McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 19 Jul 1985, p. 38

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an exprienced Auto Technician, you may be contacted for a personal Inter­ view. 1. Desired Annual Earnings 2. Four Benefits Most Important To You All-New Chrysler LeBaron GTS • MANY CALLS • GOOD CUSTOMERS • GREAT SALES 3. Type of Pay Plan You Prefer: • FLATRATE • PERCENTAGE 4.1 have been a mechanic/technician for years. I Have actual work experience in the following areas G Transmission C Front End Alignment • Air Conditioning C Brakes • Tune-Ups • Electrical • Differentials C Carburetor 5. If you have any certificates, what are they? Guaranteed through the NAME PHONE NO Mail To: AUTO TECHNICIAN SURVEY ADJEM c/o Northwest Nowspepers P.O. Bw 290 Crystal Lake, III. 40014 R î savvy LrfjJBaronGTS.sports sedan is an all-new Chrysler 1985 model entry geared toward the emerging new^nKlale market, llie tvIS Is designed to appeal to the more affluent younger buyers' tastes for an aerodynamic, well-styled responsive four-door with taut suspension "feel," compatible with turbo-charged performance. The well-equipped front-wheel drive sedan offers the latest in electronics, 15-inch road wheel handling option, and is available with manual 5-speed or automatic transmission and leather interior trim. Retail Value $13/677 USED CAR VALUES BU?CK ELECTRA 380 INCLUDES: • 3.8 LITRE MULTI-PORT FUEL INJECTED V-6 • AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION WITH OVERDRIVE • POWER WINDOWS • POWER SEAT • POWER DOOR LOCKS • CRUISE CONTROL • TILT STEERING WHEEL • LOCKING WIRE WHEEL COVERS • MANY MORE EXTRAS includes freight 1960 Jeep Cherokee Wagon, 4 wheel drive and dean 1981 Pontiac Firebird Esplrlt, Automatic, tilt, air, stereo M. Per Month 1982 CMC Caballero Pick-up, V-8 engine, automatic, air STOCK P10153 UStP 16,979.00 WIWRMOr 288.00 *17,23400 MITCHELL DISCOUNT * 2,034.00 Includes all of this 1982 Dodge Charger 2 x 2, Front wheel drive & sporty •3.8 liter V6Efl ENGINE •ELECTRIC REAR WINDOW •POWER STEERING, DEFROSTER •POWER BRAKES •AM-FM STEREO CASSETTE •INTERVAL WINDSHIELD WIPERS 'DUAL ELECTRIC REMOTE CONTROL •P205/70R14 WSW TIRES MIRRORS •ELECTRONIC DIGITAL CLOCK 'POWER WINDOWS •TILT STEERING WHEEL 'STYLED ROAD WHEELS •SPEED CONTROL -WIDE BODYSIDE MOLDINGS •DUAL ACCENT STRIPES 'TINTED GLASS •POWER 6 WAY DRIVERS SEAT -LIGHT GROUP •AIRCONDITIONING •POWERLOCKS SAVE $2499 15 In Stock Ready For Immediate Delivery 1983 Buick LeSabre, 4 door, extra clean and only 26,000 miles 1978 Ford Thunderblrd, One owner doll, only 49,000 miles DELIVERED FROM STOCK BEFORE JULY 31,1985 1983 Buick Skyhawk Coupe, 4 speed economy and only 22,000 miles 1979CamaroZ28 Clean & sporty-low mileage ON SELECTED CMC TRUCKS 1982 Dodge Charger 2.2, 4 speed, tront wheel drive NOW THRU JULY 31ST * PRICE DOES NOT INCLUDE STATE SALES TAX OR LICENSE FEES. ALL VEHICLES ARE SUBJECT TO PRIOR I SALES. 1984 AMC Eagle Wagon, Loaded 4 x 4,9,000 miles 903 N. FRONT (RT. 31) McHENRY 815-385-7200 Mon-Fri 8-9 Sat 8-5 NORTHWEST HERALD Section C Friday, July 19,1985 Page 7 China's 'Treasure Island' a gold mine By ANN SCOTT HAINAN ISLAND, China (UPI) -- "I would gladly end my days in this South Sea village," wrote China's great 11th century poet Su Shi from his exile in Hainan's lush hamlet of Piengmai. Isolated, backward, yet stunn­ ingly beautiful, the little-known tropical isle was for centuries a refuge of rebels, artists, con­ victs and errant imperial of­ ficials banished from China's mainland. Bathed on the east by the Gulf of Tonkin and by the South China Sea on the west, Hainan soothed many a Chinese outcast destined to die on its lonely shores and be bUried in its palm-studded soil. The islanders seem proud of Hainan's image as a hospice for iconoclasts, like the Song Dynas­ ty poet Su, who was disgraced several times for his controver­ sial prose before he died in 11Q1. In Haikou, the island's bustl­ ing northern seaport, leaders have even erected a small museum and shrine at the burial place of Hai Rui, an obscure, Hainan-born Ming Dynasty of­ ficial who won infamy and ex­ pulsion by daring to criticize the emperor. Today, Hainan's shimmering, deserted beaches and emerald hills offer an unspoiled her­ mitage for the modern recluse as well as an exotic stop for the adventurous traveler. Nicknamed "Treasure Island" for its rich mineral resources and fertile sugar cane, coffee and rubber planta­ tions, Hainan is nearly as big as Taiwan and has a mixed popula­ tion of 5.8 million Chinese and minority peopl$. Foreign tourists were only of­ ficially granted access to 17 Hainan locations this spring, and Western visitors are such a rare sight that islanders often remark enthusiastically on their nose length, skin color and overall size. "A map?" blinked a young hotel receptionist in Hainan's sleepy seaport of Sanya, the southernmost town in all of China. "Sanya has no maps," she laughed. And except for the occasional, "Hello," few people speak languages other than Hainanese or Cantonese. A six-hour bus ride southwest of Haikou, Sanya is a lively fishing and market town with a population of about 30,000, main­ ly descendants of Han Chinese immigrants and native Li minority people. The best way to explore Sanya -- if your bottom can absorb a few bumps -- is by hiring a "sanlunche," or motorbike with a wooden sidecar attached. A straw-hatted driver will escort you from beach to beach for only a few cents a mile. Some of China's loveliest white sand beaches, lined with feather-like pine trees, stretch for miles in crescents along the nearby Luhuitou Peninsula -- only a 20-minute trishaw ride from Sanya. Luhuitou, which means "the deer turns back its head," derives its name from a folk legend popular among Hainan's 800,000-strong Li population. According to the tale, a young Li hunter spotted a beautiful golden deer high in the Five Finger Mountains and chased it to the tip of the peninsula. Confronted with the surging waters, the deer turned back its head, instantly becoming a beautiful Li girl. The two youths were married and the wind­ swept bluffs of Luhuitou became the incarnation of the golden deer. One of the longest beaches at Luhuitou is Dadonghai or "Great Eastern Sea." Sloping gently into clear, turquoise waters, Dadonghai is ideal for swimming, and occasionally of­ fers waves big enough for body surfing. Just around the point is Xiaodonghai or "Small Eastern Sea," a steeper, frothier, more isolated beach graced by coconut palms and wild cactus. The juicy, red-violet hearts of the cactus buds are delicious and tart for an after-swim snack, and tanned Hainanese boys seem to like to show off by dashing up nearby palms to fetch refreshing, milk-filled c o c o n u t s f o r v i s i t i n g beachcombers. Barely visible above the sandy beach grass of Xiaodonghai are the remaining stone steps of a once elegant villa, the retreat of yet another ill-fated Chinese, Liu Shaoqi. One of China's com­ munist leaders, Liu was purged as the nation's "No. 1 capitalist roader" and his villa demolish­ ed by Red Guards at the onset of the 1966-76 Cultural Revolution. Not far from these beaches is the charming and moderately priced Luhuitou Hotel, a plea­ sant walk from Sanya along a coastal road past rickety stilt houses and black goats mun­ ching weeds. Built in 1958, the hotel offers airy bungalows nestled in tropical gardens, wth old- fashioned wooden furniture, tile floors and tall, four-poster beds shrouded in canopies of mos­ quito netting. At a small dining hall cooled by overhead fans, guests can sit down with workers for hearty one-dollar meals of seafood, soup, rice and vegetables. Hainan's famous Xinglong cof­ fee, China's finest, is brewed for breakfast. Sanya is known for its large catches of crab, lobster and shrimp, and restaurants in the center of town are worth explor­ ing for more exotic fare. Local chefs take pride in summoning guests to the kitchen to select a fresh fish. While downtown, visit the cor­ al and shell stalls and stroll through the main marketplace, where old Li women wearing flame orange towels puff Hainan tobacco from water pipes, and crew-cut sailors from the near­ by Yulin naval base go carous­ ing. Reaching this haven isn't easy. Planes and ferries to Haikou depart fairly regularly from Hong Kong and China's southern city of Guangzhou, but transport is primitive on the island's two main roads. Travel permits are required for all destinations but Haikou. AUTO TECHNICIAN SURVEY There are several job openings of which one may be designed especially for you. Complete the following form and mail as soon as possible. If you are

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