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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 13 Oct 1982, p. 15

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r The Church of St. Mary of the Assumption 1403 N. Richmond Rd. McHanry 3*5 0024 R«v. Jam** C. Gay nor, Pastor Rov. Jamos Novak, Asst. Prlost Rov. Waltor Johnson, M.M. Rov. Stanloy Ryznor Rov. C. Alfrod Diotsch Sat. Evo. Mass 5 PM Fulfills Sunday Obligation Sunday Massos 6:30,1:00 9:30,9:45,10:45 11:00 J2NQOH y |i--12MPQM m i McHenry Evangelical Free Church 3031 Lincoln Road 344-1111 Church Pastor Roy Wisnor 1 653 9675 Sunday Sorvic* 10:30 Sunday Evo Sorvk* 6:00PM Sunday School 9:15-10:15 "N$t. Francis Polish National Catholic Church Flanders Road East of Ringwood Road Sunday Masses - 11AM Pastor Fathe~ Joseph Brzok Maranatha Ass^ly of God Pastor Lawrence Thompson 1309 N. Court SI. * 344-0557 Sunday School Worship 10:45AM. 6:00PM Wonder Lake Bible Church Phone:728-0422 or 728-1687 7501 Howe Drive Wonder Lake. Illinois Merle D. Conklin.Pastor Sunday: Sunday School 9:30 AM Morning Worship Service 10:50 AM Prayor Hour-Wed. 7:30PM First United Methodist Churclf 3717 W. Main Street Church phone 385-0931 Thomas Lowery, Pastor [ Parsonage phone 385-1352 Sunday Service 9:30 a.m. Church School 10:45 a.m. Faith Presbyterian Church 2107 West Lincoln Rood (Across from outdoor Theater) Worship: 8:30 t 10:45 Children ft Adult Sunday School 9:30AM Bible Study-Weds. 9:30AM Pastor: Dr. Eric J. Snyder iPhone: 385-5388 or 385 8460 Nursery Services Available Home of The Joyful Noise Christian Preschool St. John the Baptist Catholic Church Johnsburg Rev. Leo Bartel, Pastor Rectory Phone: 385-1477 Sat. Eve. Moss 5:30 ft 8:00PM Fulfills Sun. Obligation Sun. Masses 7. 9. 10:30 ft 12 NOON Weekdays 7:30 ft 9 Sat 8 a.m. First Baptist Church 4918 E. Wonder LokeRd. Wonder Lake, Illinois Phone: 728-1091 Postor - Dennis Shaw Sunday Worship 11 AM Bible Study 10AM Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study 7PM Mount Hope United Methodist 1015 W. Broadway Pistakee Highlands Church phone:312-497 3805 Linda Misewicz- Perconte, Pastor Parsonage (312)497-3024 Sunday School: 9:15 a.m. Sunday Worship 10:30 a.m. Church Of God Wonder Lake. Illinois 4010 WestWood Drive Wnnrtor Lake 815 653 9980 Janie A. Long. Pastor Morning Worship Service 11:00 a.m. Evening Prayer Service 5:30 p.m. Sunday School 10:00 a.m. The Evangelical Lutheran Church of All Saints 312-587-7727 (Office) 312-497-4527 (Pastor s Office) Rev. J. W. Hughes. Ill Sunday Schedule: Worship Services 8:15AM and 10:30AM Sunday School 9:15AM St. Paul's Episcopal Church 385-0390 3706 W.St. Paul's ft Green Rev. Wm. H. Morley. vicor Sunday Services 8:00AM Holy Eucharist tiOO a.m. Christian Education 10:00 a.m. Family iwcharitt Nursery provided Wed. 9:30AM Holy Eucharist Holy Days as announced Alliance Bible Church 3815 W. Bull Volley Rd. Rev. Gerald Robertson Pre-Service Prayer 8: ISAM First Worship Service 8:30AM Sunday School 9:45AM Second Worship Service 11:00AM Choir Practice 6:00PM Evening Service 7:00PM Wednesday Bible Study ft Proyor 7:30PM Christian Science Society Lincoln Rd. and Eastwood Lane Sunday Service ft Sunday School 10:30 Wed. 8 p.m. Reading Room Tues. ft Thurs. 2-4 Saturday 11-12 Noon Chain O'Lakes Evangelical Covenant Church 4815 N. Wilmot Road Rov. Mitchell Consldine Worship Service 11:00 a.m. Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Church phone 497-3000 Parsonage 497-3050 Ringwood Methodist Church Ringwood, Illinois Postor Gordon Smith Res. 648 2848 Church 653-6956 Sunday 9:15 a.m. Church School at 9:45 a.m. McHenry County Ufewfc] Meeting (Quaker) Jstft3rd Suftdcy. lt:0Co r.< For information coll. 385-8512 or 312-683 3840 Christ the King Catholic Church 5006 E. Wonder Lake Road. Wonder Lake. Illinois • S,Mn Mosses: 8^a,.^.^pd| Noon . _ Sat. Evening Mass fe:D0 Fulfills Sunday Obligation' Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church (Missouri Synod) 4206 W. Waukogon Rd. (. Rto. 120) Rev. Hermann F. Graef 385-0859 385-1616 Sundoy Worship 7:45 ft 10:30 Nursery Services provided at 10:30 Education for Eternity Sunday School Children and Youth 9:00 a.m. Nativity Lutheran Church 3506 E. Wonder Lake Rd. Box 157 Phone 653-3832 Wonder Lake, Illinois % Sunday Worship 8:00 a.m »•* ft 10:30 a.m. Sunday School 9:00 a.m. (Nursery FcKilities Available) United Pentecostal Church 258 Sunnyside Lokemoor Rev. Nolan Hilderbrand 312-279-6289 Sunday 9:45 a.m. ft 6:30 p.m. Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Bible Study Friday 7:30 p.m. Youth Service First Baptist Church 509 Front St. 385-0083 Bible Study-Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Worship Service 10:45 a.m and 7:00 p.m. Wednesday Prayer Service 7:00 p.m. St. Patricks Catholic Church Rev. Edmund Petit. Pastor Sot. Eve (Sunday obligation fulfilled) 5 p.m. Sunday: 7:15.8:30,9:45. 11 ft 12:15 Church o( Christ 1304 N. Park St. McHenry, II, Worship 9:00 a.m. Bible Class 10:00 .am. Phone:815-344-0547 or 815-385-8667 Church of God of McHenry (Pentecostal) 3813 John St.. McHenry. II. Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.! Sunday Evening 6:00 p.m. John East. Pastor Phone 385-1304, 344 3950 Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church 404 N. Green St. Rev. Roger W. Schneider Phone 385-7786 or 385-4030l Sunday Church 8:30 ft 10:4S| Sunday School 9:15 Nursery Services Available! - George R. Justen Funeral Home 3519W.ELM STREET I McHENRY 385-2400 Glaviano's Interiors 414 S. ROUTE 31 McHENRY 385-3764 Brake Pails Co. P.O. BOX 11 McHENRY 385-7000 Ace Hardware 3729 W. ELM STREET McHENRY 385-0722 McHenry Track Line, Inc P.O. BOX 575 McHiNRY,IL. 385-0712 Freund Funeral Home 7611 HANCOCK DRIVE WONDER LAKE 1-728-0233 McHenry Savings ft Loan 1209 N.GREEN STREET McHENRY 305-3000 First National Bank 3814W.RTE. 120 McHENRY.IL. 385-5400 McHenry Plaindealer 3812 W. ELM STREET McHENRY 385-0170 McHenry State Bank 3510W.ELM STREET McHENRY 3ftS-H Peter M. lusten Funeral Home 3807W.ELM STREET McHENRY 385-0063 This space available to advertisers for pennies an issue. McHenry Paint Glass ft Wallpaper 3411W.ELMStREES McHENRY 385-7363 J Mitchell Sales. Inc. BUICK - OLDS 903 N. FRONT STREET McHENRY 385 7200 Coast to Coast Hardware 4400 W. RTE. 120 McHENRY MARKET PLACE 385-6655 PAGE 15 - PLAINDEALER - WEDNESDAY. 0CT0BER13,1982 CcJoin Us InMnshlpJ N IN THE CHURCH OF-- ' YOUR CHOICE g Hold Fall Color Tour Report From Washington hundred degrees. As a matter of fact, the only time there's absolutely no heat in the air is when it's Absolute Zero. And that's 460° below Of Fahrenheit. Since people can't feel all that heat, most of them let it go to waste. Let it blow away with the wind. And that's a crime. You see, there's a machine that can capture it..That can pull heat out of the air and bring it inside. The Electric Heat Pump. Night and day, rain or shine, all year 'round, it just gives what the sun's already put there. All for the price of a little electricity to run on. Which, of course, is very nice, considering the cost of natural gas has gone up 48 percent faster than electricity since 1967. And oil has gone up 90 percent faster. And even that could look like small potatoes when natural gas gets deregulated or OPEC turns the screws a few more times. In other words, the Electric Commonwealth Edison Doilt take tomorrow fcr granted A full day of touring the con­ servation sites and county roads of McHenry county is offered by the McHenry County Conservation district Saturday, Oct. 16. The coach bus will leave at 8:30 a.m. from Glacial park, north of Ringwood, and will make brief stops fit Harrison Benwell, Indian Ridge aft&Hickory Grove conservation sites before a lunch stop at the new shelter at Marengo Ridge. Participants should bring their own picnic lunches. Short stops after lunch at the sugar maple forest of Coral Woods and the tall grass Queen Anne Prairie will round out this 8:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. trek. The stops are selected to present both a variety of fall colors and a sampling of MCCD sites, and short distance walks of one-half to three- fourths mile will be optional at each stop. MCCD land manager, Don Schellhaass, will conduct the tour which is available for up to 45 people. To reserve a space and more in­ formation on cost contact John Shiel, McHenry County Conservation district, phone 815-678-4431. Federal Government Ally In Farm Land Protection Burden Shaw Media News Servicef Farm land has gained a strong advocate: the federal government, according to a recent article co- authored by Steve Aradas, director of the McHenry County Planning department. ^ The article on farm land protection is published by the planning advisory service of the American Planning association. The publication explains a tested pilot program in which Aradps played a major role. As part of the new federal farm land protection program, the U.S. Soil Conservation Service, in cooperation with states and local communities, has developed a system called Agricultural Land Evaluation and Site Assessment. Local governments can use this svstem to determine which lands should be preserved for agriculture. McHenry county was one of two Illinois counties invited to participate with 10 other counties from six states in the federal computer program to evaluate land, its capability, productivity and soil potential to determine the factors of "important farm land." Aradas and four land planner and conservation colleagues have worked jointly on the article, which is based on the LESA project. The maior farm land protection factor is "knowing what to protect," and the experts have put together guidelines that work, according to the soil conservation service. LESA guides planners and {overnments through several important factors required on lecision-making issues involving ration and conversion of farm Aradas is an advocate for preserving agricultural land, and in the five years he's been in McHenry county he has striven to form a land use plan that works. "There is nothing mysterious about preserving farm land, says Aradas. We've got to eat and farm land feeds us. I think it's a simple thing to understand." By preserving agricultural land, Aradas feels the growth of the area will not be stunted. "There has to be growth, but we need planned growth," he says. "Based on the county's land use plan, we envision growth taking place around existing communities." Word of McHenry county's land use and zoning plans, which have been upheld on local court and higher court levels, has reached preservation agencies and planners throughout the United States. Aradas has been asked to make presentations on agricultural land preservation in several areas of the country. Awards Made To Theatre Company The Woodstock Musical Theatre Co:, which has members from the McHerify community, placed third among six groups competing in the first annual Northern Illinois Com­ munity Theatre contest this past week. They won four of eleven categories. An award was won by the county theatre company for costumes, Nancy Potter and Anna Maurer; set design, William Nix; best supporting actor, Pat Smollen; and best actress, Nancy Potter. The competition was held at Marriott's Lincolnshire theatre. 2ND DINNER-SEMINAR Reservations are now being taken for the second monthly dinner- seminar of the Fox Valley Chapter of the National Association of Women on Thursday, Oct. 21, with registration between 5:15 and 6:45 p.m., at the Cattlemen's restaurant in Algonquin. Jackie Mansholt, McHenry, con­ sultation and education coordinator for Family Service and Community Mental Health of McHenry County, will lead a seminar on "Knowing Yourself and Communicating With Others". To attend the Oct. 21 meeting, phone Barbara Grimm at 455-5406, no later than Oct. 19. Tractors were first used during the 1870s and were then called "traction engines." By U.S. Rep. Lynn Martin Lowering interest rates, thus boosting the economy, is the only real answer to providing jobs. Stable long-term jobs will only come as a result of an aggressive economy. There is, however, an immediate need for jobs and paychecks for those areas of this nation that are being hit the hardest by the recession. I attempted to provide part of the answer by offering a jobs bill in Congress. This bill is intended to help the truly unemployed while not dipping into the ' budget and increasing the deficit. The idea is fairly simple. To fund the jobs program, $1.5 billion would have been taken from the $14 billion in unspent funds in the Synfuels program. The SynfUels program was set up in 1980 during the peak of the energy crisis and was intended to promote alternative energy sources. The $14 billion left in the program is a result of changes in the world energy situation and much of this money will go unspent. No new money would be used for this jobs program. This money would then be allocated only to areas of severely high unemployment for public service jobs. Jobs like road, street, and bridge repair, con­ servation efforts, and flood control assistance, To be eligible for these jobs, a person must have been unemployed for at least six months or have exhausted all unem­ ployment benefits. In this way we can use available money for those who have been hardest hit by the recession. In addition the funds would be targeted. Only areas in which the ' local unemployment rate has exceeded the national unemployment level foi the previous three months can qualify for funds. This bi.l'i would create over 400,000 jobs. The jobs would be allocated in the following mar. ner: ?<0 percent of the jobs would go to persons r e c e i v i n g u n e m ­ ployment benefits, 25 percent of the jobs would go to persons r e c e i v i n g A F D C benefits, 25 percent would be offered to those who are unem­ ployed who are not r e c e i v i n g u n e m ­ ployment benefits but cannot qualify for AFDC. In this manner those who live in areas that are experiencing l o n g - t e r m u n e m ­ ployment will be the first to be offered jobs. Also, the actual cost of the program will be much less than the $1.5 billion because 75 percent of those getting jobs would have been receiving benefits from the federal government already. "Workfare" is really a better term when talking about this jobs bill. Although most workers would be paid the minimum wage, t h o s e c u r r e n t l y r e c e i v i n g u n e m ­ ployment benefits or AFDC benefits will be paid at the rate of their current benefit level if that is highter than the minimum wage. This provision makes sure it would not be more advantageous to remain on benefits. This bill is not a panacea and certainly not the answer for long- term employment. But it is an attempt to ad­ dress the personal d e v a s t a t i o n a n d economic despair that pervade areas of high unemployment. I am sad to tell you that my jobs bill did not pass when it was brought up recently in Congress. In its place a Democratic backed proposal was endorsed. This proposal came no where near addressing the problems of areas in the country that really need the most help. Unfortunately Congress can get very parochial, especially in an election year. It takes one second for the wings of a small hummingbird to beat 70 times. Erf'? .if b Quote Book The world has ̂ arrow­ ed into a neighborhood before ffhas broadened into a brotherhood. Lyndon B. Johnson Imagine a midwinter night. A nasty, cold night. Now, if that prompts you to ask why we're showing you a man in a rumpled suit who looks like he's someplace in the Sahara where it's a hundred in the shade, the answer's simple. Because even on a nasty, cold night in northern Illinois, so nasty it's zero outside, there's still a whole lot of heat fiom the sun in the air. Eighty-two percent of the heat that's there when it's one Heat Pump is flat out the most energy-efficient heating system money can buy today or tomorrow. So efficient it gives you more energy (heat) than the energy (electricity) it needs to run on. While it keeps you feeling so nice and warm, you'll probably think you're in another part of the world. With a conservation dream like that, and the sun up in the sky, tomorrow can definitely be a lot easier to take. CHRIST THE KING CATHOLIC CHURCH 500t€. WONDER LAKE ROAD WONDER LAKE, ILL. i

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