nwht_2016-09-13

Page 1

NORTHWEST HERALD TUESD A Y , S E P T E M BE R 13 , 20 16 • $1.0 0

THE ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN McHENRY COUNTY

SPORTS

NWHerald.com

MAKING THEIR CASE County state’s attorney candidates address voters at forum / A3

Still unbeaten Marian Central 12-0 after three-set win over Lakes / B2 LOCAL NEWS

Murder trial

Doctor testifies that accused man had mental illness / A4 STATE

Campaign cash Ill. GOP spending big with backing of Rauner / A16

Give an Hour, Change a Life Volunteer Today to Help a Local Senior in Need

For more information

Volunteers Provide...

visit our website:

•Minor Home Repairs

scvnmchenrycounty.org Donations are welcomed and are tax-deductible

•Transportation

•Friendly Visits & Phone Calls •Seasonal Yard Work •Respite Relief for Caregivers

SM-CL0381063

815-455-3120

TODAY’S WEATHER

Mileage ts men Reimburseble Availa

HIGH

LOW

80 59

A cold front will move toward the area throughout the day. Temperatures will climb to near 80 degrees. Showers and storms arrive in the afternoon and continue overnight. Complete forecast on page A5


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

2

NORTHWEST

HERALD A NWHerald.com OFFICE 7717 S. Route 31, Crystal Lake, IL 60014 815-459-4040 Fax: 815-477-4960 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday NEWSROOM 815-459-4122 Fax: 815-459-5640 tips@nwherald.com CUSTOMER SERVICE 800-589-9363 subscriptions@shawmedia.com 6 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday 7 to 10 a.m. Saturday and Sunday Missed your paper? If you have not received your paper by 6 a.m. Monday-Friday, or by 7 a.m. Saturday/Sunday, call 800589-9363 by 10 a.m. for same-day redelivery. SUBSCRIPTIONS Monday-Saturday: $1.00 / issue Sunday: $1.50 / issue Basic weekly rate: $7.50 Basic annual rate: $390 To subscribe, make a payment or discuss your delivery, contact Customer Service. CLASSIFIED SALES 877-264-CLAS (2527) Fax: 815-477-8898 classified@shawsuburban.com LEGAL NOTICES publicnotice@nwherald.com 877-264-2527 Fax: 630-368-8809 RETAIL ADVERTISING 815-459-4040 OBITUARIES 815-526-4438 obits@nwherald.com

Good morning, McHenry County ...

What new restaurants would you like to see open in town? McHenry County residents love their restaurants. And when a new one is coming to town, they want to know about it. How do I know this? Our new restaurant stories are among the most popular at NWHerald.com. Take Sunday, for instance. The most read story online was about a new Italian restaurant coming to the village of Cary. 750 Cucina Rustica is scheduled to open in downtown Cary in mid-October in a renovated space previously occupied by Galati’s restaurant, and there are plenty of people excited about it. In addition to being the most read at NWHerald.com, it was among the most commented on and shared on Facebook. This isn’t a unique thing. New restaurant stories always get a lot of attention. And it doesn’t just have to be about higher-end restaurants. A story a couple of weeks ago about the first drive-thru-only Burger King in

TRAVELING TODAY?

General Manager Jim Ringness 815-526-4614 jringness@shawmedia.com

News Editor Kevin Lyons 815-526-4505 kelyons@shawmedia.com Northwest Herald and NWHerald.com are a division of Shaw Media. All rights reserved. Copyright 2016

• Relevant information • Marketing Solutions • Community Advocates

the country opening in Cary was among the most popular online the day it first published, too. So, I guess we love our food. Now my question for readers is, is there a restaurant either not in McHenry County or under-represented here that you’d like to see open? It could be a chain or a specific style of restaurant (i.e., Italian, Greek, etc...). Email me or send me a note on Twitter. I’ll share your feedback in a future column.

• Dan McCaleb is executive editor of the Northwest Herald. Email him at dmccaleb@ shawmedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @ Dan_McCaleb.

09.13.16

President John Rung

Editorial Director Dan McCaleb 815-526-4603 dmccaleb@shawmedia.com

FROM THE EDITOR’S DESK Dan McCaleb

Scan this QR code with your smartphone to access the Northwest Herald’s new commuter page featuring updated Metra and traffic information, weather and more. Or visit the page directly at NWHerald. com/commuter.

CONTACT US Do you have a news tip or story idea? Call us at 815-459-4122 or email us at tips@ nwherald.com.

If you’re not getting your local news sent to your phone, here’s what you missed yesterday and today’s talker. Sign up at shawurl.com/ textalert.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT

TODAY’S TALKER

MARENGO COUNCIL

N.H. FAMILY CLAIMS $487M POWERBALL JACKPOT

City officials on Monday discussed a potential limit on the number of bars in Marengo’s downtown area. Two businesses were approved for liquor licenses, including a video gambling cafe on Route 176. Story, page A9.

MOTORCYCLIST HURT

A 45-year-old Wood Dale man is hospitalized with injuries considered to be life-threatening after two motorcycles crashed Sunday in unincorporated Nunda Township. Story, page A4.

WHERE IT’S AT

Advice............................................................A28-29 Business..............................................................A22 Buzz..................................................................A23 Classified.......................................................A30-39 Comics.......................................................A26-27,30 Lottery.............................................................A17 Nation&World.................................................A17-19 Neighbors............................................................A14

CONCORD, N.H. – Lawyers for a New Hampshire family claimed a $487 million Powerball jackpot on their behalf Monday, saying the winners wished to remain anonymous but would do “great things” with their newfound wealth. Attorneys for the family’s new trust claimed the prize at a news conference after weeks of suspense about the identity of the winner of the nation’s eighth-largest lottery jackpot.

– Wire report

Puzzles............................................................A26-27 Obituaries.......................................................A12-13 Opinions........................................................A20-21 Sports..............................................................B1-8 State...............................................................A16 Technology....................................................A24-25 Television................................................................A15 Weather.................................................................A5

The daily

TWEET @NWHerald

“Paul Green is responsible for one of my favorite quotes: “Streets in Chicago are not named after nice people.” @RobHart1980

The daily

DIGIT $98 The monthly salary for a Lakewood village trustee.

ON THE COVER McHenry County State’s Attorney candidates Ray Flavin and Patrick Kenneally address questions posed Monday during the League of Women Voters of McHenry County-sponsored candidate forum, See story page A3. Photo by H. Rick Bamman – hbamman@ shawmedia.com

GET OUR NEWSLETTER Sign up for our Morning Update newsletter to get a mix of our best stories straight to your email Monday through Friday. Visit NWHerald. com/newsletter.

GET OUR APP Download the free Northwest Herald app to get your fix on local news in McHenry County. It’s available in iTunes and Google Play stores. Learn more at NWHerald.com/app.

CORRECTIONS & CLARIFICATIONS

Accuracy is important to the Northwest Herald, and we want to correct mistakes promptly. Please call errors to our attention by phone, 815-4594122; email, tips@nwherald.com; or fax, 815-459-5640.


A CLOSER LOOK

3 Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016 H. Rick Bamman – hbamman@shawmedia.com

State’s attorney Republican candidate Patrick Kenneally (from left) talks with voter Robert Jackson of Woodstock as Republican County Board chairman candidate Michael Walkup and Democratic state’s attorney candidate Ray Flavin speak with others Monday during the meet-and-greet event before the start of the League of Women Voters of McHenry County-sponsored forum at McHenry County College in Crystal Lake.

CANDIDATES OUTLINE PRIORITIES

McHenry County state’s attorney candidates talk issues at voter forum By JORDYN REILAND

jreiland@shawmedia.com CRYSTAL LAKE – Heroin use, expanding the county’s specialty courts and reducing the budget are among the top priorities of the McHenry County state’s attorney candidates. Assistant State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally and Woodstock lawyer Ray Flavin made their cases to voters who attended a forum Monday evening held by the McHenry County League of Women Voters. The candidates are running to replace current State’s Attorney Lou Bi-

anchi, who decided against seeking a fourth term. Kenneally said that as someone with experience in almost every job at the state’s attorney’s office, his primary goal is to treat everyone fairly and take every situation on a case-by-case basis. His experience, he said, is what makes him the most qualified candidate for the position. “It’s not like you just take the law, apply it and out pops justice,” Kenneally said, speaking to the experience and understanding it takes to fill the state’s attorney position. Flavin, an attorney with more than

23 years of experience, said he is looking to bring a new direction to the office if elected in November. Making all specialty courts more accessible is at the top of his list of priorities. Flavin has said he is interested in implementing a Veterans Court into the McHenry County specialty court system. “Veterans have problems unique to themselves. A lot of them don’t ask for help because they are self-reliant,” Flavin said. Kenneally said McHenry County already has a smaller Veterans Court. He said the next state’s attorney will

have to decide whether expanding the program is necessary based on the county’s veteran population. Flavin said he was frustrated that no one has talked much about the program if it already exists when many of his clients could potentially qualify and are in need of the service. Gov. Bruce Rauner signed legislation in August that would require the chief judge of every judicial circuit in Illinois to establish a veterans and service members court program. On the topic of heroin use in

See FORUM, page A8


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

4

LOCAL NEWS LOCAL BRIEF Library to host book group for young adults

CARY – The Cary Area Public Library will sponsor “Books on Tap” from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Sept. 20, Oct. 18 and Nov. 15 at the Cary Ale House, 208 W. Main St. The new book club is for adults in their 20s and 30s. The first meeting will be organizational with a discussion of current and favorite books, and potential titles to read throughout the year. Future meetings will focus on one book a month chosen by the group. Registration is required. For information, visit www. caryarealibrary.info or call 847639-4210.

– Northwest Herald

LOCAL DEATHS OBITUARIES ON PAGE A12-13

Ronald Borucki 82, Cary Russell A. Coulman 60, Hebron June Alene Sheerer 86, Grayslake Otto R. Wille Jr. 62, Crystal Lake Mary E. Wolf 93, Algonquin

NEWS ALERTS Get news from your community sent to your phone. Text the following keyword to 74574 for your community text alerts: NWHALGONQUIN NWHCARY NWHCRYSTALLAKE NWHHUNTLEY NWHLITH NWHMCHENRY NWHWOODSTOCK To sign up for more alerts – including school news, prep sports and severe weather alerts – or to manage your text alerts – visit http://shawurl.com/textalert.

Message and data rates apply.

Have a news tip?

Get text alerts

Sign up for breaking news text and email alerts at NWHerald.com.

Email tips@NWHerald.com

Doctor: Man accused of murder had mental illness since early ’90s By JORDYN REILAND

jreiland@shawmedia.com WOODSTOCK – A psychologist testified in McHenry County court on Monday that Howard E. Dibbern suffered from schizoaffective disorder the day authorities believe he killed Karen Scavelli in her Island Lake home. Scavelli died June 2, 2014. The 48-year-old died from blunt force trauma, according to an autopsy report. Dibbern, 51, is on trial this week for her alleged murder. Dibbern was charged Howard E. with first-degree murder, Dibbern concealing a homicide and possession of a stolen motor vehicle, after authorities said he beat, stabbed and broke the neck of Scavelli. Prosecutors said Dibbern hid her body under pillows and blankets. Dibbern then stole her vehicle and led police on a “high-speed chase” before crashing into a Mundelein home, authorities said. Denise Dojka, a licensed psychologist who testified for the defense, said after reviewing arrest reports, supplemental findings, medical records and a onehour interview with the defendant at the McHenry County Jail, she believed that Dibbern has had a mental illness since at least the 1990s – specifically schizoaffective disorder. Schizoaffective disorder is characterized primarily by symptoms of schizophrenia, such as hallucinations or delusions, and symptoms of a mood disorder, such as mania and depression. She said Dibbern was prescribed several anti-psychotic and depressant medica-

tions, as well as a mood stabilizer. He also underwent five electroconvulsive therapy treatments. Dibbern’s attorneys, McHenry County assistant public defenders Angelo Mourelatos and Rick Behof, are proceeding on an insanity defense, meaning they are arguing their client was legally insane at the time of the alleged crime. Dojka said she believed that Dibbern was “not in touch with reality” and exhibited depression, mania and grandiosity. She said in her own conversations and based on documentation from the jail and other facilities, Dibbern often discussed being very wealthy, either as a stock broker, a pet store owner or by winning money in several lawsuits. She also said he told her and others that his wife was stabbed in the 1980s and his mother was dead. Prosecutors said Dibbern’s father said he was unmarried and his mother was living in Fox Lake. “He’s bragging, but I believe he believes what he is bragging about,” she said. She said the day of the alleged crime Scavelli’s daughter noticed that Dibbern was acting strange and at one point said he was “the chosen one.” Dojka said she believed Dibbern was in a psychotic state. Dibbern was previously in a mental institution 10 days before the alleged murder but did not report any hallucinations or delusions while being treated, prosecutors said. When he left, he was prescribed Prozac, but was not taking any medication at the time of the June 2014 incident. “It’s much more difficult to function when you are not taking your medication,” Dojka said. After Dibbern left Scavelli’s residence in her vehicle and crashed into a Mundelein home, he was confronted by police and authorities said he was hitting his

head with a hammer and cutting himself in the arms with a knife. Dojka said Dibbern was likely feeling hopeless and was attempting to avoid the fate of having to go back to prison. Ultimately, Dojka said, Dibbern lacked the capacity to appreciate or understand his criminal conduct. Prosecutors argued that there were other tests that could have been done in order to determine whether Dibbern was telling the truth or malingering because of the serious charges he was facing. Assistant State’s Attorney Robert Zalud said that it’s not unusual for people who are charged with serious crimes to malinger, meaning they exaggerate or make up a mental illness. He asked Dojka if she had conducted any specific tests in order to determine whether he was malingering and she said she did not. Dojka said she found Dibbern to be “mostly credible.” Zalud also asked Dojka whether Dibbern could have acted on feelings of embarrassment, anger or jealously, even if he had the disorder, and she said “yes.” Zalud said Dibbern was arrested in Iowa City in 2004 after he reportedly stole a woman’s car, her credit cards and simulated cutting her throat. He said this incident and one in Lakemoor showed a pattern in his behavior. Dibbern also was on parole at the time of the alleged homicide after serving three years in prison on a weapons charge out of Cook County, according to court records. Police have said Dibbern is from McHenry, but court records show he lived in Chicago. Dibbern remains in custody in lieu of $2 million bond. The bench trial will continue at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday before McHenry County Judge Sharon Prather.

Motorcyclist in critical condition after crash NORTHWEST HERALD A 45-year-old Wood Dale man was taken to the hospital Sunday after two motorcycles crashed in unincorporated Nunda Township, police said. About 3:28 p.m., a 2014 Harley-Davidson motorcycle traveling south on Roberts Road, south of Lamphere Road, sideswiped a 2011 Harley-Davidson

also southbound on Roberts Road, according to a news release from the McHenry County Sheriff’s Office. Both motorcycles lost control and overturned, police said, and the driver of the 2014 Harley-Davidson was ejected. The Wauconda Fire District took the driver who was ejected to Advocate Condell Medical Center in Libertyville. Police

said the driver remains in critical condition with injuries that were considered life-threatening. The driver of the 2011 Harley-Davidson, a 64-year-old man from Des Plaines, was treated at the scene and released with minor injuries, police said. There were no passengers on either motorcycle, police said. Neither driver was wear-

ing a helmet, police said, and alcohol is not believed to be a factor in the crash. Police closed Roberts Road for about four hours during the investigation. The investigation is ongoing by the McHenry County Sheriff’s Traffic Crash Investigations Unit. Island Lake and Tower Lakes police also assisted with traffic control.


WEATHER

5

A cold front will move toward the area throughout the day. Ahead of this front, temperatures will climb to near 80 F. Showers and thunderstorms will arrive later this afternoon and continue overnight. A lingering shower will quickly move out of the area tomorrow morning. A large area of high pressure will settle over the area and bring nice weather.

TODAY

80 59

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

A.M. shower, then some sun

Partly sunny and nice

A blend of sun and clouds

72 53

Mostly cloudy; shower, t-storm

74 58

Galena

Freeport

74/54

76/56

Belvidere

79/59

Rockford

AIR QUALITY TODAY Main offender .......................... ozone

0-50 Good, 51-100 Moderate, 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups, 151-200 Unhealthy 201-300 Very Unhealthy, 301-500 Hazardous Source: Illinois EPA

Overcast; a couple of showers

Partly sunny and pleasant

Times of clouds and sun

78 56

Harvard

77/57

80/59

80/60

82/61

DeKalb

80/58

80/59

80/59

Orland Park 82/65 Hammond

La Salle

81/67

Joliet

82/62

Kewanee

80/66

81/64

82/63

82/63

79/57

Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

Chicago

Aurora

Sandwich

Davenport

75 56

Evanston

Oak Park

82/65

St. Charles

80/59

Rock Falls

82/63

Elgin

80/59

78/57

Waukegan Arlington Heights

Hampshire

Clinton

80/59

McHenry

80/59

78/58

73 54

Kenosha

Crystal Lake

79/60

Savanna

Statistics through 4 p.m. yesterday

8 am 10 am Noon 2 pm 4 pm 6 pm The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme.

MONDAY

76/55

Dixon

UV INDEX

SUNDAY

Lake Geneva

ALMANAC

TEMPERATURES High ................................................... 79° Low ................................................... 54° Normal high ....................................... 76° Normal low ........................................ 56° Record high .......................... 96° in 1952 Record low ........................... 44° in 2014 Peak wind ............................ S at 16 mph PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 4 p.m. yest............0.00” Month to date ................................. 0.45” Normal month to date ..................... 1.34” Year to date .................................. 27.43” Normal year to date ...................... 26.55”

77 64

SATURDAY

82/64

Michigan City

80/66

Gary

82/66 Valparaiso

Ottawa

80/60

82/62

82/64

Kankakee

83/64

FOX RIVER STAGES

NATIONAL WEATHER

Fld: flood stage. Prs: stage in feet at 7 a.m Monday. Chg: change in previous 24 hours. Station Fld Prs Chg

Algonquin Burlington, WI Fox Lake McHenry Montgomery New Munster, WI Nippersink Lake Waukesha

3 11 -4 13 11 -6

1.50 6.37 4.37 1.03 11.19 5.90 4.31 3.10

-0.02 +0.01 -0.02 +0.05 -0.02 +0.06 -0.01 -0.18

WEATHER HISTORY On Sept. 13, 1857, a hurricane off the Florida coast was blamed for sinking a passenger steamer. More than 200 aboard lost their lives.

POLLEN COUNT

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

Yesterday

SUN AND MOON Sunrise today .......................... 6:31 a.m. Sunset today ........................... 7:06 p.m. Moonrise today ........................ 5:15 p.m. Moonset today ......................... 2:50 a.m. Sunrise tomorrow .................... 6:33 a.m. Sunset tomorrow ..................... 7:04 p.m. Moonrise tomorrow ................. 5:55 p.m. Moonset tomorrow .................. 3:54 a.m.

MOON PHASES Full

Last

New

First

Sep 16

Sep 23

Sep 30

Oct 8

Source: National Allergy Bureau

NATIONAL CITIES City

Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Boston Buffalo Charlotte Chicago Dallas Denver Detroit Honolulu

Today Hi Lo W

60 87 85 81 80 88 81 93 68 83 87

47 71 65 65 63 67 64 74 49 64 73

c pc pc s s pc pc pc c pc c

Forecasts and graphics, except WFLD forecasts, provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

WORLD CITIES Wednesday Hi Lo W

59 86 92 85 72 89 72 93 76 71 86

50 71 64 57 53 68 58 74 49 54 75

pc t pc pc r pc pc pc pc pc sh

City

Houston Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles Louisville Miami Minneapolis New Orleans New York City Seattle Wash., DC

Today Hi Lo W

90 79 89 71 89 88 66 88 82 77 88

74 61 63 58 68 77 47 80 69 52 72

t t pc r s t pc t s s pc

Wednesday Hi Lo W

91 74 87 75 89 89 66 91 88 78 94

74 63 66 59 69 78 52 78 63 52 70

pc c s pc pc t s t pc s pc

City

Athens Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Berlin Buenos Aires Cairo Hong Kong Istanbul Kabul London

Today Hi Lo W

85 107 85 83 89 60 91 88 81 83 88

70 71 75 62 61 48 74 81 69 57 66

Wednesday Hi Lo W

s 86 69 s s 108 73 s t 87 76 t pc 87 64 pc s 84 58 s pc 62 40 s s 94 77 s pc 91 79 pc s 83 68 s s 82 54 s pc 85 64 s

City

Madrid Manila Mexico City Moscow New Delhi Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Tokyo Toronto

Today Hi Lo W

75 88 75 57 95 89 90 82 83 81 83

50 81 53 44 77 66 76 64 66 72 65

r t t pc s pc s pc pc sh s

Wednesday Hi Lo W

69 87 76 53 94 85 84 82 82 79 72

51 79 52 45 77 61 70 65 64 75 50

pc sh t c pc pc s pc s r r

Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR MCHENRY COUNTY SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR McHENRY COUNTY


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

|LOCAL NEWS

6 LAKEWOOD

Trustee to contribute his salary to new anti-tax effort By KEVIN P. CRAVER

kcraver@shawmedia.com LAKEWOOD – Trustee Paul Serwatka will now accept his salary as an elected official – to kick into a new political fund to fight for tax relief. Resurrecting a promise he made earlier this year when he ran for the Illinois House, Serwatka announced that he will contribute his trustee salary to the newly formed Lakewood Tax-Fighter and Better Government Project. The fund, which was registered Aug. 31 with the Illinois State Board of Elections, seeks to reduce the village’s tax burden by expanding awareness of village issues, organizing residents, and identifying and electing village board members who pledge a dedication to lower taxes, transparency and fiscally responsible policies.

Serwatka, who was elected last year on a write-in campaign and won the most votes of any candidate, previously had not accepted the salary – he would sign the monthly $98 check right back to the village. “My two biggest priorities are more ac- Paul countable government Serwatka in Lakewood, and to lower the property tax burden,” Serwatka said. “Yes, [trustees] say that Lakewood is a small percentage of property tax bills, but I’m a big believer that there is a lot of fat that can be trimmed from Lakewood’s budget.” The organization has $1,500 in seed money, according to state records. But Serwatka hopes other residents start contributing to fund mailers, signs, a

web presence and other activities. He and several volunteers spearheaded a successful petition drive of more than 500 signatures to get an advisory referendum on the Nov. 8 ballot asking voters whether taxing bodies should be required to go to referendum for any tax increase. Serwatka writes a regular email update after Village Board meetings, which he said goes out to more than 500 people. Serwatka said that while other taxing bodies on Lakewood residents’ bills take more money than village government, the village can become an example to follow. “I want to be the benchmark of excellence and not just, ‘We’re not the worst,’” Serwatka said. “I don’t want to measure us by how bad everybody else is.”

Northwest Herald Web Poll Question Logonontotowww.NWHerald.com www.NWHerald.com Log andand vote vote on today’s poll question: on today’s poll question:

Who is your choice for ghghghghg? McHenry County state’s ???day’s results as of XX p.m.: attorney? xxxx Monday’s results as of 9 p.m.: Who’s getting your vote for McHenry xxx County Board Chairman?

48% Jack Franks

30% Michael Walkup

22% Undecided

BLOOD DRIVES Following is a list of places to give blood. Donors should be 17 or older or 16 with a parent’s consent, weigh at least 110 pounds and be in good health.

Woodstock. Appointments and information: Carrie Futchko, 815-477-0086 or www. heartlandbc.org. • 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sept. 17 – Christ the King Church, 5006 E. Wonder Lake Road, • 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sept. 13 – PolyOne Cor- Wonder Lake. A Knights of Columbus poration, 921 Ridgeview Drive, McHenry. A Council 8473 blood drive. Appointments and information: Howard Knaizer, 847-224-4966 United Way blood drive. Appointments and information: Howard Knaizer, 847-224-4966 or www.lifesource.org. • 3:30 to 7:30 p.m. Sept. 20 – Shepherd or www.lifesource.org. of the Hills Lutheran Church, 404 N. Green • 3 to 7 p.m. Sept. 15 – Bickford Assisted Living, 717 S. McHenry Ave., Crystal Lake. Ap- St., McHenry. Appointments and informapointments and information: Carrie Futchko, tion: Carrie Futchko, 815-477-0086 or www. heartlandbc.org. 815-477-0086 or www.heartlandbc.org. • 8 a.m. to noon Sept. 24 – St. Peter’s • 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Sept. 15 – Johnsburg High School, 2002 W. Ringwood Road, Church of Spring Grove, 2118 Main St., Spring Grove. Appointments and informaJohnsburg. Appointments and information: tion: Carrie Futchko, 815-477-0086 or www. Carrie Futchko, 815-477-0086 or www. heartlandbc.org. heartlandbc.org. • 3:30 to 7:30 p.m. Sept. 29 – Cross• 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. Sept. 15 – McHenFit-Huntley, 10643 Wolf Drive, Huntley. ry VFW Post 4600, 3002 W. Route 120, Camille Piazza, 847-305-9998 or www. McHenry. Appointments and information: heartlandbc.org. Carrie Futchko, 815-477-0086 or www. • 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Sept. 30 – City of heartlandbc.org. Woodstock, 121 W. Calhoun St., Woodstock. • 2 to 6 p.m. Sept. 15 – McHenry County Appointments and information: Carrie FutchFarm Bureau, 1102 McConnell Road,

ko, 815-477-0086 or www.heartlandbc.org. Blood service organizations • American Red Cross of Greater Chicago – 800-448-3543 for general blood services; 312-729-6100 general questions. • Heartland Blood Centers – 800-7864483; 630-264-7834 or www.heartlandbc. org. Locations: 6296 Northwest Highway, Crystal Lake, 815-356-0608; 1140 N. McLean Blvd., Elgin, 847-741-8282; 2000 W. State St., Unit 1E, Geneva, 630-208-8105; 1200 N. Highland Ave., Aurora, 630-892-7055. • LifeSource Blood Center – Crystal Lake Community Donor Center, 5577 Northwest Highway, Crystal Lake, 815-356-0672; 815356-5173 or www.lifesource.org. Hours: noon to 7:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday; 7:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. • Rock River Valley Blood Center – 419 N. Sixth St., Rockford, 877-778-2299; 815-9658751 or www.rrvbc.org. Hours: 6:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays, 6:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Fridays; 7 to 11 a.m. second Saturdays.

Transitional housing and support services for homeless women & children in Northern Illinois.

815-271-5444 www.h-o-s.org

Count on Me... Andrew Killinger

...We Take the Time to Know You

Andrew Killinger Vice President Commercial Lending 611 S. Main St. Crystal Lake, IL 60014

(815) 788-3454 Member FDIC


7

CARY

By RENEE TOMELL

rtomell@shawmedia.com

Stacy Stusowski, PC

WILLS TRUSTS ESTATE

PLANNING

A Little Piece of Plastic Could Make your Headaches Disappear SPONSORED BY

New technology now allows Dr. Dano to objectively evaluate the state of your jaw and facial muscles and various other factors that may be affecting your bite and causing you headaches. Based on this evaluation Dr. Dano can rule in or rule out your bite as possible cause of headache pain with a high degree of confidence. The muscles of the temple area of the forehead are muscles that play an important part in the posturing and closing of the jaw. If your occlusion (bite) is not right, it can lead to abnormal tension in these muscles and this could be one of several possible causes of severe headaches If the bite is not corrected, the muscles may remain tense for long periods of time. The result can be a very painful headache. While headaches are typically treated by a physician or neurologist, improper occlusion (your bite) may play a significant role in

severe headaches as well as other head and neck pain. Headaches are generally classified into several basic types: Sinus, Cluster, Tension and Migraine. If the indications are that your bite is a major factor, Dr. Dano may recommend a fabrication of a custom made orthotic—“A LITTLE PIECE OF PLASTIC, WHICH MIGHT MAKE YOUR HEADACHES DISAPPEAR”. At this point, nothing permanent is done to alter your teeth or your bite. You would wear this orthotic for a period of time to make sure the new bite position is correct before any consideration would be given to permanently altering your bite. After wearing this for a while, you and Dr. Dano will know for sure if the new bite position has resolved the headache problem. IF you are having headaches and suspicion that your bite might be the concern please call Dr. Dano to help you at 1-815-344-2264. Bull Valley Dentistry 601 Ridgeview Drive, McHenry, IL., 60050 Call (815) 344-2264 or visit www.bullvalleydentistry.com

Preserving the Independence of McHenry County Seniors

Call 815- 455-3120 or visit scvnmchenrycounty.org

Free Unlimited one time consultation through September 30th 382 W. VIRGINIA ST. #3 CRYSTAL LAKE SMS@TRUSTSMSLAW.COM 815-893-0043 FAX: 815-893-0778

• Tuesday, September 13, 2016

BATAVIA – A Cary-based theater company has been sued for injuries to a teen who took part in a February 2015 production of “Aladdin” that used the stage at the Batavia High School Fine Arts Centre. Brought by her mother, the suit seeks more than $50,000 in damages from Spotlight Youth Theater for the 15-year-old girl identified as Janie Doe. The suit alleges that she struck her head on a low spotlight while performing the assigned task of picking up confetti at the end of the play’s first act. Her attorney, Marion Morawicz of Chicago, stated in the documents that her client “was severely and permanently injured,” citing disability, dis-

figurement and anguish. According to the documents, Morawicz named Batavia School District 101 as a respondent to access information pertinent to the case. When contacted, the school district declined to comment. The lawsuit argues the theater arts education company was negligent in the placement of the spotlight at about 5 feet off the ground on a pole near the area it designated participants use to exit the stage near the rear curtains. The teen was about 5 feet 8 inches tall at the time. While picking up the confetti, she stood up and hit her head on the stage light, according to the lawsuit. A Kane County court date of Nov. 3 has been set.

THE LAW OFFICES OF

LOCAL NEWS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Theater company sued for injury on stage in Batavia


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

|LOCAL NEWS

8

McHenry County State’s Attorney candidates Patrick Kenneally (left) and Ray Flavin greet each other Monday before the start of the League of Women Voters of McHenry County-sponsored candidate forum. H. Rick Bamman – hbamman@shawmedia.com

• FORUM

Continued from page A3 McHenry County, Kenneally said he is working with the McHenry County Substance Abuse Coalition in aiding those who are seeking treatment. He said the group is in the process of starting a program that would allow someone with a substance abuse problem to walk in and receive the treatment with the assurance that no criminal charges will be brought if they complete the program. The initiative is comparable to Lake County’s Way Out program, which was implemented over the past several months. Flavin said the number of heroin-related overdoses has increased four times since 2000. In 2014, 32 people died of drug overdose deaths in McHenry County and 12 were heroin-related, according to statistics from the McHenry County Coroner’s Office. He said he is interested in expanding the county’s drug court program, in addition to the other specialty court programs because the programs are currently too restrictive. For example, when someone is charged with driving under the influence, they are not allowed to participate in drug or mental health court. Kenneally’s goal at the end of the

first term is to cut the state’s attorney’s office budget by 10 percent or $300,000. In order to do so, he said he plans to cut staff positions, reduce the need for out-of-county office training, eliminate the need for outside counsel for labor law cases and cut the number of county-owned vehicles used by the office. While he understands the need for efficiency, any cuts made by the state’s attorney’s office would not be significant to the taxpayer, Flavin said. The office currently costs each McHenry County taxpayer about $9, he said. Instead, Flavin said he plans to consolidate the state’s attorney’s office staff because there has been a decrease in the caseload, but an increase in staffing. The candidates for McHenry County recorder and McHenry County Board chairman also spoke Monday evening. Democratic candidate Jack Franks declined to participate, so McHenry County Board chairman Republican candidate Michael Walkup made a statement. Both Republican recorder candidate Joe Tirio and Democratic recorder candidate Lynn Gray were present. Candidates for three state offices are scheduled for the second forum Sept. 19. They include candidates for the 26th and 32nd Illinois Senate districts, and the 63rd Illinois House.

LOCAL BRIEF Woman sent to hospital after Cary rollover, fire official says

the driver, Cary Fire Protection District Lt. Mark Pelletreau said. There were no CARY – A woman was taken to the hos- passengers. Pelletreau said the woman was taken pital Monday morning after her vehicle to Advocate Good Shepherd Hospital in rolled over on Route 14 in Cary, officials Barrington with minor injuries. said. He said westbound Route 14 was temCary Deputy Chief of Police Jim Fillmore porarily closed because of the crash. said a Chevrolet Equinox was traveling Fillmore said the driver, Peggy Gorman west on Route 14 and hit a small brick of Cary, was cited with improper lane wall in front of CVS before rolling over. Fire crews responded about 9 a.m. and use. cut off the roof of the vehicle to extricate – Hannah Prokop www.mchenrycountyturningpoint.org Dignified care “To confront violence against women & compassion children in McHenry and forCounty” the whole family.

847-3 8 1 - 5 8 11 815-338-8081


MARENGO

By BRITTANY KEEPERMAN

bkeeperman@shawmedia.com MARENGO – City officials want to limit the number of bars in Marengo’s downtown. The Marengo City Council met Monday for further discussion on liquor licenses related to video gaming cafes, but ended up requesting a moratorium on bars in the city’s downtown area. Two businesses sought approval for licenses Monday, including a proposed video gambling cafe on Route 176 near Rosati’s and a Mexican restaurant at 228 S. State St. Both were approved, but similar businesses may receive more scrutiny in the

“The scope of what we can regulate is limited. [The gaming board] gets to decide a lot.” Carlos Arevalo

Marengo city attorney future. The council has to determine the structure of its liquor licensing in order to limit video gaming, because the Illinois Gaming Board governs many regulations related to those types of businesses, City Attorney Carlos Arevalo said.

“It doesn’t make any sense,” Ward 2 Alderman Steven Mortensen said. “If that’s the type of business that wants to come to town, we have to support them or they won’t be here very long. Why would we deny somebody the opportunity to be an entrepreneur?” Council members didn’t vote to take action on a hold Monday, but will discuss the item at a future meeting. “I believe the image of downtown is very important,” Mayor Don Lockhart said. “I personally wouldn’t like to see another tavern downtown. ... I believe we have enough that it would be destructive to the image of the city to add more.”

practicing how to use fire extinguishers, and a firefighter skills course for children. A Flight for Life helicopter also is scheduled to land, and visitors can talk to its crew. Residents will learn ways to keep

their homes safe from fire and carbon monoxide, how to check for fire hazards in homes, and preparing and practicing evacuation plans with their families. Refreshments will be provided by The Salvation Army.

LOCAL BRIEF Crystal Lake Fire Rescue to hold open house Oct. 8

at the main station at City Hall, 100 W. Woodstock St., reminds people to CRYSTAL LAKE – The Crystal Lake Fire check the dates and replace their smoke Rescue Department will hold its annual alarms every 10 years. Family-friendly activities will include open house from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Oct. meeting firefighters, tours, watching the 8. “jaws of life” open a car, fire hose drills, The theme for this year’s open house

– Northwest Herald

In Pain? Call Now! You don’t have to live with the pain!

Neuropathy Breakthrough!

Marketing budgets for social media will nearly double in the next five years.

If You’re Experiencing Pain, Burning, Numbness, Tingling or Pins & Needles In Your Hands Or Feet -> Don’t Miss The FREE Seminar On Peripheral Neuropathy!

BREAKTHROUGH FOR PERIPHERAL NEUROPATHY SUFFERERS! Clinical Studies Reveal: The Debilitating Pain, Numbness & Tingling Experienced By Patients Suffering From Peripheral Neuropathy Can Be Successfully Treated Without The Use Of Drugs And Surgery.

Presented by:

Dr. Daniel Horn, D.C.

Leading wellness expert, lecturer and inventor

In this cutting-edge FREE seminar you’ll learn: • The underlying causes of peripheral neuropathy, and the key to prevention.

• 3 simple changes to your diet that can help prevent peripheral neuropathy from developing.

DIGITAL MARKETING STRATEGY

• The Nobel prize winning discovery that every neuropathy patient MUST know.

• How peripheral neuropathy is diagnosed, and when it can be successfully. treated

What are you doing to make social media work for you?

“…my feet were tingling and felt like needles. My toes were going numb and were discolored. I answered the ad in the newspaper and have been taking the treatments for neuropathy. I have the feeling back in my toes, my legs are so much better”– James E. Moore “…the therapy for neuropathy is helping me tremendously. My mobility is 100% better. The burning and freezing in my feet is gone.”– Vester Pitman

Thursday, September 15 @ 1:00pm

RSVP/CALL 847-558-2392

(Special seminars are available for guests with scheduling limitations.)

SM-CL0347022

Registration is FREE, but seating is limited to the first 20 callers.

1600 N. Randall Rd. Suite 100, Elgin (Across from the new Sherman Hospital)

October 17–21 • Water Tower Campus Executive Education • 312.915.6781 • LUC.edu/NH_digitalmarketing Source: The CMO Survey – Highlights and Insights Report, Figure 5.1, February 2016.

• Tuesday, September 13, 2016

“The scope of what we can regulate is limited,” he said. “[The gaming board] gets to decide a lot.” Third Ward Alderman Matt Keenum said that it was time for the city to begin to look toward regulating not just video gaming establishments, but taverns as well. “The question is revenue versus the image we project,” he said. “That’s what the balance is.” Not all agreed with Keenum’s plan to construct a more sober image for the city – particularly when it limits business opportunities for those who may be interested in one of Marengo’s numerous vacant storefronts.

LOCAL NEWS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

City considers limit on bars in downtown area

9


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

| LOCAL NEWS

10 CRYSTAL LAKE

Workshops planned for local nonprofit leaders NORTHWEST HERALD

CRYSTAL LAKE – Volunteer Center McHenry County will offer fall training sessions for those who want to strengthen local nonprofit organizations. Experienced nonprofit leaders will provide attendees with best practices and proven strategies. All classes meet at The Volunteer Center, 620 Dakota St., in Crystal Lake. Fees range from free to $100. For information and to register, visit www. volunteercentermchenrycounty.org. • Thursday: Volunteer Management Network Group: Connect with a network of resourceful McHenry County Volunteer Managers. Share skills, ask questions, give advice or find a new tool. • Oct. 3: Monday Morning Media Motivation Series: Join other nonprofits and learn how to increase capacity through Facebook. Jack Bechaud, president of The Social Networker, will lead through a seven-month series. Class will meet the first and third Mondays from 9 to 10:30 a.m. at Volunteer Center McHenry

County. Those who complete the course will receive a certificate of completion • Oct. 7: First Friday Focus on Funding: Attend an “Introduction to Finding Grants” and learn to use The Foundation Center Online Directory and Grantspace. Monthly sessions are limited to four. • Oct. 14: Fundraising – Engaging Cor-

SM-CL0382380

porations and Other Community Partners:

Discover how to expand your fundraising abilities by engaging corporations, schools and other community partners. Taught by Ruby and Associates, a catalyst strengthening nonprofit organizations. • Oct. 15: Board Member Boot Camp: Stronger boards for today’s nonprofits. Develop an organization’s leadership by learning what is needed to ensure a strong future. Volunteer Center McHenry County provides resources that help strengthen nonprofit organizations. For information, call 815-344-4483 or visit www.volunteercentermchenrycounty.org.

815-923-4050

www.ocelectric.net

Ready To Help Meet Your Electrical Needs • Certified Electricians • New / Remodel Construction • Troubleshooting • Panel Upgrades • New Circuits • Whole House

Surge Protection • Ceiling Fans & Fixtures Installed • Basements • Insurance Work • Residential, Commercial & Industrial

Family Owned Since 1996

104 Cass St. Woodstock, IL 60098 815.338.5651 thoughtfulnessShop.com


90IDEAS in 90MINUTES

Thursday, September 29th

Registration 7-7:30 am Breakfast & Program 7:30-9:15 am Crystal Lake Country Club 721 Country Club Road

Tickets $35 per person Table of 8/ $280 Table of 10/$350 Priority reservations due September 27, 2016

Dave Hubbard

Kevin Bruning

Judy Pelinski

President Exemplar Financial Network

Managing Partner Bruning & Associates P.C

President Fresh Look Interiors

Gary Reece

Priscilla Harper

Jamie Maravich

Mike Splitt

Rik Fregia

To register to attend this event go to: nwherald.com/90ideas Contact Kelly Buchanan Event Coordinator at 319-471-1202 or kbuchanan@threesixtybluesky.com if you have questions.

President Heartland Cabinet Supply, Inc.

Designer Priscilla Harper Designs

Market President McHenry County BMO Harris Bank

Attendees will receive all 90 ideas in a special exclusive supplement, complete with space to take notes PRESENTING SPONSOR

MAJOR SPONSOR

BREAKFAST SPONSOR

SUPPORTING SPONSORS HOSTED BY area of commerce

President InSync Systems Inc.

Vice President Courtesy Automotive Group

Kelly Weaver

Director Alexander Leigh Center for Autism

• Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Spend 90 Minutes with Nine of McHenry County Business Leaders and walk away with 90 of their best ideas

NORTHWEST HERALD | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

New Event!

11


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

12

OBITUARIES RONALD BORUCKI Ronald Borucki, age 82, of Cary, passed away Sept. 11, 2016. Arrangements are pending at the Kahle-Moore Funeral Home. For information: 847-639-3817 or kahlemoore.com.

RUSSELL A. COULMAN

Born: March 25, 1956; in Woodstock, IL Died: Sept. 10, 2016; in Rockford, IL Russell A. “Russ” Coulman, age 60, of Hebron, IL, passed away Saturday, Sept. 10, 2016, at Rock River Health Care in Rockford, IL. He was born in Woodstock, Illinois, on March 25, 1956, a son of the late George and Stella (Regnier) Coulman. He was a graduate of Alden-Hebron High School in 1974, where he played football. He was a member of the United Methodist Church in Hebron, IL. He was a self-described hunter and loved his outdoor activities.

How to submit Send obituary information to obits@ nwherald.com or call 815-526-4438. Notices are accepted until 2 p.m. for the next day’s edition. Obituaries also appear online at NWHerald.com/obits, where you may sign the guest book, send flowers or make a memorial donation. Survivors are a sister, Georgette (Kevin Hanneman) Braun, of Rockford, IL; two brothers, Robert (Peggy) Coulman, of Hazelhurst, WI; andRonald, (Pat Berry) Coulman, of Hebron, IL; and numerous nieces and nephews. He was preceded by his parents, a brother, Ralph “Buster” Coulman; and sister-in-law, Lois Coulman. Visitation will be from 4 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2016, at Ehorn-Adams Funeral Home, 9625 Main St., Hebron. Visitation will continue from 10:30 a.m. Thursday until the funeral services at 11 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 15, 2016, at Hebron United Methodist Church, 9811 Main St., Hebron, IL, with the Rev. Dr.

James Wilson officiating. Interment will be in Alden Cemetery in Alden, IL. Family requests donations to Hebron United Methodist Church 9811 Main St., Hebron, IL 60034, or Hebron-Alden-Greenwood Fire Protection District, 12302 IL Route 173, P.O. Box 345 Hebron, IL 60034. For information, please call 815 678-7311 or visit www.ehornadams.com.

JUNE ALENE SHEERER June Alene Sheerer (nee Betz), age 86, a “snowbird,” she resided in Saddlebrook Farms in Grayslake, IL and Cross Creek Country Club Estates, Fort Myers, FL. She was formerly of Arlington Heights, IL, for 27 years. June was the beloved wife for 63 years of the late Ralph D., whom she married on Sept. 13, 1947; proud mother of Karen (Dennis) Vito, Crystal Lake, IL, Neal (Ramona) of Pembroke Pines, FL and Nancy (Andrew) Paullin, Crystal Lake, IL; loving grandmother of Valerie (Trey) Breeden, Anthony (Elizabeth), Michael (Kelly) and Victoria Vito, Danielle,

Gabrielle and Christian Sheerer and Sally (Ryan) Bowe and Sam, Henry and Hannah Paullin; cherished great-grandmother of Mitchell and Madeleine Breeden and Nathan Bowe and Ava and Lucille Vito; devoted identical twin sister, Jean A. Elber, still resides in Ohio. June was born on Nov. 3, 1929, in Cleveland, OH, to the late Harold and Alice (nee Grills) Betz and passed away Saturday, Aug.t 27, 2016, at Fair Oaks Health Care Center in Crystal Lake, IL. A memorial service in her honor will take place Saturday, September 24, 2016, from 10 to 11:30 a.m. at Kisselburg-Wauconda Funeral Home, 235 N. Main St., Wauconda, IL 60084. In lieu of a gift or flowers, please make a donation in memory or honor of June Sheerer to: Journey Care Hospice and Palliative Care Foundation 405 Lake Zurich Road, Barrington, IL 60010, 224-770-2413 or www. Journeycare.org. Service information: 847-526-2115 or visit www.kisselburgwaucondafuneralhome.com. • Continued on page A13

An Imaginative Play about the 20th Century’s Greatest Artist & Thinker SPONSORED BY

In 1993, Steve Martin wrote a genius comedy about a fictional meeting of the greatest artist in recent history, Pablo Picasso, and his equal in terms of science and mathematics, Albert Einstein. This play is called “Picasso at the Lapin Agile” (Nimble Rabbit). The Lapin Agile is, in fact, a real institution, a bar, located in the hub of Bohemian Paris, Montmartre. During the time of the play (1904), the Lapin Agile was known to house some of Paris’s soon to be most acclaimed artists, among them Pablo Picasso himself. Picasso actually portrayed the interior of the famous bar once in his famous piece, “Au Lapin Agile” (At the Nimble Rabbit). The play pits its titular character, Picasso, against the wits of Albert Einstein in an imaginative encounter between the two greatest minds of the

Big Brothers Big Sisters

of McHenry County

www.bbbsmchenry.org • 815-385-3855

20th century. And although this chance meeting has these two geniuses at odds, they soon come to find an understanding. But how can one so easily recognize a concord between the arts and sciences? Well, for these two brilliant minds it only takes about 90 minutes of witty, charming hilarity brought to life by actors reciting the magnetic words Steve Martin put to paper almost a quarter century ago to date. If you’d like to see the punch line of the joke, “two geniuses walk into a bar…” then the wit of yet another 20th century genius, Steve Martin, should suffice to be the most fun you’ve ever had watching a play! As luck would have it, Williams Street Repertory will be performing Picasso at the Lapin Agile at Raue Center For The Arts in Crystal Lake, opening September 16 @ 8p and running through October 23! Buy your tickets today by visiting www.rauecenter.org.

Raue Center For The Arts 26 N. Williams Street Crystal Lake, IL 60014 P: 815.356.9212


• Continued from page A12

FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS Russell A. Coulman: The visitation will be from 4 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 14, at Ehorn-Adams Funeral Home, 9625 Main St., Hebron. The visitation will continue from 10:30 a.m. until the 11 a.m. funeral services Thursday, Sept. 15, at Hebron United Methodist Church, 9811 Main St., Hebron. Interment will be in Alden Cemetery. For information, call the funeral home at 815678-7311. Marjorie A. Dierksen: The visitation will be from 9 a.m. until a celebration of life at 11 a.m. Thursday, Sept, 22, at Grace Lutheran Church, 1300 Kishwaukee Valley Road, Woodstock. For information, call Schneider-Leucht-Merwin and Cooney Funeral Home at 815-338-1710. Katie M. Fisher: The visitation will be at 11 a.m. until a noon funeral Mass celebration Tuesday, Sept. 13, at Church of the Holy Apostles, 5211 Bull Valley Road, McHenry. For information, call the Colonial Funeral Home at 815-385-0063. Joseph Alden Florent: A memorial service will be at 2 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 17, at the United Church of Christ in Garden Prairie. William E. Harm: The visitation will be from 5 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 21, until the 6 p.m. celebration of life at Grace Lutheran Church, 6000 Broadway St., Richmond. Inurnment will be private in the Greenwood Cemetery. For information, call 815-678-7311. Claire Dougherty Korkowski: The funeral Mass will be celebrated at 11 a.m. Friday, Sept. 23, at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church in Johnsburg. An open house will begin at noon at Johnsburg Community Club,

2315 W. Church St., Johnsburg. Jack Korkowski: The funeral Mass will be celebrated at 11 a.m. Friday, Sept. 23, at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church in Johnsburg. An open house will begin at noon at Johnsburg Community Club, 2315 W. Church St., Johnsburg. Phyllis M. Kunde: The visitation will continue from 10 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 13, until the 11 a.m. funeral service at Zion Lutheran Church Chapel, 412 Jackson St., Marengo. Interment will be in Marengo City Cemetery. For information, call Fredrick Funeral Home at 847-683-2711. Donald H. Lansu: A funeral service will be at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 13, at DeFiore-Jorgensen Funeral Home, 10763 Dundee Road, Huntley. Burial will be in Huntley Cemetery. For information, call the funeral home at 847-515-8772. Kenneth R. Miller: The visitation will be from 10 a.m. until a 1 p.m. funeral service Thursday, Sept. 15, at Davenport Family Funeral Home, 419 E. Terra Cotta Ave., Crystal Lake. Burial will be in Windridge Memorial Park in Cary. For information, call the funeral home at 815-459-3411. Peter J. Mugavero: The visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 13, at Davenport Family Funeral Home, 419 E. Terra Cotta Ave., Crystal Lake. The visitation will continue at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 14, at the funeral home, proceeding to a funeral Mass celebration at 11 a.m. at St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church, 451 W. Terra Cotta Ave., Crystal Lake. Herbert S. Olson: The memorial service will

be at 11 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 24, at Harvest Bible Chapel, 580 Tracy Trail, Crystal Lake. Doors open at 10 a.m. June Alene Sheerer: The memorial service will be from 10 to 11:30 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 24, at Kisselburg-Wauconda Funeral Home, 235 W. Main St., Wauconda. For information, call the funeral home at 847-526-2115. Sidney Sherwin: A celebration of life will be from 1 to 4 p.m. with a 2 p.m. memorial service Saturday, Sept. 17, at Woodstock VFW Post 5040, 240 N. Throop St., Woodstock. For information, call Schneider-Leucht-Merwin and Cooney Funeral Home at 815-3381710. Otto R. Wille Jr.: The visitation will be from 9 a.m. until the 11 a.m. funeral service Wednesday, Sept. 14, at James A. O’Connor Funeral Home, 11603 Main St., Huntley. Burial will follow in the Huntley Cemetery. For information, call the funeral home at 847-669-5111. Mary E. Wolf: The visitation will be from 3 to 8 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 14, at Willow Funeral Home & Cremation Care, 1415 W. Algonquin Road, Algonquin. The funeral service will be at 11 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 15, at Elm Lawn Memorial Park, 401 E. Lake St., Elmhurst. For information, call the funeral home at 847-458-1700. Nancy Joanne Wright: A memorial service will be at 9:15 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 14, at St. Bernadette Catholic Church, 2400 Bell Ave., Rockford. A celebration of life will take place from 3 to 7 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 24, at Mixin Mingle, 1118-1122 N. Green St., McHenry.

Transgender actress Alexis Arquette has died at age 47 By LINDSEY BAHR

The Associated Press LOS ANGELES – Alexis Arquette, the transgender character actress and sibling of actors David, Rosanna, Richmond and Patricia Arquette, died early Sunday in Los Angeles. She was 47 and surrounded by family who serenaded her with David Bowie’s “Starman,” her siblings said in a statement Sunday. “Alexis was a brilliant artist and painter, a singer, an entertainer and an actor,” her brothers and sisters said. “We learned what real bravery is through watching her journey of living as a trans woman. We came to discover the one truth – that love is everything.” Alexis was born Robert Arquette in Los Angeles in 1969, and she was a performer from a young age, appearing in a music video for The Tubes’ “She’s a Beauty” at age 12 and the occasional other project. A versatile performer, Arquette’s big break came in the 1989 adaptation of “Last Exit to Brooklyn” where she played the trans sex worker Georgette. She was just visiting New York with her sister Patricia Arquette who was up for a role in the film, but pregnant at the time. “They asked me if I wanted to read for a role because they knew that I’d done a drag thing at one of my friend’s clubs,” Arquette said in a 1999 Index Magazine interview. “I ended up getting the job, basically through my sister. If it wasn’t for her, I wouldn’t have been in New York. But nobody gives you a job, you’ve got to earn it on your own. I would never want anyone to think that there’s some kind of cachet to my name.” She also had bit roles in films such as “Pulp Fiction,” ‘’Bride of Chucky” and as a Boy George impersonator first in the Adam Sandler comedy “The Wedding Singer” and again in “Blended.” Boy George even tweeted his condolences to “his sister Alexis ... another bright light gone out far too soon.” Her long list of credits are composed of mostly low-budget and independent fare. Arquette also performed in nightclubs and cabarets sometimes under the name Eva Destruction.

13

• Tuesday, September 13, 2016

er of Barbara Garrity; fond grandmother of Janet (Ken) Rowe, Christine (Sam) DiRaimondo, and Steve Garrity; great-grandmother of OTTO R. WILLE, JR. Blake, Brandon, Taylor Sanderson and Andrea, Born: Nov. 6, 1953; in Harvard, IL Alec, Alyssa DiRaimondo; dear sister of Bill Died: Sept. 9, 2016; in Crystal Lake, IL (Terry) Hall, James (Joyce) Hall, Skip Hall, Ben (Judy) Hall, Betty Charleston; and sister-inOtto R. Wille Jr., 62, of law of Nancy Hall and Elaine Hall; survived by Crystal Lake passed away many nieces and nephews. Friday evening, Sept. 9, 2016, Preceded in death by son in-law, John at home surrounded by his Garrity; siblings, Bob Hall, Dottie (Doyle) family. Wemken, Bud Charleston, Pat Hall, Chuck Hall He was born Nov. 6, 1953, in Harvard, IL, the and Danny Hall. son of Otto Sr. and Irene (Peterson) Wille. He Mary was the co-matriach of the Hall served in the U.S. Army from 1971 to 1974. Family; she will be missed by many. She was Otto married Karen Irving in Crystal Lake on an amazing women on so many levels, career Nov. 11, 1972. He worked for Harms Grain women before it was accepted, strong yet Equipment in Marengo for over 30 years as a loving, tough yet so kind. We all have another service manager. Otto was a loving dad and angel looking out for us. grandpa and was always willing to lend a A visitation will be held Wednesday, Sept. hand to whoever needed it. He will be deeply 14, from 3 to 8 p.m. at Willow Funeral Home missed by all. MARY E. WOLF & Cremation Care, 1415 W. Algonquin Road, Otto is survived by his loving wife of 43 Born: March 27, 1923; in Lajunta, CO Algonquin IL 60102. A funeral service will be years, Karen; daughter, Janice (Mike) Laffoon; Died: Sept. 10, 2016; in Crystal Lake, IL held at Elm Lawn Memorial Park, 401 E. Lake grandchildren, Jeremy, and Jessica; brothSt., Elmhurst, IL. Thursday, Sept. 15, at 11 a.m. ers and sisters, Sue (Barrie) Henkel, Sandy Mary E. Wolf, 93, of Algonquin, passed away Arrangements have been entrusted to (Randy) Tegtman, Katie (Randy) Stading, peacefully Sept. 10, 2016, in Crystal Lake, IL. Willow Funeral Home and Cremation Care. Dave (Lori) Wille, Kelly (Dale) Westphal, Jodi She was born in Lajunta, CO, on March 27, 847-458-1700 or sign guest book at www. 1923. Schultz; several nieces and nephews; and Beloved wife of the late Albert; loving moth- willowfh.com mother-in-law, Lorraine (Clarence) Grischow.

OBITUARIES | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

He was preceded in death by his parents; and father-in-law, Philip Irving. The Funeral Service will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2016, at the James A. O’Connor Funeral Home, 11603 E. Main St., Huntley, with the Rev. Robert Hoffman officiating. Burial with military honors will follow in the Huntley Cemetery. Visitation will be prior to services from 9 until the 11 a.m. service at the funeral home. For information call (847)669-5111 or visit www.jamesaoconnorfuneralhome.com


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

14

NEIGHBORS McHenry

THINGS TO DO IN & AROUND McHENRY COUNTY

1

TUESDAYS WITH MOVIES

WHEN: 6 to 8:30 p.m. Sept. 13 WHERE: Crystal Lake Public Library, 126 W. Paddock St., Crystal Lake COST & INFO: Featuring “Hello, My Name is Doris,” rated R. Bring a dinner. Free. Information: 815-459-1687 or www.clpl.org.

2

WOODSTOCK COMMUNITY CHOIR FALL SEASON

WHEN: 7:30 to 9 p.m. Sept. 13 WHERE: Unity Spiritual Center of Woodstock, 225 W. Calhoun St., Woodstock COST & INFO: Directed by Cassandra Vohs-Demann, the choir begins rehearsals for the 2016-17 season. All, including those interested in joining, are welcome to attend. Rehearsals will continue Tuesday nights at the Unity Spiritual Center of Woodstock, the choir’s new rehearsal space. Information on choir member dues and more can be found at www.woodstockcommunitychoir.org or by emailing woodstockcommunitychoir@gmail.com.

VFW AUXILIARY PENNY SOCIAL – Fox River VFW Post 4600 Auxiliary member Marge Lane positions a flier announcing the group’s second annual Penny Social, slated for Saturday at the McHenry VFW, 3002 W. Rte 120. Doors open at noon and ticket calling begins at 2 p.m. There also will be door prizes, a 50/50 raffle and gift basket raffles. The kitchen will be open, and there will be a bake sale. Raffle tickets cost $10 for 25 chances and $25 for 75 chances. The auxiliary still is accepting new and gently used items for the raffles. For information, call 815-236-3345.

COMMUNITY

CALENDAR Sept. 13

• 10 a.m. to noon – “Tell Your Story,” Wauconda Area Library, 801 N. Main St., Wauconda. Participants will be invited to share their experiences, favorite moments and more during an inspiring, memory-filled meeting. Free. Information: 847-526-6225 or www. wauclib.org. • 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. – Grandparent’s Picnic, McHenry Recreation Center, 3636 Municipal Drive, McHenry. Includes family-friendly activities, face-painting, crafts and more. Box lunches and beverages provided. For children ages 2 and older and their grandparents. Registration required. Cost: $15 a person. Information: 815-363-2160 or cwitt@ ci.mchenry.il.us. • 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. – Home School Expo, Park Place, 406 W. Woodstock St., Crystal Lake. Parents can learn about and buy home-schooling items from many exhibitors, displays and vendors. Free admission. Information: 815-477-5871 or www.crystallakeparks.org. • 12:30 p.m. – Island Lake Area Seniors meeting, Senior Center at Island Lake Village Hall, 3720 Greenleaf Ave., Island Lake. Featuring a presentation by Catholic Charities. New members welcome. Free. Information: 262-237-2961 or www.villageofislandlake. com/senior-news.

• 3 p.m. – Trip preview for “Christmas Market Cruise on the Danube River” tour, McHenry County College, Room A117, 8900 Route 14, Crystal Lake. Learn about a European river trip scheduled for Dec. 5-12, 2017. Call to register. Information: 815-455-8782. • 4:30 p.m. – Trip preview for “Backroads of Sunny Florida” tour, McHenry County College, Room A117, 8900 Route 14, Crystal Lake. Learn about a trip scheduled for April 21-28, 2017. Call to register. Information: 815-455-8782. • 5 to 7 p.m. – Hilltop Community Supper, First Congregational Church of Dundee, 900 S. Eighth St., West Dundee. Open to any community member in need. Menu includes a salad, hamburger or hot dog, potato salad, cherry crisp and drinks. Free. Information: 847-4262161, ext. 202, or www.fccdundee.com. • 7 p.m. – “Disney World on a Budget,” Wauconda Area Library, 801 N. Main St., Wauconda. Karen Thompson will discuss Disney World bargains, discounts and more. Free. Registration required. Information: 847-5266225 or www.wauclib.org. • 7 p.m. – “Paying for College without Going Broke,” Dundee Library, 55 Barrington Ave., East Dundee. Free. Information: 847428-3661 or www.frvpld.info. • 7 to 9 p.m. – McHenry County Civil War Round Table meeting, Woodstock Public Library, 414 W. Judd St., Woodstock. Frank Crawford will present “Jenny Hodgers.” Free. Information: www.mchenrycivilwar.com.

Have an event to share? Submit your information online at PlanitNorthwest.com. Photos may be emailed to neighbors@nwherald.com.

Woodstock

Svalander School to host ‘Nutcracker’ auditions The Judith Svalander School of Ballet wants to give children ages 5 to 7 the chance to appear in “The Nutcracker” at the Woodstock Opera House. For the first time, the dance company is holding open auditions for two of its 10 performances of the ballet – the Dec. 11 and 16 performances. Auditions will be Wednesday at the Opera House, 121 W. Van Buren St. (enter through the Dean Street entrance). Registration will be from 5:30 to 6 p.m. with auditions from 6 to 7:30 p.m. The audition specifically is for children not enrolled at the Judith Svalander School of Ballet, but previous dance/acting/tumbling experience is encouraged. There is no charge to audition. Audition viewing is closed with an area available for parents to wait if they wish. Selected dancers will be given a packet of information and a few days to look it over before committing to attend Wednesday night rehearsals Sept. 28, Oct. 12, 19 and 26 and Nov. 9, 16 and 30 at the Opera House. They also must attend rehearsals Dec. 6-8. For information, call 815-4552055, email info@jsvalander.com or visit www.svalanderschool.org.


TUESDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 13, 2016 5:00

5:30

6:00

6:30

7:00

7:30

8:00

8:30

9:00

9:30

10:00

10:30

11:00

11:30

12:00

12:30

By EUGENIA LAST

Newspaper Enterprise Association TODAY – Tie up loose ends and bring about changes that will give you the financial breathing room you need. An opportunity to use your talents or skills more effectively is within reach. Strive to broaden your education. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) – Make an effort to update your image or improve your domestic environment. A networking event will give you a platform to present what you have to offer. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) – Make plans to do things with children or to get together with friends or family. Interacting with people will help you sort through any differences that could hinder your progress.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) – Emotionally fraught matters will escalate if you aren’t willing to listen to others’ suggestions or constructive criticism. Don’t let uncertainty and confusion weigh you down or prevent you from finishing what you start. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) – Look at the big picture and weigh what’s doable and what isn’t before you commit to someone’s demands. Empty promises and exploitative behavior are prevalent. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) – Take more time to spend with people who understand your vision. Backup will be necessary if you want to bring about change that is not wanted by everyone. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) – You will make

headway financially, legally and personally if you take action and make things happen. An opportunistic venture should not be ignored. Romance and personal growth are highlighted. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) – Learn as you go. Set realistic expectations that won’t draw interference from someone making demands or trying to control you. Keep personal information a secret to avoid a vulnerable situation. ARIES (March 21-April 19) – Getting involved in something you believe in or helping someone you love will bring you satisfaction and promote better relationships. A physical change will give you a personal pick-me-up. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) – Count on others only if you want to be disappointed. You have more than enough knowledge and skills to do

what needs to be done on your own. Believe in yourself. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) – A chance to make extra cash while doing something you enjoy looks promising. Don’t let a needy person monopolize your time or deny you the chance to take advantage of an opportunity. CANCER (June 21-July 22) – Think matters through and be sure to do things for the right reasons. It’s time to put what you want first and stop letting others control your life. Be persistent and persuasive. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) – Educational pursuits, an apprenticeship or an educational endeavor will bring about positive vocational changes that can raise your profile and income. Socializing is featured, and romance is in the stars.

• Tuesday, September 13, 2016

HOROSCOPE

15

TELEVISION | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

CBS 2 News at CBS Evening CBS 2 News at Entertainment Big Brother (N) ’ (CC) NCIS “Family First” The team hunts NCIS: New Orleans Missing explo- CBS 2 News at (:35) The Late Show With Stephen (:37) The Late Late Show With Comics Un6PM (N) (CC) Tonight (N) ’ 10PM (N) (CC) Colbert (N) ’ leashed 5:00PM (N) ’ News/Pelley James Corden (N) ’ (CC) for an escaped spy. ’ sives threaten New Orleans. ’ NBC5 News 6P Access Holly- America’s Got Talent “Live Finale” The remaining 10 acts compete. (N) Better Late Than Never The guys NBC5 News 10P (:34) The Tonight Show Starring (:37) Late Night With Seth Meyers Last Call With NBC5 News 5P NBC Nightly % WMAQ (N) (CC) Carson Daly (N) wood (N) (CC) ’ (Live) (CC) News - Holt arrive in Thailand. (CC) (DVS) (N) (CC) (N) (CC) Jimmy Fallon (N) ’ (CC) (N) ’ (CC) Eyewitness Eyewitness ABC World Eyewitness Wheel of For- MLB Baseball: Chicago Cubs at St. Louis Cardinals. From Busch Stadium in St. Louis. (N) (Live) (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live ’ (CC) (:37) Nightline (12:07) Windy City Live Hosts Val _ WLS News at 5pm News at 10pm News News at 6pm tune (N) (CC) (N) (CC) Warner and Ryan Chiaverini. ’ (4:00) WGN Evening News The Two and a Half Two and a Half Two and a Half Two and a Half SportsFeed: Blackhawks Special WGN News at Nine (N) ’ (Live) WGN News at Friends Gang Friends ’ (CC) The Middle “The Celebrity Name Celebrity Name ) WGN day’s top stories. (N) (CC) Ten (N) (CC) goes to London. Neighbor” (N) (Live) (CC) (CC) Game ’ (CC) Game ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) Nightly Busi- Chicago Tonight ’ The Contenders -- 16 for ’16 Shir- Frontline Predatory behavior and TED Talks Innovative approaches to BBC World Wild Kratts ’ Wild Kratts ’ PBS NewsHour (N) ’ (CC) Chicago Tonight (N) ’ + WTTW (EI) (CC) ley Chisholm and John McCain. education. (N) (CC) (DVS) (EI) (CC) News ’ (CC) ness Report (N) fraud in college. (N) ’ (CC) To the Contrary Nightly Busi- Charlie Rose ’ (CC) Antiques Roadshow Eskimo hunt- Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries (8:57) Cambridge Spies The men DW News Tavis Smiley (N) Charlie Rose (N) ’ (CC) Democracy Now! Current Events & 4 WYCC With Bonnie ness Report (N) try to bury their pasts. News in the World. ing helmet; silver spoon. ’ (CC) “Murder and the Maiden” (CC) ’ (CC) Two and a Half Two and a Half The Simpsons Packer Locker The Walking Dead Rick and Glenn The Walking Dead Rick, Hershel King of the Hill The Cleveland American Dad Family Guy “Rat- American Dad King of the Hill Cheaters ’ (CC) Raising Hope 8 WCGV Room (N) ings Guy” follow Hershel into town. Show ’ (CC) ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) and Glenn try to survive. ’ ’ (CC) “Covercraft” ’ Rules of EnThe King of The King of Family Guy Family Guy “RatMike & Molly ’ Mike & Molly ’ ABC7 Eyewitness News on WCIU, How I Met Your How I Met Your 2 Broke Girls ’ 2 Broke Girls ’ Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The Rules of En: WCIU Queens (CC) The U (N) Mother (CC) Mother (CC) Queens (CC) (CC) “He’s Bla-ack!” Andrea Doria” ings Guy” (CC) (CC) (CC) gagement ’ gagement ’ Nose Job” ’ TMZ (N) (CC) Dish Nation (N) Extra (N) (CC) Jumpstart Extra (N) (CC) TMZ (N) (CC) Brooklyn Nine New Girl Lucifer “Take Me Back to Hell” Fox Chicago News at Nine (N) ’ Modern Family Big Bang @ WFLD Fox 32 News at 5 ’ Adelante BBC World Nightly Busi- (7:59) Miss Marple “The Mirror Crack’d From Side to Side” A guest gets BBC World PBS NewsHour (N) ’ (CC) Charlie Rose (N) ’ (CC) Start Up ’ (CC) Adelante Tavis Smiley ’ DW News D WMVT (CC) News America ness Report (N) the wrong daiquiri. (CC) News ’ (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds “Psychodrama” Saving Hope “The Parent Trap” Saving Hope “Hearts of Glass” Criminal Minds “P911” ’ (CC) Criminal Minds ’ (CC) Flashpoint “The Better Man” ’ F WCPX Criminal Minds ’ (CC) Big Bang Brooklyn Nine New Girl Modern Family Modern Family The Simpsons TMZ (N) (CC) Maury ’ (CC) Lucifer “Take Me Back to Hell” Eyewitness News at Nine (N) G WQRF Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Big Bang Family Feud (N) Family Feud (N) Modern Family The Big Bang The Flash “Versus Zoom” Barry has MADtv “Episode Four” Comics Mo Harry Terrence Howard (“Empire”). The Walking Dead Rick and Glenn The Walking Dead Rick, Hershel The Simpsons Anger ManageR WPWR ment (CC) a plan to catch Zoom. (CC) follow Hershel into town. “Fight or Flight” Theory (CC) Collins and Nicole Sullivan. ’ (N) ’ (CC) and Glenn try to survive. ’ ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) CABLE 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 Married-Sight (:45) Married at First Sight “To Have and to Hold” (A&E) The First 48 ’ (CC) (:01) Born This Way (N) ’ (CC) (:03) Married at First Sight (CC) (:03) Married at First Sight (CC) (11:48) Married at First Sight ’ Married at First Sight ’ (CC) (4:00) Movie ››› “Ghostbusters” (1984, Comedy) Movie ›› “Ghostbusters II” (1989, Comedy) Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Sigourney Weaver. Halt and Catch Fire Donna and (:05) Halt and Catch Fire Donna (:10) Movie ››› “Ghostbusters” (1984, Comedy) Bill Murray. Four (AMC) Gordon treat themselves. (N) and Gordon treat themselves. paranormal investigators battle mischievous ghouls. ‘PG’ (CC) Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd. ‘PG’ (CC) A long-dead Carpathian warlock attempts to return to Earth. ‘PG’ (CC) (ANPL) River Monsters ’ (CC) River Monsters ’ (CC) River Monsters ’ (CC) (:01) River Monsters Exploring Guyana’s Essequibo River. ’ (:03) River Monsters ’ (CC) (:04) River Monsters Deadly predator in a Bolivian river. ’ (CC) The Situation Room (N) Erin Burnett OutFront (N) Anderson Cooper 360 (N) (CC) Anderson Cooper 360 (N) (CC) CNN Tonight With Don Lemon (N) CNN Tonight With Don Lemon (N) Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) (CNN) The Daily Show At Midnight (:01) Tosh.0 (:33) Tosh.0 (12:06) Tosh.0 The Daily Show Tosh.0 (CC) (COM) (4:52) Futurama (:18) Futurama (5:49) Futurama (:20) Futurama Drunk History Drunk History Drunk History Drunk History Tosh.0 (CC) Inside N.D. Ftbl SportsTalk Live (N) ’ (Live) SportsNet Cent MLB Baseball: Cleveland Indians at Chicago White Sox. (N Subject to Blackout) (Live) Sox Postgame SportsNet Cent SportsNet Cent The Lance Inside N.D. Ftbl SportsNet Cent MLB Baseball (CSN) Deadliest Catch: Dungeon Cove (:04) Taking Fire ’ (CC) (12:06) Deadliest Catch: The Bait (DISC) Deadliest Catch: On Deck “The Widowmaker: Part 2” ’ (CC) Deadliest Catch: The Bait (N) ’ Deadliest Catch: Dungeon Cove (:01) Taking Fire ’ (CC) Best Friends Girl Meets World Best Friends Jessie “Used Jessie “Zombie Stuck in the Elena of Avalor Bizaardvark ’ K.C. Undercover Girl Meets World Bunk’d “Dance in Liv and Maddie Backstage Backstage K.C. Undercover Bizaardvark (DISN) Karma” (CC) Middle (CC) “Juggle” (CC) “Spellbound” (CC) Whenever ’ Whenever ’ ’ (CC) Tea Party 5” ’ ’ (CC) ’ (CC) My Pants” ’ ’ (CC) “Juggle” (N) ’ ’ (CC) “The Collab” ’ Studio Show Outside the Lines (N) (CC) Hockey: World Cup Exhibition -- Team USA vs. Team Finland. (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) (ESPN) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) Around/Horn Interruption Foot. Kickoff Jalen & Jacoby SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) WNBA Basketball: Minnesota Lynx at Chicago Sky. (N) (Live) (CC) Soccer: Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) (CC) (ESPN2) Special Report With Bret Baier On the Record With Greta The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File Hannity The O’Reilly Factor (N) The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) (FNC) Chopped Chopped Chopped Junior “Curry Hurry” Chopped “Dread and Breakfast” Chopped (N) Chopped “Dread and Breakfast” Chopped (FOOD) Chopped So Raven So Raven So Raven So Raven (FREE) Movie: ››› “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” (2005, Fantasy) Johnny Depp. ’ Movie: ››› “The Goonies” (1985, Adventure) Sean Astin, Josh Brolin. ’ The 700 Club ’ (CC) Atlanta (CC) (FX) (4:00) Movie: ››› “21 Jump Street” (2012) ’ Movie: ››› “22 Jump Street” (2014) Jonah Hill, Channing Tatum. Premiere. ’ (CC) Atlanta (N) ’ Atlanta ’ (CC) Movie: ›› “Total Recall” (2012) Colin Farrell, Jessica Biel. ’ (CC) The Golden The Golden The Golden Last Man Stand- Last Man Stand- Last Man Stand- Last Man Stand- Last Man Stand- Last Man Stand- The Middle “The The Middle “The The Middle ’ The Middle ’ The Golden Frasier “Oops!” Frasier “Death (HALL) Girls (CC) Girls (CC) Becomes Him” Break-Up” (CC) (CC) Girls ’ (CC) Girls ’ (CC) ing ’ (CC) ing ’ (CC) ing ’ (CC) ing ’ (CC) ing “Voting” ’ ing ’ (CC) ’ (CC) Bee” ’ Fixer Upper (CC) Fixer Upper (CC) Fixer Upper A family-sized house. House Hunters Hunters Int’l Fixer Upper (CC) Fixer Upper A family-sized house. House Hunters Hunters Int’l (HGTV) Fixer Upper (CC) Forged in Fire: Cutting Deeper (12:03) Forged in Fire ’ (CC) Forged in Fire “The Falcata” (N) Mil. Blacksmith Mil. Blacksmith (:03) Forged in Fire ’ (CC) (HIST) Pawn Stars ’ Pawn Stars ’ Pawn Stars ’ Pawn Stars ’ Forged in Fire: Cutting Deeper Dance Moms “Mini Madness” The Dance Moms Abby pits Mackenzie Dance Moms Jess calls out Abby’s Dance Moms Abby challenges Nia (:10) Dance Moms (CC) (:02) Dance Moms (CC) (:02) Dance Moms Jess calls out (12:02) Dance Moms Abby chal(LIFE) mini team returns. (CC) against a new mini. (CC) favoritism. (N) (CC) and Kendall. (N) (CC) Abby’s favoritism. (CC) lenges Nia and Kendall. (CC) The Last Word Hardball With Chris Matthews (N) All In With Chris Hayes (N) The Rachel Maddow Show (N) The Last Word The Place for Politics 2016 (N) The Rachel Maddow Show (MSNBC) With All Due Respect (N) Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Mary and Jane Mary and Jane Loosely Nicole Loosely Nicole (12:15) Ridiculousness ’ (MTV) Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness (:45) Ridiculousness ’ Game Shakers Full House ’ Full House ’ Full House ’ Full House ’ Friends (CC) Friends (CC) Friends (CC) (:33) Friends Fresh Prince Fresh Prince (NICK) Henry Danger Henry Danger Thundermans Thundermans Nicky, Ricky Ink Master “Ink Master Finale” The Ink Master 30 artists fight for 18 Ink Master “The Game Begins” Ink Master “Ruffled Feathers” Team Ink Master Both teams turn can- Ink Master: Re- Ink Master: Re- Tattoo Night- Tattoo Night- Tattoo Night- Tattoo Night(SPIKE) final three reveal their tattoos. Teams Peck and Nunez compete. Nunez is out for revenge. demption (N) ’ demption (CC) mares ’ (CC) mares ’ (CC) mares ’ (CC) mares ’ (CC) spots. ’ (CC) vases into warriors. (N) ’ (CC) (:15) Movie: ››› “Risky Business” (1983, Comedy) Tom Cruise. A Movie: ›› “Out to Sea” (1997) Jack Lemmon, Walter Matthau. Two (8:50) Movie: ›› “My Fellow Americans” (1996, (:35) Movie: ››› “Out of Sight” (1998) George Clooney. A U.S. mar- (:40) “Never Say (STZENC) Never Again” straight-laced teenager gets involved with a prostitute. ’ (CC) aging buddies cruise for romance on an ocean liner. ’ (CC) Comedy) Jack Lemmon, James Garner. ’ (CC) shal falls for an escaped con she must capture. ’ (CC) Movie: “The (4:30) Movie: ›› “Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Movie: ››› “The Incredible Hulk” (2008, Action) Edward Norton, Liv Tyler, Tim Roth. Movie: ›› “Hulk” (2003, Fantasy) Eric Bana, Jennifer Connelly, Sam Elliott. Scientist Bruce Banner trans(SYFY) Incredible Hulk” Thief” (2010, Adventure) Logan Lerman, Brandon T. Jackson. (CC) Bruce Banner faces an enemy known as The Abomination. (CC) (DVS) forms into a powerful brute. (CC) The Pip From Movie: ›››› “Sons of the Des- (:15) Movie: ›››› “The Music Movie: ›››› “A Night at the Opera” (1935, Com- (:45) Movie: ›› “Hips, Hips, Hooray” (1934, Musical (4:30) Movie: › “Parrish” (1961) Troy Donahue, Claudette Colbert. Poor Dollar Dizzy (TCM) Pittsburg (CC) ert” (1933) Stan Laurel. (CC) Box” (1932) Stan Laurel. (CC) edy) Groucho Marx, Harpo Marx. (CC) (DVS) young man cuts swath in Connecticut tobacco world. (CC) Comedy) Bert Wheeler, Robert Woolsey. Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Countdown Counting On “Meet the Parents” Cake Boss (N) ’ (CC) (TLC) (:02) Tallest Teens ’ (CC) (:04) Counting On ’ (CC) (:04) Cake Boss ’ (CC) (12:06) Tallest Teens ’ (CC) Castle “Always” (CC) (DVS) Castle “Secret’s Safe With Me” (TNT) Castle “Undead Again” ’ Castle “After the Storm” ’ Castle ’ (CC) (DVS) Castle “Murder, He Wrote” ’ Castle “Probable Cause” ’ Law & Order “Gov Love” ’ Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith (:12) The Andy Griffith Show Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens Old Christine Old Christine (TVL) Chrisley Knows (:31) Chrisley (:01) Modern (:31) Modern (:01) Modern (:31) Modern (12:01) Chrisley (:31) Chrisley NCIS “In the Zone” A mortar attack NCIS “Recoil” Ziva’s cover may be WWE SmackDown! (N) ’ (Live) (CC) (USA) Best (N) (CC) Knows Best Family “Snip” Family ’ Knows Best Knows Best in Baghdad. (CC) (DVS) Family ’ Family ’ blown. ’ (CC) (DVS) T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny Love & Hip Hop VH1 Live! (N) Movie: ›› “You Got Served” (2004, Drama) Marques Houston. ’ (VH1) Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood ’ Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood ’ Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood ’ Basketball Wives LA ’ Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang 2 Broke Girls Conan (CC) Cougar Town Conan (N) (CC) (WTBS) Seinfeld (CC) Seinfeld (CC) Seinfeld (CC) Seinfeld (CC) Big Bang PREMIUM 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 (:15) Movie ›› “The Forest” (2016) Natalie Dormer. A woman encoun- REAL Sports With Bryant Gumbel (:15) Movie › “Fantastic Four” (2015, Action) Miles Teller, Kate Mara. Vice Principals (:45) Movie ››› “Brooklyn” (2015, Romance) Saoirse Ronan. An Irish (:40) Movie ›› (HBO) “Windtalkers” “Gin” ’ (CC) ’ (CC) immigrant finds herself torn between two men. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) Four young superheroes battle Doctor Doom. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) ters tormented spirits in a Japanese forest. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (4:25) Movie ››› “American Sniper” (2014, War) (:40) Movie ›› “Proof of Life” (2000, Suspense) Meg Ryan, Russell Crowe, David Morse. Movie ››› “Legend” (2015, Crime Drama) Tom Hardy. Twin gangsters (:15) Movie ›› “Unbreakable” (2000, Suspense) Bruce Willis. A train(MAX) Bradley Cooper, Sienna Miller. ’ ‘R’ (CC) A negotiator tries to rescue a woman’s kidnapped husband. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Reggie and Ronnie Kray rule 1960s London. ’ ‘R’ (CC) crash survivor discovers an extraordinary talent. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) With Florida With Florida Inside the NFL Highlights and Movie ›› “War” (2007, Action) Jet Li, Jason Statham, (:45) › “Good Movie ››› “The Imitation Game” (2014) Benedict Cumberbatch. Alan Ray Donovan “Chinese Algebra” Inside the NFL Highlights and (SHOW) Turing helps crack the Enigma Code during World War II. (CC) Ray makes a plan to save Avi. ’ analysis of the second week. (N) State Football State Football analysis of the second week. ’ John Lone. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Luck Chuck” ’ (3:10) Movie (:20) Movie ›› “Manglehorn” (2014, Drama) Al Movie ››› “Begin Again” (2013) Keira Knightley. An ex-music producer Movie ››› “Things You Can Tell Just by Looking at Her” (2000, Movie › “Whore” (1991, Drama) Theresa Russell. A Movie “Double (TMC) “Snowpiercer” D Dude Ranch” Pacino, Holly Hunter. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) and a singer form a life-changing bond. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Drama) Glenn Close, Calista Flockhart. Premiere. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) streetwalker explains her lifestyle. ’ ‘R’ (CC) ^ WBBM


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

16

STATE With backing of wealthy governor, GOP spending big By IVAN MORENO

The Associated Press

SPRINGFIELD – For the first time in recent history, Illinois Republicans are vastly outspending Democrats in fall legislative races with the help of a wealthy governor determined to curtail a traditionally blue political landscape that has thwarted his agenda for two years. The more than $13 million the GOP’s main campaign committee has disbursed to House and Senate candidates so far – nearly all of it coming from Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner – dwarfs what either party has been able to spend sometimes in entire election cycles. And the Illinois Republican Party Committee still has $3 million from Rauner in the bank. “This is a new ballgame and we’re taking it very seriously,” said Rep. Barbara Flynn Currie, the Democrats’ House leader. Infusions of cash from the former venture capitalist demonstrates how much – and how easily – he’s willing to invest in pursuit of his goal to give his party greater influence in the state Legislature. The November results could determine the fate of Rauner’s proposals to weaken unions, pass business-friendly laws, impose term limits, and change

ILLINOIS ROUNDUP

AP file photo

Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner participates in a Republican rally during Governors Day on Aug. 17 at the Illinois State Fair in Springfield. the way legislative districts are drawn for years to come. They also will decide who has control of crafting a full state budget, which Illinois hasn’t had for over a year because Rauner wants Democrats to give him what he wants in exchange for raising taxes to help with a deficit that exceeds $5 billion. Rauner was elected in 2014 as a political newcomer promising to shake up the Democrats’ regime, but they’ve

had supermajorities to block all his major proposals. His entry into politics and the spending power he brought with him has allowed Republicans to compete in more races – and a lot earlier than past years when Democrats’ financial resources were superior. Democrats have controlled both chambers of the Legislature since 2003 and have the nation’s longest-tenured

funds to pay the bills.

not guilty.

2

3

Possible Chicago police cover-up case to go to grand jury

CHICAGO – A grand jury will consider whether Chicago police lied in connection with the fatal shooting of a black Illinois health care bills teenager by a white officer. continue to build without Special prosecutor Patricia Brown budget SPRINGFIELD – Illinois’ debt to the state’s Holmes said Monday that the grand jury health care providers continues to grow in is the fairest way to handle the case instead of making charging decisions on the wake of the failure by legislators and her own. the governor to agree on a budget. She was appointed in July to invesThe Illinois Legislature’s bipartisan tigate whether there was a possible Commission on Government Forecasting Chicago police cover-up in the October and Accountability reported in July that 2014 shooting death of 17-year-old payment delays to insurance companies Laquan McDonald. Holmes is a former and providers for state employee health Cook County judge. care now stretch up to 1½ years and will Cook County Judge LeRoy Martin get worse. Jr. said he would convene the special The commission’s executive director, grand jury to hear evidence. Dan Long, tells the State Journal-Register Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke in Springfield the amount owed by the is charged with murder in McDonald’s state is growing by about $200 million death. He is accused of shooting the per month and won’t stop until there’s teen 16 times. Van Dyke has pleaded legislation appropriating general revenue

News from across the state

1

City, police investigating Bloomington coliseum management

BLOOMINGTON – City officials in Bloomington said they’re working with Illinois State Police to investigate past operations at the city-owned U.S. Cellular Coliseum. The venue seats up to 8,000 people and hosts concerts and sporting events. It opened in 2006. On Monday, city officials said in a news release that the investigation focuses on the venue’s operations before the facility’s current management company took over. Bloomington Mayor Tari Renner said questions surfaced while the city was closing out financial paperwork during the management transition. Central Illinois Arena Management operated the facility from its 2006 opening until March 31, when the company’s contract expired. The city signed a five-year management contract with new manager, VenuWorks, in June.

state House speaker, Michael Madigan, who has held that post for all but two years since 1983. When Rauner was elected, he became the first Republican in 12 years in Illinois, a Democratic stronghold that hasn’t backed a Republican for president since 1988. Before Rauner, the Illinois Republican Party Committee spent $3.4 million on races in 2012. The Democratic Party of Illinois, meanwhile, spent $6.7 million. Both parties distribute money to candidates through several other committees so those totals don’t tell the entire story, but they’re indicative of each party’s past spending prowess, according to campaign disclosures The Associated Press analyzed dating back to 2006 from the Illinois State Board of Elections. “There’s never been a time in recent history where House Republicans have outspent House Democrats. It’s been a considerable disadvantage,” said Rep. Jim Durkin, the GOP’s House leader. Breaking the Democrats’ supermajorities in either chamber won’t be easy because the party enjoys advantages of 71-47 in the House and 39-20 in the Senate. But Durkin said Rauner’s money “for the first time in many years gives us a fighting chance.” Rauner has repeatedly declined to comment on the legislative races or his involvement in them.

Illinois State Police said the investigation is ongoing and had no comment.

4

American man arrested in Nepal on charges of child sex abuse

KATHMANDU, Nepal – An American who has been a frequent visitor to Nepal has been arrested in the capital’s tourist district on charges of sexually abusing children. The Central Bureau of Investigations said in a statement Monday that Kenneth Joseph Coombs and a local man arrested with him were being held for further investigation. Five boys were rescued after police raided Coombs’s hotel room in Kathmandu over the weekend. The raid was initiated after police got information from boys who had been abused there. Police said Coombs, 48, was from Illinois and had last entered Nepal on Aug. 23. Other details were not given because the case involved underage victims. – Wire reports


LOTTERY

ILLINOIS LOTTERY

Midday Pick 3: 4-7-0 Midday Pick 4: 3-8-6-2 Evening Pick 3: 4-4-5 Evening Pick 4: 1-6-6-7 Lucky Day Lotto Midday: 9-15-30-32-44 Lucky Day Lotto Evening: 2-5-21-28-32 Lotto: 18-24-33-35-38-45 (9) Lotto jackpot: $6.25 million MEGA MILLIONS

Est. jackpot: $122 million

POWERBALL Est. jackpot: $222 million INDIANA LOTTERY

Daily 3 Midday: 7-9-5 Daily 3 Evening: 1-5-5 Daily 4 Midday: 3-4-6-3 Daily 4 Evening: 1-6-5-6 Cash 5: 6-7-9-15-35 Est. Lotto jackpot: $2.5 million WISCONSIN LOTTERY Pick 3: 0-2-3 Pick 4: 6-2-1-3 SuperCash: 5-6-22-23-28-35 Badger 5: 8-12-14-23-26

NATION & WORLD BRIEFS Mosque where gunman worshipped is set on fire

hopeful Monday that an agreement can be reached to keep the government running and to FORT PIERCE, Fla. – The provide money to take care of mosque that Orlando nightclub the worsening Zika crisis. gunman Omar Mateen attended “I was encouraged by some was heavily damaged in an arson of the constructive work that’s fire that Muslim leaders said was being done right now,” Obama the latest incident in an escalatsaid after his meeting with the ing campaign of harassment and top four congressional leaders, violence against the house of two from each party. worship and its members. Long-sought provisions to Given the timing – Sunday’s provide money to deal with 15th anniversary of 9/11 and the Zika look likely to be added to a start of the Muslim holiday Eid must-pass spending bill to fund al-Adha – investigators believe the government through Dec. 9. the blaze that broke out shortly before midnight Sunday at the Islamic Center of Fort Pierce may S. African leader pays costs in home spending scandal have been a hate crime, St. Lucie JOHANNESBURG – South County sheriff’s spokesman Maj. African President Jacob Zuma David Thompson said. has paid the state more than No one was injured. The fire $500,000 after being instructburned a 10-by-10-foot hole ed to do so in a scandal over in the roof at the back of the upgrades to his private home, mosque’s main building and his office said Monday. blackened its eaves with soot. The country’s ruling party lost A surveillance video from the control of some major metromosque showed a man on a mo- politan areas last month in its torcycle approaching the building worst-ever election showing with a bottle of liquid and some amid voter dissatisfaction over papers, then leaving when there corruption allegations against was a flash and shaking his hand the president. as though he may have burned it, The Constitutional Court had Thompson said. said Zuma should pay back an amount compiled by the nationObama, GOP strike al treasury, which described the hopeful tone on budget sum of 7.8 million South African WASHINGTON – Striking a rand as a “reasonable percentconciliatory tone after an Oval age” of costs for improvements Office sitdown, President Barack to Zuma’s Nkandla home that Obama and the top Senate Rewere unrelated to security. publicans declared themselves – Wire reports

17

Clinton scrambling to head off weekend fallout By JULIE PACE

The Associated Press WASHINGTON – Hillary Clinton’s campaign is scrambling to head off lasting damage from her brutal weekend. Aides are promising to release more of her medical records after her bout of pneumonia and conceding they were too slow in providing information about her condition. Democrats said Monday that Clinton’s health incident alone is unlikely to fundamentally alter the presidential race, but some also said it adds to a growing sense of uncertainty less than two months from Election Day. For many supporters, Clinton’s battle with Republican Donald Trump is worryingly close, raising concerns not only about holding the White House, but also retaking control of the Senate. “If you look at the way the last couple months have gone, it feels like the race should be further apart,” said Greg Haas, an Ohio-based Democratic strategist and former county party chairman. Aaron Regunberg, a Democratic state representative from Rhode Island, said he was “surprised and concerned” that the race is so tight. “I still think that we are likely to win, but I think anyone who’s not concerned about a bigoted, KKK-endorsed sociopath being this close right now in the polls is not living in reality,” Regunberg said of Trump. Clinton abruptly left a 9/11 anniversary event Sunday in New York and was seen on video stumbling and being held up by aides. After about 90 minutes of silence from her campaign, aides said Clinton left because she was overheated. Several hours later, her doctor acknowledged she had been diagnosed with pneumonia two days earlier. “In retrospect, we could have handled it better,” Clin-

AP photo

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton walks from her daughter’s apartment building Sunday in New York. ton spokesman Brian Fallon said Monday. He pledged to release “additional medical information” about Clinton in the next few days. Clinton spent Monday at her home in Chappaqua, New York, after canceling a fundraising trip in California. It was unclear when she planned to return to the campaign trail. Trump, who also is promising to release new medical records this week, showed surprising restraint regarding Clinton’s health. He wished her well and did not repeat questions he has previously raised about whether the former secretary of state has the strength and stamina to be president. He did hammer Clinton for her assertion Friday night that half of his supporters belong in a “basket of deplorables” and are racist, sexist, homophobic or xenophobic. Clinton later said she regretted applying that description to “half” of Trump’s backers, but stuck by her assertion that the GOP nominee has given a platform to “hateful views and voices.” Speaking in Maryland on Monday, Trump said he was shocked to hear Clinton “attack, slander, smear and de-

mean these wonderful, amazing people who are supporting our campaign.” After a staff shake-up in August, Trump has largely abandoned the free-wheeling style of campaigning that energized his supporters but also led to an endless string of controversial comments about women, minorities and others. The Republican nominee’s newfound ability to stay on script has coincided with tightening in both national polls and surveys in some key swing states. Democrats are also warily watching a Senate landscape that looked to be favorable for the party if Trump proved to be a drag on GOP candidates. But Rob Portman in Ohio has distanced himself from Trump and appears headed for re-election, and Republicans are also feeling more confident in Florida since Marco Rubio reversed course and decided to run for re-election. “The last few days feed into a sense of uncertainty,” said Chris Kofinis, a Democratic strategist. He said Clinton’s rough weekend raises the stakes for the first presidential debate on Sept. 26, which “will either finish Trump or, if he does well, it will create a race.”

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

NATION&WORLD


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

| NATION

18

Trump restraint demonstrates new discipline By JILL COLVIN

The Associated Press WASHINGTON – For nearly 24 hours, Donald Trump was quiet. As Hillary Clinton waded through the most perilous stretch of her campaign to date, the GOP presidential nominee held his tongue, allowing amateur footage of his foe stumbling after falling ill to play over and over on TV without his commentary. The episode underscored a new political reality: After more than a year of off-the-cuff comments and chaotic cleanup, Trump’s campaign seems to have found its footing. Over the past four weeks, with a new leadership team in place, Trump has largely done away with his free-wheeling rallies, replacing them with teleprompter-guided speeches. While he is by no means a typical candidate – he derisively referred to Sen. Elizabeth Warren as “Pocahontas” and questioned the integrity of the FBI and Department of Justice during a morning show call-in on Monday – he has nonetheless refined many of his campaign’s rougher edges. He’s trying to broaden his appeal and win over the moderate and independent voters he’ll need if he hopes to win.

AP photo

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks Monday to the National Guard Association of the United States in Baltimore. Gone are the endless attacks on his former GOP rivals and his aversion to more intimate campaign events. He has even lifted his extraordinary ban on credentialing particular news outlets he’s deemed unfair. And on the worst weekend of Hillary Clinton’s year, Trump stayed largely silent and let her problems make the

headlines. Trump’s team had already imposed a day of silence order for Sept. 11, asking supporters to refrain from news interviews and suspending outright campaigning as the nation marked the anniversary of the attacks on the Twin Towers and Pentagon. But Team Trump even kept quiet

Sunday as the news dripped out about Clinton – confusion about where she’d gone after feeling “overheated,” video of her needing assistance and then stumbling while entering a van, her campaign’s eventual revelation that she’d been diagnosed with pneumonia. There were no gloating tweets, no “told-you-so’s” from supporters who’ve been pushing conspiracy theories about her health. When Trump re-emerged, in a pair of early-morning phone interviews with friendly TV stations, he was restrained and reserved, at least on the topic of Clinton’s health. “Something’s going on,” he said on “Fox and Friends,” “but I just hope she gets well and gets back on the trail and we’ll be seeing her at the debate.” Trump’s tone surprised even longtime supporters such as Barry Bennett, a former adviser to his campaign. “That’s the most remarkable thing I’ve seen out of the Trump campaign so far,” Bennett said, adding that, “the old Donald Trump would have gone straight to Twitter.” “He’s frankly a much better candidate,” Bennett said, making the case that, if Trump can stay on message for the next seven weeks, he can win in November.

ORICA NITROGEN LIQUIDATION AUCTION

Saturday, Sept. 17, 2016 at 10 am sharp (Doors open at 8:30 am) INDUSTRIAL, FABRICATION, MACHINING & OFFICE EQUIPMENT • Orica Plant Site, 7700 West Dupont Road, Seneca, IL 61360 Orica Nitrogen is liquidating all industrial & office merchandise at its closed Seneca (Morris), IL site. This is an ideal auction for specialty buyers inc. machine shops, welding & fabrication shops, industrial machining, farmers needing storage & racking AND businesses needing office accessories, including desks, chairs, file cabinets. Also, a ton of metal for all scrap recyclers. Below is a partial listing. Untitled ‘85 Ford F-600 flatbed, 10’ Basstender boat, heat exchanger, reverse osmosis machine, Rotex screener & screens, Wells band saw, industrial metal press, fume extractors, several chain hoists & engine hoist, acetylene hose reels, air conditioning system, dust collectors, Rigid threader w/16 dies, commercial drill press & 40 bits, floor-mounted grinders, industrial sander, metal lathe w/accessories, scale buggy, 55 gallon drums of antifreeze & oils, barn fan, drum mover, wheelbarrow, 50kva elec. transformers, flatbed hand cart, plastic pallets & ramps, awnings, 40’ stackable sea box container, hand truck, traffic signs, work benches, shop cabinets, 100+ lockers, roller stands, dollies, pallet mover, industrial shelving & racking, floor buffer, stainless dip tank, fume hood with fan, acid proof lab counters, 2,500 lb. capacity tote carriers, 100’ x 20’ rolls of 40 mil plastic, diesel & gas tanks, concrete tile tubes, dip tank, water depth marker, gas gauge heads, Geiger counter, copiers, scanners, printers, desks, file cabinets, credenzas, scale, tables, chairs, shredders, portable radio system, bookcases, eraser boards, conference table, ladders, toaster, elec. stove, coffee making stand, stainless sink & much, much more. *DIRECTIONS TO AUCTION: Exit 97 on IL I-80. Go south 100 yds. to 30N. Go east apprx. 5 mi. to 29 Road. Go south apprx. 5 mi. to Seneca, IL & cross Illinois River. Take immediate left (east) at marina on IL 17D (Dupont Road). Follow Auction signs apprx. 3 mi. to auction site at 7700 Dupont Road. Clearly marked address. TERMS & CONDITIONS OF AUCTION: Some items will require buyer loadout with heavy lift capacity. Light loadout available sale day. All other will be arranged with seller. Cash, checks, money orders & wire transfers. No credit cards. Letter of credit limit from buyer’s bank with authorized officer signature required for buyers unknown to auction company. All items must be paid for on auction day and prior to removal.

Photos and inventory at www.walnutcreekauction.com or www.auctionzip.com

WALNUT CREEK AUCTION COMPANY, LLC

Becky Aeschliman, President “The Business Auctioneers” David Aeschliman, Auctioneer SM-CL0382379

www.walnutcreekauction.com • 309-558-8200


19

Intellectual & Developmental Disability Division

Syria cease-fire in effect, but rebels don’t commit The ASSOCIATED PRESS BEIRUT – A cease-fire came into effect in Syria at sunset Monday in the latest attempt led by the U.S. and Russia to bring some quiet in the 5½-year civil war. Residents and observers reported quiet in most of the country hours after the truce came into effect, although activists said airstrikes took place on contested areas around the northern city of Aleppo. But the most powerful rebel groups have shown deep misgivings over the cease-fire deal, which was crafted without their input last weekend in Geneva between the top U.S. and Russian diplomats. Hours after it came into force, a coalition of rebel factions put out a statement that stopped short of committing to the cease-fire, a reflection of their distrust of the government. The first week of the truce will be crucial. During that time, all fighting between the military of President Bashar Assad and rebels is to stop. But Assad’s forces can continue airstrikes against the Islamic State group and alQaida-linked insurgents from the group once known as the Nusra Front. However, the al-Qaida linked insurgents are closely allied to many rebel factions and are a powerful force in the defense of Aleppo in particular. That raises the danger that continued airstrikes will draw rebels into retaliation, eventually leading to the cease-fire’s collapse, much as previous attempts earlier this year fell apart.

Compounding the situation, a group of 21 rebel factions issued a statement Friday in which they warned against targeting al-Qaida-linked militants. The statement was noncommittal about whether the groups would abide by the cease-fire. After a week, however, the conflict would potentially enter a dramatically different stage. A new U.S.-Russia coalition will step in to target former Nusra Front militants, and Assad’s forces will no longer be permitted to. That will effectively remove Assad’s pretext for war on opposition areas, which he calls a war on terror. Government forces will be allowed to fight defensively, target the Islamic State group and, in some designated areas, go after Nusra forces. The deal’s architects hope that would pave the way for an extended period of restraint that can serve as the foundation for peace talks between the war’s many sides. As the cease-fire came into effect, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said Monday that rebel factions must distance themselves from the al-Qaida-linked militants, whose group recently changed its name from Nusra to Jabhat Fatah al-Sham, or Levant Conquest Front. He also said the Syrian government must allow deliveries of humanitarian aid into besieged areas, including the rebel-held districts of Aleppo. Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov said peace talks between opposition groups and the government could resume as early as next month.

Who Should Attend?

• Families with transitional age youth • High school and transition teachers • Any one who wants to know about adult options for intellectual and developmental disability programs in McHenry County

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 6-8 pm

Pioneer Center for Human Services 4001 Dayton Street McHenry, IL

Our Programs Include:

• Community Employment Services • Managed Enterprises • Employee Development Services • Transition Support Services • Developmental Training

• Bridges • Residential Living • SOAR Senior Program • Home Based Support Services • Client & Family Support Services • Autism Day Program • Respite

Administrave Office

4001 Dayton Street, McHenry, IL 60050 Main 815.344.1230 • www.pioneercenter.org SM-CL0378887

• Tuesday, September 13, 2016

AP photo

Syrian President Bashar Assad (center) walks on a street with officials Monday after performing the morning Eid al-Adha prayers in Daraya, Syria.

Visit booths presented by staff and clients about our intellectual and developmental disability programs. Or, join a tour to see the program rooms up close. Refreshments will be provided!

WORLD | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Meet Our


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

20

OPINIONS

NORTHWEST HERALD EDITORIAL BOARD:

Dan McCaleb

Kevin Lyons

Valerie Katzenstein

Jon Styf

John Sahly

OUR VIEW

Enrollment lows troubling The 10th day enrollment figures released this week by Northern Illinois University weren’t good, but they could have been worse. NIU’s 5.5 percent year-over-year enrollment decline was the greatest percentage decline in records going back to 1980, but at schools including Western Illinois (down 7 percent) and Southern Illinois (down 7.5 percent) it was even worse. For the record In the most recent recruiting season, Illinois’ public univerNIU’s 5.5 percent year-oversities faced some serious “headyear enrollment decline was the winds,” as they might say at the greatest percentage decline in College of Business. It was a year records going back to 1980. in which public universities received no state aid for months and some university officials talked openly of the prospect of closing their doors. Perhaps it should be no surprise then that incoming freshman enrollment at NIU fell a whopping 20 percent this year, with the class of 2020 more than 450 students smaller than last year’s, or that graduate school enrollment also fell by more than 170 students. There is a sense that, if the state of Illinois could just get its act together, a lot of these problems would take care of themselves. But this year’s numbers aren’t a one-off. They’re part of a years-long trend. This was the seventh consecutive year of enrollment declines at NIU. Enrollment has fallen in nine of the past 10 years; the lone exception was 2009, when enrollment grew 0.1 percent. Total enrollment at NIU in fall 2007 was 25,254, almost 25 percent greater than this fall. Meanwhile, costs for students have continued to grow. Illinois residents in this year’s small freshman class will pay 76 percent more a year than those who entered school in 2007 when including room and board, student health insurance and other fees. The total cost for a full-time student for a full year is $24,980, according to estimates from NIU’s Office of the Bursar. Some say the state of Illinois is partly to blame for these increasing costs as well, citing regulations such as procurement rules and a truth-in-tuition law that keeps a student’s tuition cost the same for their freshman through senior year, forcing incoming students to shoulder a disproportionate share of cost increases. The state is not solely to blame for the dropping enrollment, though – some state schools are growing their enrollment. The University of Illinois saw 1.8 percent enrollment growth, with its largest freshman class ever. Illinois State University saw 1.1 percent enrollment growth this year. All of Northern Illinois has a stake in the fortunes of NIU. According to a study released in December by the university’s Center for Governmental Studies, student spending, university operations and construction activity generate about $895 million in economic impact to the Northern Illinois area, which includes 17 counties. Already, Illinois is the Midwest’s greatest exporter of college students, and once they earn degrees in Wisconsin, Missouri, Michigan or Indiana, they’re just as likely to start careers there as to return here. Finding ways to reverse this trend should be a priority for legislators, local leaders and average citizens.

THE FIRST

AMENDMENT

ANOTHER VIEW

Hypocrisy over Hippocratic Oath Almost everyone who needs a prescription medicine at one point or another has experienced the sense of sticker shock that comes with a new script, especially if the particular medication does not have a generic equivalent. So when people who rely on EpiPens, the preferred delivery system of a medication designed to stave off potentially life-threatening anaphylactic reactions, saw the price skyrocket during the past few years, it likely came as little surprise. The jump in EpiPen costs has been spread over nine years, with the two-pack price leapfrogging from $100 to $600 during that time. According to at least one medical professional, the active drug, the generic epinephrine, is relatively inexpensive. In fact, one Cape Cod Hospital employee put the price of an injection at less than $5. Instead, it is the convenient delivery method patients are paying for. The pharmaceutical company Mylan owns the patent on the EpiPen system, and can charge whatever it wants for it, doing so in the full knowledge patients and their insurance companies have little choice but to pony up, regardless of how exorbitant the price may be. For its part, Mylan has deferred blame to the overall health care system with an amorphous charge that insurance companies have, in essence, shifted the costs of medications onto their patients. It simultaneously began a public relations volley to staunch criticism,

announcing a coupon to cover up to $300 of the drug’s out-of-pocket cost, as well as a plan to expand a patient assistance program that helps eliminate such costs for uninsured and underinsured patients. All of this does not address the underlying question of how a delivery system that was developed years ago now costs six times as much as it did less than a decade ago. If anything, one would expect Mylan to develop economies of scale and production that would hold down, if not lower, costs. Then there was news this past week from the New York Times that even as Mylan was directly gouging customers, it also was emptying their pockets indirectly through a questionable claim that because epinephrine is a generic drug, it can offer only a reduced discount to state Medicaid programs. In essence, the company is trying to enjoy the benefits of an exclusive product that has no viable competition in the marketplace, all while maintaining with a straight face it cannot possibly offer any substantive deal to state-run programs because it is a generic drug. Public anger over the moves by Mylan to shore up its profits continues to grow, even as the company continues to maintain it has done nothing wrong. Politicians and the public should look toward new restrictions on an industry that seems quite comfortable jettisoning the Hippocratic Oath for one that embraces hypocrisy instead.

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

Cape Cod (Massachusetts) Times


VIEWS Rich Miller thusly: “To support state legislative candidates who support Gov. Rauner’s bold and needed reforms, and to oppose those who stand in the way.” That’s roughly $20.5 million, enough for second place in the aforementioned Washington Post list. The difference is, here in Illinois, it’s one guy focusing on only one state. There are some definite apples and oranges when making this comparison. Not every dime of Rauner’s campaign fund came from Rauner himself. But the total doesn’t include $2.2 million that Rauner gave to his own campaign fund this year, to avoid any possible double-counting as money is passed through. What it does show you, though, is how one person is dominating the money race here far more than individual wealthy people are influencing the national races. Yes, the Democrats have raised plenty of money as well this year. At the end of June, all Democrats (including the legislative leaders, the state party, rank and file legislators and Democratic challengers) actually had $3.4 million more cash on hand than all similar Republicans,

including Rauner. But Scott Kennedy at Illinois Election Data took a look at legislative funding so far this cycle and, as of 9 p.m. Sept. 6, 16 of the top 20 total contributions to targeted candidates were Republicans. So, if the Democrats had more cash on hand, then why aren’t they spending more of it? Well, the Democrats can raise only so much more money before November. Rauner and his wealthy friends simply can write big checks and completely erase any disadvantage as need be. It’s kind of like how people who are expecting a large inheritance don’t save much money for retirement. They know lots more cash is in the pipeline, so they often feel free to spend as they wish today. Kennedy also looked at all the money raised this cycle by the Illinois GOP, the House Republican Organization, the Republican State Senate Campaign Committee and the personal campaign funds of the two Republican legislative leaders and found of the $21.8 million they’ve raked in so far, 73 percent comes from Rauner. Without that Rauner money, the Republicans would be at a huge cash disadvantage, like they always have been in the past. Rauner is giving Republican legislative candidates a fighting chance

in a year that otherwise would be seen as a complete lost cause. Despite her national problems, all polling shows Hillary Clinton with a double-digit lead in Illinois. Without Rauner, Republican legislative leaders would be bracing for an even further retreat into their tiny minority, and praying the off-year election of 2018 would give them enough of a boost to regain a seat or two. To make it clear, I’m not saying what Rauner is doing is a bad thing. House Speaker Michael Madigan in the past absolutely has drowned the House Republicans with his ability to outspend them. The tables finally are being turned on Madigan. What goes around comes around, as they say. But if you thought Rauner exerted a lot of influence on Republican legislators during his first two spring legislative sessions, you probably ain’t seen nothing yet, especially if the GOP does better than normally would be expected. The Republican leaders are going to owe him big. Really big. And, whatever happens in November, they’ll want to keep that money pipeline flowing freely in 2018.

• Rich Miller publishes Capitol Fax, a daily political newsletter, and CapitolFax.com.

IT’S YOUR WRITE Vote for Althoff

To the Editor: This budget crisis is out of control. Luckily, Sen. Pamela Althoff constantly has stood up for the rights of her constituents in Springfield. She was part of the team of legislators that implemented the six-month budget that recently passed and continues to be part of the working group that is crafting the final annual budget in Springfield. That is why I am urging you to support Sen. Pamela Althoff in the upcoming election. Thomas C. Zanck Woodstock

Give township money to library To the Editor: I like libraries. Libraries are a cost-effective way to pool resources so many people have the benefit of books

(and so much more). When my family moved to Crystal Lake 29 years ago, the library was one of the first places to which I took my children. Funding the library is a good expenditure for the local government. I like budgets. Budgets help us to live within our means as we make choices on how to spend the available money. As I’ve told my children, you only get to spend your money once, so make good choices. Staying on a budget is a good achievement for a family. In my family, we had to make choices on expenditures. If we chose to spend more money on x, then we had less money to spend on y. Telling my husband to make more money was not an option; we could only spend what he was currently making. That principle, staying on a budget,

HOW TO SOUND OFF We welcome original letters on public issues. Letters must include the author’s full name, home address and day and evening telephone numbers. We limit letters to 250 words and one published letter every 30 days. Election-related letters are limited to 150 words. All letters are subject to editing

should apply to governments. If we want to spend more on the library, then we have to spend less on something else. Asking heavily taxed families to give even more in taxes is not a good option. I suggest we abolish the township layer of government and spend the

for length and clarity at the sole discretion of the editor. Submit letters by: • Email: letters@nwherald.com • Mail: Northwest Herald “It’s Your Write” Box 250 Crystal Lake, IL 60039-0250

savings on the library. From my average-house real estate tax bill, that would give an additional $170 to the library. Isn’t that about what they are asking from each family? Joy Otten Crystal Lake

• Tuesday, September 13, 2016

The Washington Post published a story the other day titled “Meet the wealthy donors who are pouring millions into the 2016 elections.” The paper listed the top 10 national donors to so-called “super PACS.” The list is topped by wealthy San Francisco Democrat Tom Steyer at $38 million. Second place went to “New York-based hedge-fund magnate” Robert Mercer, at $20.2 million. Keep in mind these are national-minded donors who are giving to super PACs that focus on the presidential race and U.S. Senate and congressional campaigns throughout the country. Now, take a look at the money contributed by Gov. Bruce Rauner. His personal campaign committee has contributed over $16 million to the Illinois Republican Party alone this year, accounting for 95 percent of all the money the party has raised. The party has, in turn, used that Rauner money to fund TV and radio ads, direct mail, polling, staff, etc. for state House and Senate campaigns. In June, Rauner gave another $2.5 million to Dan Proft’s Liberty Principles PAC, which is heavily involved in legislative contests. And the governor contributed $2 million to the Turnaround Illinois PAC, which describes its mission

OPINIONS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Rauner continues to fill GOP coffers

21


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

22

BUSINESS

The Dakota Access pipeline, what now? KEY CLAIMS

By JAMES MacPHERSON The Associated Press

BISMARCK, N.D. – A federal judge on Monday kept in place a previous work-stoppage order on a small portion of the nearly 1,200-mile Dakota Access oil pipeline while federal agencies review construction permits for the site, which the Standing Rock Sioux tribe says is sacred ground. But much has yet to be settled when it comes to the pipeline that’ll run from North Dakota to Illinois, including whether the company will respond to the federal agencies’ request for a voluntary, broader work stoppage in that area.

HOW WE GOT HERE

Dallas-based Energy Transfer Partners obtained federal permits for the $3.8 billion pipeline in July, two years after it was first announced. The project would carry a half-million barrels of crude oil daily from western North Dakota’s oil fields through South Dakota and Iowa to an existing pipeline in Patoka, Illinois, where shippers can access Midwest and Gulf Coast markets. Supporters say the pipeline would create more markets and reduce truck and oil train traffic. But the Standing Rock Sioux, other tribes and environmental groups say that the pipeline could threaten water supplies for millions, since it will cross the Missouri River, as well as harm sa-

The Standing Rock Sioux Tribe sued federal regulators for approving the oil pipeline, challenging the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ decision to grant permits at more than 200 water crossings and arguing that the pipeline would be placed less than a mile upstream of the reservation, potentially impacting drinking water for more than 8,000 tribal members and millions of people who rely on it further downstream. The lawsuit said the project violates several federal laws, including the National Historic Preservation Act. The tribe also worries the project will disturb ancient sacred sites outside of the 2.3 million-acre reservation. Energy Transfer Partners disputes those claims, saying the pipeline would include safeguards, such as leak detection equipment, and that workers monitoring the pipeline remotely in AP photo Texas could close valves within three In his pow wow regalia, Phil Little Thunder minutes if a breach is detected.

of Rosebud, S.D., shows his support during the protest Friday on the grounds of the North Dakota state capital in Bismarck, N.D.

cred sites and artifacts. Since April, there’s been a tribal protest at the confluence of the Cannonball and Missouri rivers, and it has grown considerably – thousands gathered last week. Nearly 40 have been arrested as the protest has grown in size, including Standing Rock Sioux Tribal Chairman David Archambault II.

pause” of work by Energy Transfer Partners for 20 miles on either side of Lake Oahe, to which ETP has not indicated its position, though it noted in an email that work was ongoing elsewhere in the four other states. Boasberg declined Monday to grant the tribe’s request to “formalize” the government’s desired work stoppage, but kept in place an earlier order to halt construction from State Highway 1806 to 20 miles east of Lake Oahe.

WHAT’S THE TIMETABLE?

No one – neither the company, nor the tribe, nor federal agencies – has said. The Departments of Justice, the Army and the Interior said Friday that it won’t authorize construction on corps land bordering or under Lake Oahe until it re-examines its permitting decision-making process. A Dakota Access lawyer said in federal court last week that the portion of the pipeline in North Dakota that’s the subject of the legal wrangling would be THE LEGAL PROCESS The Standing Rock Sioux’s effort to finished shortly if not for the delays. temporarily block construction near ETP has said it expects to complete the its reservation on the North Dako- full pipeline by the end of the year. ta-South Dakota border was denied by U.S. District Judge James Boasberg on STILL PROTESTING The temporary policy victory hasn’t Friday. But minutes later, federal officials dulled the number of people coming to ordered a temporary halt to construc- the protest site, Standing Rock tribtion of the pipeline on Army Corps land al historian LaDonna Brave Bull Alaround and underneath Lake Oahe – lard said. She and others have said is one of six reservoirs on the Missouri largest gathering of American Indian River. It also asked for a “voluntary tribes in a century.

THE MARKETS

THE STOCKS Stock

Close

Change

Stock

Close

Change

Abbott Labs AbbVie AGL Resources Allstate Alphabet American Airlines Apple AptarGroup Arch Dan AT&T Bank of America Bank of Montreal Baxter Berry Plastics Boeing Caterpillar CME Group Coca-Cola Comcast

41.42 64.08 65.97 68.48 769.02 38.34 105.44 78.51 42.96 40.71 15.9 65.63 45.73 43.82 130.12 81.92 108.18 43.19 65.76

0.41 0.72 0 0.52 9.36 -0.15 2.31 1.05 0.94 1.00 0.16 0.02 0.64 0.56 1.59 1.13 2.13 0.92 0.65

Dean Foods Dow Chemical Exelon Exxon Facebook Ford General Electric General Motors Home Depot IBM ITW JPMorganChase Kellogg Kohl’s Kraft Heinz Company Live Nation McDonald’s Medtronic Microsoft

16.07 0.19 52.91 -0.50 33.63 0.23 87.29 0.45 128.69 1.59 12.7 0.32 30.49 0.38 31.18 0.70 128.59 0.85 158.29 2.60 117.76 1.98 67.06 0.41 79.13 2.00 43.66 0.77 88.56 2.59 26.2 0.44 115.95 1.37 86.2 1.33 57.05 0.84

Stock

Close

Change

Modine Moto Solutions Netflix Office Depot Pepsi Pulte Homes Sears Holdings Snap-On Southwest Air. Supervalu Target Tesla Motors Twitter United Contint. Visa Wal-Mart Walgreen Waste Mgmt. Wintrust Fincl.

11.6 77.23 99.05 3.82 106.02 20.21 12.43 147.78 37.82 4.75 69.3 198.3 18.15 53.25 82.97 71.94 83.57 63.34 55.81

0.06 0.58 2.55 0.15 1.97 0.17 0.11 0.26 0.48 0.02 0.30 3.83 0.04 0.80 1.64 1.64 0.65 0.59 0.14

COMMODITIES

+239.62 18,325.07

+85.98 5,211.89

+31.23

2,159.04

OIL

$46.06 a barrel +0.18

Metal

Close

Change

Gold Silver Copper

1331.10 -3.40 19.175 -0.193 2.107 +0.0145

Grain (cents per bushel)

Close

Wheat Soybean Corn Rough Rice

409.50 +6.00 966.00 -14.25 340.25 -0.75 9.735 +0.22

Change

Livestock

Close

Live cattle Lean hogs Feeder cattle

105.775 +1.375 59.65 +0.425 132.05 +0.775

Business news tip? Email business@nwherald.com or stay connected on Facebook at facebook.com/nwherald or follow us on Twitter @nwherald.

Change


THINGS

WORTH TALKIN’ ABOUT TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2016

NEW YORK – “Saturday Night Live” cast member Pete Davidson is paying tribute to his late father, a New York City firefighter who died while responding to the Sept. 11 attacks. The comedian was 7 when his father was killed on 9/11. He posted several photos of his dad to Instagram on the 15th anniversary of the attacks. In one caption , he wrote: “Can’t believe tomorrow is going to be 15 years. Missing the legend!!! Thank u all for ur kind words and support.” Scott Davidson, a firefighter in Brooklyn Heights, went to the World Trade Center shortly after the second plane struck the twin towers.

BUZZWORTHY

Bruce Springsteen to visit hometown for book tour

AP photo

Margo Martindale poses in the press room Saturday with the award for outstanding guest actress in a drama series for “The Americans” during the Creative Arts Emmy Awards at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles.

Fey, Poehler share creative arts Emmy gold as ‘SNL’ hosts LOS ANGELES – Tina Fey and Amy Poehler are sharing Emmy gold as “Saturday Night Live” hosts. They were honored jointly in the best guest actress in a comedy series category at Saturday’s creative arts Emmy ceremony. Fey and Poehler won as co-hosts of last year’s Christmas episode on “SNL.” The pair didn’t attend the Los Angeles event, and Bob Newhart accepted the Emmy on their behalf. The Emmy was the first for Poehler but part of a collection for Fey. She’s won eight times before, including acting and writing trophies. Peter Scolari was another first-time Emmy winner: He captured the best guest actor in a comedy series award for “Girls,” in which he plays dad to star Lena Dunham. Scolari became a contender after another nominee, Peter MacNicol of “Veep,” was found to be ineligible because he had appeared in half of the series’ episodes, more than permitted for the category. “Well, I’d just talked myself out of it, too,” Scolari said in his acceptance speech. On the drama series side, Hank Azaria was honored as best guest actor for “Ray Donovan” and Margo Martindale of “The Americans” won as best guest actress. “Honestly, I think it has more to do with the love for ‘The Americans’ this year than it does for me,” Martindale said of the FX series that’s in the running for best drama and also reaped nominations for stars Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell.

FREEHOLD, N.J. – Bruce Springsteen is heading home to start a book tour later this month. Springsteen announced a nine-stop book tour Monday that will begin at a bookstore in his childhood hometown of Freehold on Sept. 27. Springsteen’s memoir, “Born to Run,” will be released the same day. The book tour comes after Springsteen and the E Street Band wrap up a 75-show music tour on Wednesday in Foxborough, Massachusetts. Fans at the ticketed events will get a signed copy of the book. Springsteen’s book tour also will stop in New York; Philadelphia; Seattle; Los Angeles; San Francisco; Cambridge, Massachusetts; and Portland, Oregon. In the book, Springsteen remembers his childhood in New Jersey, his rise to superstardom and personal struggles that inspired songs such as “Born to Run” and “Thunder Road.”

‘Saturday Night Live’ adds 3 players for its 42nd season LOS ANGELES – “Saturday Night Live” is adding three new players for its 42nd season. NBC said Monday that Mikey Day, Alex Moffat and Melissa Villasenor will be on board as featured performers for the show’s Oct. 1 season premiere. Villasenor, of Whittier, California, will be

one of the few Latino cast members in the history of the show, which has come under fire for a lack of diversity. She’s an impressionist and stand-up comedian who’s appeared on the club and college circuit nationwide. Villasenor also performed with Mas Mejor, a comedy studio and network launched by “SNL” producer Broadway Video and aimed at finding new Latino talent. Day, from Orange County, California, joined “SNL” as a writer in its 39th season and was a co-head writer and cast member on NBC’s variety show “Maya & Marty.” Moffat is from Chicago and was a regular performer at iO Chicago and The Annoyance Theatre. Last month, “SNL” said goodbye to two cast members, Taran Killam and Jay Pharoah. The long-running show is known for its changing slate of performers.

Study: Hiring of women, minority TV directors lags

LOS ANGELES – The expanding world of TV series is creating more opportunities for female and minority directors, but they remain a fraction of those hired, a Hollywood guild report said Monday. Women directed 17 percent and minorities 19 percent of the more than 4,000 episodes produced last season for broadcast, cable and high-budget streaming series, the Directors Guild of America said in its annual survey. For both groups, that represents a 1 percent increase over the year before.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Singer David Clayton-Thomas of Blood, Sweat and Tears is 75. Singer Peter Cetera (Chicago) is 72. Actress Jacqueline Bisset is 72. Actress Jean Smart is 65. Singer Randy Jones of the Village People is 64. Country singer Bobbie Cryner is 55. Singer-guitarist Dave Mustaine of Megadeth is 55. Radio-TV personality Tavis Smiley is 52. Drummer Steve

Perkins of Porno for Pyros and Jane’s Addiction is 49. Actor Dominic Fumusa (“Nurse Jackie”) is 47. Actress Louise Lombard (“CSI”) is 46. Country guitarist Joe Don Rooney of Rascal Flatts is 41. Singer Fiona Apple is 39. Guitarist Hector Cervantes of Casting Crowns is 36. Actor Ben Savage (“Boy Meets World”) is 36. Singer Niall Horan of One Direction is 23.

23 Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

‘SNL’ COMEDIAN HONORS DAD, A 9/11 FIREFIGHTER


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

24

TECHNOLOGY

Apple betting big on a wireless world By BRANDON BAILEY

What’s new

The Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO – Apple wants to push consumers further into a wireless world. Its tactics: eliminate the standard headphone jack in its newest iPhones and market new “AirPods” – tiny wireless earbuds that the company claims greatly improve on standard Bluetooth technology. But that strategy has some risks.

At Apple’s iPhone 7 unveiling in San Francisco on Wednesday, the tech powerhouse revealed a host of new and updated hardware and software. Apple Airpods As expected, iPhone is removing the standard analog headphone jack and forcing headphones to use its “Lightning” connector, which plugs into the phone’s charging port. The iPhone 7 will come with an adapter so older earphones still can be used. But Apple is pushing Apple AirPods, which sync across all Apple devices and respond to touch that can access Siri. The AirPods are shipping in late October and cost $160.

Airpod Angst

Start with the AirPods themselves. These are a pair of earbuds, each with an inch or so of protruding plastic, and nothing else – no wires to hold them together, no dangling cords. If they live up to Apple’s claims, they’re a technological marvel, tiny and expensive. And, perhaps, also easily dislodged or misplaced. Analysts at IHS Technology say Apple used a smooth-surfaced design that doesn’t conform to the shape of the ear, and note having AirPods fall out while running or biking “is less forgivable at the $159 cost level.” Or as Bob O’Donnell, a veteran consumer tech analyst at Technalysis Research, puts it: “You start losing those things at $160 a pair, you’re going to go crazy.” The alternative – plugging a headphone cord into the iPhone’s power port – has plenty of downside as well. Older headphones that aren’t compatible with Apple’s “Lightning” power port will need an adapter. Those will come standard with new iPhones, but many consumers could find it annoying to use the extra “dongle.” And they won’t be able to plug in headphones if there’s a power cord in the Lightning port.

Apple cuts the cord

Apple Senior Vice President Philip Schiller made it clear Wednesday the company sees a future where its sleek gadgets no longer are encumbered by cords at all. “It makes no sense to tether ourselves with cables to our mobile devices,” he said during the company’s annual fall product event. Eliminating the standard analog jack freed up some space inside the new iPhones, allowing Apple to increase the battery size and add another speaker as it redesigned the interior of the device. Despite some earlier rumors, Apple didn’t use the extra space to make the iPhone 7 or 7 Plus any slimmer than last year’s models, the 6S and 6S Plus. Apple did make an effort to improve on standard Bluetooth technology, which can be unreliable and obstinate when used to “pair” wireless headsets

AP photo

Phil Schiller, Apple’s senior vice president of worldwide marketing, talks about the features on the new iPhone 7 earphone options during an event to announce new products Wednesday in San Francisco. with phones or other devices. The new AirPods are based on Bluetooth standards. But in addition to special sensors, a microphone and noise canceling technology, they have a processor chip designed by Apple, combined with software that Apple says will make it simple to sync them with an iPhone, Apple Watch and other Apple gadgets. The result allows a “seamless connection between you and your devices,” said Apple Chief Design Officer Jony Ive in a promotional video. “We’re just at the beginning of a truly wireless future we’ve been working towards for many years.” Apple says the new “AirPods” will work for five hours before their batteries need re-charging; they come with a small charging case that’s supposed to provide 24 hours of additional juice before the case itself needs to be recharged. The “AirPods” will work with Bluetooth-enabled devices made by Apple’s rivals, but they won’t have the ease-of-pairing that comes with Apple’s software. Schiller didn’t mention rival devices during his presentation, nor did he even use the word “Bluetooth.”

Bound by wireless

Analysts say Apple clearly wants to promote its own brand of wireless listening gear, including new headphones from its own “Beats” division, since the

market for such accessories is growing at a time when sales of iPhones – and other smartphones – are slowing. Some early reviewers already are captivated by the AirPod. “They fixed Bluetooth headsets,” said tech analyst Patrick Moorhead, of Moor Insights & Strategy, after trying a pair. “I think Apple has a real winner here.” But mobile tech analyst Carolina Milanesi of the Creative Strategies firm thinks Apple has a bigger goal in mind – to make it easier for consumers to use one set of wireless earpieces with a variety of Apple’s products. “It’s not just about your iPhone anymore,” she said. “It’s about getting consumers thinking more about that ecosystem of Apple products – and how they all play nicely together.” It’s an expensive ecosystem: Buying a new iPhone 7, Apple Watch and a set of AirPods will cost more than $1,000. But Apple has never been shy about marketing its products at a premium price.

Countering the iPhone slump

Apple is hoping its new iPhone and an updated Apple Watch, known as Series 2, will help reverse a recent decline in sales. While the company sold nearly 92 million iPhones in the first six months of this year, that’s about 15 percent fewer than the same period last year.

iPhone 7 and 6 Plus Apple’s new iPhone is getting a faster processor, an updated home button and water and dust protection. The iPhone 7 will have stereo speakers for the first time, with twice the volume of iPhone 6S speakers. Apple estimates that the new iPhones will have one or two hours of additional battery life over last year’s models. Camera improvements include a new flash with four LEDs rather than two for greater brightness. The iPhone 7 Plus will have two lenses to boost the zoom capabilities of the camera. The camera now can zoom in twice as much without losing sharpness. Both cameras take 12 megapixel photos. Apple Watch Series 2 Apple introduced a “swim-proof” watch, the Apple Watch Series 2. The new watch has built-in GPS, a brighter display and faster processor than the previous Apple Watch. There’s also new ceramic watchface. A Pokemon Go app is coming to Apple Watch. The app lets you collect items from Pokestops, hatch eggs and alert you to nearby Pokemon. New Mario Game Nintendo debuted a new Super Mario game for iOS called Super Mario Run. It’s the first iOS game featuring Nintendo’s Mario characters.


TECH Triona Guidry erences. Windows 7 and 8 users have Parental Controls in Control Panel. Windows 10 users need to log in using a Microsoft account to access family features. There also are a number of commercial parental control products, including Norton Family and McAfee Family Protection. Some companies offer bundle pricing that includes antivirus software, parental controls and more. Typical parental control features include blocking inappropriate content, restricting apps, monitoring social media accounts and limiting login times. Show your kids how to use strong, unique passwords on every site. You can set an example by doing the same with your own. Use a password manager such as LastPass, KeePass,

or 1Password to create and store strong passwords. Where possible, enable two-factor authentication for improved security. Writing down passwords is OK if you keep them somewhere safe like a locked drawer. It’s a good idea to keep a record of your kids’ passwords. Use antivirus software on all smart phones and tablets. Check app permissions on a regular basis to make sure they are limited to only the data the app requires. Be especially careful of apps that request location information. Turn off location when possible, and remember that photos and videos can be tagged with location data. Don’t use real names or share addresses or other personal information. Anything posted on the Internet remains there forever, despite whatever privacy preferences have been set. Privacy settings can change, servers can be hacked, accounts can be compromised. Check social media account permissions. Never post as public; use the

Tips for painting on canvas SPONSORED BY

Painting on canvas is a rich and rewarding experience. While there are as many methods as there are artists, the well-prepared canvas is a universal point of departure that can dictate both the process and the outcome of a work. Preparatory measures include: Stretching. Do-it-yourselfers can make an attractive – and inexpensive – canvas using rolled factory-cut material and a wooden frame. With practice, the half-hour build process requires only household tools like a hammer, nails, pliers and staples. Unwrapping. Seriously – stretched canvases and canvas panels require the initial removal of a cellophane layer known as packaging. Anecdotal evidence suggests that this process is sometimes overlooked Priming. Gesso is, essentially, primer. Two or more coats create a textured, nonabsorbent surface suitable for tempera paints, acrylics or oils. Once primed, the canvas fibers assume archival properties, preserving brushes

and conserving paint. Gesso is classified – and priced – according to student and professional grades. “When preparing to prime your canvas, you should make sure your gesso is the consistency of sour cream,” one artist said. “Add water and stir with a spoon, a stick, or even the end of your brush until it has reached that consistency. This not only makes the gesso easier to paint on; it also makes it last much longer.” Toning. A “toned ground,” or colored ground, is a flat, pre-composition paint layer that covers the primed canvas. An unsaturated, neutral version of almost any color will work – but a compliment to the dominant color of the subject is a good place to start. Artists “White is incredibly bright – it will alter the perception of the colours you put on the canvas, making colours seem duller than they really are,” stated artist Ashley Picano in an online tutorial. “Your poor paint colours have no chance competing against that bright stark white!” The toned ground technique also sets the mood of a painting and has a polished, professional effect.

Reprographics Imaging and Art Supplies, 26 Crystal Lake Plaza, Crystal Lake, IL 60014, 815-477-1018 • www.imageforyou.com

SM-CL0382382

“friends only” option. Remind your kids about the problem of oversharing. Model appropriate online sharing by asking your kids before posting pictures or information about them online. Keep cameras out of bedrooms, and cover webcams when not in use. If you have questions about cyberbullying, inappropriate photo sharing and other online concerns, I suggest sites such as Netsmartz, Common Sense Media and the Kids.gov Online Safety Index, which have age-appropriate resources for younger kids as well as teens and tweens. By taking a few precautions, you can keep your entire family safer online. You’ll find more internet safety resources on my web site.

• Triona Guidry is a freelance writer and computer specialist who provides writing and consulting services. Her Tech Tips blog www. guidryconsulting.com/techtips offers tech support advice for Windows and Mac.

• Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Trying to protect your kids online can seem overwhelming. Here are some guidelines to help you and your kids learn more about internet safety. I suggest you start with an honest conversation about the dangers of the internet. Let them know your family’s policies about computer use, and ask how they’d like to contribute to a healthy computing environment. As a family, you can work together to keep everyone safe. Many people give their kids an old computer, figuring it doesn’t matter if the machine has current system software or antivirus. But an old computer quickly turns into a Typhoid Mary that spreads viruses and malware across your network. No one wants to get infected by a serious virus that can wipe out everything from business documents to family photos. Your kids’ computer, like your own, should be well-protected. I recommend trying the built-in parental controls. Mac users will find Parental Controls under System Pref-

25

TECHNOLOGY | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Communication, precautions help kids learn internet safety


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

26

FUN&GAMES Arlo & Janis

Beetle Bailey

Big Nate

Blondie

The Born Loser

Dilbert

Frazz

Monty

Non Sequitur

Pearls Before Swine


Pickles

The Family Circus

FUN & GAMES | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Rose is Rose

The Argyle Sweater

Frank & Ernest

• Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Soup to Nutz

Crankshaft

27


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

| FUN & GAMES

28 Explaining therapy may help husband seek it Dear Dr. K: I’m convinced my husband is depressed, but he refuses to seek help. What can I say to convince him he could benefit from therapy? Dear Reader: Most men don’t like to ask for help or to talk about their feelings. That’s not going to be easy for your husband. However, doing nothing could make it harder for him. If he is suffering from depression and doesn’t get help, it could threaten everything important in his life, starting with family, friends and work. Left unchecked, the symptoms of depression can make a person miserable. The sadness, lack of energy, loss of interest in sex, difficulty thinking and constant feeling of stress can cause serious problems at home and at work. They even might lead to destructive behavior such as alcohol or drug dependence. Your husband likely recognizes these negative feelings and changes. But he might not know the root cause, or if he does, what he can do about it. You gently need to help him recognize he is unhappy, and it is causing tensions at home and at work (assuming that’s true). And you need to assure him help is available, and what that involves. You might explain to him, generally speaking, a therapist will help establish treatment goals and then outline a strategy to meet them. This may include a combination of therapy during regular sessions and “homework” in between

ASK DOCTOR K Anthony L. Komaroff visits. After a series of initial treatment sessions, your husband might return periodically for “booster” visits to prevent a future relapse. If you’re able to convince your husband to try therapy, he’ll need to find a therapist. A primary care physician is a good place to start. Your husband can speak with his PCP about his situation, how he feels and his symptoms. The doctor can recommend therapists who can help. If your husband would prefer not to go through his PCP, there are other resources. Many employee health care plans offer confidential help lines where you can ask questions and find therapists in your network. Another source is the National Alliance on Mental Illness Helpline (800950-6264). Finally, once you get him started, encourage your husband to stick with therapy, even if he does not feel a strong connection with the first therapist he tries. Advise him to try someone else and not get discouraged. • Write to Dr. Komaroff at www.askdoctork.com or Ask Doctor K, 10 Shattuck St., Second Floor, Boston, MA 02115.

SUDOKU

HOW TO PLAY Each row, column and set of 3-by-3 boxes must contain the numbers 1 through 9 without repetition.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION

BE A GOOD

NEIGHBOR

Volunteer.

CROSSWORD


B Y E N O W

O O N P E R A T H E D Y Y O U B E T C H A

H A S H

C A M S

I G O R

O T E R O

OM N O E R A N R T R H A N G

G I A N T

P S R N E L Y H S U N O B A N N I C C A S L T A L O L A P I C B A Y B

Z I L C H

P A T E

E T V O I L A

G R E A T E S C B A O P L E S T U E S R A

G E N R E H O L E S

A S H E

A D H O S N N A I T I T L E R E E I S D V B I B L C A

C H I N A T O W N

S K I T

E R N O

M U M B O

T S A R

JUMBLE

I N D I G E N T

A R E A

M I A M U R B A G R A N D L A S A A C U T R E P E V I E A T R A S T O T I T D A Z E O R E M R O M P S T E T

S E N D S Y E A S T

M O C K

Z I P K S A U I P S E W R E A A R P I N G

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

B O N D

E R R O N

• Write Dear Abby at www.dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

A S H A N T I

a stellar husband and your visa problem is solved. I’d say you have done quite well. If your husband prefers to postpone the fancy celebration until you are more financially stable and foot the bill himself, you should respect him for it. I know I do.

A S R K M E I D E S H I E S

Out In Virginia Dear Missing Out: My thoughts are you have

S A T O U T T Y P Y O E A C R Y B T O E R N G

remain in loveless marriages for religious or financial reasons, because they are afraid a divorce would traumatize the children or because they are afraid of being alone. If you and your wife agree there is nothing left for either of you, and marriage counseling won’t fix the dysfunction in your relationship, then the logical next step would be an amicable separation or divorce. Dear Abby: I have the most amazing husband. He helps with the housework, provides for us and loves me unconditionally. Not a day goes by I don’t hear how precious I am to him. It’s like a fairy tale. Except – we never had a formal wedding, just a courthouse ceremony with nobody there but us two. You see, we had to get the paperwork done so I wouldn’t have to keep renewing my visa status every few months. Now we can be together in the U.S. with no issues. But I feel as if we skipped an important life milestone, and a wedding would be the perfect opportunity to unite both of our families from around the world. The problem is my husband is happy with the way things are. He refuses to spend money on a party and says, “If we ever have one, it will be when we are rich, stable and able to afford it by ourselves.” (My parents are more than willing to pay.) I feel like a lifelong dream was taken away from me. Your thoughts? – Missing

26 With 24-Across, 1962 P. G. Wodehouse book 28 Bonkers 30 Horsefeathers 32 Spanish treasure 33 Ottoman bigwigs 36 Colors, as Easter eggs 40 With 42-Across, Frank Sinatra signature song 42 With 40-Across, where Broadway is 44 Hamlet or Ophelia 45 Scanty, in London 47 Prefix with lateral 48 They turn litmus paper red 50 Monk’s superior 52 With 55-Across, town crier’s cry 55 With 52-Across, Aaron Copland ballet 58 Pipe fitting

A L I B I

Out Of Love Dear Fell Out Of Love: People sometimes

ACROSS 1 Computers that are un-PC 5 With 9-Across, an auto ad slogan 9 With 5-Across, quickly 13 Workplace protection agcy. 14 “My Heart Can’t Take ___ More” (1963 Supremes song) 15 Two cents, so to speak 17 “Pay me later” marker 18 Sly look 19 Salon jobs, for short 20 Casino game that looks like a thou in reverse 21 Grouches 23 Lawyer’s org. 24 With 26-Across, 1982 Al Pacino film

R E O P T S

59 Equivalent of C natural 61 ___ A Sketch 64 Samuel on the Supreme Court 66 Cross inscription 67 Final Four grp. 68 River near the Vatican 69 British prep school 70 Resistance units 71 With 72-Across, noted maximum security prison 72 With 71- and 72-Across, classic Louis Prima tune 73 “___ ME” (phrase written on dirty cars)

1

2

3

4

5

7

8

9

10

13

14

15

17

18

19

20

21 24

28

30

32

33

40

53

36

59

64

65

68

38

39

62

63

47

49

50 55

37

43

46

54

58

31

42 45

48

27

35

41

44

52

34

12

23

26

29

11

16

22

25

71

DOWN 1 Poke fun at 2 Tennis legend Arthur 3 Neighborhood south of SoHo 4 Skipped, as a dance 5 Bubkes 6 County in Colorado or New Mexico 7 “… ___ as it is in heaven” 8 Daybreak, to Donne 9 Closes, as a fly 10 Ironically, the last song in “A Chorus Line” 11 She’s got her OWN network 12 ___ jumbo 16 Old Russian ruler 22 Old German ruler

6

56

51

57

60

61

66

67

69

70

72

73

PUZZLE BY ANDREA CARLA MICHAELS

25 Exmaple for example, for example 27 Former New England Patriot Bruschi whose name is a bear to pronounce? 28 “GoldenEye” spy 29 Vicinity 31 Called 34 What generals keep up their sleevies? 35 Program listings, briefly

37 “Damn right!” 38 “Um … sorry!” 39 “Saturday Night Live” sketch 41 687 days, on Mars

53 ___ Island (immigrants’ site) 54 Excuse 56 ___ the side of caution

57 Mimicking 43 “I haven’t a thing 60 Hurries to ___!” 46 She had a hit with “Foolish” 49 RoboCop, e.g. 51 “Toodles!” 52 You can pack it

62 Skyping needs 63 Dish made of leftovers 65 Word after Big or top

Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Read about and comment on each puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.

• Tuesday, September 13, 2016

it possible people can just fall out of love with each other? We have been married for 21 years and have three kids who are older. Over the past five years, my wife and I have stopped communicating. We don’t do anything together and have little desire to be with each other anymore. We are good parents, but as far as being husband and wife, we pretty much have neglected each other emotionally and physically. Neither of us has strayed. We haven’t been to a marriage counselor because I just don’t love my wife anymore, and I’m not saying this to be mean. It’s just how I feel. We have failed each other miserably as husband and wife, and she deserves better. She has been a great mom to our three kids, and I would never take that away from her. Can people stay in a loveless marriage? We have talked it over, and we both agree there’s nothing left here for each other. I already have told her she needs to do whatever it takes to make herself happy because I no longer can be here for her emotionally or physically. – Fell

E L L I S

DEAR ABBY Jeanne Phillips

Note: The ninth annual Lollapuzzoola crossword tournament, directed by Brian Cimmet and Patrick Blindauer, took place Saturday, Aug. 13, at All Souls Church in Manhattan. This puzzle appeared in a prior tournament and had a 15-minute time limit.

H E A T

Dear Abby: Is

29

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD

FUN & GAMES | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Amicable divorce is next step in loveless marriage


30 CLASSIFIED • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com For Better or For Worse

ELECTRICAL / MAINTENANCE TECHNICIANS

Crystal Lake manufacturer seeking experienced Electrical/Maintenance Technicians immediately. 2nd & 3rd shift. Competitive pay and benefits. Fax resume to 815-459-4741 or email: Knaack.HRMail@wernerco.com

GROUNDSPERSON - Barrington CUSD 220

Full Time, 8 hours per day - 247 days plus 13 holidays - 12 month position. The Groundsperson is responsible for maintaining the appearance and safety of the grounds area in the District. Must have a valid Illinois “B” classification driver's license with no restrictions and must be insurable with District insurance. Visit www.barrington220.org - employment - to apply. Call 847-842-3530 for more information.

PARALEGAL/LEGAL ASSISTANT

Fast paced law firm looking for an experienced paralegal to join our team. Must be enthusiastic, dependable, detail oriented, and organized. Bilingual a plus.

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

Construction Contractor located in McHenry, is seeking a candidate for an immediate, full time position of Administrative Assistant in our Estimating Department. Duties include: Documentation organization (printing plans and specs, spreadsheets, department emails), proficiency in typing notes and proposals, filing, data entry, calling contractors for projects to bid searching for leads on projects to bid via construction websites, customer service, light marketing, cross-training, problem solving & possess strong organizational, verbal & written communication skills. Must be proficient w/ all Microsoft office programs. Hours: 7:30am-5:30PM, Mon-Fri. Qualified candidates please submit resume to: HR@Metalmaster.us

AUTO TECH

Full Time. Must have Chrysler experience. To apply, call 815-338-6756

Benoy Motor Sales, Woodstock

Email your resume to info@fgmlaw.com

Now Hiring... Always Caring Seeking experienced caregivers. Weekdays & Weekend 3-12 hours shifts days / nights available 24-hour Live-Ins (1-3 days per week) Apply online: https://va175.ersp.biz/employment Visiting Angels is an EEO employer

CARPENTERS

Busy Deck Builder with jobs all over area needs experienced Carpenters to start immediately. Call 815-479-9660 to apply.

DRIVER / MAINTENANCE WORKER

Large South Elgin commercial greenhouse is looking to fill 2 positions working in both Shipping & Maintenance. Full time. Class B CDL required. Call 847-695-1500, email eclesen@clesenbrothers.com or apply in person: Clesen Brothers, 34W240 South Dr, South Elgin

To subscribe to the Northwest Herald Call 815-459-8118 or visit: www.NWHerald.com

Deer Path of Huntley is seeking qualified candidates for CNA's, Cooks and Dietary Aides.

CUSTODIAN – PT

Cary Park District

$9/hr. Evenings / Weekends.

Apply in person: 255 Briargate Rd, Cary. Info 847-639-6100

Food Service

Sheltered Village Woodstock is in need of a Part time Dishwasher (Saturday AM) and Part time Cook (Weekend evenings) Call Amy 815-338-6440 ext: 114

Truck Driver. Class A CDL - Part Time. 2 years experience required. Deliveries to Chicagoland area.

Contact Mike Wellwerts, Rebars & Steel Co. 815-385-2356

POS Remarketing Group 847-526-9650

CASHIER/RECEPTIONIST

Evening cashier needed. 20 hrs/wk Mon., Tues., Thurs., Sat. Immediate Opening in Algonquin. Call Amanda: 847-854-6700

Fax: 847-658-4864 or email: ajwrzos10@gmail.com

ROSEN HYUNDAI

Need Help Rebuilding, Repairing or Replanting?

At Your Service Directory

Call for more information 847-515-1800 or apply online at www.gardant.com/deerpathhuntley

Health Care

RN, LPN and CNA

Potential Sign on Bonus for other positions up to $3,500

Weekend CNA program with $1000 Sign on Bonus

We are looking for dedicated and experienced professionals to assume these key positions on our nursing team! If you are committed to team-oriented outcomes and quality care, we offer: Shift Differential! Advancement Medical, Dental and Vision! And Much More! Vacation, PTO, Holiday!

Apply online at: https://tutera.vikus.net or for more information call 815-459-7791

Production Line Warehouse Position

Check out the

CAREGIVERS

Health Care

Crystal Pines Rehabilitation and Healthcare 335 North Illinois Street, Crystal Lake, IL 60014

TURNBERRY COUNTRY CLUB HAS THE FOLLOWING PART TIME OPENINGS Experienced Line Cook Bartender & Wait Staff Golf Shop Staff

Apply at the clubhouse to fill out application: Mon-Fri 10am - 5pm 9600 Turnberry Trail, Lakewood. No phone calls please.

Northwest Herald Classified It works.

Call today to place your ad

877-264-2527

RN & LPN Wanted

New Grads Welcome

Sheltered Village, Woodstock

Part Time Sign On Bonus & Shift Differential Flexible Schedule, Friendly work environment Vacation & Holiday Pay Apply in person or fax resume to:

Sheltered Village

600 Borden St., Woodstock IL Ph: 815-338-6440 Fax: 815-338-6803 Attn: Mary

Home Care Giver - Insured, Great Work, Avail. Now 312-566-6460 Retired Minister Offers Home Companion Servies Call 815-245-2850


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016 •

BRIDGE by Phillip Alder

GERMAN SHEPHERD

in Barrington. Collar. No Tag. 847-381-4100

A TV Antenna Will Save you $1000's

Watch all Major Networks and NEVER PAY AGAIN. We sell and install 815-575-1796

MAILBOX & POST SALES & INSTALLATION 815-653-7095 ~ 815-341-7822

www.mailboxpostman.com

HANDYMAN

Anything to do with Wood

We can Fix or Replace Doors and Windows I Will Clean Your Home Last Saturday, I gave a deal in which third hand had to play deceptively to mislead declarer about honor-card locations. Here is the theme again, from the World Youth Teams Championships in Italy last month. South’s three-spade cue-bid asked partner to bid three no-trump with a spade stopper. North’s double was card-showing. At every other table where diamonds were trumps, East either played the spade ace and king at the first two tricks, or won with the spade king and shifted to a club. Each declarer realized that if East had the spade ace and king, he or she could not also have the diamond king. So they all cashed the diamond ace and dropped West’s king. Only Kirstyn Fuller from Australia anticipated this future. To change it, she won trick one with the spade ace and immediately switched to the club nine. Now the declarer thought that Jessica Brake (West) had the spade king. This made it likely that East had the diamond king, and as long as West was not void in trumps, the diamond seven would be a second dummy entry. South won with her club ace, cashed the heart ace, played a heart to dummy’s king, and returned a low diamond to her queen. If that had held the trick and both opponents had followed suit, declarer would have cashed the diamond ace, led a diamond to dummy’s seven, and hoped to discard her remaining clubs on the hearts. However, the finesse lost. West then cashed her club king and gave her partner a club ruff for down three. That was timely anticipation by Fuller.

SPOTLESS!

AIRLINE MECHANIC TRAINING - GET FAA CERTIFICATION. FINANCIAL AID IF QUALIFIED. NO HS DIPLOMA OR GED - WE CAN HELP. APPROVED FOR MILITARY BENEFITS. GET STARTED BY CALLING AIM 866-315-0650 The Illinois Classified Advertising Network (ICAN) provides advertising of a national appeal. To advertise in this section, please call ICAN directly at 217-241-1700. We recommend discretion when responding. Please refer questions & comments directly to ICAN.

READER NOTICE:

As a service to you, our valued readers, we offer the following information. This newspaper will never knowingly accept any advertisement that is illegal or considered fraudulent. If you have questions or doubts about any ads on these pages, we advise that before responding or sending money ahead of time, you check with the local Attorney General's Consumer Fraud Line and/or the Better Business Bureau. They may have records or documented complaints that will serve to caution you about doing business with these advertisers. Also be advised that some phone numbers published in these ads may require an extra charge. In all cases of questionable value, such as promises or guaranteed income from work-at-home programs, money to loan, etc., if it sounds too good to be true, it may in fact be exactly that. Again, contact the local and/or national agency that may be able to provide you with some background on these companies. This newspaper cannot be held responsible for any negative consequences that occur as a result of you doing business with these advertisers.

Great References. 815-321-9742

White Male Cat W/ Black & Grey Markings. 6 Toes On Each Front Paw. His Name Is Ernie. Lost Friday Morning 9/2/16. Corner of 12 & 31 in Richmond. 815-678-4303

Don't worry about rain!

FRIDAY ONLY Sept 16th 9-3

3514 and 3506 Monica Trail

Home Decor, Furniture, Christmas, Halloween and Easter Decorations, Dept 56 Houses, Dishware, Radial Arm Saw, Misc Garden, Men's, clothing, Craft supplies and TONS MORE!

GILBERTS

MULTI-FAMILY GARAGE SALE!! 623 Pauline Ct.

Sept 15th, 16th & 17th (9:00 am to 4:30 pm) Household items, Holiday items, Electronics, Barbie dolls, Craft items, Furniture items, Ping Pong table, snow thrower & other items!

PRAIRIE GROVE

THURS Sept 15 9-4 FRI Sept 16 9-1

Faith Community UCC ATTENTION CRAFTERS! is hosting a Holiday Boutique Nov 19 & 20. We need local Vendors to offer their goods and services. Contact: frgholidayb@yahoo.com

CRYSTAL LAKE HUGE SALE Sept 15 & 16

THURS & FRI 9am - 3pm 320 N. OAK ST.

With our Great Garage Sale Guarantee you'll have great weather for your sale, or we'll run your ad again for FREE. Call to advertise 877-264-2527

CRYSTAL LAKE MOVING SALE

★ Sept 16 is Bag Sale Day $2/Paper Bag ★ $5/Garbage Bag

POLISH LADY Will Clean Your Home/Office

FREE ESTIMATES, Great References. 224-858-4515 CHILDCARE NEEDED - Seeking ASAP Reliable person for my 11 yr old child from 7pm to 6 or 6:30 am. Mon.-Fri. my house or yours. Non smoker, pay negotiable. Call 630-999-0685

CLASSIFIED 31

2023 Route 176

2 miles W of Island Lake, 3 miles E. of Rt 31 off Bayview Beach Rd. Clothes, Housewares, Jewelry, Books 25c, Puzzles 25c, Collectible Glass, Furniture & MORE Advertise here for a successful garage sale!

Call 877-264-2527

Vintage Toys, Linens, Furniture, Kitchen, Garden, Sports Cards, Household, Too much to list!!!

Fireplace Wood. King Street, Woodstock. 815-338-4446

Northwest Herald Classified

Needs some adjustment. 815-459-4742

It works.

Treadmill - Pro Plane, Sears

TWO FREE COUCHES – You Pick Up From 2nd Story. 815-404-1587 Woodworking Power Tools & Hand Tools. DeWalt Radio Arm Saw, Jointer, Planer... Call Gordon 815-236-6863

Reconditioned and Guaranteed Washers, Dryers, Stoves and Refrigerators. Good Selection. Low Prices.

Assured Appliance, 121 N. Emmett St, Genoa 847-293-0047

Side By Side Washer & Gas Dryer – Kenmore. Good Shape, $100. 262-295-8162

Bike - Ladies, Murray, Like New!

U. S. made, $30.00. 224-381-5675


32 CLASSIFIED • Tuesday, September 13, 2016 ELECTRIC SCOOTERS - NEW Brand new, never used 2 Currie Technologies zip 750 electric scooters with carrier $650.00. 815-354-5910

Ladies 18 Speed Bike, 26x175 Tires, VGC, $65 815-459-2527

Shower Kit - Complete Corner with Glass Door $300/obo. 815-355-5229

Genuine Waterford Crystal, Circa 1985

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Chain Saw – 16in Bar, Self Oiler, W/ Carrying Case, Good Shape, $110 815-790-6903

Armoire (Entertainment/Storage) – Wood & Wicker, Beautiful, Exc Cond! 71” H x 37” W x 25'' D. Shelves Incl. $90 815-308-5515

Brass Lamps - End Table Lamps, Exc Cond! $15/ea. 815-477-7138 BUFFET – 1940's Golden Oak. $399 815-404-1587

Chairs (9) from Abbey Resort in Fontana, WI with 3” padded seats and in excellent condition, $10/ea. 810 Meadow Ln., Marengo IL 60152

Recliner - Dark Green Leather

Very good condition, $140. 847-361-6256 Solid Oak Table With Chairs - 54” Round 2 leaves, opens to 90”, 6 chairs - 4 Regular, 2 Captain, $300. 815-344-4238 Twin Size Mattress – Like New! Great Condition! $75/OBO 815-546-1033 Black & Decker 22in Electric Hedge Trimmer – Never Used. $30. 815-337-3722

Chipper/Shredder MTD, 8HP

Excellent condition, $275. 815-477-4828

Lawn Mower - Craftsman “Self-Propelled” with bag, $50.00.

224-381-5675

Lawn Mower – JD, GX345, 20HP, 48in Mower Deck. Bobcat Skid Loader - #642B, 339hrs, New Tires, 1 Bucket. 815-568-5269

TREES - NICE!

Evergreens 6'-8', Buy 3 or More $195/ea, delivered & planted. 815-378-1868 Troy Bilt Chipper Shredder - $400, Comes W/ Extras. Pics Avail. 815-535-2279

Coleman 70qt Xtreme Cooler - $25 815-337-3722

815-790-6903 Motorized Handicapped Scooter – battery opp, 3yrs old, seldom used, $700/obo 815-728-1781

Just because I'm doing well in life doesn't mean I can't complain. Pretty girls have problems too.

Lowrey Super Genie Spinet Organ with Leslie speakers, early 70's model. Includes bench. Needs work. $200 or best offer. Must pick-up. 815-356-8721.

Pianos Quality, Pre-Owned Pianos

Delivered & Warrantied

815-334-8611

Need customers?

www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400

Call Classified today! 877-264-2527

Classified Avenue Ad Network Autos AUTO INSURANCE STARTING AT $25/ MONTH! CALL 877-929-9397

_____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ __

You could save over $500 off your auto insurance. It only takes a few minutes. Save 10% by adding property to quote. Call Now! 1-888-498-5313

_____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ __

Got an older car, boat or RV? Do the humane thing. Donate it to the Humane Society. Call 1-800-430-9398

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DONATE YOUR CAR – 866-616-6266 FAST FREE TOWING -24hr Response – 2015 Tax Deduction – UNITED BREST CANCER FDN: Providing Breast Cancer Information & Support Programs _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____

Follow the Northwest Herald on Twitter. McHenry County area breaking news, entertainment news, feature stories and more!

@NWHerald

You Want It?

Seeking loving homes for both kittens & poodle 815-814-8414 KITTENS – FREE Kittens (2) to a good home. Call 815-347-6888

Find !t here! PlanitNorthwest.com

Pictures increase attention to your ad! Be sure to include a photo of your pet, home, auto or merchandise.

Call to advertise 877-264-2527

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Health & Fitness

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Stop OVERPAYING for your prescriptions! SAVE! Call our licensed Canadian and International pharmacy, Compare prices and get $25.00 OFF your first prescription! CALL 1-800-418-8975 Promo Code CDC201625

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Got Knee Pain? Back Pain? Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost to you. Medicare Patients Call Health Hotline Now! 1-800-900-5406 _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

VIAGRA and CIALIS USERS! 50 Pills SPECIAL $99.00. FREE Shipping! 100% guaranteed. CALL NOW! 844-586-6399

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

GET HELP NOW! One Button Senior Medical Alert. Falls, Fires & Emergencies happen. 24/7 Protection. Only $14.99/mo. Call NOW 888-772-9801

877-264-2527

JOBS ANNOUNCEMENTS STUFF VEHICLES REAL ESTATE SERVICES LEGALS Northwest Herald Classified and online at: NWHerald.com

Or place your ad online nwherald.com/placeanad

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE TRAINING! Online Training gets you job ready in months! FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE for those who qualify! HS Diploma/GED required. & PC/Internet needed! 1-888-512-7120

We've Got It!

Classified has GREAT VARIETY!

Kittens (4) 12 Week Old Males Havanese Poodle, Male,18 Mo Old

We've got them! Advertise in print and online for one low price.

Life is full and overflowing with the new. But it is necessary to empty out the old to make room for the new to enter. www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400

PEPSI MACHINE - 26” deep x 27” wide x 60” long, Sunkist, Dad's, Country Time Lemonade, Coin operated 45¢ Must See - $300. Call anytime 815-385-0404

Ask about our 50% off specials & our Low Price Guarantee. Offer Expires Soon. Call now 1-888-906-1887 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Safe Step Walk-In Tub Alert for Seniors. Bathroom falls can be fatal. Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Step-In. Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors. American Made. Installation Included. Call 800-715-6786 for $750 Off. _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Misc. For Sale

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DISH TV 190 channels plus Highspeed Internet Only $49.94/mp! Ask about a 3 year price guarantee & get Netflix included for 1 year! Call Today 800-278-1401

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

VIAGRA and CIALIS USERS! 50 Pills SPECIAL $99.00. FREE Shipping! 100% guaranteed. CALL NOW! 844-586-6399

______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

free trial. 888-674-6073

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Financial

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied benefits? We Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing! Contact Bill Gordon & Associates at 1-800-706-8742 to start your application today!

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Sell your structured settlement or annuity payments for CASH NOW, You don't have to wait for your future payments any longer! Call 1-800-283-3601

\_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Call now to secure a super low rate on your Mortgage. Don't wait for Rates to increase. Act Now! Call 1-888-859-9539

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Are you in BIG trouble with the IRS? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues & resolve tax debt FAST. Call 844-245-2287

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Enjoy your own therapeutic walk-in luxury bath. Get a Need Funding For Your Business? Business Loans free in-home consultation and receive $1,750 OFF you $5K-$250K We work with all types of credit! To apply, new walk-in tub! Call Today!!! (800) 362-1789 call: 855-577-0314

Employment Opportunities Miscellaneous Xarelto users have you had complications due PAID IN ADVANCE! Make $1000 A Week Mailing Male Enlargement Medical Pump to internal bleeding (after January 2012)? ULTIMATE BUNDLE from DIRECTV & AT&T. 2-Year Brochures From Home! NO Experience Required. Gain 1-3 Inches Permanently! FDA Licensed For ErecIf so, you MAY be due financial compensation. Price Guarantee – Just $89.99/month Helping home workers since 2001! Genuine Opportunity. tile Dysfunction. 30-Day Risk Free Trial. Free Brochure: If you don't have an attorney, CALL Injuryfone (TV/fast internet/phone) FREE Whole-Home Genie HDStart Immediately! www.MailingProject.net Call (619) 294-7777 www.DrJoelKaplan.com today! 800-405-8327 DVR Upgrade. New Customers Only. Call Today 1-800-897-4169 Business Services VIAGRA 100MG Lung Cancer? And 60+ Years Old? If So, You And Your 40pills+/4 free, only $99.00. Family May Be Entitled To A Significant Cash Award. Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to ATTENTION BUSINESS OWNERS! Only Intuit Full Service Save Big Now, Discreet shipping. Call 866-710-5895 To Learn More. No Risk. No MonPayroll Discovers Error BEFORE They Happen! Error Free your stairs! **Limited time $250 Off Your Stairlift 100% guaranteed. FREE Shipping! ey Out Of Pocket. Purchase!** Buy Direct & SAVE. Please call Payroll & Taxes – GUARANTEED! Call: 844-271-7135 24/7 CALL NOW! 866-760-9004 1-800-304-4489 for FREE DVD and brochure. Personals Education & Training Home Improvement DISCOUNT AIRFARE. Domestic & International. Get up Flirt, Chat & Date! Talk to real singles in your area! AIRLINE MECHANIC TRAINING – Get FAA certification. All Things Basementy! Basement Systems Inc. Call us to 65%* off on phone booking. Cheap Flights, Done Call Now! Free to try! 855-684-7573 No HS Diploma or GED – We can help. Approved for Right! Call 877-649-7438 for all of your basement needs! Waterproofing, A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's largest senior military benefits. Financial Aid if qualified. Job PlaceFinishing, Structural Repairs, Humidity and Mold living referral service. Contact our trusted, local ment assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance DIGITAL HEARING AIDS – Now offering a 45-Day Risk Control FREE ESTIMATES! Call 1-800-998-5574 experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. 877-818-0783 www.FixJets.com Free Offer! FREE BATTERIES for Life! Call to start your CALL 1-800-717-2905 Find the Right Carpet, Flooring & Window Treatments. _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

_____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

_____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____

CLEANING OUT MY BARN! 20-30 2yo Bales - Grass Hay – FREE! You Pick Up – Woodstock 847-528-2816

Lexi 2 Year Old Female Rough Collie Mix

Wheelchair - McKesson, Black & Chrome 18” and folds, $200/obo. 815-355-5229

Diecast Model Cars 6 Wine Goblets @ $150, & Many More Pieces all 1/18th Scale, $30each, 815-477-4667 in excellent condition! 847-361-6256 Precious Moments Figurines – Tons to Choose Free Standing, Wood Burning Fireplace. $600. Exc Shape! 815-344-4843 From! Starting at $400. Make An Offer! 815-385-8771 Little Giant Step Ladder – 5ft to 8ft, Exc Shape, $160

Printer HP Laser Jet, 5100 with Stand Printed IDOT 11x17 Drawings, $395/obo 815-355-5229

Jinx 7 Year Old Male Black DSH

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

_____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

_____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

_____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ ___


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016 •

Lily B 10 Year Old Female Dilute Tortie DSH

Scooter

7 Y/O Long Haired Grey Male

WE BUY GUNS

All type: Modern, Military, Collectible, Antique & Sporting Single piece or collections, Cash Paid, Discrete legal transactions

CLASSIFIED 33

A-1 AUTO

Appraisal, Consignement & FFL transfer services

Vintage Arms of Illinois

www.vintagearms.com Mike@vintagearms.com 847-548-0433

Will BUY UR USED CAR, TRUCK, SUV

MOST CASH

WILL BEAT ANY QUOTE GIVEN!!

$400 - $2000

Powered by:

Most women are afraid of being conspicuous and what people will say. Not me, I dare to be different.

Looking For My Forever Home!

Air, Runs Great, $3250, FREE 3mo Warranty 815-344-9440

Adoption Hours : Mon & Wed 6:30 – 8:30PM Saturday, 9AM-Noon www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400 Get the job you want at NWHerald.com/jobs

Being the FIRST to grab reader's attention makes your item sell faster!

Highlight and border your ad! 877-264-2527

www.NWHerald.com

Find the help you need

Snowblower - Snapper

Excellent start, $85.00. 224-381-5675

2005 HONDA CIVIC HYBRID - $1500 Great Condition w/ *NEW* Hybrid Battery. 142000 Miles. Needs Transmission Repair. 925-876-9641

2009 Crysler PT Cruiser – 4D Auto, Ice Cold Air, Looks/Runs GREAT, Free 3mo Warranty. $4700 815-344-9440

2001 4WD Nissan Xterra V6 - $3000, Belt Pkge @ 120k, 146k, Must Sell – Moving, 815-382-0312 2002 Ford Explorer – 1 Owner, Looks/Runs GREAT, ALL COLLECTIONS, AUTOGRAPHS, ESTATES Ice Cold Air, 92K ONLY, 4x4, FREE 3mo Warranty $5200 815-344-9440 OLD INVENTORY CASH 815-354-6169

2005 Chevy Equinox LS - Looks & Runs Great 116K miles, $4000. 815-342-2885 Old Lever Actions, Winchesters, Marlins, Savages, etc.

Antique and Modern Guns

Lionel & American Flyer Trains 815-353-7668

In print daily Online 24/7

2004 Saab 93 2.0 turbo – 1 Owner, Loaded, 92K ONLY, Ice Cold Air, Runs/Looks GREAT $4900 815-344-9440

Paddle Boat – Good Condition. $150 815-943-3159

Old Pistols and Revolvers. Cash for Collection. FFL License. 815-338-4731

At Your Service

1999 Mazda 626 LX, 1 Owner, 79K ONLY, Ice Cold

WANTED TO BUY: Vintage or New, working or not.

Antiques, Video Games, Outboard motors, Fishing Gear, Motorcycles or Mopeds, Chainsaws, Tools etc. Cash on the spot. Cell: 815-322-6383

2000 Chevy Silverado 1500 LT Model

3 doors, 83K mi, $7000/obo. 815-568-9077 2003 Ford Ranger – 72k, Auto, Bucket Seats, Been Garaged, Good Cond. $3500 815-338-4915 2012 CHEVY SILVERADO WHEELS, P26570R17 Tires, Hub Cabs, TPS and Lug nuts. $600 O.B.O. 815-578-8807

“don't wait....call 2day”!!

815-575-5153 ★★★★★★★★★★★

I BUY CARS, TRUCKS, VANS & SUVs 1990 & Newer Will beat anyone's price by $300. Will pay extra for Honda, Toyota & Nissan.

815-814-1964

or

815-814-1224

★★★★★★★★★★★

MOTORCYCLES WANTED


34 CLASSIFIED • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

BRIAN the KIRBY SERVICE GUY Kirby Tune-Up's ~ Service/Supplies

/

(New Location) 835 VIRGINIA RD. Suite A-Rear CRYSTAL LAKE IL 60014

Free Estimates on Repairs

815-404-3720

(Call or Text)

MOP -N- SPARKLE

Best POLISH cleaning LADIES will clean your house and more. Professional, reliable, affordable. We treat your house like it's our house. CALL MAGGIE FOR A FREE ESTIMATE

815-814-0339

An Affordable Electrician 847-566-2663

Free Estimates Veterans Disc Senior Disc Single Parent Disc 40 Years Experience Licensed Bonded Insured

WILL BEAT ANY ESTIMATE

MAYA LAWN LANDSCAPING Weekly Mowing Mulching Planting Brick Pavers Patios Sidewalks & Retaining Walls Spring Clean-up Natural Stone Top Soil & Bobcat work. Fully Insured/Bonded. House Cleaning Available

Vicente - 815-382-4538

X-PERT CONCRETE

Demolition, Excavation & Bobcat Work, Foundations Driveways, Retaining Walls, Hardscape

847-980-7039 or 847-639-7625

BOB EVANS FIREWOOD & MULCH

We sell only the finest seasoned firewood! Mixed Premium Hardwood $150 F/C Oak $160 F/C Hickory / Cherry $180 F/C www.bobevansfirewoodandmulch.com

Call Gary 847-888-3599

Serving W. Rt. 59, N. of I-88 &S. of Rt 176

S&W Furniture Refinishing ✦

ZIGMAN CONSTRUCTION

Kitchen Bathrooms Tile Flooring Electric Painting Windows Bobcat Work

815-790-9542

Room Additions Remodeling Debris Removal Pergola/Arbors Screen Rooms Basements Doors Plumbing

ask for - Ziggy www.zigmanremodeling.com Place your Classified ad online 24/7 at: www.NWHerald.com/PlaceAnAd

DON'T NEED IT? SELL IT FAST! Northwest Herald Classified Call 877-264-2527 or www.NWHerald.com

JM SEAMLESS GUTTERS • Seamless Gutters 5” & 6” • Leaf Protection (Different Styles Available) • Soffit & Fascia • Aluminum Wrap Free Estimates Fully Insured Reasonable Pricing 815-404-9749

21 Yrs. Experience, Free Estimates, Insured

Lawn Maintenance Weekly~Tree Service Install & Remove ~ Spring Clean Up ~ Edging & Mulch ~ ~Trimming ~ And Much More! ~

815-261-2835 or 815-404-8530

CESAR'S LAWN & LANDSCAPING

Lawn Maintenance & Mowing Fall Clean Up Mulch - Patios - Paver Repair - Fire Pits 847-489-1529 or 815-560-3373 Email; cesar_maya0927@yahoo.com Have a news tip?

Email: tips@nwherald.com

ORTIZ LANDSCAPING ★ SUMMER CLEAN-UP ★

Mulch Brick Patios Tree Removal Maintenance Work Insured.

815-355-2121

email: amulfoortiz99@gmail.com Don't worry about rain! With our

Great Garage Sale Guarantee

you'll have great weather for your sale, or we'll run your ad again for FREE*.

Call to advertise 877-264-2527 *within 4 weeks of original sale date. Ask your representative for details.


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016 •

CLASSIFIED 35

“Quality Roofing That Cost Less”

www.costroofing.us

815-344-3929

0% Financing plans ± Roof Replacements as low as

Free Estimates

Roofing ±Siding ±Gutters

$79/per mo.

±

CASA DECORATING

PAINTING & STAINING casadecorating.com Commercial / Residential Exterior & Interior

SANDMAN'S PAVING

40 Yrs. Experience ~ Owner on Every Job-Site √ Tree Removals * Price Guarantee √ Tree Trimming √ Lot Clearing √ Stump Grinding √ New Tree Installation

Since 1984

Specializing in Asphalt & Concrete Residential/Commercial

From Parking Lot Installation to Driveway Estimates Installation / Repair / Sealing

Senior/Military Discounts Licensed • Insured • Free Estimates

847-836-6071

Proudly Serving Crystal Lake, Algonquin, Schaumburg,

24 Hours 847-973-8722

Elgin, Barrington and Huntley

41 Years of Experience

Associations - Commercial Buildings Condos - Church's - Schools - Homes

Professional Free Estimates

(send a picture w/your smartphone)

815-823-2722 800-244-2272

POWER

Tree & Stump Removal, Inc. ALSO

NOTICE PUBLICATION POLICIES This publication reserves the right to edit or reject any ads without comment. This publication is careful to review all advertising but the burden of truthful content belongs to the advertiser. We use standard abbreviations and we reserve the right to properly classify your ad. All ads are subject to credit approval. We reserve the right to require prepayment. We accept cash, check, Visa, Mastercard, Discover & American Express. CHECK YOUR AD Please check your ad the first day it is published. If you see an error, call us immediately and it will be corrected for the next available publication date. Our liability is for only one publication date and shall not exceed the total cost of the first day of publication.

Mulch & Firewood 815-943-6960

We are At Your Service! The Northwest Herald reaches 137,000 adult readers in print every week, and 259,000 unique visitors on NWHerald.com every month.

Call to advertise in the At Your Service directory.

877-264-2527

classified@shawsuburban.com

Send your Help Wanted Advertising 24/7 to: Email: helpwanted@shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898

Fully Insured 24 Hour Emergency Cell 815-236-5944 *Trimming & Removal *Specializing Large & Dangerous Trees *Storm Damage *Lot Clearing *Stump Grinding *Pruning


36 CLASSIFIED • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

The Villas of Patriot Estates 829 Ross Lane

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE TWENTY- SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MC HENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR RESIDENTIAL ASSET MORTGAGE PRODUCTS, INC., MORTGAGE ASSET-BACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2005-EFC5 Plaintiff, -v.PATRICIA A. WEBER, et al Defendant 15 CH 01058 NOTICE OF SALE PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY Capron - Big House, Big Lot, 4BR, 4 Car Gar. GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in $1500/mo. 773-743-8672 or 847-835-9892 the above cause on May 3, 2016, an agent for The Judicial Sales MCHENRY - HOME FOR RENT AVAIL IMM. Clean 2 BR, 1 bath, Ldry rm, att 1.5 garage, deck, lge. yd, pet ok, Corporation, will at 1:00 PM on October 14, 2016, at the NLT Title appl. $1100 + Sec & util. 815-355-3450 Credit Check Req. L.L.C, 390 Congress Parkway, Suite D, Crystal Lake, IL, 60014, sell at public auction to the highest bidder, as set forth below, the following described real estate: Commonly known as 115 PHEASANT TRAIL, LAKE IN THE HILLS, IL 60156 Property Index No. 19-29-177-018. The real estate is improved with a single family residence. Sale terms: 25% down of the Gary Swift highest bid by certified funds at the Berkshire Hathaway Starck Realty close of the sale payable to The Judicial Sales Corporation. No third McHenryCountyRentToOwnHomes.com party checks will be accepted. The balance, including the Judicial sale fee for Abandoned Residential Wonder Lake/East Side Small 2BR, Fenced Yard Property Municipality Relief Fund, W/D, $850/mo + util + sec. 815-236-8570 which is calculated on residential real estate at the rate of $1 for each WOODSTOCK ~ 2BR, 1BA, $750/mo. $1,000 or fraction thereof of the amount paid by the purchaser not Tenant pays electric, garbage, well and septic. exceed $300, in certified to 224-558-8874 EMAIL: markvip100@gmail.com funds/or wire transfer, is due within twenty-four (24) hours. No fee shall be paid by the mortgagee Crystal Lake Approx 175 Sq Ft With Waiting Area. Clean, nice office acquiring the residential real estate pursuant to its credit bid at the sale suite incl all util + high speed DSL, $350/mo. 815-790-0240 or by any mortgagee, judgment creditor, or other lienor acquiring the residential real estate whose McHenry – In town, 900ft, store/office by rights in and to the residential real arose prior to the sale. Walgreens. $695mo, Broker, 815-575-6869 estate The subject property is subject to general real estate taxes, special assessments, or special taxes levied against said real estate and is offered for sale without any representation as to quality or quantity of title and without recourse to Plaintiff and in \"AS IS\" condition. The sale is further subject to confirmation by the court. Upon payment in full of the amount bid, the purchaser will receive a Certificate of Sale that will entitle the purchaser Publisher's Notice: All real estate advertising in this to a deed to the real estate after newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which confirmation of the sale. The propmakes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation erty will NOT be open for inspection or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, and plaintiff makes no representahandicap, familial status or national origin, or an tion as to the condition of the intention, to make any such preference, limitation of property. Prospective bidders are discrimination." Familial status includes children under admonished to check the court file the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, to verify all information. If this pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. property is a condominium unit, This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate the purchaser of the unit at the which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that foreclosure sale, other than a mortall dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal gagee, shall pay the assessments opportunity basis. and the legal fees required by The To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. Condominium Property Act, 765 The toll-free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275 ILCS 605/9(g)(1) and (g)(4). If this property is a condominium unit which is part of a common interest community, the purchaser of the Crystal Lake – 1 Story Brick Home, 3BR 1B, 2 Car Gar, unit at the foreclosure sale other a mortgagee shall pay the Fireplace, Finsihed Bsmt, C/A, Gas. $137,900/OBO than assessments required by The 815-307-5881 Property Act, Condominium 765 ILCS 605/18.5(g-1). IF YOU ARE THE MORTGAGOR (HOMEFlorida Winter is Coming! Think FLORIDA! Gulf Coast! OWNER), YOU HAVE THE RIGHT REMAIN IN POSSESSION FOR 3BR, 2BA Ranch. HUGE Pool W/ Lani. Beautifully Landscaped, TO 30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF AN Move In Cond., Furnished Too! $269,900. 815-444-9820 ORDER OF POSSESSION, IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION Newspaper subscriptions make great gifts! 15-1701(C) OF THE ILLINOIS Show them you care everyday! MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE LAW. Call 815-459-8118 today to send a gift subscription. You ill eed photo id tifi ti Northwest Herald

Newly Constructed Townhomes in McHenry

Woodstock Studio $600/mo + Security

Efficiency $575/mo + sec, 1BR $700/mo + sec. All 3 furnished with all util incl, no pets. 815-509-5876

Visit Today to Take a Tour of our Community

Call For Details

MARENGO LRG 3BR, 2ND FLR, SEWER & WATER INCL. $900/mo, available now. 815-575-2446 McHenry - 924 Front St, 2BR, Parking, $850/mo. Heat/water incl, no pets/smoking. 815-482-1001

McHenry ~ Near Town Clean 2BR, 2BA, C/A

With storage, laundry and parking, $875/mo. 847-401-3242

$850/mo + sec, no pets. 224-358-6114 Twin Lakes, WI Lakefront 4BR $850, Pier, Beach FREE MO! 18 min to Rt 120 & 31. 847-256-0986 Woodstock On Sq, Lrg 2nd Flr, 2BR,1BA, Rent Incl

heat water, trash, no pets, $925+dep. 847-924-6342 Woodstock – Small 1BR, All Utl Inc, Laundry, Near CL -2BR, 1B, Full Bsmnt, Garage, ½ Blk Frm Husmian Square, No Pets, $700 815-703-8442 School. No Smking/Pets, $950/mo + Sec Dep, Avail 10/1/16. 815-459-4775 Crystal Lake Randall Village 2BR Condo, 2BA, 1st Flr CRYSTAL LAKE ~ 3BR, 2BA DUPLEX Kit has eating area, W/D, attach gar, storage, no pets. W/D,$1100//mo + sec, no pets/smkg. 815-477-2229 $1450/mo + sec. 815-675-6799 or 630-605-2776 Fox Lake - Leisure Village 55 + 2 Bedroom End Unit Townhome, W/D, 3 season room/porch. $875/mo + utilities + sec, no pets. 815-678-4100

Richmond 1BR, 1BA Condo, 1st Flr, W/D, 1 Car Gar $825/mo or For Sale, $66,000. 815-341-1169 www.HuskieWire.com

Harvard Quiet 3BR, 2BA, Loft, Frplc, W/D, C/A Fish/Swim, Pets OK, $1075/mo. 815-648-2716 Northwest Herald Classified 877-264-2527 www.NWHerald.com/classified

All NIU Sports... All The Time

RECRUIT LOCAL!

Target your recruitment message close to home or reach our entire area. For more information, call 877-264-2527 or email: helpwanted@shawsuburban.com

West Harbor Residences 'A World Away' Looking for a new apartment to call home? West Harbor Residences at Reva Bay is a brand new apartment community in beautiful Fox Lake, IL. 5 minutes from Metra station. Shopping and entertainment is just minutes away. Typical unit is 2 bedrooms with 2 baths in a spacious 1,250 square feet. All new stainless steel appliances with washer/dryer included. Boat slips available right at your back door. Additional storage available. - Monthly rent begins at $1,425.

West Harbor Residences 8300 Reva Bay Lane Fox Lake, IL 60020 Phone: 630-835-4287 Email: westharborppm@gmail.com

PUBLIC NOTICE

779-704-2123

RENT TO BUY

815-814-6004

You will need a photo identification issued by a government agency (driver's license, passport, etc.) in order to gain entry into our building and the foreclosure sale room in Cook County and the same identification for sales held at other county venues where The Judicial Sales Corporation conducts foreclosure sales. For information, examine the court file or contact Plaintiff's attorney: CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C., 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100, BURR RIDGE, IL 60527, (630) 794-9876 Please refer to file number 14-15-11826. THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPORATION One South Wacker Drive, 24th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312) 236-SALE You can also visit The Judicial Sales Corporation at www.tjsc.com for a 7 day status report of pending sales. CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100 BURR RIDGE, IL 60527 (630) 794-5300 E-Mail: pleadings@il.cslegal.com Attorney File No. 14-15-11826 Attorney ARDC No. 00468002 Case Number: 15 CH 01058 TJSC#: 36-6132 NOTE: Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, you are advised that Plaintiff's attorney is deemed to be a debt collector attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. I697589 (Published in the Northwest Herald, August 30, 2016 September 6, 13, 2016)

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE TWENTY- SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MC HENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff, -v.ROBERT BEATTIE, et al Defendant 15 CH 770 NOTICE OF SALE PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the above cause on July 7, 2016, an agent for The Judicial Sales Corporation, will at 1:00 PM on October 11, 2016, at the NLT Title L.L.C, 390 Congress Parkway, Suite D, Crystal Lake, IL, 60014, sell at public auction to the highest bidder, as set forth below, the following described real estate: Commonly known as 1260 WALNUT GLEN DRIVE, Crystal Lake, IL 60014 Property Index No. 18-12-182-004. The real estate is improved with a single family residence. Sale terms: 25% down of the highest bid by certified funds at the close of the sale payable to The Judicial Sales Corporation. No third party checks will be accepted. The balance, including the Judicial sale fee for Abandoned Residential Property Municipality Relief Fund, which is calculated on residential real estate at the rate of $1 for each $1,000 or fraction thereof of the amount paid by the purchaser not to exceed $300, in certified funds/or wire transfer, is due within twenty-four (24) hours. No fee shall be paid by the mortgagee acquiring the residential real estate pursuant to its credit bid at the sale or by any mortgagee, judgment creditor, or other lienor acquiring the residential real estate whose rights in and to the residential real


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016 • ght estate arose prior to the sale. The subject property is subject to general real estate taxes, special assessments, or special taxes levied against said real estate and is offered for sale without any representation as to quality or quantity of title and without recourse to Plaintiff and in \"AS IS\" condition. The sale is further subject to confirmation by the court. Upon payment in full of the amount bid, the purchaser will receive a Certificate of Sale that will entitle the purchaser to a deed to the real estate after confirmation of the sale. The property will NOT be open for inspection and plaintiff makes no representation as to the condition of the property. Prospective bidders are admonished to check the court file to verify all information. If this property is a condominium unit, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale, other than a mortgagee, shall pay the assessments and the legal fees required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1) and (g)(4). If this property is a condominium unit which is part of a common interest community, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale other than a mortgagee shall pay the assessments required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/18.5(g-1). IF YOU ARE THE MORTGAGOR (HOMEOWNER), YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN IN POSSESSION FOR 30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF AN ORDER OF POSSESSION, IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 15-1701(C) OF THE ILLINOIS MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE LAW. You will need a photo identification issued by a government agency (driver's license, passport, etc.) in order to gain entry into our building and the foreclosure sale room in Cook County and the same identification for sales held at other county venues where The Judicial Sales Corporation conducts foreclosure sales. For information: Visit our website at service.atty-pierce.com. between the hours of 3 and 5 pm. PIERCE & ASSOCIATES, Plaintiff's Attorneys, One North Dearborn Street Suite 1300, CHICAGO, IL 60602. Tel No. (312) 476-5500. Please refer to file number 10594. THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPORATION One South Wacker Drive, 24th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312) 236-SALE You can also visit The Judicial Sales Corporation at www.tjsc.com for a 7 day status report of pending sales. PIERCE & ASSOCIATES One North Dearborn Street Suite 1300 CHICAGO, IL 60602 (312) 476-5500 E-Mail: pleadings@pierceservices.com Attorney File No. 10594 Case Number: 15 CH 770 TJSC#: 36-8825 I700335 (Published in the Northwest Herald, August 30, 2016 September 6, 13, 2016)

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE TWENTY- SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MC HENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS PHH MORTGAGE CORPORATION Plaintiff, -v.LAUREN AKERS, et al Defendant 15 CH 00980 NOTICE OF SALE PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the above cause on July 7, 2016,

ly 7, , an agent for The Judicial Sales Corporation, will at 1:00 PM on October 11, 2016, at the NLT Title L.L.C, 390 Congress Parkway, Suite D, Crystal Lake, IL, 60014, sell at public auction to the highest bidder, as set forth below, the following described real estate: Commonly known as 816 DUVALL DRIVE, WOODSTOCK, IL 60098 Property Index No. 13-07-181-003. The real estate is improved with a condo/townhouse. Sale terms: 25% down of the highest bid by certified funds at the close of the sale payable to The Judicial Sales Corporation. No third party checks will be accepted. The balance, including the Judicial sale fee for Abandoned Residential Property Municipality Relief Fund, which is calculated on residential real estate at the rate of $1 for each $1,000 or fraction thereof of the amount paid by the purchaser not to exceed $300, in certified funds/or wire transfer, is due within twenty-four (24) hours. No fee shall be paid by the mortgagee acquiring the residential real estate pursuant to its credit bid at the sale or by any mortgagee, judgment creditor, or other lienor acquiring the residential real estate whose rights in and to the residential real estate arose prior to the sale. The subject property is subject to general real estate taxes, special assessments, or special taxes levied against said real estate and is offered for sale without any representation as to quality or quantity of title and without recourse to Plaintiff and in \"AS IS\" condition. The sale is further subject to confirmation by the court. Upon payment in full of the amount bid, the purchaser will receive a Certificate of Sale that will entitle the purchaser to a deed to the real estate after confirmation of the sale. The property will NOT be open for inspection and plaintiff makes no representation as to the condition of the property. Prospective bidders are admonished to check the court file to verify all information. If this property is a condominium unit, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale, other than a mortgagee, shall pay the assessments and the legal fees required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1) and (g)(4). If this property is a condominium unit which is part of a common interest community, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale other than a mortgagee shall pay the assessments required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/18.5(g-1). IF YOU ARE THE MORTGAGOR (HOMEOWNER), YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN IN POSSESSION FOR 30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF AN ORDER OF POSSESSION, IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 15-1701(C) OF THE ILLINOIS MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE LAW. You will need a photo identification issued by a government agency (driver's license, passport, etc.) in order to gain entry into our building and the foreclosure sale room in Cook County and the same identification for sales held at other county venues where The Judicial Corporation conducts Sales foreclosure sales. For information, examine the court file or contact Plaintiff's attorney: CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C., 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100, BURR RIDGE, IL 60527, (630) 794-9876 Please refer to file number 14-15-12812. THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPORATION One South Wacker Drive, 24th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312) 236-SALE You can also visit The Judicial Sales Corporation at www.tjsc.com for a 7 day status report of pending sales. CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C.

CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100 BURR RIDGE, IL 60527 (630) 794-5300 E-Mail: pleadings@il.cslegal.com Attorney File No. 14-15-12812 Attorney ARDC No. 00468002 Case Number: 15 CH 00980 TJSC#: 36-8839 NOTE: Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, you are advised that Plaintiff's attorney is deemed to be a debt collector attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. I700387 (Published in the Northwest Herald, August 30, 2016 September 6, 13, 2016)

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE TWENTY- SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MC HENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY BUT SOLELY AS TRUSTEE OF SW REMIC TRUST 2015-1 Plaintiff, -v.RAMIRO VILLASENOR, et al Defendant 16 CH 00287 NOTICE OF SALE PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the above cause on June 30, 2016, an agent for The Judicial Sales Corporation, will at 1:00 PM on October 11, 2016, at the NLT Title L.L.C, 390 Congress Parkway, Suite D, Crystal Lake, IL, 60014, sell at public auction to the highest bidder, as set forth below, the following described real estate: Commonly known as 1508 9TH STREET, HARVARD, IL 60033 Property Index No. 01-26-352-037. The real estate is improved with a single family residence. Sale terms: 25% down of the highest bid by certified funds at the close of the sale payable to The Judicial Sales Corporation. No third party checks will be accepted. The balance, including the Judicial sale fee for Abandoned Residential Property Municipality Relief Fund, which is calculated on residential real estate at the rate of $1 for each $1,000 or fraction thereof of the amount paid by the purchaser not to exceed $300, in certified funds/or wire transfer, is due within twenty-four (24) hours. No fee shall be paid by the mortgagee acquiring the residential real estate pursuant to its credit bid at the sale or by any mortgagee, judgment creditor, or other lienor acquiring the residential real estate whose rights in and to the residential real estate arose prior to the sale. The subject property is subject to general real estate taxes, special assessments, or special taxes levied against said real estate and is offered for sale without any representation as to quality or quantity of title and without recourse to Plaintiff and in \"AS IS\" condition. The sale is further subject to confirmation by the court. Upon payment in full of the amount bid, the purchaser will receive a Certificate of Sale that will entitle the purchaser to a deed to the real estate after confirmation of the sale. The property will NOT be open for inspection and plaintiff makes no representation as to the condition of the property. Prospective bidders are admonished to check the court file to verify all information. If this property is a condominium unit,

, prope y the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale, other than a mortgagee, shall pay the assessments and the legal fees required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1) and (g)(4). If this property is a condominium unit which is part of a common interest community, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale other than a mortgagee shall pay the assessments required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/18.5(g-1). IF YOU ARE THE MORTGAGOR (HOMEOWNER), YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN IN POSSESSION FOR 30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF AN ORDER OF POSSESSION, IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 15-1701 (C) OF THE ILLINOIS MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE LAW. You will need a photo identification issued by a government agency (driver's license, passport, etc.) in order to gain entry into our building and the foreclosure sale room in Cook County and the same identification for sales held at other county venues where The Judicial Sales Corporation conducts foreclosure sales. For information, examine the court file or contact Plaintiff's attorney: CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C., 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100, BURR RIDGE, IL 60527, (630) 794-9876 Please refer to file number 14-15-14834. THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPORATION One South Wacker Drive, 24th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312) 236-SALE You can also visit The Judicial Sales Corporation at www.tjsc.com for a 7 day status report of pending sales. CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100 BURR RIDGE, IL 60527 (630) 794-5300 E-Mail: pleadings@il.cslegal.com Attorney File No. 14-15-14834 Attorney ARDC No. 00468002 Case Number: 16 CH 00287 TJSC#: 36-8459 NOTE: Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, you are advised that Plaintiff's attorney is deemed to be a debt collector attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. I700596 (Published in the Northwest Herald, August 30, 2016 September 6, 13, 2016)

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE TWENTY- SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MC HENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR RESIDENTIAL ASSET MORTGAGE PRODUCTS, INC., MORTGAGE ASSET-BACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2005-EFC5 Plaintiff, -v.PATRICIA A. WEBER, et al Defendant 15 CH 01058 NOTICE OF SALE PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the above cause on May 3, 2016, an agent for The Judicial Sales Corporation, will at 1:00 PM on Octobe 14 2016 th NLT Title

poration, October 14, 2016, at the NLT Title L.L.C, 390 Congress Parkway, Suite D, Crystal Lake, IL, 60014, sell at public auction to the highest bidder, as set forth below, the following described real estate: LOT 16 IN BLOCK 20 IN LAKE IN THE HILLS ESTATES, UNIT NO. 1, A SUBDIVISION OF PART OF SECTIONS 20 AND 29, TOWNSHIP 43 NORTH, RANGE 8, EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED APRIL 26, 1947 AS DOCUMENT 200779, IN BOOK 10 OF PLATS, PAGE 56, IN MC HENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS. Commonly known as 115 PHEASANT TRAIL, LAKE IN THE HILLS, IL 60156 Property Index No. 19-29-177-018. The real estate is improved with a single family residence. Sale terms: 25% down of the highest bid by certified funds at the close of the sale payable to The Judicial Sales Corporation. No third party checks will be accepted. The balance, including the Judicial sale fee for Abandoned Residential Property Municipality Relief Fund, which is calculated on residential real estate at the rate of $1 for each $1,000 or fraction thereof of the amount paid by the purchaser not to exceed $300, in certified funds/or wire transfer, is due within twenty-four (24) hours. No fee shall be paid by the mortgagee acquiring the residential real estate pursuant to its credit bid at the sale or by any mortgagee, judgment creditor, or other lienor acquiring the residential real estate whose rights in and to the residential real estate arose prior to the sale. The subject property is subject to general real estate taxes, special assessments, or special taxes levied against said real estate and is offered for sale without any representation as to quality or quantity of title and without recourse to Plaintiff and in \"AS IS\" condition. The sale is further subject to confirmation by the court. Upon payment in full of the amount bid, the purchaser will receive a Certificate of Sale that will entitle the purchaser to a deed to the real estate after confirmation of the sale. The property will NOT be open for inspection and plaintiff makes no representation as to the condition of the property. Prospective bidders are admonished to check the court file to verify all information. If this property is a condominium unit, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale, other than a mortgagee, shall pay the assessments and the legal fees required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1) and (g)(4). If this property is a condominium unit which is part of a common interest community, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale other than a mortgagee shall pay the assessments required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/18.5(g-1). IF YOU ARE THE MORTGAGOR (HOMEOWNER), YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN IN POSSESSION FOR 30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF AN ORDER OF POSSESSION, IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 15-1701(C) OF THE ILLINOIS MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE LAW. You will need a photo identification issued by a government agency (driver's license, passport, etc.) in order to gain entry into our building and the foreclosure sale room in Cook County and the same identification for sales held at other county venues where The Judicial Sales Corporation conducts foreclosure sales. For information, examine the court file or contact Plaintiff's attorney: CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C., 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100, BURR RIDGE, IL 60527, (630) 794-9876 Please refer to file number 14-15-11826.

THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPORATION One South Wacker Drive, 24th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312) 236-SALE You can also visit The Judicial Sales Corporation at www.tjsc.com for a 7 day status report of pending sales. CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100 BURR RIDGE, IL 60527 (630) 794-5300 E-Mail: pleadings@il.cslegal.com Attorney File No. 14-15-11826 Attorney ARDC No. 00468002 Case Number: 15 CH 01058 TJSC#: 36-6132 NOTE: Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, you are advised that Plaintiff's attorney is deemed to be a debt collector attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. I697589 (Published in the Northwest Herald, August 30, 2016 September 6, 13, 2016)

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE TWENTY- SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MC HENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff, -v.ROBERT BEATTIE, et al Defendant 15 CH 770 NOTICE OF SALE PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the above cause on July 7, 2016, an agent for The Judicial Sales Corporation, will at 1:00 PM on October 11, 2016, at the NLT Title L.L.C, 390 Congress Parkway, Suite D, Crystal Lake, IL, 60014, sell at public auction to the highest bidder, as set forth below, the following described real estate: ALL THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE, TO WIT: UNIT 3-D IN WALNUT GLEN CONDOMINIUM AS DELINEATED ON A SURVEY OF THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE: LOT 1 IN WALNUT GLEN SUBDIVISION OF PART OF THE EAST HALF OF THE NORTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 12, TOWNSHIP 43 NORTH, RANGE 7, EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED JULY 17, 2003 AS DOCUMENT NUMBER 2003R0094417, IN MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS, WHICH SURVEY IS ATTACHED AS ''EXHIBIT B'' TO THE DECLARATION OF CONDOMINIUM RECORDED JULY 17, 2003 AS DOCUMENT NUMBER 2003R0094418, TOGETHER WITH ITS UNDIVIDED PERCENTAGE INTEREST IN THE COMMON ELEMENTS, AS AMENDED FROM TIME TO TIME. Commonly known as 1260 WALNUT GLEN DRIVE, Crystal Lake, IL 60014 Property Index No. 18-12-182-004. The real estate is improved with a single family residence. Sale terms: 25% down of the highest bid by certified funds at the close of the sale payable to The Judicial Sales Corporation. No third party checks will be accepted. The balance, including the Judicial sale fee for Abandoned Residential Property Municipality Relief Fund, which is calculated on residential real estate at the rate of $1 for each $1,000 or fraction thereof of the amount paid by the purchaser not to exceed $300, in certified

CLASSIFIED 37

LAUREN AKERS, et al Defendant 15 CH 00980 NOTICE OF SALE PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the above cause on July 7, 2016, an agent for The Judicial Sales Corporation, will at 1:00 PM on October 11, 2016, at the NLT Title L.L.C, 390 Congress Parkway, Suite D, Crystal Lake, IL, 60014, sell at public auction to the highest bidder, as set forth below, the following described real estate: LOT 42 IN HIGHLANDS ON THE PARK UNIT 2, BEING A SUBDIVISION OF PART OF THE WEST 1/2 OF SECTION 7, TOWNSHIP 44 NORTH, RANGE 7, EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED OCTOBER 10, 1997 AS DOCUMENT NO. 97R50158 IN MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS. Commonly known as 816 DUVALL DRIVE, WOODSTOCK, IL 60098 Property Index No. 13-07-181-003. The real estate is improved with a condo/townhouse. Sale terms: 25% down of the highest bid by certified funds at the close of the sale payable to The Judicial Sales Corporation. No third party checks will be accepted. The balance, including the Judicial sale fee for Abandoned Residential Property Municipality Relief Fund, which is calculated on residential real estate at the rate of $1 for each $1,000 or fraction thereof of the amount paid by the purchaser not to exceed $300, in certified funds/or wire transfer, is due within twenty-four (24) hours. No fee shall be paid by the mortgagee acquiring the residential real estate pursuant to its credit bid at the sale or by any mortgagee, judgment creditor, or other lienor acquiring the residential real estate whose rights in and to the residential real estate arose prior to the sale. The subject property is subject to general real estate taxes, special assessments, or special taxes levied against said real estate and is offered for sale without any representation as to quality or quantity of title and without recourse to Plaintiff and in \"AS IS\" condition. The sale is further subject to confirmation by the court. Upon payment in full of the amount bid, the purchaser will receive a Certificate of Sale that will entitle the purchaser to a deed to the real estate after confirmation of the sale. The property will NOT be open for inspection and plaintiff makes no representation as to the condition of the property. Prospective bidders are admonished to check the court file to verify all information. If this property is a condominium unit, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale, other than a mortgagee, shall pay the assessments and the legal fees required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1) and (g)(4). If this property is a condominium unit which is part of a common interest community, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale other than a mortgagee shall pay the assessments required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/18.5(g-1). IF YOU ARE THE (HOMEOWNER), (Published in the Northwest MORTGAGOR Herald, August 30, 2016 YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN IN POSSESSION FOR 30 DAYS AFSeptember 6, 13, 2016) TER ENTRY OF AN ORDER OF POSSESSION, IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 15-1701(C) OF THE ILLINOIS MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE PUBLIC NOTICE LAW. You will need a photo identification issued by a government agency (driver's license, passport, IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR etc.) in order to gain entry into our THE TWENTY- SECOND building and the foreclosure sale JUDICIAL CIRCUIT in Cook County and the same room MC HENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS PHH MORTGAGE CORPORATION identification for sales held at other county venues where The Judicial Plaintiff, Sales Corporation conducts -v.forecl le

funds/or wire transfer, is due within twenty-four (24) hours. No fee shall be paid by the mortgagee acquiring the residential real estate pursuant to its credit bid at the sale or by any mortgagee, judgment creditor, or other lienor acquiring the residential real estate whose rights in and to the residential real estate arose prior to the sale. The subject property is subject to general real estate taxes, special assessments, or special taxes levied against said real estate and is offered for sale without any representation as to quality or quantity of title and without recourse to Plaintiff and in \"AS IS\" condition. The sale is further subject to confirmation by the court. Upon payment in full of the amount bid, the purchaser will receive a Certificate of Sale that will entitle the purchaser to a deed to the real estate after confirmation of the sale. The property will NOT be open for inspection and plaintiff makes no representation as to the condition of the property. Prospective bidders are admonished to check the court file to verify all information. If this property is a condominium unit, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale, other than a mortgagee, shall pay the assessments and the legal fees required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1) and (g)(4). If this property is a condominium unit which is part of a common interest community, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale other than a mortgagee shall pay the assessments required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/18.5(g-1). IF YOU ARE THE MORTGAGOR (HOMEOWNER), YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN IN POSSESSION FOR 30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF AN ORDER OF POSSESSION, IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 15-1701(C) OF THE ILLINOIS MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE LAW. You will need a photo identification issued by a agency (driver's government license, passport, etc.) in order to gain entry into our building and the foreclosure sale room in Cook County and the same identification for sales held at other county venues where The Judicial Sales Corporation conducts foreclosure sales. For information: Visit our website at service.atty-pierce.com. between the hours of 3 and 5 pm. PIERCE & ASSOCIATES, Plaintiff's Attorneys, One North Dearborn Street Suite 1300, CHICAGO, IL 60602. Tel No. (312) 476-5500. Please refer to file number 10594. THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPORATION One South Wacker Drive, 24th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312) 236-SALE You can also visit The Judicial Sales Corporation at www.tjsc.com for a 7 day status report of pending sales. PIERCE & ASSOCIATES One North Dearborn Street Suite 1300 CHICAGO, IL 60602 (312) 476-5500 E-Mail: pleadings@pierceservices.com Attorney File No. 10594 Case Number: 15 CH 770 TJSC#: 36-8825 I700335


38 CLASSIFIED • Tuesday, September 13, 2016 rpor foreclosure sales. For information, examine the court file or contact Plaintiff's attorney: CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C., 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100, BURR RIDGE, IL 60527, (630) 794-9876 Please refer to file number 14-15-12812. THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPORATION One South Wacker Drive, 24th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312) 236-SALE You can also visit The Judicial Sales Corporation at www.tjsc.com for a 7 day status report of pending sales. CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100 BURR RIDGE, IL 60527 (630) 794-5300 E-Mail: pleadings@il.cslegal.com Attorney File No. 14-15-12812 Attorney ARDC No. 00468002 Case Number: 15 CH 00980 TJSC#: 36-8839 NOTE: Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, you are advised that Plaintiff's attorney is deemed to be a debt collector attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. I700387 (Published in the Northwest Herald, August 30, 2016 September 6, 13, 2016)

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE TWENTY- SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MC HENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY BUT SOLELY AS TRUSTEE OF SW REMIC TRUST 2015-1 Plaintiff, -v.RAMIRO VILLASENOR, et al Defendant 16 CH 00287 NOTICE OF SALE PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the above cause on June 30, 2016, an agent for The Judicial Sales Corporation, will at 1:00 PM on October 11, 2016, at the NLT Title L.L.C, 390 Congress Parkway, Suite D, Crystal Lake, IL, 60014, sell at public auction to the highest bidder, as set forth below, the following described real estate: LOT 47 IN JOHN K. LUCAS SUBDIVISION UNIT II, BEING A SUBDIVISION OF THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 26, TOWNSHIP 46 NORTH, RANGE 5 EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED DECEMBER 9, 1996, AS DOCUMENT NUMBER 96R62322, IN MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS. Commonly known as 1508 9TH STREET, HARVARD, IL 60033 Property Index No. 01-26-352-037. The real estate is improved with a single family residence. Sale terms: 25% down of the highest bid by certified funds at the close of the sale payable to The Judicial Sales Corporation. No third party checks will be accepted. The balance, including the Judicial sale fee for Abandoned Residential Property Municipality Relief Fund, which is calculated on residential real estate at the rate of $1 for each $1,000 or fraction thereof of the amount paid by the purchaser not to exceed $300, in certified funds/or wire transfer, is due within twenty-four (24) hours. No fee shall be paid by the mortgagee acquiring the residential real estate pursuant to its credit bid at the sale

purs or by any mortgagee, judgment creditor, or other lienor acquiring the residential real estate whose rights in and to the residential real estate arose prior to the sale. The subject property is subject to general real estate taxes, special assessments, or special taxes levied against said real estate and is offered for sale without any representation as to quality or quantity of title and without recourse to Plaintiff and in \"AS IS\" condition. The sale is further subject to confirmation by the court. Upon payment in full of the amount bid, the purchaser will receive a Certificate of Sale that will entitle the purchaser to a deed to the real estate after confirmation of the sale. The property will NOT be open for inspection and plaintiff makes no representation as to the condition of the property. Prospective bidders are admonished to check the court file to verify all information. If this property is a condominium unit, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale, other than a mortgagee, shall pay the assessments and the legal fees required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1) and (g)(4). If this property is a condominium unit which is part of a common interest community, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale other than a mortgagee shall pay the assessments required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/18.5(g-1). IF YOU ARE THE MORTGAGOR (HOMEOWNER), YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN IN POSSESSION FOR 30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF AN ORDER OF POSSESSION, IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 15-1701 (C) OF THE ILLINOIS MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE LAW. You will need a photo identification issued by a government agency (driver's license, passport, etc.) in order to gain entry into our building and the foreclosure sale room in Cook County and the same identification for sales held at other county venues where The Judicial Sales Corporation conducts foreclosure sales. For information, examine the court file or contact Plaintiff's attorney: CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C., 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100, BURR RIDGE, IL 60527, (630) 794-9876 Please refer to file number 14-15-14834. THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPORATION One South Wacker Drive, 24th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312) 236-SALE You can also visit The Judicial Sales Corporation at www.tjsc.com for a 7 day status report of pending sales. CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100 BURR RIDGE, IL 60527 (630) 794-5300 E-Mail: pleadings@il.cslegal.com Attorney File No. 14-15-14834 Attorney ARDC No. 00468002 Case Number: 16 CH 00287 TJSC#: 36-8459 NOTE: Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, you are advised that Plaintiff's attorney is deemed to be a debt collector attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. I700596

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

VS. J. FREDERICK; DARLENE SOMERSET CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION OF CRYSTAL LAKE; SECRETARY OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT; OWNERS AND UNKNOWN NON-RECORD CLAIMANTS, DEFENDANTS. 16 CH 614 580 SOMERSET LANE UNIT 3 CRYSTAL LAKE, IL 60014 NOTICE BY PUBLICATION NOTICE IS GIVEN TO YOU, Darlene J. Frederick Unknown Owners and Non-Record Claimants defendants, that this case has been commenced in this Court against you and other defendants, asking for the foreclosure of a certain Mortgage conveying the premises described as follows, to wit: UNIT 580-3 AS DELINEATED ON SURVEY OF THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED PARCEL OF REAL ESTATE (HEREINAFTER REFERRED TO AS "PARCEL"): THAT PART OF LOT 16 IN PLAT OF FARMS AT CRYSTAL LAKE IN SECTION 8, TOWNSHIP 43 NORTH, RANGE 8 EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, RECORDED OCTOBER 6, 1858 IN BOOK 22 OF DEEDS, PAGE 1, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: COMMENCING AT THE NORTHEASTERLY CORNER OF LOT 1 IN BLOCK 31 IN TENTH ADDITION TO COVENTRY AS RECORDED AUGUST 21, 1970 AS DOCUMENT NO. 529157; THENCE NORTH 84 DEGREES 47 MINUTE 52 SECONDS WEST, 255.47 FEET TO AN ANGLE POINT IN THE NORTHERLY LINE OF LOT 3 IN BLOCK 31 IN SAID TENTH ADDITION TO COVENTRY; THENCE NORTH 82 DEGREES 13 MINUTES 10 SECONDS WEST, 78.75 FEET TO THE PLACE OF BEGINNING OF THIS DESCRIPTION: THENCE CONTINUING NORTH 82 DEGREES 13 MINUTES 10 SECONDS WEST, 216.57 FEET TO A POINT IN THE EASTERLY LINE OF EIGHTH ADDITION TO COVENTRY; THENCE NORTH 15 DEGREES 16 MINUTES 50 SECONDS EAST, ALONG THE EASTERLY LINE OF SAID SUBDIVISION, 275.88 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 82 DEGREES 13 MINUTES 10 SECONDS EAST, 180.56 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 7 DEGREES 46 MINUTES 50 SECONDS WEST, 273.52 FEET TO THE PLACE OF BEGINNING, IN MCHENRY COUNTRY, ILLINOIS, WHICH SURVEY IS ATTACHES AS EXHIBIT "A" TO DECLARATION OF CONDOMINIUM OWNERSHIP MADE BY MCHENRY STATE BANK, AS TRUSTEE, UNDER TRUST NO.301, RECORDED IN THE OFFICE OF THE RECORDER OF DEEDS OF MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS AS DOCUMENT NO. 603023, FIRST AMENDMENT RECORDED DECEMBER 7, 1973 AS DOCUMENT NO. 607905, SECOND AMENDMENT RECORDED NOVEMBER 12, 1975 AS DOCUMENT NO. 650437, THIRD AMENDMENT RECORDED MARCH 22, 1976 AS DOCUMENT NO. 658976, FOURTH AMENDMENT RECORDED. JULY 1, 1976 AS DOCUMENT NO. 667491 AND RERECORDED JULY 14, 1976 AS DOCUMENT NO. 668599, AND RE-RECORDED JULY 14, 1976 AS DOCUMENT NO. 668599, FIFTH AMENDMENT RECORDED SEPTEMBER 20, 1976 AS DOCUMENT NO. 674903, AND SIXTH AMENDMENT RECORDED DECEMBER 2, 1976 (Published in the Northwest AS DOCUMENT NO. 681043, TOHerald, August 30, 2016 GETHER WITH A PERCENTAGE OF THE COMMON ELEMENTS APPURSeptember 6, 13, 2016) TENANT TO SAID UNIT AS SET FORTH IN SAID DECLARATION, AS AMENDED FROM TIME TO TIME, PUBLIC NOTICE WHICH PERCENTAGE SHALL AUTOMATICALLY CHANGE IN ACCORDANCE WITH AMENDED DECLARAIN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF TIONS AS SAME ARE FILED OF THE TWENTY-SECOND RECORD PURSUANT TO SAID DECJUDICIAL CIRCUIT MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS LARATION, AND TOGETHER WITH WELLS FARGO BANK NA, ADDITIONAL COMMON ELEMENTS AS SUCH AMENDED DECLARAPLAINTIFF,

TIONS ARE FILED OF RECORD, IN THE PERCENTAGES SET FORTH IN SUCH AMENDED DECLARATIONS, WHICH PERCENTAGES SHALL AUTOMATICALLY BE DEEMED TO BE CONVEYED EFFECTIVE ON THE RECORDING OF EACH SUCH AMENDED DECLARATION AS THOUGH CONVEYED HEREBY. Commonly known as: 580 Somerset Lane Unit 3 Crystal Lake, IL 60014 and which said Mortgage was made by, Darlene J. Frederick Mortgagor(s), to WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. Mortgagee, and recorded in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds of McHenry County, Illinois, as Document No. 2007R0075617; and for other relief. UNLESS YOU file your answer or otherwise file your appearance in this case in the Office of the Clerk of this County, Katherine M. Keefe 2200 North Seminary Woodstock, IL 60098 on or before October 13, 2016, A JUDGMENT OR DECREE BY DEFAULT MAY BE TAKEN AGAINST YOU FOR THE RELIEF ASKED IN THE COMPLAINT. PURSUANT TO THE FAIR DEBT COLLECTION PRACTICES ACT, THE PLAINTIFF'S ATTORNEY IS DEEMED TO BE A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. MRPierce, LLC, d/b/a McCalla Raymer Pierce, LLC Attorney for Plaintiff 1 N. Dearborn St. Suite 1300 Chicago, IL 60602 Ph. (312) 346-9088 File No. 257237-53339 I703122

/s/ Katherine M. Keefe Clerk of the Circuit Court (Published in the Northwest Herald on August 30, September 6, 13, 2016) 1219903

PUBLIC NOTICE CITY OF MCHENRY ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS SERVICES TO INSTALL, MAINTAIN, and REMOVE CHRISTMAS LIGHTS

The City of McHenry will receive sealed bids for services to install, maintain, and remove Christmas lights on trees at Veteran's Memorial Park for the 2016/2017 season until 11:00 a.m., Tuesday, September 27, 2016. All bids shall be addressed to the City Clerk's Office, City of McHenry, 333 S. Green Street, McHenry, IL 60050. Each proposal must be sealed and clearly identified on the outside of the envelope as a “BID FOR CHRISTMAS LIGHTS”. Bids will be opened at 11:00 a.m., Tuesday, September 27, 2016 in the City Council Chambers. Award of the bid will be considered at a later meeting of the McHenry City Council within at least thirty (30) days of the date of receiving bids. All bids received prior to the specified date and time, which meet or exceed the minimum specifications, will be considered by the City. The City will review each properly submitted bid and will make a selection based upon price, availability, quality and other features of the bid proposals. Bids submitted after (Published in the Northwest 11:00 a.m., local time, will not be Herald September 13, 20, 27, considered and will be returned to the bidder. 2016) The City of McHenry reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive irregularities in the bids, and PUBLIC NOTICE to select the bid that is considered to be the most advantageous to the STATE OF ILLINOIS City of McHenry. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF Only bids and proposals submitted THE TWENTY-SECOND on forms prepared by the City of JUDICIAL CIRCUIT McHenry will be considered. ComMCHENRY COUNTY-IN PROBATE plete specifications and bid proposal forms may be obtained at the In the Matter of the Estate of City Clerk's Office, 333 S. Green DONA DORION Street, McHenry, Illinois 60050. Deceased Case No. 16PR000252 Dated at McHenry, Illinois, this CLAIM NOTICE 13th day of September 2016 Notice is given of the death of: DONA DORION /s/ Janice C Jones, City Clerk of MCHENRY, IL Letters of office were issued on: (Published in the Northwest 8/23/2016 Herald on September 13, 2016) to: 1224425 Independent Representative: McHenryCountySports.com MICHAEL DORION is McHenry County Sports 7102 MALLARD WAY CARY, IL 60013 whose attorney is: PUBLIC NOTICE MCANDREWS, PATRICK J 4318 W CRYSTAL LAKE RD ASSUMED NAME SUITE A PUBLICATION NOTICE MCHENRY, IL 60050-4281 Claims against the estate may be filed within six months from the Public Notice is hereby given that date of first publication. Any claim on August 18, 2016, a certificate not filed within six months from the was filed in the Office of the County date of first publication or claims Clerk of McHenry County, Illinois, not filed within three months from setting forth the names and the date of mailing or delivery of post-office address of all of Notice to Creditor, whichever is lat- the persons owning, conducting and transacting the business er, shall be barred. Claims may be filed in the office known as of the Clerk of Circuit Court at the JOE & ASSOCIATES McHenry County Government Center, 2200 North Seminary Avenue, Woodstock, Illinois, 60098, or with located at: the representative, or both. 373 DOUGLAS AVE., Copies of claims filed with the CRYSTAL LAKE IL 60014 Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the representative and to his atDated August 18, 2016 torney within ten days after it has been filed. /s/ Mary E. McClellan

ry ) pr tly McHenry County Clerk Spruce Lane, Crystal Lake. Petitioner, Aaron Searles (Pastor) resides at (Published in the Northwest Herald 11 Maple Street, Crystal Lake. Petion August 30, September 6, 13, tioner, Dave Masey (Pastor) resides at 792 Sussex Lane, Crystal 2016) 1219973 Lake. Petitioner, Hugh McGowan (Pastor) resides at 4506 S. IL Route 47, Woodstock. PUBLIC NOTICE A hearing on this Petition will be held on the 29TH day of SeptemASSUMED NAME ber, 2016 at 1:30 P.M. in ConferPUBLICATION NOTICE ence Room B at the McHenry County Government Center/Ware Public Notice is hereby given that Rd. Administration Building, 2200 on August 18, 2016, a certificate N. Seminary Avenue, Woodstock, was filed in the Office of the County Illinois at which time and place any Clerk of McHenry County, Illinois, person desiring to be heard may be setting forth the names and present. post-office address of all of DATED THIS 2nd DAY OF the persons owning, conducting September, 2016. and transacting the business by: RICHARD KELLY JR. known as Richard Kelly Jr., Chairman McHenry County Zoning Board of NORTHWEST ILLINOIS Appeals REIKI AND WELLNESS 2200 N. Seminary Avenue Woodstock, IL 60098 located at: 508 W RINGWOOD RD., (Published in the Northwest MCHENRY IL 6051 Herald on September 13, 2016) 1224467 Dated August 18, 2016 /s/ Mary E. McClellan McHenry County Clerk (Published in the Northwest Herald on August 30, September 6, 13, 2016) 1219966

PUBLIC NOTICE

LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING #2016-025 IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH, OWNER, FOR AN AMENDMENT OF THE UNIFIED DEVELOPMENT ORDINANCE OF McHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS FOR A CONDITIONAL USE Notice is hereby given in compliance with the McHenry County Unified Development Ordinance, that a public hearing will be held before the McHenry County Zoning Board of Appeals, in connection with this Ordinance, which would result in a conditional use for the following described real estate. THE SOUTH 660.00 FEET OF THE WEST HALF OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 20, TOWNSHIP 44 NORTH, RANGE 8 EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, EXCEPTING THEREFROM ALL THAT PART LYING EAST OF THE WEST LINE OF S.A. ROUTE 6, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT OF DEDICATION THEREOF RECORDED JULY 31, 1946 AS DOCUMENT NO. 193784 IN BOOK 10 OF PLATS, PAGE 35; AND TOGETHER WITH THE EAST 88.30 FEET OF THE SOUTH 660.00 FEET OF THE NORTHWEST QUARTER OF AFORESAID SECTION 20, EXCEPTING THEREFROM THAT LAND DESCRIBED UNDER DOCUMENT NO. 2001R0097552; ALL IN MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS. PIN #14-20-200-026 The subject property is located approximately 350 feet north of the intersection of Deerwood Drive and Walkup Road, with a common address of 3419 Walkup Road, Crystal Lake, Illinois, in Nunda Township. The subject property is presently zoned “E-1” Estate District with a Conditional Use and consists of approximately 20.7 acres with “E-1” zoning to the North, South, East, and West. The Petitioner is requesting Renewal of a Conditional Use Permit to allow a Place of Worship on the subject property. Petitioner, Kent Atkinson (Senior Pastor) presently resides at 375

PUBLIC NOTICE

LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING #2016-032 IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF KEVIN L. KOLTON, OWNER, FOR AN AMENDMENT OF THE UNIFIED DEVELOPMENT ORDINANCE OF McHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS FOR A RECLASSIFICATION AND CONDITIONAL USE Notice is hereby given in compliance with the McHenry County Unified Development Ordinance, that a public hearing will be held before the McHenry County Zoning Board of Appeals, in connection with this Ordinance, which would result in a reclassification and conditional use for the following described real estate. ALL THAT PART OF FRACTIONAL SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION EIGHT (8), TOWNSHIP FORTY-FIVE (45) NORTH, RANGE NINE (9), EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: COMMENCING AT A POINT WHICH IS 3.62 CHAINS SOUTH, 39 ¾ DEGREES WEST OF THE MOST WESTERLY CORNER OF LOT 13 IN RIVERDALE, BEING PETER H. KLAPPERICH'S SUBDIVISION OF PART OF THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 8, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED IN BOOK 1 OF PLATS, PAGE 35; THENCE NORTH 38 DEGREES, 41 MINUTES WEST, 35 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 39 DEGREES, 45 MINUTES WEST, 168.35 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 37 DEGREES 47 MINUTES EAST, 323 FEET, MORE OR LESS, TO THE NORTH BANK OF FOX RIVER; THENCE EASTERLY ALONG THE NORTH BANK OF SAID FOX RIVER; 171.5 FEET; THENCE NORTH 38 DEGREES, 41 MINUTES WEST, 300.34 FEET TO THE PLACE OF BEGINNING, IN THE COUNTY OF MCHENRY, ILLINOIS. PIN #10-08-304-023 The subject property is located approximately 200 feet southwest of the intersection of W. Elder Avenue and N. Riverdale Drive, with a common address of 4412, 4414, and 4416 N. Riverdale Drive, McHenry, Illinois, in McHenry Township. The subject property is presently zoned “A-1” Agriculture District with a Variation and consists of approximately 1.27 acres with “R-1” zoning to the Southwest,

ng “R-1V” zoning to the Northeast, “R-1” and “R-1V” zoning to the Northwest, and the Fox River to the Southeast. The Petitioner is requesting reclassification of the subject property from “A-1” Agriculture District with a Variation to the “R-1” Single Family Residential District, as well as a Conditional Use Permit to allow two (2) ancillary dwelling units. The Petitioner presently resides at 491 Monroe Avenue, Glencoe, Illinois. A hearing on this Petition will be held on the 29TH day of September, 2016 at 1:30 P.M. in Conference Room B at the McHenry County Government Center/Ware Rd. Administration Building, 2200 N. Seminary Avenue, Woodstock, Illinois at which time and place any person desiring to be heard may be present. DATED THIS 2nd DAY OF September, 2016. by: RICHARD KELLY JR. Richard Kelly Jr., Chairman McHenry County Zoning Board of Appeals 2200 N. Seminary Avenue Woodstock, IL 60098 (Published in the Northwest Herald on September 13, 2016) 1224439

PUBLIC NOTICE ADVERTISEMENT FOR PROPOSALS The Hampshire Township Park District is accepting sealed requests for proposals (RFP) for Bruce Ream Park Development. This includes design of playstructures, swings, independent play pieces, and site furniture as part of a nature themed park. Minority and women owned businesses are encouraged to submit bids for this project. The successful contract bidder(s) are encouraged to utilize minority and women owned businesses as sub-contractors for supplies, equipment, services and construction. This project is partially funded by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources through an Open Space Land Acquisition and Development (OSLAD) grant. Requests for Proposal Opening: 10:00 am Thursday, September 29, 2016 at the Hampshire Township Park District Administration Offices, 390 South Ave., Hampshire, IL 60140. The Hampshire Township Park District will publicly open and read proposals immediately after specified opening time. RFP design specifications and conceptual site designs may be obtained free of charge at the above address or by contacting (847) 683-2690. The Hampshire Township Park District reserves the right to reject any or all proposals and to waive any irregularities. (Published in the Northwest Herald on September 13, 2016) 1224193

Send your Classified Advertising 24/7 to: Email: classified@ shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898 or online at: www.nwherald.com


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016 •

CLASSIFIED 39

LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING #2016-037 IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC (AND OTHERS AS LISTED HEREIN) FOR AN AMENDMENT OF THE UNIFIED DEVELOPMENT ORDINANCE OF McHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS FOR A RECLASSIFICATION AND CONDITIONAL USE Notice is hereby given in compliance with the McHenry County Unified Development Ordinance, that a public hearing will be held before the McHenry County Zoning Board of Appeals, in connection with this Ordinance, which would result in a reclassification and conditional use for the following described real estate. LOTS 1 THROUGH 50 AND LOTS 68 THROUGH 87 IN THE HENNINGS, BEING A SUBDIVISION OF PART OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER AND PART OF THE EAST HALF OF THE NORTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 27, TOWNSHIP 43 NORTH, RANGE 6 EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED NOVEMBER 7, 2007 AS DOCUMENT NO. 2007R0074241. PINS/PROPERTY OWNERS/PROPERTY ADDRESSES: 17-27-128-012 – GIUSEPPE MESSA, 10217 ELLERY LN., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-176-004 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10415 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-202-003 – DAN M. AND STACEY J. NEUROCK, 10309 OAKDALE DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-176-005 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10505 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-126-009 – GRETCHEN C. WECK, 10007 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-176-006 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10509 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-126-010 – GRETCHEN C. WECK, 10013 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-177-001 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10316 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-176-001 – PETER AND ALBA MARTI, 10315 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-177-002 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10402 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-177-003 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10408 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-127-002 – PETER AND ALBA MARTI, 10309 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-177-004 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-128-006 – CORRADO CESARIO, 10216 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-177-005 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10709 CLEARWATER, HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-129-002 – CORRADO CESARIO, 10304 ELLERY LN., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-177-006 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10705 CLEARWATER, HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-201-002 – STEVEN A. MARTI TR. AND CINZIA D. MERCURI, 9911 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-177-007 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-127-001 – JOHN GIANNINI TR., 10301 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-177-008 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10407 ELLERY LN., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-126-007 – TIM R. AND CAROL PARTRIDGE, 10103 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-177-009 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10401 ELLERY LN., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-126-001 – ARTHUR AND TERESA MARTI, 10205 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-129-001 – JOSEPH AND JAYNE VALIO, 10216 ELLERY LN., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-177-010 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10315 ELLERY LN., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-129-003 – STEPHEN WYSOCKE, 10310 ELLERY LN., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-177-011 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10309 ELLERY LN., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-126-004 – DESIDERATO AND GRACE MERCURI, 10117 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-178-001 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10316 ELLERY LN., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-126-003 – RONALD AND KAREN SCHROEDER, 10119 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-178-002 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10402 ELLERY LN., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-128-004 – SCHROEDER ASPHALT SERVICES, INC., 10114 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-178-003 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10406 ELLERY LN., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-128-001 – IRENE R. GOFRON REV. TR., 10018 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-178-004 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-126-002 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10201 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-179-001 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-126-005 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10115 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-179-002 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10708 CLEARWATER, HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-126-006 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10111 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-179-003 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10702 CLEARWATER, HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-126-008 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10019 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-179-004 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10612 CLEARWATER, HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-126-011 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10001 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-179-005 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10606 CLEARWATER, HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-128-002 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10104 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-201-001 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 9915 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-128-003 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10108 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-201-003 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 9907 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-128-005 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10208 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-201-004 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10204 OAKDALE DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-128-007 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10302 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-201-005 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10208 OAKDALE DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-128-008 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10308 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-201-006 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10212 OAKDALE DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-128-009 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10203 ELLERY LN., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-202-001 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10215 OAKDALE DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-128-010 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10207 ELLERY LN., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-202-002 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10303 OAKDALE DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-128-011 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10213 ELLERY LN., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-251-001 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10315 OAKDALE DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-128-013 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10219 ELLERY LN., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-251-002 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10401 OAKDALE DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-128-014 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10305 ELLERY LN., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-251-003 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10405 OAKDALE DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-176-002 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10401 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-251-004 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10605 CLEARWATER, HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-253-001 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10506 CLEARWATER, HUNTLEY, IL 17-27-176-003 – ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC, 10407 HENNING DR., HUNTLEY, IL The subject property is located on the north side of Church Road, approximately ¼ mile east of Route 20, in Coral Township, Huntley, Illinois. The subject property is presently zoned “E-1” Estate District and consists of approximately 92.77 acres with “A-1” zoning to the North, “E-1” zoning to the East and South, and “E-5” and “A-1” zoning to the West. The Petitioners are requesting reclassification of the subject property from the “E-1” Estate District to the “R-1” Single Family Residential District with a Conditional Use Permit for a Planned Development. The petitioners/property owners can be reached at: ROCK CREEK LAND DEVELOPMENT, LLC – 1500 EXECUTIVE DRIVE, ELGIN, IL GIUSEPPE MESSA – 4534 N. CUMBERLAND AVE., UNIT 207, CHICAGO, IL DAN M. AND STACEY J. NEUROCK – 552 BURKE DR., CAROL STREAM, IL GRETCHEN C. WECK – PO BOX 930, DUNDEE, IL PETER AND ALBA MARTI – 7928 ELM DR., NORRIDGE, IL CORRADO CESARIO – 630 REGENCY DR., DES PLAINES, IL STEVEN A. MARTI TR. AND CINZIA D. MERCURI – 2608 W. SIBLEY ST., PARK RIDGE, IL JOHN GIANNINI TR. – 1336 LINDEN AVE., PARK RIDGE, IL TIM R. AND CAROL PARTRIDGE – 17416 E. CORAL RD., UNION, IL JOSEPH AND JAYNE VALIO – 480 E. BELMONT AVE., ADDISON, IL ARTHUR AND TERESA MARTI – 2906 SPRUCE TER., ISLAND LAKE, IL STEPHEN WYSOCKE – 1435 TEAL CT., HOFFMAN ESTATES, IL DESIDERATO AND GRACE MERCURI – 1410 N. RT. 23, MARENGO, IL RONALD AND KAREN SCHROEDER – 14010 HARMONY RD., HUNTLEY, IL SCHROEDER ASPHALT SERVICES, INC. – PO BOX 831, HUNTLEY, IL IRENE R. GOFRON REV. TR. – 71 WATERGATE DR., SOUTH BARRINGTON, IL The officers/directors of Rock Creek Land Development, LLC are as follows: Thomas Rakow – President/Manager – 1500 Executive Drive, Elgin, IL Ryan Van Lue – Vice President – 10402 Oakdale, Huntley, IL Peter LeSueur – Vice President – 10402 Oakdale, Huntley, IL A hearing on this Petition will be held on the 28th day of September, 2016 at 1:30 P.M. in Conference Room C at the McHenry County Government Center/Ware Rd. Administration Building, 2200 N. Seminary Avenue, Woodstock, Illinois at which time and place any person desiring to be heard may be present. DATED THIS 8th DAY OF SEPTEMBER, 2016. by:_RICHARD KELLY JR.___ Richard Kelly Jr., Chairman, McHenry County Zoning Board of Appeals, 2200 N. Seminary Avenue, Woodstock, IL 60098 SM-CL0378778


| NORTHWEST HERALD

40

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Building wealth takes hard work and passion. So should managing it.

Wealth Management | Investment Planning | Retirement As successful as you are, we know there’s still more you want to do. We’ve been helping our clients for more than 125 years, caring for more than $1.4 trillion of their hardearned assets. Find out why so many people trust our Financial Advisors to help them manage their wealth with the care it deserves. Call us today.

Investment and Insurance Products: ! NOT FDIC Insured ! NO Bank Guarantee ! MAY Lose Value Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC, Member SIPC, is a registered broker-dealer and a separate non-bank affiliate of Wells Fargo & Company. © 2015 Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC. All rights reserved. SM-CL0381914

97340-v1 A1932

Timothy J. O'Connor , CFP® Senior Vice President - Investment Officer Certified Financial Planner™ 2424 Lake Shore Dr Woodstock, IL 60098 Direct: (815) 337-9470 timothy.oconnor@wellsfargoadvisors.com www.home.wellsfargoadvisors.com/timothy.oconnor

0715-03443


SPORTS

DAILY PULLOUT SECTION Tuesday, September 13, 2016 • NWHerald.com

Marian Central’s Lauren Hanlon (left) hits the ball over Lakes players during the second set Monday in Woodstock. Marian won in three sets. John Konstantaras for Shaw Media

MARIAN STAYS PERFECT Hurricanes need 3 sets to get past Lakes, improve record to 12-0 / 2


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

|SPORTS

2

GIRLS VOLLEYBALL: MARIAN CENTRAL 2, LAKES 1

Close call for ’Canes Marian pushed to limit in win against Lakes

FEED

Tweets from last night

Happy to say that I will be continuing my baseball career and education at Saint Xavier University – @AEngelking44 (Crystal Lake South’s Andrew Engelking)

By ALEX KANTECKI

akantecki@shawmedia.com WOODSTOCK – The excitement and noise from Lakes’ bench at Landers Pavilion reached a new high after McKenna Lahr’s block on Marian Central’s Lauren Hanlon extended Monday’s nonconference volleyball match to a decisive third set. On the Hurricanes’ side, players and coaches reminded themselves of what was at stake. “We told each other before the third game that we really need to work with unity and pull our energy together,” said senior Brenna Koch, who had two kills and an ace in the third set. “That’s how we were going to get it done.” Marian fell behind, 12-9, in the third set, but a dominant service game and better play at the net carried the Hurricanes to a 25-17, 21-25, 25-20 victory – their 12th straight win to start the season and 20th overall dating to last season. “When things get tough, we can’t freak out and fall apart,” said Koch, whose Hurricanes went on a 9-4 run out of a timeout in the third set to take the lead for good. “That’s what we needed to focus the most on, working together and being a team.” Freshman middle blocker Gabrielle Davis, the only underclassman on a Marian team with 10 seniors, provided the match-winning block on 6-foot-2 Katie Billetdeaux, the Eagles’ leading attacker with 10 kills, including six in the second set. “We really just got our game together and realized the urgency,” Davis said. “People started putting balls away, our defense started picking balls up, the blocks actually happened, and I don’t think we missed a serve the entire [third set].” Outside hitter Sydney Nemtuda led the Hurricanes with 14 kills, setter McKayla Wuensch had 24 assists, five kills and three aces, Lauren Hanlon had six kills and three aces, Meghan Schwallie had 17 digs and three aces, and Davis and Rachel Noonan had two blocks each. Marian (12-0) looked on its way to a relatively easy sweep over Lakes (9-3) with a 14-8 lead in the second set, but the Eagles chipped away as the Hurricanes struggled to run their up-tempo offense.

THE DAILY

@BeloitBucsFB Kam Sallee earns @ MWCSports Special Teams POTW honors #GoBucs @Beloit_College – @BeloitBucs (Beloit College Athletics on Huntley graduate Sallee earning Midwest Conference Football Special Teams Player of the Week honor)

John Konstantaras for Shaw Media

Marian Central’s Gabrielle Davis (left) scores a point as she battles Lakes’ Rachel Orpano at the net during their first set Monday in Woodstock. The Hurricanes won in three sets. “We got really slow and sloppy,” Marian coach Laura Watling said. “And when you go up against a team that really is fighting for the win, and they have good hitters ... you can’t afford to get into those ruts because that team will take advantage of that, and they completely did.” The Eagles are the fourth team to push Marian, the defending Class 3A state champion, to three sets. Marian plays Tuesday at Carmel in an East Suburban Catholic Conference match. “They came in here knowing who Marian Central is,” Lakes coach Katie Cheek said. “They were kind of expecting to be the underdog … and I kept telling them, any team can have a down night. You can get in any team’s head. I think the difference in the second and the third was that [Marian] just got more runs than us. They have phenomenal hitters; they’re fun to watch.”

OUTSIDE THE BOX SCORE q UNSUNG HERO

Gabrielle Davis Marian Central, fr., MB

Davis is the only underclassman of 14 players on the Hurricanes and played an important role at the net, providing the match-winning block.

q THE NUMBER

20

Consecutive wins for Marian Central dating to last season

q AND ANOTHER THING ...

Marian Central’s Sydney Nemtuda finished with a team-high 14 kills. One of them early in the first set skipped into the bleachers and knocked the popcorn out of a Lakes player’s hands. Her pizza was saved.

First practice in the new gym! Yes it has volleyball courts in it and regulation size basketball courts!! – @JHSSkyhawks (Johnsburg Skyhawks) Follow our writers on Twitter: Joe Stevenson – @NWH_JoePrepZone Sean Hammond – @sean_hammond Jon Styf – @jonstyf

What to watch MLB: Cleveland at White Sox, 7 p.m., CSN The Sox’s Jose Quintana (11-10, 3.13 ERA) faces the Indians’ Trevor Bauer (11-6, 3.86).


PREP ROUNDUP

NORTHWEST HERALD

GIRLS GOLF Huntley 169, McHenry 181: At Boone

Creek in Bull Valley, Huntley’s Katie Weidner shot a 1-over 37 to lead the Red Raiders to a Fox Valley Conference win. Nicole Gordus shot a 41, followed by Caroline Giorgi (45) and Maggie Matusik (46) for the Red Raiders.

After a scary incident Friday night in Hampshire’s football game at Cary-Grove, Whip-Purs defensive end and running back Trevone Woods is expected to return to practice Tuesday. Woods left Friday’s 62-12 loss to the Trojans in an ambulance during the second quarter. Hampshire coach Mike Brasile said the junior had taken a hand to the neck earlier in the game and had been complaining about having trouble breathing. After trying to play through it, Woods collapsed and was rushed to the hospital. According to Brasile, medical staff feared he might

have a collapsed trachea. Woods was released from the hospital later Friday night and was at team meetings Saturday. After an additional doctor visit Monday, Woods has been cleared. Woods is hearing impaired and has a sign language interpreter with him at all practices and games. “He’s a great kid, he loves the game, and it’s amazing what he’s able to do despite the impairment,” Brasile said.

– Sean Hammond shammond@shawmedia.com

McHenry was led by a 41 from Mad- Ally McNulty a 48 for Marian (10-0). die Ogden and a 43 from Hannah Ogden. Payton Bragg shot a 48, and Joely Pug- GIRLS VOLLEYBALL liese shot a 49. Rockford Lutheran 2, Marengo 0: At Richmond-Burton 208, Prairie Ridge 209: Marengo, Anna Walsweer had 10 digs in At Nippersink in Genoa City, Wiscon- a 25-10, 25-10 nonconference loss for the sin, Mackenzie Hahn shot a 40 and Lau- Indians. Alexis Anchor led Marengo (4ryn Davis a 42 to help Richmond-Burton 5) with four kills. edge Prairie Ridge by one stroke in a nonconference dual meet. Darci Reth- BOYS SOCCER erford shot a 62 and Megan Klode 64 to Marian Central 2, Larkin 1: At Woodcomplete the winning team score. stock, Conrad Majzner was involved in Marian Central 183, Burlington Central both goals as the Hurricanes beat Larkin 200: At Sycamore Park District, all four in a nonconference match. of the Hurricanes’ scoring golfers shot Majzner assisted on Zach Simmons’ in the 40s, led by Sophia Archos with a opening goal, which gave the Hurricanes 44, in a nonconference win. Maria Mer- a halftime lead. Then in the second half, curio shot a 45, Lanie Sebion a 46 and he scored what ended up as the game

winner on an assist from Josh Smith. Antioch 4, Richmond-Burton 0: At Richmond, Reed Marshall made seven saves in a nonconference loss for the Rockets (0-8-1).

BOYS GOLF Crystal Lake South 159, Huntley 180: At

Crystal Lake Country Club, Casey Hunter shot a 3-over-par 38 and Nate Zacher a 39 to lead the Gators to an FVC win over the Red Raiders. Griffin Coakley shot a 40 and Ethan Wiggs a 42 to complete the Gators’ team score. Garrett Heinke led Huntley with a 42, followed by Nick Laughlin (43) and Michael Runsey (47). Hunter Crisp and Troy Kunde both shot 48s. Woodstock 174, North Boone 238: At Oak Grove in Harvard, medalist Evan Bridges shot a 42 to lead the Blue Streaks to a nonconference win. Wauconda 188, Harvard 218: At Oak Grove, Austin Gratz shot a team-best 51 in a nonconference loss for the Hornets. James Crout shot a 55 and Ben Overlee and Alec Garza both shot 56s for Harvard. Wauconda’s Matt Szmajda was the medalist with a 40. Grant 180, Johnsburg 182: At Antioch Golf Club, Grant Fischer shot a 41 to tie for the lowest score of the day and lead the Skyhawks in a nonconference loss. Casey Wilson shot a 44, while Trevor Wotring (48) and Jay Balfanz (49) also contributed to Johnsburg’s team score.

Inside Girls Volleyball ATHLETE OF THE WEEK ALI BUCKLEY Dundee-Crown, sr., S Buckley helped lead the Chargers to second place Saturday in the Pass, Set & Spike Tournament in West Chicago with 96 assists, 18 digs and 10 kills. D-C went 3-2 with wins against Larkin, Bartlett and West Chicago, but the Chargers lost to St. Viator in pool play and again in the championship. The senior setter had 28 more assists in a 23-25, 25-22, 25-8 Fox Valley Conference win Tuesday over McHenry, moving the Chargers to 3-3 in FVC play. NORTHWEST HERALD POWER RANKINGS (Through Sunday) 1. Marian Central (11-0): The Hurricanes improved to 11-0, beating Marist, 17-25, 25-21, 2522, in their East Suburban Catholic Conference opener and adding a nonconference victory against Johnsburg. The Hurricanes play Carmel in their second ESCC match Tuesday. 2. Prairie Ridge (5-0): The Wolves are undefeated, with all of their wins coming in the FVC. They beat Dundee-Crown last week in straight sets. They’ll face Jacobs on Tuesday and Crystal

Proud Sponsor of Athlete of the Week Lake Central on Thursday and will compete in the Wheaton Warrenville South Classic on Wednesday and Saturday. 3. Crystal Lake Central (8-3): The Tigers are rolling, winning five of six, and are 5-1 in the FVC with their only loss coming against Huntley, 2523, 28-26, in the season opener. They face D-C on Tuesday and Prairie Ridge on Thursday. 4. Huntley (4-1): The Red Raiders suffered their first loss of the season to Cary-Grove, 21-25, 26-24, 25-22, but bounced back with a sweep of Hampshire. They’ll continue FVC play with McHenry on Tuesday and Crystal Lake South on Thursday. 5. Dundee-Crown (6-5): The Chargers lost to Prairie Ridge in two but beat McHenry and were second at the West Chicago Tournament over the weekend. They are 3-3 in the FVC, with a big test against Crystal Lake Central on Tuesday. Emma Brant had 38 kills and 11 blocks at West Chicago.

NOTEWORTHY Nationally ranked: Marian Central senior setter McKayla Wuensch said before the start of the season the Hurricanes were embracing the target as defending Class 3A state champions. With an 11-0 start, Marian entering Monday had won 19 straight matches dating to last year. Their impressive start has them ranked No. 15 in the country by MaxPreps.com. No. 13 Geneva is the only other team from Illinois that appears on the top-25 list. Wuensch (team-leading 255 assists) and Sydney Nemtuda (team-leading 104 kills) were on PrepVolleyball.com’s Pre-Season All-American Watch list. Moving forward: Crystal Lake South coach Jorie Fontana talked to her team at length last week after a 25-23, 25-12 FVC loss to Crystal Lake Central – a match in which the Gators jumped out to an early lead, played point-forpoint with the Tigers in the first set and faded in the second. Her message? “You can lose, yes, but you don’t have to be OK with it,” Fontana said. “How does that fuel you to the next practice, the next match?” South, which has alternated losses and wins in its first five matches, can jump back into the FVC race in the next couple of weeks with four out of its next five matches (all conference) at

home, including four straight. They enter the week as one of three FVC teams, along with D-C and C-G, with three conference losses. “We knew this team was going to be a before and an after picture,” Fontana said. “They started, and some of them are young, and they’re just kind of coming together. Mentally, they need to be more competitive. That first set ... it was a reward for us. We came out great, but I hope they realize that’s what it takes all the time. And I think they needed that message.” THIS WEEK’S TOP MATCHES Crystal Lake Central at Prairie Ridge 6 p.m. Thursday Two of the early leaders in the FVC meet for the first of two conference matches. The Wolves handed the Tigers their only two conference losses last season. Huntley at Crystal Lake South 6 p.m. Thursday The Red Raiders and Gators tied for second in the FVC Valley Division last season. Huntley is coming off its first conference loss and is 4-1 in the FVC, and the Gators are looking to improve on a 2-3 start.

– Alex Kantecki akantecki@shawmedia.com

• Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Johnsburg’s Abbie Cittadino won at No. 2 singles and Samantha Knutilla won at No. 3 singles Monday to help the Skyhawks beat Woodstock North, 5-2, in the completion of a Kishwaukee River Conference dual meet continued from Aug. 30. Cittadino beat Kelli Kunuth, 6-0, 6-0, and Knutilla beat Rachel Packard, 6-3, 7-6. The Skyhawks (3-4, 2-0) also got doubles wins from No. 2 pairing, Stephanie Flebbe/Sophie Gasior, No. 3 pairing Melinda McBride/Amy Bennett and No. 4 pairing Taylor Piggott/Aysha Ozmert. Woodstock North’s two wins came from the top positions. Lulu Nicks won at No. 1 singles, beating Paige King, 6-4, 6-1. The Thunder’s top doubles pairing of Faith Vela/Aly Callotta beat Johnsburg’s Alyssia Altobelli/Kamile Alkasaite, 6-3, 6-0. Barrington 6, Prairie Ridge 1: At Crystal Lake, No. 1 singles player Annie Timm won, 6-1, 6-4, to pick up the Wolves’ only win in a nonconference loss.

Hampshire football’s Woods OK after scare against Cary-Grove

SPORTS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Johnsburg tops Woodstock N. in KRC girls tennis

3


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

|SPORTS

4 CUBS 4, CARDINALS 1

Hendricks takes no-hitter into 9th Hazelbaker HR breaks up gem by ERA leader By GORDON WITTENMYER gwittenmyer@suntimes.com

ST. LOUIS – Despite the sparkling ERA and the huge second-half run, the only question left about Kyle Hendricks might have been whether he could keep that up when the games get bigger. Next question. In the biggest game of his season, the major-league ERA leader took a no-hitter into the ninth inning in St. Louis before Jeremy Hazelbaker drove an 0-2 pitch over the right-field wall leading off the ninth to break it up. But consider Hendricks’ statement made with what might prove the signature start of his Cy Young candidacy – culminating in a 4-1 victory over the rival Cardinals that kept alive the Cubs’ hopes of clinching the division title Wednesday at Busch Stadium. Hendricks (15-7) gave up two walks, but nobody reached second until the homer, and he faced the minimum possible until walking Jedd Gyorko with two out in the eighth. Gyorko hit into a double play in the second after a one-out walk to Yadier Molina. “Pretty special night all around,” Hendricks said. “It was fun, man.” Never in trouble, Hendricks also never seemed to sweat – a trait that has become a big part of his growing reputation and success. “I just was never that guy,” Hendricks said over the weekend about his calm on the mound compared with other, more emotional pitchers – including some teammates. “I keep my emotions in check, my personality in general, when I’m out there. I’m more calm, collected and really focused on my game plan. It’s what helps me go about my business.” Hendricks struck out seven and got help – spectacular at times – from his fielders behind him, as he lowered his season ERA to 2.03. On back-to-back plays in the sixth, Addison Russell robbed Jhonny Peralta of a hit, ranging to the hole and making a quick throw for the first out of the inning, and then right-fielder Jason Heyward reached over the first row for a foul popup. Heyward kept hold of the catch despite a fan in a Cardinals shirt trying

AP photo

Cubs starting pitcher Kyle Hendricks (center) smiles in the dugout after being removed in the ninth inning against the Cardinals on Monday in St. Louis. Hendricks had a no-hitter until Jeremy Hazelbaker hit a solo home run to lead off the ninth. third baseman Kris Bryant lunged to his left to snare Stephen Piscotty’s Chicago St. Louis smash, before scrambling to his feet to ab r h bi ab r h bi throw him out by a step. Fowler cf 4 1 2 2 Wong 2b 4 0 0 0 Bryant 3b 4 0 1 0 Pscotty rf 3 0 0 0 Home runs by Ben Zobrist and DexRizzo 1b 4 0 1 1 Crpnter 1b 3 0 0 0 Zobrist lf 4 1 2 1 M.Adams 1b 0 0 0 0 ter Fowler accounted for most of the Russell ss 3 0 0 0 Jo.Mrtn ph 1 0 0 0 scoring. M.Mntro c 4 0 0 0 Grichuk cf 3 0 0 0 Heyward rf 3 0 0 0 Molina c 2 0 0 0 And Hendricks did the rest, with J.Baez 2b 3 2 1 0 Gyorko ss 2 0 0 0 Hndrcks p 3 0 0 0 J.Prlta 3b 3 0 0 0 the best yet during a streak of 20 conA.Chpmn p 0 0 0 0 Hzlbker lf 3 1 1 1 secutive starts allowing three or fewer Leake p 1 0 0 0 A.Diaz ph 1 0 0 0 runs – the 13th in that stretch in which Sclvich p 0 0 0 0 Tvilala p 0 0 0 0 he has allowed one or none. Kkhefer p 0 0 0 0 Hendricks got a standing ovation G.Grcia ph 0 0 0 0 Pham ph 1 0 0 0 from much of the crowd when he Totals 32 4 7 4 Totals 27 1 1 1 stepped to the plate in the top of the Chicago 011 020 000 — 4 St. Louis 000 000 001 — 1 ninth with two out and the bases loaded. He lined a shot to the gap in right E–Gyorko (10). DP–Chicago 1, St. Louis 2. LOB–Chicago 5, St. Louis 2. 2B–Zobrist (29). HR–Fowler (11), Zobrist (15), that Randal Grichuk tracked down. Hazelbaker (12). S–Hendricks (8). Hazelbaker’s home run came on IP H R ER BB SO Hendricks’ 87th pitch, and managChicago Hendricks W,15-7 8 1 1 1 2 7 er Joe Maddon made sure it was the Chapman S,34-37 1 0 0 0 1 1 St. Louis right-hander’s last one, in a continuing Leake L,9-10 6 6 4 3 1 4 effort to preserve pitches and innings Socolovich 2 0 0 0 0 2 1/3 1 0 0 0 0 Tuivailala on his staff for October. 2/3 0 0 0 2 0 Kiekhefer But not before Maddon got ejectHendricks pitched to 1 batter in the 9th ed by home plate ump Joe West, who Umpires–Home, Joe West; First, Andy Fletcher; Second, seemed to take issue with the Cubs’ Kerwin Danley; Third, Mark Ripperger. T–2:17. A–43,397 (43,975). infielders hanging out on the mound with Hendricks as reliever Aroldis to wrestle the ball from his glove as Chapman warmed up. teammate Javy Baez fought off the fan. As soon as Maddon signaled for Then with one out in the seventh, Chapman, he went back to West to get CUBS 4, CARDINALS 1

his money’s worth on the ejection. But not even the ninth-inning fireworks could upstage the calm and precision work for eight innings of the National League’s newest breakout starting pitcher. And if anybody wondered about Hendricks’ ability to sustain his regular-season success onto the bigger stage of October? “I don’t see why not,” Maddon said. “Everything’s there.”

FRONT-OFFICE LOSSES LIKELY

After five seasons together as a front office, rebuilding the Cubs on the field, general manager Jed Hoyer thinks this will be the year he’ll have to rebuild some of the front office. The Minnesota Twins, who are restructuring their front office after firing longtime GM Terry Ryan, have sought permission to interview Jason McLeod, the Cubs’ top scouting and player development executive, for the Twins’ top baseball job, Hoyer said. “There could be more,” Hoyer said, adding there’s a “good chance” the Cubs lose McLeod or another high-ranking club official to teams raiding the front office of the team with the best record in the majors.


WHITE SOX

By DARYL VAN SCHOUWEN

WHITE SOX 11, INDIANS 4

dvanchouwen@suntimes.com

Cleveland

r 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 4

bi 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 4

Eaton cf Ti.Andr ss Me.Cbrr lf Abreu 1b Morneau dh Shuck ph-dh T.Frzer 3b Av.Grca rf Narvaez c Sladino 2b

ab 4 5 5 4 4 0 5 5 4 4

Cleveland Chicago

030 000 010 — 111 211 22x —

r h bi 2 2 2 1 3 1 0 0 0 1 2 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 2 3 4 1 1 1 1 1 2 1

Totals

40 11 16 10 4 11

E–Abreu 2 (10), Chisenhall 2 (3). DP–Chicago 1. LOB– Cleveland 6, Chicago 9. 2B–C.Santana (24), Jose.Ramirez (39), Chisenhall (25), Ra.Davis (22), Abreu (30), Narvaez (4), Saladino (14). HR–Napoli (33), Eaton (13), T.Frazier (36), Av.Garcia (11). SB–Ti.Anderson (10). SF–Narvaez (1). Cleveland Carrasco L,11-8 Garner Crockett McAllister Armstrong Merritt Adams Chicago Gonzalez W,4-6 Jennings Smith Kahnle

AP photo

White Sox pitching prospect Zack Burdi throws out a ceremonial first pitch before the Sox’s game against the Cleveland Indians on Monday at U.S. Cellular Field. “That’s what I love to see on the mound. When I went out to talk to the guy, he’s like, ‘I’m getting an out every single pitch’ instead of ‘What are we going to do here?’ ” Asked to elaborate on that persona that people speak of, Burdi said it’s just the way his eyes “switch” when the lights go on. “So I pitched my first game in Triple-A, and [teammates] asked me what I take before I pitch,” Burdi said. “I said, ‘I don’t take anything.’ They said, ‘You don’t take Adderall or anything?’ ” “I guess they just switch into a really weird mode. But when I’m out there, I feel super relaxed. Just growing up in a home with two older brothers, everything was competition. That just carries out on to the field.” Burdi carries that 100-mph heater out there, and that’s more intimidating than his eyes. “I’ve been up and down this summer, at 97 to about 102, 103. When you see [Aroldis] Chapman … in the back of my head I’m like, ‘Wow. When I get out there, that’s what I look like.’ ” About 15 mph less than Buehrle, who had a pretty nice career.

IP

H

R

32/3 1 0 1

8 1 0 2 1 2 2

5 1 0 1 1 1 2

4 0 0 1 1 1 2

1 1 0 0 0 0 1

2 1 1 1 1 0 1

6 0 2 0

3 0 1 0

3 0 1 0

2 0 0 0

4 0 0 2

2/3 2/3 1

62/3

1/3 1 1

ER BB SO

Crockett pitched to 1 batter in the 5th PB–Perez. T–3:30. A–12,588 (40,615).

Garcia’s 4 hits pace Sox’s victory CHICAGO – Avisail Garcia matched a career high with four hits, including a tiebreaking home run, and the White Sox pounded the sloppy Cleveland Indians, 11-4, Monday night. Todd Frazier hit his career-best 36th homer, and Adam Eaton also went deep as the White Sox improved to 4-3 on their 10-game homestand. Tim Anderson had three of the Sox’s 16 hits, and Jose Abreu drove in two runs, backing another strong start by Miguel Gonzalez. Cleveland had its AL Central lead trimmed to six games over Detroit, which rallied for a 4-2 victory over Minnesota. The Indians had won eight of their past nine against the Sox, but Lonnie Chisenhall misplayed two balls in right field and another run scored on a passed ball.

– The Associated Press

“Yeah, it’s something to put in your back pocket,” Burdi said. “But you don’t want to make it an ego thing.” If Burdi can take his stuff and pitch a little like that guy he saw throw that perfect game, the Sox might have themselves a gem. Hostetler thinks they do. “He’s going to be a major part of our teams in Chicago for many years to come,” Hostetler said.

FAVORITE Cubs New York Pittsburgh at CINCINNATI at ATLANTA at ARIZONA at SAN FRANCISCO at WHITE SOX at TORONTO at BOSTON at DETROIT at KANSAS CITY at HOUSTON Seattle LA Dodgers

National League LINE UNDERDOG -120 at ST. LOUIS -135 at WASHINGTON -152 at PHILADLEPHIA -135 Milwaukee -115 Miami -145 Colorado -148 San Diego American League -114 Cleveland -180 Tampa Bay -150 Baltimore -176 Minnesota -177 Oakland -122 Texas -120 at Los Angeles Interleague -140 at NY YANKEES

LINE +110 +125 +142 +125 +105 +135 +138 +104 +165 +140 +164 +165 +112 +110 +130

COLLEGE FOOTBALL Thursday FAVORITE OPEN TODAY O/U UNDERDOG Houston 6 7½ (OFF) at CINCINNATI Friday Baylor 27½ 29½ (OFF) at RICE Arizona St 18½ 18 (OFF) at UTSA at UTAH ST 6½ 9½ (OFF) Arkansas St Saturday E. Michigan +1 3½ (OFF) at CHARLOTTE W Michigan +1 3 (OFF) at ILLINOIS at SO CAROLINA 7 3½ (OFF) East Carolina Florida St +1 2 (OFF) at LOUISVILLE at PENN ST 8 9 (OFF) Temple Maryland 9 8½ (OFF) at UCF at UCONN 8 4 (OFF) Virginia at TCU 22 24 (OFF) Iowa St at MICHIGAN 20 20 (OFF) Colorado at RUTGERS 4½ 5½ (OFF) New Mexico MIDDLE TENN 1½ 6 (OFF) at BOWLING GRN at UMASS OFF OFF (OFF) FIU at WISCONSIN 28 34 (OFF) Georgia St at CENT. MICH. 13 13 (OFF) UNLV at GEORGIA TECH 7½ 6½ (OFF) Vanderbilt at UTEP OFF OFF (OFF) Army at KANSAS ST 18½ 22½ (OFF) FAU at TOLEDO 22½ 21 (OFF) Fresno St at VIRGINIA TECH 8 6 (OFF) Boston College South Florida 12½ 14½ (OFF) at SYRACUSE San Diego St 8 11 (OFF) at N ILLINOIS W Kentucky 15 17 (OFF) at MIAMI (OHIO) at FLORIDA 35 36½ (OFF) North Texas at TEXAS TECH 13 11 (OFF) Louisiana Tech at KENTUCKY 21½ 19½ (OFF) New Mexico St at ARKANSAS 31½ 31 (OFF) Texas State at TENNESSEE 27½ 27½ (OFF) Ohio at MARSHALL 14½ 17 (OFF) Akron at NEBRASKA 1 3 (OFF) Oregon UCLA 1 3 (OFF) at BYU Miami 3½ 3½ (OFF)at APPALACHIAN ST at OKLAHOMA ST 7 6½ (OFF) Pittsburgh at GA SOUTHERN 30 25 (OFF)Louisiana-Monroe at NC STATE 20½ 21½ (OFF) Old Dominion at SO MISS 12½ 10 (OFF) Troy at LA-LAFAYETTE 2½ 3 (OFF) South Alabama at MEMPHIS 20 20 (OFF) Kansas at NOTRE DAME 6 8 (OFF) Michigan St at AUBURN 4 4 (OFF) Texas A&M at NORTHWESTERN 1 6½ (OFF) Duke Ohio State +1 2½ (OFF) at OKLAHOMA Alabama 8½ 10 (OFF) at MISSISSIPPI Georgia 7½ 6½ (OFF) at MISSOURI at LSU OFF OFF (OFF) Mississippi St Navy 11½ 6 (OFF) at TULANE at ARIZONA OFF OFF (OFF) Hawaii at STANFORD 6½ 8½ (OFF) SOUTHERN CAL Texas 4 8 (OFF) at CALIFORNIA at NEVADA 9 11 (OFF) Buffalo Utah 13 13 (OFF) at SAN JOSE ST at WASHINGTON ST 27½ 25 (OFF) Idaho NFL Thursday FAVORITE OPEN TODAY O/U UNDERDOG at BUFFALO 3 PK (41) NY Jets Sunday at DETROIT 3½ 5½ (47) Tennessee at HOUSTON 1½ 2 (43½) Kansas City at NEW ENGLAND 4½ 7 (42) Miami Baltimore 4 7 (43) at CLEVELAND at PITTSBURGH 4 3½ (OFF) Cincinnati at WASHINGTON 3½ 3½ (OFF) Dallas at NY GIANTS 4½ 5 (53) New Orleans at CAROLINA 13½ 14 (OFF) San Francisco at ARIZONA 8 6½ (50½) Tampa Bay Seattle 4 OFF (OFF) at LOS ANGELES at DENVER 4 6 (45) Indianapolis at OAKLAND 5½ 4½ (48) Atlanta at SAN DIEGO 3 3 (48) Jacksonville Green Bay +1 2½ (45) at MINNESOTA Monday at BEARS 3 3 (43) Philadelphia

Updated odds available at Pregame.com

• Tuesday, September 13, 2016

h 1 0 0 0 1 2 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 8

Chicago

ab C.Sntna dh 3 Aguilar ph-dh 1 Kipnis 2b 4 Lindor ss 3 Napoli 1b 4 Jose.Rm 3b 4 Chsnhll rf 4 Ra.Dvis lf 4 Naquin cf 3 E.Gnzlz ph 1 R.Perez c 2 Crisp ph 1 A.Moore c 1 Totals 35

MLB

SPORTS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Burdi at top of Hostetler’s impressive first draft class CHICAGO – Zack Burdi took a seat in the White Sox dugout and glanced up toward the sky boxes where, as a kid, he watched Mark Buehrle – his favorite pitcher – throw a perfect game. Seven years later, the Sox made their second first-round pick of the June draft available to media before the team opened a four-game series against the Cleveland Indians. The 21-year-old graduate of Downers Grove South High School was engaging in conversation, much less threatening there than he figures to be with a 100-mph fastball that seems to equip him as a future closer on the South Side. “I grew up a Sox fan,” Burdi said. Burdi’s father didn’t have to call his son, as Hawk Harrelson beckoned, when Buehrle took his perfecto deep into that game against the Tampa Bay Rays on July 23, 2009. His kid was watching it happen before his own eyes. “I was here with my travel team in those [section] 320, 322 suites, thanks to a dad who hooked us up, and the next thing you know you’re watching Buehrle’s perfect game,” Burdi said. “It was crazy, and I remember it like it was yesterday.” Burdi, picked 26th overall out of Louisville after the Sox had taken Miami catcher Zack Collins 10th (the Sox should hashtag their draft the #zackdraft), had hoped to make a memory and be called up this month but the front office, citing his workload between Louisville and Sox farm system, called it a season after he posted a 3.32 ERA while striking out 51 in 38 relief innings over four minor league levels. At Triple-A Charlotte, Burdi pitched to a 2.25 ERA. Another power arm, second-rounder Alec Hansen, excelled at four levels as well (the highest at Single-A Kannapolis), leaving the Sox feeling pretty good about first-year scouting director Nick Hostetler’s first class. “We couldn’t be more happy with Zack and the rest of the draft class,” Hostetler said Monday. “Our scouts did a terrific job finding the right combination of ability and makeup this year. “Zack has been everything our area scout Phil Gulley said he was. Outstanding makeup and drive.’’ Catcher Kevan Smith, who was called up, raved about Burdi’s confidence. “Very competitive,” Smith said.

5

BETTING ODDS


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

|SPORTS

6

Game review shows Bears weren’t prepared BEARS INSIDER Hub Arkush After studying the tape, the Bears weren’t as prepared as they needed to be to take on the Houston Texans. Was that the coaching staff’s fault? In a few areas it may have been, but for the most part, no. No unit in football requires more communication, timing and teamwork than the offensive line. The Bears’ O-line that started against Houston had exactly three practices and a walkthrough together as a unit, Josh Sitton had only that many practices as a Bear and Cody Whitehair – a rookie to boot – had the same number as a center. Eleven starters and 18 players total against the Texans were playing their first game as a Bear, and new offensive coordinator Dowell Loggains was calling plays for the first time with the Bears. How they performed matters greatly; the final score not so much. Jay Cutler earned a B. Although his numbers – 16-of-29, 216 yards, 7.4 yards per attempt, one touchdown, one interception and a 76.2 passer rating – were uninspiring, he was sacked five times, absorbed eight additional hits and with the Texans’ eight tackles for loss, he spent too much of the afternoon in difficult second- and third-and-long situations. Cutler and Alshon Jeffery have mastered the deep back-shoulder throw, and his touchdown to Eddie Royal was

the Bears will have to think about benching him. The defensive line was a B-, inside linebackers a B+ and outside linebackers a C. Akiem Hicks had two splash plays, Eddie Goldman was rock-solid for the most part, and Jerrell Freeman and Danny Trevathan were as advertised. The problem with the front seven was it provided very little pressure on Brock Osweiler because the outside backers were for the most part neutralized. The secondary was a B-. Tracy Porter played well, shadowing DeAndre Hopkins all over the field, and Jacoby Glenn, Bryce Callahan and Deiondre’ Hall were all better in coverage than I expected. AP photo The problem at safety is Adrian The Texans’ J.J. Watt trips Bears quarterback Jay Cutler after getting past Bobby Massie Amos and Harold Jones-Quartey are during the second half Sunday in Houston. The Bears lost, 23-14. just there. They didn’t hurt the defense, but they didn’t make any plays either. a D. a pass fewer than a handful of QBs in I thought the coaching was a C-, The Bears just don’t have enough the league can throw. more for John Fox’s poor game managetalent at tight end, Zach Miller was not Bears running backs – basically ment than Loggains’ play-calling or any Jeremy Langford, considering Ka’Deem the vertical threat he needs to be, Kevin lack of preparation. White simply is not ready, and Deonte Carey was on the field for only two With the pressure the Texans Thompson got only two snaps, Josh snaps, Jordan Howard none and fullbrought all afternoon on defense, it’s back Paul Lasike got 14 snaps – get a C+ Bellamy none. just too soon to get a read on Loggains. for the day. Josh Sitton and Kyle Long were The Bears were neither as good nor Langford didn’t do anything wrong, B’s, playing well for the most part and as bad as they might have been in Housbut 12 of his 17 carries were for 3.5 doing what they could to help out their ton, and it wasn’t a horrible first step. yards or less, and the other five were offensive linemates, and Cody WhiteA failure to take a significant step hair was a C that would have been a B5, 6, 7, 7 and 15 yards, leaving him with forward at home Monday against the were it not for the botched snap on the 3.7 a pop. Without the 15-yarder that much lesser Eagles team, however, quarterback sneak. included a nice effort, he would have would start setting off alarms. The offensive tackle play was unacbeen much worse. ceptable; Charles Leno a D+ or C- and The Bears receivers were also a C+, • Hub Arkush is executive editor of Bobby Massie an F. but here we should it break down – Pro Football Weekly. Write to him at If Massie doesn’t raise his game a Alshon Jeffery and Eddie Royal were harkush@profootballweekly.com and level Monday night against the Eagles, B and B-, and the rest of the group was follow him on Twitter @Hub_Arkush.

CLEVELAND BROWNS

Browns’ RG3 breaks bone in shoulder, might miss season The ASSOCIATED PRESS BEREA, Ohio – Robert Griffin III’s comeback cracked. Cleveland’s quarterback curse strikes again. Griffin broke a bone in his left shoulder during the fourth quarter of Sunday’s 29-10 loss at Philadelphia and will miss at least eight games – and potentially the season – with an injury that leaves the Browns’ muddled QB situation as jumbled as ever. The franchise’s 25th starting quarterback since 1999, Griffin, who signed with the Browns as a free agent in March in hopes of reviving a career that fizzled in Washington, got hurt while trying to run out of bounds. Griffin was nearing the sideline when he was struck by Eagles rookie defensive

Steelers rout Redskins behind Roethlisberger’s 3 TD passes

But it seems to happen at an inordinate rate to the Browns, who have been unable to find any stability at the most LANDOVER, Md. – Ben Roethlisberger Coates and others, Roethlisberger recovimportant position for almost two deknew the retired Heath Miller, suspended ered a fumble at a pivotal moment and cades. teammates Le’Veon Bell and Martavis completed 27 of 37 passes for 300 yards in The Browns placed Griffin on injured Bryant and the injured Markus Wheaton the season-opening victory. reserve – under new NFL rules he can weren’t walking through that door. So he He threw two touchdowns to Brown be brought off the list – and he could reput the Pittsburgh Steelers’ young, largely and another to Rogers. Often playing on turn at some point in 2016. But there’s untested offense on his shoulders. the opposite side from Josh Norman and no guarantee that will happen, and the Roethlisberger threw for three touchtormenting cornerback Bashaud Breeland, 26-year-old has suffered another setback downs to lead the Steelers to a 38-16 rout Brown made eight catches for 126 yards. to a career filled with promise when he of the Washington Redskins on Monday Starting in place of Bell, DeAngelo burst into the NFL in 2012. With Griffin out, veteran Josh Mcnight. After telling his teammates he Williams ran for 143 yards and two touchCown will start this week’s home opener believed in not just All-Pro wide receiver downs on 26 carries. – The Associated Press against Baltimore. McCown, who coinAntonio Brown but Eli Rogers, Sammie cidentally suffered a concussion on the opening drive in his debut with Cleveback Jalen Mills, who delivered a blow pen,” Browns first-year coach Hue Jack- land last season, went 1-7 in eight starts son said. “It’s unfortunate, but it does but passed for 457 yards in a win over to the QB’s chest area. the Ravens. “It’s football and these things hap- happen in this sport.”


FIVE-DAY PLANNER TEAM

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

at St. Louis 7:15 p.m. ABC AM-670

at St. Louis 12:45 p.m. ABC AM-670

MILWAUKEE 7:05 p.m. CSN AM-670

MILWAUKEE 1:20 p.m. CSN AM-670

MILWAUKEE 3:05 p.m. WGN AM-670

CLEVELAND 7:10 p.m. CSN AM-890

CLEVELAND 7:10 p.m. CSN AM-890

CLEVELAND 1:10 p.m. CSN AM-890

at Kansas City 7:15 p.m. CSN AM-890

at Kansas City 6:15 p.m. CSN AM-890 Next: PHILADELPHIA 7:30 p.m. Monday ESPN AM-780, 105.9-FM

WHAT TO WATCH Janeiro, NBCSN 6 p.m.: 2016 Rio Summer Games (Swimming, Track & Field, Wheelchair Basketball quarterfinals), at Rio de Janeiro, NBCSN Midnight: 2016 Rio Summer Games, at Rio de Janeiro (same-day tape), NBCSN Soccer 1:30 p.m.: UEFA Champions League, group stage, Rostov at Bayern Munich, ESPN2 1:30 p.m.: UEFA Champions League, group stage, Celtic at Barcelona, FS1 1:30 p.m.: UEFA Champions League, group stage, Arsenal at Paris Saint-Germain, FS2 1:30 p.m.: UEFA Champions League, group stage, Borussia Mönchengladbach at Manchester City, FSN 9 p.m.: U.S. Open Cup, final, New England at FC Dallas, ESPN2

SPORTS BRIEFS Sky’s Delle Donne to have thumb surgery as postseason nears

be bringing six newcomers to Minnesota. Love didn’t surprise many with his first ROSEMONT – Sky star Elena Delle Donne three picks. Where he goes for the fourth will undergo surgery Tuesday to repair her and final spot may more intriguing. Love said there was strong debate and injured right thumb. discussion with vice captains Tiger Woods, The reigning WNBA MVP was injured Tom Lehman, Steve Stricker and Jim Furyk Wednesday during the first half against Washington. The Sky made the announce- late into the afternoon on Sunday before a ment Monday. There is no timetable for her consensus was finally reached, and those conversations will only increase before he return. Delle Donne, who won the scoring title in chooses the final member of the team on 2015, is tied for the scoring lead this season Sept. 25 after the Tour Championship. The with New York’s Tina Charles at 21.5 points Ryder Cup begins Sept. 30. a game. Wambach: I abused alcohol, The Sky clinched a playoff spot Sunday prescription drugs for years with a 96-86 victory over Connecticut. The Abby Wambach said she abused alcohol regular season ends Sunday. and prescription drugs for years until her arrest for driving under the influence in April. Love chooses Fowler, Holmes, “I was stubborn and I was in denial,” Kuchar for Ryder Cup; 1 pick to go soccer’s most prolific international goal CHASKA, Minn. – When Davis Love III and scorer told The Associated Press in a phone the U.S. Ryder Cup team come to Hazeltine interview. “I didn’t want to face the truth.” at the end of the month, they will be looking In “Forward,” her memoir set for release to avoid an unprecedented fourth straight Tuesday, the retired U.S. national team star defeat to the Europeans. recounts her career, from the lows of losing The U.S. has spent two years planning and her high school championship to the highs strategizing in hopes of turning the tide, of winning the Women’s World Cup last and Love’s first three captain’s picks lean heavily on experience as they try to end the year. She also chronicles her high-profile skid. Love chose Rickie Fowler, J.B. Holmes marriage to fellow soccer player Sarah and Matt Kuchar on Monday. He has one Huffman and the struggles they faced. more pick to make, too. And she tells of her bouts with vodka and The Americans haven’t won since Valhalla pills, which included Vicodin, Ambien and in 2008, and they have only one rookie on Adderall. the current roster, while the Europeans will – Wire reports

NATIONAL LEAGUE

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Central Division W L Pct 92 51 .643 75 68 .524 69 73 .486 64 80 .444 61 82 .427 East Division W L Pct Washington 86 58 .597 New York 76 68 .528 Miami 71 73 .493 Philadelphia 64 80 .444 Atlanta 56 88 .389 West Division W L Pct Los Angeles 81 62 .566 San Francisco 77 66 .538 Colorado 69 75 .479 San Diego 60 84 .417 Arizona 59 84 .413

GB — 17 22½ 28½ 31

Cubs St. Louis Pittsburgh Milwaukee Cincinnati

San Francisco NY Mets St. Louis Miami Pittsburgh

Wild Card W L 77 67 76 68 75 68 71 73 69 73

PREP SCHEDULE

GB — 10 15 22 30 GB — 4 12½ 21½ 22

PCT WCGB .538 +½ .528 – .524 ½ .493 5 .486 6½

Monday’s Results Cubs 4, St. Louis 1 L.A. Dodgers 8, N.Y. Yankees 2 Philadelphia 6, Pittsburgh 2 Washington 8, N.Y. Mets 1 Cincinnati 3, Milwaukee 0 Atlanta 12, Miami 7 Arizona 12, Colorado 9 San Diego 4, San Francisco 0 Tuesday’s Games Cubs (Hammel 14-8) at St. Louis (Garcia 10-12), 7:15 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Urias 5-2) at N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 8-12), 6:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 13-8) at Washington (Cole 1-2), 6:05 p.m. Pittsburgh (Nova 12-6) at Philadelphia (Asher 1-0), 6:05 p.m. Miami (Esch 0-1) at Atlanta (Wisler 6-11), 6:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Garza 5-6) at Cincinnati (Straily 11-8), 6:10 p.m. Colorado (De La Rosa 8-7) at Arizona (Ray 7-13), 8:40 p.m. San Diego (Richard 2-3) at San Francisco (Suarez 3-3), 9:15 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Cubs at St. Louis),12:45 p.m. San Diego at San Francisco, 2:45 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at N.Y. Yankees, 3:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Washington, 3:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m. Miami at Atlanta, 6:10 p.m. Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m. Colorado at Arizona, 8:40 p.m.

Central Division W L Pct 83 60 .580 77 66 .538 74 69 .517 69 74 .483 53 91 .368 East Division W L Pct Boston 81 62 .566 Toronto 79 64 .552 Baltimore 78 65 .545 New York 76 67 .531 Tampa Bay 60 83 .420 West Division W L Pct Texas 86 59 .593 Seattle 76 68 .528 Houston 75 69 .521 Los Angeles 63 80 .441 Oakland 61 82 .427

Cleveland Detroit Kansas City White Sox Minnesota

Toronto Baltimore Detroit New York Seattle Houston Kansas City

Wild Card W L 79 64 78 65 77 66 76 67 76 68 75 69 74 69

GB — 6 9 14 30½ GB — 2 3 5 21 GB — 9½ 10½ 22 24

PCT WCGB .552 +1 .545 – .538 1 .531 2 .528 2½ .521 3½ .517 4

Monday’s Results White Sox 11, Cleveland 4 L.A. Dodgers 8, N.Y. Yankees 2 Toronto 3, Tampa Bay 2 Boston 12, Baltimore 2 Detroit 4, Minnesota 2 Oakland 16, Kansas City 3 Texas 4, Houston 3 (12 inn.) Seattle 8, L.A. Angels 1 Tuesday’s Games Cleveland (Bauer 11-6) at White Sox (Quintana 11-10), 7:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Urias 5-2) at N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 8-12), 6:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (Smyly 6-11) at Toronto (Stroman 9-7), 6:07 p.m. Baltimore (Bundy 8-5) at Boston (Pomeranz 10-11), 6:10 p.m. Minnesota (Gibson 5-9) at Detroit (Boyd 5-3), 6:10 p.m. Oakland (Cotton 1-0) at Kansas City (Duffy 11-2), 6:15 p.m. Texas (Griffin 7-4) at Houston (Peacock 0-0), 7:10 p.m. Seattle (Walker 5-10) at L.A. Angels (Meyer 0-2), 9:05 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Cleveland at White Sox, 7:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at Toronto, 11:37 a.m. L.A. Dodgers at N.Y. Yankees, 3:05 p.m. Baltimore at Boston, 6:10 p.m. Minnesota at Detroit, 6:10 p.m. Oakland at Kansas City, 6:15 p.m. Texas at Houston, 7:10 p.m. Seattle at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m.

WNBA EASTERN CONFERENCE New York Atlanta Sky Indiana Washington Connecticut

W 21 16 16 16 12 11

L 11 15 15 15 19 20

Pct .656 .516 .516 .516 .387 .355

WESTERN CONFERENCE Minnesota Los Angeles Seattle

W 26 24 15

L 5 8 17

Pct .839 .750 .469

GB — 4½ 4½ 4½ 8½ 9½ GB — 2½ 11½

Phoenix 14 17 .452 12 Dallas 11 21 .344 15½ San Antonio 6 25 .194 20 Monday’s Results No games scheduled Tuesday’s Games Minnesota at Sky, 7 p.m. Washington at New York, 6 p.m. Indiana at Connecticut, 6 p.m. San Antonio at Atlanta, 6 p.m. Phoenix at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m. Wednesday’s Games No games scheduled

SOCCER MLS EASTERN CONFERENCE Toronto FC New York New York City FC Philadelphia Montreal Orlando City New England D.C. United Fire Columbus

W 13 12 12 11 9 7 8 7 6 5

L 8 9 9 10 8 8 12 9 13 11

T Pts 7 46 8 44 8 44 8 41 11 38 13 34 9 33 12 33 8 26 11 26

GF GA 41 29 49 37 49 50 48 45 42 43 47 49 34 48 37 38 33 42 36 45

WESTERN CONFERENCE FC Dallas Los Angeles Colorado Real Salt Lake Sporting K.C. Portland Vancouver San Jose Seattle Houston

W 15 11 12 12 11 10 9 7 9 5

L 8 4 5 9 12 11 13 8 13 11

T Pts 6 51 14 47 10 46 8 44 6 39 8 38 7 34 12 33 5 32 11 26

GF GA 45 37 49 32 29 24 42 41 35 35 43 44 37 45 27 30 33 37 32 37

Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie Friday’s Game D.C. United at Fire, 7 p.m.

Saturday’s Games Vancouver at Seattle, 3 p.m. Philadelphia at Portland, 5 p.m. FC Dallas at New York City FC, 6 p.m. Columbus at Orlando City, 6:30 p.m. New England at Montreal, 6:30 p.m. San Jose at Colorado, 8 p.m. Houston at Real Salt Lake, 8:30 p.m.

NWSL W Washington 12 Portland 11 Red Stars 8 Western New York 8 Seattle 7 Sky Blue FC 7 FC Kansas City 6 Houston 6 Orlando 6 Boston 3

L 4 3 5 6 6 7 8 9 12 14

T 3 5 6 5 6 5 5 4 1 2

Pts 39 38 30 29 27 26 23 22 19 11

GF GA 29 18 32 18 21 19 36 26 26 19 23 27 16 19 27 26 18 27 14 43

NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Saturday’s Games FC Kansas City at Orlando, 4 p.m. Western New York at Boston, 6 p.m. Washington at Chicago, 7 p.m. Sunday’s Games Portland at Sky Blue FC, 6 p.m. Seattle at Houston, 8:30 p.m.

End regular season

TUESDAY Girls volleyball: McHenry at Huntley, Prairie Ridge at Jacobs, DundeeCrown at Crystal Lake Central, Crystal Lake South at Hampshire, Johnsburg at Woodstock North, Marengo at Burlington Central, Harvard at Richmond-Burton, Faith Lutheran at Elgin Academy, Alden-Hebron at Rockford Christian Life, 6; Marian Central at Carmel, 6:15 p.m.; Grayslake Central at Woodstock, 6:30 p.m. Boys soccer: Cary-Grove at Prairie Ridge, Huntley at Crystal Lake Central, Hampshire at Dundee-Crown, Harvard at Richmond-Burton, Johnsburg at Woodstock North, 4:30 p.m.; Crystal Lake South, Huntley at PepsiCo Showdown, TBA Girls tennis: Crystal Lake Central at Hampshire, 4:15 p.m.; DundeeCrown at Cary-Grove, Prairie Ridge at Crystal Lake South, Jacobs at Huntley, Marengo at Johnsburg, Marian Central at Marist, Woodstock at Woodstock North, 4:30 p.m. Girls swimming: McHenry, Rockford Jefferson at Woodstock North, 4:30 p.m.; Dundee-Crown at IMSA, 5 p.m. Boys golf: St. Viator at Marian Central, 3:30 p.m.; Crystal Lake South at Hampshire, 4 p.m.; Johnsburg at Harvard, Dundee-Crown at Crystal Lake Central, McHenry at Huntley, 4:15 p.m.; Prairie Ridge at Jacobs, 4:30 p.m. Girls golf: McHenry County Tournament at Boone Creek, 1:30 p.m. Boys cross country: Hampshire, Woodstock North, Richmond-Burton at Burlington Central Invite, 4:15 p.m.; Harvard, Faith Lutheran, North Boone and Johnsburg at Marengo, 4:30 p.m. Girls cross country: Hampshire, Woodstock North, Richmond-Burton at Burlington Central Invite, 4:15 p.m.; Harvard, Faith Lutheran, North Boone and Johnsburg at Marengo, 4:30 p.m.

NFL NATIONAL CONFERENCE

North W L T Minnesota 1 0 0 Detroit 1 0 0 Green Bay 1 0 0 Bears 0 1 0 East W L T N.Y. Giants 1 0 0 Philadelphia 1 0 0 Dallas 0 1 0 Washington 0 1 0 South W L T Tampa Bay 1 0 0 Carolina 0 1 0 New Orleans 0 1 0 Atlanta 0 1 0 West W L T San Francisco 1 0 0 Seattle 1 0 0 Arizona 0 1 0 Los Angeles 0 1 0

Pct 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000

PF 25 39 27 14

PA 16 35 23 23

Pct 1.000 1.000 .000 .000

PF 20 29 19 16

PA 19 10 20 38

Pct 1.000 .000 .000 .000

PF 31 20 34 24

PA 24 21 35 31

Pct 1.000 1.000 .000 .000

PF 28 12 21 0

PA 0 10 23 28

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

East W L T Pct PF New England 1 0 0 1.000 23 N.Y. Jets 0 1 0 .000 22 Miami 0 1 0 .000 10 Buffalo 0 1 0 .000 7 South W L T Pct PF Houston 1 0 0 1.000 23 Indianapolis 0 1 0 .000 35 Jacksonville 0 1 0 .000 23 Tennessee 0 1 0 .000 16 North W L T Pct PF Pittsburgh 1 0 0 1.000 38 Baltimore 1 0 0 1.000 13 Cincinnati 1 0 0 1.000 23 Cleveland 0 1 0 .000 10 West W L T Pct PF Kansas City 1 0 0 1.000 33 Denver 1 0 0 1.000 21 Oakland 1 0 0 1.000 35 San Diego 0 1 0 .000 27 Thursday’s Results Denver 21, Carolina 20 Sunday’s Results Houston 23, Bears 14 Baltimore 13, Buffalo 7 Minnesota 25, Tennessee 16 Philadelphia 29, Cleveland 10 Cincinnati 23, N.Y. Jets 22 Tampa Bay 31, Atlanta 24 Green Bay 27, Jacksonville 23 Oakland 35, New Orleans 34 Kansas City 33, San Diego 27, OT Seattle 12, Miami 10 N.Y. Giants 20, Dallas 19 Detroit 39, Indianapolis 35 New England 23, Arizona 21 Monday’s Results Pittsburgh 38, Washington 16 San Francisco 28, Los Angeles 0

PA 21 23 12 13 PA 14 39 27 25 PA 16 7 22 29 PA 27 20 34 33

7

• Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Pro baseball 6 p.m.: L.A. Dodgers at N.Y. Yankees or Baltimore at Boston, MLBN 7 p.m.: Cubs at St. Louis, ABC 7 p.m.: Cleveland at White Sox, CSN Pro basketball 7 p.m.: WNBA, Minnesota at Sky, ESPN2 9:30 p.m.: WNBA, Phoenix at Los Angeles, NBAN Boxing 7 p.m.: Premier Champions, Eddie Ramirez vs. Kevin Watts, junior welterweights, at Nice, Calif., FS1 Hockey 6 p.m.: World Cup of Hockey (Exhibition), United States vs. Finland, at Washington, ESPN Paralympics 1 p.m.: 2016 Rio Summer Games (Track & Field, Wheelchair Basketball quarterfinals), at Rio de

MLB

SPORTS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

TUESDAY


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

|SPORTS

8

Gibbs favorite again at start of NASCAR’s Chase Well, Gibbs isn’t preparing any championship speeches just yet. “There’s so many, I think, well prepared cars. This is going to be a battle,” Gibbs said. “There’s no CHARLOTTE, N.C. – The odds again way that you can pick are stacked for Joe Gibbs Racing, the a favorite right now. team with all four of its drivers in Everybody that’s in NASCAR’s playoffs. there is going to have Throw in Martin Truex Jr., who is a shot. aligned with the team, and the num“I think it’s the Kyle Busch bers point to a Toyota winning the greatest reality show Chase for the Sprint Cup championship going.” for a second consecutive year. So who can beat the Toyota continKyle Busch gave Toyota its first Cup gent? title last season, and the first championship for team owner Joe Gibbs in a KEVIN HARVICK decade. His bid to repeat begins SunAlthough he has only two wins this day at Chicagoland Speedway in Joliet, year, Harvick should have been in where the 10-race Chase begins. victory lane a few more times. His top competition again could The 2014 champion has been come from within his own organizaplagued by recurring pit crew probtion. lems, and Stewart-Haas Racing last Including Truex, who drives for week made two changes to his team Furniture Row Racing in an alliance after a slow final stop at Darlington with JGR, the five Toyota drivers have cost him the win. combined for 13 wins through the first He doesn’t have the finishes to show 26 races. They’ve led more than 4,000 for how good he’s been, but Harvick’s laps and again routed the field in the 1,211 laps led this year trails only regular-season finale at Richmond Busch (1,244) and Truex (1,234). He also by leading 385 of 407 laps in a Denny leads the series in top-five finishes (13) Hamlin win. and top 10s (21). So, can anyone beat their effort? There’s nothing at all to suggest

IN THE PITS Jenna Fryer

Harvick won’t be in the final four at the Nov. 20 finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway. He made it last year, only to finish second to Busch in his bid to repeat his title.

BRAD KESELOWSKI and JOEY LOGANO

There’s no doubt Team Penske was deeply disappointed not to win the title the past two years. Keselowski had six wins in 2014 and a strong Chase until a mechanical failure in the first race of the third round put him against the ropes. A pair of top-four finishes wasn’t enough to get him into the finale, and he settled for fifth in the final standings. Last year was Logano’s year and he seemed unbeatable, particularly when the Chase began. Like Keselowski the year before, he too won six races, including three straight in the Chase. But a feud with Matt Kenseth that wouldn’t go away blew up badly at Martinsville Speedway (same place as Keselowski’s problem a year earlier) and Kenseth intentionally wrecked Logano in a race Logano seemed poised to win. Logano didn’t recover and failed to make the finale as Penske was denied in yet another season it had dominated.

KYLE LARSON

So, Larson may be a stretch, and definitely not a favorite. But it’s hard to count him out considering the way he’s running. Larson has hit a groove this year, especially since winning his Chase-clinching race at Michigan last month. The third-year driver followed it with a third-place finish at Darlington, then hustled from 12th to second on a two-lap overtime sprint Saturday night at Richmond. It’s Larson’s first appearance in the Chase, but he raced like a participant during his 2014 rookie year. He wasn’t eligible that season, but reeled off five consecutive top-six finishes in the first half of the Chase. He hasn’t hit career numbers this year in many categories, but his 241 laps led is his best to date. Larson’s biggest fight will be advancing through the first three rounds, but should he somehow make it to the final four, he considers Homestead one of his favorite race tracks. He’s not finished lower than 15th there, and was a career-best fifth last season. • Jenna Fryer covers auto racing for The Associated Press. Follow her on Twitter @JennaFryer.

HORSE & FARM EQUIPMENT AND VEHICLES AUCTION Saturday, Sept. 17th 10:30am - 7519 W 77th Ave., Schererville, In VEHICLES: 1920 Model T Flatbed Truck (Running); 1979 Chevy 10 Deluxe pickup: 2WD; 1979 Cadillac Coupe DeVille; 1980 Dodge Power Wagon; 1986 Chevy 30 Silverado Bonus Cab; Steel Goose Neck Stock Trailer (7x20). HORSE ITEMS: Heavy Horse Show Wagon; 2 Seat Siri on Rubber; Round Back and 4 other Cutters; 2 Bob Sleds; Pony Jogging Carts; 10 Flare Boxes (wooden wheeled); Carriage Lanterns, Water Tanks; Horse Drawn Plow; Slip Scope; Saddle Sewing Machine; Buggy Seats: Wagon Wheels; Horse Drawn Sickle; MORE! FARM TRACTORS & EQUIPMENT: IH Farmall M. IH Track Tractor with Hough Loader. IH 240 Utility Tractor. Ford Tractor with Loader. AC 302 Baler. 3 Pt. Rotory Mower. Old Case Tractor. ADVERTISING SIGNS: 2 Ft. Indian Head Gas Sign. Logal Farm Sign. Anvil (Blacker Engineering Co., New York). MISC: Hand & Shop Tools, Old Trunks; Sheet Metal; Lumber; MORE! Visit us online for more info and photos

SM-CL0382381

Lorenz Auctions & Real Estate - 708-421-0074 – www.lorenzauctions.com

+1!%./*,

/*$#(*( *1 &1). *$( 1' "1!*$ ,(0*("-(. Dundee-Crown, Football

Sponsored by:

8;=>5=7&' FK(

Greg Williams !=DHOOK M1>&' H>' M;&7H3&'9

,*,, NM:6$2?86 $20I L:6I E-J A:086C! !C"? B )E,I.,+IG... -+E 8I :CN@C!! :@I B C!%MN<4#N B )-*I-,)I/...


NORTHWEST HERALD TUESD A Y , S E P T E M BE R 13 , 20 16 • $1.0 0

THE ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN McHENRY COUNTY

NWHerald.com

PAID ADVERTISING

THESE 5 DAYS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

vv

SEPT.

WHY DO I HEAR BUT NOT UNDERSTAND?

FIND OUT WHY! WEDNESDAY

14

THURSDAY

15

FRIDAY

16

MONDAY

19

TUESDAY

20

Do you sometimes feel people are mumbling or not speaking clearly? Do you find it difficult to follow a conversation in a noisy restaurant or crowded room? If so you might be interested in some recent findings. The most common type of hearing loss is sensorineural, in which the inner ear becomes damaged. Sound travels through the ear canal, the ear drum (tympanic membrane), the middle ear, and is transmitted to the inner ear (cochlea). As sound-generated vibrations enter the cochlea, they cause microscopic hair cells to vibrate, which in-turn transmit neuro-electrical impulses to the brain. When these hair cells become damaged, they cannot vibrate in the appropriate way. The resulting impulses to the brain are dampened or garbled, making comprehension difficult or impossible. Damage to hair cells is irreparable. But compensation is possible. It took years for your brain to learn to interpret the meaning of sounds. If the neurons that carry signals to the brain are experiencing prolonged lack of stimulation because of damaged hair cells (auditory deprivation), they degenerate, leaving dead regions where certain sound frequencies can no longer be interpreted. In other words, “use it or lose it” applies to hearing too. Fortunately, recent advances in digital hearing technology make it possible to detect damaged and dead regions within the inner ear. Using “visual speech mapping” and “real ear measurement” processes, the highly trained audiologists and hearing instrument specialists at AccuQuest Hearing Centers (a national network of over 190 locations) can target regions of frequency loss and compensate for damaged hair cells. This targeted stimulation of neurons can aid in making speech comprehensible again. Hearing loss, regardless of degree, can interfere with one’s ability to participate in a world that greatly depends on communication for social, educational, and occupational activities. Not all hearing loss can be fixed with hearing aids, but there’s a good chance we can help you with yours. Please give us a chance to help before your loss worsens. Our local experts have been trained in the most advanced fitting procedures on the most sophisticated technology available. Call today for a FREE consultation and 30-day satisfaction guaranteed trial on ALL purchases. Call us today! Special offers end on SEPT. 20th, 2016.

Healthy Hair Cells

Damaged Hair Cells

Are you among the 1 in 6 adults suffering from hearing loss?

Call now for a FREE hearing screening!

FREE Hearing screening includes:

Video Otoscopy and Hearing Screening

VIDEO OTOSCOPY

A video inspection of your ear canal. Your problem may just be wax.

BASELINE SCREENING

Find out which pitches and tones you are hearing and which you are missing and how that impacts your ability to understand words.

SPEECH UNDERSTANDING ASSESSMENT

See how well you are hearing and understanding conversations.

FAMILIAR VOICE TEST

Let’s make sure you can understand the voices most important to you. Bring a loved one to your appointment so we can check your hearing and understanding of his or her voice.

Expires: 9/20/16

©2013 AccuQuest Hearing Centers

CALL TOLL-FREE TODAY TO SCHEDULE YOUR APPOINTMENT

(815)

261-4680

(847)

841-9574

CRYSTAL LAKE 380 Terra Cotta Rd., Unit B

SOUTH ELGIN 460 Briargate Dr., #300

Audiology & Hearing Centers

LOOKE! INSID

PROMO CODE

www.accuquest.com

N-NWH-965-SP-C

Look inside for today’s Northwest Herald


Are you tired of

T? A H W

STRUGGLING

...to hear?

• Do you HEAR but NOT UNDERSTAND? • Do people tell you to TURN DOWN THE TV? • Do you TUNE OUT in restaurants and church? • Do you MISS what your GRANDCHILDREN say?

HUH?

If you answered “YES” to any of these questions - Take the FIRST STEP for yourself and join us for a FREE Hearing Screening and Video Otoscopy!

AUTUMN HEARING EVENT!

SEPT. 14 th - SEPT. 20 th By Appointment Only

vv SEPT.

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

2W

WEDNESDAY

14

THURSDAY

15

FRIDAY

MONDAY

16

19

• Analysis of Hearing Lifestyle • Hearing Screening & Video Otoscopy • Product Demonstrations of the Latest in Technology

TUESDAY

20

Nearly invisible hearing devices starting at

Only

Interest for 18 Months

$499

ea.

With Video Otoscopy you see what we see!

CALL TOLL-FREE TODAY TO SCHEDULE YOUR APPOINTMENT

(815) 261-4680

CRYSTAL LAKE 380 Terra Cotta Rd., Unit B

(847) 841-9574

SOUTH ELGIN 460 Briargate Dr., #300

www.accuquest.com

PROMO CODE

N-NWH-965-SP-C


Introducing the... QLeaf Lite™:

A VIRTUALLY INVISIBLE HEARING DEVICE.

©2014 AccuQuest Hearing Centers

For mild amplification in special situations.

The QLeaf Lite™ is a personal sound amplifier that fits comfortably in the ear canal. The QLeaf Lite™ is not a custom-molded hearing aid. Not all ears will accommodate the QLeaf Lite™. Invisibility is based on ear anatomy.

$ ONLY Y

499

EA

Call to schedule your appointment today!

CALL TOLL-FREE TODAY TO SCHEDULE YOUR APPOINTMENT

A FREE HEARING SCREENING will show if you are a candidate for the QLeaf Lite™

(815 ) 261-4680

CRYSTAL LAKE 380 Terra Cotta Rd., Unit B

(847 ) 841-9574

SOUTH ELGIN 460 Briargate Dr., #300

Over 190 convenient locations nationwide • Visit us at www.accuquest.com

PROMO CODE N-NWH-965-SP-C

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

HEAR BETTER FOR LESS!

3W


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Tuesday, September 13, 2016

4W

WANTED 107 PEOPLE WITH HEARING LOSS Qualified Participants Needed for Technology Field Test

During this limited time event, we are looking for people like you, who may be experiencing varying levels of hearing loss, including tinnitus, to evaluate a remarkable new line of digital hearing instruments that could be the solution to your difficulties. Call us toll free today to see if you qualify for this Field Test. Potential candidates will receive a FREE hearing screening (including Video Otoscopy) to determine candidacy. Qualified participants will receive a FREE in-office demonstration, and the opportunity to evaluate the latest technology for 30 days at drastically reduced rates. A full refund* is available at the end of the test period if you feel your test instruments do not improve your hearing. A wide range of models are available in this new technology, including the Invisible-In-Canal (IIC) featured here with breakthrough HD Speech Focus Processing™ technology. The custom-fit, Invisible-In-Canal (IIC) hearing aid rests comfortably in the second bend of your ear canal. This allows it to use the ear’s natural acoustics and anatomy to deliver more precise, natural sound – AND it is completely undetectable to the outside world! Unlike extendedwear, deep-insertion aids, the IIC can be removed and reinserted daily to promote optimal hearing health.

©2013 AccuQuest Hearing Centers

CANDIDATES ARE NOW BEING SELECTED!

WN The selection process for this test NE IO S SES period will end SEPT. 23 rd, 2016.

CALL TOLL-FREE TO SCHEDULE YOUR APPOINTMENT

(815 ) 261-4680

CRYSTAL LAKE 380 Terra Cotta Rd., Unit B

(847 ) 841-9574

SOUTH ELGIN 460 Briargate Dr., #300 *Full refund of security deposit. Depending on level of customization necessary, fitting/ restocking fees may still apply. Benefits of hearing instruments vary by type and degree of hearing loss, noise in the environment, accuracy of hearing test, and proper fit.

Over 190 convenient locations nationwide • Visit us at www.accuquest.com

PROMO CODE N-NWH-965-SP-C


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.