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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 13 Jan 1982, p. 12

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I PAGE 12 • PLAINDEALKR - WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 13,1982 Legal Notice STATE OF ILLINOIS ) )SS: COUNTY OF McHENRY w ) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 19TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, McHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS IN RE: THE ) MARRIAGE OF ) FRED FINN, ) Petitioner ) and ) FRANCES FINN, ) Respondent ) NO. 81 D 695 PUBLICATION NOTICE The requisite Affidavit for Publication having been filed, notice is hereby given to you, FRANCES FINN, against you at any time after that day, and a Judgment entered in accordance with the prayer of said Petition. VERNON W. KAYS, JR., Clerk of the Circuit Court TERRY R. MOHR Attorney for Petitioner Law Offices of Mohr & Lewis Attorney for Petitioner 420 North Front Street McHenry, Illinois 60050 (815 ) 385-1313 (Pub. Jan. 13,20& 27,1982) No. 820007 must be sent to the un­ dersigned Highway Com­ missioner, regarding whether your subdivision wants to participate in this program. Participating intent must be received before March 1, 1982 at my office, 3703 N. Richmond Road, McHenry, IL., 60050. Clarence Regner, Highwav Commissioner of McHenry Township Road District (Pub. Jan. 13 & 15,1982) No. 820011 Legal Nolle. Noffc, NOTICE TO SUBDIVISIONS WITH NON-DEDICATED ROADS IN McHENRY TOWNSHIP The Motor Fuel Tax Law that a suit has been filed intf*, was recently amended to the Circuit Court of McHenry County, Illinois, by Petitioner against you for dissolution of marriage, and for other relief; that Sum­ mons duly issued against you as provided by law, and which suit is still pending. NOW, THEREFORE, unless you, FRANCES FINN, file your answer to the Petition in said suit, or otherwise make your ap­ pearance therein, in the said Circuit Court of McHenry County, held in the cour­ thouse in the City of Woodstock, Illinois, on or before the 15th day of Feb 1982, default may be entered permit townships to spend a small portion of their Motor Fuel Tax Funds for the maintenance of non- dedicated subdivision roads. The law also requires each subdivision participating in the program to make a contribution toward any work performed. In sutv divisions established prior to July 23. 1959 in accordance with the provisions of Section 6-701.8 of t^e "Illinois Highway code"? If your subdivision is in McHenry Township and is interested in participating in such a program during the 1982 calendar year a letter STATE OF ILLINOIS ) )SS COUNTY OF McHENRY ) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINETEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT McHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS McHENRY STATE BANK, ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ( ) ) CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION OF Wonder Lake State Bank ACCT. NO. 95270 OF WONDER LAKE, IL. AND SUBSIDIARIES AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS ON DEC. 31, 1981. PUBLISHED IN REPSONSE TO CALL OF THE COMMISSIONER OF BANKS AND JRUST COMPANIES OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS. Thousands of dollars ASSETS Cash and due from bonks 1 347 U.S. Treasury securities 433 Obligations of other U.S. Government Agencies and corporations 955 Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to rese II 2,450 Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) 1,522 Less: Reserve for possible loan losses 7 Loans, Net 1,515 Bank premises, furniture and Tfxtures, and other assets representing bank premises 219 Other assets 122 TOTAL ASSETS 7,051 LIABILITIES Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations 768 Time and savings deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations 4,675 Deposits of United Stptee Gove, i .ment 204 Deposits of States and political subdivisions 374 Certified and officers checks 84 TOTAL DEPOSITS 6,105 Total demand deposits 1,079 Total t ime and savings deposits 5,026 Other liabilit ies 95 TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures) 6,200 EQUITY CAPITAL Common stock No. shares authorized 32,000 No. shares outstanding 32,000 (par value) j . 320 Surplus '•*" 320 Undivided profits 211 TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL 851 TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL 7,051 I, John McCamman Vice President, of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that this report of condition is true and correct^ to the best of my knowledge and belief Will iam Johnson, Stephen Mitchell, Donald Sturm Directors State of I l l inois, County of McHenry ss: Sworn to and subscribed before me this 7th day of January, 1982. My commission expires 12 27 82. Mary Jane Johnson, Notary Public (Published Jan. 13, 1982) No.820010 an Illinois Banking Corporation; and THOMAS F. BOLGER, Trustee, Plaintiffs, vs. BILLY E. WATKINS AND JUDITH A. WATKINS, his wife; and UNKNOWN OWNERS, ) Defendants. ) No. 82 CH 2 NOTICE The requisite affidavit for publication having been tiled, notice is hereby given you UNKNOWN OWNERS a n d N O N - R E C O R D CLAIMANTS, Defendants in the above-entitled suit, that the said suit has been commenced in the Circuit Court of the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit, McHenry County, Illinois, by the said Plaintiffs against you, praying for the foreclosure of a certain Trust Deed made by BILLY E. WATKINS and JUDITH A. WATKINS, his wife, to McHENRY STATE BANK, How To Subscribe to The McHenry Plaindealer The McHenry Plaindealer 3812 W. Elm Street McHenry, II. 60050 • 3 Years-$40.00 • 2 Years-$28.50 • l Year-$15.50 • 6 Months-$8.50 • Payment Enclosed an Illinois Banking Cor­ poration; and THOMAS F. BOLGER, Trustee, con­ veying the premises described as follows, to-wit: Lot 12 in Block 14, in McHenry Shores, Unit No. 1, a Subdivision of part of the Fractional Southwest Ouarter of Section 1, lying on the Westerly side of Fox River; also Dart of the Southeast Quarter of Section 2, all in Township 44 North, Range 8 East of the Third Principal Meridian, according to the Plat thereof recorded May 17, 1954 as Document No. 278461, in Book 11 of Plats, page 111, in McHenry County, Illinois. and for other relief; that summons was duly issued out of said court as provided by law and that the suit is still pending. NOW, THEREFORE, unless you, UNKNOWN OWNERS and NON- RECORD CLAIMANTS, the said Defendants file your answer to the complaint in said suit or otherwise make your appearance therein in the said Circuit Court of the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit, McHenry County, Illinois, held in tne Courthouse in the City of Woodstock, Illinois on or before the 16th day of February, 1982, default may be entered against you at any time after the day and a decree entered in ac­ cordance with the prayer of said complaint. Dated January 7, 1982. Vernon W. Kays, Jr. COWLIN, COWLIN & UNGVARSKY Attorneys for Plaintiffs 20 Grant Street Crystal Lake, IL 60014 (815 ) 459-5300 (Pub. Jan. 13, 20 & 27,1982) No . 820008 Legal Notice IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 19TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, McHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS - PROBATE DIVISION ESTATE OF JAMES M. CLUCAS Deceased, File No. 81-P-367 CLAIM NOTICE Notice is given of the death of JAMES M. CLUCAS, of McHenry, Illinois. Letters of office were issued on Sep­ tember 30, 1981, to OLEVA GROULX CLUCAS, 1121 C u m b e r l a n d C i r c l e , McHenry, IL 60050 whose attorney is EDWARD U. NOTZ, P C., 30 N. LaSalle St., Suite 3434, Chicago, II 60602 Claims against the estate may be filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court at 2200 N. Seminary Avenue, Woodstock, Illinois, 60098, or with the representative, or both , within 6 months from the date of issuance of letters and any claim not filed within that period is barred. Copies of a claim filed with the Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the represen­ tative and to the attorney within 10 days after it has been filed. Vernon W. Kays, Jr. Clerk of the Court (Pub. Jan. 13,20 & 27,1982) No. 820009 Wildlife Report Host Families Needed JANUARY (A monthly column by the Wildlife Rehabilitation and Education Project of the McHenry County Con­ servation district Written by Louise Miller.) Because the cold weather has finally settled in this area, some of us may feel we can help wild animals by setting up feeding stations in our backyards. It is true that this is a particularly difficult time for wildlife because deep snow and ice storms can cover up or bury natural food supplies. We should also remember that regular feeding of wildlife creates an artificial situation which can produce unexpected results. For one thing, it will probably attract a higher than normal number of wild creatures to one area. This can lead to easier transmission of disease or conflict between species. For example, if you leave chicken bones out for a fox to clean up, he may also help himself to a cardinal or a junco. Feeding stations for wildlife also create an un­ natural dependency on humansTor survival, so if we forget to feed or stop feeding entirely-the animals will suffer. Also, a feeder meant to attract squirrels, rac­ coons and opossums may also attract wildlife such as mice, rats and skunks. If you really want to help during very heavy snows and extremely cold days, you could put out some kibbled dog food. This is an edible, but not preferred food, and will not create a false dependency on humans. Moldy or spoiled food should never be put out for wildlife. Wild animals should never be fed near your home or porch. Even though this may be most convenient for you, it only helps to overcome a natural caution in wildlife that may lead to its demise. It may also lead to problems with your neighbors or cause property damage to your home such as torn screens, spilled garbage and drop­ pings. For the same reason you should never feed wild animals from your hand; you also run the additional risk of being.bitten. We should also remember that food is just one element ' necessary to the survival of wildlife. Animals and birds also need shelter, water and a place to reproduce. So if you attract them to your home for food, don't be surprised if they use it for these other needs, too. Maintaining bird feeding stations has become quite popular recently,. and they < are an excellent way to enjoy our wildlife. A variety of commercial feeders are available, but homemade feeders made of split logs or flat boards work just as well. The solution to the com­ mon problem of starlings, house - sparrows and squirrels monopolizing a feeder is to set up a junk food - feeder with cracked and whole com and mixed bird seed. A second feeder filled with just sunflower seeds will be favored by the colorful native birds such as juncos, goldfinches, car­ dinals and blue jays. The best way to help all wild animals and birds to survive is to provide them with natural food and shelter by plantting seeds and shrubs for that purpose. Simply putting up nesting boxes or leaving cavities in trees will provide them with some shelter. Your Christmas tree (without the tinsel) and brush piles also provide cover from natural enemies, as well as the cold. Plans for turning your wh6le backyard or just a window box into a wildlife haven are available in a free . brochure entitled "Invite Wildlife to Your Backyard." You can order it by writing to Backyard Wildlife Program, National Wildlife Federation, 1412 Sixteenth Street NW, Washington, DC 20036. Information on or­ dering tree seedlings or wildlife food plots is available from the McHenry County Conservation district office (815-338-1405 or 815- 678-4431). If you need help or advice about any wild animal or bird, you can call Sally Joosten, director of MCCD's W i l d l i f e R e h a b i l i t a t i o n Project at 815-338-3276 or the McHenry County Con­ servation district office. Local families can have an unusual international ex­ perience in their very own homes in 1962. "We are inviting people to share the spirit of America with students from six South American countries," said Sylvia Burck, Support Services coordinator of the Youth for Understanding International Student Ex­ change program. "By hosting an exchange student for six months beginning in January, families can continue the holiday spirit of hospitality and learn first hand about the culture and lifestyle of a student from another part of the world," Graciela Perez will turn 17 shortly before her arrival in the US from Argentina. An above average student, Graciela has studied English for 10 years, French for 4 and German for 2 and she also enjoys history, psychology and ma'th. A possible career goal is that of interpreter. Hector Gomez is another student coming to this area. He will turn 16 just before he leaves Chile for the U.S. Hector has two sisters and he is anxious to live with a family with several children. Like Graciela, he has In I l l ino is 13 6 Die In Crashes In Fences are often removed between fields today to maximize cropping area. For the fences left starring, however, the two biggest problems are maintenance and fence line disputes. According to accepted standards, adjacent Ian- downers have the right to reach any private agreement they wish regarding division fences. For example, they could agree to build a fifteen-foot high fence or they could agree to put in a fence that has only a single strand of barbed wire. Likewise, they might agree to have no fence at all. Under current Illinois law, however, if there is no agreement between parties and one landowner wants a Prize Winning Author To Be Featured At Opera House Name Address American Viewpoints Prices good in McHenry County. Though we travel the world over to f ind the beau t i ful , we must carry it with us or we f ind it not . Choptl Ralph Waldo Emerson We r**erve th* right to limit quantities while they last. 4216 N. WILMOT RD SALE BEER NOT ICED SUNNYSIDE, II. DATES- "*U S t °' Johnsburg JAN. 13-19 385-8097 Shop ftLATZ BEER UN HIGH *-12 OZ. CANS 6-12 OZ. CANS WHITE & MACKAY SCOTCH 750 ML HANNAH & HOGG WHISKEY 1.75 LITER GALLO HOCH VERMOUTH 1 69 UEBFRAUMILCH ? 99 750 ML • • U U 7 5 0 M L Lm VV H a r r y M a r k P e t r a k i s , prize-winning author and lecturer, will be featured as the third program offering in the Creative Living series of the Woodstock Fine Arts association, Thursday, Jan. 21, at 10 a.m., in the Opera House. A u t h o r o f s i x n o v e l s , numerous short stories, including his best-selling "Nick the Greek", Petrakis is known as a writer who speaks with strength, authority and robust good humor. The collective memory of the Greek- American community is his specialty, making the audience as familiar with the coffee drinkers in the back rooms of smoky little restaurants on Chicago's Halsted street as with their c o u n t e r p a r t s f i g h t i n g f o r their freedom in the hills of Crete, "v Although born in St. Louis, WALKERS VODKA 1.75 LITER m FLEISCHMANN'S GIN 1.75 LITER ZONIN • :v- mm r Do you still have questions about the new Individual Retirement Accounts (IRA)? The new IRA rules let you put away up to $2,000 per year in a tax sheltered retirement savings plan -- even if you're self- ' employed or covered by a company pension plan. Your Country Companies agent has all the details. Call today! That's the Spirit of the Country! Your Country Companies Agents. McHENRY, ILLINOIS 344-1771 RICHMOND. ILLINOIS WOODSTOCK, ILLINOIS PI.11M1U he is for many American readers the leading literary ambassador of Greece on these shores. Petrakis' work, in addition to his Greek themes, is marked by a joy in living, a sensitive awareness of the feelings of his characters good or bad. As a lecturer and con­ ductor of writing workshops, Petrakis leaves plaudits in his wake wherever he goes: "Extraordinary... performan ce certainly among our finest speakers and readers to date." His books and his lectures reflect the wide-ranging experiences of this 57-year- old writer. At various times he worked as a baggage handler, a tailor's presser and in the steel mills. He operated a lunchroom, delivered for a druggist and for awhile worked on a beer truck. And always - he wrote. He counsels embryo writers, "As they send your manuscripts back, keep sending them out. And keep writing. Anybody aspiring to write today has to do it with an awareness that the primary satisfaction has to come from the experience of writing itself." Tickets may be purchased at the door or by calling 815- 338-5300. Coffee will be served at 9. Courthouse Squares ^ SOME PEOPLE CANT SEE A MYTH ING GOOD WITHOUT USING A MIRROR. m Insurance and Investment Services oMcHEnry Faint GLASS & WALLPAPER 3411 W. Elm St., McHENRY m us. «bt * fix ma m n m PRESENTS ART DEMONSTRATIONS BY DON NEUBAUER SATURDAYS 100) AM TO NOON I PUBLIC INVITED THIS SATURDAY: "KNIFE PAINTING" REGISTER FOR FREE CLASSES WITH ART SUPPLY PURCHASE I! ^ ANY REQUEST FOR DEMONSTRATION CALL: J ̂ 385-7353 studied both English and French and indicates that the sciences and history are his favorite subjects. Graciela, Hector and 61 other students from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Paraguay and Uruguay will arrive in pur region in January and return home in July 1982," stated Mrs. Burck. "We are looking for families in Illinois, Wisconsin, and Missouri to host these students. A Host Family provides a student with a bed, three meals a day, and much love and understanding. Students bring their own spending money and are covered by medical, emergency dental, and liability insurance." Maximum effort is made to match students and families and early ap­ plication is encouraged. Families who want to par­ ticipate in this program, learn more about op­ portunities to host students from 23 different countries for a year (beginning in August '82), or request in­ formation on sending their own teenagers overseas should contact: Youth for Understanding, 1S111 Spring Road No. 106, Elmhurst, 111., 60126, (312 ) 832-2177, collect. Traff ic December fence, both landowners have a legal responsibility to build and maintain a "just proportion" of the fence. In addition, unless the owners agree otherwise, a division fence should be a legal fence. Such a fence is defined in the state statutes as a fence at least founand a half feet tall, in good repair, and sufficient to turn sf This lau^fe not new. It has been in exist years and merely defines the minimum standards for a fence if either landowner wants one. It is important to recognize that the law makes no exceptions for crop farmers who do not have livestock. In Illinois, fence line disputes in which the fence location and the actual property line differ are solved with the concept of "adverse possession". Under this concept, if one owner has occupied land and openly treated it as his for twenty continuous years or more, the line that has been recognized as the boundary for all of those years may become the legal line. That fence line continues to be the legal boundary even though the owner discovers that the actual line has been misplaced. A different law applies if the fence has been misplaced for less than twenty years. In such a case, an owner who has mistakenly built a division fence on an adjoining owner's land may enter that land and move the fence to the true line. This right exists for a period of six months after the true property line has been determined. Offer Three Performances Of MCHS Play The West Campus Drama club presents its winter drama, "Whose Life Is It Anyway?" Jan. 22 and Jan. 23 at 8 p.m. and Jan. 24 at 2 p.m. in the West campus auditorium. There will be no senior citizen performance, but all senior citizens are welcome to any of the per­ formances at a reduced price. Tickets may be purchased at the door. CLOSE DRIVER FACILITIES Secretary of State Jim Edgar has announced that all of his offices and facilities will be closed Friday, Jan. 15, for Martin Luther King day. Edgar said downstate Driver Services facilities outside Cook county will reopen Saturday, Jan. 16, a regular work day, while all other offices and'facilities will resume business Monday, Jan. 18. |Pr*t"*iiiJ NEED HELP? Call omci ora«« to 11 am. AMD FVOM 7 TO f MM. MOM. THRU W. 24 HOUt ANSWWRNC UCVtCi 15-3S5-:

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