McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 20 Apr 1979, p. 28

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SKI TION 2 PAfill* PLAINDEALER- FRIDAY, APRIL 20.1979 fa /wy CHURCH SERVICES ISM Mount Hope Church United Methodist . 1015 Broadway, Pistakee Highlands Rev. Ruth Wickersham Sunday Worship 10:30 a.m. Sunday School 9:15 a.m. Alliance Bible Church 3815 W Bull VolUy Rd. R«v. Gerald Robertson > Sunday School • 9:45 A.M. Sorvico - 11:00 P.M. Sorvico - 7:00 Wod. Bible Study 4 Prayer 8:00 p.m. St. Francis National Catholic Church Flanders Rd.. east of Ringwood Rd. Sunday Masses • 11 a.m. Father A. Wodka • Pastor Chain O'Lakes Evangelical Covenant Church 4815 N. Wilmot Rd. 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 Sunday Service • 10:30 a.m. Sunday School - 10:30 a.m. Wed. Eve. 8 p.m. Christ The King Catholic Church 5006 E. Wonder Lake Rood Wonder Lake, Illinois Sunday Masses: 8. 10 a.m., and noon. Eve. Mass 8 p.m. Fulfills Sunday Obligation St. John the Baptist Catholic Church Johnsburg Rev. Leo Bortel.-Pastor Rectory Phone 385-1477 Sot Mass 5 30 or»d 8 OQp m Fulfills Son Obligation Sundoy Mosses 7 00 9 00 10 30 and 12 00 Week days 7 30 & 9 00 Sot 0 00o m First United Methodist Church 3717 West Main Street Church phone 385-0931 Ralph Smith. Pastor •< Parsonage Phone: 385-1352 Schedule of Worship Services M o r n i n g W o r s h i p 9 3 0 a n d 1 1 a Sunday School 10 50a m Nativity Lutheran Church 3506 E. Wonder Lake Rd. Box 157. Phone 653-3832 Wonder Lake, Illinois Sun. Worship 8 I 10:30 a.m. Sunday School - 9 a.m. (Nursery Facilities Available) St. Mary's Catholic Church Rev. Eugene Boumhofer Sot. Eve. Moss - 5 p.m. Fulfills Sun. obligation Sunday Masses • 6:30, 8. 9:30, 9:45, 10:45. 11. 12 noon. McHenry County Friends Meeting (Quaker) 1st 8 3rd Sunday 10:30 o.m. For information coll: 385-3872 or 312 683 3840 Church of God Greenleaf Ave. at Fairfield Dr. 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. Broadway Pistakee Highlands Rev. Ruth Wickersham Sunday Worship 10:30 a.m. Sunday School 9:15 a.m. McHenry Evangelical Free Church 803 Royal Dr., McHenry (Meeting in gym at Carestoel) 344-1111--Church Pastor Roy Wisner 1-653-9675 Sunday Service 10:30 to 11:30 am Sunday Eve Service 6:30 pm Sunday School 9:15 to 10:15 Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church (Missouri Synod) a4206 W. Woukegon Rd. (W. Rt. 120) Rev. Hemonn F. Graef 385-0859 385-1616 Sunday Worship 7:45 8 10:30 Nursery Services provided at 10:30 Education for Eternity Sunday School - Children and Youth. 9 o.m. St. Paul's Episcopal Church 3706 W. St. Paul's I Green 385 0390 Rev. Wm. H. Morley, vicar Sunday Services Holy Eucharist-8 a.m. Eucharist, Sermon-10 a.m. Church School and Coffee Hour Wednesdays Holy Eucharist-9:30 a.m. Holy Days as announced Wonder Lake Bible Church a 7501 Howe Drive Wonder Loke Illinois Rev. Richard N. Wright. Pastor Sunday: Sunday School 9:30 o.m. Morning Worship Service 11 o.m. Bible Fellowship Hour 6:00 p.m. Wednesday: Midweek Prayer and Praise Hour 7:30 p.m. Rev. Robert Repke, assistant to Pa^toi Tuesday, 7 p.m. - Shipmates Friday, 7 p.m. - Awana Ringwood Methodist Church Ringwood Illinois Rev. James Segin Res. 648 2848 Church 653 6956 Sunday 9:15 a.m. Church Service Church School at 10:15 o.m Church Of Jesus Christ Of Latter-Day Saints (MORMONS) 5209 N Walkup Ave (across from Veterons Acres) Crystal Lake I l l inois Sunday 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. Sundoy - 7o.m.,9o.m., II a.m. Faith Presbyterian Church Lincoln 8 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 • 10:00 o.m. SundaySchool - 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 8 12:15 Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church 404 N. Green St. Rev. Roger W. Schneider Phone 385-7786 or 385-4030 Soturday Church 5:00 p.m. School. 5:45 p i Sunday Church 8:30 8 10:30 School 9:15 Nursery Services Available United Pentecostal Church 258 Sunnyside- lakemoor Rev. Nolan Hi lderbrond 312 279 6289 Sundoy 9:45 & 6:30 p.m. Wed 7:30 p.m Bible Study Fri . 7:30 p.m Youth Service George R. Justen Funeral Home McHENRV I I I 3519 W ElM STREET 385 2400 Glaviano's Interiors & Palatine Millwork 385 3764 4U S ROUTE 31 JUST NORTH of McMENRY FLORAL Brake Parts. Co. P O BOX I I McHENRY I I I 385 7000 Ace Hardware 3729 W ElM STREET McHENRY I I I 385 0722 Tonyan Construction Co. 1309 N. BORDEN STREET McHENRY ill. 385-5520 Freund Funeral Home 7611 HANCOCK DR WONDER LAKE 1 728 0233 McHenry Savings & Loan 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. and 7:00 p.m Wednesday Prayer Service 7:00 p.m. Peter M. Justen Funeral Home 3807 W ELM STREET McHENRY ILL 385 0063 1209 N GREEN STREET McHENRY 11.1 Guettler's Service, Inc. 385 3000 First National Bank of McHenry 3814 W ELM STREET McHENRY I I I 385 5400 The Bath Shop 3012 W RTE 120 McHENRY I I I 385 0048 McHenry State Bank 3510 W ElM STREET McHENRY III, 385 1040 818 N FRONT STREET McHENRY ILL 385 9831 Mitchell Sales, Inc. BUICK OLDS OPEL 903 N FRONT ST MCHENRY 385 7200 The McHenry ' Plaindealer 3812 W ElM STREET McHENRY ILL 385 0170 Coast to Coast Hardware 4400 W RTE 120 McHENRY MARKET PIACE Beware Home Repair Gyp Artists 385 6655 Illinois Attorney General William J. Scott's Consumer Protection division warns Illinois residents to beware of home-repair gyp artists who may try to capitalize on last winter's record snow that collapsed or damaged area roofs. Scott's consumer chief, Michael A. Benedetto, says many fly-by-night operators set up temporarily in a neigh­ borhood, solicit as many jobs as possible and then move on They often prey on senior citizens. Benedetto says Consumer division attorney Thomas A. Knapp presently is trying to recover $41,000 for an elderly woman which was taken by a fraudulent roofing and home repair outfit. Here's how these types of schemes work. The doorbell rings and a man standing there tells you, "I was working on one of your neighbor's houses and I spotted a problem with your chimney (or roof). All you need is a simple, inexpensive repair and I'll be glad to take care of it for you." It's easy-but not wise-to say, "Go ahead." When the man is on your roof, he may dislodge a few bricks from your chimney or damage your roof. This is part of the con game. When he climbs down, he tells you you have a very serious, even dangerous problem. You'd better have it fixed immediately. The con game now is rush, rush, rush! You don't have the-money in the house for major repairs? "Let me drive you to the bank." The chief of the Consumer Hearing division, Samuel Kanter, has listened to thousands of sad stories from defrauded senior citizens who have been rushed into signing large contracts •'for un­ necessary work or have been defrauded by paying for work done, torn out, and done! again and again or for outright bad and shoddy repairs. "If you're a senior citizen, don't sign any contract without discussing it with a son or daughter, other relatives or friends," he says. "Also, make sure the company has a place of business. Check its credentials. Be suspicious if the telephone number is just an answering service. There are plenty of reputable repairmen to call on." Consumer lawyer Knapp adds this warning: "Don't let anyone scare you into purchasing repairs. Take time to get two or three opinions from local well known firms." And three vital do nots: Do not deal with door to door salesmen-there is no way to be sure of their reputations and n( way to track them down if you need to complain. Do not pay any money to a contractor until a job is com pletely and satisfactorily finished. Do not let anyone drive you to your bank to draw out your savings for repairs. Knapp asks that consumers take the names of any door to door repairmen of whom they are suspicious and notify him by mail at the Attorney General's Consumer Protection Division, Room 1242, 228 North LaSalle Street, Chicago, 111 60601. Consumer Chief Benedetto reminds consumers, "The A t t o r n e y G e n e r a l s office stands by to help you if you have been defrauded Please report any problems immediately. Do not wait until the company that cheated you may have left town." Backyard Mini Nature Preserve This Spring during the planting season is the time to act on that concern you felt for wildlife during the winter. One reason many species do not winter well in Illinois is the lack of food and protective cover, according to Vernon Kleen, non-game biologist for the Illinois Department of Con­ servation. Judicious planting of wildlife cover in the spring can help birds and animals more in the long run than handfeeding them during the winter, said Kleen. No matter how large or small your yard, it can be turned with a little smart planning and planting into a mini wildlife preserve. Apartment dwellers need not be left out of the picture, either, as window boxes can be used to provide plants and water that are at­ tractive to some species of birds. Most wildlife biologists suggest that any backyard habitat improvement be started with a sketch of the property showing placement of permanent structures and existing plants. The large*your property, the greater variety of plantings you can provide for. This, in turn, will attract a greater variety of wildlife species because the feeding, nesting and protective habitat requirements of each species differs somewhat from all others. The arrangement most ef­ fective in providing a hospitable place for wildlife is one in which plantings are of graduated heights, adjacent to other species either slightly larger or slightly smaller than themselves. Kleen suggests that taller trees be placed in the rear of a property with gradually smaller shrubs placed in front of the trees, and the smallest at the edge of the lawn. Such an arrangement simulates the edge habitat found in the wild which is generally the most productive of wildlife. In reevaluating a yard that is already extensively planted, the owner should look to existing shrubs with the idea of planting adjacent to them either smaller or larger species, Kleen suggested. It could also be helpful to leave unmowed a few areas of your lawn that are next to small shrubberies. If done properly, these areas need not look scraggly but can provide an interesting accent to your landscaping. Such low shrubs as black­ berry, blueberry and huckleberry make very good wildlife plantings when used in conjunction with taller shrubs such as sumac, dogwood or autumn olive. Further enrich­ ment to wildlife habitat would be smaller trees such as hawthorn and cherry, and larger trees either coniferous or deciduous. In placing coniferous trees, great care should be taken that they do not interfere with the growth of other shurbbery by providing too much shade. If, during the course of preparing your backyard for wildlife, you happen across a baby rabbit or some other nestling, it's probably best to leave it alone, Kleen advises. Making a pet out of any type of wild animal will ultimately result in its becoming a prisoner and often ends up in the animal becoming a nuisance problem for its well- intentioned benefactors Likewise, feeding of small mammals and migratory waterfowl is usually not a good idea and will never substitute for providing the natural habitat for which they are best adapted. A limited number of copies of the National Wildlife Federation's pamphlet, "Invite Wildlife to Your Backyard ', are available at the Depart­ ment of Conservation's Chicago Office, 160 N. LaSalle Street, Chicago. $114,245 Paid For Feed Grain Program Deficiency Feed grain program deficiency payment checks totaling $114,245 have been issued to McHenry county producers for their 1978 corn crops. Jim Lucas, county executive director of the Agricultural Stabilization and conservation Service (ASCS), said farmers who participated in the 1978 set-aside program are eligible to receive the payments. Based on a payment rate of 3 cents per bushel for corn, deficiency payments make up the difference between the target price and the higher of the loan rate for the crop or the average price received by farmers. The 1978 target price was $2.10 per bushel for corn. The national average loan rate was $2 for corn. Lucas said the payments were computed by multiplying the established yield for the farm by the acreage planted for harvest times the payment rate. Farmers who participate in this year's set-aside program will be eligible for deficiency payments and other benefits on their 1979 crops. "The sign-up period ends April 30. Producers who have not filed their in­ tentions to participate are urged to do so as soon as possible," the ASC official said. Name Winners In 4-H Demonstration After tabulating the scores of the recent 4-H demonstration contest, judges Ed Weilbacher of Soil Conservation service and Mary Wagner of the Barrington Press prepared to announce the winners of the contest. "Everyone did a good job of showing techniques that per­ tained to their demonstrations. Also the topic were interesting to see", stated Weilbacher. One of the State fair delegates is a team demon­ stration done by Nikki and Betsy Payne from the Hartland Homemakers 4-H club with their demonstration, "Put Your Best Back Forward." The other state fair delegate is Shelly VonBruenchenhein from the when you buy this LAWN-BOY Supreme! 2103 RTE. 120 McHENRY FREE S i x - p a c k ' o f Mattel 8270 Suprwna 21" --If pnpilid Lincoln Cloverleafs 4-H club with the demonstration of "Summer Shape-Up". Dale Hazelwood of the Cloverleaf Boosters will be attending the state fair in the Horticulture area. First, second and third alternates to State fair were Jodi and Kerri Beutel, Judy Vyduna and Sue Malenius, respectively, and all were ol the Lincoln Cloverleafs 4-H club. "A" ratings were awarded to Dale Hazelwood of the Cloverleaf Boosters and Beverely and Bobby Fink- beiner of the 'Lincoln Cloverleafs. Participation awards to the members just a few points shy of the "A" rating were awarded to Susan Thompson of the , Greenwood Gremlins and Tanja and Ivan Cvitkovic of the Lincoln Cloverleafs. Floating Debt A neighbor recently classified his yacht as a "floating debt. " 815 385-0434 BENT MNSEHVAC the professional do-it-yourself carpet cleaning system First Hour of Rental $1.00 per hour . . . for every hour thereafter. (Example 2 hours . . total charge $1 plus tax.) NO MINIMUM Special Rental Rate Good Monday thru Thursday RINSENVAC cleans the way professionals do, at a fraction f- of the cost t SUN (27 . MRS. $5.00 MIN. PER HOUR OVERNIGHT SPECIAL I • :00 P.M. »:00 A.M. $10.00 HORNSBYS f a m i l y crnicrs - Route 47 A Liberty At Woverly. Morris J42-S623

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