McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 16 Jul 1976, p. 18

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Al.K h »l \t I i III DAY, JILY 16, 1976 tfuvfomti CHURCH SERVICES ®ijii % h % „ m w? t m:; ^ss^- idl* We're always encountering the heredity versus environment controversy . . . even uhen ue think about brothers. Is blood primarily responsible for the bond of comradery and affection pictured here'.' Or did the influence of parents and the atmosphere of their home largely inspire this relationship'.' History suggests the answer in man's religious growth: it was when he came to know God as his Father that he began to think of other men as his Brothers. The beliefs that draw families to church on Sunday inspire the dimensions of brotherhood every day. Mount Hope Church United Methodist 1015 W. Broadway Pistakee Highlands Rev. Len Schoenherr Sunday Worship 11a.m., Sun­ day School, 9:45a.m. Faith Presbyterian Church West of the Outdoor Theatre John O. Mclntyre, Pastor Corporate Worship and Church School: Pre-school-grade 6 9:30 A.M. Copyright 1976 Keister Advertising Service Inc Strasburg Virginia * Scriptures selected by The American Bible Society Saturday Matthew 13:1-9 Thursday Matthew 6:1-8 r Friday Luke 6:37-42 Wednesday Matthew '5:1-12 Monday Ephesians 5:21, 6:9 Tuesday James 2:1-17 Sunday Matt he* 25:31-46 First Baptist Church 509 \. Front St. 385-0083 Kev. Marshall F. Werry Bible Study-Sunday School 9:30a.m. Worship Service 10:45a.m. and 7:00 p.m. Training I'nion: 6:00 p.m. Interpretation for Deaf at all Services. Special Spanish Services. Wednesday, Prayer Service, 7:30 p.m. Wonder Lake Bible Church 7501 Howe Drive Wonder Lake, Illinois Rev. Richard N. Wright, Pastor Sunday: Sunday School, 9:30 A.MC Morning Worship Service, 11:00 A.M. Bible Fellowship Hour,6:00P.M Wednesday: Midweek Prayer and Praise Hour, 7:30 P.M. 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-10A.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 MASSFSrDfUly 8 a.m. Saturday J 7;30 p.m. Sunday - 7a.m., 9a.m., 11a.m. St. John the Baptist Catholic Church lohnsburg Rev. Leo Bartel, Pastor Rectory Phone 385-1477 C onvent Phone 385-5363 Sat., night -K: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 Sunday Masses-6:30,8,9:30 9:45,10:45,11,12 noon. Alliance Bible Church 3815 W. Bull Valley Rd. Rev. Gerald Robertson Sunday School-9:45 A.M. Service-ll:00 P.M. Service-7:00 Wed. Bible Study & Prayer 8:00 pjn. 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 I-ake, Illinois Sunday School Meeting 10:30AM Sunday •>acrament Meetings 5:00 PM Sunday cxcept on 1st Sunday of Month; then held at 11' 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 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 Land Sunday Service-10:30 a.m. Sunday School - 10:30 a.m. Wed. Fve., Meeting Every Third Wed.-8:00pm. 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. 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 Saturday Church-5:00pm School-5:45pm Sunday Church - 8:30 & 10:30 School - 9:15 & 11:15 Nursery Services Available St. Francis National Catholic Church Flanders Rd., east of Ringwood Rd. Sunday Masses - 10 a.m. Fafther A. Wodka - 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 Included On Cystic Fibrosis Ride Dr. Frank J. Duda will ride a bicycle at least 300 miles in July to fulfill a promise he made to a patient who knew she was dying. His ride will take him through McHenry. Miss Debbie Zagone. daughter of Joseph and Eva Zagone of 7245 Ibsen avenue, Chicago, died of cystic fibrosis May 11, 1976, at the age of 14. Dr. Duda. a pediatrician specializing in the treatment of cystic fibrosis and related pulpionary-respiratorv dis­ eases, said that during the last days of her life, he asked Debbie if he could do something in her name for other child 0 Let us help you get to know your new coWimunitv as quickly as possible. Our hpfctess will call on you and present you ith gifts, greetings and useful informa­ tion. m Call McHenry County Friends Meeting (Quaker) 1st & 3rd Sundays, 10:30 A.M. for information call: 385-3872 or 312-683-3840 McHenry Evangelical Free Church 1309 N. C ourt St. Sunday School - 9:45 A.M. Sunday Service - 11:00 A.M. Wednesday Evening - 7:30 P.M Rev. David Fogleboch 344-1111 or 728-0516 George R. Justen Funeral Home 3519 W. ELM STREET MCHENRY, ILL 385-2400 Glaviano's Interiors & Palatine Millwork 385-3764 o r 3*5-3765 414 S . ROCTE 31 J l ST NORTH OF McHENRY FLORAL First National Bank of McHenry 3814 W. ELM STREET McHENRY. ILL 385-5400 Brake Parts Co. P .O. BOX 11 Mf HENRY, ILL. 385-7000 Aee Hardware 3729 A . ELM STRF.F . I McHENRY. ILL 3S5 -0722 Tonyan Construction Co. 13H9 N . BORDEN STREET McE r N'R Y , ILL 385-5520 McHenry Savings & Loan 1209 N . GREEN STREET McHENRY. ILL 385-3000 Halm's Wonder Lake Funeral Home 7611 I IANC'X K DR. WONDER LAKi 1 -728-0233 The Bath Shop 3012 \\. R 1 E. 120 McHENRY, ILL 3*5-0048 McHenry State Bank 3510 A. I l.M s TREE'I McHENRY, ILL 385-1040 Peter M. Justen Funeral Home 3807 W. ELM STREET McHENRY. ILL. 385-0063 Guettler's Service, Inc. 818 N. FRONT STREET McHENRY. ILL 385-9831 Mitchell Sales, Inc. 151 IC K-OLDS-OPEL 903 N. 1 RONT ST.-McHENRY- 385-7200 The McHenry Plaindealer 3K12 WEST ELM STREET McHENRY, ILL 385-0170 Coast to Coast Hardware 4400 W. RTF. 120 McHENRY MARKET PLACE 3 Maty Ann Bellak 385-5705 Mamerite Kaiser 385-2710 j sufferers of CF and suggested the bicycle ride. Dr. Duda said: "Though she knew she .was going to die. Debbie wished that she could live on in some way. She smiled when I told her I would ride acrosS^ie state for CF and her. The lasrtfitng she said was. 'Take care of the chidlren.' The bicycle ride, backed by per-mile cash pledges from colleagues and staff at the four clinics wtrefe Dr. Duda is associated, and members of the Northern Illinois chapter of the Cystic Fibrosis foundation, is his way of fulfilling that pledge. The public ,is also invited to take part in pledging on a per mile basis by contacting the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation at 6 N. Michigan avenue, Chicago, II., 60602 or by calling CF at (312) 236-4491. Bicycling 50 miles a day, Dr. Duda vyill start at Children's Memorial hospital. Fullerton and Lincoln avenues. His route will take him up the North Shore to Zion, then west through McHenry, Harvard, and south Beloit to Rockford, then south to Oregon, Dixon-, Rock Falls back east through Mendota, Rochelle, DeKalb, Elgin, Barrington, Arlington Heights and Park Ridge, en­ ding in Lincolnwood. The ride will begin July 24, according to Steven L. Sch- wieger, local chapter president. Dr. Duda will bicycle approximately 50 miles a day. | 4-H NEWS I BETTER GOALS CIA B Sunday, July 18, the Better Goals 4-H club is sponsoring its eighth annual youth horse show to be held at the 4S Ranch, corner of Kishwaukee Valley road and Route 23. The-events will start at 8:30 a.m. rain or shine. An entry fee will be charged per class. These will include junior, age 13 and under; senior, age 14 through 19; twenty classes of horsemanship and games with a trophy prize, six ribbons in each class and a high point trophy to horse and rider combination. All are invited to come and have a fun day. Chicken or the Egg?. Scientists have settled the dispute over which came first, the chicken or the egg Reptiles were laying eggs thousands of years before chickens appeared, the National Geographic Society says, and the first chicken came from an egg laid by a bird that was not quite a chicken On July 4, 1776, at Phil­ adelphia, Jefferson s Dec­ laration of Independence, as amended after two days discussion by the Continen­ tal Congress, was adopted. President John Hancock and Charles Thomson, sec­ retary, signed the docu- ment which was to be print ed so that copies could be sent to state assemblies, conventions and military posts. TO: BUSINESSMEN, BUSINESSWOMEN, FARMERS and all voters in the 33rd District FROM: RON STR0UPE of Huntley RE: SURVIVAL OF YOUR COMPANY and your jobs State Rep. Thomas Hanahan and a group of budget- busting big spenders in Springfield are banta-upting our state and many of the small businesses in it. Tens of thousands of jobs and hundreds of companies have been lost in the past few years. The ruinous workmen's compensation insurance rate increase is only the latest example. Hanahan's plan to raise the corporate tax rate will be next, perhaps followed by a statewide "head tax." House Bill 1, sponsored by Hanahan, will legalize strikes and compulsory union membership for the 550,000 public employees in the state. And on and on. Doing business in Illinois has become a punishable offense. What can be done to reverse this deteriorating business climate in our state9 Only one thing. Send a loud and clear message to Springfield by defeating a leader of the anti-business legislators. That s why I'm running against Hanahan. I operate a 25-employee machine tool business in Elk •Grove. I am a village trustee of Huntley. My views of the issues have appeared regularly in the Letters to the Editor column. I'm a Jimmy Carter Democrat, a fiscal conservative. While I support responsible labor legislation and will never have a 100 per cent Chamber of Commerce voting record, I deplore what Hanahan and his crowd are doing. Posing as a friend of the working men and women of Illinois, Hanahan has been growing wealthy from their dues money at the same time he is driving away their jobs, your profits and perhaps your business or mine. On June 2, we finally became aware of just how much he is paid by the Chicago bosses of organized labor to be their "voice in Springfield." L.S. Clemens, Executive Editor of the Courier-News of Elgin broke the story, quoting from a May 30 article by Bob Weidrich, ace columnist of the Chicago Tribune: A VvfThar's gold in them voting booths ir By L. S. CLEMENS "Run, sheep, run." These words conclude a column by Bob Weidrich in Sunday's Chicago Tribune. The sheep he apparently had in mind are the voters of the 33rd District who keep returning Thomas Hanahan, D-McHenry, to the Illinois legislature. Weidrich was being kind. Something other thah "sheep" must have occurred to him to describe this blot by the people on the people for the people. Weidrich points out that Hanahan was paid $32,000 last year in salary and expenses to represent the taxpayers of his district-and $77,321 to represent the interest of labor unions. Hanahan carries out the second part of this task with en­ thusiasm: It's a rare piece of union-backed legislation that doesn't bear his name as a sponsor or co-sponsor. Weidrich breaks down the figures in finer pieces than any I have seen before. And it probably ought to be added that the totals were provided by Hanahan personally, due to the requirement of the federal Landrum-Griffin Act. In other words, they weren't dreamed up, or added carelessly by an anti- labor hatchet man for the Chicago Tribune. Here are the totals: • Legislator's salary, $12,000. Total $32,000. $20,000. Expenses, • Salary as organizer, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, $22,000. Ex­ penses, $7,336. Total $29,336. • Salary as organizer. Hotel, Restaurant Employees and Bartenders Union, $12,000. Allowances, $5,685. Total $17,685. • In addition this year, as in other years, Hanahan received $30,000 for campaign purposes, the profit from a $20 per person dinner held in Chicago-sponsored by Chicago labor bosses. That's a grand total of $109,321. The story of his several sources of income has been told many times. So has the story of his in­ dictment by a federal grand jury for an attempt to extort a paltry $5,000 from the auto rental industry. His story is a classic for anyone who wants to ponder these questions: What is corruption? Who are the guilty: His defense against extortion charge, for instance, has so far focused on his im­ munity privileges as a legislator rather than an attempt to prove his innocence. He has not been called upon for an accounting in his own party in McHenry county (where he is Democratic party chaiman), nor will he be. The party there is a parasitic growth with only one in­ terest - patronage jobs. Greed, not pride, is its trademark, and Hanahan fits into its mold (no pun intended) much more comfortably than does an Adlai Stevenson, Paul Douglas or Paul Simon. As for 33rd District Republicans, they illustrate beautifully the correctness of Edmund Burke's observation that all that is needed for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing. This isn't to say that all Republican voters are automatically "good," of course. But they do, under the cumulative voting system that gives each Illinois citizen three votes for legislators, have the means to retire him come election day in November by casting one of those votes for his opponent. I don't have much hope for that possibility, though. Voters in Kane and McHenry counties who could do this will probably figure they did their good citizenship bit for the year - by signing a petition to add three amendments to the Illinois Constitution. One of these, if approved, would forbid the kind of conflict of interest that Hanahan's job as a union organizer and actions as a legislator seem to represent. But don't bet on it. Hanahan has proved himself most adroit at circumventing the written law. That leaves his fate in the apathetic hands of 33rd District voters. He's got to like odds like that. Daily Courier-News, Elgin, III., Wednesday, June 2, 1976 Incredibiey, the above numbers are not complete. U.S. Department of Labor records show that Hanahan was also paid $14,000 last year by a third union, the Chicago Janitors, who list him as a "consultant." Personally, I.do not want my vote in Springfield cast by a person the Rockford Morning Star refers to as a "a loud, manipulating, self-serving legislator who has become a stooge for organized labor instead of a spokesman for his district." If you feel the same way, I ask for your word - of - mouth support and a contribution of up to $150, my self- imposed limit, to Citizens for Stroupe, at the address shown below. If you'd like to assist in other ways, let me know. Remember: "All that is needed for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing." I intend to do something. I hope you will help. <5? Poid for by Citizens for Stroupe. 122 Woodstock St., Huntley 60142, (312)669-5644. A copy of our report, filed with the State Board of flections, is available for purchase from the State Board of Elections, Springfield, 1L 62 704 ~SL

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