendance and gave a brief speech. The meeting was then adpoumed Honorary Chapter Farmers This year's Honorary Chapter Farper» ot the Huntley F. F. A. pictured above (left to right) are Harry Isenhart, Mr. aad Nrs. Percy Swanson, and danghters Diana, Lonnie, and Marcy and Miss Hannah Martin. Terry Henning, President o<( tbe Hnntley Chapter F. F. A. presentfaig the awards. 5 Petitions Filed For Village Board The following persons have filed for trustee on The Village Board; according to Richard Enstrom, Village Clerk: Emil Meyer, Ernest Fitzi, Leon¬ ard Ackman, Donald Heinz, Rich¬ ard Staab. The election will be held <m April 16th. Zoning Board Meeting ntley 2k> clyjt th« eMry )n^ne r The Huntley Zoning Board met at 4 o'clocl^jt the Vll'age Hall on Friday, FeMpry 22, 1963 to hear a plea fron^ne Illinois BeU Tele¬ phone Company to enlarge their present facilities on Ma'n Street between Grove and Myrtle Streets The telephone company building on the premises was buUt before the zoning ^j^ance went into ef¬ fect and i^Ph business estaUish- ment in a rCT.dential area. Mr. Donald Barrett, represented by Attorney Henry Wells, and other residents of the area were present at the hearing and objected to the re-zoning as it would permit a business zone to be established in a residential zone. The Zoning Board took no action on the matter at this time but continued the hearing until 4 p.m. on Friday, March 1st, 1963 at the Village Hall. Bank Safe Deposit Week National Safe Deposit Week, be¬ ing observed this week, is a good time for householders to check up on their valuables and importark papers, according to Wayne Miller Exec. Vice-Pres. State Bank of Huntley. / Mr. Miller stated that birth cer¬ tificates, titles, bonds, citizenship papers, deeds, wills, tax records, insurance policies, mortgage rec¬ ords, and marriage certificates are the most important papers which should be stored in safe deposit boxes. He said that a safe deposit box keeps these vital records safe from loss by fire, misplacement utd theft. The State Bank of Huntley has safe d^MDsit facilities available at a cost of less than a penny a day. He said that these safe deposit boxes are housed in the same-type vaults which are used by banks to protect their cash and securities. Often, the safe deposit boxes are in the same vault the bank us«. content* of safe dqwdt booces are confidential, and the booc may Mily be opwMd by tha box holder.
Object Description
Title | The Huntley Farmside |
Date | 1963-02-28 |
Month | 02 |
Day | 28 |
Year | 1963 |
Volume | 3 |
Issue | 48 |
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 | 1963-02-28 |
Month | 02 |
Day | 28 |
Year | 1963 |
Volume | 3 |
Issue | 48 |
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 225 kilobytes. |
FileName | 19630228_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 |
'^' HUNTLEY ^"^^^^
VOLUME S — NUMBER 48 THURSDAY FEBRUARY 28, 196S
PHOME:
312-669-8621 (any ttane) (If no answer) 816-4584)998
SCHOOL FILE {•UNTLEY HIGH SCHOOL HUNTLEY. ILL
6 PAOES
MAILED AND DISTRIBUTED WEEKLY
7c PER COPY
Adult Farmer Courses
Dr. J. P. Ostrader will discuss "Herd Health as related to Pro¬ ducing Quality Milk" at the 9th meeting of the Adult Farmer class
Dr. Ostrander has done an ex¬ cellent job in our community, dis- cu.ssing and helping dairy farmers solve Quality Milk Producing Problems.
The meeting is Thursday, Feb. 28th at 8;00 p.m. at the Huntley High School Agr. Dept.
Jr. Class Play March 29
The Junior Class will present their class play onjttg-ch 29. The play is entitled "Cn^Per By The Dozen." It is a three act comedy that is sure to delight everyone wJto comes to see it. It has an out¬ standing reputation and is highly recommended by many people.
"Cheaper By the_Dozen" has been made into a h^fcselling nov¬ el, a technicolor i^Hon picture and now into a play. The novel was written by Frank B. Gilbreth Jr. and Ernestine Gilmreth Carey. The book was condensed by the Read¬ ers Digest, selected by the Book of the Month Chih and serialized by the Ladies Home Joumay.
Car 39 Calling
$1,(X)0.00 has been turned into the Village by the Police Depart¬ ment for 1%3 Vehicle stickers up to this date.
After March 1st, the price of these license stickers will go up $.50 as a penalty for delinquent payment of the tax.
More than 45 tog tax tags have been issued at the present time. Owners have until April 1 to sec¬ ure the required dab tax tags.
Used Clothing Project
The Use clothing project of the United Church of Christ—Congre¬ gational in Huntley is facing a shipping deadline on Monday, Mar. llth. Any who have gifts of cloth¬ ing, blankets, shoes, or money which they wish to send to needy Refugees overseas should have their gifts at the church by Sun¬ day, March 10th. Blanket Sunday, sponsored by the national council of Churches as an Inter-denomi¬ national project is to be observed in the United Church on that Sun¬ day. Each worshipper is asked to bring a blanket and a quarter for some shivering refugee from man- made or natural disasters. The participation of the entire com¬ munity is invited.
Huntley Chapter F.F.A. Members
F.F.A. Banquet
The Huntley F. F. A. C^iapter held their annual banquet last Sat. night at the Lutheran Ci^urch with 110 people in attendance.
The Ladies Aid of the Lutheran Church served a delicious family style roast beef dinner.
Terry Henning, President of the F. F. A. then called the meeting to order. Progress reports were given. Terry Henning gave the progress report on hog loans. AUen Heimsoth gave a report on dafry loans. Mike Zemla then gave a re¬ port on the Freshman hog project. Following this Gary Borhart gave a report on the F. F. A.'s land project and Dennis Budsinski gave a talk on carcass grading of hogs. Mr. Joe Hemmer then gave a talk on scholarships set up by the F. F. A. Advisory Board.
Next on the agenda was the presentation of awards for out¬ standing work by individual mem¬ bers. A911en Heimsoth received tho dairy award, Terry Henning the hog project award, and Alan Avang the mechnics award.
Honary Chapter Farmers A- wards were then presented to Miss Martin, Harry Isenhart, and the Percy Swanson Family for all their help during the past years.
In attendance were school board members, past honary members, and members of the F. F. A. Ad¬ visory Board. Mr. Kelly was also in attendance and gave a brief speech.
The meeting was then adpoumed
Honorary Chapter Farmers
This year's Honorary Chapter Farper» ot the Huntley F. F. A. pictured above (left to right) are Harry Isenhart, Mr. aad Nrs. Percy Swanson, and danghters Diana, Lonnie, and Marcy and Miss Hannah Martin. Terry Henning, President o<( tbe Hnntley Chapter F. F. A. presentfaig the awards.
5 Petitions Filed
For
Village Board
The following persons have filed for trustee on The Village Board; according to Richard Enstrom, Village Clerk:
Emil Meyer, Ernest Fitzi, Leon¬ ard Ackman, Donald Heinz, Rich¬ ard Staab.
The election will be held |
Collection Name | Huntley Area Newspapers |