mnirirmliiiiii imij KID'S KLOSET RESALE SHOPPE jkk a* ft AM.il * * M jfr Mj; f t«HfE YOU FOLLOWED >: : THE STAR OF BETHLEHEM t AS WISE MEN DID LONG AGO? !: : ON DECEMBER 18th, THE STAR WILL APPEAR IN THE RICHMOND AREA. I WISE MEN STILL SEEK 1ESUS. • Lingerie by Glydons, size medium. • Big Top blouses by Yalclco and Lady Lewis, size 38. • Caftans by Maria K, size 10. • Sleepwear closeouts, by John Kless. • The styles are individual.. ...one of a kind. • The prices are 40% less than manufacturers! suggested retail prices. •v7* / # 5 BED PILLOWS STANDARD SIZES . MO. *S.191ACM */l 1402N. RIVERSIDE DR. McHenry, Illinois If Christmas Hours:' I :' Mon.-Fri. 9-9, Sat 9-6, Sun. 9-5 jMcHenry Highlights! PAGE 3 ^_PLAINDEALER • FRIDAY. DECEMBER II, lW "MEANWHILE BACK AT THE COURTHOUSE" LOUISA'S %LETTER This December 17 will be the seventeenth year that the McHenry County Audubon society has participated in the nationwide annual bird count. Starting in 1900, as an alternate for snipe hunting, twenty observers began recording the species sighted in one day. In 1975 there were 2,800 observers throughout the U.S., including Alaska and Hawaii and over 124 million individual birds were recorded. In McHenry county, eight teams of Audubon members and concerned persons will be out, if the weather cooperates, from dawn to dusk; some especially energetic people will start earlier and end later, in the hope of calling or see ing owls. These teams will be covering many of the roads and well known birding sites jn McHenry county. As in the past four years, Dave Frey will again be organizing and compiling the results of this census. Frey welcomes non-members to Join the day's activity. Being an expert at bird identification is not a strong necessity, as each group is led by a member who is expertise and can share observational abilities. Anyone who might want to participate either at home by watching his own bird feeder or joining with one of the teams, should call David Frey, 656 Margaret, Woodstock, for information. A trip to Northwestern university Technological in stitute was the highlight of a recent Science club field trip. Students toured the facilities and watched demonstrations given by the university's professors. Students along with Ron Glawe, the club's advisor, attended lectures on neutron stars, solar energy, radiation, and the different properties of gases. Activities Offered Science club, which has been an active organization for many years at McHenry high school, serves to promote student interest in science. It is also a means to promoting career education in the science area. The number of club ac tivities varies. Each year, besides taking several field trips, the club also hosts an annual science fair. As a member of the Illinois Junior Academy of Science, winners participate in the regional contest in DeKalb and advance to state science fair from there. /. In the , past two years McHenry has been well represented at state. Inthe last two years as many as five students from McHenry ad vanced to state. Among those were Brian O'Neill, Scott Crittenden, Tim True, Evelyn Olmen and Mike Giddings. Earth day is another special project of Science club. Students promote the recognition of this day through various displays and projects. Science club scholarships are awarded each year at^ graduation to a senior Science' club member. These awards are given to a student who is planning to continue their education in a scientific area. Past recepients have been successful in their future en deavors. Science club members are pursuing higher education in the areas of forensic chemistry, environmental educa t ion , chemis t ry , medicine, biology and nursing. The opportunities afforded students through participation in Science club are many. Students with a keen interest in science and who wish to pursue it as a life-long interest or career are well served by the activities Science club offers. Moving Farming's Mountains It requires the moving: of mountains of sorts to keep supermarket shelves and other food sources filled. Consider only the begin ning of the food cycle, the farm, which now rivals con struction or warehousing in amounts of materials han dled. As an example, there's the ^airyman. A modern, effi- lt family dairy farm now can produce some one mil lion pounds of milk a year. But to produce that amount of milk, the family dairy farm operation might han dle something like 3,000 tons of materials, like feed, seed, fertilizer, animal bedding and wastes. Is it any wonder that mechanization has moved from farm fields to areas in and around barns and other central buildings to handle such large amounts of mate rials. The modern workhorse on the typical family farm is becoming the skid-steer loader, which handles the GET PROFESSIONAL carpet cleaning results! (At do-it-yourself prices) RENT OUR RINSE N VAC-the new portable, ewy-hnise hot water extraction carpet cleaning machine that GENTLY... Times carpet fibers with hot witer and cleaning solution. •loosens and lifts all dirt, grime and residues to the carpet surface where :m they are immediately vacuumed up •leeves your carpets , CLEAN, FRESH and 0D0R-FREE! . inputs and byproducts of agricultural operations, which start the basic forms of food and fibre on their way from fields-to families. / And that's only the initial 'mountain" moved in the continuing farmer-to-con sumer relationship. McHENRY HOSPITAL NAMED FOR GRAND FATHER Troy Robert Blake was named for his grandfather Robert Hansen after his birth Tuesday, Dec, 6» at 4:28 a.m. at McHenry hospital. He is the first child for Wayne and Peggy Blake of McHenry. He weighed a hefty 10 lbs. 2 oz. and had light brown hair and blue eyes when his parents first saw him. Delighted grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hansen and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Blake, all of McHenry. He has a wealth of great grandparents. On the paternal side are Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Blake of McHenry and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Harris of Crystal Lake. Maternal great grandparents include Mrs. Mary Hess of McHenry and Mr. and Mrs. Herman Schniedwind of Arkansas. WEDNESDAY'S CHILD As of 9:35 p.m., Wednesday, Dec. 7, Jody and Carri Turner, 10 and 2 years old respectively, had a new baby brother, Kirk Wallace Turner. The son of Jerry and Wendy Turner of 1207 Quincy, McHenry, tipped the scales at a healthy 9 lbs. 8 oz., was of fair coloring and had blue eyes when he arrived at McHenry hospital. Proud grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Waltace.Ri»v McHenry, after whom the baby was named, and Mr, and Mrs. Jack Tusek of Chicago. His great grandmother is Mrs. Betty Hudgins of S. Wilmington, 111. MKMOKIAL HOSPITAL WOODSTOCK A daughter bom Tuesday, Dec. 13, is welcomed into the home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Burns of Wonder l^ake. NEW GRANDPARENTS Mr. and Mrs. William Herrmann of McHenry are the happy first-time grandparents of a 9 lb. V* oz. baby boy. Scott Douglas, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Doug Neidigh of Elnora, Ind., was born aV Good Samaritan hospital, Vincennes, Ind., Monday, Dec. 12, it 6:04 p.m. He stretched the ruler to 24 inches. Paternal grand parents are Mr. and Mrs. Junior Neidigh of Sandborn, Ind. with Mr. and Mrs. William Herrmann of Crystal Lake as great grandparents. The baby's mother is the former Peggy Herrmann. V . Men were born to lie, and women to believe them. •John Gay. PUNCH LINE MXJ'RE $O HANO$OM£ I Shamefully, money] is the most universal measure. On Nov. 30, Judge James H. Cooney, in Circuit court, sentenced Gregory Pickrum, 4419 E. Wonder Lake road, Wonder Lake, to two years' probation on a conviction for burglary. He was also fined $500 and and costs of 170. The - court ordered Pickrum to serve the balance of a fifteen-day jail sentence, with credit for time served, on a periodical basis on certain days of the week when he was not at work. Pickrum was further ordered to make restitution to the Montgomery Ward store at Crystal Lake for damages and losses from the theft. Pickrum had been charged in connection with an entry to the store building June 4, 1977, through a receiving dock hatch. On Nov. 29, Judge Charles S. Parker, placed Roy J. Thompson, 3003 Maryville, McHenry, on one-year probation under Section 10 of the Cannabis Control act for a violation of the act. 'He was assessed court costs, but no judgment was entered against the defendant. \ On Dec. 5, Judge Parker sentenced HowardL.Freefnan, 8904 Woody trail, Wonder Lake, to two years' probation in a v modification of an earlier sentence which dated the probation from July 8,1977. He had been convicted for burglary. Freeman was also assessed court costs. Freeman had been arrested and charged in connection with the entry of a home at 3116 Thompson road, Woodstock, during which he was ap prehended by the residents and held for the deputies. Taken in the burglary attempt were kitchen appliances and silverware. The court ordered Freeman to make restitution of $225 to the victims. Judge Parker also sentenced Gary R. Engstrom, 1210 N. Eastwood lane, McHenry, to two years' probation and costs on a conviction for theft over $150. Engstrom was ordered to spend thirty-six days in periodical confinement in the county jail with credit for 4 days already served. He was ordered to make restitution of $83 to the victim. Engstrom had been arrested in connection with an entry made to a building at 2108 W. Mill lane, McHenry, May 5, 1977, in which sound equipment and musical instruments were taken. On Dec. 5, Judge Parker sentenced Dale R. Morin, 515 Deerpath, McHenry, to eighteen months' probation and to pay court costs on a con viction for possession of can nabis, from 30 to 500 grams. The alleged incident took place Aug. 17, 1977. In hearings before Associate Judge Contad Floeter in Branch I court at Woodstock Dec. 8. Robert D. Waller, 8706 Dorr road. Wonder Lake, entered a negotiated plea of guilty to driving with his license suspended and he was placed on six months' probation and fined $75 and costs. He pleaded guilty to a charge of speeding and was fined $25 and costs. Fred Gardner, 2614 Shorewood, McHenry, was fined $50 and costs after being adjudged guilty to a charge of creating and maintaining a nuisance. Buster E. Davis, 2304 N. Solon road, Richmond, entered a negotiated plea of guilty to a charge of transporting or possessing open liquor in a motor vehicle and 'was fined $150 and costs. The cdurt did not prosecute a charge orBWI. In a hearing before Associate Judge Leonard Brody in Branch II Court in Crystal Lake Dec. 8, Carl D. Schmidt, 5013 Wildwood drive, McHenry, pleaded guilty to speeding and was fined $25 and costs. OUR PUBLIC LANDS According to figures recently published, the Federal govern ment holds more than 725 mil lion acres of national forests, parks, wildlife refuges, public domain and other lands in trust for the American people. This land has been acquired, in large part, by money supplied by hunt ers. Statisticians at Remington Arms have determined that taxes levied on sportsmen have raised more than $3 billion over the past half century. These dollars have contributed greatly to the cause of wildlife preservation and land conservation. f Dear Louisa, I have heard over the air a terrible account of the exploitation of little children by these adult monsters who defile and degrade these little ones. It made me sick on my stomach to think that anyone could be that low and filthy. What are our legislators doing about this? Why can't these fieople " be locked up where they can't hurt young sters who are nd| able to pro tect themselves? How in the world has our country got in such a state that people like this have the nerve to protest that they have the right to do these things? What can we do? Troubled-Ill. Answer: I think one reason the '•y* country has got in such a sorry state as far as the protection of little children is concerned, is because people, such as you and I, could not imagine that such things could happen to children. With this new per missiveness, regarding morals and sex, radicals become very bold and think they can get away with all kinds of sexual misbehavior. However, I think we are beginning to wake up to what is happening and will not be content to sit back and close our eyes any longer. Write to your legislators, demanding stricter laws and stricter enforcement of them. Every letter will help. Louisa S.C. 29115 SAVE NOW FOR CHRISTMAS I Mtoriaty (2% Hr,< $5.00 Min.) ONLY112.00 FOE 24 HOURS. ACE HARDWARE 3729 W. Elm St. McHenry, III.- 385-0722 TWO STORES I TWO WAYS TOSAVEI Only 1 Shopping Sunday to Christmas I (SPECIALS GOOD SUNDAY DEC. IS ONLY) OIRtV WINTER JACKETS » ENTIRE -- W nooci -, 0 meu CHRISTMAS GIFT WRAP 125 MO.M.79 I maa ILL SNOWMOBILE HELMETS BBffflJi . •. v.- . , IN STOCK I LADIES' NECKLACES m m , t o t m l h a r d w a r e BICYCLES °&f 10#o°* spurgeons fc*4MIT STMH | ™T