Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 11 Sep 1974, p. 3

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mtmn Pictured is a committee of Luther Leaguers from Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran church, 404 North Green street, planning for a paper drive to be conducted by the group. Seated, from left, are Kurt Teuber, Jeff Haddick and Lynn Ann Haddick. Standing are John Honning, Brian Lund and Keith Teuber. Luther League Paper Drive The Luther League or youth group at Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran church, 404 North Green street, McHenry, has planned a paper drive for Saturday, Sept. 14, from 9 to 5 p.m. at the church parking lot. The leaguers are attempting to raise funds to provide scholarships for a weekend retreat at Lutherdale Bible camp, Elkhorn, Wis., for fifty youths. The retreat offers outside discussion leaders and speakers for the youth, planned Bible study periods, and many types of organized activities such as knock hockey and tobogganing in the winter and canoeing and swimming in the summer. Each year approximately fifty members of the Luther League attend both the winter and the summer retreats planned for the group. The officers for the Luther League include Lowell Kivley, president ; Jeff Damiani, vice- president; P" e 1 i c i a York, secretary, and Jeff Haddick, Community II ; ; i> ,, Calendar ;; SEPTEMBER 11 LCWC Card Party, Luncheon, Comedy Fashion Show -- Starting Noon - St. Peter 's Hall -- Spring Grove. SEPTEMBER 12 McHenry Woman's Club -- Fall Luncheon -- Floyd's Restaurant, Rt. 31 --12:30 - For Reservations f ill M- Elmer S ange. Senior Citizens Sewing Club -- Home of Alice Wilke --9:15 a.m. SEPTEMBER 14 Friendship Club Pot-Luck Dinner and Meeting; First United Methodist Church Dining Room -- 6 p.m. SEPTEMBER 15 Annual "Saufen und Spiel" - Johnsburg Community Club Benefit -- Parade - 1 p.m. St. Margaret Chapter of NAIM -- Annual Mass For Deceased Spouses - St. Peter, Spring Grove -- 11 a.m. - Dinner School Basement - Reservations by Sept. 9 - 385- 1105. SEPTEMBER 16 McHenry Senior Citizens Club "Kitchen Band' ' - 12:30 p.m. -- Luncheon and Program, Woodstock Women's Club -- Presbyterian Church, Calhoun Street, Woodstock. McHenry Business & Professional Woman's Club -- Dinner Meeting - Andre's Steak House -- Richmond - Social Hour 6:30 -- Dinner -- 7 p.m. SEPTEMBER 17 Johnsburg School District 12 - - P.T O. - General Meeting - Junior High School -- 8 p.m. SEPTEMBER 17-18 Benefit Party - St. John's Building Fund - Sponsored By Blessed Virgin Sodality -- Johnsburg Community Club - 8 p.m. SEPTEMBER 18 LCWC Meeting - Noon - Town Flail - Spring Grove - Organ Recital At Mrs. Ida Koberstine Home. McHenry Legion Of The Moose Steak Dinner Dance Dinner 6 to 8 p.m Dancing 9 •o 1 a.m. Oaks Women's Guest I)a\ 1 Court Joyce Kilmer No. 573 Catholic Daughters of America -- Meeting - K. of C. Hall - 8 p.m. M c C u 1 1 o m L a k e Conservation Club Meeting - Spojnia Polish National Union Camp -- Spojnia and Flanders Road -- 8 p.m. SEPTEMBER 20 St. Margaret Chapter of NAIM -- Regular Meeting - Oak Room - St. Mary's - 7:30 p.m. SEPTEMBER 21 Free Dance -- Checker Board Squares -- Edgebrook School - 8 p.m. SEPTEMBER 23 McHenry Senior Citizens Club Annual Fall Smorgasbord -- 6:30 P.M. -- East Campus Cafeteria. McHenry FISH Annual Me ling -- V.F.W. Hall -- All FISH And Public Invited -- 7 p.m. SEPTEMBER 25 McHenry Senior Citizens Club Bus Trip to the Oscar Mayer Plant - Madison, Wis. - Bus will leave the McHenry State Bank Parking Lot at 9 A.M. McHenry Women's Club - Musical "Irene" - Bus Leaving State Bank Parking Lot At 12:30 p.m. For Reservations Call Ree Nelson, 385-7348. SEPTEMBER 28 St. Margaret Chapter of NAIM - Meet For Cards -- Oak Room, St. Mary's - 7:30 p.m. VFW Post 4600 and Ladies Auxiliary -- Annual Membership Kick-Off Dinner Dance - VFW Post Home p.m. 6:30 %ifldSg&L. presents "DOVE CARTER" Saturday Sept. 14th 6:00 to 11:00 P.M. -d C. Whispering Club Meeting p.m. ILL. SEPTEMBER 19 St. Peter 's Christian Mothers Installation Dinner At t ' ran- dall 's Rt. 47, Hebron, 7:00p.m. " F.ASY ( ARK" HAIR CUTS 1 OR gals on the go • I-ayer Cuts • Shags • Naturals $10.00 J AXE'S 385-7771 t* OPEN WEDNESDAY thru SATURDAY 5:00 P.M. SUNDAY 1:00 P.M. 'JqmsejJo ̂ FINEST FRENCH GERMAN ITALIAN CUISINE 3312 CHAPEL HILL RD. McHENRY (JOHNSBURG) 385 1475 Legal Notice ADOPTION NOTICE STATE OF ILLINOIS, COUNTY OF McHENRY, ss. -- In the Circuit Court of McHenry County, County Division. In the matter of the Petit ion for the adoption of CYNTHIA AKSAMIT, a female child, MARJORIE AKSAMIT, a female child, and JAMES AKSAMIT, a male child. Adoption No. 74 F-191. To James Aksamit, and all whom it may concern. •fake notice that a Petit ion was filed in the Circuit Court of McHenry County Ill inois, for the adoption of three children named Cynthia Aksamit, Marjorie Aksamit, and James Aksamit THEREFORE, YOU, James N O W , UNLESS Aksamit. And all whom it may concern, file your answer to the Petition in said suit or otherwise file your appearance therein, in trie saicf Circuit Court of McHenry County, on or before the 21st day of October 1974, a default may be entered against you at any time after that day and a decree entered in accordance with the prayer of said Petition Dated. Woodstock, Il l inois Sept. 9. 1974 Margaret O'N'eil , Clerk Rinella and Rinella, Attorneys for Petit ioners, 1 North LaSalle Street, Chicago, Ill inois Telephone 312-236-5454. (Pub Sept 11, 18 & 15,1974) PAGE 3 - PLAINDEALER-WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 11, ifM >• H Medical Center Tower Design Environmental Study Reports Made Known Q D Q O treasurer The sponsors for the League include Larry and Lynn Lund, Earl and Lynette Trier, Harold and Shirley Kivley, Robert and Jane Lewis, Steve Missman, Intern Lynn Parsons, and Pastor Roger Schneider Members of the community are invited to bring magazines and newspapers to the church parking lot Saturday, where a semi-truck will be parked to receive them. Teen-agers will be on duty to remove the papers from the cars and place them in the truck. Il l inois Department of Transportation study teams will prepare environmental impact statements for two p r o p o s e d s u p p l e m e n t a l freeways in Cook. Lake and McHenry counties, it has been announced The study area for proposed Freeway 420 (Richmond- Waukegan Freeway) is between Allman road and the Wisconsin state line north of Richmond The study area for proposed Freeway 432 (Lake- Will Freeway) is between Belvidere and Dundee roads. The freeways are part of the OCTOBER 3 Fall Public Card Party -- Court Joyce Kilmer No. 573, Catholic Daughters of America -- K. of C. Hall -- 8 p.m. OCTOBER 19 Octoberfest Polka Dance - Sponsored by V.F.W. Post 4600 - - V.F.W. Hall -- 9 p.m. ti l? Consumers' Corner As a result of a unanimous Su­ preme Court decision, consumers will find it more difficult and more expensive to bring class ac­ tion law suits. In a class action, suit can be brought by 1 or more persons (plaintiffs) on behalf of an entire group or class of per­ sons who have the same basic complaint. In its decision, the court de­ termined that plaintiffs in class action suits must notify -- at plaintiffs' expense -- all members of the class who can be identi­ fied "with reasonable effort," such as through use of a mailing list. The court's reasoning was that under present Federal rules of procedure for class action suits, it is a fundamental requirement that all "identifiable victims" must be notified individually. Notification could be costly, since a class action may involve mil­ lions of people -- for instance, everyone who bought a particu lar unsafe or defective product or all owners of property damaged by a factory's industrial pol­ lution. Notifying all identifiable parties in the class makes it pos­ sible for affected persons to join the class action case actively with their own attorneys or to remove themselves from the case if they prefer not to be bound by the suit 's final decision. Class action suits have made it possible for persons with small individual claims to join froces and to go to court in a situation where a single person's claim would be so small that it would not cover the cost of the suit. Such suits have been used in re­ cent years in cases involving consumer, environmental, civil rights and antitrust issues. N o r t h e a s t e r n I l l i n o i s Transportation system developed by the Chicago Area Transportation study. They will serve local as well as regional travel demands The study teams will interview area residents to determine possible effects of the proposed freeways on the environment Completion of the first draft of the statement is expected by Dec. 1, when it will be distributed for review by interested governmental agencies Comments from the various agencies will be PATIENT CARE CLUSTER ... STAFF • ••••••••••Ml NURSING CONTROL CENTER CONFERENCE/CLASSROOM " FOOD, PHARMACY A EQUIPMENT VERTICAL TRANSPORTATION The Northern Illinois Medical center's patient tower will have a four-leaf clover design, to accommodate "clusters" of patient rooms around four individual nursing stations. The core of the tower will contain elevators and vertical transport systems, and such elements as pharmacy units, inhalation therapy and other equipment, and a room for physician conferences. incorporated into the final statement submitted to the F e d e r a l H i g h w a y administration in April , 1975. Alaska Pipeline Construction costs for the re cently begun Alaska pipeline pro­ ject are expected to exceed two billion dollars. This represents the most expensive privately funded project in history. JOINS FRATERNITY Charles Clay pool, a resident of Valparaiso, Ind., has just returned from the thirty-second biennial convocation of Sigma Pi fraternity of the U.S. The convention drew more than 300 members and guests from the fraternity's 130 chapters and colonies. Claypool was initiated into the fraternity Valparaiso university. at Panama Canal The Panama Canal connects the Caribbean Sea and the Pa­ cific Ocean Normal passage time is twelve hours and though the depth of the canal varies -- it never goes below 40 feet. » j | 1 September 1$ . . MISSY & JUNIOR (FAMOUS BRANDS) LINGERIE WALTZ GOWNS - LONG GOWNS- P.J.'s PEIGNOIR SETS & ROBES SIZES SM thru XXL & 30 thru 44 EARLY BIRD SALE SLIPPERS MEN'S- WOMEN'S-CHILDREN'S FALL & WINTER MISSY DRESSES SIZES 10 thru 20, 14% thru 24% 2©%off FREE GIFT WRAPPING ON REOUEST ENTIRE SELECTION 20%off' SELECT GROUP 50%»ff SELECT GROUP D0UBLEKNIT MISSY QUEEN CASUAL SLACKS SIZES 8 thru 18 $799 • PAIR MEN'S SPORT COATS ENTIRE SELECTION 2«% D0UBLEKN1T -BLENDS-WOOLS- SOLIDS - & PATTERNS SIZES 36 thru 44 MEN'S DOUBLEKNIT DRESS SLACKS (FAMOUS BRANDS) SIZES 32 thru 44 lA MANY OTHER IN-STORE SPECIALS SALE DAYS - THURS., FR1., SAT., SUN SEPTEMBER 12-13-14&15 CaLRDSTDNE A M TTT •i •H \ 2 I H Nor ill («reen SI. I'hoiM' :iH.VOI82 >!«• II «• i i r > Illinois

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