Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 22 Aug 1985, p. 7

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McHENRY PLAINDEALER Section A Thursday, August22,19tS Page 7 Nation/World Fighting resumes in Lebanon UPIpboto With the Lotto jackpot at i record|41million Wednesday, New Yorkers brave the rain to form an early line for tickets on Lexington Avenue and 45th Street Meanwhile, 2 more killed Activist: U.S. condones apartheid By Brendan Boyle United Press International JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -- Winnie Mandela, wife of the jailed leader of the outlawed Afri­ can National Congress, accused the United States Wednesday of condon­ ing apartheid and said South Afri­ can blacks no longer are willing to consider sharing power with whites. Two more people were reported killed in racial violence Wednesday and the National Union of Mineworkers prepared a last-min- ute bid to avert the largest mining strike in South African history. Mandela told an illicit news con­ ference she was turning down a $10,000 gift from the U.S. Human Eights Fund because of what she called U.S. support for apartheid, South Africa's system of rigid racial segregation. She also said black leaders felt South Africa had passed the stage where the nation's black and white leaders could sit down at a national convention to negotiate a way of sharing power. Teen kin with deer riffle HENDERSON, Texas (UPI) - A 16-year-old boy "demolished" his stepfather, grandmother and a younger brother, shooting them in the head with a high-powered deer rifle, investigators said Wednesday. Sheriffs investigators said the youth, whose name was withheld, was arrested shortly after the bod­ ies of Kevin Brown, 11, Kenneth Dalton Brown, 35, and Eva Juanita Ray, 59, were discovered in two Rusk County residencesat 5:45 p.m: CDT Tuesday. The victims had been shot in the head at close range with a .35-cali- ber rifle, officers said. Doyle Williams, a criminal inves­ tigator with the Rusk County sher­ iffs office, said the boy's mother found the bodies when returning home to the small East Texas com­ munity from work. "When she walked in, she told us he met her at Ihe door and pointed the rifle at her," Williams said. "She was able to talk him down and got the rifle from him and took off in her car to a neighbor's house. That's where she called police." The youth fled in his car, driving about 7 miles to Henderson. The boy's mother was being treat­ ed for shock at a Henderson hospi­ tal. Henderson is about 135 miles east of Dallas: Williams said the suspect's half- brother and stepfather were found in the living room of the family's trailer home. Both had been shot once in the head. Williams said the grandmother's body was found in the living room of her adjoining wood-frame home. She had been shot at least twice. "I've been on shooting scenes be­ fore and seen people shot in the head before," Williams said, "but I have never seen anybody demol­ ished like the grandmother was. It ~ was a gruesome sight." • There were no signs of a struggle inside either home. "The only aspect that can be dis­ cussed by the black people of this . country and the ruling Afrikaner is the handing over of power," ̂ he told reporters in the Johannesburg of­ fices of her lawyer, Ismael Ayob. Mandela said the governments of President Reagan and British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher should press for free elections in South Africa "so that the people may decide who will govern.*' "Our people are angry that the Reagan and Thatcher administra­ tions ... continue to condone the activities of the South African gov­ ernment," she said. "If they had any feelings for the downtrodden and oppressed major­ ities in our country they would forthwith end their policies of gentle persuasion or constructive engage­ ment," she added. "It appears ti\at their interests in this country out­ weigh their so-called abhorrence of apartheid." Mandela said she was "greatly disturbed" by the U.S. reaction to President Pieter Botha's major pol­ icy speech in Durban Thursday. . She said Botha was "arrogant and ^insensitive* and appeared "totally committed to the tragic path Song which this government has led South Africa since... 1948." Mandela is banned, which means she is restricted to a black township near the Orange Free State farming town of Brandfort. She had official permission to be in Johannesburg but the news conference violated another condition of her banish­ ment, which bars her from meeting with more than one person at a time. Her husband, Nelson Mandela, has served more than 22 years of a life sentence for treason, but re­ mains the honorary leader of the outlawed African National Con­ gress, which opposes white rule. The Star newspaper reported ear­ lier Wednesday that police fired into a crOWd of stone-throwing youths Tuesday, killing one young girl. The clash, which was not immediately reported by police, came before a funeral for Nomoya Masilela, an­ other victim of racial unrest, the Star said. In the black township of Imbali in Natal province, police said, a black man was "stabbed to death by un­ known criminals." In the same dis­ trict, they said, arsonists set fire to four minibuses and an unidentified gunman fired into a private home. Other violent incidents, including rock-throwing, arson and an unsuc­ cessful axe atack on a policeman, were reported in six blacks town­ ships, indicating no end is in sight to the violence that has claimed at least 635 lives in less than a year. Negotiations Wednesday between NUM officials and the nation's gold £hd coal mine owners may be the last chance to avoid a mine strike would b§v\wgecediented in its e. .« . . . . . j JM General Secretary Cyril Ra- maphosa agreed Tuesday to further meetings with mine owners to dis­ cuss the wage and benefit demands of the black National Union of Mineworkers. But he said he would call at least 240,000 black miners out on strike Sunday at 18 gold mines and 11 coal mines if no agreement was reached. Up to 400,000 miners could join the stoppage if the strike spreads to non-union laborers, cutting the na­ tion's gold production, which totals about $4.4 billion a year, by as much as 70 percent. 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Be sufe to see the Verio vs. Name Brand Comparison Corner in Our Showroom ahd find out why more people are buying their New Beds from the Verio Mattress Factory. i mVfcVi Sate Ends Sat Aug. 24 SAVI ON vine's BIST MATTRISS SITS VERLO VERLO VERLO VERLO PRINCESS EXCELLENCE SUPREME CLASSIC *99 s119 *139 $149 Twin Each Twin Each Twin Each Twin Each Full Each *129 Full Each *149 Full Each *169 Full Each *199 Queen Set *299 Queen Set *349 Queen Set *399 Queen Set *439 King Set *399 King Set *449 King Set *S19 King Set *559 "From Our Factory to Your Home" Vtrlo FrM Mwy Fret 90 Day Financing Free Removal Of OM Bedding esa mattress factory NAPCRVILLE <22 W. 5THAVE (312)9619191 CRYSTAL LAKE MWY UafPlNGREt RD ('/.ml.W ofRte 3D (SIS) 455 2570 . ... JFi. . „ i 'Family owned and operated since 1958" WHEELING 62E DUNDEE RO (312)541 1234 By David Zenian United Press International BEIRUT, Lebanon -- Intense ar­ tillery and rocket fire shattered a brief Christian-Moslem militia truce Wednesday and pushed the death toll in three days of sectarian bloodshed to at least 93. The undeclared truce lasted only four hours. The bombardment re­ sumed at 10 a.m., jeopardizing plans to convene a Cabinet meeting today to discuss ways of ending the factional fighting that police say has left 261 people dead and 858 wounded in the past 10 days in Lebanon. Christian and Moslem militia ra­ dio stations repeatedly interrupted their programs to warn residents of "the barbaric shelling." Police re­ ports said 15 people were killed and 83 wounded in Wednesday's bom­ bardment, pushing the toll in three days of fighting to 93. At least 33 people were killed and 140 wounded by shells that battered Beirut and the surrounding area Monday and Tuesday. Another 45 people were killed and 90 were wounded by a car bomb that explod­ ed Tuesday in Tripoli. State-owned Beirut radio said un­ identified warplanes raided a posi­ tion of the Shiite Mosem Amal mili­ tia near the mountain village of Hazerta, 16 miles east of Beirut, for a second time in as many days Wednesday. The radio quoted Amal sources saying the planes were driven off by anti-aircraft fire and dropped their bombs in an empty lot near the village, Security sources in Christian east Beirut denied Moslem speculation that the planes belong to the mostly Christian-manned Lebanese Air Force and said the strike was artil­ lery fire instead of a warplane raid. The police sources said initial es­ timates indicate more than 2,500 homes and appartments and at least 1,200 cars have been hit by shellfire in the past few days of militia fighting. Christian militia sources said more than 12,000 rockets, mortars, tank shells and missiles were fired into the Christian areas of Beirut and villages north and northeast of the capital. They said at least 75 shells crashed around the east Beirut sub­ urban home of U.S. Ambassador Reginald Bartholomew and at least 338 around the nearby Baabda Pal­ ace of President Amin Gemayel. It was not known if Bartholomew or Gemayel were at their resi­ dences during the bombardment. Moslem militia officials said re­ gions under their control were pounded by an equal number of shells and rockets, causing exten­ sive damage and destruction. "It's the game of death in its ugliest form," Education and Labor Minister Selim Hoss said Tuesday. The intensity of the bombardment began easing at dawn Wednesday, though there was no formal cease­ fire agreement between the warring factions, police and militia sources said. The four-hour lull allowed govern­ ment officials to intensify contacts in a bid to end the violence and to make plans for a Cabinet meeting today. Legal Notices 4 PUBLIC NOTICE LEVY ORDINANCE NO. 15-3 AN ORDINANCE FOR THE LEVYING OF TAXES FOR THE WAUCONDA FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT IN THE COUNTIESOF LAKE AND McHENRY AND IN THE STATE OF ILLINOIS FOR THE FISCAL YEAR BEGINNING MAY 1, IMS AND ENDING APRIL M, 1M6 BE IT ORDAINED BY THE PRESIDENT AND BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE WAUCONDA FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT: SECTION 1: That the sum of Three Hundred Seventy-Eight Thousand Five Hundred And NO/lOO ($378,500.00) Dollars for cor­ porate purposes and the sum of Three Hundred Twenty-Five Thou­ sand Six Hundred Seventy-Five And NO/lOO ($325,475.00) Dollars for Emergency Ambulance Service purposes legally made and to be collected from the levy of the current fical year beginning May l, 1965 and ending April 30,1966, shall be, and the same is hereby levied on all property subject to taxation within the corporate limits of the said Wauconda Fire Protection District, in the Coun­ ties of Lake and McHenry, and in the State of Illinois, as the said property is assessed and equalized for State and County purposes for the current year. SECTION 2: GEN E R AL - CORPORATE. That the purpose of which said levy is hereby made and the sums or amounts to be ap­ propriated for such purposes, respectively, are as follows, to-wit: Items of Appropriation Amount Amount and Levy Appropriated Levied 1. ADMINISTRATION EXPENSE FUND a) Printing, postage and miscel­ laneous office supplies i.S 1,000.00 $ 1,000.00 b) Illinois Association of Fire , Protection Districts (dues) 175.00 175.00 c)Illinois Municipal League ..250.00 250.00 d) E lection expense and annexation ... V500.00 1,500.00 e) Errors and Omissions Insurance 5,000.00 5,000.00 2. SALARY FUND a) For salaries of Trustees 3,400.00 3,400.00 b) For compensation of the District's Attorney and for legal expenses.... 3,000.00 3,000.00 c) For bond premiums 3,000.00 3,000.00 d) For financial audit 1,500.00 1,500.00 e) Legal defense of contested municipal annexation 3,000.00 3,000.00 3. FIRE INSPECTOR SALARY .v. 4400.00 4,000.00 4. FIRE PROTECTION FUND For contract obligation for fire » protection and fire equipment..... 315,675.00 315,675.00 5) ISLAND LAKE FIRE STATION NO. 2 For expansion of service fund 16,000.00 16,000.00 6. FIRE FIGHTING APPARATUS AND EQUIPMENT FUND • Purchase of new fire fighting equipment 10,000.00 10,000.00 7. INTEREST ON TAX ANTICI­ PATION WARRANTS 7,500.00 7,500.00 6. MISCELLANEOUS. 1,500.00 1,500.00 TOTAL $376,500.00 $378,500.00 SECTION 3: NECESSITY. That each of said sums and the ag­ gregate thereof are deemed necessary by the President and Board of Trustees of the Wauconda Fire Protection Dlstlct to defray the necessary expenses and liabilities of said Fire Protection District for corporate purposes for the fiscal year ending April 30,1966. SECTION 4: EMERGENCY AMBULANCE SERVICE. That the purpose for which said levy is hereby made and the sum or amounts to be appropriated for such purposes, respectively, are as follows, to-wit: Items of Appropriation Amount Amount and Levy Appropriated Levied Purchase of new ambulance ~ -- -- -- and equipment.. '. $ 10,000.00 $ 10,000.00 Contract for furnishing services for operation of emergency ambulance service 315,675.00 315,675.00 TOTAL $325,675.00 - $325^75.00 SECTION 5: NECESSITY. That each of said sums and the ag­ gregate thereof are deemed necessary by the President and Board of Trustees of the Wauconda Fire Protection District to defray the necessary expenses and liabilities of said Fife Protection District tor Emergency Ambulance Service for the fiscal year ending April 30,1966. SECTION 6: That the Clerk of the Board of Trustees of the Wavconda Fire Protection District is hereby directed to file a cer­ tified copy of this Ordinance with the County Clerks of Lake and McHenry Counties, In the State of Illinois, as provided by law. SECTION 7: That this Ordinance shall take effect and be in full __ force from and after its passage and approval, as provided by law. WAUCONDA FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT (s) By Harold R. Pohlman - ., President ATTEST: (s) Edwin M. Underwood " District Secretary , APPROVED: This 16th day of August, 1965 (s) Mitchell Bienkowski District Trustee (s) John R. Sloan District's Attorney (Published InMcHenry Plaindealer Aug. 22,1965) 3568 PUBLIC NOTICE STATE OF ILLINOIS ) )SS COUNTY OF McHENRY ) INTHE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 19TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT McHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS IN THE MATTE R OF THE PETITION OF JOSHUA MICHAEL ANDERSON, a minor by SUSAN L. MIHALOVIC, his mother and next friend, FOR CHANGE OF .NAME NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on the 3rd day of October, 1905, at 9:00 a.m., I will file my Petition in said Court praying for the change of my name from JOSHUA MICHAEL ANDERSON to that of JOSHUA MICHAEL MIHALOVIC, pursuant to the statute In such case made and provided. JOSHUA MICHAEL ANDERSON, a minor, by SUSAN L. MIHALOVIC, his mother and next friend /s/ Susan L. Mihalovic (Published In McHenry Plaindealer Aug. 15,22,29,1965) v. 3766 N PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING A public meeting on thf "-opos- ed McHenry Coun'y Land Use Plan: Year 2005 Update will be held on Thursday, August 22, 1965, at 7:00 p.m. in Room 203 of the McHenry County Cour thouse. Copies of the draft text are available from the McHenry County Department of Planning, Room T05 of the Courthouse. Persrw« wishing to submit writ­ ten comments should address them to: McHenry County Regional Planning Commission, 2200 N. Seminary Ave., Woodstock, IL 60096 Written comments will be accepted through Friday, August 30,1965. The proposed Plan Map is on display in the McHenry Dept. of Planning Offics and may be viewed between 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Mondays through Fridays. (Published in the McHenry Plaindealer, Aug. 8,15,22,1965) nis PUBLIC NOTICE IVTWTVVKjn IW DKM "Small HIMIMAA JNWI DVNVIVII DVTASNIV Sealed bids are requested by the State of Illinois, Department of Conservation, for the following minor repair and/or maintenance trades: Concrete work "flat work and footings." Sealed bids will be received at Chain O'Lakes State Park, 39947 N.̂ tate Park Rd., Spring Grove, IL 60061 for Department of Conservation Properties at Chain O" Lakes State Park in Lake County, Illinois, until 10:00 a.m. prevailing time on Tuesday, September 10,1965 at which time all bids will be publicly opened and read aloud. - All bids must comply with Article 2 of the Illinois Human Rights Act, (III. Rev. Stat., 1961 Ch. 166, Par. 1-101 et. seq.). Complete Information including specifics for bidding and bidding forms may be obtained from the Site Manager or the Regional Lane Manager In charge of the above location. The owner reserves the right to reject any and all bids and to waive any formality In the bids received whenever such rejection or waiver is in the best Interests of the owner. State of Illinois Department of Conservation (Published In McHenry Plaindealer Aug. 22,1965) 3763 PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION Manufacturers Hanover Mort. Corp., Plaintiff -vs- Darrel Brothers, et al.. Defendants CASE NO. 65 C 3*47 NOTICE OF SPECIAL COMMISStONE R'S SALE Public Notice is hereby given that in pursuance of a decree entered in the above entitled Court in said cause on July 30,1965,1, Eugene Crane, Special Commissioner for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, will on Thursday, Sept. 12, 1965 at the hour of 1:00 p.m. at the front door of the County building located in the main lobby of 2200 N. Seminary St., Woodstock, IL sell to the highest bidder for cash, the following described premises situated in McHenry, County, I lllnols. Said sale shall be subject to 1964 general taxes and to any special assessments or special taxes levied against said real estate. Upon the sale being made the purchaser will receive a Certificate Qf Sale which will entitle the purchaser to a deed on a specified date unless the property is redeemed according to law. Said property is described as follows, to-wit: A part of Lot One (1) in Block Five (5) of Safford's Addition to the Village of Marengo, a Subdivision of parts of the southeast quarter (14) and other quarter PA) sections of Section thirty-six (36), Township forty-four (44) north. Range five (5) east of the Third Principal /Meridian, ac­ cording to the plat thereof recorded September 16,1658 in Book Seventeen (17) of Deeds, Page six hundred twenty- eight (628), described as follows: Commencing at the northwesterly corner of said Lot One (1) and running thence southerly along the Westerly line of LotOned), one hundred forty (140) feet to a point; thence southeasterly on a line parallel with the northeasterly line of said Lot One (1), to the easterly line of said Lot One (i), thence Northerly along the Easterly line of said Lot One (1), to the notheasterly line thereof to the place of beginn ing, (excepting therefrom that part described as follows: Commencing at the Northwest corner of said Lot One (l) and thence southerly along the westerly line of Lot One (1), seventy (70) feet to a point; thence easterly one hundred twenty-four (124) feet to a point, which point Is sixty-one (61) feet south of the northerly line of said Lot One (1), as measured on a line parallel with the westerly line of said Lot One (1); thence northerly parallel with the westerly line of Lot One (1), sixty-one (61) feet to a point on the nor therly line of said Lot One (1); thence westerly along the northerly line of said Lot One (1), to the place of beginning, ~ ALSO, The premises described In deed record three hundred - sixty-seven (367) page two hundred forty-eight (248) and Document 723533 being a vacation of part of the south half (VJ) of a vacant alley north of and adjacent to said premises except and reserving therefrom the premises described in deed record three hundred seventy-two (372) page seven (7), all in McHenry County, Illinois. - c/k/a 241 South Locust Street, Marengo, IL. Tax ID 111-36-405-010 Dated this 5th day of August, 1965 /s/ Eugene Crane Special Commissioner of the United States District Court Northern District of I llinois FISHER 4 FISHER Attorneys for Plaintiff 30 North LaSalle Street Chicago, IL 60602 312/372-4784 . (Published in Plaindealer-Herald Aug. 8,15,22,29,1965) 3797 PUBLIC NOTICE ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE Public Notice is hereby given that on August 2, 1965, a cer­ tificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk ot. McHenry County, Illinois, setting forth the names and post-office addresses of all of the persons owning, con­ ducting and transacting me business known as FITTER INN located at 620 Rand Road (Lilymoor), McHenry, IL 60050. Dated August 2,1965 (SEAL) (s) Rosemary Azzaro County Clerk (Published in the Plaindealer- Herald, Aug. 8,15,22,1965. 3796 ust check our ads from front to back i >

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