Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 Jul 1983, p. 12

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7 HMvy . 0 Sun god 0 T«r»0V »d*p«lf 10 Equal 12 R«p*lr« 20 Man's nlcknwiw 21 Instruct 23 Colorado Indian 24 Following 20 Dig Into ' 27 RMt 28 Over 20 W*ar.$p.. 30 Qlottal atop: Dan. 32 Bind 33 Enlarge 30 Artful 30 Bar 41 Laaks . i 43 DuHft . -- 45 invant »..•/ >* PAGE It - PLAINDEAI.ER - WEDNESDAY. JULY FOR RENT "mm 1 BEDROOM HOUSE, Wonder Lake, Beach rights, $270 month plus deposit. 815-728-1092. 7- 27-7-29C S M A L L ( L N E BEDROOM Apartment, middle of McHenry, air conditioning, stove and refrigerator, $257.00. Call 815-385-3490. 7-27tfc LAKEFRONT RESIDENCE, Griswold Lake, 2 bedroom. Carpeted. $325 plus utilities, now until June 1st. 815-728-0135. 7-27-7- 29c PRIVATE, VERY Quiet Modern Apartment, one clean, mature adult, stove, refrigerator, carpeting. No pets. 815- 385-6235. 7-27-7-29C CLEAN SLEEPING Rooms. 815-385-8905, 815-675-6008. 7-ltfc SMOKEY MOUN­ TAINS, Tennessee, Beautiful mountain top cabins, $180.00 weekly. 615-261-2145. 7-ltfc WINNEBAGO Land Houseboat Rentals, by day-week for 2-10 people, miles and miles of waterway. 10 miles west of Oshkosh, Wisconsin. 414-582-7477. 7-ltfc 3 BEDROOM RAISED Ranch, 2 baths, family room with fireplace, central air, stove and refrigerator, garage, close to shopping, schools and Peterson Park. Available Sep­ tember 1st, $495 a month plus deposit. 815-385- 6181. 7-22-7-29C JOHNSBURG AREA, 4 Bedroom, living, dining room, kitchen, full basement, 2 car garage, carpet, partially fur­ nished, washer-dryer, appliances, a.c., $375 per month plus utilities, security deposit, references required. 815-459-0012. 7-22-7-29c HALL AND GROVE for Parties, Weddings and Picnics. Spojnia Park, Polish National Union. Located at Ringwood Road and Flanders Road, McHenry. Phone 815-385-1298. 7-13-8-5C STORAGE SPACE in city of McHenry. Dry, clean with electricity and semi-truck dock. Approximately 4,400 sq. ft. 815-385-3192 or 815- 385-7632. 7-ltfc SMALL HALL For Rent, 125 people or less, Anniversaries, Graduations, Weddings, etc. Liberty Hall, 1304 Park Street, McHenry. 815-385-2281 after 5pm. 7-ltfc VFW CLUBHOUSE and Hall for rent. Seating capacity for 400. Call- 815-385-9860 from 9am to 12pm weekdays or after 6pm. 7-ltfc INDUSTRIAL SPACE, Available, Fritzsche Industrial Park, Inc., 5,000 sq. ft. to 52,500 sq. ft. 815-385-1079. 7-ltfc NEW DELUXE 2 and 3 Bedroom Apartment, in city of McHenry featuring security, privacy and luxury, August and September occupancy. Call now to reserve your choice of unit. 815-385-3192. 7- 20tfc FURNISHED ONE Bedroom and one studio apartment in McHenry, utilities included. Mature adults only. 815- 385-6566. , 7-20tfc READY NOW, 1 BEDROOM Apartment in town, big rooms, big closets, all appliances, security deposit, 815- •*85-5727. 7-22-7-29C IN McHENRY, OLDER 3 bedroom home, basement, l car garage, located 1 block from East Campus, Library and Hospital. $375 month, references and s e c u r i t y d e p o s i t required. Phone 815-385- 3007 . 7-8-7-29C 2 BEDROOM 5 ROOM Apartment, 1,400 sq. ft., appliances, carpeting, downtown McHenry. $385 month. 815-344-1632, 815-385-6566, 815-344- 0748. 7-20-7-29C 3 BEDROOM HOUSE; full basement, $450 per month plus utilities, McHenry area. 815-344- 4178 . 7-27tfc 3 CAR STORAGE Garage, in city, $180 per month. Call 815-385-3192. 7-27-7-29C 1 BEDROOM APART­ MENT right in McHenry. Air c«h- ditioned, stove and refrigerator, $255. Call 815-385-3490. 7-6tfc APPROXIMATELY 800 sq. ft. basement level in local office building, $200 per month as is or will remodel. 815-459- 3145, ask for Bill. 7-ltfc SLEEPING ROOMS, shared kitchen, cable T.V., linens, $42.50 week. 815-385-9738 before lpm. 7-27-8-5C 3 BEDROOMS, ltt Baths, family room, 1 car garage, full b a s e m e n t , j u s t remodeled, everything new, available August l, references, security deposit, lease required. No pets, $425 month, McHenry area, 8154575- 2410. 7-27-7-29C TUSCON, ARIZONA. New 2 Bedroom, 2 bath house, furnished, rent by month or season, $500 per month, utilities furnished, security deposit. 815-653-9405. 7- 22-7-27C OFFICE RENTAL, Available immediately, 600 sq. ft., prime location, corner of Rte. 31 and 120.815-385-5716. 7-22-7-29C ftiAl ESTATE HUNTING CLUBS, Choice Deer location, 40 a c r e s , c e n t r a l Wisconsin. Interested? 312-587-0983 after 5pm. 7-27-7-29C McHENRY, NEW 2 Bedroom Raised Ranch, $6,9% down, $277 month. Contract 7% percent, Fox River. 815-385-0169. 7-27-7-29C TWO HOUSES, $59.50 week (with rent), $4,980 down, one-third acre, 8% percent contract. Wonder Lake. 815-385- 0169. 7-27-7-29C CRYSTAL LAKE, 3-4 bedroom Ranch, 2Vz bath, 5 additional rooms, 1 car garage, large fenced lot, ,&c, close to shopping mm) schools, $79,500. Call 815-455-1585 for ap­ pointment by owner. 7- 27-7-29c Doctor Talk PV THIS WEEKS' IZZLE ANSWER FIFTY YEARS AGO 1 (Taken from the files of July 30,193® Local officers of the McHenry K. of C. council will be installed by the newly appointed district deputy, who is none other than one of our own members, John A. Bolger. John was appointed to this honor, the first of its. kind in the 25 years existence of McHenry council. The success of the council is assured in this district for the ensuing term undo* the able supervision and enthusiasm of our new district deputy. Nick Adams has taken over the West side Garage which he will operate under the name of Adams Repair shop. He will do general repair work and invites his old and new customers to visit him. Peter Wirfs, night policeman of McHenry, was seriously injured while on duty in Centerville at the in­ tersection of Green street and Route 20.As Officer Wirfs stepped from behind a Greyhound- bus, he was struck by a car. FORTY YEARS AGO (Taken from the files of July 22, 1943) Leaders of the McHenry Council of Defense were surprised when a directive was issued from state headquarters announcing the date and time of the state wide blackout test for this month. An announcement has been received that the date is now set for July 30 and the time about 9:30. Afc. Lillian L. Brda has been transferred from Conway, Ark., to Salina, Kas. Three local soldiers paid their hometown a visit last week. They were Donald Schaefer of Scott Field, Bob Adams of Peoria and George Freund of Champaign. All qualified voters of McHenry county to be eligible to vote at a primary election or special elections, at which time officers are to be nominated or selected, must be registered at the county clerk's office in Woodstock not later than the 30th day before such election. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (Taken from the files of July 24,1958) More than 2,000 interested persons braved the rain at the Heart of Illinois Fair in Peoria to see Miss Mary Ann Granger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Granger of McHenry, crowned state dairy princess. As winner over 21 contestants for the coveted honor, Mary Ann was awarded $100 in cash and $200 in clothes. A young McHenry college man is among five from the county com­ peting for the title of 4-H King to reign over that section of the annual county junior fair. He is Richard Wissell of the Cherry Valley club, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Wissell, Sr., of Waukegan road. Among those who watched the Fiesta Day parade was ninety-eight^ TENlfe&SAGO (Taken frOm the fftea of July 27,1973) The McHenry County Board of Catholic Education, approved the contracts of a full-time area superintendent and a full-time area director of religious education. The Rev. James C. Moses, M.S.C., assumes the position of superin­ tendent of Catholic Education in McHenry county and the Rev. Karl Ganss, M.S.C., continues his second year as director of Religious Education few the McHenry area. Fire damage estimated at between $20,000 and $25,000 entirely gutted a farm home on the Hidden Valley lodge property, located on Sunset drive, a mile south of Highway 12, near Spring Grove. Malenlus Heads Montinl Board Ed Malenius was elected president of the Montini Catholic schools board of education for the 1983-84 term at the board's regular July meeting. Mrs. Mary Meyer wUl serve as vice- president and Mrs. Donna Buch was elected secretary. Four new board members were seated at this meeting and began their terms of office: Mrs. Marilyn Wisniewski and Mrs. Judy Swietlik of St. Patrick's parish, and George Riley and A1 Turner of St. Mary's parish. The board voted appreciation to the retiring board members for terms well-served; John CoUghlin, Gerry Grant and Mrs. Jane Keith. In other businesses, the board ac­ cepted Montini's 1982-83 allotment from the McHenry County Catholic Education foundation of $13,984,78. Mrs. Vicki Bottari, representing the foundation, made the presentation. Book rental day was set for Aug. 26 and the first day of school for the 1983- 84 school year will be Aug. 29. Answers From Experts Q. - My car's engine conked out while I was driving. What should I do? A - First, pull well off the road to a safe spot. Then see if you're out of gas. If you're not, make sure the,engine is getting the gas it needs. YoU'll have to check if the carburetor is feeding sufficient air and gasoline to the engine by removing the top of the air cleaner so you can see the choke plate. If the plate is stuck open, push it shut (only if the engine is cold) and try to start again. Next, look for loose wires at the distributor and the spark plugs. Fix what you can or get help. If it's an unseasonably hot day and = - , ^ ,, you've been driving year-old MtB% MinnieBtock, who only traffic,>tttefe*%n outaflftl two days before celebrated her bir- have something called va thday. This is civic interest at its so, just wait patienUy. You can starf finest and our hats are off to one who the car again after the engine has has been a part of McHenry's pooled off progress for so long. Harold B'ugon, MD * - In the ' last article we mentioned foods that are in ptirines. these purines, we explained, are converted into uric acid-and when too much uric acid accumulates ih the blood, it can't be held iif solution-end crystals are formed. These crystals are needle, anil rod shaped, and they have favortie places to accu­ mulate. It should be noted, how­ ever, that they can accumu­ late in any joint, although it's most commonly the big toes, fingers, ankles, wrists.- el­ bows and knees. Today we will discuss the consequences of this clump­ ing or amassing of uric acid crystals in the various joints. Naturally, an; excessive buildup of needle and rod shaped crystals would b# ex­ pected to cause trouble-and that it does! The result is an inflam­ matory reaction that pro­ duces redness, heat, steady pain, and acute tenderness to pressure or weight bearing (if the affected joint is on the foot, of course). Not Oldest One news item which at­ tracted much attention in recent years was the claim that the southern Ap­ palachians were the world's oldest mountains. Not true-says one of the best qualified experts in North Carolina. Dr. Paul Fullagar, chairman of the geology department at the University of North Carolina, estimates the age of the Appalachians at about a billion years. Using the technique of measuring the age of rocks by the amount of radioactive material they contain (radioactive uranium decays into lead, as one example, and there are other products which evolve as radioactivity diminishes), Fullagar thinks the Appalachians were much flatter just 60 or 70 million years ago. v He believes the Ap­ palachians have risen and fallen several times in the last billion years and that the world's oldest rocks may be in Minnesota, Greenland or Australia. for the Bltt4 ntains jppfwell Appalachians- which are also still young at heart, relatively speaking. ACROSS 1 Gratuity 4 Oh my! • Knock 11 Small art let* 13 Latvian /14 Number on* 19 Simpla 16 In 17 Naontaymbol 18 Iratand 1S Stroll 22 Pester 2ft Oolt mound 2ft Smaara 31 Information 34 Hoax 3ft Departs 37 _Campeador 3ft Parted ot time 40 Storagaplaca: , 2wde. 42 Electrified pertIcJe 44 Color 4ft Load 40 Finishes S3 Upon ft4 Wasteland 80 Fual 87 Proian daaaart > F'u»» ounn ora iurarie SJKII UDtJH 17K3E2 KM BCJKIL HfeJKEEkS] KiKU .. r-JtimuwiaKW EBB HUOOIU -Ug beo craa ntjuatiiias -urjij fejtii HOOD nnrii FIRQ UUEIB i2lgUll CJuH UliUu HUU 98 Study hard: liana 00 Rational «1 Trap 02 Hadaa rivar 03 Iranian DOWN 1 Favorabla opportun­ ity 2 Roman road 3 Patalan fairy 4 Caliph 9 Magnlfylngglaaa 0 Leaf-cutting ant 1- a 3 1 11 IS 1« Available At The Following Locations: • WHITE HEN PANTRY, • McHENRY DRUG • BELL LIQUORS • BQLGERS DRUG STORE • BEN FRANKLIN • OSCO DRUGS • JEWEL • HORNSBY'S • HERMES & CQ. • LIQUOR MART • VILLAGE MARKET • J ft R FOOD MART • McHENRY HOSPITAL • FOOD MART • J ft L GAS • ACE HARDWARE • LAKEVIEW • SUNNYSIDE FOODS • ADAMS GROCERY • LITTLE STORE •FRED ft IRENE'S TAP • SUNRISE GROCERY • DEBBIE'S GENERAL STORE • NORTHWEST TRAIN • ISLAND FOODS • CONVENIENT FOOD • COUNTRY CUPBOARD • SULLIVAN FOODS • MILLSTREAM UNION '76 PHARMACY • SUNNYSIDE AUTO •COAST TO COAST FISHING TIPS * Fishing experts agree that the weakest spot in your line can be the weakest spot in your entire fishing rig. Line care is important. You can avoid , the frustration of having your line break off after hooking a big one- especially after you figured you had that darned fish beat. Here are some hints from experts: -Keep track of the age of your line. -If you fish in rough or rocky terrain, you can be sure you are giving your line a beating. Change line frequently, after every'two to three days' fishing. -To check for line wear, let the line slip between your thumb and forefinger as you reel it in. If you feel nicks or rough spots, trim off the piece of line and re-tie your bait. -Be sure to store the line out of direct sunlight. -Avoid exposing the line to battery acid which can damage monofilament. BICYCLE CLINIC All bicycle riders are invited to attend the bicycle clinic to be held July 27 at 6 p.m. in Building C on the McHenry county fairgrounds, Woodstock. Bicycle riders will be tested on their riding skills and safety knowledge and have their bicycles safety inspected. Cycling Sense A motorcycle is the smallest motor vehicle on the road today, a tractor- trailer is the largest. The size and construction of trucks create some special problems for motorcyclists. In order to safely share the road with trucks, the Motorcycle Safety Foundation suggests riders follow these rules: ...When riding behind trucks, position yourself to see and be seen. Many riders follow close behind tfucks to take advantage of the slipstream effect trailers create, although this is a dangerous practice. Maintain a two-second following distance which will allow you to react to unanticipated braking or debris which can fly out from under the truck's wheels. ...Because of the great length of a tractor-trailer, it is often difficult for the driver to know after passing when his trailer is far enough ahead for him to safely move back into your lane. Help the driver by flashing your headlight when it is safe for him to return to the lane. ...When passing a truck, always signal your intentions. This is especially important on single-lane road where curves, hills, or a truck's spray on a wet road may reduce visibility. ...Always be aware of the tur­ bulence trucks create, particularly in rainy or windy weather. RTA ADVANCE Governor James E. T h o m p s o n h a s authorized the release of a $22.2 million ad­ vance payment to the R e g i o n a l T r a n ­ sportation Authority (RTA). The payment is based on an estimate of sales tax receipts the RTA normally would have received in July. The receipts, collected in the six-county metropolitan area, represent sales tax collections due the RTA on an accelerated schedule approved by the Governor in May, 1981, to' keep mass transit operating in the Chicago area. PRO-DEL SYSTEM PART TIME POSITIONS AVAILABLE ProDel, McHenry County's fastest growing newspaper distributor, is looking for aggressive and responsible individuals to supervise boy and girl newspaper carriers in the McHenry area 2 days per week. •Applicant must be 21 years or over "Vehicle necessary •Good working conditions •No experience necessary •Excellent on-the-job training Apply in person to: McHenry Plaindealer 3812 W. Elm Street, McHenry --or-- Woodstock Sentinel 109 S. Jefferson Street, Woodstock A Babylonian recipe from 2,800 B.C. exists for making beer. HOW 10 SUBSCRIBE TO THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER The McHenry Plaindealer 3812 W. Elm Street McHenry. II. 60050 • 3 YEARS - $40.00 • 2 YEARS • $28.50 • 1 YEAR-S16.50 • 6 MONTHS $8.50 • PAYMENT ENCLOSED Name Address Prices good in McHenry County : ' U v Here's a clue: e' marks the spot YouH be seeing this sign on all the smartest addresses in town, on homes certified as Energy Wise Whether you're looking tor yourdream home or your first apartment, look tor the Energy Wise Home sign It's a seal of approval that says this home is energy-efficient Your energy bills may be significantly lower tor heat in the winter and for air conditioning in the summer You'll feel all warm inside thinking about your lower energy costs " Energy Wise Homes have to meet or exceed a lot ol strict standards The owners have gone to, < great pains outfitting them with the ideal energy- saving equipment and insulation They've worked y ' w hard to help make your search easier SO mpke sure you're looking at an Energy '• # k * S3* VtflWj Wise Home before you sign on the dotted line 'S * ' That would be wise Obviously Commonwealth Edison ' „ , Want more information" Write to Commonwealth Edison Marketing Services PO Box 767. Chicago Illinois 60690 Cl»M Corr.mor.weaWf. Ea sor

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