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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 3 Nov 1978, p. 26

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«ION '> l».\GE 4 - PLAINPEALER - FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 3, 1978 Wonders Of The West gwefanto vitttod CHURCH SERVICES *1' * ®$y ̂ Christ The King Catholic Church 5006 E. WONDER LAKE RD., WONDER LAKE, ILL. SUNDAY MASSES - 8AM 10AM 12 NOON EVENING MASS 8PM. Fulfills Sunday Obligation Alliance Bible Church 3«1SW Bull Volley Rd Rev Gerald Robertson Sunday School - 9:45 A M Service • 11 00 P M. Service • 7:00 Wed Bible Study t Prayer 8:00 p m St. Francis National Catholic Church Flanders Rd east of Ringwood Rd Sunday Masses • 11 a m Father A Wodko Pastor Chain O'Lakes Evangelical Covenant Church 4815 N Wilmot rid Rev Mitchell Considine Sunday School 9:45 Worship Service 11:00 a.m. Church Phone 497 3000 Parsonage 497-3050 Christian Science Society Lincoln Rood And Eastwood Lane Sundoy Service 10:30 a m Sunday School 10:30 a m W e d E v e 8 p m St. John the Baptist Catholic Church Johnsburg Rev Leo Bortel Pastor Rectory Phone 385 1477 Sat £ ve Moss 5 30 ond 8 OOp rn Fulfil* Sun Obligation Sundov Mosses 7 00 9 00 10 30 and I 2 00 vVee* days 7 JO 4 9 00 So' 8 OOo m First United Methodist Church 3717 West Mam Street Church phone 385-0931 Ralph Smith Postor Parsonage Phone: 385-1352 Schedu le o f Worsh ip Serv ices Morn ing Worsh ip 9 30 and 1 I a Sunday Schoo l 10 50 a m *St. Paul's Episcopal Church ^706 W S» Pou l s & Green Rev Ar thur D. McKay V icar 38S 7690 « Sundoy Serv ices H ^ l y E u c h o r i l t S A M Fomi ly Euchor is t 10 o m Church Schoo l t Col fee Hour Wednesdays Holy Euchorist 9 30 a m Fr iday Ho ly Euchorn t 9 30-a m Christ The King Catholic Church 5006 E. Wonder Lake Road Wonder Lake Illinois Sunday Masses: 8 10 a m and noon Eve Mass 8 p m Fulfills Sunday Obligation Nativity Lutheran Church 3506 E Wonder Lake Rd Bo« 157 Phone 653 3832 Wonder Lake Illinois Sun Worship 8 & 10 30 a m Sunday School - 9 a m (Nursery Facilities Avoilable) St. Mary's Catholic Church Rev Eugene Baumhoter S o t E v e M o s s 5 p m Fulfills Sun obligation Sunday Masses 6:30 8 9 30 9 45 10:45 II 12 noon Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church (Missour i Synod) 4206 W WoukeganRd (W Rt 120; Rev Hemonn F Groef 385 0859 385 1616 Sunday Worsh ip 7 .45 A 10:30 Nursery Serv ices p rov ided a t 10 :30 Educat ion lo r E tern i ty Sunday Schoo l Ch i ld ren ond Youth 9 o m Wonder Lake Bible Church 750 1 Howe Dr ive Wonder Loke I l l ino is Rev R ichard N Wr igh t Postor Sunday Sunday Schoo l 9 :30 a m Morn ing Worsh ip Serv ice 11 a m Bib le Fe l lowsh ip Hour 6 00 p m Wednesday Midweek Proyer ond Pra ise Hour 7 :30 p m McHenry County Friends Meeting (Quaker) Ist 1 3rd Sunday 10:30a m For information call: 385 3872 or 312 683 3840 Church of God Greenlaof Ave. at Fairfield Or. Island Lake School Services: Sunday School. 10 a m Church Service. 11 a.m. Evangelistic Service 7 p m Telephone: 312 526 8056 Mount Hope Church United Methodist 1015 W. Broadwoy Pistakee Highlands Rev Ruth Wickersham Sunday Worship 10:30 a.m. Sunday School 9:15 a.m. McHenry Evangelical Free Church 803 Royal Or. McHenry (Meeting 2nd Floor Carestoel) 344 1111-- Church Pastor Roy Wisner 1 653 9675 Sunday Service 1:45 Sunday School 10:00 Ringwood Methodist Church Ringwood Illinois Rev. James Segin Res 648 2848 Church 653 6956 Sunday 9:15 a m Church Service Church School at 10:15a m Church Of Jesus Christ Of Latter-Day Saints (MORMONS) 5209 N Walk up Ave (across from Veterans Acres) Crystal loke Illinois Sundoy School: 10:30 Sacrament Meeting 5:00 p m Sunday St. Peter's Catholic Church Spring Grove Illinois Rev. Kilduff Pastor Phone 815 675 2288 Masses: Daily 8 a.m. Saturday - 4:00 p.m. Sunday-7a.m. 9a.m.. 11 a. Faith Presbyterian Church Lincoln A Chapel Hill Roads Rev. Eric J. Snyder Corporate Worship 10:30 a.m. Church School: Sunday School 9 a.m. Spring Grove Church United Methodist 8102 N. Blivin. Spring Grove III. Rev. Douglas White-Pastor Sunday Worship )0:00 a.m. Sunday School • 9:00 a.m. St. Patrick's Catholic Church Rev. Edmund Petit. Pastor Rev Raymond Kearny Assoc Pastor Sat Eve. (Sun. obligation fulfilled 5 p.m.) Sundoy 7:15 8:30 9:45 11*12:15 Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church 404 N Green St Rev. Roger W Schneider Phone 385 7786 or 385-4030 Saturday Church 5:00 p.m. School 5:45 p m Sunday Church 8 30 & 10:30 School 9:15 Nursery Services Avoilable United Pentecostal Church 258 Sunnyside-lakemoor Rev Nolan Hilderbrand 312 279 6289 Sunday 9:45 i 6:30 p.m. Wed 7:30 p m Bible Study Fn 7:30 p.m Youth Service George R. Justen Funeral Home 3519 /V ELM STREET Mt HENRY I I I 385 2400 Freund Funeral Home 761 I HANCOCK DR WONDER LAKE 1728 0233 Glaviano s Interiors McHenry & Palatine Millwork Savings & Loan 385 3764 414 S ROUTE 31 i 1 209 N GREEN STREET First Baptist Church 509 Front St 385 0083 Rev Marshall E Werry Bible Study Sunday School 9 30 a m Worship Service 10 45 a.m. ond 7.00 p.m, Wednesday v Prayer Service 7 00pm Peter M. Justen Funeral Home 3807 W ELM STREET McHENRY ILL 385 0063 JUST NORTH Of McHENRY FIORAL McHENRY I I I . 385 3000 Guettler's Service, Inc. 818 N FRONT STREET McHENRY I I I 385 9831 Brake Parts. Co. FirSt ?° t i°nal Bank Mitchell Sales, Inc. ot McHenry buick oids.opei 38 4 A ElM STREET 903 N FRONT ST McHENRY 385 7J00 P O BOX 11 McHENRv n 385 7000 McHENRY I I I 385 5400 Ace Hardware 3729 A ElM STREET The Bath Shop McHfNS* I I I 385 0722 ! McHENR Y I I I 3012 W RTE 1 20 The McHenry Plaindealer 385 0048 3812 W HM STREET McHENRY I I I 385 0170 Tonyan Construction Co. McHenry State Bank Coast to Coast Hardware 1309 N BORDEN STREET 3510 W E lM STREET J 4400 W RTE 120 McHENRr m 385 5520 Mc HE NB "* I I I 385 1040 | Mc HE NR r M A RK E T P i A CE 385 6655 (By Father William O. Hanner. rector emeritus or Holy Comrorter church. Episcopal, Kenilworth, for- merly made his home in McHenry. He now resides in Florida.) On To Oregon We left Denver on Labor day at 9:20 a.m. and were in Por­ tland. Ore., before lunch. The western skies were as clear as crystal. Crossing the Rockies at 37,000 feet gives you quite a sight for your money-you can see just as much from the cheap back seats as from the better ones up front and the loss of meal was of no consequence on a flight where no lunch was served We picked up our rented cars for the trip to Eugene. Mike took his mother in the Opal and Susie and 1 traveled in style with Sue driving the rental car We put up at the Eugene hotel where we have stayed before and where we always stay in Eugene. Both young people work every day. We spend evenings with them and they get a couple of days off to go places with us. Mike and Sue have an acre of ground in Eugene where they have a small but comfortable house which they have both worked on to fix up. Prices are much higher in Portland, Eugene and Denver than in St. Petersburg and Chicago, this is particularly true of Denver. (1 found gas at 80 cents in Chicago that cost me 60 cents in St Pete's this a m ) but we went out to eat anyway and had some fine meals at home Both of the junior Hanners cook well There is great shopping in Eugene 1 am told it is the last stand of the hippies The University of Oregon is here. One day we visited Roseburg, Ore ., where we found an ex cellent small museum, the Douglas county museum Items of the early days in Oregon were well displayed and marked You find many good small museums in the west It is just about a hundred years since the first heavy armies of settlers were pouring into the west after the Civil war in the years of Reconstruction. From Roseburg we continued on down to the Wildlife Safari at Winston. Ore. I wouldn't go to a safari in Florida but in Oregon it seemed to be the thing to do As many of you have seen them in Florida you will recall the lions dismembering a carcass, the beautiful African and Asian deer, the cheetahs (the fastest running animal on earth) (but not for long distances) the wildsheep, elands, yaks. Zebra, impala. Wildebeest, the name the South African Dutch gave the Gnu, and the lions and ostriches. We kept our windows closed as the signs warned you to do and were peered at by ostriches and emus Their long necks, small heads with big eyes look fierce up close. The car in front of us had to roll down their window at which the flightless fast running bird stuck his long neck and little head through the open window, reached clear across the car and made off with a little boy's apple to the chidl's great fear and distress You never saw such big feet as a camel has when he walks down the road before you. There were two baby hippos weighing in at half a ton at age one year. It rained on nine of the eleven days we were in Eugene but one fine week day when both the young people were at work Rose and I journeyed over to the coast. It is around fifty miles from Eugene to the town of Florence on the Pacific A few miles north of town (five or six) we came to a place where an elevator takes you down to a sea lion cave. This was something new to u«r. The cave is large, two or three times the size of a football stadium. It cannot be seen from the land and was only discovered from the sea It is open to the sea which surges out and in-in and out in constant ebb and flow- advance and retreat and here the sea lions come to breed. Each male gathers a harem of from two or three to a dozen or more depending on his skill, fight and strength There can be from a few to as many as 400 when storm or fog drive the animals to shelter. Here the young get a start, here a con-, stant roaring, barking, yapping and snapping goes on This is just the way it has been for centuries There are no lights and a relatively small space for humans, who may make no loud noises nor shoot flash bulbs It is dim and eerie but one of the most interesting places we have visited in years. The Oregon and Washington coasts are showplaces of our country. I tried one time in Biloxi to describe them to a grand dame She looked at me condescendingly and said, "Oh! But we have the Mississippi Gulf Coast!'" Our kids have been married several years now They ap­ pear happy Certainly they work hard and we, Mrs Hanner and myself, are most thankful for the blessing of their home, the old one and the new now abuilding on forested acres In another article I am going to tell you something about the wine grown in Oregon It's good I won't tell you that I had to pay $4.50 for a haircut That would be bad for you to know, for it might prejudice you against this amazing state, this Beaver state which we ap preciate more each time we go West Its mountains, clear streams. cleaned and rejuvenated Willamette river are a source of wonder and pride to us with each Western trip I can't wait to go again It's easy to see which children get adequate at­ tention from their parents and those who don't. WITH THIS COUPON YOU SA VE MORE A T 'e&miorn Furniture And Bedding McHenry McHENR Y STORE ONL Y! VALUABLE COUPON I SLEEPER SELL-A-TH0N SPECIALS I SIMMONS, SCHWEIGER, KR0HLER, ENGLANDER, TOWNHOUSE, LEE, LTD AND MANY, MANY MORE. Choice fabrics SAVE S75 TO $250! Sofa Sleepers For Beauty and Convenience • fulI Si/e • Quwn S i l r • Loom* PI I IUM f cUcfc • Quiltml Seals and BaiM I • All Stylet and Sum Nylon Herculon Velvet* *544 ! MUST BRING COUPON FOR THESE SPECIAL PRICES TICKET j+:160376 - WINNER OF OUR STRATOLOUNGER! COME TAKE IT HOMEl SWAG LAMPS 1/2 OFF ! REG. PRICE WITH COUPON S McHENRY Neit to Fire Station on Route 120 at 31 (815)385 1800 Free Parking In Rear oriN DAILY DAILY 9:30 TO 6:00 FRI. 9:30 TO 9 SUNDAY 11 TO J YOU AND YOUR PET By Robert L. St ear, D.V.M. KEEPING WILD PETS You're bored with owning a ring or rat You want something (^fterenT ^he answer is a snake, a raccoon or a tarantula spider, right? Wrong! Some people mistakenly think wild or exotic pets are more interesting or easier to care for. Unfortunately, this is rarely the case. All animals make the same demands for proper housing, food and medical care. You should consider the same questions whether you buy a domestic or exotic pet: Is it healthy? Can I house and feed it? Does it have any special needs? Buying a healthy animal is a lot harder when you're not too knowledgeable about the animal you wish to purchase Let your veterinarian familiarize you with an exotic species. Examine the pet closely before you buy, and schedule an early visit to your veterinarian soon after the pet arrives in your home. In deciding where to keep the pet, note that animals and birds from the tropical areas require more warmth than most cats and dogs Their living quarters should be draft-proof as well as escape-proof. Considerable damage has been done by "escaped" monkeys and large parrots Certain animals require special ac­ commodations inside the cage too. Snakes are unhappy in full view all day long and need a retreat -- a large piece of broken flower pot. or hollow piece of wood. Lizards ac­ customed to licking rain from wet foliage may not drink from a bowl You can satisfy their moisture requirement by placing a wet plant in the cage each morning. Make sure you know what your new pet will eat before you buy it. Although reptiles do not eat often, many times their food must be live, or they will refuse to eat and starve The same rule holds for certain large spiders. Your veterinarian can help you design a balanced diet, in­ cluding vitamin supplements, for most pets Keeping a wild pet healthy is not an easy job Monkeys, for instance. are extremely susceptible to tuberculosis; even zoos have problems keeping them well And there are few sprays or vaccines that are marketed for use on wild animals. Such animals as raccoons, skunks or otters are susceptible to both cat and dog diseases, and must be im munized against both feline and canine distemper M o s t v e t e r i n a r i a n s discourage keeping wild mammals *warm blooded animals) as pets When these animals are captured in the wild, it is \npossible to be sure they are free trom rabies, a disease fatal to man There is, in fact, a constant reservoir of rabies in the native population of skunks, raccoons, bats, foxes and other wild mammals. Every year, cases are reported where wild animals held in captivity suddenly begin to show signs of rabies after weeks or months of apparent good health In such situations, all human beings in contact with the affected animal must undergo a series of therapeutic injections If you are determined to keep a wild pet. try to find someone who has kept your type of animal before, so that you can learn something about its disposition Wild pets are often By Robert L. Stear. D.V.M Manager of Veterinary Services Norden Laboratories independent creatures, and may disappoint you with their lack of affection. Also make sure that your new pet fits into your normal household routine Some animals are active only at night, and quickly bore owners who seek a sleeping ball of fur day after day. If you travel frequently, check before buying for someone in your vicinity willing to care for your pet while you are away. Some wild pets are being domesticated with con­ siderable success, Gerbils (small mouse-like rodents) are now common in pet stores across the coutnry. Chameleons, small frogs and toads, easily satisfied with a diet of raw meat and small bugs, add life and interest to balanced terrariums. The demand for wild animals as pets is. of course, causing problems. For every ten animals captured for dealers, only one or two survive long enough to be sold And the growing interest in exotic animals is encouraging a black market in endangered species One last caution: an exotic pet is easier to acquire than to discard Zoos flooded with pleas to accept partially tamed raccoons and the like probably will not take your pet if you tire of it The pet store where you purchased your lizard, snake or spider will want it only if it's in saleable condition well-fed and healthy And pets turned loose in woods or fields after a period of captivity may starve before they learn to catch their own food RECIPE By Sarah Ann Shertdaa These two recipes require very little preparation and are welcomed busy-day recipes Sanuge- Macaroni 1 lb. pork-sausage meat 1 medium onion, chop­ ped 1 green pepper, chopped 1 16-oz. can tomatoes 1 c uncooked elbow mac­ aroni 1 T granulated sugar '/j t salt V* t pepper 1 c sour cream V* c milk In large skillet over high heat, brown sausage, breaking it into small pieces, with onion and green pepper; spoon off all fat. Stir in tomatoes, maca­ roni, sugar, salt and pepper. Cover and simmer, stirring oc­ casionally for 20 minutes. Re­ move from heat; stir in sour cream and milk. Makes 4 serv­ ings. Apple Fritter* Pare and core 3 large green apples; slice into '/*-inch-thick rings. In medium bowl, mix 1 cup biscuit mix with 1 egg. Gradually beat in '/i cup milk to make thick batter. Dip apple rings into batter; drain slight­ ly. In large skillet, in 2 inches hot salad oil, fry rings 2 min­ utes on each side or until golden brown. Drain on paper towels. Sprinkle with cinna­ mon sugar. Preparation time about 20 minutes. Serves 4 to 6. Alas There are thousands of hidden taxes these days, but, alas, no place where the taxpayer can hide. -Star, St. Louis. New In your neighborhood? And still seorching for the grocery store ond more closet spoce? It's my job to help you feel or home As WELCOME WAGON Representative I con supply answers to your new neigh­ borhood questions and bring a bosket of gifts to delight your family. Hundreds of people like you hove colled me. I hope you will, too. f̂amidkk < t a T K « N A ? I O N A l Peggy Kaiser 385-2710

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