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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 4 Apr 1979, p. 15

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PAGE 14 • PLAINDEAI.ER - WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4.1979 FOR RENT APARTMENT AVAILABLE, MC HENRY 5 rooms, carpeted, heated and furnished, no pets or children $225. month. 815-385- 7193 4-4-4-6C Lovely new furnished apart­ ment, second floor, quiet neigh­ borhood, $250. month, utilities furnished.815-385-5218 after 5:30pm. 4-4-4-6C In Town McHenry, one & two bedroom apartments available now. 815-675-2435. 4-4-4-6C NEWLY REMODELED OF- FICES in McHenry. 815-344- 1183. 4-4-4-6C LARGE 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT. Modern kitchen utilities included $385. 815-385- 9292 3-30-4-6c 2 YEAR OLD, 3 bedroom home in McHenry, attached garage, range, refrigerator and car­ peted, no pets. References and security deposit required. 815- 653-3711. 3-30-4-6c WANTED TO HCNT Schools Bonds In Concert EAST CAMPUS JAZZ BAND Mature working woman looking for 1 or 2 bedroom apt. on 1st floor in the town of McHenry. Reasonable rent. 385-8075. 4-4-4-6C HAPPY 8KTH0AV Happy 17th Bill SOPHOMORE BAND The Family PET COLUMN • LOST: German Shepherd mix, female, answers to "Stac'e" in ; vicinity of Millstream and j Maple Ave. in McHenry • *385-0370 4-4-4-6c j WANTED PUPPIES 6-8 weeks ' old, good homes guaranteed. Also we buy Poodle or Schnauzer mixed pups. 815-385- 7897. 4-4tfc GIVEAWAY Mostly Cocker Spaniel puppies, part Poodle, 6 weeks old, 3 black and 1 male blonde. 815-385-3039. 4-4-4-6C GIVE AWAY Apricot miniature poodle, AKC male, 8 years old. 815-385-1654. . 4-4 Lost, German Shepherd, black with light collar on neck, Ans. to Butch, has rabies tags. 385- 4-4 Three bands from McHenry East campus high school will present their annual Spring band concert Thursday, April 5, at 7:30 p.m. in the East school gymnasium. They will be directed by W.N. Toalson. The award winning jazz band will be heard in "Fire and Brimstone", "I've Been Working On The Railroad", ESHMAN BAND "Apple Corps", "Maria" and "Peg". Soloists to be featured will be Joe Mullen, Dan Diedrich, Bill Demarco, Vic Champney, Stephanie Allen, and Roger Quinlan. The sophomore band will be heard in "Chicago: A Portrait In Sound", "Chase The Clouds Away" and "Rock Encounter". Members of the freshman band will play "Concerto For Madison Avenue", "Bellavia" and "The Golden Age Of Rock and Roll". The young musicians remind that the Music department will sponsor a pizza sale Saturday, April 7, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. behind East campus. PETS m SALt Schnauzer, Lhasa Apso, Cocker, Quality stud service. Walnut Hinge Boarding and Grooming Kennel Rte. 31, McHenry 815-385-1757. 4-4 A . K . C . R E G I S T E R E D LABRADOR PUPPIES. 2 Black males. Ready to go the end of March. Parents good hunters. Don't wait. Reserve yours now $75.00 and up. 815- 385-3405. 4-4-4-6c HOUSCS L I C E N S E D H O R S E SHOEING. Mike Westland 815- 385-8877 or 312-690-6360 evenings. 4-4-4-27C Legal Notice STATE OF ILLINOIS ) ) COUNTY OF McHENRY ) BEFORE THE ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS OF THE VILLAGE OF LAKEMOOR Matthew J. Stahl and Patricia M. Stahl. his wife, of Wood­ stock, Illinois, have filed a Petition before the Village of Lakemoor Zoning Board of Appeals praying lor a zoning reclassification from the present R-I to Multi-Family for the purpose of erecting two (2) 4 Unit Buildings on the property commonly known as 337 South Venice Rd., in the Village of Lakemoor, Illinois. Said property is legally described as follows: Lots 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 14 and 15 in Block 46 in Sampson, Sex and Co., Lily Lake Subdivision, being a sub­ division of part of the Southeast Quarter of Section 32, Township 45 North, Range 9 and part of the Northeast Quarter of - Section 5, Township 44 North, Range 9, East of the Third Principal Meridian according to the Plat thereof recorded July 28, 1926 as Document No. 74254 in Book 5 of Plat, Page 81 in McHenry County, Illinois. The Hearing on this Petition will be held on Monday, April 23,1979 at the hour of 7:30 p.m. in the Council Room of the Municipal Building of the Village of Lakemoor, 234 W. Perspective OIL AND GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS BY RONALD REAGAN Energy. America's problem is not so much a shortage of it as it is a surplus of government - and politics. In Long Beach, Calif., oil decreed by government as "old oil" stays in the ground because the mandated price isn't high enough to pump it out. Meanwhile, a few feet away, Japanese tankers land Arab oil at $13 a barrel. Energy Secretary James Schlesinger says that the oil industry is about to scrap plans for a terminal in Long Beach and a pipeline to Texas to move Alaskan oil inland for refining. The regulatory hurdles and delays appear to have proved too much for the industry, after all. Chalk up another victory for politics. And, also in California, although a federal judge ruled that Gov. Brown's relentlessly anti-nuclear Energy com­ mission could no longer deny plant permits on the basis of a state law calling for near- impossible waste disposal technology, the public utilities didn't jump with joy. They say they will await the outcome of appeals to higher courts. Having spent large sums of money and endless frustrating hours trying to thread their way through California's "Catch-22" permit process, no wonder they are exhausted. In Seabrook, New Hamp­ shire, the public utility that has fought tirelessly to build a nuclear plant to supply large quantities of electricity to energy-short New England, has about run out of construction money. Having survived vir­ tually every roadblock the resourceful anti-nuclear, no- growth people could throw at them, the utility says it may have to sell the project to its shareholders and others in order to get enough money to finish building it. Schlesinger, again the other day, weighed in with perhaps the gloomiest comment of all. He reminded a congressional hearing that if a ship were to be sunk in the narrow Straits of Hormuz, through which steams 60 percent of the free world's oil (from the Persian Gulf), the Western world would undergo profound upset and change. What is the answer? Barter is at least part of it according to economist Eliot Janeway. He says that "the idea of the United States wringing its hands for fear of running out of claims on oil in a world rich in reserves and poor only in the politics of negotiating for them is preposterous." He says that Mexico could be a prime candidate for a barter strategy. The U.S. holds the answer to Mexico's tieed for capital and technological supply as a means of solving its population and economic problems, and we need Mexico's oil. What is needed is barter-oriented leadership willing to overcome old prejudices and deal with Mexico as a partner. The Mexicans, for their part, need to put their historic distrust of the U.S. behind them. Alaskan oil offers barter potential, too. At least for the short-term, some of it might be sold to the Japanese in ex­ change for third-party oil committed to the Japanese which could be transported to IKS. ports faster than Alaskan can (at present, Alaskan oil must be transferred at the Panama canal from large to small tankers in order to get to Texas refineries). Congress, in an effort to make us energy- independent, passed a bill a few years ago prohibiting the sale of Alaskan oil outside the U.S. Inadvertently, that bill has become the roadblock to creative barter possibilities which would actually increase our independence. Chicken Prices Up While broiler production has been higher than last year, prices are still up -- primarily because many people have turned to chicken as a quality food purchase. If you're buying chicken, keep in mind that the best price is usually available when you buy the whole bird. Then, you can do the splitting, quartering or boning at home. Rand Rd., Lakemoor, Illinois. ALL PERSONS INTERESTED M A Y A T T E N D A N D B E HEARD ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS OF THE VILLAGE OF LAKEMOOR By: Norman H. Morrison, its Chairman (Pub. April 4,1979) Avoid Loneliness "Is it true that money talks?" the wife asked her husband. "That's what they say," he replied. "Then please leave a little here today," she remarked, "I get lonely and it would be nice to have something to talk to." RAY SMITH FOR 3RD WARD ALDERMAN COONEY HEIGHTS IS NOW A PART OF WARD 3 POLLING PLACE -- CITY HALL SMITH BORN AND RAISED IN McHENRY'S THIRD WARD >W.W.II VETERAN >16 YEARS ON THE CITY COUNCIL WITH YOUR HELP, AND WORKING WITH OTHER MEMBERS OF THE COUNCIL, I WOULD LIKE TO: •SOLVE OUR CONGESTED TRAFFICE PROBLEM •WORK OUT AN AGREEABLE APPROACH TO OUR PARK PROBLEM •STRENGTHEN OUR PLANNING AND ZONING TO MAINTAIN OUR COUNTRYSIDE LIVING WITH COMPATIBLE BUSINESS GROWTH VOTE-CITY HALL APRIL 17, 1979 ( g M l C U B I B B TTIV fl I * V HORSES 3 BOARDED Posture-Dox Stalls New Indoor Arena Daily Grain Turn Out Outside Riding Arena RAJA ACRES (fcntg MwjAtafctt Am) W 815-648-4012 v". Thank You WE'RE YOUR "OIK STOP SPORT SHOP" FOR •TEAM EQUIPMENT •FOOTWEAR CONVERSE ft NKE SHOES •APPAREL JOGGMG IRIMNMG SUITS McHenry, for making our Grand Opening Celebration a huge success. Your support and patronage is greatly appreciated. John Bolton SPOT BILT ALL PURPOSE BASEBALL SHOES (CLEATS t SPIKES) NEW STOCK JUST ARRIVED! S P R I N G S I G H T . . . America's fishermen come out of winter hibernation with season openings and the first warm days of spring. This scene is Bennett Spring State Park, near Lebanon, Missouri. ill SPOT-BILT ALL PURPOSE BASEBALL SHOES (CLEATS! SPIES) NEW STOCK JUST ARRIVED! HOURS MON-TUES-WED 9:30-6:00 THURS & FRI 9:30 -9:00 SATURDAY 9:00-6:00 NOW OPEN EVERY SUNDRY! 12 NOON TO 5:00 i) FEATURING: •WILSON TENNIS RACKETS •LEACH RACKET BALLS •RAWLING GLOVES •T SHIRTS TOOOLER & ADULT SIZES •CUSTOM STOCKS! BONDS OTHER INVESTMENTS MARTIN L. SMITH JON STOUT RONALD J. THOMAS JAMES HENRY RICHARD P. SEXTON MARK Le FEVRE VIRGIL R. SMITH Manager A. G. Edwards & Sons, Inc. Member New York Stock Exchange Phone (815) 338-2550 Woodstock Exchange Building 231 Main Street - Woodstock HOURS: 8:15 a.m. • 5 p.m. MONDAY-FRIDAY 9 a.m. • Noon Saturday t

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