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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 3 Jul 1975, p. 16

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PAGE 16 - PLAINPEA1 F" THWSniV, .HJLY 3, >875 go* fa**, e/̂ CHORCfl SERVICES 1M>m to ~&?9'lyr iec4T0'n- °r , fy°uZrs f<'"naf0; ^ rr , rnanHrS^ PriviU Us! make th ents wo ,9ed to reu/ . youv!^ POs,"°u'« Von the °nWcf/0 c°nirr,it fl )) Scriptures selected by The American Bible Society fIt •'!'!f;j-." Ji ;,i\' Copyright 1975 Keister Advertising Service, Inc.. Strasburg, Virginia Mount Hope Church ,• United Methodist 1015 W. Broadway Pistakee Highlands -- Rev. Len Schoenherr,4 Sunday Worship 11 a.m.. Sun­ day School. 9:45 a.m. Faith Presbyterian Church West of the Outdoor Theatre John C). Mclntyre, Pastor Corporate Worship - 9:30 a.m. No Church School Pre-School - 9:30 a.m. First Baptist Church 509N. Front St. 385-0083 George MpGown Pulpit Supply Bible Study - Sunday School 9:30a.m. Worship Service 10:45 a.m. and7:00p.m. Training Union; 6:00p.m Interpretation tor De;-! at all Services. Special Spanish Services. Wednesday. Prayer Service. 7:30 p.m. St Paul's Episcopal Clurch 3706 W. St. Paul's & Green Kev. Arthur D. McKay. Vicar 385-7690 Sunday Services Holy Eucharist - 8 a.m., Family Eucharist, 10 a.m. Church School & Coffee 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 11:00 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. Sunday Psalms 19:25-29 Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Lamentations Psalms Proverbs* Luke Matthew Jeremiah 3:19-24 23:1-6 27:10-12 10:8-12 24:34-39 28:12-14 First United Methodist Church 3717 West Main Street Church phone 385-0931 Ralph Smith, Pastor Parsonage Phone: 385-1352 Worship: 8 a.m. and 9:30 a.m. ( June, July, August) No Sunday School, June, July, August. Church of God (Greenleaf Ave at Fairfield Dr Island Lake School Iservices: Sunday School-lOA.M Church Service -11 a.m. Evangelistic Service - 7 p.m Telephone: 312-526-8056 St. Peter's ^ Catholic Church Spring Grove. Illinois Rev. Kilduff. Pastor Phone 815-675-2288 MASSES: Daily 8a m Saturday - 7:30p.m. Sunday - 7 a.m.. 9 a.m., 11 am Nativity Lutheran Church 3506 E. Wonder Lake Rd. Box 157 Phone 653-3832 Wonder Lake, Illinois Sun , Worship8and 10:30a.m. ' Sunday School -9a.m. (Nursery Facilities Available) St Mary's Catholic Church Rev. Eugene Baumhofer Sat., Eve., Mass -5 p.m. Fulfills Sun., obligation. Sunday Masses - 6:30, 8,9:30 9:45,10:45, 11,12 noon. Alliance Bible Church 3815 W.John St. Rev. Gerald Robertson Sunday School -9:45 A.M Service -11:00 P.M. Service - 7:00 Wed. Bible Study & Prayer 8:00 p.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 Church Of Jesus Christ Of Latter-Day Saints James Hufford Branch President Phone: 459-3889 Meetings at Praire Grove School 8617 Ridgefield Road (Route 176) Crystal Lake, Illinois Sunday School Meeting 10:30 AM 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: 8 p.m. Fulfills Sunday Obligation. St. Patrick's Catholic Church Rev. Edmund 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 \Y, Schneider Phone 385-7786 or 385-4030 Family worship and Sunday -School---.8:30 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Nursery facilities available, Ringwood Methodist Church Ringwood, Illinois Rev. Ruth Wegner Res. 648-2848 ~ Church 653-6956 Sunday-9:30 a.m. Church Scr vice. Church School at 10:30 AM St Francis National Catholic Church Flanders Rd., east of Ringwood Rd. Sunday Masses- 10 a.m. Father Dobranski - Pastor Chain 0'Lakes Evangefical - Covenant Church 4815 N. Wilmot Rd. Rev. Mitchell Considine Sunday School 9:00 a.m. Worship Service 10:00 a.m. Church Phone - 497-3000 Parsonage -497-3050 Christian Science Society Lincoln Road and Eastwood Lane Sunday Service -10:30 a.m. Sunday School - 10:30a.m. Wed. Eve., Meetin&Every Third Wed. - 8:00 pm. McHenry County Friends Meeting (Quaker) , 1st & 3rd Sundays, 10:30 A.M. for information call: 385-3872 or 312-683-3840 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 120) Rev. Herman 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 AM Morning Worship - 11:00 AM Wed. Eve. Prayer & Bible Study 7:30 PM ll - *1 i ***» \ « -. v* ft % %/* i V,. d % m # • •< # • 1 * • *« « V# * § IMP ft < » « ft ftltf « » « ft lift * ft * >1<& ft % _____ \ v « y p * -i m rn I'm * * ft « | » |*P ili« » • *. A t • ## » / , • • t • PLAN CARE FOR RETARDED - New officers of the McHenry County Association for the Retarded have assumed leadership. One immediate concern is to develop a way to care for those waiting to become part of a twenty-four-hour-a-day living facility. From left are John Maselter, vice- president; Dixie Meyer, president, and Wanda Pears, secretary. (DON PEASLEY PHOTOGRAPHY! Corner your imagination with these smart ideas George R. Justen Funeral Home 3519 W. ELM STREET MclIENRY, 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 MclIENRY FLORAL McHenry Savings & Loan 1209 N. GREEN STREET McHENRY. ILL. 385-3000 Guettler's Service, .Inc. 818 N. FRONT STREET McHENRY. ILL. 385-9831 Brake Parts Co. P.O. BOX 11 MclIENRY, ILL. 385-7000 Attend Of Voi| Thisi \ Church r Choice Sunday. 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 \Y. RTE. 11<) McHENRY. ILL. 385-0048 The McHenry Plaindealer 3812 WEST ELM STREET McHENRY. ILL. 385-0170 • Tonyan Construction Co. 1309 X. BORDEN SfREET ' McHENRY. ILL. 385-5520 McHenry State Bank 3510 \\\ ELM STREET^ McHENRY, ILL. 385-10-tf) Coast to Coa,st . Hardware 4400 \\, RTE. 120 4cHENRY MARKET PLACE 385-6655 M l CORNERS NEEDN'T GO TO WASTE. This one was turned into an eye-catcher with minimal carpentry and dramatic color. Plywood boards turned space around the window into a storage area and window seat. Bold colors picked up from the Egetaepper all-wool rya rug, "Lofoten," set the scheme for walls, seat cushion and cube in gold, contrasted with the tomato red that runs in a stripe up the wall and is picked up Twice Told Tales j FIFTY YEARS AGO (Taken from the files of July 2, 1925) United States Senator William B. McKinley, on a tour of McHenry county, stopped off a short time in this city Monday afternoon. Mrs. Roy Norton, mother of nine children, passed away at the Cottage hospital, Harvard, Tuesday evening, as the result of burns sustained in a fire which destroyed the family home at Spring Grove. The Dr. Wells property consisting of a lot, a large two story house and private garage, located on the corner of Green and Elm street, passed from the local physician's ownership to that of Tom Dattolo of Arlington Heights and Charles and John Unti of this city. in accessories. Once you've placed your major pieces of furniture, what do you do with the left-over spaces to make them work for you? Most of us find it almost im­ possible to visualize how to make effective use of the odd spaces such as corners, a technique that professional interior de- ROWERS SORROW PETALS & STEMS 3301 W. Elm St 385-4747 DO IT Yourself signers seem so adept at handling. One1 of the devices for making these blank spots more functional is turn­ ing them into areas for specific activities. For ex­ ample, designer Peggy Walker took an unused, and seemingly unusable, corner in a family room and turned it into an area for quiet reading or listen­ ing to music. It was done with several simple and inexpensive tricks: some minimal car­ pentry and a rug to define the area and establish a dramatic color scheme. An uncomplicated plywood construction that could easily be a do-it-ypurself project frames theWindow to form a window seat and a storage area. Dimen­ sions were adjusted to fit perfectly around an inex­ pensive chest of drawers, eliminating fancy and dif­ ficult cabinetry but pro­ viding the necessary stow­ away space for records and other miscellany. A vividly colored Dan­ ish rya rug instantly es­ tablished the perimeters of a special area. Its flow­ ing abstract design in golds and reds formed the basis for the rest of the color scheme. The walls, seat cushion and the extra cube for seating or eating were painted in the same warm gold hue. A clear tomato red tone, picked up from the design, runs in a stripe up the wall to cre­ ate a sharp and exciting contrast. The same red was echoed in other ac­ cessories as well, to tie the scheme together. The long shaggy pile of "Lofoten," an all-wool rug from the Ege Rya De Luxe collection by Ege­ taepper, creates a warm and comfortable environ­ ment for the corner whether it is used for quiet reading or a teen-aged rock and rap session. Although this area rug was laid directly on the floor, the same decorating approach can be used even in a room with broadloom simply by putting a rug over it, where desired, to create a visual focal point. The term "rya," by the way,0comes from the an­ cient Norse word for "rough" and its origin is the Viking tradition of weaving long yarns into blankets and wall hang­ ings, as well as rugs. Today's sophisticated and refined versions of the rya are a natural, whether used on the floor or wall, to set the foundation of today's more personal dec­ orating themes. Mrs. Agnes Weingart, a long time resident of this com­ munity, passed away at Volo June 2 at the age of 79. Mrs. "Weingart was the mother of fifteen children. U. McHenry baseball team on Sunday went down to Elgin and played an Elgin team winning ^ by a score of 11 to 7. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hughes and children, Frances and Raymond, and Miss Minnie Ferwerda spent the weekend at Phanton Lake at Muskegon, Wis Mrs. Margaret McCarthy and Mrs. Anton Schneider attended a Forester convention at Quincy, Ill.*> going as delegates from the two local courts, St. Mary's and St. ^ Patrick's. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Warrington and daughters have vacated the flat in the - former J.W. Bonslett building on Elm street are now making their home in the Mrs. Lizzie Holly house opposite Justen's hotel. FORTY YEARS AGO (Taken from the files of July 4, 1935) Burglars broke into the "Pit tavern reported on Route 20, east of McHenry early Sunday morning and took $165 in cash. The Carey Electric Co. has installed the largest and finest radio testing equipment in Northern Illinois. Also a complete line of parts and tubes. June 28 a pretty wedding was solemnized at the Wauconda Federated church when Miss Henrietta Doris Dahms of Wauconda was united in marriage to Mr. Harold Donald Vycital of McHenry with Rev. John Figley officiating. A Goodyear blimp flew over McHenry this morning on a pre-fourth of July air cruise. The blimp was probably from Palwaukee airport where the Goodyear company maintains two of these ships. The federal aid project road, Section 362A-Route 20 being made from the highway, Route 20 to the Johnsburg bridge, will be opened to the fourth of July traffic. The road is of stabilized gravel calcium chloride, applied to the top makes a hard surface. This is the first road of its kind in the north.. An attempt was made to burn the Mike Winkle barbecue stand at Lily Lake Sunday morning. A sack filled with hay was tossed out of a passing car, the sack being ablaze which landed alongside of the bar­ becue stand. Mr. and Mrs. C.H. Duker and family have purchased the F.E. Cobb house and will soon move from the Merriman house which they have lived in for thirteen years. WITH STeaMex RENTAL (CARPET CLEANER Get professional results for far less than professional costs Hourly Daily Weekend Rates GEM DRIVE-IN CLEANERS McHenry's Finest Fabric Care Specialists 3004 W. Route McHenry, III 385-2231 120 A£lv IN Let us help you get to know your new community as quickly as possible. Our hostess will call on you and present you with gifts, greetings and useful informa­ tion. M N T E K M A T I O N Call Maiy Ann Bellak 385-5705 Mamerite Kaiser 385-2710 TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (Taken from the files of July 13, 1950) William Kinsala, now at­ tending Woodbury college, LosAngeles, has been awarded the silver pin of the Phi Gamma Kappa honor scholarship fraternity. He is majoring in executive interior decorating. A graduate of McHenry Community high school and Marinello School of Cosmetology, Kinsala served \ with the U.S. Army during World War II. Rev. J. Elliott Corbett, new minister at the Community Methodist church, and Mrs. Corbett were guests of honor at a reception held at the Norman Eggert home on Waukegan street. $122.60 was raised on Doughnut Day in this com­ munity. Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Lasch of Riverside drive ac- * companied by their grand­ daughters, Dana and Christie White of Cleveland, . Ohio , attended the races at Arlington. The trip served as part of a birthday celebration for Miss Christie, 9 years old, on July 9, a racing enthusiast. The girls are spending the summer with their grandparents. The Shamrocks met the Algonquin Simplex nine here last Sunday in what was billed as the battle of the day. The teams were tied for first place in the county league. McHenry won over Algonquin, 12-2. Word has been received here that Richard Von Bampus, former resident of Shore Hills, has been commissioned as captain in the reserves. PUBLIC NOTICE Notice of Proposed Change in Gas Schedule NORTHERN ILLINOIS GAS COM­ PANY hereby gives notice to the public that it has filed with the Illinois Commerce Commission on June 16, 1976, a proposed change in its schedule for gas service. The only change is that the Company has remove<f 4.1* per therm from the Purchased Gas Ad­ justment (PGA) and added the exact same amount to the basic rates. Thus there is no change in your total bill. Further information with respect thereto may be obtained either directly from this Company or by addressing the Secretary of the Illinois Commerce Commission at Springfield, Illinois, 62706. f ' A copy of the proposed change in sched­ ule may be inspected by any interested party at any business office of this Company. NORTHERN ILLINOIS OAS COMPANY By: ~ J.M.Quigley Financial Vice President and Secretary (Pub. June 25. July 3, 1975 ) /

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