PAGE 16-PLAINDEALER-WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1973 Legal Notice STATE OF ILLINOIS ) )SS ) COUNTY OF MCHENRY LEGAL NOTICE HAROLD J. PAUL AND JOSEPHINE E., PAUL have filed a Petition before the McHenry County Zoning Board of Appeals praying for a zoning reclassification from "F* Farming District to '1-1" Light Industrial District, or in the alternative a variance to allow the property to be used as "M" Lignt industrial District. The intended purpose of reclassification is to permit the maintaining and operating of a warehouse for motorcycle parts and accessories upon the premises. The property, containing about 3 acres, more or less, is located in Nunda Township, South of the McHenry city limits on the West side of Route 31 and is more particularly described as follows: That part of the Southwest quarter of Section 2, Township 44 North, Range 8 East of the Third P.M. described as follows: Beginning on the West line of said Section 2 at a point 275.55 feet south from the Northwest corner of said Southwest quarter and running thence Easterly on a line forming an angle of 90 degrees and 35 minutes to the left, with a prolongation of the last described line, for a distance of 722.35 feet to the Westerly boundary of the Highway known as U.S. No. 12, (also known as state highway No. 31) thence Southwesterly along the Westerly boundary of said highway, 1.4 feet to the angle in said boundary line; thence Southwesterly on a line forming an angle of 2 degrees and 53 minutes to the right, being along the Westerly boundary of said highway, 99 feet to the angle in saia highway; thence Southwesterly on a line forming an angle of 3 degrees to the right being along the Westerly boun dary of said highway, 28.17 feet; thence Westerly 691.95 feet in a straight line to a point on the West line of said section 124.53 feet south from the aforesaid Rlace of beginning; thence [orth 124.53 feet to the Rlace of beginning, in IcHenry County, Illinois. This Petition has been filed in behalf of HAROLD J. PAUL AND JOSEPHINE E. PAUL, by their Attorneys. POLLOCK, MEYERS & EICKSTEADT, 213 South State Street, Marengo, Illinois. The hearing on this Petition will be held on April 18,1973, at 2:00 P.M. in the Village Hall, Crystal Lake, Illinois. (Pub. March 28,1973) Legal Notice NOTICE Public Notice is hereby given that on March 6th, A.D. 1973, a certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk of McHenry County, Illinois, setting forth the names and post-office addresses erf all of the persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as OUR FARM, located at 6703 W. Bull Valley Road, (Nunda Township) McHenry, 111. 60050 Dated this 6th day of March, A.D. 1973. Vernon W. Kays County Clerk (Pub. March 14,21,28,1973) He Did? God made women without a sense of humor so that they could love men instead of laugh at them. -Eagle, Do than, Ala. The Amateur Nurseryman When family living was all indoors, with many rooms to accommodate all the activities of the various members and walls and windows to provide protection from nature's elements, this is about the time of year when mother would say, "Let's rearrange the fur niture." Now that life as moved ouside to be closer to nature, and homes are designed with outdoor "rooms" in mind, that same urge to change things around is per fectly in order. If one of the outside room furnishing you want to move is an evergreen that just doesn't seem right in its present location, go ahead and move it. Some suggestions from the people who specialize in nature's green, growing gifts, the members of the American Association of Nurserymen, may make the move easier and more successful. Before you make a move, two facts are important. Evergreens are best tran splanted when their root growth is most likely to take place--early in the growing season--because they always require moisture. For that same reason, they must be moved with a "ball" of earth around the roots. You'll be wise to wrap the ball in burlap as soon as you dig up the tree and its roots, then keep the burlap moist while you take the next steps in the moving process. At the new location a hole should be prepared with a six to 12 inch clearance all arounH Name County Senator To Commissions State Sen. Jack Schaffer, R- Cary, has been appointed to serve on three commissions during the 78th General Assembly. Senate President William C. Harris of Pontiac named the freshman lawmaker to the important Toll Road Advisory committee, the County Problems commission and the Commission on the Status of Women. Sen. Schaffer becomes the first person to serve on the tollway panel as both a public member and legislator. He was first named to the committee in 1969 by former Gov. Richard B. Ogilvie as a public member. The group serves in an ad visory capacity to the authority which operates tollways in the state. Sen. Schaffer said he was "particularly pleased to have been chosen for continued service on the toll road com mittee. The Northwest Tollway serves residents in a large part of the 33rd legislative district. A RECYCLE Monthly Paper Drive Last Saturday of Each Month Market Place 9-5 LARRY LEAFBLAD JOINS JIM JORDAN " 9:15 A.M. WEEKDAYS AT NEW TIME... on the POPULAR Phone-SfTow: "CALL 1220" dial (312) 223-5555 (or 312-244*1220) and two to three inches deeper than the ball of the earth. Partially fill the hole with a mixture of good garden loam and peat moss or other com posted material, then set the evergreen plant at about the same depth in the new location as it was before the move. (Actually, the soil will settle, so you should set the ball about an inch deeper than its original site.) Pack about two to three in ches of soil mixture around the sides of the plant. Add more soil until the hole is about half full, pack it firmly, then water it thoroughly. When the water has soaked in, fill the hole to within three or four inches of the top, pack and then cut away the burlap about the stem of the plant, and lay it back on the soil. Finish filling the planting hole remembering to leave a saucer-shaped surface around the base of the plant. If the evergreen you're moving is fairly large you will want to brace it with guy wires supported with stakes along the outer sides of the hole. Use pieces of old garden hose or leather straps around the tree to protect it against the wire or rope you use. Finally, spread a mulch of peat moss, straw, sawdust or leaves over the loose soil to a depth of about two or three inches. You can leave the mulch through the summer and following winter if you stir it now and then. During the first growing season after moving day the soil should never be allowed to dry out completely around the evergreen. At the same time, however, the American Association of Nurserymen Prior Identification Heart Patients' Hope Prior identification of those susceptible to sudden death, killer of some 400,000 persons annually, is a major factor in the abatement of morbidity associated with this condition, a leading researcher reported at a Chicago Heart Association G o l d e n A n n i v e r s a r y Professional Lecture held at Michael Reese hospital. Bernard Lown, M.D., associate professor of Car diology, Harvard School of Public Health, and director of Levine Cardiac unit, Peter Bent Brigham hospital, said that evidence suggests that death is most frequently due to electrical disorganization of the heart beat which prevents coordinated contractions of the heart. Dr. Lown explained that approximately 70 percent of patients dying from acute coronary atherosclerotic heart disease (CAHD) never reach the hospital, and that about 60 per cent of all sudden deaths do occur in patients with CAHD. "Death is frequently sudden, unexpected, and often nearly instantaneous. Once this condition develops," Dr. Lown said, "the period of grace for restoring a normal heart beat is extremely brief, generally 2 or 3 minutes. Thisjimount of time points out that over-watering is more injurious than under- watering in almost all cases. The watering word for evergreens in a new location is "moist" -- not dry, not wet. is far too short for developing e f f e c t i v e i n t e r v e n t i v e programs. If this catastrophe, therefore, is to be controlled, ventricular fibrillation must be prevented." Electrical instability of the myocardium (muscular wall of the heart) is a precondition for ventricular fibrillation. With this instability transient risk factors create certain ven tricular premature beats (VPB). Dr. Lown believed that "existence of the change in the electrical charge of the heart beat is the distinct feature that predisposes it to ventricular fibrillation." A number of ways have been: developed to identify can-1 didates of sudden death in cluding monitoring and exercise testing. Information derived from the elec trocardiogram can give in-: d i c a t i o n s a s t o t h e p r e s e n c e o f j irregularities which indicate a; susceptibility to ventricular fibrillation. Dr. Lown said that a portable cassette monitoring device is being used to monitor patients' heart beats for a 36- hour period. The portability enables monitoring to take place while the patient is in volved in a daily routine or in the home. Stress exercise testing has also proven very helpful in exposing irregularities when the patient is tested while conducting a number of exercises. "A number of patients with CAHD, Dr. Lown said, "do not exhibit ectopic activity during prolonged periods of monitoring but do exhibit them during exercise. Such studies may contribute to the identification of the patient at higher risk." Experiments are under way at Harvard and other in stitutions throughout the country to treat with drugs those persons identified as candidates for sudden death. It is hoped that those drugs will prevent the occurrence of ventricular fibrillation, thus,, drastically reducing the number of unexpected deaths. At the present time, there is no drug that is effective at the same fixed dosage when ad ministered to a large group of patients. Experiments are continuing to develop an anti- arrhythmia drug that is both effective and safe when used for an extended period of time. This lecture was organized as part of the Chicago Heart association celebration of fifty years of progress in the abatement of cardiovascular diseases. The series, consisting of ten lectures, was designed to give area physicians an op portunity to hear, first hand, noted physicians, cardiologists and researchers from across the country discuss current research or new developments in the prevention and treatment of coronoary heart disease. The lectures are being conducted t h r o u g h o u t M e t r o p o l i t a n Chicago and are being co- sponsored by the Chicago Heart association, medical schools, < and other medical organizations hosting the lectures. Silence may be golden, and again, it may be guilt. Spring Quarter YMCA Program Now Under Way On Saturday, March 24, some of the Spring quarter activities of the Lake Region YMCA met for the first time. Registrations continue to be accepted for many of the ac tivities. t.ake registration will be accepted until April 6. Presently, adult residents of the Lake Region service area can register for the aviation flight school which meets on Mondays at 7 p.m., for the chess club which meets on Wednesdays at 7:30 p.m., for golf which meets on Wed nesdays in the evening, for judo which meets on Saturday at 10:50 a.m., for karate which meets on Mondays at 7:30 p.m. for women and on Wednesdays for men at 7:00 p.m., for physical fitness which meets on Tuesday at 7:30 p.m., for tennis which meets on Mondays at 7 p.m., for volleyball which meets on Thursdays for women at 7:30 p.m. and at 7 p.m. for men, and for yoga which meets on Thursdays at 7 p.m. for beginners, at 8:10 p.m. for continuing and at 9:15 for married tuples. Teen-agers may register for aviation flight school which meets on Mondays at 7 p.m., for bowling which meets on Thursdays at 4 p.m., for golf which meets on Wednesday at 5:15 p.m., for judo which meets on Saturday at 10:50 p.m. and for tennis which meets on Mondays at 7 p.m. Youth 7 years and old- d e r m a y r e g i s t e r f o r bowling which meets on Monday, Tuesday or Wed n e s d a y a t 4 : 3 0 p . m . , f o r girls' gymnastics which meets on Saturday at 2:45 p.m., for judo which meets on Saturday at 9 a.m. fdr beginners and at 9:55 a.m. for intermediates, for Junior high dances on April 13 and May 11, for boys' spring sports which meets on Saturday at 1:45 p.m., for swim in struction which meets on Saturdays at 12:45,1:45,or 2:45 p.m. and for tennis which meets on Mondays at 7 p.m. for nine-year-olds and up. All registrations should be made at the Lake Region YMCA office at 95 N. Grant street in Crystal Lake. Office hours are Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday morning. EASTER CANTATA The first rehearsal for the April 11 presentation of Dubois' cantata, "The Seven Last Words of Christ", was well attended. The Choral Society was fortunate to have all three soloists present for this first meeting. Lynn Opitz of Delavan, Wis., will be the tenor soloist and Herb Alley of Harvard the bass. Mrs. Karla Tildahl of Fontana, Wis., will be the soprano soloist. The presentation will be April 11 at 8 p.m. in the Trinity Lutheran church, Harvard. SENIOR CITIZEN-a dropoui from the School of Forty Hour per Week Grind. A proven way to avoid excess excitement is to live within your income. *y M i fx*! V.Vi i •»:i ;X0 >x< •:# li iS i II m W ?x* i 1 S3 m •XX-i v.**: M ivX; fox Jewel does more than youci expect FOR DELICIOUS MEALS ON A BUDGET... Serve U.S.D.A. Grade "A" Chicken From Jewel! O N Y O U R D I A L li ix:x McHenry, 3718 W. NEW STORE HOURS: Monday Thru Friday 8 A.M. till 11 PM Saturday 8 AM. til 9 P.M Sunday 9 A.M. till 7 P.M; U S D A GRADE "A" QUARTERED COUNTRY STYLE Chicken U.S.D.A. GRADE "A" QUARTERED COUNTRY STYLE RATH HICKORY SMOKED Sliced Bacon U S D A. CHOICE KCF TIP OR ROUND USOA CHOICE U S D A. CHOICE BEEF Cubed Steaks Chicken Breasts Sirloin /j Tip Roast FRESHLY GROUND APPROX. 85% LEAN Ground Beef GOV'T. INSP. - FULLY COOKED WATER ADDED - SMOKED HAM Center Slice CASH-SAVING COUPON GOV'T. INSP.-- Back Ri GOOD THRU SUN., APR. 1, 1973. SAVE 10' REG 49 Chipped Weats^»J CHECKERBOARD FARMS W,TH THIS COUPON Cornish Hens o I GOVT. INSP. -POWK LOIM- BONELESS ! Rolled Roast Jewel's Sausage Shop! Honey Pepper YOUR JEWEL'S OWN FRESH Italian Sausage ON ANY 3 OZ. PKG. OF BUDDIG CHOICE Barbecue Loaf U.S.D.A. CHOICE-BEEF Pan or Sandwich Steaks GOOD THRU SUN , APR 1, 1973 GOOD THRU SUN., APR. 1, 1973. APR 1, 1973 GOODTHRU SUN GOOD THRU SUN., APR. 1, 1973 SAVE 10c ON AN 8 OZ. OR 12 OZ. PKG. OF ALL MEAT OR PURE REEF Oscar Mayer Bologna j WITH THIS COUPON^j^W j SAVE 15c SAVE 10 SAVE 50 ON ANY 8 OZ PKG ALL VARIETIES ON ANY 1 LB. PKG OF ON ANY 3 LB OR 5 LB. CAN OF SWIFT'S - MOWN 'N SCRVI OSCAR MAYER, JEWEL, ARMOUR RATH HICKORY SMOKCD •4.79 I' 7 v1 l|V Sausage Links CORN KING, OR HYGRADE'S OR GARLAND Canned Ham Meat Hot Dogs or Patties WITH THIS COUPON WITH THIS COUPON WITH THIS COUPON GOLDEN RIPE Bananas nc 49* BAKED AMERICAN Country Manor Ham REG *1.09 '/a LB ALL GREEN Asparagus HAWAIIAN - LARGE 5 SIZE Pineapple 49c BAKED Imported Ham AMERICAN Potato Salad /2 LB. SUBURBAN STORES EACH Available Only In Jewel Stores With CheJ's Kitchen Shops! YOUR CHICAGO JEWEL STORES, IN COMPLI ANCE WITH A CHICAGO CITY ORDINANCE, NOW OFFER PINEAPPLE AT THEIR PRICE PER POUND YOU CAN BE ASSURED THAT THE PRICE PER POUND AND PRICE PER PINEAPPLE WILL OFFER ALL OUR SHOP PERS COMPARABLE VALUE Iwux(L (J PASTI FIESTA Coffee Cake BE SURE TO VISIT Jewel's Wine Corner AT THC Chicago Flower And Garden Show! 50^ jssssss^ ssssr^ 13V2 0Z. PKG. DELICIOUS Country Bread MARCH 34, APRIL I - McCORMICK PLACE COME SAMPLE ANO PURCHASE Wines-Cheeses-Sausages 16OZ LOAVES HILLFARM FULL MOON Colby Cheese PER LB \ (EXCLUDING RIVIR OAKS) CHERRY VALLEY CREAMETTES Elbow Macaroni IMPERIAL French Style Green Beans 1 6 O Z . C A N Margarine OR Spaghetti 1 LB. PKG. 2 LB. PKG. GREEN Btf* w REG. *1.19 REG. 43' REG. 23' REG. 48' «!«1 UN itx: £::: IvXi I-: K' m !#: i:K 1 In •V.M IS Xvl [XvJ m SXvJ C*>5 m r. v.* v& ;XvJ m £1 m ffi m m 1 Si i •M X*X* •X-X :X:X P I I ii-x-i M xx II w rXv m m 1 1 m i I 1$ •Xvl Xvi m !