Woodstock Independent 8/26/2020

Page 1

The

Woodstock

I NDEPENDENT

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

Published every Wednesday | Est. 1987 | Serving Woodstock, Wonder Lake and Bull Valley, Ill. | www.thewoodstockindependent.com | $1.50

SECOND OF TWO PARTS McHenry County Opioids Update

Help coming for students in eLearning

D-200 small groups will meet for lessons

COMMUNITY

By Larry Lough

Counseling service helps with financial struggles since 1982

LARRY@THE WOODSTOCKINDEPENDENT.COM

PAGE 15

A&E

INDEPENDENT PHOTO BY TRICIA CARZOLI

C.C. and Hannah pause while making dinner for their fellow Lincoln Home residents. Making dinner and doing house chores help residents learn to care for themselves for when they will be on their own.

Creative Living series having to get creative in pandemic

PUBLIC NOTICE

PAGE 12

Land assessment changes reported by Dorr Township

PAGE 25

INDEX

Obituaries

4

Opinion

6

Schools

9

A&E

12

Marketplace

13

Community

15

Calendar

20

Classified

22

Puzzles

24

Public Notices

25

Sports

34

The Woodstock Independent

671 E. Calhoun St., Woodstock, IL 60098 Phone: 815-338-8040 Fax: 815-338-8177 Thewoodstock independent.com

Learning to live without addiction Sober living house rebuilds lives

By Susan W. Murray

NEWS@THE WOODSTOCKINDEPENDENT.COM

As reported last week in The Woodstock Independent, McHenry County had 21 overdose deaths in the first seven months of this year – the lowest number for the January-to-July period in five years, counter to the national trend of rising overdoses during the coronavirus pandemic. But while the decreasing number of overdoses is good news, even better news comes in the stories of people who, with the help available in the county, are learning a new life without drugs or alcohol. Sober living homes provide people who have completed alcohol or drug rehabilitation a structured environment in which to recover and transition back to normal life. New Directions runs three sober living houses in the county, with a total of 26 beds. The Independent recently visited the Lincoln Home for women in

recovery.

A recovered home

When New Directions bought the 1910 home just a few blocks west of downtown Crystal Lake, the listing advertised it as “not a fixer-upper for a normal handyman.” It seemed to be “a solid house,” the listing continued, that needed “just about everything.” That’s an apt metaphor for what a sober house does – taking the hand of someone who has completed drug or alcohol rehabilitation and teaching them skills, instilling accountability, and building confidence to restore that person’s solid structure. The home was “taken down to the studs,” said house manager Virginia S., age 55, whom the four current residents affectionately refer to as “Virg.” Lincoln Home opened in January 2018 – not without opposition from the neighbors, Virginia said. But as time has gone on, the restored See RECOVERY, Page 2

Extra teaching support is expected to begin Monday for atrisk students who might have problems with the remote learning plan Woodstock School District 200 is using to start the school year. Classes for the fall semester began last week with no in-school instruction because of COVID-19 precautions, but the D-200 Board of Education has approved an administrative plan that includes small group meetings to help student who might struggle with athome learning. Superintendent Mike Moan told the board he hoped the support plan would be launched Aug. 31, See SCHOOLS, Page 3

INDEPENDENT PHOTO BY TRICIA CARZOLI

St. Mary sixth-grader Bailey Keller has her temperature checked before entering the building on the first day of school last Thursday. Back-toschool story is on Page 9.


NEWS

Aug. 26-Sept.1, 2020

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

2

Public to get debt survey in September By Larry Lough

LARRY@THE WOODSTOCKINDEPENDENT.COM

“After Labor Day” is the target for releasing a survey to gauge public opinion on options to pay off the $160 million bond debt of Woodstock School District 200. The Board of Education last week approved the five-question survey on how the district should deal with the bond debt that dates to new school construction in 2006-08. Superintendent Mike Moan said the public would have about three weeks to respond before board members review the results Oct. 6.

The board must act by March if it wants to avoid five or six years of significant property tax increases. Other options available to the board include: n Use some or all of the $28 million in cash reserve and extend the payoff by three to eight years; additional interest could increase the final payout by tens of millions of dollars. n Cut “dozens of teachers and support staff,” increase class sizes, and eliminate “numerous” programs. n Combine those varied options. Moan said the survey, which will be available in English and Spanish, would be offered on various websites and social media platforms. It will

come with a two-minute video that explains the history of the debt and the board’s options.

New house for sale

In other action at its Aug. 18 meeting, the board adopted a resolution to sell a house at 1401 Sandpiper Lane that was built by students in the high school building trades program. Bids on the three-bedroom, twobath house with 1,650 square feet and a full basement will be opened at 10 a.m. Monday, Sept. 21. Bids will be sought through a public notice in The Independent today and for the next two weeks.

RECOVERY

Continued from page 1

house and its recovering residents have become part of the neighborhood. The man who lives next door mows the property’s large yard with his lawn tractor, and a woman who lives down the street invited the residents and some of the neighbors to a cookout so everyone could get to know one another. To live in the home, residents must stay sober, pay rent, get a job, open a bank account, obey curfew, attend regular recovery meetings, and pitch in with cooking dinner and house chores. “I love the rules,” Hannah C. said. “I need stability in my life.” Hannah, who is 26, said her addiction began with alcohol, then methadone. “I used drugs every day for six or seven years,” she said. During addiction, she could not hold a job and was raped twice. After two one-month stays in rehab, she relapsed both times. She came to Lincoln Home after three months in the Northern Illinois Recovery Center. Although they come from different backgrounds and misused different substances, all residents agree that a 28-day rehab stint, as romanticized in the Sandra Bullock movie “28 Days,” is not enough for a successful recovery. “Twenty-eight days gets the drugs out of your system,” said Casey M., 25, “but you have no skills.” Before going to a sober living house, “you need 90 to 180 days in rehab,” Virginia said.

The last straw

Bed bugs drove Casey to rehab. Casey’s drug-of-choice was alcohol, along with “a little of everything else.” She and her boyfriend of seven years became homeless and took refuge on a friend’s couch. Horrified to wake

INDEPENDENT PHOTO BY TRICIA CARZOLI

Sitting down to a dinner of pasta, salad, and garlic bread, (from left) C.C., Virginia, Rachel, Hannah, and Casey share a meal that Hannah prepared with help from C.C. Hannah’s mother dropped off the fruit salad while visiting. After dinner, everyone attends a recovery meeting. up covered with bed bug bites, Casey called her mother, who said she would pick up Casey if she would go into rehab. She entered Timberline House in Lemont and then completed treatment at the Northern Illinois Recovery Center. After three months, she became a resident at the Lincoln Home, where she is learning to deal with life’s curveballs. “I couldn’t go through challenges without Virg,” Casey said. Virginia relishes the role. “I am proud to live in the sober house and help these girls,” Virginia said. While her title is house manager, Virginia functions more as a house mother. Her own troubles began with opiates after a difficult C-section with the second of her four children. The problems intensified with an ensuing 21-day migraine, a later broken tailbone, and a difficult divorce. She used opiates off-and-on for 10 years, followed by two decades of

constant use. During the final four months, she became a heroin user. Neighbors who lived next to the townhome she shared with a roommate called police about suspicious activity. Police raided the townhome, and Virginia was taken to jail – something she calls “a blessing in disguise.” Substance-free since May 2018, she enforces the rules, provides the sympathetic ear, and dispenses “Mom” advice. “You can’t order fast food for the rest of your life,” she reminds the young women who are tasked with making dinner.

Time to heal

Generally, residents stay for six to 18 months, Virginia said, but a longer stay is possible. Christine C., who goes by C.C., is 52 years old and will have been at Lincoln Home for two years this coming November, after 35 years of addiction to alcohol and drugs. A stint in rehab when she was in her

DISTRICT 200 PHOTO

This custom kitchen is part of a house built by building trades students in Woodstock School District 200. The ranch home at 1401 Sandpiper Lane is the 42nd house to be built by the program. Bids on the 1,650-square-foot house will be opened Sept. 21.

20s and one when she was in her 40s did not work, she said, because “I was doing it for everyone else.” But then things got much worse. “I almost died twice,” C.C. said. Determined to survive, she found herself on a month-long waiting list to get into a rehab center. While waiting, “I went to five meetings a day so I wouldn’t relapse,” C.C. said. In addition to working on her recovery, C.C. had to get her body back to health and have extensive dental work done. “AA and New Directions saved my life,” C.C. said.

Daring to dream

Rachel B., age 26, agreed to enter rehab after her father drove up behind the car she and her boyfriend were in while they were “wasted.” She received suboxone treatment for her heroin addiction before coming to the Lincoln Home. Now working at a fast food restaurant, she wants to find a good job that pays well so she can realize her dreams of traveling and supporting herself as a yoga instructor. Daring to dream again is one sign of recovery. Virginia wants to spend time with her children and grandchildren, while “OK, sober, and happy.” Hannah, who has worked her way up to a full-time job in one of the big box stores, wants to marry and have children. Casey, an employee at a home goods store, hopes to graduate from cosmetology school. C.C., who prepares breakfast and lunch at a gas station convenience store, would like “to find that good job, save money, have my own place, replace my car, and help people.” All five of the women share C.C.’s foremost desire: “to learn how to live without alcohol and drugs – contentedly.”


Busing provided

In anticipation that state-approved cannabis businesses will eventually come to town, Woodstock continues to tweak its ordinance regulating dispensaries and growers. The City Council last week amended city code to put a limit of two dispensaries within city limits and to reduce the minimum distance to 500 feet (it had been 1,000) between a dispensary and a school or day care. A limit of two growers was repealed (the city already has approved special use zoning permits for three proposals). And growers may not be within 2,500 feet of a school, park, or residential area, but that may be waived in conditions of a special use permit. In fact, that has been waived in the proposals the council has already approved. During a 37-minute meeting last week – and with no discussion – the council also extended for the second time – this time indefinitely – suspension of the city’s 10-cent fee on single-use bags at large retailers. After enacting the fee Jan. 1, the council suspended it in March

Woodstock

Report Infections

03/29 04/05 04/12 04/19 04/26 05/03 05/10 05/17 05/24 05/31 06/07 06/14 06/21 06/28 07/05 07/12 07/19 07/26 08/02 08/09 08/16 08/23

52 133 (+81) 234 (+101) 348 (+114) 503 (+155) 703 (+200) 953 (+250) 1,175 (+223) 1,407 (+232) 1,584 (+177) 1,733 (+149) 1,849 (+116) 1,911 (+62) 2,002 (+91) 2,119 (+117) 2,268 (+149) 2,470 (+202) 2,703 (+233) 2,946 (+243) 3,210 (+264) 3,396 (+186) 3.598 (+202)

Deaths

2 3 (+1) 7 (+4) 16 (+9) 28 (+12) 39 (+11) 50 (+11) 61 (+11) 69 (+8) 73 (+4) 83 (+10) 87 (+4) 90 (+3) 96 (+6) 97 (+1) 101 (+4) 106 (+5) 108 (+2) 112 (+4) 113 (+1) 113 (+0) 113 (+0)

Does not include two “probable” deaths SOURCE: McHenry County Department of Health

when the state banned reusable bags among other restrictions during the coronavirus pandemic. The local fee will be reinstated only if the state ban is lifted.

11607 Catalpa Ln. • 815.337.0014 • by Anytime Fitness

McHenry

1778 N.Richmond Rd. • 815.385.6685 • by Stock + Field

McHenry

3822 Charles Miller Rd. • 815.578.1908 • by BP Gas

Island Lake

510 Auburn Dr • 847-487-2559 • by Dunkin Donuts

Lake Geneva 654 N.Edwards Blvd. • 262.248.3222 • by Target Beloit

2600 Branigan Rd. • 608.362.6220 • by Starbucks

3

NEWS

Some in-class time will address social-emotional needs for students who need a more “direct connection” than remote learning offers, Lyons said. Students in the Everybody Reads program, who were accustomed to daily meetings before the pandemic, will also get some in-school attention to help them develop their grade-level skills. D-200 will provide transportation to and from school for the groups. With so few students involved in the groups, Lyons said, “they can easily space the kids out” on the buses. The plan will be in place as long as remote learning is in place, which is indefinite at this point. “Everybody agrees it’s best to have students in school,” Lyons said, “but there are a lot of barriers to that.”

Council amends rules on cannabis businesses

WEEKLY COVID-19 CASES FOR McHENRY COUNTY

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

including more individual instruction in groups no larger than six students. “We’re exciting about getting the small groups in as soon as we can,” he said. Board members had asked for an adjustment to the school-wide eLearning program two weeks earlier when they decided not to offer in-class instruction as part of a hybrid plan of school options they had originally approved. The support plan includes not only academic support but also socialemotional support, especially for the transition of sixth-graders into middle school and ninth-graders into high school. “We really want to focus our energy there,” Moan said. Moan insisted the small groups would follow state-required protocols for safety, including temperature checks, masks, and social distancing, though some modification might be made to provide face shields for students who are unable to wear masks. “But no face covering at all?” Moan said “We can’t.” Although some details of the support plan were still being developed last week – and are likely to be adjusted once the program is underway

IN BRIEF

offer good at the following locations:

Continued from Page 1

– at-risk groups will meet in person with a teacher or social worker “at least weekly, in some cases more,” according to Kevin Lyons, communications director for D-200. So, targeted groups such as life skills students will get some in-person attention for lessons that don’t work well remotely, such as speech therapy. “A lot of these [groups] are based on conversations with parents,” Lyons explained. “[Asking them], What are your needs?”

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

SCHOOLS


NEWS

Aug. 26-Sept.1, 2020

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

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OBITUARIES

Richard C. Boehmke, 83

Rohard C. Boehmke, born Feb. 6, 1937, in Belvidere, Ill., to William and Mary (Pfannenstill) Boehmke, passed away on Aug. 15, 2020, at home with his family. He lived in Crystal Lake, Ill., until his marriage to Betty (Hansman) Boehmke on Feb. 23, 1957, at Grace Lutheran Church, Woodstock. Dick worked at Union Special Corp. in Huntley for 38 years as a tool designer, and he taught more than 80 young men to be toolmakers. He loved to share his carpentry, electrical, and a myriad of other skills with anyone who wanted to learn. Dick was a dedicated member of Grace Lutheran Church, serving two terms on the Church Council and was always on a committee. After his retirement, he became a devoted volunteer with the Woodstock Food Pantry, Meals on Wheels, and Faith in Action (now Senior Services). He is survived by his wife, Betty; children, Susan (Glenn) Wayman and Philip Boehmke; his brother, Thomas Boehmke; his grandchildren, John (Laura) Wayman, Laura (Bill) Stanton Jr., Sarah (Kyle) Ewert, and Ryan (Allison) Wayman; his greatgrandchildren, Annabelle, Ellabelle, Leah, and Shayla Wayman and Shayla Stanton, Luke and Emma Wayman; sister-nlaw, Judy Hansman; and many nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents; his beloved father-in-law, Armond Hansman; and his sister, Maxine; brothersin-law, Ronald and Roger Hansman; and sister-n-law, Jackie Boehmke. His family would like to thank JourneyCare for their assistance and understanding care. Visitation will be from 4 to 6 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2020, at Schneider, Leucht, Merwin & Cooney Funeral Home, 1211 N. Seminary Ave,, Woodstock, Ill. His memorial service will be private due to COVID-19 limitations. Memorials may be made to Grace Lutheran Church, Woodstock, Woodstock Food Pantry, or a charity or your choosing. For information, contact the Schneider, Leucht, Merwin & Cooney Funeral Home,

PUBLIC SAFETY LOG Woodstock Police Department

■ Male juvenile, 17, Wonder Lake, was arrested Aug. 11 in the 100 block of South Eastwood Drive on charges of possession of cannabis by driver and illegal transportation of alcoholic liquor. Released to parent. Court date Sept. 18. ■ Jamaine P. Craft, 36, Chicago, was arrested Aug. 12 in the 300 block of Short Street on a charge of battery. Bond $100. Released with notice to appear. Court date Sept. 25.

815-338-1710, or visit slmcfh.com.

Pat Gilman-Frisch, 91

Services were held Aug. 17 for Pat Gilman-Frisch, 91, whose real estate company, Pat-Ex Properties, developed Victorian Village condominiums and Victorian Country housing project in Woodstock. During her career from the 1970s to 1990s, she also built Justice Hill subdivision among other developments in McHenry County. Burial was at Linn-Hebron Cemetery.

Richard Bruce (R.B.) McCallister, 73 Richard Bruce (R.B.) McCallister was born in Portsmouth, Ohio, on Nov. 8, 1946, to Richard Basil and Mary Louise (Newman) McCallister. He passed away on Thursday, Aug. 13, 2020. An accomplished Eagle Scout and recipient of the Boy Scout’s Order of the Arrow commendation, he lived by the Boy Scout principles. His sense of adventure was piqued at an early age when he and two other Scouts undertook a long trek down the Ohio River ... in a canoe! A harrowing feat on a major waterway. In his teens, a move from McDermott, Ohio, to Satellite Beach, Fla., introduced Bruce to the world of the space coast life and surfing. There, he became a secret document carrier for the space missions. He would fly to various bases around the world, handcuffed to a briefcase, with an entourage of security that would ensure he delivered the documents to the assigned base. His white blond hair led to his nickname, “Whitey.” In 1969, he was drafted into the U.S. Army. Being a sole surviving son, he was kept stateside in Colorado Springs and eventually segued into college, where he earned his doctor’s assistant degree in radiology. A short stint working for a team of traveling doctors led him to realize that his passion was in the arts. He pursued that passion at Adams State College in Colorado, where he taught jewelry smithing and

■ Sarah L. Kalbach, 22, Woodstock, was arrested Aug. 12 in the 3700 block of Doty Road on charges of possession of controlled substance, possession of drug paraphernalia, possession of hypodermic needles, and a Lake County warrant charging failure to appear. Taken to jail. Bond $10,000. Court date to be set. ■ Jamaine P. Craft, 36, Chicago, was arrested Aug. 15 in the 300 block of South Eastwood Drive, on a charge of criminal trespass to motor vehicle. Bond $100. Released on personal recognizance. Court date Aug. 27.

photography. While teaching, he obtained his Master of Fine Arts in ceramics. From his love of ceramics, Clay & Co. was born, an artist’s shop and studio loved by Woodstock, Ill., locals and tourists featuring his functional pottery. R.B. transitioned to a career in real estate in the 1980s and loved the time he spent with clients finding each Richard Bruce their dream home McCallister or helping investors find good opportunities. In each of these careers, he touched so many lives and felt so fulfilled in helping others. In 2010, R.B. suffered a paralyzing illness. He was the ultimate fighter and continued to give everything he had toward his recovery for 10 years. In those years he accomplished much and remained fearless to any opportunity that came his way. While his athletic opportunities no longer included upland game hunting, surfing, scuba diving, and volleyball, he was able to water ski and snow ski with the help of organizations like Adaptive Adventures and continued to enjoy fly fishing with the help of dear friends. He also got back in the pottery studio and modified his way of throwing and hand-building pieces to fulfill his creative needs and make his heart happy. His inspiration will live on in those who had the pleasure of being in his company. As his father taught him, he would ask that you be kind to others no matter their stature in life, and to approach every interaction with the intention of making a new friend. R.B. is survived by his wife, Kim; a daughter, Shannon (Kevin) Kreeger; a son, Seth (Laura) McCallister; and two grandchildren, Kyle and Katey Kreeger. In memoriam donations can be made to Independence Health and Therapy (formerly Adult & Child Therapy), an organization that played a tremendous role in

■ Jamaine P. Craft, 36, was arrested Aug. 16 on charges of disorderly conduct, aggravated assault, and aggravated assault to a peace officer. Taken to jail. Bond and court date to be set

McHenry County Sheriff’s Office ■ Jodi A. Clewis, 43, Wonder Lake, was arrested Aug. 12 on a charge of criminal trespass of land. Charges are only accusations of crimes, and defendants are presumed innocent until proved guilty.

helping R.B. remain strong and reclaim some of his mobility over the years. A celebration of his life will be held at a later date. For information, contact the Schneider, Leucht, Merwin & Cooney Funeral Home, 815-338-1710, or visit slmcfh.com.

Elaine R. Passfield, 92

Elaine R. Passfield née Krich, age 92, of Woodstock, passed away on Tuesday, Aug. 18, 2020. Elaine was born on June 6, 1928, in Crystal Lake to George and Violet (Thomfohrda) Krich. She grew up on her parents’ dairy farm where she worked the fields, drove a tractor, milked the cows, tended to the animals, etc. She truly understood the value of a hard day’s work. On Feb. 22, 1958, she was united in marriage with Melvin Passfield in Woodstock. Together, they lived in Woodstock until Melvin retired. After Melvin retired, they lived in Ozark, Mo., for several years before returning to Woodstock to settle down. Elaine was a lover of all kinds of animals, and she cherished her two cats who were her pride and joy. Survivors include her loving husband of 62 years, Melvin; a nephew, Don Peterson; two sisters, Mariann (Larry) Sporleder and Phyllis Margraf; and two brothers, Elroy (Barbara) Krich and Harold (Carol) Krich; and many nieces and nephews, greatnieces and great-nephews. In addition to her parents, Elaine was preceded in death by three brothers, Marvin (Eleanor) Krich, Melvin (Gloria) Krich, and Donald Krich. A visitation was held on Saturday, Aug. 22, from 10 a.m. to noon at Justen Funeral Home & Crematory, 3700 Charles J. Miller Road, McHenry, IL 60050. The funeral service was at noon in the funeral home. Interment was in Woodland Cemetery, McHenry. For information, please call the funeral home at 815-385-2400, or visit justenfh. com, where friends may share memories with the family on Elaine’s tribute page.

Woodstock Fire/Rescue District EMS calls for Aug. 13-19: 61 Fire Runs Aug. 13

2:02 p.m. – 300 block of South Hayward Street, gas leak (natural or LP); truck Aug. 14

11:18 a.m. – 2400 block of Fairview Lane, dumpster/outside receptacle fire; engine, shift commander 11:54 a.m. – 1200 block of Wicker Street, smoke or odor removal; truck

Continued on Next page


Continued from Previous page

Aug. 15

11:52 a.m. – Kimball Avenue and Jefferson Street, traffic accident with no injuries; engine, ambulance, shift commander 12:29 p.m. – Eastwood Drive and Irving Avenue, traffic accident with no injuries; truck, ambulance, shift commander 4:39 p.m. – Brink Street/Marengo Road, assist police or other agency; ambulance Aug. 17

12:19 p.m. – 1200 block of Lake Avenue, unintentional transmission of alarm/other; engine 2:27 p.m. – 13300 block of Charles Road, traffic accident with injuries; engine, shift commander, ambulance 2:39 p.m. – 1400 block of Commons Drive, malfunctioning smoke detector activation; truck 4:12 p.m. – 800 block of Queen Anne Street, outside rubbish/trash/waste fire; truck, shift commander Aug. 18

4:52 p.m. – 2500 block of Harding Lane, unintentional transmission of alarm/other; truck 10:13 p.m. – 300 block of South Tryon Street, public service assistance/ other; engine, ambulance 10:43 p.m. – Douglas and Calhoun streets, smoke scare/odor of smoke; truck, shift commander

IN BRIEF

Libertarians fill vacancies on county’s Nov. 3 ballot Two McHenry County ballot vacancies have been filled by Libertarian candidates after the county’s Electoral Board voted 3-0 to deny objections to their petitions. The Nov. 3 ballot will include Libertarian candidates James “Jim” Young for county auditor and Kelly Liebmann for county coroner. No Democrats filed for those county offices. Republican candidates are incumbent Auditor Shannon Teresi and former County Board member Michael Rein for coroner.

Nov. 23 deadline for filing mayor, city council papers

Nomination petitions are now available for candidates for Woodstock mayor and City Council in the 2021 election. The consolidated primary election will be Feb. 23. Petitions for mayor and three atlarge seats on the council are available from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday in the city manager’s office at City Hall, 121 W. Calhoun St. They also may be picked up until 7 p.m. Tuesdays at the reception desk.

An election packet also may be emailed to candidates by calling Jane Howie at 815-338-4301. Petitions are due by 5 p.m. Monday, Nov. 23. They may be filed during business hours in the city manager’s office on Monday, Nov. 16, through Friday, Nov. 20, and the following Monday. For more information, call 815-338-4301.

Township offers petitions for eight elected positions

Candidate petitions for eight elected positions of Dorr Township government are due Monday, Nov. 23, for candidates of established political parties. Clerk Brenda E. Stack announced her office has petitions available at the township office, 1039 Lake Ave., for candidates running for the offices of supervisor, clerk, assessor, highway commissioner, and four members of the township board. Packets to qualify for the Feb. 23 primary election may be picked up from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Petitions must be filed at the office during regular business hours weekdays through Nov. 23. Information on filing of independent candidates will be announced later. All candidates must be residents of Dorr Township.

5

NEWS

12:50 a.m. – 200 block of Main Street, unintentional alarm system activation, no fire; shift commander, truck, ambulance 6:24 a.m. – 1200 block of Lake Avenue, system malfunction/other; engine 6:43 a.m. – 1500 block of McConnell Road, malfunctioning alarm system sounded; shift commander, engine, ambulance 6:45 a.m. – U.S. 14 and Doty Road, no incident found on arrival; truck, shift commander 6:59 a.m. – 11000 block of North U.S. 14, unintentional transmission of alarm/ other; shift commander 8:09 a.m. – 14800 block of Kishwaukee Valley Road, carbon monoxide detector activation, no CO; engine 10:32 a.m. – 15900 block of West South Street, no incident found on

Aug. 16

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

1:48 p.m. – 11600 block of Country Club Road, traffic accident with no injuries; truck, ambulance, shift commander 1:56 p.m. – 600 block of South Eastwood Drive, unintentional smoke detector activation, no fire; ambulance, engine 7:09 p.m. – 13100 block of Pleasant Valley Road, traffic accident with injuries; ambulance, shift commander, engine 8:38 p.m. – 300 block of Short Street, power line down; truck

arrival; engine

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

PUBLIC SAFETY LOG


OPINION

Aug. 26-Sept.1, 2020

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

6

Opinion

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

Cheryl Wormley Publisher, Co-Owner

Paul Wormley Co-Owner

Woodstock, IL • 1987

THE EDITORIAL BOARD

Cheryl Wormley Larry Lough Sandy Kucharski Ken Farver

Here comes your future, ready or not!

For all the misery it has brought, all the damage it has wrought, the coronavirus pandemic has offered us one gift: it has opened our eyes and our lives to the future, whether we’re ready for it or not. As we observed a couple of months ago, many Woodstock restaurants and retailers have rebalanced their business models to be less reliant on hosting customers and more focused on pickup and delivery of products, giving them flexibility as a hedge against such disruptions as a pandemic causes. Technology allows a different relationship with an increasing tech-comfortable customer, something food-delivery services in larger markets figured out some time ago. Now we see a similar opportunity to pivot in education as schools deal with remote learning options amid health concerns from the spread of COVID19 that have administrators wary of in-school instruction. The Board of Education was reminded of that last week by Eva Olson, the mother of two students in District 200 who, two weeks earlier, had urged the board (unsuccessfully) to allow her children and others the option of returning to school. In her return visit to the board’s in-person meeting, Olson encouraged the board to consider the possibilities of remote learning when the urgent concerns of the coronavirus pass. Think of the uses, she told the board, for allowing students to keep up with their classes if they’re forced to stay home with illness or injury. For that matter, even in the harshest northern Illinois winters, is there a reason D-200 should ever have to declare another “snow day”? We realize we’re not there yet, but the pandemic has helped us to realize better uses of the technical possibilities for teaching and learning. While educators rightfully insist that being in school is important for not just the education but the social-emotional

Honey?

My class is more receptive to my lessons when they come from Mr. Whiskers. Go figure. EDITORIAL CARTOON BY LUKE GOINS

health of young people, that doesn’t mean sitting in a classroom for hours is best for every student in every class every day. Why not a tailored approach that addresses the need, strengths, and weaknesses of each student? As schools have discovered while relying on remote-learning to start this most unusual academic

year, the process is still totally dependent on technical matters of internet accessibility, as well as adequate equipment in the home of every student. But those are relatively easy to fix. We would have been there eventually, but the pandemic created the urgent necessity to do things differently.

» GUEST COLUMN

If our flag could talk, what a story to tell I started out as some material, oh, you know, not just any cloth but fibers with real color. Big and bold, different from all those European flags. Yes, it was important to our young collection of so-called colonies, because we were not yet a free nation. Required to pay rising taxes, without representation, to a monarch half a world away ultimately gave reason to rebel and fight for our freedoms being denied. So back to my story about my beginning.

The hands of a seamstress by the name of Betsy Ross did weave and sew as she coordinated 13 horizontal stripes, bold ones, with colors of red and white stream- Kenneth ing across my face. Stoklosa And as lights from Guest Columnist the heavens, this

woman made a unifying circle of stars for those 13 original colonies hugging the East Coast of America. Once completed, the flag of those colonies went to war as it was waved by patriots who took on and defeated the most powerful army of the world. Alas, the price of attaining that moment of declared independence 244 years ago had to be paid, and it was soon thereafter. From those 18th century beginnings to the present 21st

century, I was carried by many people. People who left their homes and families to fight in a savage civil war upon the American soil, to the battlefields of Europe and Asia. Being a flag of bold colors, held high during those conflicts, I took my share of abuse. Yes, I was shot-at, burned, ripped, desecrated under foot, denied, and spat upon. However, those attacks are only

Continued on Next page


For more than 20 years, John Daab wrote his On the Town column for this newspaper. It started as tips on entertainment opportunities in Woodstock and became much more. On the Town, always a fun read, won awards in Illinois Press Association and Northern Illinois Newspaper contests. Several months ago, John’s wife, Kathleen “Kathy” Spaltro, emailed asking permission to compile some of John’s columns into a book. Permission granted: Kathy went to work. I think she wrote the Amazon promo for John’s “Vultures and Other Friends,” because it is so right on. It reads, “[On the Town] turned into a personal-essay column in which he discussed pets, flat-earthers, the chore of cleaning the fridge, his preference for manual typewriters, his passion for Italy, his memories of growing up in the Fifties and going to college in the Sixties, and any other topic that caught Continued from Previous page

part of my story. The other part of my story is also woven into the dark times of history with moments of light. Moments that defined infamy, with virtues pouring forth human courage, honor, dignity, and vision as only the selfless and unvanquished human spirit could endeavor. Yes, those people, those American people, watched their sons and daughters pay the ultimate sacrifice for causes that threatened the free world. Today the voices and times of generations past are silent. Replaced by memorials, songs, old photos and letters, and row upon row of decorated headstones of fallen heroes. I have been stretched-out over coffins,

under the tomatoes. More tomatoes were munched. He fenced. More were eaten. We dumped coffee grounds on top of the mothballs, after I read chipmunks were averse to coffee. More half-eaten tomatoes.

Chipmunks

Green tomatoes

Cheryl Wormley

Chipmunks are back in full force. Declarations I had been calling them ground squirrels, but an internet search revealed the varmints that are back in my yard and garden are chipmunks. Chipmunks have stripes on their faces as well as their backs. Ground squirrels have stripes on their backs, but no stripes on their faces. Ground squirrels also have longer tails, but who can measure when they are darting across the lawn in search of the next almost ripe tomato. I watched with great joy the growth of our tomato plants this summer. It’s been part of my COVID-19 entertainment. When the plants were still quite small, they survived a deer’s munching. They grew tall, blossomed, and put on fruit. The fruit grew from tiny green orbs, like marbles, to baseball size and larger. A few began to “turn pink.” I could almost taste the first bacon, lettuce, and tomato sandwich. But pink is just right for chipmunks. In one day, they dined on three – eating about half of each one. It was as if they were taunting me. “Eat half, and she’ll really fume.” My husband offered aid. We heard mothballs were a chipmunk deterrent. Jim bought a box and filled every hole he found in the yard and sprinkled mothballs liberally on the ground

I’m quite adept at making lemonade and lemon meringue pie when I’ve been given lemons. Since the chipmunks seemed to prefer pink tomatoes, I’d find ways to eat green ones. Our first green tomato dish was, you guessed it, fried green tomatoes. Our second was green tomato and avocado salad. The firmness and acidity of the green tomato mixed well with avocado and lettuce. A bit of lime juice was a fitting addition. I found that recipe and one for green tomato and black bean tostadas online. For the tostadas, the green tomatoes were sliced and grilled. Lime juice, cilantro, arugula, and grated Monterey jack cheese completed the tostadas. Delicious. There are recipes for green tomato bread, green tomato cake, green tomato pie, green tomato salsa and on and on. I couldn’t help but wonder what motivated the development of all those recipes. Was it creativity, an abundance of fruit at the end of the season, or chipmunks? Three recommendations this week: watch for wildlife, order “Vultures and Other Friends,” and try green tomatoes. Cheryl Wormley is publisher of The Woodstock Independent. Her email address is c.wormley@thewoodstockindependent.com

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raised in honor across this nation, carried into the bowels of a disappearing World Trade Center, carried by Freedom Fighters throughout the South, and placed on the laps of mothers and fathers absorbing their tears for lovedones in silent remembrance of generations past. Today, some people in this country choose not to stand as I am raised over arenas, stadiums, parks and memorials. But they are not the first. Oh, yes, I took a knee as well: knocked down by King George and the British, knocked down at Pearl Harbor, knocked down in Selma, Ala., knocked down by Watergate, knocked-down by deadly viruses, and scorned by enemies seeking our demise. But as I began so long ago in those

early days of our country under the guiding hand of a seamstress who offered-up a bold and bright material for Americans, today I enshrine 50 stars against a blue background like the evening sky. Well, that is my story. Complete with shouts of joy, hate, pain, and love. Yes, I have had my share of faults, but I have tried and will continue to try to get better. And as I learn and mend flying over this country, known as America, I recall those words I have heard from generations past: “one nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.” Kenneth Stoklosa is a retired banker who has lived in Woodstock since 1989.

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OPINION

Vultures

his fancy.” “Vultures and Other Friends” is available in paperback or for Kindle on Amazon. My copy is ordered.

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7

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

Swans were the start of my animal-and-vegetable week. Last Monday afternoon as I was driving north on Route 47, I spotted something white on the pond just beyond Northwood Middle School. I’m used to seeing Canada geese or ducks or both on the pond, but they aren’t white. I looked again and saw the artful arching of a long, thin, white neck – had to be a swan – and I had to have another look. A detour through the Presbyterian Church parking lot put me back on Route 47 heading south. Hazard lights blinking, I pulled off the road. Yes, swans! I counted maybe six or seven. “Seven swans a swimming,” in Woodstock. Why? Would they stay? Unanswered questions. Hoping to learn more.

Woodstock

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

Swans, chipmunks, vultures, tomatoes

The

I NDEPENDENT


SCHOOLS Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

8


Schools

9

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

While D-200 classes go online, private schools go in-person By Tricia Carzoli

NEWS@THEWOODSTOCKINDEPENDENT.COM

SCHOOLS

Students at schools in Woodstock began school last week, but their days looked very different. Marian Central Catholic High School began Monday with a full day of in-school instruction. In Woodstock School District 200, students began the week on a staggered schedule, with all classes fully remote. Grades six through 12 began Aug. 17, while kindergarten through fifth grade started two days later. On Aug. 20, St. Mary Catholic School started its hybrid school day: in-class instruction in the morning, then home for lunch and remote learning in the afternoon, though some students remained at school for the after-lunch session. “Despite anyone’s best intentions, the first week of classes in any school is always exciting, chaotic, and sometimes nerve-wracking,” Kevin Lyons, D-200’s director of communications, wrote in an email. “There’s always an adjustment period. The difference this year is adding the remote start to the year compounded by parents feeling all of the anxiety right along with the rest of the staff and watching it in real time.” Superintendent Mike Moan said last week was different from the eLearning used the last several weeks of the past school year after coronavirus concerns closed Illinois classrooms. “The biggest change in our plan from spring to this fall is the dramatic increase in live instruction and live interaction among students and teachers,” Moan said in an email. “That was based on feedback we got from both parents and teachers, and we believe it’s going to improve this experience. It already has.” D-200’s elementary school students receive 300 minutes of live remote instruction a day, while middle and high school students tune in to 40 minutes of instruction per

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

Different schools, different approaches

INDEPENDENT PHOTOS BY TRICIA CARZOLI

Nine-year-old Layla Perrotta picks up a meal from Sharon Powers of the Woodstock School District 200 lunch program at Mary Endres Elementary School. Even with no in-school instruction, D-200 is offering breakfast and lunch, as it did last spring during remote learning. class/subject and continue to maintain an A/B schedule, with half of the classes rotating throughout the week. Technology issues caused some problems, according to D-200 technology director George Oslovich. The tech department handled 940 requests for assistance over the week as well as hundreds of phone calls. Elementary-level teachers tried to alleviate some technology glitches by connecting with families one-onone on Monday and Tuesday, according to Lyons. In an email, second-grade teacher Marti Frisbie of Prairiewood Elementary School said the days with family connection were “game changers.” She explained that parents and children had 15 minutes to talk with the teacher about what the day would look like and how it would be different from what they experienced in spring. She noted that they had adapted well to the changes – which involve mostly the increased instruction time.

Private schools in class

Marian and St. Mary began meeting in-person with guidance from the

Cleaning protocol ucts – are an impos – and prodschool instructio rtant part of inn tral Catholic High at Marian Cenare cleaned betw School. Rooms een classes. Diocese of Rockford and the McHenry County Health Department. St. Mary began on Thursday with parents in a line of cars waiting for their students to get a health assessment at the door, which included questions and a temperature check before they were led to their classrooms. Students were prepared for a half

day in-class learning and half day remote learning, with an option to remain in the building for remote learning. The drop-off process Thursday morning took roughly 35 minutes, but Principal Vince Sossong said Friday’s drop-off ran smoother with all students in the building in just 25 minutes. Inside the school, Sossong explained via email, signs on doors and stairways remind students of social distancing, mask wearing, and hand washing. Hallways are lined with arrows helping to guide students as they walk to and from class. Sossong noted students did well with wearing masks and needed only gentle reminders to maintain distance. He indicated that St. Mary had an influx of new students, but the school also lost several students for a variety of reasons – including finances, mask requirements, and a fear of committing in case the school needed to return to full eLearning. Currently, of the 160 students enrolled, less than 5 percent chose to stay at home. Please see SCHOOL Page 11


SCHOOLS

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

10

COLLEGE CURRENTS Local students named to dean’s list at Aurora U. Aurora University has named 14 local students to the dean’s list for the spring 2020 semester. The dean’s list recognizes full-time undergraduate students who have earned a 3.6 GPA or higher, with high honors for those who earned a perfect 4.0. High honors were accorded to Woodstock residents Karlie Bartlett, a junior studying social work; Jenna Czarnik, a junior in pre-social work; Elizabeth Dorantes de Inzunza, a senior in social work; Brian Flores, a freshman in business administration and Spanish; Courtnie Gabala, a junior student of nursing; Hanna Major, a junior studying psychology; Irene Vasquez, a freshman in pre-social work and Spanish; and Diana Zovkic, a sophomore art major. Other dean’s list recipients are Francesca Ventura of Wonder Lake, a junior majoring in marketing, communication and media; and Woodstock residents Sarah Drafall, a junior who is studying nursing; Maria Esquivel-Cervantes, a freshman in early child/special education; Julia Kranenburg, a senior in nursing; Angel Ortega, a sophomore in pre-social work; and Keyri Salmeron, a junior in presocial work.

The

Woodstock

Winona State University names locals to dean’s list Five local students have been named to the dean’s list for spring 2020 at Winona State University in Winona, Minn. They are: Wonder Lake: Jessica Dicker and Melissa Dicker Woodstock: Briana Baltes, Brooklyn Crowley, and Leah Dechant.

Heather Vosburgh makes Eastern Illinois dean’s list Heather Vosburgh has been named to the dean’s list for the spring 2020 semester in the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences at Eastern Illinois University in Charleston.

Local students named to UW-Milwaukee dean’s list Three students from Woodstock have been named to the dean’s list at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee for the spring 2020 semester. They are Abbigail Wember of Bull Valley, a student in the College of Letters and Science, and Woodstock residents

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Bella Biwer, who is studying in the School of Architecture and Urban Planning, and Jacob Oteman, a student in the College of Nursing.

Five local students on Missouri’s dean’s list The University of Missouri has named five students from Woodstock to the dean’s list for spring 2020. They are Andrew M. Adams, a sophomore in the College of Arts & Sciences; Michael R. Brown, a freshman studying business; Kathryn A. Ferguson, a senior; Madison E. Garrett, a senior nursing student; and Courtney Marie Richter, a sophomore studying journalism.

UW-Platteville names four locals to spring dean’s list Four local students have been named to the dean’s list at the University of Wisconsin-Platteville for the spring 2020 semester. They are Dominic Amettis and Garrett Gillund, both of Wonder Lake and studying industrial technology management; Joseph Budmayr of Woodstock, a business administration major, and Zachary

Emricson of Woodstock, who is studying industrial engineering.

Paxson Dechant earns Purdue dean’s list honor Woodstock High School graduate Paxson Dechant was named to the dean’s list and received semester honors for the 2019-20 academic year by the Davidson School of Chemical Engineering at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind. He is a 2017 graduate of WHS.

Three locals on dean’s list at Illinois Wesleyan U. Three students from Woodstock have been named to the dean’s list for spring semester 2020 at Illinois Wesleyan University in Bloomington. They are Olivia Croner, a senior majoring in nursing, Kathleen Holub, a senior majoring in music education; and Jake Potthoff, a sophomore majoring in health promotion and fitness management. To qualify for the dean’s list, a student must earn a GPA of 3.50 or better during the semester, based on 4.0 for straight A’s.


Molly Dougherty of Woodstock was among nearly 8,500 students who received degrees from the University of Wisconsin-Madison during an online commencement ceremony on May 9. She received a Bachelor of Science degree in elementary education from the School of Education.

Amy Herff of Woodstock, a freshman attending the University of WisconsinOshkosh, qualified for the honor roll with a GPA of at least 3.3 on a 4.0 scale.

Heather Quiroga earns nursing degree in Utah

Overall, Sossong said in an email, “the teachers were just so excited to be back doing what they were called to do.” “All the extra planning and prep allowed for a great day,” he said. “The joy, peace, and excitement we got to see in our students and family made all the extra work worth it.”

New students register

Marian Central Catholic High School has seen an increase in enrollment over the summer. Marian Principal Debra Novy said the school received several inquiries during the week D-200 announced it would begin the school year with fully remote classes. “In August alone,” Novy said, “we have 11 new students registered. “We realize that school is more than academics,” she continued. “It is relational, spiritual and physical. Our students want to be here – and we know it is important.” The school already was planning to lengthen the school day this year, before COVID-19 concerns. An advisory period was scheduled after the first hour, but with the pandemic, the administration chose to use that

11

INDEPENDENT PHOTO BY TRICIA CARZOLI

Hallways at Marian Central Catholic High School display hard-tomiss social distancing reminders.

situation, but are adapting with such grace and respect for each other,” Novy said. “I’m just so proud of them.” The morning check-in has also brought some unexpected benefits. “It is really a pleasure to see everyone [face-to-face] every morning,” Novy said. “It sets the tone for the day, and that has been really wonderful to experience.”

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SCHOOLS

Heather Quiroga of Woodstock received a Bachelor of Science in nursing from Western Governors University in Salt Lake City, Utah. The online, nonprofit university has graduated more than 190,000 students from across the country since its inception in 1997. Since April 1, WGU has recognized 7,734 undergraduate and 5,254 graduate degree recipients.

Continued from Page 9

time to increase and space out passing periods and increase instruction time. When students arrive between 7:30 and 7:55 a.m., they must go directly to their first-hour class. Novy said arrival went smoothly the first week. Marian students must enter through one of two doors. When they approach the door, they are asked questions about their health, then they follow the clearly marked lanes to have their temperature checked at one of three stations. “It is almost as if they never stop walking,” Novy said. “It is seamless.” Noting the smaller size of the school’s student body allowed more social distancing, Novy indicated students had been wearing masks and adhering to social distancing protocol. Of the school’s 434 enrolled students, 7 percent have chosen to learn remotely for the semester, she reported. Throughout the day, those students follow all their classes online with Zoom, along with their peers. The lost interaction is made up for with teachers checking with the eLearners for comprehension of lessons. “Students and staff alike are recognizing that this is not a normal

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

Herff named to honor roll at Wisconsin-Oshkosh

SCHOOL

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

COLLEGE CURRENTS Molly Dougherty earns degree at UW-Madison


ARTS & ENTERTAIINMENT

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

12

A&E

Front row for everyone

Creative Living begins with webinar, crossed fingers for spring By Susan W. Murray

from home. The webinar is “an opportunity to have people [attend] from anywhere in the world,” Prindiville said. To expand the audience, WFAA has embarked upon an ambitious publicity campaign. Beyond outreach to season-ticket holders, WFAA is promoting Gray’s talk on Facebook and Twitter and through social media sharing with articles on Katherine Gray, the “Blown Away” show, and a host of arts groups, such as the Glass Arts Society.

NEWS@THEWOODSTOCKINDEPENDENT.COM

Because of the 50-person limit on indoor theater seating, the 57th season of the Woodstock Fine Arts Association’s Creative Living Series will kick off in a much different way on Sept. 17 – with a live webinar. Katherine Gray, whose award-winning work has been featured in solo exhibitions at the Toledo Museum of Art and the Heller Gallery of New York City, will speak on the relevance of glass in her art and relate her adventures as “resident evaluator” on “Blown Away,” the competitive reality series on glassblowing produced by Netflix. Gray’s appearance is made possible, in part, by a grant from the Illinois Arts Council Agency and an award from the National Endowment for the Arts.

Hoping for spring shows

With a webinar, everyone gets a front-row seat.” - WFAA President Mary Ellen Prindiville The Illinois stay-at-home order resulted in cancellation of Gray’s talk – titled “After, Words” – that had been scheduled to close the 2019-2020 Creative Living series in April. Having 50 people in the theater “is not viable,” said WFAA President Mary Ellen Prindiville, co-chairwoman of the series. Subscriptions to the Creative Living Series not only pay for speakers but support the organization’s philanthropic activities. This past spring, WFAA funded 10 scholarships of $1,000 each for McHenry County high school seniors active in the arts who planned to continue their education. WFAA also donates funds toward maintenance and renovation of the Woodstock Opera House. Last year, WFAA donated $14,000 to buy the Opera House’s large screen and projector. This year’s goal is to raise $5,000 for an acoustic tin ceiling in the community room of the historic building.

PHOTO PROVIDED

Glass artist Katherine Gray will give her talk, “After, Words,” as a webinar to begin the Creative Living Series on Sept. 17. The series, beginning its 57th year, is the longest-running lecture series in the country that is not hosted by a college or university.

Wider potential audience

While the door is shut on using the Opera House for Creative Living presentations, a webinar opens a window of opportunity for a much wider audience to view Gray’s talk. “These talks have an interest beyond us,” Prindiville said. Those who wish to hear Gray can buy a $20 ticket at bit.ly/ CreativeLiving2020.

Technical information on how to access the program from a computer, smartphone, or tablet will be provided with the e-ticket. Although it’s through technological pixie dust, Gray, who lives in California, will appear in front of the Opera House stage as the backdrop. Prindiville will also appear as host for the introduction and the question-and-answer period, using questions that viewers can type

Early in the summer, WFAA had hoped that Gray could appear at the Opera House live in October. Once the switch was made to a September webinar, the group decided to cancel the planned November presentation, ironically titled “The Power of Bad.” Science writer and contributing New York Times columnist John Tierney was set to discuss the book he co-authored, “The Power of Bad,” in which he argues that bad breaks and bad feelings create the most powerful incentives to become smarter and stronger. “We hope we can schedule him again,” Prindiville said. After evaluating the response to the September webinar and seeing where restrictions are, WFAA board members will determine the feasibility of hosting the scheduled January-through-April talks: Dawn Jackson Blatner’s “The New Healthy”; Jonathan Eig’s “Ali: A Life”; Anna Celenza’s “Celebrating Jazz”; and Joseph Luzzi’s “A Grand Tour of Italy.” Prindiville said season-ticket holders could rest assured that their seats are being held for them in anticipation of a return to the Opera House. While a Creative Living Series webinar was on no one’s horizon back in March, utilizing the technology comes with a side benefit. “With a webinar,” Prindiville said, “everyone gets a front-row seat.”


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Woodstock, was sold by Phillip Mazur, Mesa, Ariz., to Michael Maxcy, Woodstock, for $323,000. ■ Commercial building at 11601 Catalpa Lane, Woodstock, was sold by Midland State Bank, Bourbonnais, to SWRE Woodstock LLC, Dyer, Ind., for $650,000. ■ Residence at 1071 Greenwood Circle, Unit 3-A, Woodstock, was sold by Edward Otto Fraase, Woodstock, to Ralph E. and Kimberly B. Lewis, Elk Grove Village, for $110,000. ■ Residence at 1001 Jewett St., Woodstock, was sold by Suzanne McDonald, Woodstock, to Tyler M. Perkins, Woodstock, for $147,500. ■ Residence at 11011 Ayrshire Court, Woodstock, was sold by Hometown Ltd., Woodstock, to Joseph M. Langton, Woodstock, for $464,000. ■ Residence at 531 Leah Lane, 1C, Woodstock, was sold by The Wayne and Janice Hansen Revocable Trust, Huntley, to Kurt Kristmann, Woodstock, for $94,500. ■ Residence at 473 W. Jackson St., Woodstock, was sold by William S. Reynolds, Fort Myers, Fla., to Daniel K. Howe, Chicago, for $215,000.

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Valley, was sold by Chicago Title Land Trust Co., Chicago, to Michael Lynn and Kamila A. Hayden, Bull Valley, for $378,000. ■ Residence at 8804 Ramble Road, Wonder Lake, was sold by Property Tree LLC, Wonder Lake, to McKenzie Laurent, Wonder Lake, for $164,900. ■ Residence at 2742 Verdi Court, Woodstock, was sold by Jay D. Marsh, Libertyville, to Christian V. Mueller, Woodstock, for $200,000. ■ Residence at 1561 Ash Ave., Woodstock was sold by F. Philip Gardner, Cam Verde, Ariz., to Meredith Batterham, Woodstock, for $227,000. ■ Residence at 631 Silver Creek Road, Unit 5B, Woodstock, was sold by Justin Thrall, Woodstock, to Margaret A. White, Woodstock, for $137,000. ■ Residence at 412 Saint John’s Road, Woodstock, was sold by Fairway Brothers Properties LLC, Woodstock, to Thomas J. Volmer, Woodstock, for $95,000. ■ Residence at 360 S. Madison St., Woodstock, was sold by Sandra Woznicki, Woodstock, to Jane Zamudio, Woodstock, for $270,000. ■ Residence at 1280 Mitchell St., Woodstock, was sold by Maria Taydem, Knoxville, Tenn., to James Lynes and Arlene Lynes, Woodstock, for $252,500. ■ Residence at 839 Victoria Drive, Unit 839, Woodstock, was sold by The Terrance J. Adams Revocable Trust, Rolling Meadows, to Christina M. Spears, Woodstock, for $120,000. ■ Residence at 2456 Fairview Circle, Woodstock, was sold by D.R, Horton, Inc. - Midwest, Vernon Hills, to Phillip J. Taylor, Woodstock, for $326,000. ■ Residence at 158 Bloomfield Drive,

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

■ Residence at 811 Verdi Court, Woodstock, was sold by Dhiresh J. Maganlal, Arlington Heights, to Henry Naughton, Woodstock, for $256,500. ■ Residence at 9202 Evergreen Drive, Woodstock, was sold by Susan L. Berg, Ingleside, to John T. Buehler, Wonder Lake, for $165,000. ■ Residence at 760 Duvall Drive, Woodstock, was sold by Sarah N. Gardmer, Knoxville, Tenn., to Dennis R. McKay, Woodstock, for $220,000. ■ Residence at 431 Leah Lane, Unit 2C, Woodstock, was sold by Renee M. Pales, Eloy, Ariz., to Oksana and Volodymyr Chapliy, Woodstock, for $64,000. ■ Residence at 8917 Woody Trail, Wonder Lake, was sold by The Catherine A. Majercik Living Trust, McHenry, to Kyle Edward Caccamo, Wonder Lake, for $100,000. ■ Residence at 1261 Wood Drive, Woodstock, was sold by Christopher Wachewicz, Las Vegas, Nev., to Nelson Salva Jr., Woodstock, for $212,000. ■ Residence at 1249 Bunker St., Woodstock, was sold by The Joseph Michael Bottalla Declaration of Trust, Crystal Lake, to Saul Vega, Woodstock, for $194,000. ■ Residence at 1419 Bull Valley Drive, Woodstock, was sold by Joseph M. Langton, Woodstock, to Patrick Louise, Woodstock, for $460,000. ■ Residence at 2215 Applewood Lane, Woodstock, was sold by Sean David Scott, Woodstock, to Benjamin Simpson, West Dundee, for $205,000. ■ Residence at 9313 Bull Valley Road,

Woodstock, was sold by The Kenneth V. Fiske Trust, Bull Valley, to Mary S. Fawcett, Bull Valley, for $275,000. ■ Residence at 819 Bunker St., Woodstock, was sold by Roger Brand, Woodstock, to Jessica M. Jarling, Woodstock, for $149,999. ■ Residence at 14408 Jankowski Road, Woodstock, was sold by The Richard James Sylvester Living Trust, Burnside, Ky., to Heather D. Veller, Naperville, for $385,000. ■ Residence at 432 Pleasant St., Woodstock, was sold by Alvin Johnson, Wonder Lake, to Kevin M. Lundborg, Woodstock, for $89,990. ■ Residence at 317 S. Valley Hill Road, Bull Valley, was sold by Bank of America N.A., St. Louis, Mo., to Adam and Bridget Wedoff, Bull Valley, for $220,000. ■ Residence at 508 Burbank Ave., Woodstock, was sold by Karen J. Hampston, Woodstock, to Brennan Baker, Woodstock, for $125,500. ■ Residence at 800 Regina Court, Woodstock, was sold by the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Woodstock, to Jonathan Borre, Woodstock, for $86,200. ■ Residence at 1715 Woodside Drive, Woodstock, was sold by Dammyer Properties LLC, Poplar Grove, to Justin Kavanagh, Woodstock, for $136,500. ■ Residence at 324 W. South St., Woodstock, was sold by Stewart and Kristen Smith, Woodstock, to Jennifer M. Kohnke, Woodstock, for $142,000. ■ Vacant land, approximately .80 acres, at 1111 Galloway Drive, Woodstock, was sold by The Carolyn Goodman Trust, Woodstock, to Steven J. Baginski and Lisa M. Sciame, Woodstock, for $10,000. ■ Residence at 9020 Shadow Lane, Bull

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REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS


Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

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Community

15 THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

Financial counseling, assistance available with money struggles in time of pandemic

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

‘Our agency helps’ By Lydia LaGue

NEWS@THEWOODSTOCKINDEPENDENT.COM

Special COVID-19 help

Serving McHenry, Lake, and Kane counties, CCCS can be reached at the Woodstock office at 815-3385757 or by a toll-free number at 800-815-2227. “We will ask clients to send us some paperwork so we can look at their situation and then explain their options,” Jackowiak said. “We do anything involved with housing, such as pre-purchase counseling.

COMMUNITY

If financial difficulties leave you in a dark place, Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Northern Illinois might help to guide you out to the light. Founded in 1982, the accredited nonprofit offers a variety of resources and counseling services to anyone with debt or finance issues. Donna Jackowiak, the service’s program manager, explained that the church women behind the Clothing Closet in Woodstock saw people coming in with a need for help with their finances. Church Women United and the county’s Mental Health Board provided grants to start in March 1982, which included funds from Bersted Foundation of Illinois. With CCCS approved by the Council on Accreditation, all counselors are certified to help with any financial needs, including debt management, rental or mortgage assistance, bankruptcy counseling, and student loan assistance. There are no limits or requirements to be eligible for services, and most are free of charge to the client. Jackowiak encourages anyone facing financial difficulties to schedule an appointment. All counseling currently is being done by phone.

INDEPENDENT PHOTO BY KEN FARVER

Donna Jackowiak, program manager of Consumer Credit Counseling Services in Woodstock, says new assistance programs are available for people impacted by COVID-19. We also do counseling for people in their homes and struggling with their budget or if they’re behind on their mortgages.” The agency served 2,600 people in 2019 through counseling and education, she reported; 1,700 were low- to moderate-income residents, and 38 were homeless. Over the past 10 years, she said, the service has worked with more than 1,000 veterans or active-duty military personnel. Jackowiak explained that because of the pandemic, assistance programs in Illinois have increased slightly, mostly those dealing with rental payments or mortgages. “Part of [a program] is anybody who is behind in their rent since March 1st because of COVID may be eligible to receive $5,000 in rental assistance,” Jackowiak said. Though that program portal will stay open until Aug. 28, anyone

looking for rental assistance is encouraged to call the CCCS office. “Starting Aug. 24th is a program for people who are behind in their mortgages,” Jackowiak said. “[The state] is giving $15,000 in help to bring someone’s mortgage current, if they have been in delinquency after March 1st, and it has to be COVID related. Our agency helps with those two programs.”

Lower ‘anxiety level’

In addition to regular budget counseling, CCCS offers a program to help consumers manage their debt. Jackowiak said 146 clients were currently in a debt-management program with CCCS, with an average amount of debt of nearly $27,000. “If someone has unsecured creditcard debt, they would make payments to us once a month, and then

we make the payments to the creditor for them,” Jackowiak explained. “This helps lower the interest rate, and we get them paid off in five years. “The people who have been in our debt-management program with a lot of credit-card debt, once they are in it for five years and pay it off, that’s rewarding.” CCCS also offers workshops at libraries and a variety of social services. Businesses can also contact the counseling service to arrange a workshop for their employees tailored specifically to the business. The most rewarding part of her work, Jackowiak said, is helping people. “We do a survey prior to their appointment and ask what their anxiety level is regarding their finances; they are usually very stressed,” she said. “Once we show their options, it’s reduced.”


COMMUNITY

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

16

He’ll encourage use of your‘Sixth Sense’ “A person without a sense of humor is like a wagon without springs. It’s jolted by every pebble on the road.”

In mid-March, the pandemic sent many workplaces – including the wellness company I work for in Chicago – scrambling. With little notice, my coworkers and I were told to take our laptops and other crucial materials Paul home with us Lockwood that evening so A Musing we could start working from home the next day. We didn’t have any idea how long we’d be away from the office – it now appears it’ll be through at least December (!) – so I had to quickly determine what it was important to grab. I brought home my four (yes, four) “day-by-day” calendars, three of them humor-focused. I’m glad I did. While I value all five of my senses, the true sixth sense – a sense of humor – is an integral part of me that is desperately needed in 2020. If this isn’t the first column of mine you’ve come “a-pun” – or even if it is – you can probably guess

from this sentence that I’m a fan of wordplay. It should be no surprise that I just bought my first 2021 calendar – “Pun Intended” – which features a groaner every day (e.g., “I’m glad I know sign language. It’s pretty handy.”). And while I’m not a father, I relish a good (or bad?) “dad joke.” I know we’re going through stunningly tough times now. Woodstock still has the highest number of COVID-19 cases in the county. Parents are monitoring their kids’ online learning, taking a more hands-on approach to education, and worrying about in-person interactions with their families or friends. Seeing someone without a mask near us may cause anxiety or frustration. Businesses are struggling to stay afloat. The most recent not-seasonally-adjusted unemployment rate (June) for McHenry County is 13.4 percent. And we still have almost 10 weeks to go until a November election that many say is one of the most important in our lifetimes. That’s just a sampling of what we’ve all been facing. It’s understandable that laughter and a sense of humor may not be a priority. But shouldn’t it be? Mayo Clinic is just one of the organizations that says laughter is a great stress reliever. Short-term benefits include: the stimulation of many organs (e.g., heart, lungs, muscles; increased endorphins);

activation and relief of your stress response; soothing of tension through stimulated circulation and then muscle relaxation. Over the long term, laughter may: relieve pain, improve the immune system, and help reduce depression and anxiety. Another website, HelpGuide (helpguide.org/articles/mentalhealth/laughter-is-the-best-medicine.htm), says “shared laughter is one of the most effective tools for keeping relationships fresh and exciting” and “laughter unites people during difficult times.” Take advantage of this increased time with your family. HelpGuide suggests we be more spontaneous, let go of our defensiveness (e.g., helping to forget resentments), release our inhibitions, and express our true feelings. For those of us lucky enough to still be working, it’s in our best interests to find ways to bring appropriate humor into the workplace. Andrew Tarvin, author of “Humor That Works: The Missing Skill for Success and Happiness at Work” and the “world’s first Humor Engineer,” lists 30 benefits of humor at work (humorthatworks.com/benefits/30-benefits-of-humor-at-work/) – with research/citations for each – including: boosting overall brainpower, improving memory retention, fostering rapport, encouraging collaboration, building credibility,

and enhancing perceived leadership skills. Who knew that my ability to make co-workers chuckle or groan helped all of us? If you feel you don’t have a sense of humor, never fear. Search the web for “developing a sense of humor” and you’ll get a lot of guidance. One site to help you move from identifying and responding to humor to joking around to learning about your sense of humor is wikihow.com/Develop-a-Sense-ofHumor. Even if you’re uncomfortable at the idea of cracking a joke, odds are that there’s a movie or TV show you always laughed at (“Airplane!” and “The Golden Girls” are two of my favorites) – find them at the Woodstock Public Library or order a DVD or Blu-ray or find them on a streaming service. Find the cartoons/comics in The Independent. Buy a funny book at Read Between the Lynes. Whatever it takes, find your humor. After all, even a “sick” sense of humor can be healing.

IN BRIEF Registration now open for GriefShare in Woodstock

Rabid bats reported found in Crystal Lake, Lakewood

subsequently bites or scratches a human.

Electronic devices will be accepted, with a fee applied to TVs and computer monitors. Elgin Recycling will accept credit cards or cash onsite. A list of items accepted is available at elginrecycling.com or call 847-741-4100. Environmental Defenders also will collect fluorescent tubes for a cost of 50 cents to $1 each; clean plastic foam (Styrofoam); packing peanuts; reusable bubble wrap and cloth items (clothing, linens, rags, and shoes tied together by the laces). Paper Tiger will provide a truck to shred paper documents onsite for free until the truck is full. The Department of Health will accept alkaline batteries for no charge. Future events are planned Sept. 19 at Grafton Township Road District in Huntley and Oct. 3 at McHenry County College east of Woodstock.

– Henry Ward Beecher, American clergyman and activist

Grace Fellowship GriefShare will begin online sessions Monday, Aug. 31. People may register for this fall sessions at griefshare.org. Enter a ZIP code and look for Grace Fellowship Church. Click on that link, then follow directions to register and get information. According to a news release, community members who have experienced the death of a family member or friend, which may be recent or not so recent, are invited to register. The nondenominational program features biblical teaching that focuses on grief topics associated with the death of a loved one. The DVD seminars are followed by a small group discussion about what was seen on the DVD. For more information, call Judy Connor at 815-338-1699.

No human exposure was reported from bats that tested positive for rabies after being found recently inside homes in Crystal Lake and Lakewood. According to Maryellen Howell, manager of McHenry County Department of Health’s Veterinary Public Health Division, people should use a shovel or plastic bag to ensure no direct contact between themselves and the bat “Whether a bat is found inside or outside your home, avoid touching it with bare hands,” she said. If a bat is found inside or outside the home, call Animal Control, 815-459-6222. Health officials said that keeping indoor and outdoor pets up to date on vaccinations would keep them from getting rabies and provide a barrier of protection for people if a rabid animal bites a pet and

Recycling event will take electronics, batteries, bulbs

Woodstock will host the second of four monthly recycling opportunities scheduled on Saturdays . The events are sponsored by McHenry County Department of Health, Elgin Recycling, The Environmental Defenders of McHenry County, and Paper Tiger Shredding. The Woodstock recycling will be from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday, Aug. 29, at the McHenry County Administration Building, 667 Ware Road. As a COVID-19 precaution, people should put items for recycling in their vehicle’s trunk and remain in their vehicles to help maintain social distancing. Masks will be required.

Paul Lockwood has been an enthusiastic singer, constant punster, frequent local theater actor, active Grace Lutheran Church and Toastmasters member, occasional theater reviewer, and past president of TownSquare Players. He’s a senior sales operations specialist and technical lead for Vitality Group USA. He’s lived in Woodstock for more than 19 years with his wife, Diane.


SHE DECLARES

17 THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

INDEPENDENT PHOTO BY SUSAN W. MURRAY

Anne Stebbins, decked out as an early 20th century suffragette, holds a sign reminding people to vote Nov. 3. Stebbins, a costume designer in New York, is waiting in Illinois for the resumption of stage and television productions. She appeared in front of the Old Courthouse on the Woodstock Square during the Farmers Market on Aug. 18, the 100th anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment, guaranteeing U.S. women the right to vote. Stebbins, whose alter ego is Lady Declaration, distributed scrolls directing people to the vote.org website for information on voter registration, voting by mail, and polling locations.

MASKS ON; HANDS OFF

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Rules at the Farmers Market encourage customers to wear face masks but strictly prohibit their touching of products displayed by vendors.

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GETTING A CHARGE

Two charging stations for electric vehicles are available on the south end of the Metra parking lot at Throop and Washington streets in Woodstock. The Environmental Defenders of McHenry County used a grant from the Full Circle Foundation to buy the stations, which were donated to the city of Woodstock. At least for now, charging is free. Non-electric vehicles will be ticketed if they park in those two spaces. Other charging stations in the area are in Algonquin and at McHenry County College.

COMMUNITY

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

18

COURTESY PHOTO

PICTURE THIS

Farmers inspect a specific variety of hybrid seed corn at the Earl M. Hughes farm northwest of Woodstock in 1969.

Tickets are now available for the McHenry County Historical Society’s 2020 Heritage Quilters Raffle Quilt, “Fit to be Tied.” The new quilt for the 2020 raffle is a bow-tie pattern made from reproduction 1930s pastel prints. Tickets are $1 each or six for $5 and can be purchased at www.mchenrycountyhistory.org.

Don Peasley Photo Collection, McHenry County Historical Society

Kitchens • Baths • Windows • Millwork • Lumber • Doors 815-338-0075 • 1101 Lake Ave., Woodstock • www.woodstocklumber.com


AND THE LISTENING IS EASY

19 THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

COMMUNITY

INDEPENDENT PHOTOS BY KEN FARVER

Summertime, and the music was free Saturday when the Woodstock Jazz Festival and the Great Lakes Steelpan Festival provided a day of good sounds from the bandstand in the Park in the Square. Jody Fields (above) offered vocals with The Stan Dard Jazz Project, which shared the morning with Jazz Mercenaries, including sax man Bryan Kyrouac. The evening hours featured the Clyde “Lightning” George Quartet (George pictured), which performed along with the Potts & Pans Steelband.

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June 10-16, 2020

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had been for a Saturday as it 6 t, was as busy OpiniOn use of coronavirus of Cass Stree time this season. Beca 4 Obituaries 9 by this photo rounds. It will nced the first schOOls nry County 6Fairg stock, as evide return the Square for OpiniOn et a&e ed to at11its winter home at the McHe Downtown Wood Farmers Mark et had d ay and Saturday. the staye Tuesd when each while 8 schOOls open 13 producers mark uleaceof being Marketpl concerns, the normal summer sched 11 a&e 19 cOMMunity now resume the

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s s police resource MCAT expand Virus sparks restaurant competition

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26 WEDNESDAY

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

20

Dorr Township offices 1039 Lake Ave. 11:30 - 12:15 Available to seniors, 60 and older $5 Call to reserve, 815-338-0125.

calendar SENIOR LUNCH PICKUP

COMMUNITY

WOODSTOCK WEDNESDAYS Tune in on Facebook at Woodstock Folk Festival. Tret Fure performs at 7 p.m.

27 THURSDAY VIRTUAL CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP

Zoom meeting open to the public 4 to 5 p.m. Visit woodstockilchamber.com for website, meeting ID and password.

28 FRIDAY

HEARTHSTONE OUTDOOR JOB FAIR Woodstock Square gazebo 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. 815-338-1749

UPSTAGED–THE SERIES ON FACEBOOK Woodstock Square 7 p.m. Tune in on Facebook at Woodstock Opera House.

29 SATURDAY

WOODSTOCK FARMERS MARKET

Woodstock Square 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. woodstockfarmersmarket.org Music by Bad Penny from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

EXPO 2020 ON FACEBOOK LIVE 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. woodstockilchamber.com

30 SUNDAY

SUNDAYS ON THE SQUARE Woodstock Square 5 to 7 p.m. Off Square Music and the city of Woodstock present music by Rachel and Jori.

31 MONDAY GRIEFSHARE

Grace Fellowship Church Register at griefshare.org for online sessions.

SEPTEMBER

1 TUESDAY

WOODSTOCK FARMERS MARKET

VIRTUAL CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP Zoom meeting open to the public 4 to 5 p.m. Visit woodstockilchamber.com for website, meeting ID and password.

4 FRIDAY

‘MUM’S THE WORD’ ANNUAL PLANT SALE Woodstock Public Library 414 W. Judd St. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

5 SATURDAY

WOODSTOCK FARMERS MARKET

Woodstock Square 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. woodstockfarmersmarket.org Music by Stage Leftovers from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

‘MUM’S THE WORD’ ANNUAL PLANT SALE

Woodstock Square 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. woodstockfarmersmarket.org Music by Courtney and Chris from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

Woodstock Public Library 414 W. Judd St. 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.

WOODSTOCK CITY COUNCIL MEETING

SUNDAYS ON THE SQUARE

Woodstock City Hall 121 W. Calhoun St. 7 p.m.

2 WEDNESDAY SENIOR LUNCH PICKUP

Dorr Township offices 1039 Lake Ave. 11:30 - 12:15 Available to seniors, 60 and older $5 Call to reserve, 815-338-0125.

3 THURSDAY

6 SUNDAY

Woodstock Square 5 to 7 p.m. Off Square Music and the city of Woodstock present music by Courtney and Chris and Small Potatoes.

7 MONDAY GRIEFSHARE

Grace Fellowship Church Register at griefshare.org for online sessions.

8 TUESDAY

WOODSTOCK FARMERS

To submit calendar items, email pr@thewoodstockindependent.com MARKET

Woodstock Square 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. woodstockfarmersmarket.org Music by ThingamaJig from 9 to 11 a.m., Mark Hobbs from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

D-200 BOARD OF EDUCATION

14 MONDAY PRIDE MEETING

Woodstock Chamber of Commerce 6 p.m. 127 E. Calhoun St.

GRIEFSHARE

Grace Fellowship Church Register at griefshare.org for online sessions.

Woodstock High School 501 W. South St. 7 p.m.

15 TUESDAY

9 WEDNESDAY SENIOR LUNCH PICKUP

Dorr Township offices 1039 Lake Ave. 11:30 - 12:15 Available to seniors, 60 and older $5 Call to reserve, 815-338-0125.

10 THURSDAY

VIRTUAL CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP

Zoom meeting open to the public 4 to 5 p.m. Visit woodstockilchamber.com for website, meeting ID and password

12 SATURDAY

WOODSTOCK FARMERS MARKET

Woodstock Square 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. woodstockfarmersmarket.org Music by Steve Firak at 9 a.m., Tricia Alexander at 11 a.m.

COFFEE WITH THE CHIEF Woodstock Police Department 656 Lake Ave. 7 p.m.

WOODSTOCK CITY COUNCIL MEETING Woodstock City Hall 121 W. Calhoun St. 7 p.m.

16 WEDNESDAY

WOODSTOCK FARMERS MARKET

SENIOR LUNCH PICKUP

Woodstock Square 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. woodstockfarmersmarket.org Music by Big Fish from 9 to 11 a.m., Mary Lai from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

Dorr Township offices 1039 Lake Ave. 11:30 - 12:15 Available to seniors, 60 and older $5 Call to reserve, 815-338-0125.

13 SUNDAY

17 THURSDAY

Woodstock Square 5 to 7 p.m. Off Square Music and the city of Woodstock present music by Corner Boys.

Woodstock Chamber of Commerce Noon 127 E. Calhoun St.

SUNDAYS ON THE SQUARE

Resurrection Catholic Church

HISPANIC CONNECTIONS MEETING

2918 South Country Club Road Woodstock, IL 60098

We welcome all to join us at our Mass times: Saturday at 5:00 pm & Sunday at 8:00 am and 10:30 am.

We, the members of the Resurrection Catholic Church, are a prayerful, loving community formed by the Holy Spirit, striving to be a sign of the Gospel values of Jesus Christ: justice, truth and love.


30 years ago – 1990

■ Production crews for the NBC weekly series “Unsolved Mysteries” were in Woodstock to film an episode about the 1988 murders of Raymond and Ruth Ann Ritter. ■ The Woodstock School District 200 Board of Education authorized the purchase of a double-classroom mobile unit for $52,000 to be used at Woodstock High School.

25 years ago – 1995

■ Marian Central Catholic High School’s $4.25-million building program was under construction. A new gymnasium, auditorium, and 10 classrooms were expected to be completed by February 1996. ■ An AIDS walk-a-thon was held at Emricson Park to encourage and support AIDS education and to promote AIDS awareness among people living and working in McHenry County. ■ Photographer John Spates won the $500 best of show at the 20th annual Woodstock Art Fair held in the Park in the Square.

20 years ago – 2000

■ A second round of soil tests at the former site of the Woodstock Sportsmen’s Club in Emricson Park indicated cleanup action would be needed to remove lead shot.

15 years ago – 2005

■ The Woodstock City Council approved $245,720 for Baxter & Woodman to design new city athletic fields in The Fields of Woodstock subdivision between Raffel and Queen Anne roads. ■ The Woodstock girls sixth-grade traveling basketball team garnered a firstplace tournament trophy, defeating Carmel, McHenry-Orange, McHenry-Black, and Elkhorn, Wis.

10 years ago – 2010

■ The Masthouse, a Woodstock institution that hosted musicians ranging from local and Chicago area folk music acts to Pete Seeger, announced its doors would close in early September. In December 1980, Don and Eunice Mast founded Masthouse in an addition they built on the back of their Calhoun Street home. By the mid-1980s, about 200 to 300 people were making their way to Woodstock for the monthly performances. ■ Marty Adelphia, Bob Westman, Pat Burke, and Joe McCarthy, who began

21 maintaining the Dream Field at Emricson Park in 1992, retired. They were among the 12 men who renovated the field in 1991. Other members of what was called the “12 Apostles” were Ed Brucker, Phil Cooper, John Headley, Harry Maynard, John Sorensen, Fred Strang, JohnTheriault, and Terry Zimmerman. ■ The Woodstock Jazz Festival, in its third year, featured both local talent and well-established names in the Chicago Jazz community. Featured were the Chris Green Quartet, Paul Abella Trio, Roger Panella Trio, Elaine Dame Duo, Shawn Maxwell Trio, and Stephanie Monique Duo. The two-day festival was organized by Jazz on the Square.

5 years ago – 2015

■ A citizens group questioned Board of Education members about D-200’s debt, the district’s increasing tax rate over the years, school sizes, decreased enrollment, and the burden the combination of factors was placing on District 200 taxpayers. ■ Garrett Anderson was hired as the city’s economic development director. Anderson said he would bring businessand visitor-attraction experiences from Branson, Mo., to Woodstock. With regard to tourism, he said he would be a “voice of caution.” “Tourism isn’t the answer to all woes,” he said. “It brings its own set of challenges.” ■ The Challenger Center for Science & Technology, Woodstock, was honored at the Challenger National Conference for increasing its number of missions by at least 10 percent. Rebecca Dolmon, lead flight director for Woodstock’s center, credited the increase in missions to a record 321 to the center’s reputation and outreach efforts.

1 year ago – 2019

■ The Woodstock Fire/Rescue District staff presented a new four-year strategic plan to its Board of Trustees. “We’re not satisfied with the status quo,” said Capt. Karen Bush, who led the effort to create the 32-page plan. “We want to get better.” ■ After 34 years of service to the Woodstock Opera House, building manager Mark Greenleaf retired. Working alongside former managing director John Scharres, Greenleaf led projects to preserve, rehab, and re-create aspects of the building, such as the iconic bell tower, historic masonry, carpeting, and window treatments. “It’s been a terrific gig, and I love this town,” Greenleaf said.

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COMMUNITY

■ FIRST UNITED METHODIST 201 W. South St. • 815-338-3310 fumcwoodstock.org Worship: 9:30 a.m. Sunday Sunday school for children 9:45 a.m. ■ FREE METHODIST 934 N. Seminary Ave. • 815-338-3180 Worship: 10:30 a.m. ■ GOOD NEWS CHURCH Meeting at Dorr Township Community Room, 1039 Lake Ave. 815-575-9224 goodnewswoodstock.org Worship: 10:15 a.m. Sunday ■ GRACE FELLOWSHIP 200 Cairns Court • gfchurch.org Worship: 9 and 10:45 a.m. Sunday ■ GRACE LUTHERAN 1300 Kishwaukee Valley Road 815-338-0554 Worship: Videos on website each weekend; parking lot services at 9 a.m., listen on 89.3 FM ■ HOUSE OF BLESSING 2018 N. Route 47 (First Presbyterian Church building) cbhbfil413.com Worship: 1 p.m. Sunday

■ JEWISH REFORMED CONGREGATION TIKKUN OLAM 503 W. Jackson St. (St. Ann’s Episcopal Church building) Call 815-455-9236 or email tikkunolam@ hotmail.com for service information. n McHENRY COUNTY JEWISH CONGREGATION 8617 Ridgefield Road, Crystal Lake 815-455-1810 Worship: 7 p.m. Friday, 9:30 a.m. Saturday NEW LIFE CHRISTIAN CENTER 5115 Dean St. • 815-337-4673 Worship: 10 a.m. Sunday ■ REDEEMER LUTHERAN 1320 Dean St. • 815-338-9370 Worship: 8:45 a.m. Sunday ■ RESURRECTION CATHOLIC 2918 S. Country Club Road 815-338-7330 Worship: 8 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Sunday; 5 p.m. Saturday; 8:30 a.m. weekdays ■ ST. ANN’S EPISCOPAL 503 W. Jackson St. • 815-338-0950 Worship: 8 and 10 a.m. Sunday ■ ST. JOHN’S LUTHERAN 401 St. John’s Road • 815-338-5159 Worship: 5 p.m. Saturday; 9 a.m. Sunday ■ ST. MARY CATHOLIC 313 N. Tryon St. • 815-338-3377 Worship: 7:30 a.m. Monday - Saturday; 12:15 p.m. Monday-Friday; 5 and 6:30 p.m. (Spanish) Saturday; 7:30, 9 and 10:30 a.m., noon (Spanish), 5 p.m. Sunday ■ THE BRIDGE CHRISTIAN 2620 Bridge Lane • 815-496-0548 Worship: 10 a.m. Sunday ■ THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS 2016 Hartland Road • 815-334-1703 Worship: 10 a.m. Sunday ■ THE VINE CHRISTIAN CHURCH 1132 N. Madison St. • 815-338-3380 Worship: 10 a.m. Sunday ■ UNITY SPIRITUAL CENTER 225 W. Calhoun St. • 815-337-3534 unitywoodstock.org Worship: 10 a.m. Sunday ■ UPPER FOX VALLEY QUAKER MEETING 4614 Pioneer Road, McHenry 815-385-8512 Discussion and singing, 9 a.m. Sunday Worship, 10 a.m., fellowship, 11 a.m. Sunday ■ WOODSTOCK ASSEMBLY OF GOD 1201 Dean St.• 815-338-1316 Worship: 10 a.m. Sunday ■ WOODSTOCK BIBLE CHURCH 118 Benton St. Worship: 10:30 a..m. Sunday

■ BAHA’I COMMUNITY OF WOODSTOCK Gatherings are open to the public the second Saturday of each month. For information: 815-337-0126 woodstock.bahais@gmail.com ■ BLUE LOTUS TEMPLE & MEDITATION CENTER 221 Dean St. • 815-337-7378 Meditation: 10 a.m. Tuesday, Saturday; 7 p.m. Monday, Wednesday ■ CASA DE BENDICION 8015 Ridgefield Road, Crystal Lake (Crystal Lake Christian Church) Worship: 1 p.m. Sunday, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday ■ CHRIST LIFE 13614 W. Jackson St. • 815-338-4934 Worship: 10:30 a.m. Sunday ■ COVENANT REFORMED BAPTIST CHURCH 4609 Greenwood Road P.O. Box 463 • 815-575-9612 Worship: 10 a.m. Sunday ■ EDEN BAPTIST 1903 N. Seminary Ave. • 815-814-7847 Worship: 3 p.m. Sunday (Spanish) ■ FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 111 W. South St. • 815-338-2731 Worship: 10 a.m. Sunday ■ FIRST PRESBYTERIAN 2018 N. Route 47 • 815-338-2627 Outdoor worship: 9:30 a.m. Sunday

FLASHBACKS

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

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Dec. 27-Jan. 2, 2017

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

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1 THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

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PUBLIC NOTICE

13-01-300-025 13-01-376-001 13-01-376-004 13-01-376-005 13-01-376-006 13-01-376-008 13-01-376-010 13-01-376-012 13-01-400-001 13-01-400-003 13-01-400-004 13-01-400-007 13-01-400-008 13-01-400-009 13-01-400-010 13-01-400-012 13-01-400-014 13-01-400-015 13-01-400-016 13-01-400-019 13-01-400-020 13-01-400-021 13-02-101-002 13-02-101-003 13-02-101-004 13-02-101-005 13-02-102-001 13-02-102-002 13-02-102-004 13-02-102-005 13-02-102-006 13-02-126-001 13-02-126-002 13-02-126-004 13-02-126-005 13-02-127-001 13-02-127-002 13-02-127-003 13-02-127-006 13-02-151-001 13-02-151-002 13-02-152-001 13-02-152-003

13-02-152-004 13-02-176-001 13-02-176-002 13-02-176-003 13-02-176-004 13-02-177-003 13-02-177-005 13-02-177-006 13-02-177-011 13-02-200-002 13-02-200-004 13-02-200-006 13-02-200-015 13-02-200-016 13-02-200-021 13-02-200-022 13-02-200-024 13-02-200-025 13-02-200-026 13-02-200-028 13-02-200-030 13-02-276-001 13-02-276-002 13-02-276-003 13-02-276-004 13-02-276-005 13-02-276-006 13-02-276-007 13-02-276-008 13-02-300-001 13-02-300-002 13-02-300-003 13-02-300-005 13-02-300-008 13-02-300-009 13-02-300-010 13-02-300-011 13-02-300-012 13-02-300-018 13-02-300-019 13-02-300-023 13-02-300-025 13-02-300-027

NOTICE TO DORR TOWNSHIP TAXPAYERS: ASSESSED VALUES FOR 2020 Valuation date (35 ILCS 200/9-95): January 1, 2020 Required level of assessment (35 ILCS 200/9-145): 33.33% Valuation based on sales from (35 ILCS 200/1-155): 2017-2019

LEWKE TYLER W DECL TR GOODMAN, WILLIAM L BK AMERICA NA HESCH, CHRIS D CAREY JULIE E REV TR HARRIS TR SVGS BK TR HTX 7036 MCCULLOUGH PK TR PD TR HAYES, MICHAEL D CAROL L FISKE, JENNIFER S MILESKI, THOMAS A BV REAL EST PRNTS LLC MESSMAN, PETER MILESKI, THOMAS TIFFANY DESIGNER DIRECT INC MILESKI, THOMAS A TIFFANY R STOLAR MARK W TR LASALLE NATL BK 115030 RICE, PAUL RHONDA ELGUTS, JOHN SANDUST LLC OBRIEN, PATRICK J MARGARET J CULLOTTA, DOMINIC A LAURA F RICE, PAUL D RHONDA R RICE, PAUL D RHONDA R BRUNNER, ROBERT J CATHERINE JACKSON, RONALD D CONSTANCE M PALAZZO, JOHN A KORENE B NEUMANN CHRISTOPHER W TR PALATINE NATL BK TR 2346 STIPES, ALBERT H MARY M LIVOLSI AS BJ TRS GOLDEN, DEBORAH J MITCHELL MARK R LYNN A TR SCHMIDT, MICHAEL KIRSTEN PREWITT, PHILIP OLGA LASALLE NATL BK 112529 WDSTK 1ST NATL BK 693 ERIKSEN, KENNETH P BEVERLY A LASALLE NATL BK 112529 CHGO AMER NATL BK 110808-01 ERIKSEN, KENNETH P BEVERLY A WDSTK 1ST NATL BK 693

TWP 112,361 140,825 126,690 185,953 414,068 395,918 205,375 139,419 119,070 124,976 320,467 70,594 293,623 10,623 19,140 169,950 6,239 92,553 104,537 42,855 152,175 192,409 178,321 94,844 132,559 115,771 121,873 163,239 130,468 134,850 112,628 130,249 157,226 147,325 109,310 130 5 3,286 8,393 122,380 103,060 45,403

MILLER, BRIAN J IRENE S MOREHEAD, PATRICK O MOREHEAD, PATRICK O MOREHEAD, PATRICK O MOREHEAD, PATRICK MOREHEAD, PATRICK ODONNELL, THOMAS M MOREHEAD ME SELF DECL OF TR JAKUBOWICZ, BRIAN W AMANDA M FRANZEN, DARICK ANDREA HOME ST BK NA TR 5709 HOLOUBEK, CATHERINE KONIECZKA, MICHAEL JULIE BERRY VIRGIL J JR TR KOESTER , DANIEL DEBORAH GOERNER, D JOHN MARCIA HOME ST BK NA TR 4587 HARNEY, NANCY 2000 DECL OF TR HARNEY, NANCY 2000 DECL OF TR STASSEN, EDWARD SHEILA BERRY, SCOT STEPHANIE JANTZ AW TRS TR 1749 HOGEL JH REV LIV TR ET AL HEALY DEBORAH A REV TR GOODNOW, FREDERICK J AMY C LUKAS, DIANE M VYTAUTAS S TR BENNETT, ET MOLTMANN ML VICKERS, MICHAEL W SUSAN E PESCHKE VIRGINIA D TR 2016 1 REUTER RENEE LIV TR REUTER RENEE LIV TR HARTNETT SANDRA TR WDSTK 1ST NA BK TR 636 HILL, SHARON A TR HILL, JEFFRY J JR JENNIFER C PESCHKE, JOHN D SHIRLEY A MAGERL JOHN TR CASTELL, SCOTT W JOAN K SCHULTZ, PEARL E KLOUDA, PAUL R SUSAN A MADDEN, LARA KEINZ PHYLLIS R TR HERVERT JG, BETH HERVERT JA

163,944 141 244 326 1,226 162 1,170 376,978 114,166 80,869 121,983 111,908 98,265 127,848 98,261 142,127 135,845 1,030 565 159,384 31,437 85,516 125,711 135,054 146,419 139,385 93,715 116,085 132,256 120,703 22,400 129,451 143,950 140,005 142,615 106,849 91,674 101,879 46,416 124,078 85,250 69,610 482

HERVERT JG, BETH HERVERT JA COUNTRYMAN, BRITTANY L ADAM L ZOCH, VICKI ANN ELLIS, LEE D LEWANDOWSKA, JESSICA CREIGHTON JAC TR JANKEE, MARY ROSE HEDGE, EDWARD PATRICIA SMITH VALARIE D TR WINTRUST ASSET MGMT LFT 1549 FLYNN, TIMOTHY J JACKLYN A CHGO TR CO TR 1102400 MORRISON, PAUL M CAROL G COVALT ROBERT B TR SKVORETZ P, MAYER MJ COVALT ROBERT B TR MORRISON, PAUL M CAROL G COVALT ROBERT B TR ENOT, STEVEN W DIANE S MORRISON, PAUL M CAROL G DESIGNER DIRECT INC SOBOL NANCY TR GRAHAM JOHN P TR WARD, JAN CALEY CB JR MC STODDARD TR LAMPE, JENNEL SCHUMACHER FAM 2019 TR MOSTACCIO, CATHERINE A LISZEWSKI, RODNEY M PATRICIA MORENO, JANNET JONATHAN PERIC, TADIJA BROWN BARRY C MARY C TR KRENGER JOHN R DECL OF TR KAHL, BRETT ASHLEY PERFECT, LISA PEREZ, MARIO J ESTHER M ZBIERSKI, HENRY F LYNN A OBRIEN HELEN R REV TR SHAY PATRICK J REV TR WDSTK 1ST NA BANK TR 1503 FLISK, LORIN G WDSTK ST BK TR 2451 JACKSON, KT KRICK CM

81,897 103,903 98,757 107,933 114,598 30,091 102,359 70,958 247,315 124,619 408,839 90,223 32,640 431 136,000 199 463,238 422,632 72,862 521 20,182 120,394 333,961 106,276 97,343 104,833 127,035 84,905 104,901 138,724 200,503 118,623 3,035 98,766 156,330 114,107 113,654 186,932 105,873 135,035 125,058 125,560 120,796

PUBLIC NOTICES

DORR 13-01-100-006 13-01-100-007 13-01-100-011 13-01-100-012 13-01-100-013 13-01-100-014 13-01-100-015 13-01-100-017 13-01-100-018 13-01-100-019 13-01-100-025 13-01-100-026 13-01-100-027 13-01-100-032 13-01-100-035 13-01-100-037 13-01-200-003 13-01-200-004 13-01-200-009 13-01-200-010 13-01-200-011 13-01-200-012 13-01-200-013 13-01-200-014 13-01-226-001 13-01-226-002 13-01-226-003 13-01-226-004 13-01-227-001 13-01-227-002 13-01-227-003 13-01-227-004 13-01-227-005 13-01-228-001 13-01-228-002 13-01-300-008 13-01-300-011 13-01-300-014 13-01-300-015 13-01-300-019 13-01-300-020 13-01-300-023

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF REAL ESTATE ASSESSMENTS FOR 2020

25

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

is 30 days from this publication date. After this date, the Board of Review is prohibited by law from accepting assessment appeals for properties in this township. For more information on township filing deadlines, call (815) 334-4290 or visit: w w w. m c h e n r y c o u n t y i l . g o v / c o u n t y government/departments-a-i/assessments/ township-filing-deadlines. Your property may be eligible for homestead exemptions, which can reduce your property’s taxable assessment. For more information on homestead exemptions, call (815) 334-4290. Your property tax bill will be calculated as follows: Final Equalized Assessed Value – Exemptions = Taxable Assessment; Taxable Assessment x Current Tax Rate = Total Tax Bill. All equalized assessed valuations are subject to further equalization and revision by the McHenry County Board of Review as well as equalization by the Illinois Department of Revenue. Robert H. Ross, ASA, Chief County Assessment Officer, McHenry County, Illinois A list of assessment changes for this township for the current assessment year, except those assessments that were changed solely by equalization factor noted above, is as follows:

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

Publication is hereby made for equalized assessed valuations for real property in this township in accordance with 35 ILCS 200/12-10. As required by 35 ILCS 200/9210 and 35 ILCS 200/10-115, the following equalization factors have been applied to bring the assessments to the statutorily required three-year median level of 33.33%: Farm Land: 1.0000 Farm Improvements: 1.0000 Non-Farm Land: 1.0476 Non-Farm Improvements: 1.0476 Questions about these valuations should be directed to: VERONICA A MYERS 1039 LAKE AVE, WOODSTOCK IL 60098 (815) 338-0128 www.dorrtownship.com

Office hours are MON-FRI 9:00A-4:00P Property in this Township, other than farmland and coal, is to be assessed at a 33.33% median level of assessment, based on the fair cash value of the property. You may check the accuracy of your assessment by dividing your assessment by the median level of assessment. The resulting value should equal the estimated fair cash value of your property. If the resulting value is greater than the estimated fair cash value of your property, you may be over-assessed. If the resulting value is less than the fair cash value of your property, you may be underassessed. You may appeal your assessment to the Board of Review. If you believe your property’s fair cash value is incorrect or that the equalized assessed valuation is not uniform with other comparable properties in the same neighborhood, the following steps should be taken: 1. Contact your township assessor’s office to review the assessment. 2. If not satisfied with the assessor review, taxpayers may file an appeal with the McHenry County Board of Review. For appeal forms, instructions, and the Rules and Procedures of the Board of Review, call (815) 334-4290 or visit: www.mchenrycountyil. gov/county-government/departments-a-i/ assessments/forms-and-rules. 3. The final filing deadline for your township


PPUBLIC NOTICES

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

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13-02-300-031 13-02-300-035 13-02-300-036 13-02-300-040 13-02-300-041 13-02-300-042 13-02-400-008 13-02-400-010 13-02-400-011 13-02-400-012 13-02-400-016 13-02-400-018 13-02-400-019 13-02-400-022 13-02-400-023 13-02-400-024 13-02-400-025 13-02-400-027 13-02-400-028 13-02-400-029 13-02-400-030 13-02-400-031 13-03-100-001 13-03-100-004 13-03-100-008 13-03-100-009 13-03-100-012 13-03-100-013 13-03-100-014 13-03-200-002 13-03-200-003 13-03-200-004 13-03-200-011 13-03-200-014 13-03-200-015 13-03-200-016 13-03-200-017 13-03-200-018 13-03-200-019 13-03-200-020 13-03-200-021 13-03-200-023 13-03-200-024 13-03-200-025 13-03-200-026 13-03-200-027 13-03-200-028 13-03-300-002 13-03-300-005 13-03-300-006 13-03-300-007 13-03-300-008 13-03-300-013 13-03-300-014 13-03-300-015 13-03-300-016 13-03-300-017 13-03-300-018 13-03-376-001 13-03-376-002 13-03-376-003 13-03-376-004 13-03-377-001 13-03-377-002 13-03-378-001 13-03-378-002 13-03-378-003 13-03-378-004 13-03-378-008 13-03-378-011 13-03-378-018 13-03-378-019 13-03-401-001 13-03-401-002 13-03-402-001 13-03-402-002 13-03-402-003 13-03-402-004 13-03-402-005 13-03-402-006 13-03-402-008 13-03-426-001 13-03-426-002 13-03-426-003 13-03-426-004 13-03-451-002 13-03-451-003 13-03-451-004 13-03-451-005 13-03-451-006 13-03-451-007 13-03-451-008 13-03-451-009 13-03-476-001 13-03-476-002 13-03-476-003 13-03-476-004 13-03-476-005 13-03-476-006 13-03-477-001

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ERICKSON, GLENN WEILER, AMY R 2011 REV TR KARTH, BARBARA TR KARTH, FRANK J TR ROVETTO, RICHARD P JUDITH M SCHWALBACH JC TR DM TR CINCINNATI, RONALD J TR TAYLOR, STEPHEN A WOLD LUAN E 1992 TR KRAFT FAM TR HARRIS NA TR 4305 LEWIS, WILLIAM J DALE M MUELLER, ROY A BONNIE D WAGNER, ROBERT MARLA BVGC LLC BVGC LLC BVGC LLC MUNDELEIN REAL PROP LLC BROWN, KENNETH J ET AL LEDANSKI, NICHOLAS L TR BOLLINGER, JOSEPH A TR BOLLINGER, JOSEPH A TR FLORENT, DAVID MONICA FLORENT, DAVID MONICA THANDUPURAKAL, THOMAS V SUSAN GORA, STANLEY CYNTHIA CARISSIMI, BRUNO JANET A JUNG, J E J C JNT FAM REV TR RADOSKY, WAYNE TR BROZNOWSKI, DAN KASZNIAK, ROBERT D LINDA M CLINGER TR, LOUISE, PATRICK RHIANNON WAGNER, SANDRA D RICHARD P AMCORE BANK 3517 SMITHSON JAMES V TR WALLNER, EDWARD R TR DZIAK RS, GEATER RR VINCI, MICHAEL J CASSANDRA M WILLIAMS, ROBERT S REV TR NIEHOFF, AUDREY M REV TR 1 MCHENRY STATE BK 1959 NIEHOFF, AUDREY M REV TR 1 DAVIS GT WL LIV TR MINDRUM, MARK D LINDA C WALROD, L J L TR BRASILIANO ZAJICEK, JOHN MECKLENBURG, ROBERT E SHERRI WERTHEIMER WR, GROENENDAL E MALLORY, THOMAS JENNIFER REYES, LEO A ET AL NOWACKI, ADAM PIERACCI, GEORGE ET AL SPRATT, AMY H ONEILL, DIANA F PENUELA TR ODISHOO, SAMI M TRACEY A MCCONNELL, MICHAEL JENNIFER ILLY, ANTOINE GERDA RYAN, RICHARD KAREN STOCKWELL, TM MA HOWARD, LAURA J ET AL BALDUF, BRAD JENNIFER BIEBER, RONALD C JONNA L KRENGER, JOHN R DECL TR SANCHEZ, YESENIA NELSON RA, KOVALASKE KL AMCORE INVSTMNT GRP NA 3692 CHAMBERS, GILES TONYA KELLY, BRIAN M ERIN T HAYDEN, KATHLEEN A TR POTTHAST JAMES W SARA M TR SKIDMORE, STEVEN J KAREN A DEIHS, DONALD J VOSTERS P TR VOSTERS S TR PROVOST, CHRISTOPHER DANIELLE ELLIOTT, G R C L TR BEYROW P, CARTWRIGHT S TEELE TERRY W 2016 LIV TR RIABKOV, JUSTAS KRENGER JOHN R DECL OF TR KRENGER, JOHN R DECL TR RINER, ROBERT M ELAINE S WACHOB, D F STEINMEYER N L RENNER, KENNETH GLADYS RENNER, KENNETH GLADYS HOME ST BK NA TR 5821 HOOVED ANIMAL HUMANE SOCIETY, REO FUNDING SOLUTIONS IV LLC REO FUNDING SOLUTIONS IV LLC REO FUNDING SOLUTIONS IV LLC GALLIMORE LIV TR WENDLER, J A J L REV LIV TR MARIUTTO, LUIGI LUIGIA BUCZEK, DIANE M HARRIS TR SVGS BK TR HTB 1482 GHEYSEN, KAREN C DECL OF TR GODWIN, MARY L MARTINO, WALTER J SUSAN K LANGNER, GERALD J CAROLYN J

179,013 14,566 155,720 6,286 139,916 138,425 179,403 26,517 115,964 111,155 124,515 113,491 126,294 171,562 14,536 14,536 14,536 121,234 127,618 103,886 104,829 11,576 128,219 12,129 12,643 109,261 131,219 113,528 11,784 131,404 11,899 100,834 136,095 129,270 275,519 104,257 133,829 125,069 114,888 120,167 6,618 115,969 5,917 105,486 131,817 132,670 148,532 12,544 151,948 131,161 120,339 150,604 12,494 11,886 123,581 10,057 111,835 125,240 129,562 120,046 145,842 180,798 17,348 133,413 7,287 121,576 108,878 87,718 170,670 283,734 93,874 204,261 137,653 150,883 178,179 175,321 151,947 93,285 153,280 101,775 594 727 91,383 96,364 47,580 25 2,132 8,131 7,990 7,990 7,990 93,379 107,674 90,057 107,754 93,364 106,542 93,678 93,030 94,201

13-10-301-033 13-10-301-034 13-10-301-035 13-10-301-036 13-10-301-037 13-10-301-038 13-10-301-039 13-10-301-040 13-10-301-041 13-10-301-042 13-10-301-043 13-10-301-044 13-10-301-045 13-10-301-046 13-10-301-047 13-10-301-048 13-10-301-049 13-10-301-050 13-10-301-051 13-10-301-052 13-10-301-053 13-10-301-054 13-10-301-055 13-10-301-056 13-10-301-057 13-10-301-058 13-10-301-059 13-10-301-060 13-10-301-061 13-10-301-062 13-10-301-063 13-10-302-003 13-10-302-004 13-10-302-005 13-10-302-006 13-10-302-007 13-10-302-009 13-10-302-010 13-10-302-011 13-10-302-012 13-10-326-001 13-10-326-002 13-10-326-003 13-10-326-004 13-10-326-005 13-10-326-006 13-10-326-007 13-10-326-008 13-10-326-009 13-10-326-010 13-10-326-011 13-10-327-001 13-10-327-002 13-10-327-003 13-10-327-004 13-10-327-005 13-10-327-006 13-10-327-007 13-10-327-008 13-10-327-009 13-10-327-012 13-10-327-013 13-10-327-014 13-10-351-023 13-10-351-024 13-10-351-026 13-10-351-027 13-10-351-028 13-10-351-029 13-10-351-030 13-10-351-031 13-10-351-032 13-10-351-033 13-10-351-034 13-10-351-035 13-10-351-036 13-10-351-037 13-10-351-038 13-10-351-039 13-10-351-040 13-10-351-041 13-10-352-034 13-10-352-036 13-10-352-037 13-10-352-038 13-10-352-039 13-10-352-040 13-10-352-041 13-10-352-042 13-10-352-043 13-10-352-044 13-10-352-045 13-10-352-046 13-10-352-047 13-10-401-003 13-10-401-010 13-10-401-011 13-10-401-012 13-10-401-013 13-10-401-014

DECHAMPS, LARRY V WERKEMA CHAD A REV LIV TR KECLIK, WILLIAM J MELISSA S KINERT, MARTY CHERYL ADELMANN, JEANNE C TR 1 SAMARAS PETER L SUSAN E TR 1 GRELL, EDWIN MARGARET LEWIS, ALEXANDRIA W MADDEN, WILLIAM M TR ROSQUIST WR LAB JNT TEN TR DREISCHARF, DALE A JEANNE L KRAMER, JOSEPH W PHYLLIS M DEFRANCE, LOWELL G SANDRA J PLOZAY, ROBERT A MARIE F CHWALISZ, D A B C REV DECL TR AVEN, J IDA GREEN C A MCLAUGHLIN LIV TR STOMPANATO, FRANK PATRICIA BERLETH G, GAMM CJ KRAFT GE KL DECL OF TR SCHNEIDER, BARBARA J TR SIMPSON, NANCY R TRS CARLTON, THOMAS J MICHELLE SALMAN, GARY A KAREN K REV TR RECZEK HARRY NANCY REV TR LUPER GEORGE E TR OLEARY, CAROLYN TIM CASEY, TR 2003 STENSLAND, ALLEN G CAROL L VANDERSTRAETEN WG TR ET AL FRENK, KENNETH L REV TR REO FUNDING SOLUTIONS IV LLC REO FUNDING SOLUTIONS IV LLC REO FUNDING SOLUTIONS IV LLC REO FUNDING SOLUTIONS IV LLC REO FUNDING SOLUTIONS IV LLC REYCRAFT, LEO B BEVERLY A LYNCH, DENNIS M HEATHER A RYBA MARTIN REV TR STANNERS , JERRILYN S TR ET A JOHNSON, PAUL H ANGELA BAGINSKI, STEVEN J RABINE CHERYL REV TR ABRUZZO, FRANK DEBORAH POLLOCK, CANDY LIV TR HARDING, BRADLEY TRICIA GARDNER MARTIN, ZACARIAS PAUL FABER, JAMES W KRISTINA M KORABIK RM MM DECL OF TR POPE, RICHARD CELINE ANDERSON, KRISTINE N ONEILL, DIANA F PENUELA TR TOWNS, SHERMAN J REV LIV TR GRENA, THOMAS J EILEEN P DAVIS, JAMES M MICHELE W PRESCOTT, BENJAMIN C TAYLOR F BLOM BE, THOMPSON KJ COOPER, MARK S GAIL TOWER, STEPHEN CHRISTINA HARTLIEB, ANDREW T DIANE PAULSON, PETER L TERESE D REED, JUNE B TR GRUEBNAU, JAMES C TINA M REO FUNDING SOLUTIONS IV LLC REO FUNDING SOLUTIONS IV LLC BATES, JOHN SUZANNE HESS, JOHN J JOYCE B JORIE B CRAMER, DONNA TR RICKERD FAM TR STANWOOD, WALTER FRANCES KREVITT JAMES S 1997 TR L M PROP LLC ARNOLD, TIMOTHY W BARBARA J MOELLER, KENNETH R MARIE E DOWNEY ELIZABETH TR 14 ZYMONAS, VIRGINIA JOHNSON, FAM TR MURRAY FAM LIV TR BLACK, RONALD F ARLENE F MCNAMARA, ELIZABETH A REV TR BOLLMANN DONNA G TR REO FUNDING SOLUTIONS IV LLC BRIGGS FAM TR, CHILES, LINDA B TR SANDQUIST DA, RENTERIA ME DECAPO, R T M J TR WOLFF, LORNA K BAUER STEINEKE, EDWARD F III TR GUSTAFSON, MICHAEL P LINDA BECKER, STEVEN E KAREN M ANZELMO, LYNETTE RAFFERTY, LAWRENCE E ANNETTE MJ REAL EST LLC TR HILL100, DAHLSTROM, ROGER K DORTCH CHERYL A TR ZOIA, ANTHONY DEBORAH MEDINS, P BS KENT TR WHITE, M S L S DECL OF TR THORNTON, MICHAEL T

107,149 82,260 87,113 90,635 106,135 88,708 92,933 88,870 108,727 93,435 107,222 93,400 93,215 105,126 85,654 90,910 103,447 103,324 90,308 95,189 93,389 92,076 104,609 91,921 87,633 86,816 99,886 91,023 95,013 94,652 95,340 7,990 8,101 8,101 8,101 8,101 109,255 91,655 91,899 91,869 160,951 122,123 154,266 152,802 184,039 117,166 133,652 115,169 128,158 120,144 143,109 136,331 139,664 133,892 11,203 117,213 127,613 109,003 11,894 138,121 143,492 108,143 122,065 7,990 7,990 96,141 102,349 111,526 91,818 102,350 93,889 88,719 108,177 93,438 108,483 93,908 108,153 94,463 109,371 92,554 95,383 7,990 89,050 102,669 107,515 88,860 89,392 90,417 92,408 88,719 90,677 90,584 92,404 88,798 134,017 128,596 147,105 125,631 191,560 130,788

27

PUBLIC NOTICES

88,266 88,126 83,524 94,554 89,093 93,872 88,560 83,190 83,077 81,383 151,611 129,295 96,362 109,215 13,089 192,839 221,711 127,770 160,023 99,762 81,801 92,004 92,826 89,368 96,087 92,470 85,673 70,355 93,915 78,926 99,066 88,958 88,887 88,167 83,620 105,024 84,732 58,563 114,285 161,250 66,992 36 727 1,018 909 343 287 1,038 298 510 71,787 70,267 68,567 71,020 208,106 27,363 2,157,178 55,257 127,094 24,111 1,159,221 12,373 237,751 10,569 104,708 12,151 376,771 48,012 138,509 115,874 136,026 113,899 134,066 122,130 139,229 139,323 13,064 129,665 126,040 113,931 123,383 120,523 116,771 11,387 12,307 12,389 16,625 130,074 152,517 134,100 16,608 132,930 155,826 5,590 123,851 134,569 140,497 126,129 146,307 14,566

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

BILDERBACK, JOAN H TR HOMAN JOHN F LIV TR GOGOL, RADOSLAW S KORMAN, SANDRA P 2005 LIV TR HOBSON JOE SUSAN G REV TR GOODMAN, CAROLYN REV TR PACCAGNINI, ROBERT E DEBORAH SOLIMINI PAULA T REV TR LARSON, RR KJ TR THORNE, JEFFREY G SEYMOUR, ROBERT SANDRA BENGSTON DF TR, STEWART B TR OCONNOR, DONALD ALANA ANDERSON L N E DECL OF TR WELLS, T W T B 1998 TR WELLS, T BLAINE 1998 TR IDEN CAROL E TR 101 WECK, GEOFFREY E BONNIE S CURTIS, ROBERT B MARCIA M EICHHORST, GEORGE E PATRICIA YOUNG, ALLISON G REV TR LOMBARDI RS, WOOTEN KR WINTERS, LA JMA VAZZANO, MARTIN ET AL HEILGEIST, JOSEPH C KARIN K LENKE ROBERT LINDA JNT TEN TR MCGORRIAN JOHN SUSAN JNT TR RODRIGUEZ, MICHELLE TOMBAUGH, CHERYL L TR KOENIGSBERGER, THOMAS G LORI CASALINO, ANTHONY F MARTHA M LAUDICK PE, SCHULTZ KC DINA, RICHARD E LAURIE FREUND CASEY, MICHAEL J KIM M FARRELL, SANDRA KOTTKE FAM TR RICHARDSON, PATRICK C LORRAIN PIEKOS, LARRY MARCY DLIT HOLDINGS LLC MCHENRY CO FARM BUREAU EYRE, R W S T TR EYRE , R W S T TR LAKE STREETS LLC 2 LAKE STREETS LLC 3 LAKE STREETS LLC 4 LAKE STREETS LLC 4 TINKLER, PETER C KATHLEEN S TINKLER, PETER C KATHLEEN S TINKLER, PETER C KATHLEEN S TINKLER, PETER C KATHLEEN S PARRISH, RONALD K BARBARA S GRENWAY PROP TR 35 2533256 MCMAHON, LINDA P BABBITT, JOHN K VIRGINIA A DUNCAN PARTNERSHIP KNIGHT PLASTICS INC KNIGHT PLASTICS INC KNIGHT PLASTICS INC OCONNOR, LAWRENCE R CARTEL LLC STAG WDSTK LLC KB PROP HLDG LLC PROVIDENCE PROP PTNRS LLC KB PROP HLDG LLC LUKASIK PROP LLC PIERCE PROP HLDGS DUNCAN 11 COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO HARVARD ST BK TR 731 BERRY, SCOT STEPHANIE CASCIARO, JOHN M HEIDE B HASAN, MUMTAZ YASMEEN PAVON J, PADILLA LM TUTTLE, JOHN AMY PATEL, HETANKUMAR NITABEN DELGADO, RUTH E POWERS TR 1 KIELAR FAM LIV TR DE SERTO, SILVIO PATRICIA GILE, STEVEN E PERALTA, JUAN C AMY A BULL VALLEY TR EDDY, JOHN P MICHELLE L RIGGS, MARY T MCNAMARA, LIV TR COFFMAN CHRISTINA A REV TR RUPANY, BEVERLY A LIV TR GOODMAN CAROLYN REV TR MORSE, GREGORY TR ARNOLD, DAVID W DEIDRE B TREU OGLE , ROBERT S LINDA LORENE BOZICH, DANA A JAMES W TR BARRY, GREGORY J JILLIAN L KWIATKOWSKI M, KIRALY P MACKNIGHT WARREN R LIV TR MACKNIGHT, WARREN R LIV TR MOAN , MICHAEL PAULA OLSON ELIZABETH M LIV TR STEVENS, CHARLES H DECL OF TR 10711 BULL VALLEY DRIVE TR WEILER AMY R 2011 REV TR

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

13-09-278-065 13-09-278-066 13-09-278-067 13-09-278-068 13-09-278-069 13-09-278-070 13-09-278-071 13-09-278-072 13-09-278-073 13-09-278-074 13-09-279-002 13-09-279-003 13-09-279-004 13-09-279-005 13-09-279-006 13-09-279-007 13-09-279-008 13-09-279-009 13-09-279-012 13-09-280-011 13-09-280-012 13-09-280-013 13-09-280-014 13-09-280-015 13-09-280-016 13-09-280-017 13-09-280-018 13-09-280-019 13-09-280-020 13-09-280-021 13-09-280-022 13-09-280-023 13-09-280-024 13-09-280-025 13-09-280-026 13-09-280-027 13-09-280-028 13-09-301-001 13-09-306-001 13-09-326-001 13-09-327-001 13-09-327-002 13-09-376-005 13-09-376-006 13-09-376-012 13-09-376-013 13-09-426-007 13-09-426-010 13-09-426-012 13-09-426-022 13-09-428-002 13-09-428-003 13-09-428-004 13-09-428-005 13-09-476-010 13-09-476-011 13-09-476-017 13-09-476-018 13-09-476-021 13-09-476-022 13-09-476-023 13-09-477-004 13-09-477-007 13-09-477-009 13-09-478-003 13-09-478-007 13-09-478-008 13-09-478-011 13-10-101-005 13-10-101-008 13-10-101-009 13-10-101-010 13-10-101-011 13-10-101-012 13-10-101-013 13-10-101-014 13-10-101-015 13-10-101-016 13-10-101-017 13-10-101-018 13-10-101-019 13-10-101-020 13-10-101-021 13-10-101-022 13-10-101-023 13-10-101-024 13-10-102-001 13-10-102-002 13-10-102-003 13-10-102-004 13-10-103-001 13-10-103-004 13-10-104-001 13-10-104-002 13-10-104-003 13-10-104-004 13-10-104-005 13-10-104-006 13-10-104-007 13-10-104-010


PPUBLIC NOTICES

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

28

13-10-401-015 13-10-401-016 13-10-401-017 13-10-401-018 13-10-401-019 13-10-401-020 13-10-401-021 13-10-401-022 13-10-402-002 13-10-402-003 13-10-402-005 13-10-402-006 13-10-402-007 13-10-403-001 13-10-403-002 13-10-403-003 13-10-403-004 13-10-403-005 13-10-403-006 13-10-403-007 13-10-403-008 13-10-403-009 13-10-426-013 13-10-451-002 13-10-452-001 13-10-452-002 13-10-452-004 13-10-452-005 13-10-452-006 13-10-452-007 13-10-452-008 13-10-452-009 13-10-452-010 13-10-452-011 13-10-452-012 13-10-452-013 13-10-452-014 13-10-452-015 13-10-452-016 13-10-452-017 13-10-452-018 13-10-452-020 13-10-452-023 13-10-452-024 13-10-452-025 13-10-452-027 13-10-452-028 13-10-452-029 13-10-453-001 13-10-453-002 13-10-453-003 13-10-453-004 13-10-453-005 13-10-453-006 13-10-453-007 13-10-454-001 13-10-454-003 13-10-454-004 13-10-454-005 13-10-454-006 13-10-454-007 13-10-454-008 13-10-454-009 13-10-454-010 13-10-454-011 13-10-454-012 13-10-454-013 13-10-454-016 13-10-454-017 13-10-454-018 13-10-454-019 13-10-454-020 13-10-454-021 13-10-454-022 13-10-454-023 13-10-454-024 13-10-454-025 13-10-454-026 13-10-454-028 13-10-477-006 13-10-478-001 13-10-478-002 13-10-478-003 13-10-478-004 13-10-479-001 13-10-479-002 13-10-479-003 13-10-479-004 13-10-479-007 13-10-482-007 13-10-482-010 13-11-100-001 13-11-100-002 13-11-100-006 13-11-100-007 13-11-100-008 13-11-100-010 13-11-100-011 13-11-100-012 13-11-100-019

ROBERTSON, PHILLIP CHRISTINE BODUCK, MARK E PATRICIA MCCLELLAN, MICHAEL G HALL, ROBERT F JR KRISTINE T SALERNO, JOHN MARLENE J LOWRY, JOHN J LAMBROS FRANCES PETERSON RT TR, CARLSON DM TR REECE PG TR REECE TS TR TAYLOR PL, BORSKI LJ SIVORE, SEAN KIMBERLY KOBY, DANIEL PAMELA TR CASTILLO VN ET AL TR VICKERS KARLA A LIV TR DEPERSIO SM, KRETOWICZ A BOHO, JOHN F PATRICIA J BOHO, JOHN F PATRICIA J LIND JOANNE 2012 TR ZAINO, RICCA Y DECL TR OSBORNE, WILLIAM G JR WENSCH , THOMAS P JANICE S TR ONEILL, DIANA F PENUELA TR LERUM, JOAN C TR RABINE CHERYL REV TR HARRIS TR SVGS BANK TR 2216 DOUGHERTY, MICHAEL L KARYN E MORROW, KATHLEEN A JAMES R NORTON, PETER T MEGAN M RINQUEST, DELBERT S JESSICA L ZARATE, CLAUDIO BARBARA PALOMAKI, W J JR L J LEWANDOWSKI IRREV TR MAYER, LAWRENCE A PATRICIA R PRIHODA WEINER LAUREN N TR PARLBERG, DAVID WAYNE ROBINETT, KRISTINE DONALD BOETEL, RICHARD J LAURENE A HENRICKSON, JAMES A CINDY A JOHNSON, DAVID HOFFMAN, A WAYNE CHRISTINE WEBBER MA, LISOWSKI NL MILLER, HEATHER C DECKER, ROBERT W MARY L FLYNN, ROBERT J JUDY M KOGLER K, KRYSIAK M DAVIS J C, KARPIEL A B DANOWSKI, ADAM M DAVIS, GEORGE W AHLNESS, TREVOR TRACY PHIPPS, JEREMIAH T SHARON R WHITE, SPENCER R ORTIZ, RAYMUNDO O GRACIELA B ROTH KURT M, MANZO ELIZABETH RICK, STEVEN M CYNTHIA M WASBERG, THOMAS J CHRISTINE N TIERNEY, TOM RANGEL, MELISSA J HANSEN, EARL J DECL OF TR REYES, ANN SAMUEL GREGORY, THEODORE G ET AL KRUK, DAVID A CHRISTINE M CHRISTENSEN, NICK CLAUDIA KASHMIER, BRIAN J TINA M SRAL, PETER J DIANE M FREY, WOLFGANG K GAIL F CUSACK CE, TERESI B MARSH E, WERENSKI HA PEAKE, CHAD A ANDREA A JACOBS, DAVID P ALICIA M CLIFTON, TIMOTHY J KATEY H CIESLA, HENRY REBECCA HILLIARD, SHARI J JERICHO BODZIOCH, RACHEL WOOD, DONALD J DONALD WEBER, DAVID T LISA K DUDEK, RICHARD S NORMA S JOHNSON, KATIE DEMAREO AMH 2015 2 BORROWER LLC GREGORY, KRISTEN E DAVID J GREEN VIEW HOMES LLC REUTER, SC PN MALYSA, JAN FELIKS BEATA KRIEGEL, KIMBERLY E ROBERT W VETTER, KRISTEN DR HORTON INC MIDWEST CELLUCCI, RM JR JN ELBERT, NICHOLAS S GIANNA M DAMMYER PROP LLC DR HORTON INC MIDWEST SIEGFRIED, NORMAN D DIANE L RIBEIRO, ROBERT J KATHERINE P JONES WP, BARRANCO MM KRENGER, JOHN R DECL TR PALENSKI JOHN B REAL EST TR LICHTHARDT, DONNA GREGORY STROMBACH HANK, EHORN KATHY CHGO TITLE TR CO TR 1089097 SCHRAGER, TIMOTHY S RHOADES, THOMAS F LISA K RICHARDSON JEFFREY, MULDERINK MANNY DELORIS M TR

133,212 119,229 126,050 140,520 145,244 123,936 136,425 156,838 11,784 138,904 129,570 128,337 141,405 123,397 12,192 11,978 177,164 16,494 132,082 114,736 10,057 141,135 248,234 146,478 61,869 76,679 73,959 61,823 62,353 62,730 80,640 73,373 84,384 74,399 82,391 77,541 81,598 82,121 85,479 91,790 79,082 79,706 68,433 80,114 81,457 72,904 73,645 73,745 81,864 63,094 73,226 62,415 75,715 76,904 81,793 75,445 70,415 73,899 62,812 79,592 83,838 70,404 62,535 79,052 86,229 72,991 74,802 83,559 78,447 65,374 74,571 69,142 62,277 73,577 68,248 86,913 69,843 63,277 9,615 258,086 56,992 55,928 54,615 10,758 84,760 76,447 10,698 11,515 74,192 79,122 92,225 5,657 106,367 97,743 161,427 245,314 256 984 257,813 145

13-11-100-027 13-11-100-029 13-11-100-032 13-11-100-033 13-11-100-034 13-11-100-035 13-11-100-036 13-11-100-039 13-11-100-040 13-11-200-008 13-11-200-010 13-11-200-011 13-11-200-012 13-11-200-015 13-11-200-016 13-11-200-018 13-11-200-020 13-11-200-021 13-11-200-024 13-11-200-026 13-11-200-029 13-11-300-001 13-11-300-005 13-11-300-009 13-11-351-003 13-11-400-002 13-11-400-003 13-11-400-006 13-11-400-007 13-11-400-012 13-11-400-015 13-11-400-016 13-11-400-017 13-12-100-009 13-12-100-010 13-12-100-013 13-12-100-014 13-12-100-015 13-12-100-016 13-12-100-017 13-12-126-002 13-12-200-001 13-12-200-009 13-12-200-018 13-12-200-019 13-12-200-020 13-12-200-023 13-12-200-024 13-12-200-025 13-12-200-026 13-12-200-027 13-12-200-028 13-12-300-005 13-12-300-009 13-12-300-012 13-12-300-013 13-12-300-014 13-12-300-015 13-12-300-016 13-12-300-020 13-12-300-021 13-12-300-025 13-12-300-028 13-12-300-029 13-12-300-030 13-12-300-031 13-12-326-001 13-12-326-002 13-12-326-003 13-12-326-004 13-12-326-005 13-12-326-007 13-12-326-008 13-12-400-004 13-12-400-005 13-12-400-006 13-12-400-015 13-12-400-018 13-12-400-019 13-12-400-020 13-12-400-023 13-12-400-025 13-12-400-026 13-12-400-028 13-12-400-029 13-12-400-032 13-12-400-034 13-12-400-036 13-12-400-038 13-12-400-039 13-12-400-041 13-12-400-042 13-12-400-043 13-12-400-044 13-12-451-010 13-13-100-001 13-13-100-002 13-13-100-003 13-13-100-006 13-13-100-007

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13-13-100-008 13-13-100-009 13-13-100-010 13-13-100-011 13-13-100-012 13-13-100-013 13-13-100-015 13-13-100-019 13-13-100-020 13-13-100-021 13-13-100-024 13-13-100-025 13-13-100-026 13-13-100-027 13-13-100-032 13-13-100-036 13-13-100-037 13-13-100-038 13-13-100-040 13-13-100-041 13-13-100-042 13-13-100-043 13-13-100-044 13-13-100-045 13-13-100-048 13-13-101-001 13-13-101-002 13-13-101-003 13-13-101-004 13-13-200-002 13-13-200-010 13-13-200-023 13-13-200-026 13-13-200-027 13-13-200-028 13-13-200-029 13-13-200-032 13-13-200-034 13-13-200-036 13-13-200-038 13-13-200-040 13-13-200-041 13-13-200-042 13-13-200-044 13-13-200-045 13-13-277-004 13-13-300-001 13-13-300-002 13-13-300-003 13-13-300-008 13-13-300-011 13-13-300-012 13-13-300-017 13-13-300-027 13-13-300-030 13-13-300-031 13-13-300-033 13-13-300-034 13-13-400-002 13-13-400-004 13-13-400-007 13-13-400-010 13-14-100-002 13-14-100-005 13-14-100-006 13-14-100-013 13-14-101-004 13-14-101-006 13-14-101-008 13-14-102-004 13-14-102-005 13-14-102-007 13-14-103-004 13-14-103-005 13-14-151-002 13-14-151-003 13-14-151-004 13-14-151-009 13-14-151-010 13-14-151-013 13-14-151-021 13-14-154-006 13-14-154-007 13-14-154-009 13-14-154-010 13-14-154-011 13-14-200-001 13-14-200-003 13-14-200-004 13-14-200-005 13-14-200-006 13-14-200-007 13-14-200-008 13-14-200-009 13-14-300-008 13-14-300-010 13-14-300-011 13-14-300-012 13-14-300-013 13-14-300-014

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102,814 89,730 113,870 101,257 130,485 26,572 79,854 13,740 121,499 101,300 132,592 146,623 107,439 107,796 142,630 1,096 193,837 1,148 130,974 152,346 210,765 1,276 283,877 185,309 69,388 138,478 112,580 116,219 105,191 118,665 109,090 129,077 147,716 172,170 29,518 177,973 136,256 102,810 321 86,592 103,582 142,633 99,155 118,310 1,742 146,750 84,185 865 74,233 67,995 95,962 87,163 273 369 114,396 193,070 18,744 70,912 193,933 914 128,074 155,752 10,300 11,060 1,675 1,419 190,323 229,823 161,439 201,214 167,297 220,964 172,568 195,847 73,906 70,131 56,334 58,992 70,421 72,746 55,478 102,554 60,750 103,865 49,086 57,999 14,718 7,502 103,283 1,781 137,737 15,632 16,912 6,886 1,815 353 11,979 9,000 3,571 1,146


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61,823 82,317 92,296 77,773 79,018 70,502 73,936 77,055 86,649 85,911 76,683 84,544 54,473 95,345 49,700 9,963 10,046 9,975 9,887 9,931 9,949 10,173 81,198 82,944 81,132 75,577 81,067 84,003 88,920 89,237 84,969 79,701 75,877 74,536 64,072 73,803 78,896 74,118 74,741 74,771 80,292 63,871 61,751 8,173 8,173 60,583 56,030 56,030 56,251 48,078 62,402 62,402 48,078 62,402 48,024 48,078 49,876 60,583 56,030 56,030 56,251 56,030 60,583 60,583 56,030 56,030 56,251 59,549 56,030 60,230 56,383 56,030 56,251 84,007 84,873 80,969 7,262 7,262 84,541 74,875 83,670 5,548 4,129 9,869 3,668 5,686 37 25 722,588 193,712 71,878 67,765 71,912 72,328 75,939 79,590 67,114 58,011 83,083 72,128

13-17-100-006 13-17-276-005 13-17-276-006 13-17-300-001 13-17-300-005 13-17-300-007 13-17-300-014 13-17-377-015 13-17-377-025 13-17-378-018 13-17-379-001 13-17-379-002 13-17-379-003 13-17-379-004 13-17-379-005 13-17-452-001 13-17-453-007 13-17-453-008 13-17-453-009 13-17-453-010 13-17-453-011 13-17-453-013 13-17-454-001 13-17-454-002 13-17-454-005 13-17-454-006 13-17-454-007 13-17-454-008 13-17-476-003 13-18-100-001 13-18-100-002 13-18-100-003 13-18-100-004 13-18-100-007 13-18-100-008 13-18-100-009 13-18-100-010 13-18-100-013 13-18-100-014 13-18-100-015 13-18-200-009 13-18-300-001 13-18-300-002 13-18-300-003 13-18-400-001 13-18-400-004 13-18-400-005 13-18-400-006 13-18-400-007 13-19-100-001 13-19-100-002 13-19-100-003 13-19-100-004 13-19-100-005 13-19-201-001 13-19-226-003 13-19-226-004 13-19-226-008 13-19-226-010 13-19-226-016 13-19-226-019 13-19-226-020 13-19-251-002 13-19-300-001 13-19-300-002 13-19-400-001 13-19-400-002 13-19-400-003 13-20-100-011 13-20-100-012 13-20-100-013 13-20-101-001 13-20-101-002 13-20-101-003 13-20-101-004 13-20-101-005 13-20-102-001 13-20-102-002 13-20-102-003 13-20-103-001 13-20-104-004 13-20-126-005 13-20-126-006 13-20-127-024 13-20-129-005 13-20-136-003 13-20-136-028 13-20-200-004 13-20-200-005 13-20-200-006 13-20-300-014 13-20-300-016 13-20-300-017 13-20-300-018 13-20-400-002 13-20-400-003 13-20-400-005 13-20-400-006 13-21-101-001 13-21-126-005

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51,888 641,186 434,407 65,722 55,692 72,104 11,039 71,078 82,109 98,282 88,444 89,101 95,605 91,850 84,964 75,231 90,614 90,415 82,394 92,164 92,115 74,532 79,292 94,526 82,862 69,973 78,101 74,418 6,680 1,829 1,196 2,513 66,461 1,978 11,904 62 11,546 127,892 578 11,521 22,640 8,457 9,207 12,839 143,235 117,052 1,664 2,048 2,210 1,410 9,216 5,250 5,291 144,783 11,308 2,151 92,711 1,166 1,227 89,537 978 646 10,178 78,283 76,673 9,213 2,470 23,014 11,293 201 1,169 77,092 63,300 74,901 81,584 73,540 92,948 65,864 72,981 81,895 77,643 89,934 77,148 48,081 70,573 40,262 47,562 4,650 17,107 13,829 2,075 4,675 322 32,640 329 5,712 1,569 22,575 6,532 55,290

29

PUBLIC NOTICES

1,167 49 118,967 3,509 3,713 10,559 1,921 120,456 81,053 90,735 1,902 94,297 1,539 7,858 1,204 2,998 1,736 1,035 59,421 68,221 83,691 79,199 75,739 79,848 93,789 75,455 72,478 80,057 68,528 60,022 73,184 72,330 63,770 75,360 61,393 72,962 61,810 79,095 61,859 63,448 84,953 74,505 74,627 80,064 63,594 63,239 70,101 70,034 74,142 89,292 67,935 61,394 75,108 86,498 61,221 87,625 68,347 75,908 79,211 79,601 64,838 74,431 78,576 67,221 82,218 80,053 61,917 81,775 62,800 64,045 61,872 79,581 63,240 79,386 88,984 73,081 69,736 77,534 75,241 77,781 81,104 87,898 85,331 81,222 86,418 88,916 74,809 75,761 78,898 89,306 83,857 74,134 7,262 7,262 7,262 84,466 78,850 68,431 79,093 66,650

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

LAND RESERVES LLC LILY POND STONE LLC LONG, GEORGE E WDSTK AMCORE BK NA TR 2779 MCCONNELL RD FARM LLC MCCONNELL RD FARM LLC PARKWAY BK TR CO TR 4520 PARKWAY BK TR CO TR 4520 HELFMAN AJ, OHAIR BRAWLEY HA BRATANICK, JOSEPH K HOLLY L CUNNINGHAM R, FIGUEREDO Y WALKE FAM TR , RENNER, KENNETH GLADYS WDSTK ST BK TR 5179 WDSTK ST BK TR 5179 WELLS MFG CO WELLS MFG CO HOME ST BK NA TR 5821 REMIER, LARRY T CHERYL M BAUMAN, MARK CHRISTINE HEISLER JA WJ REV TR 1 GANDAY, RENATA T DEGREEF, DAVID N BATRA A TR BATRA P TR PEREZ, ANA MARIE VIC R KOENIG, HAROLD L BAUGHMAN FAM TR GUILBEAU, JEREMY C NATALIE A SCHMARJE, H G ALBERTSON L T FISCHER, CHRISTINE M COPERSMET, KEITH V JR WOHLHART, DAVID R LISA A MONSON, MATTHEW M NICOLE A THR PROP IL LP KAMPSCHROER, MELISSA FERRARINI, LARRY JILL C LOPEZ , V G TR 20101 RICO, DANIEL MARIA R DOBLER, JASON MICHELLE SPUKAS, CESLOVAS DALIA OWCARZ, JAMES CONSTANCE BRUNETTI J A , CUNNINGHAM K M KLOPFENSTEIN, EMY HICKS, MICHELLE ORTIZ NO, AYALA F LEISE, DONALD SYLVESTER, MICHAEL MEGAN RIFFE, JAMES C STACIA L FOURDYCE, JOSHUA S ANGELA D GREEN, MICHELLE L GATTUSO, FRANK H SUZANNE L CAREY, ROBERT J PEGGY ANNE CARR, DEBORAH RUDDEN, BRYAN D RAYMOND C MEDINA MA, SALAZAR VILCHIS MD WEGRZYN CL, PEDDIE MC BLAZIER, RW DA REV TR BOWERS R JR K JNT TR HENDRICKS, MARK D NATALIE L PILGARD, VICKI BRIAN RAMIREZ, GREGORIO MALOUF, CYNTHIA NATTRESS, LEROY W LYNN M FREDRICK, JAMES M MARGARET M KEARLEY, WILLIAM F TRS CONTE, B J FURIO C R NENNI, NICHOLAS P KARLI KAROLCZAK, ROBERT J COLLEEN M RASSBACH, ANDREA BENTLEY, SCOTT A BENEDETTA L ST JOHN, JOSHUA C DEBRA L ANDERSON, MICHAEL W SHARON M THR PROP IL LP KENNING, DANIEL J TRACY A NOVELLE, DONALD V ROBIN M WILSON THOMAS P 2016 TR DUPAW, GERALD R JR MORRIS, JON C ANNA MARIE NELSON, JOHN C RIBBE, ROBERT W ANGELA B FORNER, JAMES R CELENTANO, ANDREW GLORIA JEAN LISOWSKI, JANICE A ROBERT A MARTENS, PAUL N JOHANNSEN, CURT R JENNIFER L ROWZEE, JENNIFER MICHAEL CONTE, RUTH S ROBERT W ZIMMERMAN, SCOTT M SR LAURA E COLLIER, MARY E REV DECL TR LEUNG, ANTHONY K QIN GE PALA, KERI L EDWARD S CHERNOFF M H C I, DR HORTON INC MIDWEST DR HORTON INC MIDWEST DR HORTON INC MIDWEST ALFUS, RESHMA MICHAEL NORMAN JOHN, MAYS BETHANY VOGLE, DAVID R FRAGANTE, JOHNSON C GLENDA C JURKIEWICZ, LISA

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

13-14-300-015 13-14-300-018 13-14-400-003 13-14-400-010 13-14-400-011 13-14-400-012 13-14-400-015 13-14-400-016 13-14-400-017 13-14-451-006 13-14-477-004 13-14-477-013 13-15-100-014 13-15-100-015 13-15-100-016 13-15-100-019 13-15-100-020 13-15-100-024 13-15-177-059 13-15-178-031 13-15-200-003 13-15-201-001 13-15-201-003 13-15-201-004 13-15-201-005 13-15-201-006 13-15-201-007 13-15-202-003 13-15-202-004 13-15-202-005 13-15-202-006 13-15-202-007 13-15-202-009 13-15-202-010 13-15-202-011 13-15-202-013 13-15-202-014 13-15-202-015 13-15-202-016 13-15-202-017 13-15-202-018 13-15-202-019 13-15-202-020 13-15-202-021 13-15-202-022 13-15-202-023 13-15-202-024 13-15-202-025 13-15-202-026 13-15-202-027 13-15-202-030 13-15-203-001 13-15-203-002 13-15-203-003 13-15-203-004 13-15-203-005 13-15-203-006 13-15-203-007 13-15-203-008 13-15-203-009 13-15-203-010 13-15-203-011 13-15-204-002 13-15-204-003 13-15-204-004 13-15-204-005 13-15-204-006 13-15-204-008 13-15-204-009 13-15-204-010 13-15-204-011 13-15-204-012 13-15-204-013 13-15-204-014 13-15-204-015 13-15-204-016 13-15-204-018 13-15-204-019 13-15-204-020 13-15-204-021 13-15-204-023 13-15-204-024 13-15-204-025 13-15-204-026 13-15-204-027 13-15-204-028 13-15-204-029 13-15-226-002 13-15-226-004 13-15-226-006 13-15-226-007 13-15-226-008 13-15-226-009 13-15-226-010 13-15-226-011 13-15-226-012 13-15-226-015 13-15-226-016 13-15-226-017 13-15-226-018


PPUBLIC NOTICES

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

30

13-21-126-006 13-21-126-007 13-21-126-008 13-21-126-009 13-21-127-001 13-21-127-002 13-21-127-003 13-21-127-004 13-21-127-005 13-21-127-006 13-21-127-007 13-21-127-008 13-21-127-009 13-21-127-011 13-21-127-012 13-21-127-013 13-21-127-014 13-21-127-015 13-21-127-016 13-21-127-017 13-21-127-018 13-21-128-001 13-21-128-002 13-21-128-003 13-21-128-004 13-21-128-005 13-21-128-006 13-21-128-007 13-21-128-008 13-21-129-001 13-21-129-002 13-21-129-003 13-21-129-004 13-21-129-005 13-21-129-006 13-21-129-007 13-21-129-009 13-21-129-010 13-21-129-011 13-21-129-012 13-21-129-013 13-21-129-014 13-21-130-001 13-21-130-002 13-21-130-003 13-21-130-004 13-21-130-005 13-21-130-006 13-21-130-007 13-21-130-008 13-21-130-011 13-21-130-012 13-21-130-013 13-21-130-014 13-21-130-015 13-21-130-016 13-21-130-017 13-21-130-018 13-21-130-019 13-21-130-020 13-21-130-021 13-21-130-022 13-21-130-023 13-21-130-024 13-21-130-025 13-21-130-026 13-21-130-027 13-21-130-028 13-21-130-029 13-21-130-030 13-21-130-031 13-21-130-032 13-21-131-001 13-21-131-002 13-21-131-003 13-21-131-004 13-21-131-005 13-21-131-006 13-21-131-007 13-21-131-008 13-21-131-009 13-21-131-010 13-21-131-011 13-21-131-012 13-21-131-013 13-21-131-015 13-21-131-016 13-21-131-017 13-21-131-018 13-21-131-019 13-21-131-020 13-21-131-021 13-21-131-022 13-21-131-023 13-21-131-025 13-21-131-026 13-21-151-001 13-21-151-002 13-21-176-004 13-21-200-003

BELSKI, EDWARD J HALVEY TIMOTHY, JOHNSON AMBER ESCOBAR, JUVENAL RENKO LAWRENCE, HANCE JEANNE KOPARI, JON P SARA N WARNER, RYAN CARMEN CRUZ, JESUS NANCY GULAM, RABBANI FRANKE, CHAD J DION D BOBER, MARK GUZMAN, JESUS M BARBARA E ZECCHIN, JOSEPH ERIN M ZAMORANO, RAUL JR MALES, PAUL E VICTORIA R GOGLIN, ANDREW F KIMBERLY A FEDMASU, NICU RADKIEWICZ, LORI IRENE GUTIERREZ, RONALDO DIAZ ET AL MERKLING KJ, DISKIN JM BOWLES, NATHAN P JENNIFER M HASSEN, KYLE EIGENFELD, WILLIAM K WHITNEY COOK, BRANDON M BETH A TRCH, JACOB PASHA, ARMAND GERTA MONTANO, LORENZO CHRISTINA COLE, MARTIN C JR JUANA A DOMANSKI, SLAWOMIR WILLIAMS, DANIEL VANDERVILLE, MATTHEW R JULIE KOSTOV, TCHAVDAR P CARZOLI, JOHN C TRICIA L WHITED, KRISTA M JAMES R GODINEZ, LUIS MCLOUGHLIN, J TERRY JANINE PATEL, JAYESH DIMAL WHITE, JAMES VALERIE SIMPSON, KEITH G PAMELA J ROJAS, EDDY R SAIRA ROMAN AYALA, SAMUEL MARIA BURLEY, KATIE MICHAEL P RYAN, JOSEPH T LEAH T AMIN, HARSHAD MEENA H LINDNER , ZACHARY M GRACEY J LUSCAVICH, CHRISTOPHER A ARROYO, ALEJANDRO ENA NEAL, PHILLIP C SHAUNA BUCHAR, SEAN MARGARET AMH 2014 2 BORROWER LLC BAKAZAN, ETHAN R BISHOP, ROBERT W METZE, JOHNATHAN R ANN M GALANOPOULOS, KIM M WALKER, DANIEL TRACY SOOS BLACH AL, HULSART SM SLIFFY, SHEILA J BRIAN J DRAKE, LAWRENCE E HANSON, RACHEL E GREGORY W COTE, PATRICK W ANGELA J WIENKE, CAROLINE DAVE FASLIU, AFERDITA HARUN SAHLBERG, GRANT ERIN BALCKE, CONCETTA A ROBERT W BOYD, JENNIFER L GEORGE P JR DIMRAJ, GRAMOS LUIZA SAMAKOURIS, ELZBIETA MICHAEL NABONG, JENNIFER L MICHAEL J EDWARDS, JEREMY V CHRISTEN D CYSCON, RONALD E KATHLEEN H SPARK, CHAD J AIMEE J BELCASTRO, BRIDGET ZIMMERMAN, STEVEN R KRISTA R CASTANEDA, SERGIO BELEN DADEJ, DENNIS J JOSEPHINE T ESTEVEZ, CARLOS CORDELL, DANIEL JENNIFER HOCHREIN, SHAWN C HAY, SANDRA L TR FLORES, FELICIANO G JR HAY, SANDRA L TR SWENSON, BRADLEY J MALTESE, DANIEL M REGAN SEIBERT S, PRUDLICK KW ZAPATA, MARIA E FISCHER, IAN S APRIL L CAUDLE, JASON M BENNETT FAM TR ALVAREZ, MIGUEL A BEATRIZ V NIXON, SHANDON W JENNIFER C MEUS, DAVID G MARTHA A DAY, ROSANNE KLINEFELTER, JEFF L JAMIE D ODEA, BENJAMIN D STACY A RICO, ELIA M JORGE OROZCO RAUL, RIVAS SONIA CARRIS, DAVID M DEBRA L SUBURBAN BK TR CO TR 744563 CRANE, BRANDON MG ORTMANN, MICHAEL W TAMMY L CHGO TR CO TR 1109235 ET AL

80,039 58,772 67,590 72,004 75,575 73,754 58,858 68,838 66,899 65,777 72,569 59,316 83,097 76,796 72,191 73,130 62,980 58,910 79,203 63,955 60,043 65,377 57,828 63,655 72,173 74,682 65,682 65,682 71,223 67,519 64,251 69,581 64,372 68,094 66,954 81,545 81,542 79,714 71,800 72,813 65,682 69,306 66,183 63,825 73,918 71,924 76,490 72,961 58,739 68,108 76,351 58,124 54,694 73,178 82,135 82,470 59,698 70,390 82,171 73,382 55,390 58,962 81,151 64,636 58,588 75,508 82,173 82,630 58,702 69,158 68,709 60,011 69,050 84,439 66,403 64,511 71,586 7,534 68,711 7,534 80,177 58,998 66,653 78,540 70,069 65,125 65,913 65,843 71,280 72,723 66,802 64,473 72,542 58,415 64,796 70,531 1,587 85,518 75,123 15,307

13-21-200-004 13-21-300-003 13-21-300-005 13-21-300-008 13-21-300-011 13-21-300-012 13-21-300-013 13-21-300-014 13-21-300-016 13-21-300-017 13-21-300-018 13-21-300-019 13-21-300-020 13-21-300-021 13-21-400-001 13-21-400-002 13-21-400-003 13-21-400-004 13-21-400-005 13-21-400-006 13-21-400-007 13-21-400-008 13-21-400-011 13-21-400-012 13-21-400-013 13-21-400-014 13-21-400-015 13-21-400-016 13-22-100-025 13-22-100-026 13-22-100-027 13-22-100-032 13-22-106-001 13-22-106-004 13-22-106-005 13-22-200-013 13-22-200-014 13-22-200-016 13-22-300-003 13-22-300-004 13-22-300-005 13-22-300-006 13-22-300-012 13-22-426-002 13-22-451-004 13-22-476-004 13-22-476-006 13-23-100-001 13-23-100-011 13-23-100-022 13-23-100-023 13-23-200-001 13-23-200-002 13-23-200-003 13-23-200-004 13-23-300-026 13-23-300-027 13-23-300-031 13-23-400-001 13-23-400-005 13-24-100-006 13-24-100-008 13-24-100-009 13-24-101-010 13-24-200-002 13-24-200-006 13-24-251-003 13-24-251-004 13-24-276-003 13-24-276-007 13-24-300-001 13-24-300-002 13-24-300-018 13-24-351-001 13-24-426-002 13-24-477-008 13-25-126-006 13-25-127-011 13-25-151-002 13-25-176-002 13-25-202-002 13-25-227-005 13-25-227-006 13-25-227-007 13-25-227-008 13-25-251-002 13-25-277-002 13-25-277-003 13-25-300-020 13-25-400-006 13-25-400-007 13-25-400-009 13-25-400-010 13-25-400-013 13-25-400-014 13-25-400-015 13-26-100-002 13-26-100-004 13-26-100-006 13-26-100-008

CHGO TITLE TR CO TR 1096027 CHGO TITLE TR CO TR 1071852 WDSTK HLDGS LLC CHGO TITLE TR CO TR 1071852 CHGO TITLE LAND TR 1071852 WDSTK HLDGS LLC WDSTK HLDGS LLC WDSTK HLDGS LLC SCIMECA, LINDA ET AL CHGO TR CO TR 1109235 CHGO TR CO TR 1109235 CHGO TITLE LAND TR 1071852 KLEHM, SUSAN M TR KLEHM, SUSAN M SKERKE JOHN H SCIMECA, LINDA ET AL SCIMECA, LINDA ET AL CHGO TITLE TR CO TR 1071852 SCIMECA, LINDA ET AL CHGO TITLE LAND TR 8002374494 CHGO TR CO TR 1109235 CHGO TITLE LAND TR 1071852 SCIMECA, LINDA ET AL CHGO TR CO TR 1109235 SCIMECA LINDA ET AL KLEHM, SUSAN M TR KLEHM, SUSAN M TR KLEHM, SUSAN M TR KLEHM, SUSAN M TR WDSTK 1ST NATL BK TR 772 1ST AMER BK TR 100111 CEDARHURST WDSTK REAL EST NIMED CORP LROC PROP LLC WCC UNIT 1 LLC FC HLDGS LLC WDSTK 1ST NATL BK TR 772 GORMAN, JAMES ET AL LILY POND STONE LLC CHGO TITLE LAND TR 8002374494 HAAG LYLE E LIV TR CHGO TITLE LAND TR 8002374494 CHGO TITLE LAND TR 8002374494 NIMED CORP LILY POND STONE LLC HAAG LYLE E LIV TR SKELTON, NICHOLAS J HEATHER M LIN YING YING TR ET AL LAND RESERVES LLC CIRIGLIANO, BARBARA W WDSTK 1ST NATL BK TR 2325 WDSTK 1ST NATL BK TR 2325 WDSTK 1ST NATL BK TR 2325 UTECH, ERICH R ET AL WDSTK 1ST NATL BK TR 2325 UTECH, ERICH R ET AL WDSTK HLDGS LLC DOMENELLA FAM LP 1 CHGO CSMPLTN NATL BK 29727 CHGO CSMPLTN NATL BK 29727 EIGER LLC C D B FAM LTD PRTNRSHP WDSTK ST BK TR 3719 CASCIARO, JOHN M HEIDE B ZOELLER, GERALD L ALLISON M AMCORE INVSTMNT GRP 15453 CASCIARO, JOHN M HEIDE B WEBER, CRAIG JULIE WEBER, CRAIG JULIE FISK RG PL REV TR BURCHAM WF TR BURCHAM EM TR NORTH STAR TR CO TR 2350 KHW MCHENRY LLC AMCORE TR CO TR 3582 1310 RIDGEFIELD ROAD LLC KHW MCHENRY LLC CURRIER, CHARLES W MARILYN A BAXTER WOODMAN REAL EST HLDGS CHGO TITLE 8002351915 ET AL CHGO TITLE TR CO TR 52235 MCHENRY CO COLLEGE TENUTA BOB COOPER, MARK S GAIL M HOME ST BK NA TR 3818 HOME ST BK NA TR 3818 HOME ST BK NA TR 3818 HOME ST BK NA TR 3818 TRS OF MCH CO COLL DIST 528 LUBRIZOL HLDG INC HANSON MARK P, THE OM MABEL WDSTK AMCORE BK NA TR 2696 BEHRENS DAVID, ORMSBY STACY PALATINE NATL BANK 485 LUBRIZOL HLDG INC DORR TWP LAND CO PISORS, HOLLY J FRANK HANSON MARK P, THE OM MABEL HANSON POPP IS, POPP AD DEARBORN ST HLDGS SERIES 16 WILMETTE LAUREL II LLC LIN YING YING TR ET AL WDSTK ST BK TR 4845

13,814 10,967 4,576 3,833 1,409 2,137 1,449 1,318 6,354 86,163 1,766 4,337 41,529 14,169 4,352 4,137 6,558 2,685 9,115 4,940 6,538 866 3,748 1,403 4,771 4,646 3,598 3,195 115 81,397 1,905 10,424 129,271 64,015 65,410 9,409 335,721 150,955 9,180 10,385 3,672 2,573 2,240 71 9,648 119,765 15,174 85 51,103 5,280 3 11,108 70,910 19,631 63 19,480 2,759 15,703 65,946 17,811 157 64,584 43,461 97,417 662 2,318 9,191 221,085 106,323 182,305 2,841 4,823 7,998 6,362 27,282 128,699 876,149 55,078 13,130 17,468 24,190 1,633 54,971 5,505 35,980 18,293 525 53 6,744 893 12,950 170 13,797 8,587 44,506 9,136 11,593 11,883 11,309 136,357

13-26-200-006 13-26-200-010 13-26-300-015 13-26-300-017 13-26-300-018 13-26-300-019 13-26-300-020 13-26-300-021 13-26-300-022 13-26-300-023 13-26-376-002 13-26-400-002 13-26-400-009 13-26-400-014 13-26-400-015 13-27-100-003 13-27-100-006 13-27-100-007 13-27-100-019 13-27-100-022 13-27-100-023 13-27-100-028 13-27-100-029 13-27-200-008 13-27-200-020 13-27-200-021 13-27-200-022 13-27-200-023 13-27-200-025 13-27-200-026 13-27-200-040 13-27-200-041 13-27-300-001 13-27-300-002 13-27-300-003 13-27-300-004 13-27-300-009 13-27-300-010 13-27-400-012 13-27-400-013 13-27-400-016 13-27-400-027 13-27-400-029 13-28-100-004 13-28-100-005 13-28-100-008 13-28-100-010 13-28-100-014 13-28-200-001 13-28-200-003 13-28-200-004 13-28-200-005 13-28-200-009 13-28-200-010 13-28-200-011 13-28-200-012 13-28-200-013 13-28-300-007 13-28-300-008 13-28-400-001 13-28-400-002 13-28-400-003 13-29-100-001 13-29-100-007 13-29-100-012 13-29-100-013 13-29-100-014 13-29-100-015 13-29-200-002 13-29-200-003 13-29-200-004 13-29-200-005 13-29-200-006 13-29-200-007 13-29-200-008 13-29-200-009 13-29-200-010 13-29-200-012 13-29-300-008 13-29-300-011 13-29-300-013 13-29-300-028 13-29-400-002 13-29-400-007 13-29-400-009 13-30-100-001 13-30-100-002 13-30-200-001 13-30-200-002 13-30-226-001 13-30-351-011 13-30-376-003 13-30-376-011 13-30-400-002 13-30-400-003 13-30-400-005 13-30-400-006 13-30-400-007 13-30-400-010 13-30-400-011

WILMETTE LAUREL II LLC SELCKE, LE RJ TR 101 WDSTK ST BK TR 1825 WILMETTE LAUREL II LLC WILMETTE LAUREL II LLC ROSATI, R HC WF J ROSATI, RONALD HAZEL C ROGERS, KATHLEEN A REV LIV TR EKLUND, C H B B TR WILMETTE LAUREL II LLC ROSATI, JOAN M TR ET AL KLAGUES, HILDEGARD A TR ET AL WILMETTE LAUREL II LLC WILMETTE LAUREL II LLC WILMETTE LAUREL II LLC CHGO TITLE TR CO TR 10-67447 CHGO TITLE TR CO TR 10-67447 HAAG LYLE E LIV TR COOK, SCOTT R LIEBETRAU T M JNT TEN TR BUCCI, NICHOLAS P KELLIE J CHGO TITLE LAND TR 8002374494 CHGO TITLE LAND TR 8002374494 HAAG LYLE E LIV TR DALLAS, STEVEN PATRICIA A DALLAS, STEVEN PATRICIA A KOLANOWSKI LIV TR KOLANOWSKI LIV TR DEARBORN ST HLDGS SERIES 16 LIN YING YING TR ET AL MINER KYLE W, SIMKUS ANNE R MINER KYLE W, SIMKUS ANNE R CHGO TITLE TR CO TR 10-67447 DRAKES ONLY LLC TIMMINS, KENNETH H GLORIA T CRYSTAL LK HOME ST BK TR 1894 MARTINE, SALLY J DRAKES ONLY LLC HEAD GAIL SHARON LIV TR HEAD GAIL SHARON LIV TR OAK PK 1ST BK TR 10357 SIMEK, DANIEL J ANDRA MOADDELI H R, ARGHAVANI M CHGO TITLE LAND 42604 HARRIS TR SVGS BANK TR 42604 MARCIA EQUITY MGMT LLC BANGASH, FAM LTD PRTNSHP RITTMAN, MARY ELLEN CHGO TITLE LAND TR 1071852 DIVERSIFIED SALES LLC FANNING, MARIA PATRICK SEAN FUNK PROP HLDGS LLC KLEHM, SUSAN M TR KLEHM, SUSAN M TR KLEHM, SUSAN M TR KLEHM, SUSAN M TR LUCAS WDSTK LLC PROVISION EQUITY LLC ET AL FREEDOM LANE LLC ET AL DIVERSIFIED SALES LLC CHGO TITLE TR CO TR 10-67447 LNL 4EVER LLC COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO INDECK PLEASANT VALLEY LLC OSMAN FAM TR 101 LANGTON GROUP PROP LLC INDECK PLEASANT VALLEY LLC OSMAN FAM TR 101 MARAS, A THOMAS TR FUDALA, MICHAEL A INDECK PLEASANT VALLEY LLC COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO EMERALD FARMS LLC MARAS, A THOMAS TR ARELLANO R, BRAVO SA YOUNG AT HEART PET RESCUE INC BERTHOLD, GARY R TR INDECK PLEASANT VALLEY LLC WDSTK HLDG LLC WDSTK HLDG LLC HILL, DAMON MICHELE FREEDOM LN LLC ET AL COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO PROVISION EQUITY LLC ET AL INDECK PLEASANT VALLEY LLC COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO CHGO AMER BK 12473906 COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO PLAYTIME INVSTMNTS LLC BECKETT, DANIEL G DEANNA D CONROY, MICHAEL C TRS CONROY, MICHAEL C TRS WDSTK XMAS TREES LLC PLAYTIME INVSTMNTS LLC WDSTK XMAS TREES LLC MLJ PROP LLC PLAYTIME INVSTMNTS LLC LAPRISE CYNTHIA L 2019 LIV TR JOHNSON HILL FARMS LLC JOHNSON HILL FARMS LLC

2,826 12,492 2,354 6,517 5,707 506 1,734 85,917 6,433 4,080 2,755 117,548 10,084 4,294 15,961 10,622 7,564 922 111,601 97,904 174,409 1,719 2,196 891 923 90,094 97,617 4,462 7,498 9,631 68,448 21,528 17,201 8,411 81,951 1,394 1,596 10,303 113,208 17,953 48,096 88,451 828 2,774 7,272 90,271 4,492 10,320 269 2,453 84,158 104,170 401 786 1,240 1,347 13,277 5,774 34,108 1,544 22,254 11,907 2,063 17,124 7,423 66,139 974 1,800 3,917 80,262 5,625 1,318 940 1,269 1,394 190,872 1,750 1,639 8,230 4,503 115,744 2,898 2,402 15,704 3,036 1,633 76,411 1,537 22,294 88,567 80 66,953 9,863 518 1,941 3,649 150 176 122,268 2,253


13-33-300-021 13-33-300-029 13-33-400-001 13-33-400-008 13-33-400-010 13-33-400-011 13-34-100-001 13-34-100-010 13-34-100-012 13-34-100-013 13-34-100-014 13-34-100-016 13-34-100-019 13-34-100-021 13-34-101-001 13-34-101-002 13-34-101-003 13-34-101-004 13-34-101-005 13-34-101-006 13-34-101-007 13-34-101-009 13-34-101-010 13-34-101-011 13-34-101-012 13-34-101-013 13-34-102-001 13-34-102-002 13-34-102-003 13-34-102-004 13-34-102-005 13-34-102-006 13-34-102-007 13-34-102-008 13-34-102-009 13-34-102-010 13-34-103-001 13-34-103-002 13-34-103-003 13-34-103-004 13-34-103-005 13-34-104-001 13-34-104-002 13-34-104-003 13-34-104-004 13-34-104-005 13-34-104-007 13-34-104-008 13-34-104-009 13-34-104-011 13-34-104-012 13-34-104-013 13-34-104-014 13-34-104-015 13-34-104-016 13-34-104-017 13-34-151-001 13-34-151-002 13-34-151-003 13-34-151-004 13-34-151-005 13-34-151-006 13-34-152-001 13-34-152-002 13-34-152-003 13-34-152-004 13-34-152-005 13-34-152-006 13-34-152-007 13-34-152-008 13-34-153-001 13-34-153-002 13-34-153-003 13-34-153-004 13-34-153-005 13-34-153-006 13-34-153-007 13-34-153-008 13-34-153-009 13-34-153-010 13-34-153-011 13-34-153-012 13-34-153-013 13-34-200-001

FRUIN, DAN ROSS OASIS ON 176 47 INC MS INVESTMNT GRP INC BEYOND STABLE FARM LLC EUGENE A DE ST AUBIN BROS INC VEGA, RAQUEL COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO BREVIK, DALE A MARIANNE A BECK, JANET S POPS FARM 7 LLC KOCKLER SZATKOWSKI, AL LNL 4EVER LLC EUGENE A DE ST AUBIN BROS INC PBIL OREO LLC PARKER, MATHEW J CHRISTINA M SCHAU, SCOTT LAURA R COX, MICHAEL INCE, KENNETH M MADDI, CHRISTOPHER D TONILYNN DOBLER, MICHELLE M JASON S FRAGASKIS, DAVID J CRYSTAL MONTANYE, KURT MEGAN RUSSO, GREGORY G SARABIA, LEONARDO LARA, PEDRO MARIA DE LOURDES PRISLINGER, RICHARD T ERSEK E, BOUNIPALLY S CHRIST, MARK BREDEMUS, ROBERT R DANIELLE N MALEK, JEFFREY MICHELLE STEC, PIOTR DAGMARA MANKOWSKI, JACQUELIN WEBB, CHRISTINA M CURTIS A REINHART, R W JR L B SELLERS, STEPHON BHATT, DHRUMAL VANCHHANA PEREZ, MELINDA K MALINGER DT, SMITH SL SCHAAL, RENEE ANN JASON ALAN ESCHE FAM LIV TR HOLLAND, EDWARD W EMILY N TR BRUNETTE, MELISSA R CAPACI BRIAN A 2017 TR CRESS, BENJAMIN D PATRYCJA A BELLAH, BRYAN ROBERT NENADAL, ROBERT T ANNA M CASPARI, AMY DAVID A HOPKINS, MATTHEW J KYLENE L MACCRINDLE, MATTHEW B AMY N OFFDENKAMP, MICHAEL NANCY TR RICHTER, ROLAND SUSANNE BALCER, AMY M JEFF A LEA, LORI DUCHARME, MICHAEL NANCY WEEKS, RONNIE E STEPHENS , SEAN ULANOWSKI, MATTHEW JILL M GILLUM, TIMOTHY J TAMMY L GARRISON, TYLER ANDREA S LEISERING, KENNETH K LISA R SMILGIS J A , RODRIGUEZ A JAVED, DANIEL AMY PYREK, FLORIAN A VATANEE S FERNANDEZ, JILEENA VICTOR BARTOWIAK, PAUL D SCHERRY R GUTIERREZ JA, PUENTES SMD MECWAN, NORMAN RIMA FINNEY, LAWRENCE A PATRICIA A WOZNIAK, KEITH L JENNIFER WAGNER, BEAU RAGUSIN, MATTHEW S EMILY J BECKMAN, KORY BRANSCUM, PAULETTE DARREN BRZEZINSKI, JOHN A MARNI LYNN MARTINEC, NICHOLAS S KAYLA A MATTSON JR LR LIV TR BAKKEN, JEFFREY J MEREDITH A SPEAR, DARREN S JENNIFER S YERGENS, ERIC JAMIE MORSE ZACHARY, FLORES TINA CHRISTIANSEN FAM TR DAVE, SANDEEP P PALAK H MAHLMAN, BRETT W BRITTANY N COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO

4,778 160,241 500 130,915 1,113 1,136 3,641 900 103,671 1,715 61,057 3,826 218 68 127,451 93,287 96,481 97,267 88,234 92,220 87,696 96,128 105,213 86,541 85,357 115,621 109,094 110,741 88,295 104,427 98,987 85,574 96,651 99,332 106,979 110,936 108,446 97,536 114,126 85,386 91,521 102,736 96,820 95,702 115,747 91,158 105,964 95,593 107,413 97,228 123,418 94,535 110,343 94,392 97,051 103,854 94,562 117,672 95,320 104,164 84,244 88,981 110,219 100,867 94,539 116,687 108,938 104,777 95,930 113,485 98,432 122,838 89,606 84,109 103,867 87,896 97,244 87,849 96,685 86,543 95,606 96,346 116,584 868

13-34-200-002 BAUMAN, AMBER A TYSON A 84,043 13-34-200-007 MOADDELI H R, ARGHAVANI M 2,814 13-34-200-009 MOADDELI H R, ARGHAVANI M 1,009 13-34-200-010 POLNET COMM LTD 90,440 13-34-200-011 MOADDELI H R, ARHGAVANI M 36 13-34-200-012 PALL HLDGS LLC 13,355 13-34-300-002 PALL HOLDINGS LLC 4,993 13-34-300-003 PALL HOLDINGS LLC 106,527 13-34-300-004 PALL HOLDINGS LLC 63,237 13-34-300-005 EUGENE A DE ST AUBIN BROS INC 54 13-34-300-006 PBIL OREO LLC 118 13-34-400-002 SCHMID, TODD M LYNN A 94,317 13-34-400-004 PALL HOLDINGS LLC 40 13-34-400-005 KURTZ JOHN D TR 148,246 13-34-400-007 LEE CHARLES W SUSAN E TR 110,336 13-34-400-013 PALL HLDGS LLC 6,295 13-35-101-001 COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO 1,801 13-35-101-003 ROSATI, R HC WF J 13,065 13-35-126-001 COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO 672 13-35-126-002 ROSATI, JOAN M TR ET AL 2,248 13-35-151-001 PALL HOLDINGS LLC 9,910 13-35-201-001 COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO 3,730 13-35-201-003 HALVERSON, HEIDI 86,313 13-35-201-005 GRISCHOW, DANIEL L MARY M 114,590 13-35-201-006 WHISTLER, ROBERT J III KELLY 144,067 13-35-201-007 PETERSON, CRAIG E KAREN L 79,166 13-35-201-008 PLUT ANTON THERESA DECL OF TR 81,098 13-35-226-002 CRYSTAL LK PARK DIST 18,280 13-35-251-003 PORTER MELANIE Z LIV TR 1,810 13-35-251-004 PORTER MELANIE Z LIV TR 1,671 13-35-251-005 DEEGAN, ANTHONY P ANN M 91,676 13-35-351-003 HARAST, LISA BERNADETTE 16,772 13-35-351-004 CICHOCK, GREGORI P JUDITH A 142,627 13-35-351-006 HUTCHINSON, SCOTT T 16,353 13-35-351-007 ALLEN TE TR ALLEN JM TR 16,952 13-35-351-008 ALLEN TE JM LIV TR 187,112 13-35-351-009 CROWLEY, DAVID H HEATHER M 169,462 13-35-351-010 RYAN, ZACHARY ASHLEY J 161,522 13-35-351-011 HEIDT, KENNETH LENNY 119,004 13-35-351-012 CHAN, CHRISTOPHER K ERIN K 140,510 13-35-351-013 HAMMOND THOMAS REV TR 178,534 13-35-352-001 HALLMAN FAM 2017 TR 7,292 13-35-352-002 WARD, RONALD A LISA A 158,799 13-35-352-003 SHULFER, JOSEPH AMY 150,511 13-35-353-001 SWAIN, STUART D TONI A 138,821 13-35-353-002 TAPP, JOHN S KADIE J 144,136 13-35-353-003 SIMATOS, ANTON P LISA H 115,145 13-35-353-004 KIRKHAM, CR LE 130,730 13-35-353-005 CROFOOT, DAVID V SUZANNE C 122,460 13-35-353-006 VIRGIL, MICHAEL S CYNTHIA J 163,648 13-35-353-007 DEL MARTO, ANGELO F JUDY J 16,295 13-35-353-008 RICHARD, JOHN J PROTOMA B TR 123,019 13-35-353-009 HAUSLER, MICHAEL D TRICIA L 130,805 13-35-353-010 DVORACEK, I J P E TR 127,644 13-35-353-011 ABRAHAM T, ABRAHAM MULA L TR 140,908 13-35-353-012 PICKETT H, ARMBRUSTER J 160,467 13-35-354-001 FLOJ LLC 4,464 13-35-354-002 SNELTEN BF CL JT TEN TR 137,266 13-35-354-003 HOEFLE, GEORGE S JR STACY L 167,955 13-35-355-001 POTTS, MICHAEL JESSICA 118,042 13-35-355-002 MEMETI, AIMEE K JEFFREY D 117,888 13-35-356-002 NOWELL, RICHARD P DONNA J 167,764 13-35-356-003 WYDRA, BRIAN REBECCA 152,014 13-35-356-004 OCONNOR B TR OCONNOR G TR 134,813 13-35-356-005 BYHAM, JONATHAN T SARAH A 146,509 13-35-356-006 HISEL, RODNEY VALERIE 167,002 13-35-357-001 DRIVAS K, CRUZ I 181,746 13-35-357-002 FITZPATRICK, BRIAN M ANNA M 124,347 13-35-357-003 MICHELSEN, MARK E CARRIE L 163,975 13-35-357-004 GAU KJ MCKEOWNGAU TM LIV TR 131,286 13-35-357-005 HODE, TODD R CATHERINE M 145,727 13-35-357-006 BRAY, KENNETH D SHAWNYA R 176,384 13-35-357-007 SAHA HENRY, LALLAS JUNE 148,534 13-35-357-008 DANIELSON, MICHAEL HOLLY 128,880 13-35-379-002 ZIMMER, GREGORY JOY 82,501 13-35-401-013 WILSON, P T III L H DECL OF T 68,931 13-35-426-001 SCHLENKER, BRETT D CYNTHIA 103,037 13-36-100-006 COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO 2,617 13-36-100-010 PAPPAS, NICK JOANN 2,458 13-36-100-011 CRYSTAL LK PARK DIST 24,995 13-36-100-015 PAPPAS, NICK JOANN 15,192 13-36-200-009 PALATINE NATL BK TR 485 15,432 13-36-200-011 CRYSTAL LK HOME ST BK TR 1281 28,166 (Published in The Woodstock Independent August 26, 2020)L11067

31

PUBLIC NOTICES

906 1,878 117,712 2,851 143 1,381 10,604 100,090 78,506 6,715 138,164 108,041 313 2,609 170 68,806 5,250 132,631 9,445 20,214 17,330 140,680 2,536 107,324 7,579 6,202 1,264 99,310 181,846 7,024 169,047 70,318 40,069 72,045 208,579 9,796 8,793 78,935 180 177,565 4,076 16,068 464 269,764 12,819 978 1,612 14,898 19,757 4,910 7,071 130 9,810 8,529 93,769 4,740 11,043 88,096 96,329 87,850 123,973 108,491 92,555 116,142 92,691 108,414 94,334 89,294 93,207 84,685 94,313 97,850 99,848 94,224 101,681 88,089 113,018 89,980 93,603 79,924 1,227 925 864 462

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

PLAYTIME INVSTMNTS LLC LAPRISE CYNTHIA L 2019 LIV TR LAPRISE CYNTHIA L 2019 LIV TR LAPRISE CYNTHIA L 2019 LIV TR PLAYTIME INVSTMNTS LLC PLAYTIME INVSTMNTS LLC FREEDOM LN LLC ET AL HOWARD AA, LIENHARD AA BD LLC GUST, LISA MILLER, BRIAN M KIMBERLY A MATLAKOWSKI, LUKASZ MICHELE DOOLEY, DANIEL T DOOLEY, DANIEL T VAZQUEZ, RAUL KUSUMOTO, KATSUMI TOMIKO ANDERSEN, JOHN MAXINE MCCONNELL, KEITH LORI R OHARA TIMBER FARMS INC ET AL DAVID, DOUGLAS E ERIN DOOLEY, DANIEL T SMITH, CALEB S ABIGAIL K BRIGHT, GEORGE R III VASQUEZ, RAUL FITZGERALD STEVEN 2017 TR MCHENRY CO CONSERV DIST MCHENRY CO CONSERV DIST KLIMCZAK, ROBERT G PEGGY J NAZARIO, RUBEN L KATHLEEN M KOLZE PROP PRTNSHP KOLZE, ROBERT C ROBERT J AKERBERG EDWIN G PAULINE W TR NAPIER PRTNS L P GREENWICH FC JR, CAVANAUGH JE MAB REAL EST HLDGS LLC MAB REAL EST HLDGS LLC COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO CRESTWOOD FARMS 20131 LLC LARSON REV TR BETTCHER, MARK P KATHRYN WDSTK ST BK TR 4084 ST JOSEPHS DREAM HOME ST JOSEPHS DREAM HOME WDSTK ST BK TR 4084 NAPIER PRTNS L P WDSTK ST BK TR 3501 WDSTK HARRIS BK TR X3501 WILD DAISY FARMS LLC WILD DAISY FARMS LLC COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO LNL 4EVER LLC 1ST MIDWEST TR CO NA 6603 LNL 4EVER LLC DITTMER, MICHAEL F HOME ST BK NA TR 6161 LNL4EVER LLC LNL 4EVER LLC MAWDSLEY, JEFFREY V ALISON ZAUHAR, KALI LUSCAVICH, JUNE ZUCHORA, JOHN DOWLING, JOHN F LINDA POWELL, JASON AMI MARSCHALL SUSAN LOUISE TR BABICH, MARK MEGAN WILSON, KALEB M ERBACH, L E K A TR DOHERTY, MP JR AL LETTIERI, ARRON M JESSICA L CLAUSS, MICHAEL A KATHLEEN LINTAG, GENER T AILEEN D STEPONAITIS, C K MANNING, PATRICK R SCHMITT, JOANNA M SANJAYKUMAR, V PATEL SHAILA S CROSSMAN DECL OF TR LIENHARD, AMY M ET AL RANDALL, JOSHUA ROGGE, DONALD W ALLISON C DOUGLAS, WILLIAM G DONNA S SWANSON, DALE R AWE LORI A WILD DAISY FARMS LLC WILD DAISY FARMS LLC WILD DAISY FARMS LLC

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

13-30-400-013 13-30-400-014 13-30-400-015 13-30-400-016 13-30-400-017 13-30-400-018 13-31-100-001 13-31-100-002 13-31-100-003 13-31-100-006 13-31-100-008 13-31-100-014 13-31-100-015 13-31-100-016 13-31-100-018 13-31-200-001 13-31-200-002 13-31-200-003 13-31-200-006 13-31-200-009 13-31-200-014 13-31-200-021 13-31-200-022 13-31-300-010 13-31-300-012 13-31-300-016 13-31-400-013 13-32-100-010 13-32-100-031 13-32-100-037 13-32-100-038 13-32-200-005 13-32-200-008 13-32-200-009 13-32-200-011 13-32-200-012 13-32-200-015 13-32-200-016 13-32-200-017 13-32-300-001 13-32-300-004 13-32-400-001 13-32-400-003 13-32-400-004 13-32-400-006 13-33-100-007 13-33-100-008 13-33-100-013 13-33-100-015 13-33-200-001 13-33-200-004 13-33-200-005 13-33-200-007 13-33-200-008 13-33-200-014 13-33-200-016 13-33-200-017 13-33-226-001 13-33-227-001 13-33-227-002 13-33-228-001 13-33-229-001 13-33-229-002 13-33-230-001 13-33-230-002 13-33-230-003 13-33-230-004 13-33-230-005 13-33-230-006 13-33-230-007 13-33-230-008 13-33-230-009 13-33-230-010 13-33-276-001 13-33-276-002 13-33-276-003 13-33-276-004 13-33-277-001 13-33-277-002 13-33-300-007 13-33-300-015 13-33-300-017 13-33-300-018 13-33-300-019


32

Pet Week

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

of the

RETIREMENT

SAVING JUST ONE PET WON’T CHANGE THE WORLD BUT, SURELY, THE WORLD WILL CHANGE FOR THAT ONE PET.

“Mocha”

Temporary hours: M/W/F/SA 12 PM - 4 PM by appointment only 2500 Harding Lane, Woodstock (Off Rt. 14 at the Lake Shore Dr. traffic light)

TH AUG23 24RD MAY –- AUG MAY 29 26THTH

EVERYTHING UP TO 25% OFF!

Vickie ie Peter, P , Sherry Sherr Sta Staudt, udt, Ber Bernade Bernadette nadette nade tte Goul Gould d and an AI Gould of the Crystal Lake Lloyd’s

& INTERIOR DESIGN STUDIO

MON-SAT 7:30-5:30 • THURS 7:30-8:00 MON-FRI 7:30-5:30 • SAT 7:30-5:00 73 N. Willams St. | Downtown Crystal Lake

815 459-1160 www.lloydspaintnpaper.com

SM-CL1525170

815-338-4400

Mocha came to Helping Paws with her litter of kittens. She is a domestic shorthair, and if you want someone to talk to, Mocha enjoys a great conversation. She’s a sweet girl that loves to be petted. Let’s find this deserving mom a forever home.

SPONSORED BY

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

1-year-old female

To see this pet or others or to volunteer to help walk dogs, call the shelter at:

PPUBLIC NOTICES

LLOYD’S PAINT & PAPER

show off your masks! SEND YOUR PHOTO TO THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

*All Discounts are from our everyday regular pricing. Cash, check or credit card only.

SPECIAL AD OFFER

LAST CHANCE TO GET THIS OFFER!

for SMALL businesses!

1/8 page color print ad that includes your O.K. WITH CORRECTIONS BY:__________________ business logo, contact info, hours of operation, $ a special offer.ONLINE The ad will run four times PLEASE READ CAREFULLY and • SUBMIT CORRECTIONS and Ninclude a social shout-out. ADVERTISER: LLOYDS PAINT PAPER INC PROOFmedia CREATED AT: 4/16/2018Offer 12:29 PM PROOF O.K. BY: _____________________________

199

SALES PERSON: Mary Ellen Sherman PROOF DUE: good for new customers only. SM-CL152517 PUBLICATION: SM-CLNNN-MCHENRY MAGAZINE NEXT RUN DATE: 04/30/18 SIZE: 2 col X 5 in Jen Wilson: 815.701.9258 • jen@thewoodstockindependent.com

Katy O’Brien: 815.701.9268 • katy@thewoodstockindependent.com

The Independent is inviting you to submit a photo of your family, club, or other group wearing masks of your choice as you help to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. Please email your photo to woodstock4all@thewoodstockindependent.com. We’re all in this together, Woodstock!

SUPPORT SMALL BUSINESS!

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PUBLIC NOTICE

ASSUMED NAME Public Notice is hereby given that on AUGUST 6, 2020 An Assumed Name Business Certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk in McHenry

PUBLIC NOTICE

ASSUMED NAME Public Notice is hereby given that on AUGUST 17, 2020 An Assumed Name Business Certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk in McHenry County, IL under the following business name and address, and setting forth the names and addresses of all persons owning, conducting and transacting business known as: TRANSPARENCY

CONSTRUCTION located at 85 EAST TERRA COTTA AVE. UNIT 1B, CRYSTAL LAKE IL 60014. Owner Name & Address: PAUL OZIMEK 1142 GREENWOOD CIRCLE WOODSTOCK IL 60098. Dated: AUGUST 17, 2020 /s/ JOSEPH J. TIRIO (McHenry County Clerk) (Published in The Woodstock Independent August 26, 2020)L11068

Bids will be opened on September 21, 2020 at 10:00 a.m. prevailing time and read aloud in the Woodstock Community Unit School District No. 200 Business Services Office, 2990 Raffel Road, Woodstock, Illinois, by Risa Hanson, Chief Financial Officer. (Published in The Woodstock Independent August 26, 2020)L11069

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

INVITATION TO BID The Board of Education, Woodstock Community Unit School District No. 200 will receive sealed bids until 10:00 a.m. prevailing time on Tuesday, September 21, 2020, for the sale of the Building Trades house, located at 1401 Sandpiper, Woodstock, Illinois. Bid specifications and forms can be obtained on the district’s website www.woodstockschools.org or from Woodstock Community Unit School District No. 200, Business Services Office, 2990 Raffel Road, Woodstock, IL 60098, 815- 338-8204.

STATE OF ILLINOIS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE TWENTY-SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MCHENRY COUNTY-IN PROBATE Case No. 20PR000231 In the Matter of the Estate of MONICA R. HEGE Deceased CLAIM NOTICE Notice is given of the death of MONICA R. HEGE Of: WOODSTOCK, IL Letters of office were issued on: 8/19/2020 to: Representative: HERMAN W. MULLEJANS 2337 ALTA VISTA DR.

WAUKEGAN, IL 60087 JOAN M. MULLEJANS 2337 ALTA VISTA DR. WAUKEGAN, IL 60087 whose attorney is: KRAFT, PATRICIA C. 131 E. CALHOUN ST. WOODSTOCK, IL 60098 Claims against the estate may be filed within six months from the date of first publication. Any claim not filed within six months from the date of first publication or claims not filed within three months from the date of mailing or delivery of Notice to Creditor, whichever is later, shall be barred. Claims may be filed in the office of the Clerk of Circuit Court at the McHenry County Government Center, 2200 North Seminary Avenue, Woodstock, Illinois, 60098, or with the representative, or both. Copies of claims filed with the Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the representative and to his attorney within ten days after it has been filed. /s/KATHERINE M KEEFE (Clerk of the Circuit Court) (Published in The Woodstock Independent August 26, 2020)L11070

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33

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

PUBLIC NOTICE

County, IL under the following business name and address, and setting forth the names and addresses of all persons owning, conducting and transacting business known as: ROY ROGERS CONST & HANDYMAN SERVICES located at 7412 BURNING TREE DR., MCHENRY IL 60050. Owner Name & Address: ROY K. ROGERS JR. 7412 BURNING TREE DR., MCHENRY IL 60050. Dated: AUGUST 6, 2020 /s/ JOSEPH J. TIRIO (McHenry County Clerk) (Published in The Woodstock Independent August 19, 2020, August 26, 2020)L11065

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ASSUMED NAME Public Notice is hereby given that on AUGUST 6, 2020 An Assumed Name Business Certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk in McHenry County, IL under the following business name and address, and setting forth the names and addresses of all persons owning, conducting and transacting business known as: AMAZING CUSTOM CRAFTS located at 7518 MARBLEHEAD RD, PO BOX 117, WONDER LAKE IL 60097. Owner Name & Address: JUDITH RASMUSSEN 7518 MARBLEHEAD RD, PO BOX 117, WONDER LAKE IL 60097. Dated: AUGUSTN 6, 2020 /s/ JOSEPH J. TIRIO (McHenry County Clerk) (Published in The Woodstock Independent August 12, 2020, August 19, 2020, August 26, 2020)L11064


Sports NN SCOREBOARD NN

WOODSTOCK TRAVEL BASEBALL 10 U BOYS The Woodstock Heat 10U team defeated Mac Nationals Deubel 10U 18-14 Aug. 17. Jacob Fifer was on the hill for Woodstock, allowing four hits and four runs over two innings. Woodstock Heat 10U tallied 12 hits. Luca Kozlow and Rian Hahn-Clifton had multiple hits to lead the Heat. Eleven players stole at least two bases, with Carson Halihan leading the way with six.

SPORTS

Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT

34

INDEPENDENT PHOTO BY VICKY LONG

Frank Ferru chips for the Woodstock co-op team Aug. 19. The team began the fall sports season with a 192223 win over Harvard at Bull Valley Golf Club. The Woodstock co-op is looking to defend its 2019 Kishwaukee RIver Conference title.

COURTESY PHOTO

Team members of Woodstock Heat 10U gather for a photo after their 25-7 victory Aug. 21.

The Heat 10U continued its winning streak on Aug. 21. Frank Cohen would not be denied at the plate when runners were on base, driving in five on two hits to lead Woodstock Heat 10U past SCA Slam 10U 25-7 on Friday. Frank drove in runs on a triple in the second, a walk in the fourth, and a triple in the fourth. The team collected 22 hits in the game, with Rian Hahn-Clifton, Bryce Schwanke, Cooper Hacker, Luca Kozlow, Cohen, Luke Bigler, Simon Baker and Carson Halihan all collecting multiple hits. They ran wild on the base paths with 23 stolen bases.

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205 E. South St. • Woodstock

Fall sports back to meets, matches Rosters for most teams looking strong for fall sports season in 2020 By Sandy Kucharski

SANDY@THEWOODSTOCKINDEPENDENT.COM

Despite remote learning, it’s apparent that student athletes are eager to get back to sports. Rosters have been filling at all three local high schools, with some teams hosting tryouts and others accepting all applicants. “I am extremely excited for our athletes to get the chance to compete this fall,” said Bobby Mickey, athletic director at Woodstock North. “Our kids have worked hard, and our coaches are doing an amazing job getting them prepared to follow the new guidelines. This year will look different, but our coaches and athletes are extremely excited to participate in fall athletics.” WNHS was still accepting athletes as of Aug. 11, but Woodstock High School athletic director Chris Kirkpatrick

reported Aug. 17 that all Blue Streak sports teams were complete and WHS would not accept any more participants. “We are not having tryouts this year for fall sports,” Mickey said. “We are allowing all athletes to sign up, but limited athletes would be allowed to travel for JV and varsity.” Curtis Price, athletic director at Marian Central High School, said the roster for boys golf and girls tennis had reached capacity, but they could still accept athletes in girls golf and girls cross-country.

Fewer teams, more interest?

The 2020 fall sports season looks very different from every previous year. Deemed high- and medium-risk sports, football, soccer and volleyball are all missing from the fall lineup. Sports currently practicing and competing are swimming, golf and girls tennis, Fewer fall sports leaves a sizable number of typically fall athletes with time on their hands. The big question was whether those athletes would

choose to try something new or opt for some free time this fall. “All of our numbers have stayed pretty true to what they were last year,” WHS’s Kirkpatrick said, “so I don’t think they are attracting more or less.” As of Aug. 17, Kirkpatrick reported that the Blue Streaks had 27 boys and 16 girls in cross-country, 25 girls tennis players, 19 girl swimmers (co-op team), and 23 golfers (co-op team). In addition to the swimming and golf co-op teams with WHS, Mickey reported the Thunder had 36 in girls tennis and 13 athletes running cross country. “Right now I don’t see any [teams] attracting more or less,” Mickey said. “Our girls tennis numbers have been high in the past years, so that will be our biggest numbers.” Marian saw a rise in interest in boys golf. Price reported 24 students tried out for boys golf for a varsity roster of six and a JV roster of six. He noted that girls tennis was also a popular draw this fall with 29 athletes trying out for a team that typically fields 22 to 28 Continued on next page


35 THE WOODSTOCK INDEPENDENT Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 2020

his way to Luke Trewyn puttsot a 43 to sh yn victory. Trew ock co-op. lead the Woodsdt

positions. The Hurricane’s have 10 girl golfers and two girls and 16 boys in cross-country.

Slippery schedules

Each school has been working on scheduling meets and matches for the fall sports, working within their COVID regions. Some teams have even begun to compete, but everything is subject to change. “At this point scheduling is complete but remains fluid,” Kirkpatrick said. Price added that some schools had

INDEPENDENT PHOTOS BY VICKY LONG

Coach Brent Filetti (center, red mask) reviews the mask rules and new greens procedures before the players tee off. elected to play within their conference only, so in some instances, a team could play an opponent two to three times to get all its games in.

Fans stay home, please

As much as the athletes love to have fans and family cheer them on, the schools are directed by the All Sports Policy announced July 29 by Gov. J.B. Pritzker. Upon reviewing the policy, the Kishwaukee River Conference made the difficult decision to not allow spectators/fans at any fall sporting

ROAD WORK

INDEPENDENT PHOTO BY SANDY KUCHARSKI

Mario Medina rides along Sullivan Road west of Woodstock. Medina each week logs in many miles riding on rural roads while training his horses.

event at this time. A press release from KRC athletic directors stated: “These current fall sports have presented a multitude of challenges to overcome in order to compete. Our conference feels that our priority is the safety and health of our Kishwaukee River Conference student-athletes and coaches currently participating in the sports of golf, cross-country, girls tennis, and swimming.” A press release on the Blue Streaks athletic page said expectations set

forth in the All Sports Policy – for group size, space required between groups, attendance logs, and symptom/temperature checks for all persons in attendance – would not allow spectators/fans to be present. Despite the obstacles, athletes in Woodstock are practicing and competing primarily for the love of the sport. “It is exciting to see the smiles on our student-athletes and coaches’ faces as we begin the season,” Price said. “Let’s hope and pray that everyone remains safe.”

SPORTS

Continued from previous page


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