Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 3 Oct 1979, p. 15

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mm • • r * V* , - us-. L MOTHERS COPE Household Sale, 80 years collection, an­ tiques,;! furniture, dishes, lamps, old trunk etc. Saturday October 6th, 8am to 8pm. near Hospital 623 Forest, Wood­ stock. FOR -- • ? . -- 10-310-5C m BENT Now taking applications for now apartments. Located at 4005 Lillian St., City of McHenry. 2 bedrooms with 1 or l'/t baths, carpotod, all ap­ pliances. ideal for retired, semi-retired or older people. IMMEDIATE OCCWAIKY. Call for ap­ pointment. - 815-344-1*32 er •15485-4566 «O/STF COACH HOUSE Deluxe 2 story coach house. Pistakee Bay front estate. 4 rooms, large yard, patio, gas grill, boat docking privileges. Very privote with beautiful views of Bay. Couple preferred, no pets, references and lease required. $3*5. Call MS-2511 I0/3TF GAJPtAGE SALE, 4 drawer , metal depk, wooden cupboardf tables, chairs, misc. furniture, r clothing, books, much misc. Saturday and Sunday, 10 to 4 | pm 3713W.Grand,McHenry. ; ' ! 10-5 , GARAGE SALE -Machinist ; and Mechanic Tools, furniture, • household items and collec- ! tables. Fri. Sat. & Sun. 9 to 5 ! East River Rd. to Oakhurst | 2618W.Apache. 10-3-10-5C -- GARAGE SALE Furniture, Clothes, toys, Grundig stereo and much more. Corner of Green St. & Fairway, McHenry Friday & Saturday. 9am to 6pm 10-3-10-5C GARAGE SALE October 6th, one day only. 9am to 5pm. Everything must go. Baby clothes, adult clothing, small appliances and much more. 3203 Stillhill Dr. McHenry Shores 10-3-10-5C 2 FAMILY GARAGE SALE, 1205 N. Clover Lane. (East­ wood Manor Sub.) Clothes, books, toys, record player, AM car radio and speakers, much misc. October 4th and 5th, 9:00 to 3:30. No early birds, Cash Only. 10-3 GARAGE SALE, Chiffarobe, go cart, antique doll carriage & other antiques, aquariums, humidifier, kitchen table set, heater for tent-camper, plants, pots & stands. Weber gas grill, toys, games, books and loads of misc. Special-9 ft. table with good clothing-none over a dollar! Thursday & Friday 9 to 5, Sat, 9 to 3, NO EARLY BIRDS PLEASE. Country Club Estates 3424 W. Skyway, (corner of Linda & Skyway.) 10-3-10-5C Garage Sale, October 5th & 6th, 9am to 5pm, 620 Brandenburg, Ingleside, hardware, household items and sewing machine. 10- 3-10-5C LAKEFRONT HOME, Fur­ nished 3 bedroom, garage, 2 baths, dishwasher, basement. References and security deposit required. . Terms negotiable. $350 per month. 312-296-6216 or 815-653-4946 10-3-* 10-5C For Rent, large executive home located on beautiful McHenry Country Club, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, super large rooms, two car garage, low maintenance yark for the daily golfer. $600.00 per month, security deposit, references required. 815-385-4949 10-3-10-5C *--I FOR LEASE, 3,000 sq. ft. of prime business space for retail or wholesale use. Located in McHenry's busiest shopping area. Appointment only 815- 385-4949 10-3-10-5C HOUSE ON McCULLOM LAKE, McHenry. For rent- sale. $395 per month, 2 months security. Sale price $47,500. Available now. November 1st. 3 to 4 bedrooms, stable, beach, air conditioned. Call 815-385- 8294 or 312-256-4481. 10-3-10-19C RENT WITH OPTION TO BUY. Exceptionally nice 2 bedroom home, attached garage, full basement, wooded lot, all appliances, McHenry area. $375.00 per month with one month security deposit. Available immediately. 815- 728-1412, ' 10-3-10-5C McHenry, Quiet, maintenance free, 4 bedroom ranch with garage, basement, family room, $450.00 312-541-3220 10- 3tfc OFFICE IN McHENRY, good location, air conditioned, all utilities furnished. $95. Call 815- 385-3490. 10-3tf LAKE IN THE HILLS, spacious 2 bedroom apartment, appliances and carpeted, adults, no pets. $j|00.00 per month, frlus utilities and security deposit. 815-344-2479. 9-28-10-5C. Large 2 bedroom $385.00 month includes utilities, security deposit, available im­ mediately. Cadi Taimi's Fur­ niture 815-385-9292 10-3tfc For Rent - Three bedroom cape codf 2 baths, in town, M> block to school, 2 -ear garage. Security deposit required, no pets, immediate occupancy. $450.00 month 385-4880 10-3-10-5C 4 BEDROOM HOUSE, family room,. 2 car garage, johnsburg school district. immediate occupancy, no pets. Security deposit $375 month plu! utilities. 815-385-9034 10-3-10-5cv Clean one bedroom apartment pay own utilities. $200.00 per month, couple or single preferred. No pets, security deposit, available im­ mediately. McHenry area. 312- 367-4675 10-3-10-5C Two bedroom home, central air, washer, dryer, fenced in yard, Country Club Estates, references and security deposit required. Available im­ mediately. $375.00 month. 815- 728-0150 , 10-3-10-5C 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT, No childred, no pets, $280.00 per month plus security deposit. 815-385-7065 10-3-10-5C Fox Lake-Spring Grove area, Spacious 3 bedroom home on Vfe acre. Large family room with attached screened proch, full basement, 2V2 car garage. Security and references $410.00 month 815-675-6255 after 6pm 10-3-10-5C TWO BEDROOM DUPLEX, full basement, yard, off street parking in Harvard. $215.00 Call 815-385-3490 10-3-10-5C 3 BEDROOM HOME, 1st floor recreation room, full basement, 2 car garage, ap­ pliances included $375 plus utilities. Security deposit and references. No pets. 312-685- 4278 2 miles from Fox Lake train station. 9-28-10-5c In Wonder Lake, 4 bedroom, 2V2 bath, formal dining room, two car garage, $425. per month plus utilities. 815-923-2646 10-3- 10-5c " . . ' LARGE 4 bedroom house in McCullom Lake. Partial basement, 2 car garage, washer and dryer. $395. month plus deposit. 815-385-4566 10-3- 10-5c . ONE BEDROOM FUR­ NISHED, apartment for 'mature adults. All utilities included. Convenient in town, location. 815-385-6566 ; 10-3tfc . ^ •' - For Rent, 3 bedroom with family room, two car garage, 815-459-5820 or 455-3091 references required. $480. month. • . 10-3 CLEAN SLEEPING ROOMS for mature adult men 815-385- 0266 or 385-8905 10-3tf QUALITY MOTORHOME, 30 foot Diplomat, sleeps 9, rent by or week. Reserve^now for summer vacation. Richmond 1.815-67^-6356 10-3tfc BOATS * MOTORS 6 CYLINDER ENGINE BLOCK and drive unit for Johnson I-O. $800. 815-653-1061 ask for Bill Fitzgerald 9-28-10- 5c A BLACK BEAUTY SS 160, 17 ft. Slick Craft, w-100 hp. Johnson outboard, comes with EZ Loader trailer, ski equip­ ment, like new with extras and ready t8 launch $3,000. Call after 5pm. 312-766-3674 10-3tf SNOWMOBILE M •J& asm. Jada Yearling, 16 months already 15 hands, will mature gver 16 hands, has plenty of ground work $2500.00 Call 815- 344-1750 or312-546-0599 10-3-10- 5C ' 720 to 1440 Sq. Ft. 385-8180 10/3TF MODERN OFFICE SPACE For lease, available im­ mediately. Up to 1,500 sq. ft. Fully air conditioned and car­ peted. Office suites start at $100. per month, including utilities. 815-728-0404 77 POLARIS COLT SS 340, excellent condition $1,050. 815- 385-2534 or 815-385-0360 10-3-10- 5c 1976 POLARIS COLT SS 340, escellent condition $900 or best offer 815-653-7536 after 6pm 10- 3-10-5C ' ' / WANTED FOR RENT OR SALE, Waterfront house, South of McHenry on 1 acre lot, 1 bedroom possible 2, $350.00 plus Security Deposit. Immediate Occupancy 385-1369. 9-28-10-5C JOHNSBURG-BARN with concrete floor approximately 1300 sq. ft. on first floor, 1100 sq. ft. on second floor 815-385-1268 10-3tf 5 BEDROOM NEW HOME, 2 baths, family room, dish­ washer, disposal, attached garage, acre lot $500. 815-728- 013i 10-3tf WAREHOUSE OR FACTORY space, from 5,000 to 15,000 ft. 815-385-1079. 10-3tf Newly decorated 3 bedroom tri- level, one block from beach, Lakewood area, Crystal Lake, $500. security deposit, $500. monthly plus utilities, no pets, references required, by ap­ pointment. 312-529-2629 10-3-10- 5c VFW CLUBHOUSE and Hall for rent. Seating capacity for 400. Call 815-385-9860 from 9 to 12 weekdays or after 6pm. 10- 3tfc FOR RENT with option to buy. Whispering Oaks, 2 bedroom home, immediate occupancy. Call 312-395-8172 evenings. 10-3- 10-5c 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT, convenient in town location. $300. month. 815-385-4646 or 385- 2352 10-3tf LOST GOLD tipped female cat with 3 legs, please call 815-385- 2603. 10-3-10-5C -- i WANTED PUPPIES, 6-8 weeks old, good homes guaranteed. Also we buy Poodle or Schnauzer mixed pups. 815-385- 7897 10-3tf PETS m SALt AKC Weinreimer 5 month old female, excellent hunting stock, house broken and good with children. Must sell due to allergies $110.00 815-385-8939 10-3-10-5C CANARIES ON SALE. Males & Females. All colors 312-639- 2622 10-3-10-12C AKC Chihuahua female, non barking $75.00 815-344-1325 10- 3-10-5C One female AKC Doberman puppy black & rust 2'/fe months old, champion bloodline, ears cropped, tails and dew claws, dewormed. $300.00 or best offer. Call anytime. 312-639- 1568 9-28-10-5C FOR ADOPTION, small Benji, 8 month old male. 385-1771. 9- 28-10-3 . " HOMELESS PETS AVAILABLE for adoption. Pure brads, and mixed breeds. $30.00 or less. Includes shots, Veterinary examination, collar, leash, I.O. tag, carrying case for cats. Pet care literature. Open Monday through Saturday. TIm Animal Shelter . Rt®. 31, South Elgin 312-697-2880 Perspective EDUCATION: WHAT'S HAPPENING? v' •. -. is " v ; , By R6N ALD REAGAN PAGE 15 -PLA1NDEALER - WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3,1979 Focus On Law-Finance --* •mvxw JMUMM iMQU m I ARENA «UKEFMURST«UMMUU MEM JkVMlillU IT IK MM YreiTMS WELCME RAM ACHES 8417 DESK! 10, HEBRON, IL 815-648-4012 , 3-1F1 New Oratorio Singers Begin Season Oct. IS A new performance group, the New oratorio Singers, begins its first season of choral music presentations under the direction of Thomas Wikman. The group has been formed to give serious singers an op­ portunity to study and present great works'from the choral repertoire in the tradition of inspired performance. Interested singers in all voice ranges are encouraged to at­ tend an open rehearsal Mon­ day, Oct. 15, at 8 p.m. in the, library of Lakeside center (former Dole mansion), 401 Country Club road in Crystal Lake. What Just One Person Can Do MOVING? Breaking up housekeeping? Will buy antique furnitue, china, glassware, etc. 815-678-4141. 9-12-10-5C ORIENTAL RUGS WANTED We also buy entire estates. Highest Prices Paid. Call Mark Anderson 312-683-3760. 9-12-10 19c ORIENTAL RUGS WANTED, we pay top dollar for your old Oriental rugs. Call 312-884-6444. 9-5tfc INSTRUCTIONS Accepting accordian and piano students $3.50 for beginners. Accordians to rent. Eleanor's Music Studio 815-385-35% 10- 3tfc ACCORDIAN, ORGAN, GUITAR, PIANO, in your home, taught 29 years. Specialize in popular music. $5.50 and up. 815-385-3750 10-3- 10-5C PET COLUMN --i LOST: Female Collie taken from Premises, 1202 South Rt. 31. Heart sick boy, please return 815-385-5013 no questions asked. 10-3-10-5C "Love is a Dreadul Thing" "I am not a good mother," she told me. She was beautiful', her two small children were exquisite, her middle-class home was warm and at­ tractive. Shd had a fine husband and good parents but she was not happy. "I can't stand being home with the children. I'm always trying to find a way out." Actually she was a good mother. She had many skills and talents for homemaking and cb41dtaiuriii0Mt&Mre was something <wxongv ^he was expressing the same "pain and confusion that millions of mothers experience during the dying process. It is not a physical dying she was ex­ periencing but a kind of ex­ cruciating death to self. "Love in dreams is easy," wrote Dostoyevski, "love in reality is a harsh and dreadful thing." In your dreams you may have thought indeed that love was soft and easy. Even children's fairy tales end with "and they lived happily ever after" as if feelings of love for the "right" person were all that was needed for happiness. Soon enough, the illusion is shattered when one enters the reality of daily life. You come to see that the cute, adorable children cif your dreams are demanding creatures who require constant attention and care and certainly infringe upon your own freedom, your own plans, your own needs, and at times cause you to feel angry and rebellious. How can you cope with these feelings? How can you cope with the guilt they generate? You want to be a good mother, you love your children and yet something in you is raging, struggling to be free. You come to see that real love is a harsh and dreadful thing; that it brings pain, that it calls for sacrifice, restraint, a losing of one's own life. Without strong motivations, such a life becomes dreary, empty, a burden impossible to lift. But there is flways hope, there is always grace. "If you lose your life, you will gain it," said the Lord: a statement which appears in­ comprehensible to some, yet it is the only remedy for the condition of angry rebellion. What is required, is a readiness to abandon your own ideas of self-fulfillment for the . sake of these human beings ^entrusted to your care, not in a slavish way but freely and for the sake of love. You need the help of God ; it may be distasteful to you to acknowledge dependency upon God but this is the key to sur­ vival. You need His help to relate your .life to His power, to trust Him, to ask Him to strengthen and enlighten you. Things will not suddenly become easy, the children will not stop crying or demanding your attention. But your per­ spective will begin to change. You will see that your present work is not merely a necessary burden but a great and won­ derful good, a divine vocation. / To give a chromium tea­ kettle a quick and easy s h i n e , g o o v e r i t w i t h a p i e c e o f w a x p a p e r when the kettle is 1 Usually there is nothing less exciting to read than a report on educational statistics. In fact, if there were some way we could get education reports into capsule form we would have a safe and effective sleeping pill. • But such reports, however dull, cap tell us interesting thitfgs if we know how to look at them. Take a recent report called "The Condition of Education: 1979 Edition " This is the annual report of the National Center for ^Educational Statistics. Phi Delta Kappan magazine recently reviewed it. Consider some of its intriguing and sometimes puzzling findings: First,, public confidence in the people who run the nation's education system has fallen to its lowest point in six years. Only 28 percent have "a great deal of confidence" in educational leaders and 15 percent have "hardly any confidence." While the report doesn't say it, it seems clear that iparents and taxpayers aren't convinced that a decade or more of federal government aid to education has helped Johnny to , learn. Maybe it is only a coincidence that the decade when federal aid and regulations were increasing in education, public confidence was declining, but I think there is a connection and that the government should step back and examine where it has been and where it intends to go in education. ! Speaking of government aid to education, the Center's study found that 51 percent of the public believed in 1978 that too little is spent on education and health and too much on welfare and national defense. j Yet the same study shows that current expenditures of public school systems have more than tripled since 1957, even taking inflation into ac­ count. And, since 1942, state and federal shares of public school costs have been in­ creasing while the local share has decreased by almost 20 percent. Why is it that a majority of the public thinks we are not spending enough on education j and too mueh on defense when preciseljll the? opposite is the case? Wl^^|>ve have tripled education expenditures our defense spending, in terms of Constant dollars, has actually •declined in recent years. I think ^part of the reason is that we 'have been bombarded by a n barrage of anti-defense that the nation's education leaders prefer to blame their own failures on the old "you're- not-giving-us-enough-money" excuse. Finally, "The Condiiton of Education" reports a curious finding, the significance of which is not immediately clear. It seems that college graduates earn at least 30 percent more than high school graduates. That part is not puzzling, but according to the same report, 10 years ago college graduates earned 50 percent more than high school graduates. v In other words, during a decade when young people have been told of the financial benefits of a college degree the real financial rewards of a degree have dramatically decreased. Could this possibly be a reflection of a negative national attitude toward formal learning? Or is it a reflection of a positive national attitude rewarding blue-collar work? I don't know. But I do know the fact that the drop in the general level of educational per­ formance coincides with the intrusion Of the federal government into the field keeps coming back to haunt me. One of the seminars or adult educatiorf classes at McHenry County college this fall focuses on law and . finance for the consumer. For a general overview there is a five-week class in financial planning which will teach how to become financially in­ dependent in 10,years or less. The problems of taxes, in­ flation,. social security and consumer legal rights are in­ cluded in the course. It also covers life insurance, estate planning, retirement pensions, stock markets and real estate. There is also a 10-week course in law for everyday living which covers topics such as divorce, debtors and creditors, contracts, com­ mercial papers, criminal law, real property, sales and wills. Seminars which will help With legal and financial mat­ ters include "legalities of divorce," "basic estate and financial planning" and "twenty-two ways to fight inflation." The legalities of divorce seminar is held in two evening sessions and is a factual ap­ proach to the legal rights and responsibilities of marriage. The seminar emphasizes custody, child support, property settlement and courtroom proceedings. Basic estate and financial planning meets all day on a Saturday and for two evening sessions and will be taught by estate planners who belong to the Estate Planning Council of McHenry County. The seminar covers basic knowledge in areas such as proper will planning, property ownership, coordination of assets, needs and uses of life insurance, definitiohs, trust planning, bank accounts and related transactions. The instructors will include a bank trust of­ ficer, two attorneys, an in­ surance agent', two life un­ derwriters and a certified public accountant. Twehty-two ways to fight inflation is a seminar designed to help you learn better money management. Included in the two evening sessions are in­ surance, coupons, credit cards, bond and treasury rate cer­ tificates, shopping for credit and taking your own financial pulse. To learn more about the classes and seminars on financial and legal planning telephone MCC. Best Of Press Unmanageable Marriage is probably the only union which has consistently defied man­ agement. -Times, Marshalltown, la. THOUGHT FOR FOOD By GOULD CSTOOK SPRING GROVE FIRE DEPARTMENT S Don't Be Wasteful The article most frequently wasted is bread, every crumb of which should be saved. It can be converted into toast or placed in the oven to dry. When dry it can be greated coarsely and put in jars for puddings, stuffings, or thickening for meat gravies. Other pieces not large enough for toast can be converted into griddle cakes. Don't forget bread pudding! If you're tired of the economical bread pudding with lemon sauce, try the same in costard cups with raisins for fruit. Butter the cups, fill, and then bake them, standing in a pan of hot water. Cover each one with a teaspoon of bright-colored ielly and it will no longer be a simple bread pudding, but a rich new dish, to be eaten with cream. ANNUAL FALL DANCE Saturday, October 6th at 8 P.M. DANCE TO THE MUSIC OF "NITE SHIFTS" St. Peter's Church Hall in Spring Grove c A PRIZES & REFRESHMENTS DONATION - $1 Carpets & furnishings 8 1 5 4 5 9 3 2 1 1 325 V i rg in ia S t . (R t 14 ) Crys ta l Lake , I l l i no is MANUFACTURER'S AUTHORIZED CARPET SALE ON ALL CARPETING IN STORE featuring famous k MILLIKEN " CARPETS The good lite at youf teet SALE NOW IN PROGRESS REG. SALE ENTICING *14.95 . . . . . . . . $ 1 2 . 6 5 EVENING SONG *21.00 M7.96 CARMEL *19.95 *15.96 SHIMMERON *24.50 * 18.80 LUXURY *18.25 *14.65 CASELON *20.50 *15.60 NEW VIEW *18.95 *16.73 FORMAL ELEGANCE *24.95 *18.80 STARRY NIGHT. *20.50 *17.26 CELESTRA *21.50 *17.65 BRECKENWOOD *18.95 *16.57 SUN MIST . . . *18.95 *16.50 SUN ISLE .... *18.95 *16.50 Prices Include Installation With Our Heaviest 9/16" Pad All Armstrong & Congoleum On Sale NO WAX VINYL FLOORS AS LOW AS '5.95vd. SEE OUR LARGE SELECTION OF CERAMIC TILE Stop In Fop A Free Door Met --No purchase necessary• e L Bruce Hardwood Floors

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