Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 10 Aug 1983, p. 16

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PAGE 10-PLAINDKAI.KB-WEDNESDAY. AUCil'ST HKJ9K3 AUGUST 10.IS83 BTSBRff CURRENCY EXCHANGE fti Manager and cashiers needed for new currency exchange opening up in McHenry about September 15th. We prefer people .with currency exchange or banking ex­ perience, or a knowledge of Illinois Auto License procedures. However we would be willing to train an intelligent person with a good work record. Excellent salary and benefits. For appointment call collect 312-225-25i0 Auro i SALES < Sales Experience Preferred £ Good Pay Plan *5 Demo Hospitalization And O'ther Benefits Call Gary Lang at | (815)385-2100 1BARY LANG CHEVROLET t' 908 Front St. McHenry, IL & f 8/10-8/12 ; ASSISTANT SALES MANAGER Growing manufacturer of home im- S'ovement hardware, seeks capable in-vidual for inside sales, sales » ad­ ministration and trade show participation. Must have mechanical understanding and be able to promote mechanical products. We sell nationwide to hardware and building material distributors, chains, and major retailers. Please send resume or detailed letter. cJolm Ste>»CU»«[Co\|MAiiUo»v Box 469 Richmond, III. 60071 e/io.8/i2 MATURE WOMAN to care for invalid lady, 2 or 3 hours per day, 5 days week. Please call 115-728-1001 after 6pm. 8-10-8-12C MOTHER OF 3 needs full-time loving sitter for weekdays, my house or yours. 312-497-3747 Pistakee Highlands after 6pm. 8- 10-8-12c WANTED: MATURE , an to care for 15 ith old, 3 days per week, references BABYSITTER NEEDED, Johns burg area, nine year old boy, 6am to 4:30pm. 815-385- 8-10-8-12C MAINTENANCE ELECTRONIC TECHNICIANS Brake Parts Company, a leading manufac­ turer of brake replacement parts, has two positions open for Maintenace Electronic ! Technicians. (1 st and 2nd shifts.) ! £Aust have two or more years of electronic maintenance experience on CNC equip­ ment plus a background in general (nachine maintenance. We offer a good starting wage plus an ex­ ceptional benefit package. Please apply in person BRAKE PARTS COMPANY (Located behind Horntbyt Shopping Canter off Rout* 120) 1400 N. Industrial Drive McHenry, II. 40050 An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F 8/10 MAJOR MEDICAL AND SHORT TERM HOSPITAL AND SURGICAL INSURANCE * Between Employment * On Vacation From College * Recently Graduated * On Strike * In Between Croup Enrollment Choose a policy term of 30 days to 6 months. Immediate coverage. No deductible JACK WALSH AGENCY McHENRY • 385-3300 8/3TF" Experienced Screw Machine Operator 1st Shift Set up & operate Brown & Sharp Machines. Job shop experience preferred. Please apply at \ > Autotrel Corporation 365 E. Prairie St. - Crystal Lake, il 815-459-3080 8/10*8/1 DIRECTORS Nationwide Child Care Company has Direc­ tors positions available in the Crystal Lake and McHenry areas. Desirable applicant should possess experience in Marketing, Public Relations, personnel Management, Profit and Loss, as well as a college degree with 18 hours in Child Development. In-: terested applicants should send resume to: Kinder Car® Learning Cantors 1122 Westover Lane Schaumberg, IL 60193 s/s-s/io DIRECTOR OF STUDENT ACTIVITIES To provide leadership A. coordinate the develop­ ment ond implemen­ tation of diverse student octivites program. 10 month' position. Background in human services, managment, and/or recreation required. Also, ex­ perience working with diverse oge arid interest groups. Application deadline, Aug. 18, 1983. For additional infor­ mation, contact Person­ nel office McHenry Coun­ ty College. 815 455*3700 EOAAE/MF 8/io COUPLE LOOKING for mature woman over 30, starting immediately, to sit, flexible hours in our home. References required, 1 boy child, age 17 months. 815-344- 5181. 8-10-8-12c CHILD CUE DIRECTOR SPECIALIST To provide leadership and coordinate the ac­ tivities of the MCC Child Care Center and to work as a Child Care Specialist 11 month position. In­ dividual must meet licen­ sing requirements for child care associate and have child care center experience. Application deadline Aug. 11, 1983. For additional infor­ mation contact Personnel office, McHenry County College. 815 455-3700 EOAAE/MF Part-Tiet Waitress Flexible Hours Must be 21. Call 344-1520 «• and ask for Jim or come in to fill out an application. ^a&. Hq9I -Hut 4301 W. Elm St. McHenry e/s-e/ia T FULL TIME Finish Carpenter For installing kitchen and bathrooms. Call Creative Kitchens 815-344-1180 U&IJL A Small Prosperous Manufacturing Company in McHenry is in need of an executive secretary. Ex­ cellent skills required in­ cluding shorthand. Call Carolyn at •15-344-3230 8/10-8/12 "fflr needed to core for 2 small children in my home, ages 21 months and 6 months. Must have own transporation and be willing to work hard and love children. Call 815-344-1411 Between 9 8 4 pm or 815344-4191 after 5 pm for Interview and details 7/WTf S A L E S W O M A N Wanted for Upholstery Department of Old Volo F a m o u s N a m e s Division. Home fur­ nishing sales experience with flair for decor design. Part-time, base and commission. Call Kevin Hausherr for appointment. 815-385- 3896. 8-10-8-12C OUTSIDE PLAYGROUND SUPERVISOR Edgebrook Elementary School, 701 N. Green Street, McHenry, IL 60050; 11:30 A.M.-2:30 P.M. daily; Monday- Friday during the school year; $3.45 per hour. Contact Nr. Jim LaShelle, Principal 385-3123 8/,o HELP WANTED Laundromat Attendant Weekends only, work one shift both Sat. 8 Sun. Will train, need mature, responsible person. Ap­ ply Southgate Fabric Care 810 N. Front St. McHenry, IL 8/10^/12 HELP WANTED 20 Hours per Week $3.35 per hour Indivioual over age 55 to divide tune between corn piling statistics and pro­ viding outr<M<n to older persons wno m.iy be or Know vc tims ol t.imily violence Contact TURNING POINT 815-338-8081 BABYSITTER NEEDED for 2 children, ages 2 and 5, full time, my home or yours, Sunnyside, J o h n s b u r g a r e a . Starting week of August 29.815-344-3893. 1 8-10-8- 12c AVON WANTS you to turn your life ex­ perience into a career! Represent America's Number l direct-selling company. Call 815-385- 6105. 8-10-8-12C EXTRA EARNINGS. Need 3 people who have 10 to 15 flexible hours per week, depending on time. For complete information call 312-658- 7402. 8-10-8-19C EXPERIENCED WAITRESS Wanted, full time evenings. Must be 21. Call between 2 5pm. 815-344-3700. 8-10 BABYSITTER WAN­ TED. Preferably in my h o m e , m o r n i n g s , Monday thru Friday, Sunnyside area. Call after 4pm, 815-344-2996. 8-5-8-10 NEED 3 LADIES, work flexible hours, up to $7.00 per hour and more. 815-728-0226. 8-10-8-12C •••••••••••••••••••••••• Keepin' Healthy • Last week we reported on an in­ vestigation of health p r o d u c t s a d " vertisements which had been conducted by the American Council on Science and Health. The council found that those ads which make fan­ tastic claims are either m i s l e a d i n g o r fraudulent; yet mail orders for these products total as much as 150 million dollars a year. Some of these ad­ vertised products promise such things as effortless weight loss, wrinkle removal, and an end to baldness. The weight loss products included a sauna belt, a sauna suit, rubber panty hose and a recipe for bread capable of producing dramatic weight loss. The sauna belt turned out to be a fabric tube, about seven inches wide, with an inner layer of spongy rubber and an outer layer of nylon. It is to be worn around your middle, and is guaranteed to reduce waist and stomach bulges in three days. The sauna belts arid sauna suits cannot get rid of body fat. You may have some weight loss due to perspiration or water loss, but that is only a temporary effect. Losing body fat is the only way to lose weight on a long-term basis. And the only way to lose body fat is to reduce your intake of calories, or by exercising to in­ crease the number of calories you burn up. The sauna suit came with a sheet of exercise i n s t r u c t i o n s a n d a pamphlet entitled, "The Adventure of Running." The directions for using the suit emphasize the importance of doing something active while you're wearing it and contain the statement that no permanent loss of inches or weight can be attained without a sensible, nutritionally balanced diet. If you exercise enough, and stay on a sensible diet, you won't heed the sauna sui», and you will not have spent $12.99 needlessly. The book that con­ tains a cure for bald­ ness, which cost $7.95, claims that all other baldness remedies are worthless, and then proposes that vigorous rubbing of the scalp will reverse male baldness and cause new hair to grow. In 1980, a special panel of the federal Food and t)rug Ad­ ministration reviewed the effectiveness of the various creams and ointments advertised & for the treatment of baldness in men; The panel found that all the solutions for baldness are worthless. As a result, mail-order ads f o r a n t i - b a l d n e s s potions.now must carry a notice that there are no known cures or ef­ fective treatments for male pattern baldness. Then, there are the oroducts that are supposed to stop the growth of hair. The councii found that they are just as ineffective as the creams and lotions which claim to grow hair. Also, among the items the council ordered were some creams that claimed to lighten stretch marks. It was found that, except for different names and d i s t r i b u t o r s , , t h e products were identical. They contained the same ingredients-- primarily vitamin E oil with a number of emollients. None of these products are ef­ fective. Organizations Eligible For Health Promotion Awards REVCO DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER Refreshing OLD STYLE BEER 12 PACK • 12 OZ. CANS REVCO'S LOW, LOW PRICE »79 FLEISCHMANN'S VODKA 80 Proof • Liter Distilled from 100% Grain REVCO'S LOW, LOW PRICE $479 BACARDI RUM 80 Proof • 750 ML Light or Dark REVCO'S LOW. LOW PRICE *41? HANNAH & HOGG SCOTCH 80 Proof • 1.75 Liter Product of Scotland REVCO'S LOW, LOW PRICE $JS9 E A J BRANDY 80 Proof • Liter Extra Smooth REVCO'S LOW, LOW PRICE YAGO SANTGRIA 9% Alcohol • 750 ML REVCO'S LOW, Perfect 0\ier Ice LOW PRICE $2®' MeHwny • MOO W. Elm • 385-1125 Community organizations which conduct health-promotion programs emphasizing exercise, nutrition, reduction of alcohol and drug use, smoking cessation and the effective use of preventive health services, are eligible to apply for. Community Health Promotion awards. According to William L. Kempiners, director of the Illinois Department of Public Health, "These awards have been established by the secretary of the federal Department of Health and Human Services (H.H.S.) to improve community health by stimulating greater participation in community- wide health promotion efforts." Illinois organizations which are eligible may submit applications for awards to the state health depart­ ment. A selection committee will review the applications, and the Ave projects deemed the most exemplary will be submitted to H.H.S. for con­ sideration for a Secretarial award. "Each state will submit its Ave best projects to H.H.S.", Kempiners ex­ plained. "A national selection com­ mittee will review the projects and will present awards for Outstanding Achievement in Community Health Promotion to those projects judged best in the nation." The Outstanding Achievement awards will not be limited to a specific number of projects. Each winning project will receive a certificate and a plaque. Award winners will be an­ nounced by the secretary of H.H.S. on or about Dec. l. Kempiners said that each of the five Illinois nominees will be awarded a Certificate of Merit. Information concerning application for these awards can be obtained by contacting Community Health Promotion Award Committee, Division of Education and In­ formation, Illinois Department of Public Health, 535 West Jefferson Street, Springfield, 111. 62761; telephone 217-785-2060. Deadline for submitting ap­ plications is Sept. 1. Safety In The Sun ENTERPRISE ZONES The Illinois Depart­ ment of Commerce and Community Affairs has named areas of Decatur, Canton, Joliet, East St. Louis, Rockford and Peoria as En­ terprise Zones in Illinois. Two more zones, both located in Chicago, will be an­ nounced before July 1. The purpose of the new Enterprise Zone act is to f o s t e r e c o n o m i c d e v e l o p m e n t i n depressed areas of the state. Each of these locations will benefit greatly from the host of incentives and ad­ vantages included in this legislative package. Under the law. DCCA can name up to eight Enterprise Zones each y e a r f o r s i x y e a r s , w i i h the terms of She benefits to run up to 20 years. Although a dark tan is considered by many to be attractive, it is very possible that acquiring that tan may do the body more harm than good, said Peggy Brock, recreation and sports safety specialist of the National Safety Council. "There are a couple of critical health hazards associated with overexposure to the sun," Ms. Brock said. "First of all, skin that is habitually exposed to large amounts of summer sun ages at an abnormally rapid rate. A person who obtains a deep tan every summer may have the skin of a 40-year-old by the age of 30." The ultraviolet rays in sunrays also can cause skin cancer, Ms. Brock said, which is responsible for 5,000 deaths each year. She said the predominant cause of these fatalities is overexposure to the sun. "The plain truth is that there are virtually no medical benefits to be gained from sunbathing," she said. "But it's foolish to think that people aren't going to stop trying to get that deep, dark tan." Ms. Brock offers these tips for those who spend a great deal of time in the sun: ...Limit exposure, particularly initial exposure, during the hours of greatest risk~10 a.m. to 2 p.m. ...Use sun screens and sun blockers to prevent burning. Sun screens prevent the burning rays ,from penetrating the skin, but permit the tanning rays to pass. Sun blockers reduce the penetration of all ultraviolet rays. ...Avoid using oils which attract the burning rays and increase the long- range possibility of skin cancer. ...Protect your eyes from reflected and direct exposui^ to the sun's rays by wearing polarized glasses or a hat that shields the sun. ...Clouds and water will not shield you from ultraviolet radiation. These rays penetrate wet clothing and reflect off of sand. ...Inoculate yourself slowly to ob­ taining a tan. As a rule of thumb, your first exposure should be less than 20 minutes because a tan begins to develop after 3 to 5 days of exposure to the sun. ...If you get a painful burn, apply cold compresses and a soothing skin lotion. Remember that it's a good idea to drink plenty of liquids whenever you're outdoors in warm weather. m Annual September 11,1983 Woodstock, Illinois oJ gi SEPTEMBER 11,1983 8:30 a.m. Start 2 Mile Fun Run - 8 Mile Road Race - 9:00 a.m. Start WOODSTOCK CITY PARK Recreation Building, West South Street PAI |DCC> 2 Mile: (Recommended as a family activity and lor tha beginning runner): loop course on paved city streets, mostly flat with one hill, split at 1 mile mark. 8 Mile: (A challenging course and dlatance tor the more experienced racer): scenic loop course on paved county and city roads, rolling hills, every mile marked, splits at every mile, water at 3, 5 and 7 miles. DIVISIONS* 1° Men's and Women's Division* for each Run: I i and under; 12-15 years; 16 24 " yrs.; 25-29 yrs.; 30-39 yrs.; 40-49 yrs.: 50-59 yrs.: 60 ± yrs.; Wheelchair, Blind. AWARDS' Grand Prize Trophies to Men's and Women's Overall Champion (or each run. Handsome. n engraved race medals to top three divisional finishers for each run. Souvenir shirts to all finishers (Pre-entries by August 31 win receive shirts day of run, all others may be by rain check.) Course Record Holders; 2 Mile - Jim Sims, 9:51 (1980), and Kim Kelly, 12:23 (1982). 8 Mile - Tom Rachubinski. 41:34 (1982), and Betty Boppart. 51:24 (1980) . .<•- : f W-'ldj-i&i;-'-, • . ' CIIKI. After-the-race drink compliments of Kentucky Fried Chicken, Woodstock. Cold, juicy • wn. watermelon for aN runners at the finish. We urge you to bring along your family The beautiful Woodstock City Park is a perfect setting for a family outing. . DCAICTD ATI/MU* W-0® by August 31; $7.00 after August 31 until day of run. Runners may register ricuio I n« I lun. 7:00-0:30 a.m. day of run. No refunds after August 31. Assisted By The Woodstock Running Club and Youth Opportunities Unlimited of McHenry County AFDR??KACE IW*l<» FWtfW». COURTESY: (h Wood Mock DAILY SENTINEL CHALLENGE ROAD RUN ENTRY FORM PIMM Prtot: NAME AGE (as of September 11)__ MALE ADORESS. CITY FEMALE. 2 MILE. 8 MILE. STATE. PHONE. ZIP. wmwifc Q» ft mftm. •! IwH. n llnfl. M? •«*•£» ill'!•«» mi »»'«««"" PLEASE SIGN HERE: If Minor • Signature of Parent or Guardian For additional information phone (815) 338-1300 May be copied if additional forms are needed. SHIRT SIZE (Circle One) Adults S M L XL Mall Complete Form To: CHALLENGE ROAD RUN P.O. BOX 70S Woodstock, IL 80096 or Bring To: WOODSTOCK DAILY SENTINEL 100 8. Jefferson, Woodstock, IL T | ' V„. <!r

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