Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 May 1976, p. 16

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Legal Notice NOTICE Public Notice is hereby given that on April 21st, A.D. 1976, certificate was filed in a the PAGE 1ft- PLAINDEALER-FRIDAY, MAY 14. 1*7* Office of the County Clerk of McHenrv County, Illinois, setting forth the names and post-otfice addresses of all of the persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as TONYAN REAL ESTATE PARTNERSHIP, located at 1400 South Route 31, (Township of Nunda), McHenry. III. 60050 Dated this 2lst day of April, A.D. 1976 Vernon W. Kays County Clerk (Pub. Apr. 30, May 7 & 14,1976) Legal Notice The Nunda Township Board of Auditors, in an effort to again help to alleviate the local unemployment situation and direct our youth toward a more profitable and constructive pastime, is offering a referral sejrvice for the youtn and other unemployed residents of the townsnip. This service was offered last year and enjoyed much success. This will be strictly a coor­ dinating service " directed toward bringing together a prospective employer with a prospective employee. All negotiations will ne left up to the two parties concerned. The township will take applications from the people and try to match the applicants to the jobs available. Each applicant will be given a form introducing him-her to the prospective employer and every effort will be made to screen applicants as to con­ scientious attitude and serious intent. There will be no charge to either party. Because of complications that might arise the township is limiting ap­ plicants to age 16 and over. Any prospective employer or employee who is interested in this program is encouraged to fill out the applicable form printed below. Individual home owners who would like to hire to the Nunda Township Office, 95 Grant Street, Crystal Lake, III. 60014. Although the town­ ship is seeking openings with businesses and factories, they are interested in listings of any type of work. If an opening is not available now but will be in a month or so, please indicate that on the form and return it to the township office. (Pub. May 14,1976) Legal Notice NOTICE Public Notice is hereby given that on May 3, A.D. 1976, a certificate was filed in the Office of the County Qerk of McHenrv County, Illinois, setting forth the names and post-office addresses of all of the persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as MELODY MAKER RECORDS, located at 2921 W. Rte. 120, McHenry, Illinois 60050. Dated this 3rd day of May, A.D. 1976. Vernon W. Kays County Clerk (Pub. May 7,14& 21,1976) , Legal Notice IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF E.R. WHITNEY and ROSE J. WHITNEY his wife, FOR RECLASSIFICATION AND AMENDMENT OF CERTAIN REAL ESTATE FROM "B-l" to "B-2" UNDER THE McHENRY COUNTY ZONING ORDINANCE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held before the McHenry County Zoning Board of Appeals in connection with the application of petitioners for a reclassification and amendment under the McHenry County Zoning Ordinance from its present classification of "B-l" to "B-2" for the following described property: loners Lots 15,16 and 17 in Block 16 in Deep Spring Woods Unit No. 2, being a subdivision of rot theNWV« of Section rWp 45 N, RB, ETPM according to the plat thereof recorded 10-7-36 as Doc. 122968 in Book 8 of Plats, pages 148 and 149 in McHenry County, Illinois Above property is located at the southwest corner of Wonder Lake Road and Hancock Drive in Wonder Lake, Illinois and contains a gas station, residence and small retail store, all presently zones "B-l" The said hearing will take place on Wednesday, June 9th, at 2 p.m. in McHenry City Hall, 1111 N. Green Street, McHenry, Illinois at which time and place any interested pa-sons may attend. McHENRYCOUNTY ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS CHARLES T. SMITH, Chairman Attorney for petitic Leroy J. Weluer 1903 N Richmond Road McHenry, Illinois 60050 Telephone: 815-385-1333 (Pub. May 14,1976) Legal Notice DM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 19TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. McHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS PROBATE DIVISION ESTATE OF Kathryn B. Schreiner Deceased, FILE NO. 76-P-141 Notice is hereby given pursuant to Section 194 of the Probate Act, of the death of the above named decedent and that letters TESTAMENTARY were issued on May 6, 1976, to McHenry State Bank, 3510 W. Elm St., McHenry, Illinois, whose attorney of record is Looze & Kinne, 3431 W. Elm St., McHenry, Illinois. Claims may be Hied within 6 months from the date of issuance of Letters and that any claim not filed within that period is barred as to the estate which is inventoried within that period. Claims against said estate should be filed in the Probate JOB ORDER FORM NAME OF BUSINESS OR INDIVIDUAL. ADDRESS Street City State Zip TELEPHONE. JOB AVAILABLE. DATE JOB AVAILABLE. YEAR ROUND .FULL TIME SUMMER EMPLOYMENT. FULL TIME .PART TIME PART TIME AGE REQUIREMENT (if any). WORKING HOURS or SHIFT_ WHAT SKILLS ARE NECESSARY. WILL YOU TRAIN APPROXIMATE STARTING SALARY. WHO SHOULD BE CONTACTED ADDITIONAL COMMENTS OR INFORMATION. Please return this form to: NUNDA TOWNSHIP EMPLOYMENT REFERRAL SERVICE 95 Grant Street, Crystal Lake, III. 60014 NUNDA TOWNSHIP EMPLOYMENT REFERRAL SERVICE 95 Grant Street Ciystal Like, III. 60014 JOB APPLICATION For Youths and Unemployed Residents of Nunda Township NAME. Social Security No.. ADDRESS. Street City DATE OF BIRTH SEX Month Day Year Zip . Telephone No._ MARRIED. SINGLE. .NUMBER OF CHILDREN. ATTENDING SCHOOL NAME OF SCHOOL. IF NO LONGER ATTENDING SCHOOL WHAT YEAR HAVE YOU COMPLETED GRADE. VOCATIONAL TRAINING. WORK EXPERIENCE TYPE OF JOB DESIRED. YEAR ROUND SUMMER EMPLOYMENT. .FULLTIME. .FULL TIME. SIGNATURE. DATE PART TIME. PART TIME. Please do not write in this space! REFERRALS: : PLACEMENT: (Employer and DsteL office of the Clerk of said Court, County Court House, Woodstock, Illinois, ahd copies thereof mailed or delivered to said legal representative and to said attorney. MARGARET O'NEIL Clerk of the Court (Pub. May 14,21, & 28,1976) Legal Notice The Board of Education of McHenry Community High School District No. 156 will receive sealed bids on Graphic Arts Supplies for the 1976-77 school year. Bids will be accepted until ll :00 a.m. Monday, May 24, 1976. zifications may be obtained at the Board of Education Office, 3926 W. Main St.,, McHenry. Michael R.Kelly Business Manager (Pub. May 14,1976) Legal Notice McHenry County College is accepting sealed bids on Conference Room Furniture. Specifications may be obtained at the District Office of McHenry County College, Rt. 14 and Lucas Road, Crystal Lake, IL. Telephone 815-455- 3700; ask for Mr. Pohl. Bids will be opened on May 20, 1976 at 1:00 p.m. (Pub. May 14,1976) FAMILY SERVICE GIFT - The Women's auxiliary of the Family Service and Mental Health Clinic for McHenry County plans to purchase a $6,368 revolving filing system for storage of patients' records by the Family Service and Mental Health Clinic for McHenry County, according to Barbara Johnson, auxiliary president. She is pictured here with George Malley. clinic director; The new filing system will be like the clinic's present system, shown here at the McHenry location. Mrs. Johnson said, "In the near future, the auxiliary will consider purchase of additional equipment for the clinic." Bicentennial Dance Theatre iC Participating in the Bicentennial Dance Theatre program this month, from left are Julie Johnson, Crystal Lake, Jennifer Lewan, McHenry, Joan Goodwin and Carolyn Cowie, Crystal Lake, as they perform in Visions and Reflections, one of the ballets in the May 21 concert. The show, which includes classical and modern ballet, character and jazz dancing, begins at 8 p.m. in the Crystal Lake high school audiotrium. The Bicentennial Dance theatre is a McHenry county dance company formed with the ideal of providing high level, exciting entertainment in suburban - and rural communities. It is under the direction of Judy and John Svalander of McHenry, and it is their goal to implement this entertainment with talent from McHenry county and the surrounding northern Illinois area. Now, with the development of the company, their dream is becoming reality, and the pubi?c will reap the benefits of this project. On Friday, May 21, at 8 p.m., the B.D.T. dancers will perform in a concert that is truly an American birthday bouquet, with music and choreography carefully chosen to evoke feelings both of nostalgia and exuberance at being in America in this special anniversary year. Performing new ballets and a jazz suite choreographed by Mrs. Svalander, as ' well as some works from her previous concerts, the dancers hope to convey a spirited birthday greeting, while establishing this region of the state as an up- and-coming and creative one in the field of dance. A new ballet, "O, Sing of my Johnny," is a haunting, lyrical interlude relating to war and peace, commitment and loss, and uses both classical and modern ballet technique. It is wartime, but four sisters revel in the joys of the oldest sister's wedding preparations and plans for her new life. In a camp far north of their home. her groom longs for the end of bitter conflict so that he may return to his bride. But the young soldier will never see her smile up at him to promise her love, and grief and maturity are forced on the girl's shoulders. Act II brings a comedic and historical change of pace. By the mid-eighteenth century, the medieval court minstrel had evolved into a wandering fiddler or poet who stopped at a New England inn to earn his bread and bed by amusing the guests with a tall tale or fireside music. Along with tea and plum pudding, the colonists had imported their favorite stories and songs, so nursery tales told by a London nanny, might soon become staples in American homes. Thus, the strains of a symphonic "Pop, goes the Weasel," (a beloved rural folk song of our early days), is the background for a new character ballet, "A Village Tale." The plot mixes humor and pathos, and is a light tale of tails, indeed. Then, reflecting some of the best in the U.S.A.'s upbeat composing, "American Jazz Opus," with its pulsating rhythms and outpouring of spirit, tells what it's like to be young and free in the middle of the twentieth century. Instead of precise statements chiseled out of the music, the exhilarating jazz movements and throbbing songs flood the mind with emotions and ideas, touching physical and spiritual senses: Love, hate, joy, fear, darkness, light, heat, cold, shyness, daring. Universal feelings, but here stamped with America's multi-ethnic look and style. Drawing on music from Bourbon street, to Broadway, to the Barbary coast, the free-wheeling elements of rock and jazz celebrate their birthplace in a fireworks of movement and color. Repeating Mrs. Svalander's original ballet, "Visions and Reflections", which she premiered last year, the B.D.T. brings the tenderness and vitality gf Vivaldi's "Four Seasons" to the stage, as the life of one woman is traced from the tiny bud of childhood to the full, fragrant bloom of , her old age. Touching on those days of shared secrets with friends, the blossoming of first love, the silver-etched memories of the birth of a child and pthe rich harvest of happiness in a full life, the ballet is meant to be a tapestry of love as it pauses for a moment at crucial stages of the woman's growth and fulfillment. Also included in the evening's program is a set of divertissements of interest to both the devoted dance connoisseur or the newcomer to live dance performances. Tickets for this May 21 concert are strictly reserved seat basis. They may be purchased at 1301 N. Riverside drive, McHenry. Tickets will also be on sale at the box office the night of the concert. Fa* further information call 385- 6520. Grant Program Improves State Water Quality Water quality in Illinois has improved during the past two years due to the more than $770.7 million in federal and state construction grant funds offered to some 400 communities for improving and developing sewage treatment facilities, according to Dr. Richard H. Briceland, director of the Illinois Environmental^ Protection agency. The grants are issued by the Illinois EPA in a three-step process. The first is the planning stage where a study is conducted to determine the most effective method of treating a community's sewage. The second step is the designing of a facility to meet the planning standards, and the third stage is the actual construction of the needed facilities. Among the many factors taken into consideration are the town's growth potential and the location and capacity of the treatment plant so that the final facility will operate with the optimum of efficiency. Understanding Mental Health (Editor's Note: This is the sixteenth in a series on UNDERSTANDING MENTAL HEALTH, presented as a public service by the Family Service and Mental Health Clinic of McHenry County. The purpose is to help develop a much broader understanding of one of this nation's major health problems. Information is supplied with the cooperation of the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Today's presentation concerns What Mental Illness Costs). The dollar cost of mental illness in the United States rose from $25 billion in 1971 to almost $37 billion in 1974. Of the $37 billion, direct care alone amounted to $14.5 billion or roughly 15 percent of all direct health expenditures in the United States. The remainder is atributable to "supportive" activities: development of care facilities, management expenses, and research, training, and fellowships. Direct care costs include those for care provided in traditional mental hospital and mental health clinic settings. They include the care given to the mentally ill in nursing h o m e s , v o c a t i o n a l rehabilitation services, halfway houses, residential treatment centers and schools and other programs for children, private psychotherapy, therapeutic drug use, and general medical settings. In direct costs include the income losses resulting from the loss of productive time to those persons who are institutionalized or who utilise outpatient therapy for mental illness, total disability due to mental illness, and deaths due to this cause. A detailed breakdown of these costs is given in a publication, The Cost of Mental Illness, Statistical Note 125, prepared by the Division of Biometry and Epedemiology of the National Institute of Mental Health. Single copies may be obtained without charge from the Division of Biometry and Epidmeiology, Room 18C-2J, National Institute of Mental Health, 5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville, Md., 20852. It is requested that a return address label be sent to expedite handling of the request. Extension Comments The grants are offered in an effort to control water pollution, to improve the state's environment and to create jobs. "We'll continue to work directly with city officials, consulting engineers and contractors in an effort to speed the flow of pollution control money into the construction projects," said Briceland. "Cleaner rivers and streams mean fewer health problems and improved recreational opportunities. It also means that our drinking water can be more easily purified. This program will ensure that we will continue to see rapid improvement in the aquatic life (By George J cung, University of Illinois Extension A d v i s e r , A g r i c u l t u r e , McHenry County) 1975 Yields - The Illinois Cooperative Crop Reporting service just released the revised 1975 corn and soybean yield report. They Report that McHenry county's average corn yield was 102.0 bushels per acre and the state's average yield was 116.0. Our average soybean yield was 32.7 bushels per acre while Illinois averaged 35.5 Illinois Agriculture Tops - Our rank in the nation's agriculture is number one and two in many areas. We lead the nation in yield and total production of corn and soybean?; we produce more Swiss cheese, hor­ seradish and onion sets than any other state. We rank second in production of red clover seed, Muenster cheese, and number of pigs saved. Illinois ranks first in export of all agriculture commodities and soybeans and their products. We rank second in export of meats and feed grains. Carcass Show Dates Set - The local hog carcass show will be July 21 and 23 and the beef carcass show will be the week of July 26. The McHenry-Lake Pork Producers Association and the McHenry County Livestock Association are co- sponsoring the hog carcass snow. The Livestock Association sponsors the beef carcass show. Federal Estate Tax Reform - U.S. House Bill 1793 and Senate Bill 1173 would change the present estate tax exemption of $60,000 to $200,000. The $60,000 limit was established in 1942. Your congressmen are now considering these bills. These bills include all property owners. Solid Seeded Soybeans • I have had several inquiries recently about solid seeding soybeans. It is possible to get a 10 to 20 percent increase in yields by of many of our state's waters. "The communities approved for grants all agreed to meet state requirements including such items as agreeing to serve the designated community and nearby areas when feasible and conforming with any regionalization requirements, official population estimates and essential financial c o n d i t i o n s , " B r i c e l a n d concluded. shifting from rows of cultivatable width to rows that are spaced 7 to 14 inches apart. But the chief bugaboo is weed control. If you are interested in this, I have a concise article you will want to read from the USDA Agricultural Research magazine. Play It Safe - Prevent fires and explosions when refueling tractors for spring work. Never refuel your tractor while the engine is running or hot. Ground out the tractor by using a ground wire or by dropping mounted equipment so it touches the ground to reduce static electricity. Always refuel your tractor outside. Transport additional fuel in approved safety cans. Approved cans will bear the Underwriter's Laboratory or Factory Mutual labels. Control Iris Borer - If iris borers have been a problem in your flower border, the time to spray is when new plant growth is about three inches tall. Demethoate (Cygon or DeFand) gives good control. Plants must be examined closely to locate the insects. Wilted, discolored, dead- looking leaves in mid-summer are the first signs of borer damage. If damage is severe, the best control may be to dig up and destroy affected rhizomes and replant healthy ones. Keep • the sound of independence in the air. TU® stock in America. Buy US. Savings Bonds.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy