Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 16 Feb 1979, p. 3

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

BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. Steven Sch­ midt, 1620 Oakleaf, McHenry; had their first child, a daughter, at McHenry hospital Feb. 7, 1979. Jillian Christine weighed 8 lbs and 1 oz. at birth. Maternal grandparents are Mrs. Karyn Maras, McHenry, and the late Harvey Smith. Mr. and Mrs. William Schmidt, McHenry are the paternal grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Marc Poulin <the. former Linda Blundell) had their first baby, Lisa Ann, Feb. 13. The 8 lb. 13 oz. baby girl is the first grandchild for maternal grandparents Mrs. Ann Diedrich, Lodi, Wise., and Richard Blundell, McHenry. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Poulin, West Warwick, R.I. Great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. John Bathany and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Makowski, all of Florida. Feb. 12, at Woodstock hospital, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Berry of Wonder Lake had a girl, and in Harvard hospital Mr. and Mrs. Alan Schneberger of McHenry had a boy. Legal Notice NOTICE Public Notice is hereby given that on Febuary 13. A.D. 1979, a certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk 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 A 2 Z Building & Remodeling Co., located at 721 S McHenry Ave., McHenry Shores, McHenry, IL. 60050. Dated this 13th day of February, A.D. 1979 Rosemary Azzaro County Clerk (Pub. Feb. 16,23 & Mar. 2,1979) Legal Notice r HOSPITAL NOTES I MC HENRY Admissions: Margaret L. Salata, Linda M. Andersen, Lorraine Wenderski and Therese Lyons, all of McHenry ; Barbara Wetstein of Johnsburg, Gwen Eblin of Crystal Lake, David Christie of Richmond and Josephine Br Kallal of Algonquin. WOODSTOCK MEMORIAL Admissions: Mrs. Elayne Mahoney, S. Peter Nowell and Mrs. N. Nolan, all of McHenry and Mrs. Doris Scheppa of Wonder Lake. HARVARD Admissions: Samuel Perez of McHenry. F MARRIAGE H LICENSES About Your Wedding... In order to serve McHenry area brides the Plaindealer sends wedding forms to all those whose engagements hove been announced and carry a definite date We ask that these com pleted forms be returned three days prior to the wed ding Complete details will ap pear only during the week following the wedding except in the case of out-of-state weddings where an ad ditional week is allowed Photogrophs will be printed any time later or will be in­ cluded with the wedding in formation if they accompany the story If your engagement on nouncement has not published or if the date of the wedding was not known at thot time pleas# call our of fice and request that a morriage form be sent the Ifd Applications for marriage licenses at the McHenry County Clerk's office were recently made by: William M. Hogan and Lorie J. Olson, both of Woodstock; Charles A. Brewer and Debra L. Duncan, both of Woodstock; Gary E. Jahraus and Donna S. Courvoisier, both of Algonquin. Edward E. Urias and Diane L. Radtke, both of Lake In The Hills; Timothy E. Abney and Diane J. Marshall, both of Crystal Lake; Wayne §tuart Ziskal and Robin Lasley Tower, both of Algonquin. Gerald E. Bundgard, St. Charles, and Maryeve A. Laino, Cary; William J. Swiatkowski and Cheryl L. Musick, both of Woodstock; Max H. Norris and Judith A. Naylon, both of Polo. Laurence F. Ostdick and Kathleen A. Jacobsen, both of Algonquin; Robert E. Markham and Kristy Kay Hunt, both of Woodstock; Richard H. Donahoe, Wood­ stock, and Joan G. Murray, Round Lake. Kenneth E. Morris and Judy K. McMurry, both of Jonesboro, Ark.; Dominic J. Knitter and Kimberly N. Olbinski, both of McHenry; Randall G. Johnson and Cheri L. Gudmundson, both of McHenry. Thomas W. Pfrommer and Janice F. Harbecke, both of McHenry,; Tim Kuebler, Ingleside, and Debra Freeland, McHenry. • • • • The scope of a man's mind is accurately indi­ cated by the type of honor that he cherishes. NOTICE OF SALE of Property Owned by Village of Sunrise Rid Illinois and Invitation to Thereon PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT the President and Board of Trustees of the Village of Sunrise Ridge, Illinois, will receive sealed bids for the gurchase, under the successful id, of the fee simple interest in the following described real property: That part of the Southeast quarter of the Southwest quarter of Section 12, Township 45 North, Range 7, East of the Third Prin­ cipal Meridian, described as follows: Commencing at the Northeast corner of the Southeast quarter of the Southwest quarter of said Section 12 and running thence West on the North line thereof for a distance of 880 feet to a point for a place of beginning; thence continuing West on the said • North line thereof for a distance of 270 feet to a ?oint in the center lme-cT~ hompson Road; thence South on the center line of said Thompson Road for a distance of 240 feet to a point; thence in an Easterly direction on a straight line parallel to the North line of said Quarter Quarter Section a distance of 270 feet to a point; thence Northerly on a straight line parallel to the center line of Thompson Road, a distance of 240 feet to the place of beginning, all in mcHenry County, Illinois, ana con­ taining approximately 1.4 acres, more or less; - which land is vacant and is located within said Village on Thompson Road. Bids for the purchase of the aforesaid interest in the above described property are hereby invited ana will be received by the Village Clerk at her residence at 8603 Alden Road, Village of Sunrise Ridge, Wonder Lake, Illinois 60097 between the hours of 9:00 o'clock A.M. and 4:30 o'clock P.M. on the date below specified for the opening of bids. The bids shall be made on a Real Estate Contract form available from the Village Clerk or Village President which shall be inserted in a sealed envelope addressed to the President and Board of Trustees of the Village of Sunrise Ridge, Illinois. All bids received will be publicly opened and read aloud at the regular meeting of the President and Board of Trustees of the Village of Sunrise Ridge, Illinois, at 8:00 o'clock P.M. on March 22, 1979. A contract may be awarded to the highest bidder whose bid is found to be in the best in­ terests of the Village of Sunrise Ridge, Illinois. The President and Board of Trustees reserve the right to reject any and all bids and to waive any in­ formalities or irregularities in the bidding. The President and Board of Trustees further reserve the right to review and study any and all bids and to make a contract award within thirty days after the bids have been opened and publicly read. Elisabeth Kelly, Village Clerk 8603 Alden Road, Sunrise Ridge 815 728-0865 (Pub. Feb. 16,23 & Mar. 2,1979) • • • • Economy is the axe to be applied to the other fellow's expenditures. Perspective Do You Kids Belong To Uncle Sam? The McHertryrState Bank will be 'OltrikiBU MONDAY-FEB. 19th Washingtons Birthday and will be OPEN WEDNESDAY, FEB. 21. For Your Convenience DRIVE-UP and WALK-UP WINDOWS 9am to 3pm 3510 W. Elm St., McHenry, Illinois CONTEST PIANO SALE SUNDAY, FEB. 18th Bev Patterson Piano 6 Organ Co. Along with the cooperation of Kimball Co. again helps sponsor the Illinois Music Association Con­ test. Fifty-two brand new pianos will be delivered to the school where they will be used for the contest only. Spinets, studios, and con­ soles will all be available to the public the day after the contest at SPECIAL EDUCATIONAL PRICES - rates usually reserved just for schools! Come to the school to make your selection. iOev p / iano Organ SUN., FEB. 18th 1 -4PM North Elementary School 500 Woodstock St., Crystal Lake SUN. FEB. 18th 1 -4 PM Harrison School i 6809 McCullom Lk. Rd., Wonder Lake • FOX VALLEY MALL 898-8882 •NAPERVILLE 355-0624 BY RONALD RKA<;AN PAGE 3 - PLAINDEALER - FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 16, 1979 * -- -- I * * * * Frozen Foods * * * Though it has been with us for several years, the all-volunteer Army is still a subject of controversy. One criticism frequently heard is that the intelligence and education levels are lower than they would be if conscripts were in the mix.* Beyond measuring test scores and statistics, that may be hard to prove. A few weeks ago, in Berlin, I had a vigorous "rap" session in a mess hall filled with men and women from today's Army. The questions they asked and the comments they made told me they were as well informed -- probably better ~ on current events than most civilian audiences back home. And, so far as understanding the cause and effects of inflation* they were experts. With the fall of the dollar, their pay doesn't go very far in Germany. Despite this, their morale was sur­ prisingly good. Perhaps our troops in Ger­ many aren't typical and it is probably fair to say that the "final score" is not in on the overall .performance of the all- volunteer Army. Still, from a philosophical standpoint, it is preferable in times of peace to universal conscription. What is lacking is a standby draft system for quickly calling up additional manpower in times of need. The old draft board system with mandatory registration for young men was cumbersome, costly and not always equitable. Laterly there have been reports of proposals that the computers of the In­ ternal Revenue Service or the Social Security system be used for "banking" data on draft- age men. It is worth studying to see if such a system would be 'efficient, economical and fair as a means of creating a standby pool. Now comes another idea about "national service" which deserves to be quickly filed and forgotten, an organization calling itself The Committee for the Study of National Service, supported by the Ford foundation and the Potomac insitute, has just issued a 143-page report which concludes that a million young Americans should be con­ scripted to perform non- military jobs. The committee, which in­ cludes some well known names from the academic world, says it favors restoration of "the spirit of service" in American youth. Fine, but the method it proposes is dead wrong for a free society. The report says, "We have concluded the nation's social, economic, education, environmental and military needs, including the need of our society to regain a sense of service, together make a compelling case for moving toward universal service for American youth." These folks envision sending the conscripted young people out to work in schools, hospitals, day care centers, community health centers and in programs for the elderly, conservation, renovation and the like. Every one of these areas can use all the help -- volunteer help -- it can get, but shown the need American kids have responded and can and do respond to calls for service. Surely, more than a million American young people do volunteer work in hospitals today, and witness the large numbers of them who have pitched in to clean oil spills and to sandbag beaches in violent storms. The trouble with the universal service idea is simple and very basic: it rests on the assumption that your kids* belong to the state. If we buy that assumption then it is for the state - not for parents, the community, religious in­ stitutions or teachers to decide who shall have what values and who shall do what work, when, where and how in our society. That assumption isn't a new one. The Nazis thought it was a great idea. Freezer Management Getting the most value from frozen foods requires proper man agement of the freezer and organization of the foods in it. In each 24-hour period, never freeze more than three pounds of unfrozen food for every cubic foot of storage space For example, you can add 36 pounds of unfrozen food to a 12-cubic foot freezer. Adding too much unfrozen food can raise the temperature of the frozen food already in your freezer. Keep similar foods together in baskets or on shelves. Never overload your freezer. By keeping it two-thirds fqll most of the time, cold air will circulate freely to keep the foods solidly frozen. Defrost the freezer every two months. Never let frost reach a depth of Vz inch as this causes the temperature to rise several degrees. - ' . * Rotate the frozen foods in a freezer. Store newly put chased frozen items on the bottom shelf (or next to the walls in a chest freezer). Provide for air circulation around unfrozen products to ensure rapid and uniform freezing Label and date foods with masking tape Keep a running inventory of the foods in the freezer to help in menu planning and in keeping a balanced assortment on hand. ' . - Right "Now Johnny," said the teacher, "can you tell me what a hypocrite is?" "Yes, Miss," replied Johnny: "It's a boy what comes to school with a smile on his face." American Legion Post 491 - RINGW00D ROAD. McHENRY - OPEN TO THE PUBLIC FISH FRY EVERY FRIDAY 15:00 - 9:00 P.M.) •PERCH-ALL YOU CAN EAT 'OTHER MENU AVAILABLE ROADMASTERS SAT. NITE It's believed the eating of beef was introduced to Japan in 1856 by American diplomat Townsend Harris. MM M \n hoi it MOV I I I V - W I I I - I I I I H v - H M ) \ V t to i.> < hi |*» i. i . gnnnrB ASSOCIATION <r COME TRX SERVICE |Yegge Accounting } ^Experienced > •Professional I •Personalized * •Year-Round > ; INCOME TRX Phone for appointment a RjLtLflJULfl.BJULfiJLftJLB-8.BJL9 EVRN W. LEWIS AFTER FOUR YEARS WITH THE MC HENRY COUNTY STATES ATTORNEY'S OFFICE. ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF AN OFFICE FOR THE PRACTICE OF LAW IN ASSOCIATION WITH TERRY R. MOHR AT THE FIRST NRTIONRL BRNK OF McHENRY BUILDING 3814 W. ELM ST.-McHENRY. ILL. 385-1313 WITH EMPHASIS ON CRIMINAL AND CIVIL LITIGATION y v SEMI-ANNUAL SALE 2 WEEKS ONLY Now thru March 3rd SHOP 1 AT HOME | PHONE i 385-7531 j J PRICES INCLUDE • Measuring • Fabric • Tailoring Only twice each year wi l l the manufacturer permit discounts on the ful l range of our luxurious fabrics. Don t de lay , come down now to ge ta f ree es t ima te , o r ca l l , and we wil l br ing fabrics to your home McHenry Drapery & Carpet Co. 1253 N. Green St. McHenry, III. 60050 IMP-. W^T-

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy