« • Lakemoor-Li lvmoor Margaret Karas 385-4934 -VT- Exciting Times At Celebration Ron Scharff and Les Nejedly were the coordinators for the three days of excitement at Lakemoor, in recognition of the sewer project connection. It is all a memory now. Ap preciation is in order for the work, worry and many plan ning hours that were spent to make this a truly entertaining weekend. If you didn't come, you missed a lot of fun. The McHenry Plaindealer (USPS 335-200) Established 1S75 3112 West Elm Street Phone 385 0170 McHenry, Illinois 50050 Published Every Wednesday t Friday at McHenry. Illinois Second Class Postage Paid at McHenry. Illinois By McHENRY PUBLISHING COMPANY Subscribers or* r*qu*t«*d to provid* nolle* of chango of oddrot. to Tho McHonry floindoator. Mil W Elm St. McHoory III M0S0. A dodwetion of ono month from tho oxpiration of a subscription will bo mod* wh*r* a chong* of oddr*ss is pro«id*d through th* Post Offic* O*portm*nt. JUNE, SPOON. MOON, ETC. This is another week of many anniversaries to be celebrated. On June 6, Dale and Carolyn Rasmussen will enjoy their tenth. Dale is a fishing en thusiast and a board member of the Lily Lake conservation club, and Carolyn is the treasurer of the McHenry Nunda library and secretary of the Lilymoor association. This next year should be an especially happy year for them, as daughter Suzanne will be having a baby playmate. June 8 is Les and Barbara Nejedly's anniversary. Les is on Lakemoor's zoning board and was co-chairman of the Royal Flush days. Barbara is one of the dependable blood pressure ladies, and is also in Lakemoor's governing body. Also celebrating June 8 are Delbert and Karen Douglass. Mary and Lonnie Wilson,. Senior, recognize the an niversary of their wedding day on June 9. May you all have a good day, week, month and year. GRADUATION Young people leaving the McHenry school systems this year include Daniel Odarc- zenko, Sharon Charrey, Angelique Betancourt and Alfred Krepel, Jr. Alfred will be continuing with the job he has had during high school. May the futures of our graduates have much ac complishment and joy. SAVE LILY LAKE PROGRESS ^ The dredge has been moved to the edge of the remaining waters of Lily lake. The ex cessive cost of the only in surance plan as yet made available is still the deterring factor to the start of the project. Join the club - your membership will help towards the funding and operation. Lily lake is one of our important resources, and needs the help of all of us. Call 385-4934 for in formation. COMMUNITY CALENDAR June 7 - zoning hearing - grave] pit annexation to Lakemoor, 7:30 p.m. municipal building. June 12 - Lilymoor association meeting, 8 p.m.-214 N. Ridgeway. June' 13 - Lily Lake Con- Lorry E. Lund-Publisher \ NEWSPAPER Adele Froehlich-Editor NATIONAL NEWSPAPER MSOCIATION fsnM IMS frf,Pr„,H NNA SUSTAINING » MEMBER --1979 SUBSCRIPTION RATES ' Y#or $12.00 1 Year $17.00 In McHenry Outside McHenry County County No Charge To Our Savers... Money Orders McHenry Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 1209 N. Green St. McHenry 385-3000 10520 Main St. Richmond 678-2061 kopie lUpwy ̂ Wijf&piet McHENRY SAVINCS MAYTAG LAST CHANCE SALE on MAHALS MAYTAG will have to raise prices June 11th SAVE $20 - $30 MAYTAG Heavy Duty WASHERS • Built to. last longer and need fewer repairs • Energy efficient operation 'CtfScE JjfrSfi Dishwashers See Bob Smith for a Great Deal on Washers BUY NOW and AVE (/©GliftGgJ o (U Ask Don Weingart about the Huge Savings on Dishwashers. on Maytjg dependability Big Load MAYTAG DRYERS • Big capaci ty to • Big capaci ty to handle your b ig l o a d s ' L o w temp. Stream-of- HeatT" dry ing • Fast , energy ef f ic ient operat ion • Dura-cushion' v dryerdrum f in ish. CAREY Appliance 1241 N. Green Street SALES & SERVICE , 385-5500 McHenry, Illinois servation club open meeting, 7:30 p.m. - municipal building. June 14 - Lakemoor village meeting, 8 p.m. - municipal building. June 18 - Free blood pressure screening, 7-9 p.m. municipal building. Life is like an onion. You peel off one layer at a time, and sometimes you weep. GOD BLESS To Much Don't worry about our Government being over- thrown-there's too much of it. -Times, Marshalltown, la. PAGE 5 - PLAINDEALER - WEDNESDAY, JUNE I, lf7f Launch Farm Report Drive Alcoholism Treatment At a press conference May 21, Dr. Robert deVito, Director of the Illinois Department of Mental Health and Develop mental Disabilities (ID- MHDD), said alcoholism programs funded by the state are a top priority in the department's fiscal year 1980 proposed budget. "It's par ticularly significant," said deVito, "that the department is focusing some of its energy to allocating dollars to the areas of prevention and early in tervention which represents a departure from past prac tices." IDMHDD will also respond to such problem areas as teenage drinking, the woman alcoholic, and the Fetal Alcoholism Syndrome during the coming fiscal year, ac cording to deVito. A drive to round up reports that have not yet been returned from farm households in the 1978 Census of Agriculture has been launched by the Bureau of the Census. Bureau officials called the drive a "special effort to provide statistical results to the nation's farmers and other users of census data as early as possible." Most farm operators first received report forms last January, and most have, by now, completed and returned them. Although the rate at which reports have been returned has exceeded the pace of the last farm census, some farmers and ranchers have not sent in their reports. "The completeness and accuracy of this important agricultural census depend upon each individual filling out the report form received," said Orvin Whilhite, chief of the Bureau's Agriculture division. "I am sure that farmers and agricultural leaders want their county and state totals to be as accurate and useful as possible." The farm census is the only government or private method for gathering and reporting agriculture information on a county-by-county basis for the entire nation, Wilhite noted. Important decisions will be made by farmer organizations, marketing associations and co ops on the basis of information in the farm census, he said. Census figures also are widely used by many other organizations, both public and private, on which farmers depend for services, supplies, and equipment. Operators who neglect to fill out and return their reports. Wilhite said, are doing them selves and all other operators a disservice. They impair the accuracy of the statistics for their area and may even reduce their county's share of funds allocated for j^gsearch and other agricultural purposes, Wilhite said. A few landlords and other persons who did not operate farms in 1978 may have received report forms, and others may have received more than one form, each addressed differently. Wilhite explained this as follows: "Each report that the Bureau mailed was assigned its own census file number (CFN). We neeed a response for each CFN so that the record can be cleared Anyone who did not farm in 1978, for whatever reason, and anyone who recieved extra reports with different file numbers should note these facts on the forms and return them so that ad ditional followups can be avoided." The Bureau realizes that some farmers and ranchers need reassurance that their report is confidential. "By law," Wilhite said, "the report may be seen only by sworn census employees, and used only to tabulate totals for your county, state and the nation." from HISTORY'S SCRAPBOOK OATES AND EVENTS FROM YESTERYEARS June 7,1789 -- Famous frontiersman Daniel Boone starts his ex ploration of Kentucky. June 8,19S3 -- The U.S. Supreme Court rules that restaurants in the District of Columbia may not legally refuse to serve blacks. June 9,1948 - President Harry S. Truman describes the current 80th Congress as "the worst we have ever had." June 10, 1898 -- U.S. Marines begin the invasion of Cuba in the Spanish-American War. June 11, 1927 -- Charles A. Lindbergh is welcomed home after his historic flight across the Atlantic Ocean. June 12, 1963 -- Medgar W. Evers, a black Mississippi civil rights leader is murdered in front of his Jackson home. 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