PAGE 16 - PLAINDEALER-FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1975 St. Mary's Church To Conclude Holy Year The week of Nov. 23 will climax the observance of the holy year at St. Mary's church with the annual Eucharistic devotion Sunday, "the twenty - third, and the opening of Mission week. The Very Rev. Father Norbert, of the Franciscan Fathers, will open the Mission, preaching at all Masses and the closing of the Eucharistic devotion Nov. 23, Feast of Christ the King, at 5 p.m. He comes to St. Mary's well qualified to conduct the week of mission services. Father Norbert served as superior and principal of the minor seminary at Crystal Lake, and has recently returned to the Middle West, after a term of service as pastor of the Franciscan parish in Riverside, Calif. His wide and varied experience make him highly qualified for mission work. "Faith of Our Fathers" is the general theme of the parish mission. Renewal, practice and sense of mission are the ob jectives of this special week. Masses, with homily by Father Norbert, will be offered daily at 6:45 and 8, except for Thanksgiving day when the Mass schedule will be 6:45, 8 and 9 a.m., leavirig the rest of the day for celebration in the Family. Services will be at 7:30 each evening, except on Thanksgiving. Daily themes are: Sunday, "Christ Our King"; Monday, "Christ Our Savior"; Tuesday, "Christ's Mother and Ours"; Wed nesday, "Christ and Calvary"; Thursday, "Christ Our Eucharist"; Friday, "Christ Our Healer"; Saturday and Sunday, "Christ and His Church". On Friday evening the Sacrament of Anointing of the Sick will be administered within a special Mass for the sick and infirm. A special feature of Tuesday and Wednesday evenings will be a Question Box. Questions submitted prior to these evenings will be answered. Confessions will be heard nightly after the devotions. The Mission will close with the Noon Mass Sunday, Nov. 30. Father Norbert will be available during the day hours for per sonal counseling and direction. A general invitation is extended to all. County Board Committee Views Sludqe Disposal A system of disposing liquid digested sludge under en vironmentally-approved con ditions and at agronomic rates was demonstrated at Hill view farm, Richmond, for members of the McHenry County Health and Agriculture committee, environmental protection specialists, farmers and neighbors last week. 1 Arnold May, who operates the 1,300-acre grain and livestock farm, said the specially-designed system involves simultaneous in- ground injection and coverup with a special piece of equip ment May devised after ex tensive experimentation. May said he has received an Illinois Environmental Protection agency permit to accept digested sludge and to apply it to 374 acres of the farm certified for this purpose. Application is with a 3,000- gallon tank vehicle equipped with the plow-and-disc ap plicator. Three cultivator shovels- spaced in 38-inch rows-slice the injected fluid into the ground at a depth of 8-10 inches. Coulters on the unit cover the liquid, avoiding any chance for odor or runoff which had been the main objections to an air- spray system. May told County Board Chairman Walter Dean and other observers he believes this new system is the way to make use of millions of, dollars of fertilizer (sludge) currently burned or buried by present day disposal methods. "It is ironical," said May, "that at a time when we are so aware of the need to conserve energy, we are using energy to burn what is good fertilizer." Robert Taylor, Illinois En vironmental Protection agency specialist in the EPA's sur veillance section, said engineers with EPA at Springfield are encouraged with the success of May's sludge disposal program. Both engineers who issue permits and those who serve as con sultants find this injection system satisfactory. May said he raises about 3,500 head of hogs, from farrowing to finish, and 1,000 head of cattle annually. The farm is designed so that animal waste is channeled into storage tanks and a holding pond. The cattle are in confinement areas over a million-gallon tank. Hog lots are sloped so all runoff flows into a holding pond where the liquid is pumped into holding tanks or on fields. Visitors saw extensive construction for a huge tank that will hold 3 million gallons of liquid. May said this tank will be 162 feet wide, 252 feet long and 12 feet deep. Another cattle feeding area will be built over this tank. Dirt from this excavation was used to build a pit silo for corn silage storage. The total of 4 million gallons' capacity will provide adequate storage facilities for use during DIAL-A-DEVOTION PHONE 385-8729 Hear God's Word Wherever You Are. SPONSORED BY: GUETTLER'S SERVICE STATION the winter months when the liquid sludge cannot be spread because of the frozen ground. May figures he can spread from April through early July. After the first com is harvested for silage, he can spread again until the first hard freeze, REMOVE CHURCH ARTICLES-Tim Byers, left, and his father, John Byers are shown removing Christ the King crucifix from St. Paul's Episcopal church in anticipation of the transfer to the new addition not yet completed. Other valuable articles are also being moved to prevent damage when work involves the location where the addition joins the new church. Buying On Credit According to Illinois Consumer Advocate Celia Maloney, buying on credit has both advantages and disadvantages. It is often easier to make payments than save enough to buy large items and you can use your merchandise while you pay for it. Buying on time also helps establish your credit rating.* Unfortunately, credit buying presents drawbacks as well. Buying on time can cost up to 20 per cent more than paying cash. So-called "easy terms" and long time repayment may tempt you into overbuying, and leave you unable to make your payments in the case of a financial emergency. The terms of the contracts which you must sign are often difficult to understand and may obligate you to terms which are unsatisfactory. The Governor's Consumer Advocate office of Illinois suggests that you follow this "Credit Checklist" in evaluating whether or not you are using credit wisely: Know the different types of credit available. Investigate usually in early December. The -- ^ equipment is capable of- Teans-they may be less expensive than installment sales spreading about 100,000 gallons plans. a day under good conditions. The present injection rate, carefully calibrated on the spreading equipment, applies 23,105 gallons to the acre, an equivalent of 250 . pounds of nitrogen fertilizer. Except for a small application of started nitrogen at planting time, no added nitrogen is applied to the corn land, May reported. May said spreading must be done under strict monitoring conditions. Before spreading was approved, the EPA required testing the ground. Soil samples to five feet un derground, water and deep wells in the area are monitored according to EPA specifications. Purpose is to provide a continuing check of the area's soil and water quality. In addition, May must collect samples of water and other monitoring parameters and send them to the state EPA monthly. Charles Kirkpatrick, farm manager for the past five years, took training to qualify as a sewage treatment operator. The EPA requires a specialist of this skill on the project,. plans. ...Know the cost of credit both in actual dollars and in annual percentage rates for comparison with the cash price. ...Be sure that it is better to use credit instead of taking money from a savings account, or saving money to pay cash. It is less costly to take money from a savings account that earns 5 per cent annual interest than it is to incur an 18 per cent finance charge from credit buying. ...Use credit only for things that last long after the final payment is made...for example, a car. ...Use a budget to plan your spending. Try to avoid using your maximum credit capacity, except in cases of emergency .- ...Assume no more debt that you can reasonably repay out of your current level of income. ...Comparison shop for credit. Choose the source that offers the best credit "buy." When you do use credit, your best bet is to pay down as much as you can, pay the balance as quickly as possible and keep your promises to repay. ' -V :s."' If you have credit questions or problems, write Celia Maloney, Consumer Advocate, State of Illinois, 160 N. LaSalle, Room 2010, Chicago, Illinois, 60601, or call her at (312) 793-2754. "wsKRisniir SERVICE Free Loaners-Complete Service on all Makes Custom Earmolds-30 Day Trial on New Aids Try Before you Buy! Maico-Zenith-Radio Ear Qualitone R0BT. STENSLAND & ASSOC. 3937 W. Main St. 385-7661 Behind-the-ear AID AA Reg. $239 199 JMIgltftngale .or the playroom Less than a century and a quarter have passed since that terrible winter when Florence Nightingale minis tered to suffering British soldiers. Until then there had been no place for women nurses in military hospitals, and not many women nurses any where. Ever notice how often it is the occupations or professions of SERVICE TO OTHERSihat excite the imagination of our children? We should leam something from that! Boys and girls see them selves as amateur adults. Through their imagination they often show us the world they would like to live in. Their hopes can become a reality if we support our churches with our faith and our families. After all, it was the Founder of Christianity who insisted that He came not fo be ministered unto, but to minis ter. Copyright 1975 Keister Advertising Service. Inc.. Strasburg. Virginia Scriptures selected by The American Bible Society ELECTRICAL OUTLOOK Even assuming low rates of population growth, the country must prepare for electricity consumption doubling every 10 to 15 years to the end of this century, according to Dr. Chauncey Starr, president of the electric Power Research Institute. This will be necessary, he says, in order to insure that our objectives of national security and economic growth can be metr-"' rrrs • f * WAUCOnDA nduOIUL BAIK Is Pleased to Announce the Opening Of A TRUST DEPARTMENT Certified by Comptroller of Currency, U.S. Treasury Department and State of Illinois, Nov. 10, 1975 Robert W. Hinman, President (312) 526-6604 WELL DRILLING & WATER PUMPS UIE'RE BURSTIIIC I HI THE SEPIAS! / "rap " „ t --TT McHENRY COUNTY WELL & PUMP CO. So * IN. THE FUTURE WE WILL BE L0CATEQ 1V« ML NORTH OF McHENRY ON RT. 31. 4913 W. McCULLOM LAKE RQAD.-McHENRY 385-5252 Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 11 Peter 11 Thessalonians Revelation Joel Matthew I Corinthians Matthew 3:10-13 1:6-10 10:8-11 2:1-2 24:3-8 15:22-26 25:31-34 mmmmmmammmmmmmmmams First United Methodist Church 3717 West Main Street Church phone 385-0931 Ralph Smith, Pastor Parsonage Phone: 385-1352 Worship: 9:30a.m. and 11:00a.m. Church School: 11:00 a.m. Church of God Greenleaf Ave at Fairfield Dr Island Lake School Services: Sunday School-IOA.M Church Service - 11 a.m. Evangelistic Service - 7p.m. Telephone:312-526-8056 St. Peter's Catholic Church Spring Grove, Illinois Rev. Kilduff, Pastor Phone 815-675-2288 MASSES: Daily 8 a.m. Saturday - 7:30 p.m. Sunday - 7a.m., 9a.m., lla.m St. John the Baptist Catholic Church Johnsburg Rev. Leo Bartel, Pastor Rectory Phone 385-1477 Convent Phone 385-5363 Sat., night -8:00p.m. Mass Sun.,Masses;7,9,10:30,12:00 Nativity Lutheran Church 3506 E. Wonder Lake Rd. Box 157 Phone 653-3832 Wonder Lake, Illinois Sun, Worship 8 and 10:30 a.m. Sunday School - 9a.m. (Nursery Facilities Available) St. Mary's Catholic Church Rev. Eugene Baumhofer Sat., Eve., Mass-5pm. Fulfills Sun., obligation Sundaj/Ma ssfes^ 6:30,8,9:30 9:4?,10:45,11,t2sqoon. Alliance Bible Church 3815 W. Bul\ Valley Rd. Rev. Gerald Irobertson Sunday School-9:45 A.M. Service-ll:00 P.M. Service-7:00 Wed. Bible Study & Prayer 8:00 p.m. Church Of Jesus Christ Of Latter-Day Saints James Hufford Branch President Phone; 459-3889 Meetings at Praire Grove School 8617 Ridgefield Road (Routel76) Crystal Lake, Illinois Sunday School Meeting 10:30AM Sunday Sacrament Meetings 5:00 PM Sunday Except on 1st Sunday of Month; then held at 12 noon. Christ The King Catholic Church 5006 E. Wonder Lake Road Wonder Lake, Illinois Sunday Masses: 8.10a.m. and noon. Eve., Mass:8p.m. Fulfills Sunday Obligation Ringwood Methodist Church Ringwood, Illinois Rev. James Segin Res. 648-2848 Church 653-6956 Sunday 9:15 a.m. Church Ser vice. Church School at 10:15 AM Chain 0'Lakes Evangelical Covenant Church 4815 N. Wilmot Rd. Rev. Mitchell Considine Sunday School9:45 a.m. Worship Service 11:00 a.m. Church Phone-497-3000 Parsonage-497-3050 Christian Science Society Lincoln Road And Eastwood Land Sunday Service-10:30 a.m. Sunday School - 10:30 a.m. Wed. Eve., Meeting Every Third Wed.-8:00pm. McHenry County Friends Meeting (Quaker) 1st & 3rd Sundays, 10:30 A.M. for information call: 385-3872 or 312-683-3840 Mount Hope Church United Methodist 1015 W. Broadway Pistakee Highlands Rev. Len Schoenherr Sunday Worship lla.m., Sun day School, 9:45a.m. Faith Presbyterian Church West of the Outdoor Theatre John O. Mclntyre, Pastor Corporate Worship - 10:30 a.m Church School Grades 1-9 - 9:00 a.m. Pre-School - 10:30 a.m. First Baptist Church 509 N. Front St. 385-0083 Rev. Marshall E. Werry Bible Study-Sunday School 9:30a.m. Worship Service 10:45a.m. and 7:00 p.m. Training Union: 6:00 p.m. Interpretation for Deaf at all Services. Special Spanish Services. Wednesday, Prayer Service, 7:30 p.m. St. Paul's Episcopal Church 3706 W. St. Paul's & Green Rev. Arthur D. McKay, Vicar 385-7690 Sunday Services - Holy Eucharist - 8 a.m., Family Eucharist, 10 a.m. Church School & Coffe Hour. Wed nesdays - Holy Eucharist 9:30 a.m. Friday-Holy "Eucharist 9:30 a.m. Wonder Lake Bible Church 7501 Howe Road, Box No. 2 Rev. Richard N. Wright, Pastor Sunday: 9:30 A.M. Sunday School 9:30 A.M. Morning, Worship Service, 6:00 P.M. Bible, Fellowship Hour Nursery care is available Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. Midweek Prayer and Praise Service. St. Patrick's Catholic Church Rev. Edumund Petit, Pastor Rev. Michael Douglas, Assoc., Pastor Sat., Eve. (Sun., obligation fulfilled 5 p.m.) Sunday 7:15; 8:30,9:45.11 and 12:15 Shepherd of the Hill Lutheran Church 404 N. Green St. Rev. Roger W. Schneider Phone 385-7786 or 385-4030 Family worship and Sunday School - 8:30 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Nursery Facilities available. St. Francis National Catholic Church Flanders Rd., east of Ringwood Rd. Sunday Masses - 10 a.m. Father Dobranski - Pastor Spring Grove Church United Methodist, 8102 N. Blivin, Spring Grove, III. Rev. Len Schoenherr- Pastor Sunday Worship - 9 a.m. Sunday School - 10:15 a.m. Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church (Missouri Synod) 4206 W. Waukegan Rd. (W. Rt. Rev. Hermann F. Graef 385-0859 385-1616 Sunday Worship -7:45 and 10:30 Nursery Services provided at 10:30. Education for Eternity Sunday School - Children and Youth, 9 a.m. McHenry Evangelical Free Church Meeting At The Masonic Temple 1309 N. Court St., McHenry Sunday School - 9:45 A.M. Morning Worship - 11:00 A.M, Wed. Eve Prayer & Bible Study 7:30 PM George R. Justen Funeral Home 3519 W. ELM STREET McHENRY, ILL 385-2400 First National Bank of McHenry 3814 W. ELM STREET McHENRY, ILL 385-5400 Peter M. Justen Funeral Home 3807 W. ELM STREET McHENRY. ILL. 385-0063 Glaviano's Interiors & Palatine Millwork 385-3764 or 385-3765 414 S. ROUTE 31 JUST NORTH OF McHENRY FLORAL McHenry Savings & Loan 1209 N. GREEN STREET McHENRY. ILL 385-3000 GuettlerV Service, Inc. 818 N. FRONT STREET McHENRY, ILL 385-9831 •Brake Parts Co. P.O. BOX 11 McHENRY, ILL. 385-7000 Halm's Wonder Lake Funeral Home 7611 HANCOCK DR. WONDER LAKE 1-728-0233 Mitchell Sales, Inc. BUICK-OLDS-OPEL 903 N. FRONT ST.-McHENRY- 385-7200 Ace Hardware 3729 W. ELM STREET McHENRY,?ILL 385-0722 The Bath Shop 3012 W. RTE. 120 McHENRY, ILL 385-0048 The McHenry Plaindealer 3812 WEST ELM STREET McHENRY, ILL 385-0170 Tonyan Construction Co. 1309 N. BORDEN STREET McHENRY, ILL 385-5520 McHenry State Bank 3510 W. ELM STREET McHENRY, ILL 385-1040 Coast to Coast Hardware 4400 W. RTE. 12g | McHENRY MARKET PLACE 385-6655