Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 2 Mar 1977, p. 20

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SF« 1 ION •» P AGE \ - ri.AlNDFALER-WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2.1977 Toucher I )f The II eek 1 ••I ~ t D i s t r i c t I j ) DI AN A MAAS Ms Diana Maas is a sixth grade teacher at Parkland Junior high She is a gradaute of Seattle Pacific university and has taken advanced studies from La Verne collge and the University of Saskatchewan She is married and has two daughters Ms Maas enjoys music, cake decorating. bike riding, miniature golf and bowling. NHer hometown is Sunnvside. Wash She has previously taught in Port Angelos. Wash . and at a junior college in Saskatchewan She also has been involved in the teaching of Indians on a reservation. Her students are working on weather and climate with a focus on forecasting the weather The reading students are stressing creative writing with animals as the topic. The Middle Ages and fractions are being studied in Social Studies and Math She presently resides in Woodstock Legal Notice , IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 19th JUDICIAL CIRCUIT McHENRY COUNTY. ILLINOIS IN THE MATTER OF THE ) PETITION FOR THE ) adoption of > JEFFREY ANTHONY ) DINES ) a male child ) No. 77-F-60 TO Jessie Feltner PUBLICATION NOTICE TAKE NOTICE that a Petition was filed in the Circuit Court of McHenry County. Illinois, for the adoption of a child named JEFFREY AN­ THONY DINES. Now therefore, unless you JESSIE FELTNER. and all whom it may concern, file your answer to the Petition in said suit or otherwise file vour appearance therein, in the saia Circuit Court of McHenry County. Room 305, in the City of Woodstock, on or before the 24th day of March. 1977. a default judgment may be en­ tered against you at any time after that day and a judgment entered in accordance with the praver of said Petition. DATED: Feb. 10. 1977 MARGARET O'NEIL. Circuit Clerk MOHR & ASSOCIATES First National Bank Building 3814 West Elm Street McHenry. Illinois 60050 (815) 385-1313 ' Pub. Feb 16. 23. Mar. 2.19771 Legal Notice IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 19th JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. McHENRY COUNTY. ILLINOIS PROBATE DIVISION ESTATE OF VERNIE H. VEH- MEIER Deceased. FILE NO 77-P-32 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 Feb. 17, 1977, to McHenry State Bank, 3510 W. Elm St., McHenry, Illinois, whose attorney of record is Harry C. Kinne, Jr 3431 W. Elm St., McHenry, Illinois. Claims may be filed 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 office of the Clerk of said Court, County Court House, Wood­ stock. Illinois, and copies thereof mailed or delivered to said legal representative and to said attorney. MARGARET O'NEIL Clerk of the Court (Pub. Feb 23, Mar. 2 & 9, 1977) BLIND GUILD MOVES Recently the Catholic Guild ' for the Blind, the not-for-profit organization which has for thirty years assisted blind persons or those with a serious visual impairment, moved its headquarters to 180 North Michigan Avenue in Chicago. Since its foundation in 1947, the guild has served thousands of blind persons through providing them with hundreds of thousands braille pages of educational textbooks, religious books, cassettes, records, and large type reprints. It is supported by .voluntary contributions. ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for sale at or below the advertised price in each A&P Store, except as specifically noted in this ad. PEOPLE, PRICE & VIENNA Top Round Roast Beef POUND $2 58 HormelHard Salami OR PEPPEAONI White Meat Chicken Roll ">»o«aw POUND 95C Eckrich Lunch Meat • M AC Al e PICKLE A PIMENTO POUND MACARONI A CHEESE Leon Old Fashioned L' U« ITEMS AVAILABLE ONLY AT STORES WITH 2IGGY DELICATESSENS CUT FROM HEAVY GRAIN FED WESTERN BEEF POUND half $1 98 POUND 99c LOAF $1 38 oqund CUT FROM CHUCK BEEF CUBE $159 STEAK LB APPROX. 72% LEAN SULTANA QUART JAR Salad Dressing ANN PAGE Tuna Flakes ?s100 CANS I ANN PAGE 1-LB. Pkg. Noodles ASST. WIDTHS Ground 5-LB. PKG. OR LARGER LB. Boneless Rump Roast *129 • LB. CUT FROM HEAVY GRAIN FED WESTERN BEEF BLADE CUT Chuck Steak LB. 79 Hamburger OR HOT DOG BUNS JANE PARKER 8-CT. 12-OZ. tfapJi jbfuu (jJJiahf* Ocean Perch Fillet Cap'n John's Breaded Shrimp vi *215 Cap'n John's Perch Dinner.^ 79c Cap'n John's Fish & Chips 99c Van de Kamp's Fish Fillet VI *149 Red Snapper Fillets ^ *13* "&hocsuu} (JalusA BONELESS SIRLOIN TIP OR Top Round Roast lb.1 TAIL-LESS PORTERHOUSE OR T-Bone Steak lb. I ALL MEAT CHICKEN ADDED LANDO Chunk Bologna lb' SUPER RIGHT SMOKED Liver Sausage HYGRADE BALL PARK Beef Franks OR REGULAR ANY SIZE PIECE Wlsuah Sap's Pasteries Variety Pack Master Pies ASSORTED FLAVORS Jane Parker White Bread 3 24 0ZPKG Mc PKG. OF I ie-oz SIZE 1-LB. LOAVES 79c $100 ASP GAMERAMA Last chance to be a winner. Gamerama will end March 5, 1977. • Scheduled Termination Date is March 14, 1977. Game Officially Terminates when all game tickets are distributed or sooner if all tickets are distributed. All prizes must be claimed within five (5) days after announcement of Termination Date. March 5, 1977, therefore all winners must be redeemed by March 10, 1977. IPeaders l\J)igest CHECKOU r SPECIAL |~59c I MARCH Readers Digest "Sasueh RQC * EACH ||g JENO'S FROZEN OUR OWN M O R T O N Pizza Pot Pies 4 s10l CHEESE & OR SAUSAGE 13-OZ SIZE 100 COUNT PKG OnCor Meat Entrees • BEEF •TURKEY •SALISBURY STEAK DELICIOUS QUICK MEAL PKG. A&P Dill Pickles POLISH OR KOSHER STYLE SWISS MISS INSTANT HALF GAL. CTN. Cocoa Mix ALL FLAVORS ANN PAGE 48-OZ. JAR WITH MINI MARSH- MALLOWS EACH NEW HOURS TO CONSERVE ENERGY McHENRY STORE ONLY SUNDAY 9 AM TO 5 PM MON. -- FRI. S AM TO 9 PM < SATURDAY 8 AM TO 7 PM I SECTION 2 - PAGE 5 - PLAINDEALER-WEDNESDAY. MARCH 2,1977 nr IT TAKES A LOT TO HAKE A FOOD STORE GREAT... We're working at it! - J>ja/un jMAk (Daihy Cottage Cheese FULL SHANK HALF % % A&P 24-OZ. CARTON 99 pa JMMUtt *5" no* Pi* Smsnuem v i a ^•i WITH NO CENTER SL haM 1 rULLT ~ VVITH ashank^ORTION j COOKED OR ROAST Orange Juice WATER ADDED LB. TROPICANA 64-OZ. CTN. 89 FULL RIB HALF Boneless Ham Fully Cooked $ Choco-riflic WHOLE OR HALF SUGAR DALE U.S. GOVT. INSP. SERVE IT HOT OR COLD" DEAN'S CHOC. FLAVORED DRINK GAL. JUG 4 TO 5 LB. AVG. Allsweet Margarine QUARTERS 2 ,<£ '1°° Gaymont Sour Supreme PKG. 59c BONE IN AQ SUPER RIGHT SHOULDER BLADE CUT Pork Steak Strip Steak • 2 BONELESS RIB EYE STEAK OR WHOLE $AQQ ASS0RTED Beef Tenderloin PorkChops FULLY COOKED BUTT HPA Portion Ham •• /« 1^K86TV; PCS. U.S. GOVT. INSP. FJ A A&P % OR GOETZE BONELESS Box-O-Chicken Jta Smoked Butt FCOUNTRY STYLE-FRESH WITH PLL FULLY COOKED iFryer Legs' ~ 59' Center H am LB. INCLUDES: • 2 SIRLOIN CHOPS • 6 CENTER CHOPS • 2 SHOULDER CHOPS LB. V THIS WEEK'S FEATURE WEXFORD CRYSTAL FOOTED WINE/JUICE GLASS EACH m FRESH MEATY PORK Neck Bones A&P S OR GOETZE BONELESS JsjaJtwiSLii LB. •TAB •FRESCA LB. SLICE OR ROAST LB. Coca Cola 199 16-OZ. BTLS. PLUS DEP. (Di/kfjovsh Uahishj ai ti&ft... J'AcAh (pAnducc ^uahwrdssud Jto £nnanc& a l/Vbial TEXAS RUBY RED Seedless Grapefruit P RC Cola or | Diet Rite V 2-OZ. :ANS |19 BARRELHEAD ROOT BEER OR Canada Dry a AA • Ginger Ale H UU< h i OR ASST. FLAVORS TEMPTING CALIFORNIA AVOCADOS FRESH FOR Papayas FRESH GREEN Onions FLORIDA NEW RED Potatoes EACH BUNCH EACH 59c Cole Slaw FRESH 19c Bean Sprouts E X T R A F A N C Y LB. LB. FANCY QUALITY LB. CRISP. FIRM 25c Cucumbers 3 FOR F-LB. CELLO BAG Parsnips FLORIST QUALITY EACH 49c Mum Plants 6 INCH POT EACH Red Delicious Apples 5 ..'179 B A G | ^ Wilkinson Colgate Razor Toothpaste WITH 3 BLADES 7-OZ. TUBE ULL. 15C OFF LABEL Vaseline Intensive Lotion Curad P last ic B and ages 99c 79c Clorox Bleach GALLON JUG PURINA Dog Chow 25-LB. *C49 BAG ^ TODDLE* TODDLER'S SIZE Pampers DIAPERS 12-CT. 4 PKG. PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY MARCH 5,1977 NONE SOLD TO DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS. 149 • ito CARY RTE. 14 & SILVER LAKE RD. HARVARD 106 W. SUMNER WOODSTOCK 220 N. JEFFERSON McHENRY 3750 W. ELM ST. Keepin' Healthy The pros and cons of nuclear power have been much discussed in the news media in recent months. Some people claim the existence of nuclear in­ stallations represents a threat to public health. Others say it does not. lllinoisans should be especially interested in the use of nuclear power, as there are i more nuclear installations in Illinois than in any other state. There are currently seven nuclear powered reactors in the state, generating almost 25 percent of the state's power. And. if projected plans are carried through, there will be fifteen such installations in Illinois by 1984, generating almost 50 percent of the state's power. The first nuclear installation in Illinois, at Dresden, began operatios in 1960. Since then, other installations have been activated at Quad-Cities and Zion. In the years since the first one began operating, these installations have compiled a remarkable safety record. No Illinoisan has been killed as a result of any incident in a nuclear installation. In order to assure the con­ tinuation of this safety record, more than a year ago, the Illinois Department of Public Health increased its staff of nuclear engineers, and added other radiologic experts to conduct an ongoing sur­ veillance of nuclear in­ stallations and their surrounding environment. Air monitors, installed in the vicinity of each installation, give these scientists a con­ tinuous report of radioactive particulates in the air. If one of the reports would show higher than normal radioactivity, immediate action would be taken to determine the cause, and, if necessary, the nuclear plant would be asked to shut down. Samples from rivers, lakes, streams, private and public water supplies located near nuclear installations are also collected and analyzed on a regular basis. Again, any high reading will trigger immediate action. The same is true of milk samples from dairy herds and vegetation growing in the vicinity of nuclear in­ stallations. The power plants themselves are inspected regularly to assure that all equipment is in good condition, that safety back-up systems are in working order and that all safety precautions are being ob­ served. The establishment of this nuclear safety program is just one of the ways in which the state health department keeps pace with the changing health needs of the people of Illinois. No one could have envisioned this need when the department was organized a hundred years ago At that time, poor sanitation and disease epidemics were the primary public health problems of the day. They were, therefore, the primary concerns of the newly organized State Board of Health <as it was called then). During its first century, the state health department has expanded and redirected its areas of concern as the public health needs of the state have grown and changed. The Nuclear Safety program is just one of the more than 100 ways in which the Illinois Department of Public Health now serves your health needs. The department's 1,100 em­ ployees are dedicated to its goai.."not just prolonging life, but making it better." Anyone wanting more in­ formation about nuclear safety, contact the Illinois Department of Public Health, Office of Consumer Health Protection, 535 W Jefferson, Springfield, 111. 62751 Insurance Man Qualifies For Leaders Club Robert Stengel, of Route 1, McHenry, a district representative for Lutheran Brotherhood, has qualified for the 1976 Leaders club, one of the top sales honors of the Minneapolis-based fj-aternal insurance society. Woodrow P. Langhaug, Lutheran Brotherhood pres­ ident. said Stengel qualified on the basis of the amount of life and health insurance protection provided for Lutherans in his area, in ad­ dition to other financial plans and services. BUMPER STICKERS HATE DESTROYS WISDOM. LOVE. 19 7 7

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