NWH-5-18-2013

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BLACKHAWKS GAMEDAY WRAPPED AROUND SPORTS WESTERN CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS Game 2: Detroit at Blackhawks Noon Saturday, NBC-TV

Complete coverage inside Online: NWHerald.com/blackhawks

Saturday, May 18, 2013 •

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AMERICAN PROFILE • INSIDE

Huntley wins relay, heads to state

Celebrating Superman and other superheroes

Huntley’s Keagan Smith (right) and Trevor Obecny

EVENT SUPPORTS MARCH OF DIMES ORGANIZATION

Marching for healthy babies

NTSB: Toughen DUI laws Agency urges states to lower legal limit to 0.05 By CHELSEA McDOUGALL cmcdougall@shawmedia.com

Sarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com

Lisa Koenen of Crystal Lake gives a presentation Friday about March of Dimes to employees at Kmart in Crystal Lake. The Koenen family will serve as the McHenry County March for Babies Ambassador Family in remembrance of their daughter Melinda during Sunday’s event.

Event helps Crystal Lake family honor daughter’s memory By JEFF ENGELHARDT jengelhardt@shawmedia.com CRYSTAL LAKE – Lisa Koenen wants to put the March of Dimes out of business. It’s not that the Crystal Lake resident doesn’t support the organization dedicated to preventing premature infant deaths and diseases. She just does not want any mother to experience the

lected as the McHenry County Family Ambassador for Sunday’s March for Babies walk at McHenry County College. The Koenen family is the first in the county to be selected as an ambassador family whose child did not survive birth complications. Jennifer Smith, spokeswoman for March of Dimes,

pain she endured in 2010. “No one really ever had a chance to meet Melinda, so I am here to tell her story,” Koenen said of her 7-month old daughter who died in 2010 after being born 27 weeks into pregnancy, weighing just more than 2 pounds. “Our job is to put March of Dimes out of business because then we’ll know every baby is going home healthy.” The Koenen family was se-

See MARCHING, page A9

If you go What: McHenry County March For Babies When: Sunday at 9 a.m. Registration opens at 8 a.m. Where: McHenry County College Why: A walk to support the March of Dimes and its mission to prevent premature birth complications

States should cut the threshold for drunken driving from 0.08 to 0.05, a federal safety board said this week in a suggestion that was met with misgivings among some in the legal system. But to advocates, it offered a renewed promise for reducing impaired driving deaths. The National Transportation Safety Board said that driving impairment occurs in alcohol concentration levels at 0.05 or lower, and that a 0.05 blood-alcohol concentration significantly increases the risk of fatal crashes. NTSB may have made the recommendation, but it’s up to states to adopt it, and not everyone is on board with the recommendation. Advocates predict an uphill battle getting the measure passed in Illinois. Criminal defense attorney Patrick Walsh, whose McHenry law firm Donahue and Walsh represents a high volume of driving under the influence cases, said the change would further clog the legal system. “It would load up courtrooms that are already crowded as is,” Walsh said. “These cases would have to be tried. …. At 0.05 it’s incredibly

At a glance The National Transportation Safety Board said that driving impairment occurs in alcohol concentration levels at 0.05 or lower, and that a 0.05 blood-alcohol concentration significantly increases the risk of fatal crashes. The recommended threshold means about one drink per hour for a woman weighing less than 120 pounds, two for a 160-pound man.

See NTSB, page A9

Illinois Senate approves medical marijuana legislation By REGINA GARCIA CANO

How they voted

The Associated Press

Of McHenry County’s legislators, Sen. Pam Althoff, R-McHenry, voted for the medical marijuana legalization. Sens. Dan Duffy, R-Lake Barrington, and Karen McConnaughay, R-St. Charles, voted against the measure.

SPRINGFIELD – Illinois lawmakers agreed to legalize the use of medical marijuana on Friday under a plan that’s being billed as the strictest in the nation among states that have authorized the drug’s me-

LOCALLY SPEAKING

dicinal use, although it was unclear whether the Democratic governor plans to sign it. The plan authorizes a pilot program for physicians to prescribe marijuana only to patients with whom they have an existing relationship. Background checks are required,

and patients must have at least one of more than three dozen terminal illnesses or other debilitating medical conditions specifically listed in the bill. Gov. Pat Quinn has declined to say whether he supports the legislation, saying only that he was “open-minded” on the issue. Lt. Gov.

WOODSTOCK

D-200 PRAISED FOR HEALTHY HABITS This year, all 12 District 200 schools received certification under the United States Department of Agriculture’s HealthierU.S. School Challenge. The program challenges schools to meet certain criteria for healthy foods, and then gives award levels based on the percentage of children that eat school lunches.

Employee Virginia Soldon (left)

For more, see page B1.

Kyle Grillot – kgrillot@shawmedia.com

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Vol. 28, Issue 138 Local&Region B1-4 Lottery A2 Movies B7 Obituaries B4

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A11 E7 C1-10 E7

Sheila Simon, a former prosecutor, has said she is in favor of the plan after meeting with patients, including military veterans. The proposed legislation creates a framework for a four-year pilot program that includes requiring

See MARIJUANA, page A9


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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com is published daily, Sundays and holidays by Shaw Media, P.O. Box 250, Crystal Lake, IL 60039-0250. GENERAL INFORMATION: 815-459-4040

Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Northwest Herald • NWHerald.com

PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER John Rung jrung@shawmedia.com 815-459-4040

Freedoms erode when rights are violated What’s the best thing to do when your Justice Department infringes on First Amendment rights of the media? Float – again – the idea of passing a federal media shield law. It’s been quite the week for government and the Fourth Estate. On Monday, it was revealed that the Justice Department secretly obtained two months of telephone records of reporters and editors for the Associated Press. On Wednesday, Attorney General Eric Holder was rightfully grilled in a Congressional Hearing about the unprecedented attack against journalists. By the end of the day Wednesday, President Barack Obama and his administration were pushing to revive the media shield law as if to say, “We’re sorry.” Holder’s Justice Department seized the records for more than 20 separate phone lines assigned to the AP and

8LOTTERY

VIEWS Jason Schaumburg its reporters. It did so while investigating a leak of information provided to AP for a story that reported details of a CIA operation in Yemen to stop an airliner bombing plot around the anniversary of Osama bin Laden’s death. This clear overstep of the Justice Department should disturb every American, not only journalists. The department ignored established guidelines to try and obtain this information and secretly spied on Americans, who happen to be journalists. That’s bad for you. That’s bad for me. That’s bad for your neighbor. That’s bad for your children. Because when the government crosses the line and starts spying on

media charged with holding the government accountable and keeping it on its toes, freedoms start to erode. There are numerous examples of wrong-doing and abuse that have been exposed by journalists with the help of sources who were comfortable enough to know that they would never be revealed and decided that the information they had needed to be disclosed for the public good. These sources will dry up if the government is secretly watching. If these sources stay quiet, it opens up the possibility for the government to do more public business behind closed doors without fear of being exposed. And we’ve been down the mediashield-law road before. Such a law would, in theory, protect journalists from being compelled to reveal sources as part of an investigation. Obama tried to pass a shield law in his first year as president. It’s hard

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• Jason Schaumburg is editor of the Northwest Herald. He’s certain the Blackhawks made the right decision last season by not firing Joel Quenneville. Reach him at 815-4594122 or via email at jschaumburg@ shawmedia.com. Follow him on Twitter at @Schaumy.

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Illinois Lottery Pick 3 Midday: 1-3-0 Pick 3 Evening: 2-5-9 Pick 4 Midday: 4-2-6-2 Pick 4 Evening: 2-8-7-6 Lucky Day Lotto: 12-13-17-33-37 Lotto jackpot: $3.05 million

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8CONTACT US

Indiana Lottery Daily 3 Midday: 1-2-6 Daily 3 Evening: 1-7-3 Daily 4 Midday: 3-1-4-9 Daily 4 Evening: 5-6-1-2 Cash 5: 6-9-31-32-34 Mix and Match: 12-21-26-41-47 Est. jackpot: $3 million Wisconsin Lottery Pick 3: 7-0-6 Pick 4: 9-3-2-3 SuperCash: 6-7-9-15-22-33 Badger 5: 6-18-22-24-27

8WATER COOLER Birth of anteater has Conn. zoo staff puzzled GREENWICH, Conn. – An anteater has given birth at a Connecticut conservation center, prompting officials there to wonder how the mother conceived. Officials at the LEO Zoological Conservation Center told the Greenwich Time they had removed the only male anteater from the enclosure in August, long before the six-month gestation period for baby Archie would have begun. They feared that male, Alf, would kill another baby in the pen. That left the mother Armani, and the young female, Alice, in the enclosure. But little Archie was born in April anyway. Marcella Leone, founder and director of the conservation center, suspects this might be a rare case of delayed implantation.

– Wire report

Northwest Herald Web Poll Question The Northwest Herald invites you to voice your opinion. Log on to www. NWHerald.com and vote on today’s poll question:

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

8CORRECTIONS & CLARIFICATIONS Kyle Grillot – kgrillot@shawmedia.com

Bella, an Australian shepard jumps for a frisbee May 4 at the Bark in the Park event at the Lake in the Hills Dog Park. The event allows dogs and their owners to enjoy the 10-acre, off-leash park with various activities going on throughout the day.

LIKE WHAT YOU SEE? Check out our gallery of images made by Northwest Herald photographers on the Northwest Herald Facebook page at http://shawurl.com/1d6. Photos also can be purchased at http://photos.nwherald.com/photostore. 8TODAY’S TALKER

Record Powerball jackpot inspires office pools By BARBARA RODRIGUEZ The Associated Press In workplaces across the nation, Americans are inviting their colleagues to chip in $2 for a Powerball ticket and a shared daydream. The office lottery pool is a way to improve your odds and have a little fun with co-workers. And besides, who wants to be the only person at work the next day when everyone quits? With $600 million on the line, this is the time to play. It’s the largest-ever Powerball jackpot and the second-largest world jackpot of all time. And it could get even bigger before Saturday’s drawing. The Multi-State Lottery Association recognizes the

Count on Me...

Andrew Killinger

Saturday’s results:

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popularity of work pools, especially when the stakes are so high. In the last few years, lottery officials have offered tips for organizing pools. “The appeal is they can stretch the value of their $2,” said Norm Lingle, executive director of the South Dakota Lottery and chairman of the Powerball Executive Committee. But it’s important to be careful. Workplace pools that yield big jackpots sometimes result in lawsuits, broken friendships and delayed payouts. Lottery officials encourage pools organizers to lay down rules, put them in writing and distribute the details to all participants before the winning numbers are drawn. Linda Golden, of Gettys-

burg, Pa., may set the bar for how to manage an office lottery pool. An employee for more than three decades at a printing company called Quad Graphics, Golden has organized a pool for years and requires everyone to sign in, showing they contributed. She had 14 co-workers on board when the jackpot pushed past $200 million in late March. They only won $4. But instead of distributing what would have amounted to about 27 cents a person, Golden bought more tickets for the $1 million Powerball drawing on March 27 without telling the others. She hit the jackpot and never gave a thought to keeping the winnings all for herself. One co-worker was

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a woman who used a walker because of a foot problem. Another had just been to the emergency room because of a knee problem. “I say it over and over again. That ticket we won was meant for those two ladies and the rest of [the group] is there for the ride,” she said. After taxes, each person ended up with about $50,000. Golden’s winning ticket has only stirred more excitement in her office for Saturday’s giant Powerball jackpot. She estimated she had 26 people in her pool this time. “This time, it’s starting to take up so much of my time. So many people wanted to join,” she said. “It’s kind of getting out of hand.”

A special town meeting on whether McHenry Township should assume responsibility for Ostend Cemetery is scheduled for Thursday, June 13. An article in the May 17 edition of the Northwest Herald incorrectly identified the date due to incorrect information provided to the paper. ••• Accuracy is important to the Northwest Herald, and we want to correct mistakes promptly. Please call errors to our attention by phone, 815-459-4122; email, tips@ nwherald.com; or fax, 815-4595640.

8CRISIS LINE Don’t know where to turn for help? Call the McHenry County Crisis Line at 800-892-8900. The phone line is open 24 hours a day. It’s confidential and free. You also can visit the crisis line on the Web at www. mchenry-crisis.org.

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EDITOR Jason Schaumburg 815-459-4122 jschaumburg@shawmedia.com

to say whether such a law would be effective without seeing how it is written. The White House appears to be using Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., as its conduit to reviving the shield law. “Right now, there are no guidelines, and we feel that there should be guidelines,” Schumer is quoted as saying in a Wall Street Journal story. “It shouldn’t be any time a government official wants information from the press that they can just get it.” Correct. But that’s what happened. And I fear for our country if it is allowed to continue to happen.

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STATE

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Page A3

Senate Dems want more school money, not cuts By JOHN O’CONNOR The Associated Press SPRINGFIELD – Illinois Senate Democrats want to boost general education funding by $156 million next year, not cut it, key budget negotiators said Friday, but acknowledged the increase would only keep per-student funding level. Gov. Pat Quinn has proposed a $150 million reduction in general state aid for primary and secondary schools in the budget that begins July 1, largely because of the pressure of mounting pension obliga-

tions. But lawmakers should ditch that plan, Sens. Heather Steans and Dan Kotowski said in an interview with The Associated Press. Steans, of Chicago, and Kotowski, from Park Ridge, discussed a budget “framework” a day after presenting it to their Democratic colleagues and just two weeks before the General Assembly’s scheduled adjournment. It also calls for using hundreds of millions of dollars in unanticipated state revenues to immediately pay down past-due bills, an idea that has support in the House

and that Quinn embraces. Kotowski called it a “realistic budget” that recognizes education’s importance. “We see what businesses are saying. And families, they want a world-class education for their kids,” Kotowski said. But it’s still not the full funding state law requires. This year, the so-called foundation level was $6,119 per pupil, and the state provided 89 percent of that. Quinn’s proposed budget reduction would drop that proration to 82 percent. The plan from Steans and Kotowski would keep it at 89

percent – of the current level. “We’d love to be able to fully fund education but this is not draconian,” Steans said. “It really does provide a very good base. And until we deal with pensions, which clearly are an ongoing issue, we’re going to continue to have pressures.” Lawmakers are trying to fashion a plan that likely will result in higher pension contributions by employees and less-generous benefits for retirees to close what has become a $97 billion shortfall in what the state must have to

cover retirement benefits for current and former workers. Quinn’s assistant budget director, Abdon Pallasch, noted the Democrat’s proposed budget would not reduce early childhood education or college grants while Quinn continues to make a pension fix his primary task. “The administration is working with legislators to find ways to minimize cuts to other education-related areas of the budget,” Pallasch said. Steans and Kotowski, who each chair appropriations committees for the Senate,

also stressed the desire of their caucus to use at least $400 million from unanticipated revenue this spring to pay overdue bills for social-service providers in programs that help seniors and disabled people in their homes. The pay-down would continue reducing what until recently had consistently been a $9 billion backlog. State Comptroller Judy Baar Topinka’s office said Friday the total in owed bills is down to $5.8 billion, of which $2.2 billion is truly overdue – 30 or more days old.

State extends deadline After Trump blasts 87-year-old, she takes stand for health guide grants By MICHAEL TARM

The Associated Press

By CARLA K. JOHNSON The Associated Press CHICAGO – Community groups in Illinois have been given more time to apply for $28 million in grants to help consumers learn how to shop for health insurance that will be available under President Barack Obama’s health overhaul law. Illinois officials announced Friday they’ve extended the deadline for grant applications by 12 days to June 11. The new deadline gives more time for applicants to find collaborative partners, state officials said. More than 100 groups filed letters expressing interest in the grants, said Mike Claffey, a spokesman for Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn. The new deadline still allows sufficient time for training outreach workers ahead of this summer’s coordinated push to educate people about the new health insurance marketplace, Claffey said. The Affordable Care Act – Obama’s signature domestic achievement – requires that nearly all Americans have health insurance beginning in 2014 or pay a penalty. New insurance marketplaces are scheduled to be operating in every state by Oct. 1. People who are un-

insured will be able to comparison-shop for affordable health plans on these websites and many will qualify for tax credits to help them pay for coverage. In Illinois, the grant winners will oversee trained guides – called in-person counselors – who will educate people about the marketplace and help consumers understand their insurance plan choices. The federal grant money will be distributed in a competitive selection process. Organizations eligible to apply include nonprofit groups, farming organizations, fishing industry organizations, chambers of commerce and unions. State officials intend to distribute the grants with consideration to serving various populations, regions and cultures. The University of Illinois at Chicago’s School of Public Health will run a training program this summer for organizations selected for the grants. On a parallel track, 13 ad agencies and public relations firms are vying for a government contract potentially worth $35 million. The company that wins the contract will design TV ads, radio spots and billboards to urge people without insurance to sign up.

CHICAGO – An 87-year-old who drew Donald Trump’s ire by accusing the real estate mogul of cheating her testified Friday she felt comfortable investing with the TV star because of his business success and celebrity. Jacqueline Goldberg, of Evanston, testified two days after the “Apprentice” host finished his sometimes combative testimony at a civil trial in Chicago. In her lawsuit, Goldberg alleges Trump promised her a share of profits from the Trump International Hotel & Tower if she bought condos at the Chicago skyscraper. Her

AP file photo

Donald Trump arrives at federal court Tuesday in Chicago. suit claims he reneged on that promise after she committed to buy. In comments to reporters this week, Trump described himself as the victim and said Goldberg is the one “trying to

rip me off.” Trump, who is 66, also accused her playing “the age card” and trying to curry sympathy with the jury by highlighting that she’s nearly 90. Goldberg spoke softly and

Police Cmdr. Jon Burge. The commission also found three cases didn’t have sufficient evidence of torture and didn’t refer the cases for investigation.

to maintain local monuments honoring veterans. Current law allows voters in a municipality to choose to construct and fund a veteran’s memorial. But it doesn’t allow them to use the same money for the monument’s upkeep.

without hesitation during her testimony Friday. She recalled minute details from meetings with Trump sales representatives going back to the mid-2000s. She also talked about what she described as a difficult childhood and how she worked her way through college waiting on tables. She said that through much of her adulthood, she was a stay-athome mom raising four kids. Only into her 60s did she get into real estate investing, telling jurors she had become particularly excited by Trump’s plans 10 years ago to construct a 92-story building on prime property near downtown Chicago’s famed Michigan Avenue.

8STATE BRIEFS 7 police torture cases OK’d for investigation CHICAGO – A state commission that investigates alleged police torture says seven cases have merit for more investigation. The Illinois Torture Relief and Inquiry Commission has approved the cases for evidentiary hearings. Commission spokesman Mike Claffey said the cases were forwarded to the chief judge for Cook County Criminal Court. The cases involve seven men who say they were tortured by police detectives associated with former Chicago

INTEGRITY

Lawmakers OK bill for memorials upkeep SPRINGFIELD – Illinois lawmakers have approved a measure aimed at boosting the upkeep of veterans’ memorials. The state’s House voted unanimously Thursday to send the bill to the governor for his signature. The measure gives municipalities access to funds

DNA tests to determine identity of infant body CHICAGO – Authorities say DNA will be used to determine the identity of the decomposed remains of an infant found earlier this week in the Des Plaines River. The body of a male infant was

found Tuesday in the water near McCormick Woods in North Riverside. Authorities say the cause and manner of the victim’s death haven’t been determined. The Cook County Sheriff’s office said authorities were focused on the Des Plaines River since April in their search for 1-year-old Bryeon Hunter of Maywood. The boy’s mother and her boyfriend are charged with murder in his death. Lakeshia Baker, 22, and 21-year-old Michael Scott are being held in Cook County Jail.

– Wire reports

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NATION

Page A4 • Saturday, May 18, 2013

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Ousted IRS chief regrets tea party treatment The ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON – The ousted head of the Internal Revenue Service apologized to Congress on Friday for his agency’s tougher treatment of tea party and other conservative groups seeking tax-exempt status. He said they resulted from a misguided effort to handle a flood of applications, not political bias. “I want to apologize on behalf of the Internal Revenue Service for the mistakes that we made and the poor service we provided,” Steven Miller, who has been acting IRS commissioner, told the House Ways and Means Committee as the panel held Congress’ first hearing on the episode.

“The affected organizations and the American public deserve better. Partisanship and even the perception of partisanship have no place at the Internal Revenue Service.” At a hearing that saw lawmakers from both parties harshly criticize his agency, Miller conceded that “foolish mistakes were made” by IRS officials trying to handle a flood of groups seeking tax-exempt status. He said the process that resulted in conservatives being targeted, “while intolerable, was a mistake and not an act of partisanship.” Though Miller and another top IRS official are stepping down, the chairman

of the committee said that would not be enough. “The reality is this is not a personnel problem. This is a problem of the IRS being too large, too powerful, too intrusive and too abusive of honest, hardworking taxpayers,” said Rep. Dave Camp, R-Mich. At one point, anti-IRS sentiment was voiced by spectators, who included members of grass-roots conservative groups. They broke into cheers after Rep. Mike Kelly, R-Pa., said, “This is absolutely an overreach, and this is an outrage for all Americans.” Camp also said the tougher examinations that conservative groups encountered seemed to be part of a “culture

of cover-ups and intimidation in this administration.” He offered no other examples. Camp’s remark about cover-ups drew a sharp retort from the committee’s top Democrat, Rep. Sander Levin of Michigan. Levin said if the hearing became a preview of the 2014 political campaigns, “we’ll be making a very, very serious mistake.” The administration has been forced on the defensive about last September’s terrorist attack in Benghazi, Libya, that killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans, and the government’s seizure of The Associated Press’ telephone records as part of a leaks investigation.

AP photo

Ousted IRS chief Steve Miller (right) and J. Russell George, Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, are sworn in Friday on Capitol Hill in Washington before testifying before the House Ways and Means Committee hearing on the Internal Revenue Service practice of targeting applicants for tax-exempt status based on political leanings.

Hagel seeks review of sex-abuse prevention The ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photo

O.J. Simpson looks over at his lawyer during an evidentiary hearing Friday in Clark County District Court in Las Vegas. Simpson, who is currently serving a nine-to-33-year sentence in state prison as a result of his October 2008 conviction for armed robbery and kidnapping charges, is using a writ of habeas corpus to seek a new trial, claiming he had such bad representation that his conviction should be reversed.

Ex-lawyer: O.J. Simpson knew his buddies had guns The ASSOCIATED PRESS LAS VEGAS – The lawyer who defended O.J. Simpson on armed robbery charges delivered a potentially heavy blow to the former football star’s bid for a new trial Friday, testifying that Simpson knew his buddies had guns on them when he went to a hotel room to reclaim some sports memorabilia. Miami attorney Yale Galanter took the stand in a frequently combative hearing over Simpson’s claim that he was so badly represented by Galanter that his conviction should be thrown out. Point by point, Galanter contradicted much of his former client’s testimony and defended his handling of the case. Galanter said Simpson confided to him that he had asked two men to bring guns to the hotel room confrontation with two memorabilia dealers in 2007 and “he knew he screwed up.” The attorney denied giving Simpson the go-ahead to try to retrieve the items, which in-

cluded photos and signed footballs that Simpson believed had been stolen from him. He said he advised Simpson not to take matters into his own hands. And Galanter disputed Simpson’s claim that Galanter never told him about plea bargain discussions with prosecutors that could have resulted in a prison sentence of just a few years. Simpson, 65, was convicted in 2008 of kidnapping and armed robbery over the hotel room episode and was sentenced to nine to 33 years in prison. He and his new lawyers, Patricia Palm and Ozzie Fumo, allege Galanter botched the trial. District Judge Linda Marie Bell has not indicated when she will rule on the request for a new trial. On the stand, Galanter hesitated and spoke only after he paused, breathed deeply and was reminded that Simpson had waived attorney-client privilege. “I’m very uncomfortable doing this,” Galanter said. Testifying about events

leading up to the hotel room incident, Galanter said he was surprised when Simpson told him over dinner at a Las Vegas hotel that he and several other men were planning a “sting” the next morning to take back items he believed had been stolen from him in Los Angeles. Galanter said he advised against it. “When he first mentioned it, it just went over my head,” Galanter said of Simpson’s plan. “About a minute or two later, I leaned over and said, ‘What are you talking about? What are you doing?’ “He told me he finally had a lead on some personal pictures and memorabilia that was stolen from him years earlier,” Galanter testified. “I said, ‘O.J., you’ve got to call the police.’” According to Simpson, Galanter advised the former NFL running back that it was his legal right to retrieve the items; told Simpson not to testify at the trial; and failed to tell Simpson that prosecutors had offered plea bargains.

Facebook aims to be ad colossus By BARBARA ORTUTAY The Associated Press NEW YORK – It was supposed to be our IPO, the people’s public offering. Facebook, the brainchild of a young CEO who sauntered into Wall Street meetings in a hoodie, was going to be bigger than Amazon, bigger than McDonald’s, bigger than Coca-Cola. And it was all made possible by our friendships, photos and family ties. Then came the IPO, and it flopped. Facebook’s stock finished its first day of trading just 23 cents higher than its $38 IPO price. It hasn’t been that high since. Even amid the hype and excitement surrounding Facebook’s May 18 stock market debut a year ago, there were looming doubts. Investors wondered whether the social network could increase advertising revenue

without alienating users, especially those using smartphones and tablet computers. The worries intensified just days before the IPO when General Motors said it would stop paying for advertisements on the site. The symbolic exit cast a shroud over Facebook that still exists. Facebook’s market value is $63 billion, some two-thirds of what it was the morning it first began trading. At around $27 per share, the company’s stock is down roughly 30 percent from its IPO price. Meanwhile, the Standard & Poor’s 500 index is up 27 percent over the same period. Despite its disappointing stock market performance, the company has delivered strong financial results. Net income increased 7 percent to $219 million in the most recent quarter, compared with the previous year, and reve-

nue was up 38 percent to $1.46 billion. The world’s biggest online social network has also kept growing to 1.1 billion users. Some 665 million people check in every day to share photos, comment on news articles and play games. Millions of people around the world who don’t own a computer use Facebook, in Malawi, Malaysia and Martinique. And much has changed at Facebook in a year. The company’s executives and engineers have quietly addressed the very doubts that dogged the company for so long. Facebook began showing mobile advertisements for the first time just after the IPO. It launched a search feature in January and unveiled a branded Facebook smartphone in April. The company also introduced ways for advertisers to gauge the effectiveness of their ads.

WASHINGTON – Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel on Friday ordered the military to recertify all 25,000 people involved in programs designed to prevent and respond to sexual assault, an acknowledgement that assaults have escalated beyond the Pentagon’s control. He said this step, which also applies to the military’s approximately 19,000 recruiters and must be completed by July 1, is one among many that will be taken to fix the problem of sexual abuse and sexual harassment within every branch of the military. At a news conference with Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Hagel said he believes alcohol use is “a very big factor” in many sexual assault and sexual harassment cases, but there are many pieces to the problem. He and Dempsey spoke one day after all of the military’s leadership were summoned to the White House to discuss the sexual assault

problem with President Barack Obama, who has expressed impatience with the Pentagon’s failure to solve it. At his Pentagon news conference, Hagel said it has become clear to him since taking office in February that holding people accountable for their actions is important, but simply firing people is not a solution. He said he gets a lot of advice on that. He said some ask him, Chuck Hagel “Well, why Defense don’t you just secretary fire some people?” He said his answer is, “Well, yeah, we could do that. And, you know, who are you going to fire?” A catalyst for congressional outrage has been the disclosure in recent days of at least two cases in which a military member with responsibility for sexual assault prevention programs has himself been accused of sexual misconduct. Cases of

sexual assault allegations against military recruiters also have arisen recently. Dempsey, who has been among the most outspoken Pentagon official on this topic, called sexual assault in the military “a crime that demands accountability and consequences.” “As the president made clear to us yesterday, we can and must do more to change a culture that has become too complacent,” Dempsey said. “We have a serious problem that we must solve: aggressive sexual behavior that rips at the bond of trust that binds us together.” Earlier Friday, the Air Force’s top general said that sexual assaults in his branch of the military typically involve alcohol use and can be traced to a lack of respect for women. “We have a problem with respect for women that leads to many of the situations that result in sexual assault in our Air Force,” Gen. Mark Welsh told reporters in a lengthy interview in his Pentagon offices.

Thursday during a raid of his small apartment south of Boise’s downtown. Prosecutors charged him with felonies in Idaho and Utah after an extensive investigation into his activities late last year and this year.

over the university community gearing up for commencement ceremonies this weekend. Hofstra’s president said in a statement that the ceremonies would go on as scheduled. It wasn’t clear who fired the fatal shots or how many rounds were fired, but authorities said police were involved in the shooting, which happened about 2:30 a.m. Nassau County police and Hofstra University identified the slain student as Andrea Rebello, 21, of Tarrytown, N.Y. Her sister, Jessica, was also in the house at the time of the break-in but was not injured, police said. The gunman was not immediately identified.

8NATION BRIEFS Idaho man charged in terrorism plot BOISE, Idaho – He was a Russian-speaking truck driver who came to Idaho nearly four years ago to join hundreds of other Uzbekistan refugees for whom the state has become a sanctuary from violence in their home country. But federal officials say in an indictment that Fazliddin Kurbanov also was teaching people to build bombs that would target public transportation. It’s unclear whether those alleged targets were domestic or abroad – or how far Kurbanov would have gone. Prosecutors said Friday only that they believe he no longer is a threat. Kurbanov, 30, was arrested

Student, intruder killed in N.Y. break-in UNIONDALE, N.Y. – A Hofstra University junior sharing an off-campus house with her twin sister and several other college students was shot and killed during an early morning break-in Friday that also left the armed intruder dead, police said. The shooting at a private house only steps from the Long Island campus cast a pall

– Wire reports

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NATION & WORLD

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Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Page A7

Rights groups: Syria holds thousands incommunicado By KARIN LAUB The Associated Press

AP photo/Christian Abraham – Connecticut Post

Emergency personnel work Friday at the scene where two Metro North commuter trains collided near Fairfield, Conn.

Conn. commuter trains collide; injuring dozens By SUSAN HAIGH The Associated Press FAIRFIELD, Conn. – Two commuter trains serving New York City collided in Connecticut during Friday’s evening rush hour, sending 60 people to the hospital, including five with critical injuries, Gov. Dannel Malloy said. About 250 people were on board the Metro-North trains when one heading east from New York City’s Grand Central Station to New Haven derailed about 6:10 p.m. just outside Bridgeport, MTA and Bridgeport officials said. The train was hit by a train heading west from New Haven to Grand Central on an adjacent track, MTA spokesman Aaron Donovan said. Some cars on the second train also derailed as a result of the collision. Lola Oliver, 49, of Bridgeport, was on one of the trains when she suddenly found herself in mid-air.

“Finally I came to a stop on one of the seats. And I just gripped it because I felt the train sliding. It happened so fast I had no idea what was going on. All I know is we crashed,” she told The Associated Press in a hospital interview. Investigators Friday night did not know what caused the first train to derail. Malloy said there was no reason to believe it was anything other than an accident. “We’re most concerned about the injured and ultimately reopening the system,” Malloy said from the scene about three hours after the crash. The governor said that most people were not seriously hurt. Among those critically injured, he said, one’s injuries were “very critical.” The Metro-North Railroad, a commuter line serving the northern suburbs, described it as a “major derailment.” Photos showed a train car askew on the rails,

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with its end smashed up and brushing against another train. Amtrak suspended service indefinitely between New York and Boston. Malloy said there was extensive damage to the train cars and the track, and it could take until Monday for normal service to be restored. He said the accident will have a “big impact on the Northeast Corridor.” The area where the accident happened was already down to two tracks because of repair work, Malloy said. Crews have been working for a long time on the electric lines above the tracks, the power source for the trains. He said Connecticut has an old system and no other alternate tracks. By late evening, Bridgeport Police Chief Joseph Gaudett said everybody who needed treatment had been attended to, and authorities were beginning to turn their attention to investigating the cause.

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BEIRUT – About 30 security agents showed up just after midnight, breaking down the door to an apartment in the town of Daraya near the Syrian capital of Damascus. They grabbed a 24-year-old university student and drove off. That was a year ago. The young man, who had been providing aid to Syrians displaced by the country’s civil war, was never heard from again. His family was told by former prisoners that he ended up in one of the torture dungeons of President Bashar Assad’s regime. They don’t know if he’s dead or alive. More than two years into the conflict, such accounts have become chill-

traditionally is to get rid of opponents and scare the rest of the population into submission – a rationale laid out in Adolf Hitler’s “Nacht und Nebel (Night and Fog)” decree of 1941. In Syria, the goal is to “terrorize the society and dry up the revolution,” said Anwar al-Bounni, a veteran defense lawyer and human rights campaigner in Damascus. However, numbers remain sketchy. Four Syrian human rights monitors offered separate estimates ranging from about 10,000 to as many as 120,000 disappeared. The two lower estimates are based on information from families and released prisoners, while the higher figures are based on extrapolation from partial data.

ingly familiar to Syrians. Intelligence agents have been seizing people from homes, offices and checkpoints, and human rights activists say the targets often are peaceful regime opponents, including defense lawyers, doctors and aid workers. Syrian human rights monitors say the number of those disappeared without a trace is now in the thousands. By comparison, the official figure of those who disappeared in Argentina’s “dirty war” of the 1970s and 1980s is about 13,000, though rights activists say the actual figure is more than twice that. In such “enforced disappearances,” governments refuse to acknowledge detentions or provide information about those taken. The point

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NEWS

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Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Page A9

Hints of political change in Algeria

About 1,000 people are expected at event • MARCHING Continued from page A1

By PAUL SCHEMM The Associated Press ALGIERS, Algeria – The Arab Spring may finally be en route to Algeria. With the president in a French hospital recovering from a stroke, the generation of aging politicians and generals that has run Africa’s largest country for a half-century is reaching its end. Adding to the mix, Algeria’s overwhelmingly young population is increasingly vocal in its demands for jobs and housing that its oil-dependent economy isn’t providing. What comes next is of vital importance to Algeria – and the West. Algeria has the most powerful and best-equipped military in North Africa and the Sahel and is an important bulwark against terrorist groups linked to al-Qaida. Any further instability in North Africa, where Tunisia, Libya and Egypt are already struggling, could embolden the armed militants. So far Algeria has been buoyed by high oil prices and, with almost $200 billion in foreign reserves, it has spent lavishly to try to buy off the discontent. But critics maintain that short-term approach does not take into account the volatile energy market or of Algerians’ deep-seated need for a new political vision. Algeria has been more stable than its neighbors, but that may not last. In a country where the age of the average government official is the 70s, the biggest driver of political change has been the funerals, as one by one the grand figures of Algeria’s revolutionary generation die off. In the past year, the country’s first president, Ahmed Ben Bella; Chadli Benjedid, the third president; and Ali Kafi, an interim leader after the 1992 military coup have all died. During a moment of silence for Kafi at a soccer game last month, the crowd started chanting “Bouteflika next.” President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, 76, has been ill since he disappeared into a French hospital in 2005 to treat what was called a bleeding ulcer. U.S. State Department cables at the time said it could possibly be stomach cancer. Yet despite his apparent frailty and his frequent absences from public life, Bouteflika is widely believed to be aiming for a fourth presidential term in the 2014 election. He has been in Paris since April 27 recovering from a mini-stroke. Chafiq Mesbah, a former member of Algeria’s intelligence service and now a political analyst, said Bouteflika’s mini-stroke should mean that Algerians in 2014 will finally get to truly elect a leader.

AP photo

Karima el-Mahroug’s is escorted outside the Milan’s Law court Friday by two Carabinieri police officers after giving her testimony at the trial of three former Berlusconi aides accused with procuring her and other woman for prostitution in Milan. Silvio Berlusconi’s private disco featured not only aspiring showgirls performing striptease acts as sexy nuns and nurses, but also dressed as President Barack Obama and a prominent Milan prosecutor whom the billionaire media mogul has accused of persecuting him, according to the first public sworn testimony by the Moroccan woman at the center of the scandal.

Woman describes ‘bunga’ parties held by Berlusconi By COLLEEN BARRY The Associated Press MILAN – Silvio Berlusconi’s private disco featured not only aspiring showgirls performing striptease acts as sexy nuns and nurses, but one woman dressed up as President Barack Obama and a prominent Milan prosecutor whom the billionaire media mogul has accused of persecuting him, according to the first public sworn testimony by the Moroccan woman at the center of the scandal. Karima el-Mahroug’s testimony Friday at the trial of three former Berlusconi aides accused with procuring her and other women for prostitution confirms a sexually charged atmosphere at the “bunga bunga” parties of the then-sitting premier. The trial is separate from the one in which Berlusconi is charged with paying for sex with a minor – el-Mahroug when she was 17 – and trying to cover it up. El-Mahroug, now 20, said she attended about a half-dozen parties, using her nickname Ruby, and that after each, Berlusconi handed her an en-

velope with up to $3,900 in denominations of 500. She said she later received 30,000 euros cash from the then-premier paid through an intermediary – money that she told Berlusconi she wanted to use to open a beautician salon despite having no formal training. But she denied that Berlusconi had ever given her $6.43 million. She said she told acquaintances and even her father that she was going to receive such a large sum “as a boast,” but that it was a lie to make her seem more important. The three Berlusconi aides – Emilio Fede, an executive in Berlusconi’s media empire; Nicole Minetti, a former dental hygienist, showgirl and local politician; and talent agent Dario “Lele” Mora – are accused of recruiting women for prostitution at the parties and abetting prostitution, including of a minor. They deny the charges. El-Mahroug has made carefully orchestrated statements to the media since the scandal broke, but has never publicly given sworn testimony. Both she and Berlusconi deny having had sex.

Dressed soberly with her hair pulled back, El-Mahroug said she first made contact with Berlusconi’s inner circle when she participated in a beauty contest organized by Fede in Sicily when she was 16. After that she made her way to Milan, hoping to find work. She said she tried to get work through another defendant’s talent agency but didn’t have proper identity documents, and wound up landing a job as a hostess in nightclubs, earning around $130 a night. She frequently changed accommodation during that time, staying for periods of days with people whose names she no longer recalls. Eventually, she ran into Fede at a restaurant, where she reminded him of his promise in Sicily to help her. Shortly thereafter, she was invited to a dinner party, at Berlusconi’s villa outside of Milan. She testified that she met the premier that night – on Valentine’s Day in 2010 – and that he gave her an envelope of $2,600 to $3,900 as she was leaving, saying it was “a little help” and asking for her telephone number, which she gave him.

Venezuela’s military enters slums By KARL RITTER The Associated Press PETARE, Venezuela – Stern-looking soldiers clutching assault rifles wave down the beat-up Chevy Caprice entering this sprawling slum on the outskirts of Caracas. Flashlights in his face, the driver steps out and places his hands on the roof while the soldiers frisk him for drugs and weapons. He’s clean, and a hand gesture from the commanding officer sends him off into the maze of ramshackle homes that is Petare, one of the most dangerous parts of Venezuela’s notoriously crime-infested capital. Since Monday, this scene is playing out day and night

at dozens of military checkpoints set up here in the socialist government’s latest attempt to control the oil-rich country’s pandemic of violence. Critics dismiss the “Secure Homeland” initiative as a political charade that risks degenerating into human rights abuses while having no lasting impact on crime. But to many residents, weary of being terrorized by armed gangs, seeing troops on the streets is a welcome projection of government power. “You have to act forcefully so that people feel the force of the state,” said 47-year-old Irving Garcia, an unemployed former Army reservist, who like many Caracas residents has firsthand experience of

violent crime. Garcia said he was shot in the chest when he unknowingly walked into a restaurant robbery. The bullet shattered his sternum, he said, inviting a reporter to feel a piece of protruding bone through his shirt. With some 15,000 killings a year, Venezuela’s homicide rate is the fifth highest in the world, according to U.N. statistics. The murder rate doubled during the 14-year-rule of the late President Hugo Chavez as cheap access to guns and an ineffective justice system fed a culture of violence in slums like Petare, parts of which have become no-go zones for outsiders, including police.

said it was important to represent a family who has lost a child and it gives the Koenens a way to honor Melinda. “Not every ending is a happy one, and although they didn’t have a happy ending they are finding a lot of meaning in supporting the March of Dimes,” Smith said. “It was time for us to choose a family that could share their story with the community and say this is why we need your help.” Registration for the 3.1mile walk will start at 8 a.m. Sunday, and step-off is scheduled for 9 a.m. Roughly 1,000 people are expected at the event, which has a goal of raising $100,000 for the March of Dimes. Thanks to the efforts of Koenen’s team, Melinda’s Pixie Dust, and the Crystal Lake Kmart, more than $5,000 has already been raised. Koenen thanked the Kmart staff Friday morning for being one of the top 50 locations in the country when it comes to supporting the March of Dimes. Kmart employee Becca

Campbell said the giving spirit of her co-workers and the customers is a point of pride at the store. “I think it’s really great a little store like us can raise so much to help a good cause,” Campbell said. “It’s really fulfilling.” Sunday’s event will also include some special guests. Koenen said children who spent time with her daughter in the neonatal intensive care unit would be at the walk after a successful battle against premature birth complications, heart issues and other dire health problems. Koenen said she has stayed in touch with those families throughout the years and they continue to be a tremendous support, along with events such as the March of Dimes walk. “It’s amazing the impact [Melinda] has had,” Koenen said. “The fact people care enough to tell me their stories of struggle or help with events like this is amazing to me.” March for Babies began in 1970 and has raised more than $2 billion to date. Smith said events have been held in McHenry County for more than 30 years.

Current version of bill passed in House • MARIJUANA Continued from page A1 patients and caregivers to undergo background checks. It sets a 2.5 ounce limit per patient per purchase and calls for 60 dispensaries regulated by the state where patients could buy the drug. “We are embarking here on a way to achieve relief, compassionate relief, consistent with the law [with] a system which avoids abuse,” said the bill’s sponsor, Democratic Sen. Bill Haine of Alton. “It’s the tightest, most controlled legislative initiative in the United States related to medical cannabis.” Supporters say it is a compassionate measure that could save patients from the agony caused by illnesses such as cancer, multiple sclerosis and HIV. They argue that marijuana can relieve continual pain without triggering the harmful effects of other prescription drugs, including painkillers such as Oxycontin and Vicodin. But opponents contend the program could encourage the recreational use of marijuana, especially among teenagers. A report issued last month by the Pew Research Center poll showed that 77 percent of Americans say marijuana has legitimate medical uses. Eighteen states and the District of Columbia allow the use of marijuana for medical purposes. But critics in the Illinois Senate, which approved

the plan Friday in a 35-21 vote, worried about whether the regulations would be enough to prevent abuse of the drug. “For every touching story that we have heard about the benefits of those in pain, I remind you today that there are a thousand times more parents who will never be relieved from the pain of losing a child due to addiction, which in many cases has started with the very illegal, FDA-unapproved, addiction-forming drug you are asking us to make a normal part of our communities,” Sen. Kyle McCarter, a Republican from Lebanon, said ahead of the chamber’s vote. Under the bill, patients who are prescribed the drug would automatically consent to submit to a sobriety field test should a police officer suspect they were driving under the influence of the drug. But leading Illinois law enforcement organizations have opposed the legislation, saying the test cannot determine if a motorist is under the influence of marijuana. The groups say the test works only for alcohol. Haine, however, said his measure is the strictest the General Assembly has considered on medical marijuana. Haine and other supporters have advocated for the issue for several years. A measure that cleared the Senate failed in the House in 2011. The current version of the bill received the House’s approval in April.

Illinois law changed legal limit to 0.08 in 1997 • NTSB Continued from page A1 difficult to show that somebody is impaired versus somebody with a higher [BAC].” The recommended threshold means about one drink per hour for a woman weighing less than 120 pounds, two for a 160-pound man. But BAC is largely dependent on a number of factors, including food consumption and medication intake. A drink is defined as 12 ounces of beer, 4 ounces of wine, or 1.5 ounces of 80-proof alcohol under most guidelines. Rita Kreslin is the executive director of The Alliance Against Intoxicated Motor-

ists. She doesn’t believe a lower limit would target casual drinkers, as critics have said. “It’s a proposal that’s not meant to criminalize responsible drinkers,” Kreslin said. “…. [If the medical community says] that impairment starts at 0.05, then we should support that.” AAIM’s board of directors has not yet voted on the organization’s official position, board member Marti Belluschi said. But other safety groups such as Mothers Against Drunk Driving and AAA declined to endorse NTSB’s call. When Illinois law changed in 1997 to reflect an 0.08 legal limit, it acted as a significant deterrent for impaired driv-

ers, McHenry County Undersheriff Andrew Zinke said. “If 0.05 makes the streets safer, then we’re all for it,” he said. In Illinois, the legal drinking limit first introduced in 1958 was 0.15 and then was reduced to 0.10 in 1967. Drunken driving crash-

es claim nearly 10,000 lives a year – down from 21,000 in 1982 – the NTSB said, adding that lowering the threshold could prevent nearly 1,000 deaths each year. “It’s not about the 0.05 blood-alcohol concentration, it’s about those 1,000 lives,” Belluschi said.

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Opinion

John Rung President and Publisher

Dan McCaleb Group Editor

Jason Schaumburg Editor

Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Page A11 • Northwest Herald • NWHerald.com 8THUMBS UP, THUMBS DOWN

8SKETCH VIEW

Rough week for Obama The Northwest Herald Editorial Board offers this week’s thumbs up and thumbs down: Thumbs down: To the Obama administration for the numerous scandals that have become a major distraction for his second term. As if “Fast & Furious” and Benghazi-gate weren’t trouble enough, he now has to deal with a runaway IRS that was targeting conservative groups for special scrutiny and a Justice Department that, by secretly examining a couple of months worth of phone records of AP reporters, apparently thinks it’s exempt from First Amendment protections. Thumbs up: To the Illinois Legislature for finally stripping large perks such as insurance benefits and pension benefits from transit board members. The bill was sponsored in separate chambers by state Rep. Jack Franks, D-Marengo, and state Sen. Dan Duffy, R-Lake Barrington. Hopefully, it will be signed by Gov. Pat Quinn. While a step in the right direction, the bill only scratches the surface of ludicrous patronage benefits for these kind of positions that require only occasional board meeting attendance. No one voted against the bill. If anything is that obvious, perhaps we should be looking for more examples of this kind of waste. Thumbs down: To continued mismanagement of state funds. A report by Illinois Auditor General William Holland found that less than half of state road fund money spent in the past decade actually went toward construction costs. The money was instead spent on salaries for state police and secretary of state staff, and health insurance and workers’ compensation programs. Many Illinois roads and highways are in dire need of repair, and such projects provide needed jobs while improving public safety. Spending funds earmarked for road improvements should be a given, and this is just one more example of the fiscal irresponsibility practiced in Springfield. Thumbs up: To Senate Bill 0494. There are nearly 7,000 units of government in Illinois, demonstrating wastefulness and inefficiency. SB 0494 allows for the elimination of 13 of those units in DuPage County. DuPage County Board Chairman Dan Cronin pushed for the bill, which will save taxpayers in that county $100 million. Responsibilities of the eliminated units will be consolidated either with other bodies or DuPage County government. The bill, which has passed both chambers in Springfield, awaits Quinn’s signature.

8ANOTHER VIEW

The bane of guns in U.S. America has witnessed yet another shocking incident of gun violence. During an annual Mother’s Day parade in New Orleans, which was attended by nearly 400 people, gunmen opened fire, injuring at least 19 people, including three children. This incident has followed a surge in gunrelated violence recently in the U.S., and justifies the necessity to enforce more stringent gun ownership laws. But if historical examples are anything to go by, accomplishing this would be no easy feat. Real change in gun laws at a federal level will continue to be a distant dream. And this is definitely disappointing, considering that gun-related violence is a big cause of fatalities in the country. The (Dubai) Khaleej Times

8IT’S YOUR WRITE Opposed to SB 2187 To the Editor: The Illinois Legislature is on the verge of putting thousands of Illinoisans with mental and emotional conditions at serious risk if it passes legislation allowing nonmedically trained psychologists to prescribe powerful and potentially dangerous psychotropic drugs. The proposed legislation, Senate Bill 2187, has passed the Senate and could be voted on soon in the House. Forty-eight other states prohibit psychologists from prescribing these drugs, which are among the most powerful in medicine. They’re prescribed to treat mental and emotional conditions such as bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and clinical depression. Allowing nonmedically trained psychologists to prescribe such powerful drugs is like allowing someone who’s never piloted an airplane to fly a 747. Patient care requires collaboration between many members of the health care team, and psychologists play an important role. However, the simple truth is they do not have the biomedical education similar to that of health professionals currently authorized to prescribe, such as physician assistants and nurse practitioners. A proposed pharmacology “Cliffs

Notes” type of course is far inferior to the in-depth medical education physicians undertake. Doctors urge the Illinois House to vote “no” on SB 2187. Eldon A. Trame President, Illinois State Medical Society

Do the right thing To the Editor: As former senior counselor in one of the most respected agencies in the state that provides substance abuse treatment for adolescents and young adults in McHenry County, I know the importance of insuring the issues of the Mental Health Board are addressed. I can tell you first hand that if the problems are not corrected, many families and, ultimately, the community will be devastated. I have seen the great choices the Public Health and Human Services Committee have made in the past several months and greatly respect their integrity and full dedication to the citizens of McHenry County. I have many family members and friends who live in the county, and we all sincerely hope that the County Board members withdraw from allowing Chairwoman Tina Hill to propose her own candidate and dismantle the excellent work of the committee. I hope and pray County Board

How to sound off We welcome original letters on public issues. Letters must include the author’s full name, home address and day and evening telephone numbers. We limit letters to 250 words and one published letter every 30 days. All letters are subject to editing

members do the right thing. Contitta Garcia Chicago

Property owner thoughts To the Editor: I love living in McHenry County for the past 10 years. I have been further fortunate enough to have a job where I have met a lot of great McHenry County families and seniors that are living on a fixed income. I would try to listen to their plights with empathy, but now I am really able to understand and feel the hardships many folks are going through. Going on my fourth year of not having a raise, I am experiencing what it is like to live on a fixed income when everything, except income, else keeps going up in cost. Now I must find $75 more a month to pay my property taxes. In calculating the property-tax

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

hikes over the past four years, and projecting this into the future, I will essentially be taxed out of my home by 2019. Being village president of Gilberts for five years, I supported tax hikes for schools and governmental bodies that provided the residents of Gilberts and Kane County with needed services. However, that was in good times, when we all were working and getting raises. While the taxing bodies provide excellent and needed services, we have to find a better way to support them financially. The average homeowner cannot possibly continue to absorb these tax increases. We all have to learn to live on a fixed income until things improve in our economy and we all can once again afford to pay our fair share for services. Michael P. Isitoro McHenry

Will Republicans let President Obama have his scandal? WASHINGTON – Republicans in Congress are so hungry for scalps, they just can’t leave well enough alone. The scandal engulfing the Internal Revenue Service is a story that’s playing to their benefit. Monday, after having the weekend to think about it, Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida puffed himself up and called on the president to “demand the IRS commissioner’s resignation, effectively immediately.” Only one problem: The position of IRS commissioner is currently vacant. (Rubio’s spokesman later clarified he was referring to the acting commissioner.) Chalk up his confusion to Obama Derangement Syndrome, which afflicts Republicans as acutely as Bush Derangement Syndrome once did Democrats. When you are in a hole, the saying goes, stop digging. The corollary is that when you’re on top, don’t pile on. What happened at the IRS is significant, easily understood by a distracted public and being taken seriously by President Barack Obama. What happened in Benghazi – the other scandal Republicans are obsessed with – is none of the above. The differing ways the president

is treating the two stories says a lot about the state of Washington scandals. With Benghazi, Obama takes the Republicans’ second go-round at scandal-making personally but not seriously. He’s still bristling over their treatment of U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice, who was said to be his first choice to replace Hillary Clinton as secretary of state. After Rice became the target of criticism last year for her Sunday-morning recital of the administration’s talking points about the scandal, she was forced to withdraw her name from consideration. That’s why Obama was so sarcastic – as close to ridicule or anger as he generally gets – talking about the latest congressional hearings, saying the Republicans’ theory of the case “defies logic.” If the president were worried, he wouldn’t be baiting the Republicans he has been taking out to dinner for the past two months. The White House also has engaged in a little stonewalling, which only raises Republican suspicions. Last week, Press Secretary Jay Carney defended his characterization of the changes to the talking points as “stylistic.” Hardly. Yes,

Editorial Board: John Rung, Dan McCaleb, Jason Schaumburg, Kevin Lyons, Jon Styf, Kate Schott, Stacia Hahn

VIEWS Maragret Carlson the changes reflected a tug of war between the State Department and the Central Intelligence Agency, but everyone knows the White House is more powerful than both and gets the final word. Benghazi’s not nothing. People died. Yet it’s hard to turn it into a sustainable political scandal when a prominent Republican such as former Defense Secretary Robert Gates says there wasn’t a way for the military to have saved the diplomatic compound from an attack last September. Not to mention that Republicans themselves have blocked the spending of more money to increase security at dangerous posts. So Republicans are turning their focus on the IRS. They must know what I have learned in my polling: When I ask about Benghazi whenever I go home to Pennsylvania, I get no reaction. I’m sure there will be no shortage of opinion when I mention the IRS. At the same time, this scandal

8THE FIRST AMENDMENT

at – let me get this on the record – my favorite federal agency may not be as damaging to the president as Republicans expect. The IRS was doing what it should have been doing, but in a very stupid way. It will help that the stupidity, and any Benghazi-type cover-up that took place, happened under the IRS’s last permanent commissioner, and that this commissioner was appointed by President George W. Bush. What the IRS was doing was, at long last, bringing scrutiny to under-scrutinized groups that are classified under the tax code as “social welfare” organizations but are basically engaged in partisan politics. IRS investigators essentially took a Google shortcut, asking for more information from any group with “tea party” or “patriot” in its name. They did not have a similar shortcut for liberal groups equally likely to have engaged in inappropriate political activity, although surely there were search terms they could have come up with. Since the groups being profiled were the very ones congressional Republicans fear most, the program quickly got another kind of scrutiny: from congressional Republicans. The then commissioner, Douglas

Shulman, was called before Congress in March 2012 to answer for the program. He stonewalled. Now Republicans are calling for a special investigation, since his resignation is a little beside the point. There really isn’t much of an argument to be had about what happened at the IRS – the president himself twice called it “outrageous” at Monday’s news conference. The question is how the president and congressional Republicans will manage the fallout. For Obama, the risk is that the scandal undermines one of the central goals of his administration, which is to rebuild faith in the federal government. Sure, no one likes the IRS, present company excluded. But the IRS is the one federal agency that touches every U.S. household. If the president wants Americans to be able to trust their government more, and he does, then he needs the IRS to be beyond reproach. Republicans have an easier task: ginning up outrage over the IRS. They just have to be careful not to make too many calls for the resignation of officials who don’t exist.

• Margaret Carlson is a Bloomberg View columnist.

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


Saturday, May 18, 2013 Northwest Herald Page A12

Weather TODAY

SUN

80

85

Partly sunny & warm; few sprinkles

Wind: E/SE 5-15 mph

MON

TUE

THU

FRI

67

69

Partly sunny & cool

Mostly sunny & warmer

85

77

73

Wind:

Cloudy with periods of rain & t-storms Wind:

M. cloudy & cooler with a few t-storms Wind:

M. cloudy & cooler; few light showers Wind:

S/SW 10-20 mph

S 10-20 mph

SW 10-20 mph

W/NW 5-15 mph

Partly sunny, breezy & humid

62

65

ALMANAC

65

62

Wind:

Wind:

N 5-15 mph

NE 5-15 mph

52

50

48

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

at Chicago through 4 p.m. yesterday

Harvard 78/55

Belvidere 80/57

TEMPERATURE HIGH

WED

Crystal Lake 80/62

Rockford 80/58

LOW

McHenry 78/57

Hampshire 78/58

90

Waukegan 72/53 Algonquin 78/57

Oak Park 78/58

St. Charles 80/62

DeKalb 80/62

88

Dixon 83/60

Aurora 80/58

Sandwich 80/59

39

A warm front will pass north of our area leaving us in the warm sector of a storm system out to our west. Southeast winds will not only help to warm temperatures into the 80s, but increase humidity levels. Sunday will be warm and humid with highs in the mid-80s. Periods of rain and thunderstorms for Monday and Tuesday, some could be severe along with heavy rain.

LAKE FORECAST WATER TEMP: Chicago Winds: E at 6-12 kts. 79/56 Waves: 1-2 ft.

44

Orland Park 81/59 Normal high

70°

Normal low

49°

Record high

94° in 1962

Record low

36° in 2002

POLLEN COUNT TREES GRASSES

PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 4 p.m. yest.

0.00”

Month to date

0.63”

Normal month to date

1.99”

Year to date

17.90”

Normal year to date

11.39”

WEEDS MOLD

FOX RIVER STAGES as of 7 a.m. yesterday Flood

Fox Lake

SUN AND MOON

Current

24hr Chg.

--

4.31

-0.09

Nippersink Lake

--

4.30

-0.04

Sunrise

5:29 a.m.

New Munster, WI

10

8.74

-0.13

Sunset

8:11 p.m.

McHenry

4

2.37

-0.25

Moonrise

1:07 p.m.

Algonquin

3

1.88

-0.02

Moonset

1:30 a.m.

Full

Last

May 24

May 31

New

First

Jun 8

Jun 16

AIR QUALITY Friday’s reading

0-50 Good; 51-100 Moderate; 101-150 Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200 Unhealthy; 201-300 Very Unhealthy; 301-500 Hazardous Source: http://www.epa.state.il.us/air/aqi/index.html

UV INDEX TODAY The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.

9a

10a 11a Noon 1p

2p

3p

NATIONAL CITIES Today

MOON PHASES

4p

Today

Sunday

Monday

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Arlington Hts Aurora Bloomington Carbondale Champaign Chicago Clinton Evanston Galesburg Joliet Kankakee Mt. Vernon Naperville Peoria Princeton Rockford Rock Island Springfield Waukegan Wheaton

79/57/pc 80/58/pc 82/62/pc 84/65/pc 82/62/pc 79/56/pc 83/63/pc 72/56/pc 82/63/pc 83/57/pc 83/59/pc 82/63/pc 80/57/pc 83/64/pc 83/62/pc 80/58/pc 84/63/pc 84/64/pc 72/53/pc 79/57/pc

82/64/pc 86/64/pc 88/65/pc 88/68/pc 88/65/pc 82/65/pc 88/67/pc 77/62/pc 87/66/pc 85/65/pc 86/64/pc 89/67/pc 85/63/pc 88/68/pc 87/66/pc 85/65/pc 88/68/pc 89/69/pc 74/59/pc 84/64/pc

86/66/t 85/65/t 88/66/t 90/68/t 87/64/t 86/66/t 88/67/t 80/63/t 85/62/t 86/66/t 87/66/t 90/67/t 86/64/t 87/67/t 87/66/t 85/65/t 86/63/t 88/68/t 79/63/t 86/65/t

Today

City

Hi/Lo/W

City

Hi/Lo/W

Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Billings Boise Boston Charlotte Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit El Paso Fairbanks Fargo Green Bay Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jacksonville Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles Louisville Memphis

83/55/s 41/24/sn 81/67/t 64/56/pc 70/58/c 65/49/t 70/47/pc 68/52/s 80/64/t 77/63/t 74/58/t 94/72/pc 78/48/pc 85/69/pc 74/55/c 90/65/s 33/20/sn 78/62/t 72/54/pc 87/70/sh 88/72/pc 83/62/c 88/65/pc 86/71/pc 87/70/s 72/58/pc 80/66/t 86/71/pc

Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York Norfolk Oklahoma City Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, OR Reno Richmond Sacramento Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Seattle Sioux Falls St. Louis St. Paul Tampa Tucson Wash., DC Wichita

87/74/t 68/53/pc 82/65/pc 82/66/t 85/71/s 72/57/pc 72/65/t 94/71/pc 90/68/t 72/58/pc 92/73/s 78/58/t 63/49/c 74/48/s 72/64/t 82/53/s 67/49/t 95/73/pc 70/60/pc 68/52/pc 61/49/sh 85/65/pc 85/69/pc 81/64/pc 89/72/t 90/62/s 70/60/t 88/69/pc

Today

Today City

Hi/Lo/W

City

Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Beijing Berlin Brussels Buenos Aires Cairo Cancun Dublin Geneva Hong Kong Islamabad Istanbul Kabul Kingston Lima London Madrid

90/75/pc 61/49/r 89/67/s 97/76/s 83/60/pc 68/47/c 63/50/c 57/46/sh 99/76/s 88/77/pc 51/46/r 64/48/r 89/81/pc 111/78/s 80/66/s 89/54/pc 89/80/pc 74/62/pc 62/49/c 58/43/r

Manila Melbourne Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Paris Rome Santiago Sao Paulo Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw

Hi/Lo/W

92/80/c 57/42/pc 82/57/t 70/50/s 78/53/t 106/79/pc 63/48/sh 77/59/s 59/41/sh 66/60/c 73/61/sh 88/78/t 71/58/pc 67/43/s 84/64/pc 76/62/pc 69/53/pc 60/48/sh 75/52/pc 76/57/r

NATIONAL FORECAST -10s

-0s

0s

10s

20s

30s

40s

50s

60s

70s

80s

90s

100s 110s

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

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

5p

0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very high; 11+ Extreme

Forecasts and graphics, except WFLD forecasts, provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2013

Showers T-storms

Rain

Flurries

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Local&Region News editor: Kevin Lyons • kelyons@shawmedia.com

8COMMUNITY NEWS

POLICE ENFORCING SEATBELT LAWS Police departments in the area have kicked off their annual Click It or Ticket campaigns as the Memorial Day holiday weekend approaches. Woodstock and the McHenry County Sheriff’s Office are among the 500 law enforcement agencies in the state participating in the program to strongly enforce seat belt laws. “As we kick off the busy summer driving season, it’s important for everyone to buckle up every trip, every time, day or night,” Woodstock Sgt. Dennis Leard said. “Our officers are prepared to ticket anyone who is not wearing a seat belt.” The Lake in the Hills Police Department has begun a late-night enforcement to crackdown on impaired drivers. “We will be stepping up our late-night enforcement efforts making sure impaired drivers are off the road and motorists are buckled up,” said James Wales, director of Police and Public Safety. The department recommends people establish designated drivers before going out, or call a taxi if people are impaired. People should also report impaired drivers to the police.

SECTION B Saturday, May 18, 2013 Northwest Herald

Breaking news @ www.NWHerald.com

D-200 makes healthy choices Twelve schools certified under USDA program to improve kids’ lunches By SHAWN SHINNEMAN sshinneman@shawmedia.com WOODSTOCK – To the traditional Chicagoan, replacing classic pizza toppings like sausage and pepperoni with their turkey equivalent could be regarded as a sin. Whole grain crust? Downright unforgivable. But in Woodstock’s School District 200, where a french fry hasn’t hit a cafeteria plate since 2006, it’s these sort of sneaky, calorie-cutting adjustments that have kids eating healthier – and have the district winning praise for its efforts. This year, all 12 District 200

schools received certification under the United States Department of Agriculture’s HealthierU.S. School Challenge. The program challenges schools to meet certain criteria for healthy foods, and then gives award levels based on the percentage of children that eat school lunches. Food service specialists face the challenge of making healthy food appealing. “You can have a really healthy meal, but if no one buys it, there’s no benefit,” said Sue Malley, the district’s food service director. Just 210 schools in Illinois have received the USDA’s distinction since the program started in 2004. Locally,

By the numbers 12 – District 200 schools receiving USDA’s HealthierU.S. School certification 210 – Schools in Illinois receiving honor since 2004 4 of 126 – Illinois high schools receiving honor since July 1, 2012 2 – District 200 schools representing that of that four listed above only Husmann Elementary School in Crystal Lake and several elementary schools in District 300 have been certified, according to the USDA’s website. And just four of 126 Illinois schools

certified since July 1, 2012, are high schools, according to a news release from the Illinois State Board of Education. District 200 accounts for two of those four – a tougher achievement because of the expanded menu at the high school level, Malley said. “That’s huge to get that at the high school level,” she said. Malley said the district has been serious about improving the breakfast and lunch menu at schools for about seven years, but efforts intensified two years ago when they received a $25,500 grant to put toward wellness initiatives.

See LUNCHES, page B2

‘Let my daughter finally grieve’

– Joseph Bustos

MISSING PERSON CASE REOPENED Cary police are taking a fresh look at the case of a Chicago woman who went missing in the area more than two decades ago. Wendy M. Kimura was reported missing May 20, 1999, after she took a train from Chicago to Fox River Grove to visit a friend in the 200 block of Route 14. The Cary Police Department will be canvassing the area and wants to talk to anyone who knew Kimura at the time. Kimura, who was 28 when she disappeared, is 4 feet 11 inches tall, weighs 100 pounds, and suffers from schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. She is of Asian descent and has black hair and brown eyes. When she went missing, Kimura was wearing a St. Edward’s school jacket with red trim and the word “April” stitched on the front in red. Anyone with information is urged to contact Cary Investigations Sergeant Jim Fillmore at 847-639-2341.

Sarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com

Christine Haynes of McHenry holds her 6-year-old daughter’s hand Thursday while they look at what is left of their neighbors’ home. A fire ravaged the McHenry home and killed 12-year-old, Dayana Garcia in early March. Haynes has been trying to get the property cleared since March but hasn’t had any luck.

Neighbors want property cleaned up after March fire claimed life of McHenry girl

– Shawn Shinneman

8LOCAL BEST BETS

CONCERT PLANNED IN WOODSTOCK Cary-based folk duo Small Potatoes will perform at 8 p.m. Saturday at Unity Spiritual Center, 225 Calhoun St., Woodstock. Admission is $12. For reservations and information, call 815338-5164 or visit offsquare@ gmail.com.

STUDENT GROUP SET TO PERFORM Project Two Music will perform at 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the Cosman Cultural Center, 12015 Mill St., Huntley. The group, made of up students from Huntley, will perform the hits of Broadway. Tickets, at $15 for adults, $10 for students in advance ($5 additional at the door), are available at www.projecttwomusic.com.

8LOCAL DEATHS Mary G. Horton 74, formerly of Harvard Joseph Paul Waldin 83, Cary OBITUARIES on page B4

By JIM DALLKE jdallke@shawmedia.com McHENRY – More than two months after a fire destroyed a McHenry home and took the life of a 12-year-old girl, the property’s charred remains have yet to be demolished from the Lakeland Park subdivision. Neighbors on the 4500 block of Parkway Avenue, ready to move on from that tragic March 8 fire, are provided with a constant reminder of that night every time they pull in

“[My kids] can’t even play outside without seeing her stuff, or even get the mail or go to the ice cream truck without seeing her shoes in the yard. Let my daughter finally grieve over the loss of her friend.” Christine Haynes, neighbor who lives next to the burned McHenry home of Dayana Garcia, a 12-year-old who died in a fire in March the driveway, take out the garbage or pick up their mail. And the house at 4510 Parkway Ave. may remain in that state for several more months, according to the bank that owns the home.

“Stuff has been blowing in our yard,” said Christine Haynes, who lives next door to the burned home. Haynes said her two children, ages 6 and 3, were close friends with Dayana Garcia, the girl who died in the fire.

“[My kids] can’t even play outside without seeing her stuff, or even get the mail or go to the ice cream truck without seeing her shoes in the yard,” Haynes said. “Let my daughter finally grieve over the loss of her friend.” Haynes and her husband have called the city of McHenry and have yet to receive an answer as to why the property has yet to be cleaned up. “It’s been kind of a jumbled mess,” admitted McHenry Code Compliance Inspector Jean Headley.

See FIRE, page B2

Couple to participate in Wellness Place walk Work to make MCCD facilities more accessible

By JOSEPH BUSTOS jbustos@shawmedia.com ALGONQUIN – In 2009, Dick Rehwaldt was diagnosed with bad news that was a double whammy. He had colon and esophageal cancer. The cancer spread to his liver, and in November 2011, Rehwaldt had part of his liver removed, which led to complications from the surgery and a 2½-month hospital stay. While dealing with all of the emotional and medical hardships of cancer, Rehwaldt and his wife, Maureen, started going to the Wellness Place, where they could receive cancer education and support. They have been so thankful for the support that the Algonquin residents will be participating in the Wellness Place Community Cancer Walk/Run on Sunday.

See WALK, page B2

By EMILY K. COLEMAN ecoleman@shawmedia.com

Kyle Grillot – kgrillot@shawmedia.com

Maureen and Dick Rehwaldt stand outside their Algonquin home Friday. The Rehwaldts go to the Wellness Place in Palatine, where they take part in support groups. Maureen goes to a caregiver group, and Dick goes to the men’s group. For the third year, they will be participating in the Wellness Place Community Cancer Walk/Run, which helps raises money for the Wellness Place.

WOODSTOCK – Improvements planned for two McHenry County Conservation District facilities this summer will bring them in compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, the district’s executive director said. The district’s board of trustees accepted bids on 16 contracts, totaling $1.09 million, at its meeting Thursday evening, according to district documents. The work will improve entrances, walkways, hallways, slopes, restrooms and doorways of the two

See MCCD, page B4


LOCAL&REGION

Page B2 • Saturday, May 18, 2013

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

ELGIN: FUNDING

Legislation aids Elgin Community College expansion SHAW MEDIA ELGIN – The Illinois General Assembly has passed a measure that will let Elgin Community College expand by purchasing land from the city of Elgin, according to a news release from State Rep. Keith Farnham, D-Elgin.

“This bill will allow ECC to continue to expand its beautiful campus and provide additional educational resources to our quickly growing community and student population,” Farnham said in the release. Farnham introduced House Bill 2862 in February. Sen. Michael Noland, D-Elgin,

sponsored the legislation in the Senate. “ECC is an important part of our community, and this expansion will ensure students have the resources they need to success,” Noland said in the release. “ECC needs this expansion to prepare students for the future and remain a vi-

brant center of learning.” The bill advanced out of the General Assembly on Wednesday and awaits Gov. Pat Quinn’s approval. The legislation, an initiative of the city of Elgin, would allow land owned by the city to be rezoned for commercial or industrial use, according to

the release. The change is necessary because Elgin plans to sell part of the land to ECC, which will use the property for an expansion that might include a bookstore or restaurant, according to the release. “We are pleased to have the support of both State Rep. Farnham and State Sen. No-

land as we work with the city of Elgin to acquire this property adjacent to our campus,” ECC President David Sam said in a written statement. “The rezoning gives the college flexibility as we determine how this land will be used to benefit our students and the community.”

Neighbor calls scene ‘eyesore’ of bad memories

Algonquin man still receiving chemo

• FIRE

• WALK

Continued from page B1

Continued from page B1

Headley said the demolition process has taken an especially long time because the home was in the process of foreclosure before the fire. The city has been waiting on Bank of America to take possession of the house, which occurred April 22. It is then up to the bank to initiate the demolition process, Headley said. The city of McHenry took Bank of America to administrative adjudication court May 9 to prove that it had ownership of the property and was moving toward demolishing the charred residence, Headley said. Headley was under the impression Thursday that Bank of America had a signed agreement with a property management company to demolish and clean up the residence “this week.” However, Bank of America Spokeswoman Diane Wagner said Friday that nothing is expected to be done to the home before the bank’s next court date in July. Headley did not immediately return

Sarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com

Christine Haynes of McHenry walks Thursday past what is left of her neighbors’ home. phone calls Friday afternoon. Haynes said when it rains the home smells like it’s burning all over again. Gusts of wind blow debris across the street, and there is a constant smell of gasoline. “We are still really close with the family,” Haynes said. “I get [Dayana’s brothers] once a week so the girls can play with them. For them to play here, we have to keep them inside and blinds closed.” Greg Rolewski, who lives directly across the street

and sees the burnt home every time he opens his blinds or walks out the front door, said he wished it would get resolved. “It’s an eyesore that keeps bringing back bad memories,” he said. Headley said that in a “normal situation” the cleanup process takes approximately one week. A call to the family of Dayana Garcia was not immediately returned Friday. “We didn’t mean to do this to the neighbors,” Headley said.

Learn more

The event is a fundraiser for the facility. “We want to support this place,” Maureen Rehwaldt said. “We know money is tight everywhere. If we didn’t have this place to go to, we would be without a lot of services. It’s our way to give back to them for the services they provide.” Maureen Rehwaldt is in a caregiver support group, while Dick Rehwaldt is in a men’s cancer group. “It’s a place where guys can go, who have cancer, and talk to other guys who have cancer,” the 69-year-old Dick Rehwaldt said. “We understand each others problems, and ... we’re interested in each others situations. When we find something that’s new, in the medical field, we share it with everybody.” Dick Rehwaldt still is going through chemotherapy

For more information about the Wellness Place Community Cancer Walk/Run at the Arboretum of South Barrington, go to http:// www.wellnessplace.org/home/ events/wellness-walk. Registration and check-in is at 8 a.m. Sunday, with the event starting at 9 a.m. every two weeks. During five-hour sessions, he receives infusions through a port in his body. He then has another bag of treatment that has to be pumped into his body at home. He’s had three sessions of the chemo. He isn’t sure how long he’ll have to go through it, but the growth rate of the tumor has been decreasing, Dick said. The treatment leaves him so fatigued that naps don’t leave him refreshed. “I can take a nap, and wake up just as tired as when I went to sleep,” Dick Re-

hwaldt said. Maureen Rehwaldt, 64, works as a nurse at the Midwest Palliative and Hospice Care Center. She started going to the support groups at the Wellness Place in Palatine two years ago. Among the programs the Wellness Place offers are tai chi massage therapy, acupuncture and sessions on stress management. She goes to her support group twice a month, where they talk about what everyone is going through. “There’s sharing of mutual problems,” Maureen Rehwaldt said. Sometimes the caregivers even give each other advice on various things, such as what to buy at a store. “It’s a good place to have someone really listen to you and share your concerns and give support,” Maureen Rehwaldt said. “Friends can do that, but they don’t know what this journey is like. Other caregivers do.”

District 200 officials revamped menu • LUNCHES Continued from page B1 Much of the money went toward promotional and educational materials, but officials went through the process of revamping the menu

during that time as well, Malley said. They were required to apply for HealthierU.S. certification after the grant period ended. When they heard back, seven of the districts schools were certified “silver” and five were certified “bronze.”

“I think we’re doing more and more to get kids to have that healthy focus in schools, but also to embrace lifelong habits,” Superintendent Ellyn Wrzeski said. “A tremendous amount has been done in the food service area.”

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LOCAL&REGION

Page B4 • Saturday, May 18, 2013

8OBITUARIES BRUCE COSBY Born: Sept. 6, 1943 Died: May 14, 2013 PROVIDENCE, Ky. – Bruce Cosby, 69, of Providence, Ky., passed away Tuesday, May 14, 2013. He was born Sept. 6, 1943, in Marion, to Jesse and Dortha Cosby. He attended Crittenden County schools and married Linda Raether on April 20, 1968, in Marengo. In 1977, the family moved to Providence, Ky., where Bruce worked as a coal miner. He was an avid golfer and a Kentucky Wildcats fan. He is survived by his wife, Linda; his daughter, Karla (Billy) Sensabaugh; his sons, Ken Cosby, Kelly (Cherish) Cosby and Kevin (Robin) Cosby; his grandchildren, Tyler, Dustin, Logan, Samuel, Devin, Blake, Landon, Kelby, Kylee, Courtney, Abby and Billy; his sisters, Helen Jones and Phyllis Anderson; and his brother, Wayne Cosby. He was preceded in death by three brothers. The visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. Monday, May 20, at Zion Lutheran Church, 412 Jackson St., Marengo. A graveside service will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday, May 21, at Marengo City Cemetery. For information, call the Marengo-Union Funeral Home at 815-568-8131. Online condolences may be expressed at www.marengo-unionfuneralhome.com. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits

MARY G. HORTON Born: Jan. 22, 1939; in Albion Died: May 16, 2013; in Harvard HARVARD – Mary G. Horton, 74, of Walworth, Wis., died Thursday, May 16, 2013, at Mercy Harvard Hospital. She was born Jan. 22, 1939, to Glenn K. and Helen S. (Fisher) Hodgson in Albion. On May 24, 1957, she married John G. “Jack” Horton Sr. in Browns at the

Methodist Church. She had worked as a preschool teacher in Harvard for 20 years. Along with being a homemaker, she also had worked at Gamble’s Hardware Store and Sternberg’s. She was a member of the First United Methodist Church, where she was a Sunday School teacher, and a member of the Harvard Women of the Moose Golden Agers. She loved spending time with her grandchildren, enjoyed her family vacations, which were always to educational places, and was an avid St. Louis Cardinals fan. Survivors include her sons, John Jr. (Wendy) Horton of Walworth and Jason (Lori) Horton of Walworth; grandchildren, Christopher, Camryn, Chloe, Benjamin and Tess; one godchild, Heather Loewe; one brother, Larry Hodgson; two sisters-in-law, Melba Hodgson and MaryDon Hortin; two brothers-inlaw, Benjamin Horton Jr. and Leo Tibbitts; nephews, Tony DeMarco and Bob Horton; nieces, Janet Swonguer and Teri Horton; and several other nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her parents; her husband, who died June 12, 1998; one sister, June Horton; and one brother, Gary Hodgson. Special thanks to the Harvard Care Center for their loving care and support. The visitation will be from 5 to 8 p.m. Monday, May 20, at Saunders & McFarlin Funeral Home, 107 W. Sumner St., Harvard. The visitation will continue from 10:30 a.m. until the 11 a.m. funeral service Tuesday, May 21, at First United Methodist Church, 1100 N. Division St., Harvard. The Rev. Jim Bell will officiate. Interment will be in Linn-Hebron Cemetery in Hebron. Memorials may be made to First United Methodist Church or to the Lakeland Animal Shelter, P.O. Box 1000, Elkhorn, WI 53121. Family and friends may sign the online guest book at saundersmcfarlin.net. Call the funeral home at 815-9435400 for more information. Sign the guest book at www.

NWHerald.com/obits

JOSEPH PAUL WALDIN Born: Sept. 12, 1929; in Chicago Died: May 11, 2013; in Barrington CARY – Joseph Paul Waldin, 83, of Cary and formerly of Arlington Heights for 20 years, passed away Saturday, May 11, 2013, in Barrington. Born Sept. 12, 1929, in Chicago, he was the son of Joseph and Estelle (Fydryck) Waldin. On Oct. 13, 1962, he was united in marriage to Carol J. Schwartz. As a member of the United States Army, Mr. Waldin proudly served his country during the Korean War. A carpenter for Local 1 for more than 50 years, he was employed by Harris Bank, Power Construction and Bulley & Anders. Mr. Waldin loved to fish and enjoyed woodworking, gardening and volunteering for AmVets. Most of all, he loved spending time with his family. His survivors include his beloved wife, Carol Waldin; his loving daughters, Heather (Steve) Guillen of Cary and Laurie (David) Leeds of Hoffman Estates; his adored granddaughters, Jennifer (Adam) Leeds Radochnoski and Jadine Guillen; his other children, Joe, Debbie and Cindy; eight other grandchildren; and his dear sister, Virginia Warakomski of Kansas. He was preceded in death by his parents; his brother, Paul; and his sister, Theresa Buck. The memorial visitation for Mr. Waldin will begin at noon Sunday, May 19, followed by a service at 2 p.m. at Davenport Family Funeral Home, 419 E. Terra Cotta Ave. (Route 176), Crystal Lake. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions in his honor may be directed to JourneyCare Foundation, 405 Lake Zurich Road, Barrington, IL 60010. Online condolences may be sent

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

8POLICE REPORTS

to his family at www.davenportfamily.com. For information, call the funeral home at 815-459-3411. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits

PHILLIP M. YURGAITIS Born: Jan. 1, 1947; in Chicago Died: May 15, 2013; in Barrington FOX RIVER GROVE – Phillip M. Yurgaitis, 66, of Fox River Grove, passed away Wednesday, May 15, 2013, in the JourneyCare hospice unit in Barrington. He was born Jan. 1, 1947, in Chicago, the son of Peter and Simone Yurgaitis. His father preceded him in death. Besides his mother, he is survived by his wife, Pamella (Nee Turcotte) Yurgaitis, whom he married March 10, 1991, in Long Grove; five children, Katie Hanus, Christy (Brendan) Kelly, Peter (Amy) Yurgaitis, Dayna (Larry) Pandocchi and Bryan (Chrissy) Newbold; five grandchildren, Tim Hanus, Hailey Stockwell, Eamon Kelly, Kyla Kelly and Rory Kelly; three siblings, Fran (Jim) Lyne, Dan Yurgaitis and Michelle Spaulding; and many nieces and nephews. Phil owned and operated Peter’s Bakery in Cary for many years. He loved to bowl and participated in a number of leagues in the area. He was an avid Green Bay Packer fan. The visitation will be from 4 to 9 p.m. Monday, May 20, with a service with military honors at 7 p.m. at Kahle-Moore Funeral Home, 403 Silver Lake Road, Cary. For information, call the funeral home at 847-639-3817. Online condolences may be sent to the family at kahlemoore.com. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits

8FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS Patricia “Patty” Brannam: A celebration of life service will be at 10 a.m. Saturday, May 18, at Living Water Lutheran Church in Crystal Lake. For information, call Roller Funeral Home at 870-425-2161. William Mabon Clardy: A memorial visitation will be from 4 to 5 p.m. Saturday, May 18, at Collierville Funeral Home, 534 W. Poplar, Collierville, Tenn. For information, call Colonial Funeral Home at 815-385-0063. Bruce Cosby: The visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. Monday, May 20, at Zion Lutheran Church, 412 Jackson St., Marengo. A graveside service will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday, May 21, at Marengo City Cemetery. For information, call the Marengo-Union Funeral Home at 815-568-8131. Milton T. Ewert: A memorial service will be at 1:30 p.m. Sunday, May 19, at the United Methodist Church of Crystal Lake, 236 W. Crystal Lake Ave., Crystal Lake. Dean Matthew Glosson: A funeral Mass celebration will be at 10 a.m. Saturday, May 18, at St. Patrick Church, 3500 W. Washington, McHenry. For information, call the funeral home at 815-385-2400. Maria Elena (Nooning) Havemann: The visitation will be from 4 to 7 p.m. Sunday, May 19, at DeFiore-Jorgensen Funeral Home, 10763 Dundee Road, Huntley, and from 9:30 a.m. until the Mass celebration at 10:30 a.m. Monday, May 20, at St. Mary Catholic Church, 10307 Dundee Road, Huntley. Entombment will be in

St. Michael the Archangel Cemetery in Palatine. For information, call 847-515-8772. Eleonore Hedke: The funeral services will be at 10 a.m. Saturday, May 18, at Skaja Bachmann Funeral Home, 7715 W. Route 14, Crystal Lake. Interment will be at Memory Garden Memorial Park in Arlington Heights. For information, call the funeral home at 815-455-2233. Mary G. Horton: The visitation will be from 5 to 8 p.m. Monday, May 20, at Saunders & McFarlin Funeral Home, 107 W. Sumner St., Harvard. The visitation will continue from 10:30 a.m. until the 11 a.m. funeral service Tuesday, May 21, at First United Methodist Church, 1100 N. Division St., Harvard. Interment will be in Linn-Hebron Cemetery in Hebron. For information, call the funeral home at 815-943-5400. Charles A. Kilgore: Family and friends will meet for graveside funeral services with burial at 2 p.m. Saturday, May 18, in Union Cemetery in Union. The visitation will be from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, May 18, at Miller Funeral Home, West Dundee. For information, call 847-426-3436. Toby Shussin Levin: Two public memorial gatherings have been set to celebrate her life and are open to her many friends and loved ones: from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday, June 1, at her home, 500 Stanford Drive, Marengo; and from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday, July 14, at Wolfe Lake Condominiums

Party Room, 4820 Park Commons Drive, Minneapolis, MN 55416. Jennifer Marie Mahaffey: The funeral services will be at 10 a.m. Saturday, May 18, at Alden Community United Methodist Church, 16532 Route 173, Alden. A burial service will follow in Hebron Cemetery, and a celebration of life luncheon will be at noon at The Stratford, 21007 McGuire Road, Harvard. For information, call McHenry County Burial and Cremation Society at 815-5688115. Frederic E. Rachford: The visitation will be from 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday, May 19, at Schneider-Leucht-Merwin & Cooney Funeral Home, 1211 N. Seminary Ave., Woodstock. The visitation will continue from 9:30 a.m. Monday, May 20, until the Mass celebration at 10:30 a.m. at Church of Holy Apostles, 5211 Bull Valley Road, McHenry. Burial will be in Oakland Cemetery in Woodstock. For information, call the funeral home at 815-338-1710. Mary Jane Rask-Long: The service will be at 1 p.m. Saturday, May 18, at Church of Incarnation, Bloomingdale. Anna Mae Davidson Michalsen: A memorial service will be at 11 a.m. Wednesday, June 5, at St. Paul’s United Church of Christ, 485 Woodstock St., Crystal Lake. Shirley Mae (Louy) Thomas: A memorial service in celebration of Shirley’s life will be at 2 p.m. Sunday, May 26, at First Congregational United Church of Christ

of DeKalb, 615 N. First St., DeKalb. Private family burial will be in Oakwood Cemetery in DeKalb. For information, call Ronan-MooreFinch Funeral Home at 815-7583841. Dorothy M. Urben: Inurnment will be at 11 a.m. Saturday, May 18, in New Glarus Cemetery in New Glarus, Wis. For information, call James A. O’Connor Funeral Home at 847-669-5111. Joseph Paul Waldin: The memorial visitation for Mr. Waldin will begin at noon Sunday, May 19, followed by a service at 2 p.m. at Davenport Family Funeral Home, 419 E. Terra Cotta Ave. (Route 176), Crystal Lake. For information, call the funeral home at 815-459-3411. Christina M. Weck: A tribute to her life will be from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday, May 18, at Ehorn-Adams Funeral Home, 10011 Main St., Richmond. Inurnment will be in Forked River, N.J., at a later date. For information, call the funeral home at 815 678-7311. LeRoy Wegener: A visitation will be from 9 to 11 a.m., followed by a memorial service and luncheon Saturday, June 1, at Chain O’ Lakes Community Bible Church, 43 W. Grass Lake Road, Lake Villa. Phillip M. Yurgaitis: The visitation will be from 4 to 9 p.m. Monday, May 20, with a service with military honors at 7 p.m. at the Kahle-Moore Funeral Home, 403 Silver Lake Road, Cary. For information, call the funeral home at 847-639-3817.

Top priority is to have two facilities done this summer • MCCD Continued from page B1 buildings at the Brookdale Administrative Offices, 18410 Route 14, Woodstock, and the Prairieview Education Center, 2112 Behan Road, Crystal Lake, district spokeswoman Wendy Kummerer said in an email. Once the work is complete, the facilities will be in compliance with federal law, Executive Director Elizabeth Kessler said. The district has been chipping away at the accessibility audit it completed in 2007. It has less than three years to make progress in the areas not

in compliance, Kessler said. Some easily made changes that could be taken care of internally are done, she said, and accessibility issues are addressed when the district makes other improvements. The top priority is the two facilities be done this summer because they receive the most traffic, Kessler said. “We’re committed and we take the requirement of making our sites accessible very seriously,” she said. “Everyone should have the opportunity to access our sites and enjoy the outdoors.” Construction will start at the Brookdale Administrative Offices around June 8 and continue until Aug. 8. Work on the

Prairieview Education Center will run from August to October, Kummerer said. The buildings will be closed and staff will be relocated during the construction. Trails at the Brookdale Conservation Area still will be

Algonquin • Rafael Rodriguez, 19, 118 Austin Ave., Carpentersville, was charged Saturday, March 23, with possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of marijuana. • A 14-year-old Lake in the Hills juvenile and two 13-year-old Huntley girls were charged Sunday, March 24, with retail theft. • Amber S. Mason, 24, 2635 Williamsburg Drive, Algonquin, was charged Friday, March 29, with two counts of domestic battery and criminal damage to property. • Nancy L. Blanchard, 57, 2661 Melboure Lane, Lake in the Hills, was charged Friday, March 29, with retail theft. • Viola G. Flores, 49, 221 Basswood Drive, Naperville, was charged Friday, March 29, with driving under the influence, driving without insurance, failure to reduce speed, and failure to yield to the right of way. • A 16-year-old Elgin girl was charged Saturday, March 30, with retail theft and resisting a peace officer. • Elvis A. Rodriguez, 19, 1425 Greenridge Ave., Algonquin, was charged Monday, April 1, with domestic battery. • Sharogerlene Cooper, 37, 9953 Thornton Way, Huntley, was charged Thursday, April 4, with domestic battery and assault. • Crystal J. Humme, 25, 523 State St., St. Charles, was charged Thursday, April 4, with retail theft. • Zachary J. Trent, 35, 4180 Bunker Hill Drive, Algonquin, was charged Saturday, April 6, with driving under the influence, driving with a blood-alcohol content greater than 0.08 percent, improper lane use, illegal transportation of alcohol and failure to reduce speed. • Suranji Edirisinghe, 37, 1 Baronet Court, Lake in the Hills, was charged Saturday, April 6, with retail theft. • Helen E. Rodriquez, 20, 430 Tuscany Drive, Algonquin, was charged Saturday, April 6, with retail theft. • Maura Escobar-Hernandez, 29, 403 Garfield St., Harvard, was charged Saturday, April 6, with retail theft. • Alexander Serafin, 18, 2307 Loop Road, Algonquin, was charged Sunday, April 7, with resisting a peace officer and two counts of aggravated battery. • Hajnalka Ion, 42, 3210 New Market Ave., Carpentersville, was charged Sunday, April 7, with retail theft. • Brian R. Lane, 34, 1301 Locust Drive, Sleepy Hollow, was charged Tuesday, April 9, with retail theft. • A 16-year-old Algonquin girl was charged Tuesday, April 9, with retail theft. • A 16-year-old Algonquin boy was charged Tuesday, April 9, with underage drinking. • Dominique M. Smith, 19, 17 Oxford Court, Unit 4, Carpentersville, was charged Wednesday, April 10, with retail theft. • Jasmine T. Watkins, 23, 1834 Endicott Circle, Carpentersville, was charged Wednesday, April 10, with attempted retail theft. • Isaac E. Faulk, 18, 316 Harvest Gate, Lake in the Hills, was charged Friday, April 12, with retail theft. • Brian E. Dierking, 22, 730 Timberwood Lane, Algonquin, was charged Saturday, April 13, with driving under the influence, driving with a blood-alcohol content of more than 0.08 percent and improper lane use. • David S. Lim, 44, 620 Saratoga Circle, Algonquin, was charged

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• Karyn L. Henson, 49, 4951 Bode Lane, McHenry, was charged Monday, April 8, with driving under the influence of alcohol and disobeying a traffic-control signal. • Alexis T. Vasquez, 21, 1984 Prairie Mist Drive, Round Lake, was charged Monday, April 8, with felony possession of 30 to 500 grams marijuana with intent to deliver, felony possession of more than 30 grams of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, driving without insurance and driving in the wrong lane. • Dennis G. Burdick, 44, 4512 Garden Quarter Road, McHenry, was charged Tuesday, April 9, with felony aggravated driving while license revoked and fleeing police. • Emily R. Smith, 22, 801 Bach Court, Woodstock, was charged Tuesday, April 9, with attempted obstructing justice. • Bruce S. Safraniec, 47, 2005 Bull Ridge Drive, McHenry, was charged Wednesday, April 10, with driving with a revoked license and speeding. He also was wanted on a Peoria County warrant related to driving under the influence. • Jamie Petterson, 31, 2420 Evergreen Circle, McHenry, was charged Thursday, April 11, with retail theft. • Daniel R. Schmidt, 52, 1780 Arlington Heights Road, Arlington Heights, was charged Saturday, April 13, with driving under the influence of alcohol, driving without a valid license and illegally transporting alcohol.

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Saturday, April 13, with domestic battery and interfering with the reporting of a domestic battery. • Kori L. Warner, 18, 678 Eletson Drive, Crystal Lake, was charged Sunday, April 14, with retail theft. • Alyssa Weber, 18, 410 Grace Drive, Lake in the Hills, was charged Sunday, April 14, with retail theft. • Christopher O. Lester, 21, 2803 Sorrel Row, Lake in the Hills, was charged Monday, April 15, with battery. • A 14-year-old Sleepy Hollow boy was charged Friday, April 19, with retail theft. • Luciano T. Rodriguez, 27, 2009 Berkshire Circle, Carpentersville, was charged Saturday, April 20, with driving under the influence, driving without a license and improper lane use. • Ellen M. Scranton, 18, 734 Hickman Lane, Woodstock, was charged Saturday, April 20, with retail theft. • A 16-year-old Huntley girl was charged Sunday, April 21, with retail theft. • Bailey R. Wagner, 19, 18N861 Sleepy Hollow Road, West Dundee, was charged Monday, April 22, with retail theft. • A 17-year-old Lake in the Hills boy was charged Wednesday, April 24, with retail theft. • Brobbey J. Kofi, 64, 930 Fox Run Lane, was charged Wednesday, April 24, with domestic battery. • Jody B. Garcia, 21, 1 Sycamore Ave., Carpentersville, was charged Friday, April 26, with driving under the influence, driving the wrong way on a divided highway and driving without proof of insurance. • A 15-year-old Carpentersville boy was charged Friday, April 26, with retail theft. He also was wanted on a juvenile warrant. • Ryan F. Zak, 22, 1796 Deerhaven Drive, Crystal Lake, was charged Friday, April 26, with retail theft.

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Page B5


Page B6 • Saturday, May 18, 2013

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QUICKCRITIC

More reviews at PlanitNorthwest.com Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Page B7

MINI-REVIEWS & LOCAL SHOWTIMES OF CURRENT MOVIES ON SCREEN NOW “The Croods” HH½ STARRING: The voices of Nicolas Cage, Ryan Reynolds, Emma Stone and Catherine Keener PLOT: The world’s irst prehistoric family goes on a road trip to an uncharted and fantastic world. RATING: PG for some scary action TIME: 1 hour, 32 minutes VERDICT: Cavemen – they’re just like us! – or so “The Croods” seems to be saying with its familiar mix of generational clashes, coming-of-age milestones and generally relatable laughs. The animated adventure features a strong, star-studded cast and dazzles visually in wondrously colorful, vibrant 3-D, but the script doesn’t pop off the screen quite so effectively. The simplistic message here is: Trying new things is good. It’s a useful notion for kids in the crowd to chew on, but their older companions may be longing for something more substantive. Still, “The Croods” is both brisk and beautiful, and should be suficiently entertaining for family audiences for whom few such options exist these days. And it might be especially resonant with young female viewers, with a strong, resourceful teenage girl at its center named Eep (voiced by Emma Stone in her usual charming rasp). It’s the prehistoric era, and while the rest of Eep’s family prefers the comforting safety of hiding fearfully inside a cave, with only sporadic outings for group hunts, she longs to see what’s outside those stone walls. Her dad, Grug (Cage), is especially protective, neurotically worrying about every possible unknown and urging the same sort of apprehension in everyone else. But everything changes when Eep escapes and meets a guy named Guy (Reynolds). – Christy

Lemire, The Associated Press

“42” HHH

STARRING: Chadwick Boseman, Harrison Ford, Christopher Meloni, Nicole Beharie PLOT: Jackie Robinson (Boseman) breaks the race barrier in Major League baseball when general manager Branch Rickey (Ford) puts him on the Brooklyn Dodgers’ roster. Robinson endures racism from the stands and in his own clubhouse during his historic rookie season. RATING: PG-13 for thematic elements including language TIME: 2 hours, 1 minute VERDICT: Writer-director Brian Helgeland (who won an Oscar for his “L.A. Conidential” script) tells Jackie Robinson’s incredible story in a fast-paced and entertaining style, even if Helgeland’s history lessons are aimed at a middle-school level. Adults may appreciate the sentiment but get antsy waiting for material pitched at them. Screen newcomer Boseman is phenomenal as Robinson, capturing the ballplayer’s tortured soul as well as his prowess on the ield. Ford turns himself into a character actor and clearly enjoys himself, even though he does ham it up a bit. Worth seeing, but it wears its nobility too conspicuously. – Jef-

frey Westhoff, Northwest Herald

“The Great Gatsby” HHH STARRING: Leonardo DiCaprio, Tobey Maguire, Carey Mulligan, Joel Edgerton PLOT: In 1920s Long Island, a naïve Midwesterner (Maguire) gets pulled into the world of his enigmatic and wealthy neighbor, Jay Gatsby (DiCaprio) and Gatsby’s quest to regain the woman he once loved (Mulligan). RATING: PG-13 for some violent images, sexual content, smoking, partying and brief language TIME: 2 hours, 23 minutes VERDICT: Director Baz Luhrmann applies his “Moulin Rouge” approach to F. Scott Fitzgerald’s literary classic, and the results are as uneven as expected. Luhrmann and his technical wizards whip up a fantasy version of the Roaring Twenties with eye-popping effects (see it in 3-D) and a jazz/ hip-hop soundscape masterminded by Jay Z. But the somber second half struggles to match with the glamorous irst half, where Gatsby’s extravagant parties are staged like music videos. The cast is just about McHenry Downtown Theatre

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LOCAL SHOWTIMES

THEATERS Classic Cinemas Woodstock 209 Main St., Woodstock, 815-338-8555 www.classiccinemas.com AMC Lake in the Hills 12 Randall Road, Lake in the Hills, 800-fandango www.amctheatres.com/LakeHills McHenry Downtown Theatre 1204 N. Green St., McHenry, 815-578-0500 http://cyouatthemovies.com Regal Cinemas 5600 W. Route 14, Crystal Lake, 800-fandango www.regmovies.com

perfect, with Mulligan and Edgerton ideal as Daisy and Tom Buchanan and DiCaprio delivering one of his best performances. – Jeffrey West-

hoff, Northwest Herald

“Iron Man 3” HHH½ STARRING: Robert Downey Jr., Gwyneth Paltrow, Ben Kingsley, Guy Pearce PLOT: Prone to anxiety attacks after battling aliens in “The Avengers,” Tony Stark (Downey) now spends most of his time tinkering on new armor. That changes when a terrorist calling himself the Mandarin (Kingsley) threatens Tony’s girlfriend (Paltrow) and brings the war to Tony’s front door. RATING: PG-13 for intense sequences of science-iction action and violence throughout, and brief suggestive content TIME: 2 hours, 10 minutes VERDICT: Superhero series usually lose their footing in the third outing, but director Shane Black, replacing Jon Favreau, avoids the third-movie curse by crafting a movie much different, and much more personal, than the irst two. For most of the story, Downey had to prove his heroism without Iron Man’s armor. Kingsley’s villain is odd, but that makes him more chilling. As big as the action sequences are, Downey commands the ilm. – Jeffrey West-

hoff, Northwest Herald

“Mud” HH½ STARRING: Matthew McConaughey, Tye Sheridan, Jacob Loland PLOT: Two teenage boys encounter a fugitive and form a pact to help him evade the bounty hunters on his trail and to reunite him with his true love. RATING: PG-13 for some violence, sexual references, language, thematic elements and smoking TIME: 2 hours, 10 minutes VERDICT: The story of a sympathetic fugitive who forges a bond with two teenage boys near a mighty river down South, “Mud” is shot through with traditional qualities of American literature and drama. Jeff Nichols’ much-anticipated follow-up to his breakthrough second feature “Take Shelter” feels less adventurous and unsettling but remains a well-carpentered piece of work marked by some ine performances and resilient thematic iber. – Todd McCarthy, The

Hollywood Reporter

“Oblivion” HHH STARRING: Tom Cruise, Olga Kurylenko, Andrea Riseborough, Morgan Freeman PLOT: A maintenance worker (Cruise)

left behind to repair robots on a post-Apocalyptic Earth sees a spacecraft drop from the sky. He discovers a life pod containing a woman (Kurylenko) who has been in suspended animation for 60 years, and he recognizes her from his dreams. RATING: PG-13 for science-iction action violence, brief strong language and some sexuality and nudity TIME: 2 hours, 6 minutes VERDICT: This science-iction opus comes from the same man, Joseph Kosinski, who directed “TRON: Legacy.” Whatever else you can say about him, Kosinski is a genius at building fantastic worlds for the screen. The production design and special effects are outstanding, creating a chilling dystopian wasteland contrasted by the shining futuristic architecture of Cruise’s existence. Typical of heroes in post-apocalyptic science iction, Cruise is living a lie. As the truth is revealed to him, the plot becomes more and more implausible as it deploys nearly every plot twist ever used in science iction. The irst hour is amazing to see, though. British actress Andrea Riseborough and Morgan Freeman co-star. – Jeffrey

Westhoff, Northwest Herald McCarthy, The Hollywood Reporter

“Pain & Gain” HH STARRING: Mark Wahlberg, Dwayne Johnson, Anthony Mackie, Tony Shalhoub PLOT: Three Miami bodybuilders (Wahlberg, Johnson and Mackie) with low IQs and lower scruples kidnap a millionaire sub shop owner (Shalhoub) and plan to steal his money and property. When they fail to kill him, things spin terribly out of control. RATING: R for bloody violence, crude sexual content, nudity, language throughout and drug use TIME: 2 hours, 10 minutes VERDICT: After nearly 20 years of blockbuster budgets, giant robots, islands full of clones and wall-to-wall visual effects, Michael Bay makes a deliberate attempt to return to the low-budget, low-tech days of his irst (and best) movie, “Bad Boys.” He may have cut the budget, but the excesses of his crass views and boorish humor remain. Nearly every character is treated as an object of ridicule, the victims more so than the criminals. The true story is so twisted that Bay can’t screw it up completely, and Johnson gives a nuanced comic performance amid the bedlam. – Jeffrey Westhoff,

Northwest Herald

“Peeples” HH STARRING: Craig Robinson, Kerry Washington, David Alan Grier PLOT: Sparks ly when Wade Walker crashes the Peeples annual reunion in the Hamptons to ask for their precious daughter Grace’s hand in marriage. RATING: PG-13 for sexual content, drug material and language TIME: 1 hour, 35 minutes VERDICT: The people of “Peeples” make a better impression than most collections of oddballs in the weary mold of comedies centered on meeting the prospective in-laws. They still overstay their welcome, though. With a long, boring buildup that inally pays off with scattered laughs in the second half, “Peeples” also manages to leave a better impression than the “Tyler Perry Presents” tag on the posters might imply. This is broad comedy, but nowhere near as broad – or boorish and shrill – as producer Perry’s own

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family adventures (for disclosure’s sake, there are screechy relations here, but Perry’s Madea fortunately isn’t among them). Craig Robinson moves up from caustic supporting player on “The Ofice” to show himself as an engaging romantic lead in the chubby, lovable, gregarious Jack Black school, while Kerry Washington lightens up from heavier drama as the love of his life, a daddy’s girl whose daddy – a stern federal judge played by David Alan Grier – naturally doesn’t approve. Screenwriter and irst-time director Tina Gordon Chism (her previous scripts include “Drumline”) crafts a predictable “Meet the Parents” riff, though she ills it out with a pleasant supporting cast of kooks who, while not always interesting, at least are not off-putting. – David Germain, The

Associated Press

“Star Trek Into Darkness” HH STARRING: Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Zoë Saldana PLOT: After the crew of the Enterprise ind an unstoppable force of terror from within their own organization, Captain Kirk leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a oneman weapon of mass destruction. RATING: PG-13 for intense sequences of sci-i action and violence TIME: 2 hours, 22 minutes VERDICT: Like fan-boy iction on a $185 million budget, director J.J. Abrams’ ilm is reverential, faithful and steeped in “Trek” mythology. It’s also an excessively derivative what-if rehash of themes and interactions that came before, most of the characters lesser copies and even caricatures of the originals. The scenario’s been hijacked and rejiggered from better “Trek” plots of decades ago, the best verbal exchanges lifted nearly verbatim from past adventures. In short, the new chiefs of Starleet aren’t coming up with much to call their own. But they pile on the spectacle in a way that’s never been seen before in “Star Trek”; the action in “Into Darkness” is top-notch, the visuals grand, though the movie’s needless conversion to 3-D muddies the images. – David Germain, The

Associated Press

Classic Cinemas Carpentersville 1:00, 3:05, 5:10, 7:15, 9:20 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 11:05 a.m., 1:30, 3:45, 7:25, 9:55 p.m.

McHenry Outdoor Theatre - 8:45 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 2D: 10:20 a.m., 12:40, 1:20, 3:50, 4:30, 7:00, 7:40, 10:10, 10:50 p.m.; 3D: 11:50 a.m., 3:00, 6:15, 9:20 p.m.

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AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 10:00 a.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville 12:00, 2:15, 4:30 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 10:30 a.m.

Regal Cinemas – 1:05, 4:05, 7:05, 10:05 p.m.

“OBLIVION” Saturday, May 18

“42” Saturday, May 18 AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 11:55 a.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville 1:30, 4:15, 7:00, 9:45 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 12:15, 3:20, 6:30, 9:45 p.m.

“THE GREAT GATSBY” Saturday, May 18 AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 2D: 10:05 a.m., 1:10, 3:05, 4:15, 7:20 p.m.; 3D: 11:05 a.m., 2:10, 5:15, 8:20 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville 2D: 1:45, 4:45, 7:45 p.m.; 3D: 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 9:45 p.m. Classic Cinemas Woodstock - 2D: 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 10:00 p.m.; 3D: 1:45, 4:45, 7:45 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 2D: 12:30, 2:00, 3:40, 5:10, 7:10, 8:40, 10:20 p.m.; 3D: 11:40 a.m., 2:50, 6:05, 9:30 p.m.

“IRON MAN 3” Saturday, May 18 AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 2D: 11:30 a.m., 2:30, 5:30, 6:40, 8:30, 9:45, 10:25 p.m.; 3D: 10:50 a.m., 1:50, 4:50, 7:45, 10:45 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville 2D: 12:00, 1:00, 2:45, 3:45, 5:30, 6:30, 8:15, 9:15 p.m.; 3D: 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 10:00 p.m. Classic Cinemas Woodstock - 4:30, 6:15, 7:15, 9:00, 10:00 p.m. McHenry Downtown Theatre - 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 9:45 p.m.

McHenry Outdoor Theatre - 11:10 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 11:45 a.m., 2:45, 7:15, 10:15 p.m.

“PAIN & GAIN” Saturday, May 18 Classic Cinemas Carpentersville 1:40, 4:25, 7:10, 9:55 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 11:10 a.m., 2:05, 5:05, 8:05, 11:05 p.m.

“PEEPLES” Saturday, May 18 Classic Cinemas Carpentersville 12:30, 2:40, 4:50, 7:00, 9:10 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 3:10, 11:15 p.m.

“STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS” Saturday, May 18 AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 2D: 10:00 a.m., 12:20, 1:00, 3:15, 4:10, 6:20, 7:20, 9:20, 10:30 p.m.; 3D: 10:35 a.m., 1:45, 4:55, 8:05 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville 2D: 12:40, 3:30, 6:20, 9:10 p.m.; 3D: 1:30, 4:20, 7:10, 10:00 p.m. Classic Cinemas Woodstock - 2D: 4:00 p.m.; 3D: 1:10, 6:50, 9:40 p.m. McHenry Downtown Theatre - 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 2D: 10:40 a.m., 12:10, 1:40, 4:50, 6:40, 8:00, 9:40, 11:10 p.m.; 3D: 10:00 a.m., 11:00a, 11:30a, 1:00, 2:10, 2:40, 4:10, 5:20, 5:45, 7:20, 8:20, 9:00, 10:30 p.m.


ADVICE

Page B8 • Saturday, May 18, 2013

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Many forms of vasculitis Mom dreads rivalry between can be treated successfully daughter and her new sibling Dear Dr. K: My father recently saw his doctor, complaining of fever, fatigue, joint pain and rashes. His doctor suspects vasculitis. What is vasculitis? How is it diagnosed and treated? Dear Reader: Vasculitis is an inflammation of the blood vessels. This inflammation can be severe enough to reduce blood flow to tissues and organs. We don’t know for sure what causes it, but scientists believe it is an autoimmune disease. For some reason, the immune system mistakenly attacks the blood vessels, causing them to become inflamed. Under the microscope, you can see immune system cells next to the walls of blood vessels, and the walls have been damaged (presumably by the attack). There are many different types of vasculitis, affecting blood vessels of different sizes and in different locations. The various forms also differ by the age at which they typically begin and the symptoms they cause. Following are the types of vasculitis your father may be dealing with: • Giant cell arteritis (temporal arteritis) affects medium to large arteries, including those around the scalp, face and eyes. This type also affects the aorta as

ASK DR. K Dr. Anthony Komaroff it branches from the heart, up into the neck and head. • Takayasu arteritis affects the body’s biggest artery, the aorta, and its main branches. • Polyarteritis nodosa affects small- to medium-sized blood vessels, especially in the skin, intestines, kidneys and nerves. • Kawasaki disease is particularly likely to involve the arteries of the heart. It happens mainly in children and can cause fatal heart attacks in young children. • Hypersensitivity vasculitis affects the smallest blood vessels, especially those in the skin. It is triggered by an allergy, particularly to a drug. • Granulomatosis with polyangiitis (Wegener’s) affects small- and medium-sized blood vessels in the kidneys and in the upper and lower respiratory tract. • Vasculitis due to rheumatologic diseases. The two most common of these diseases to produce vasculitis are systemic lupus erythematosus (lupus) and rheumatoid arthritis. • Vasculitis due to infection. Certain viruses cause

vasculitis. Two examples are hepatitis B and hepatitis C virus. The most accurate way to diagnose vasculitis is with a tissue biopsy. The doctor removes a small tissue sample from an organ (such as skin, muscle, nerve or kidney) to be examined in a laboratory. Before a biopsy, however, the doctor is likely to do some less invasive tests. These may include blood tests to check for inflammation, immune system activity, and liver and kidney function. Urine analysis also may be done to evaluate possible kidney problems. The main treatment for most types of vasculitis is prednisone. This corticosteroid works by reducing inflammation. Additional treatments depend on the form of vasculitis. For example, a doctor may treat giant cell arteritis with an immune-suppressing medication. The intensity and duration of the treatment depends on the type and cause of the vasculitis. The good news is most cases of vasculitis can be treated successfully.

• Write to Dr. Komaroff at www.askdoctork.com or Ask Doctor K, 10 Shattuck St., Second Floor, Boston, MA 02115.

Dear Abby: I am the mother of a 5-year-old daughter I’ll call Mandy. Her father and I separated when she was 16 months old, and now we are divorced. I am newly engaged to a wonderful man and very happy. I have just learned my ex is having a baby boy with a woman he has stated he does not love and isn’t even in a committed relationship with. I would like to protect Mandy from any pain this might cause her because she is a Daddy’s girl. How should I deal with this and maintain my composure regarding the sibling who will now forever be a part of my daughter’s life (and mine)? – Stressed Out In

San Diego Dear Stressed Out: It is not appropriate to show your disgust with this situation to your daughter. Because your ex has gone on record that he doesn’t love the woman he impregnated, and he is not in a committed relationship with her, you may be worrying needlessly. He will have a financial obligation to his son, but whether he’s willing to be a father in the best sense of the word we don’t know. If Mandy interacts with her half brother, she will

Dear Let Your Guard Down:

DEAR ABBY Jeanne Phillips have to learn to SHARE, which is an important life lesson every child must learn sooner or later. Dear Abby: I am a 40-something divorced female. After my divorce, I met a man I enjoyed being with. He led me to believe he cared for me, and I bought into it. It was a vulnerable time for me and, unfortunately, I let my guard down. I did something stupid and co-signed for a student loan for him. He has stopped making payments, has blocked my calls, moved, etc., and now I’m stuck with the financial burden. I have learned he had a fiancée while we were involved and they are now married. Abby, he was bilking me the whole time. I need to know what legal recourse I have. I know where he lives and possibly where he works, so if he needs to be served with papers, he can be found. I regret I didn’t keep my guard up, and I don’t feel he should get away with this. What should I do now? – Let

My Guard Down In Ohio

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It appears you have been the victim of a fraud. If I were you, the first thing I’d do is share his address with the loan company. Then I’d discuss this matter with the police to find out if he has a history of bilking women and if I could file charges. If that isn’t possible, the next thing I’d do is talk with a lawyer about any legal remedies available to me. And that’s what I’m advising you to do. Dear Abby: I work in the media and meet a lot of people. I have arthritis in my hands. I have always believed in a firm handshake, but I’m finding receiving one is crippling my hand. I don’t want to appear unfriendly by not reciprocating a handshake, but I don’t want my hand to ache for hours on end after meeting someone. Any suggestions? – Hurting In

Dover, Del. Dear Hurting: It would not be unfriendly to simply say, “It’s nice to meet you, but I can’t shake hands because I have arthritis.” Many people do, and it’s the truth.

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

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SUNDAY

Fashion, home decorating, gardening, announcements and more!


COMICS

Northwest Herald/NWHerald.com

Pickles

Brian Crane Pearls Before Swine

For Better or For Worse

Non Sequitur

Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Page B9

Stephan Pastis

Lynn Johnston Crankshaft

Tom Batiuk & Chuck Hayes

Wiley The Duplex

Glenn McCoy

Beetle Bailey

Mort Walker Blondie

Dean Young & Denis LeBrun

Frank & Ernest

Bob Thaves Dilbert

Scott Adams

Monty

Jim Meddick Hi and Lois

Rose is Rose

Pat Brady & Don Wimmer Arlo & Janis

Soup to Nutz

The Family Circus

Rick Stromoski Big Nate

Bill Keane

The Argyle Sweater

Scott Hilburn

Stone Soup

Grizzwells

Brian & Greg Walker

Jimmy Johnson

Lincoln Pierce

Jan Eliot

Bill Schorr


SCAN THE QR CODE AT LEFT TO GET YOUR DAILY DOSE OF CELEBRITY NEWS AND GOSSIP ON YOUR SMARTPHONE OR TABLET. BUZZWORTHY

More celeb news at PlanitNorthwest.com/buzz

Jewelry stolen at Cannes THINGS

WORTH TALKIN’ ABOUT

Saturday, May 18, 2013 • PlanitNorthwest.com/buzz

Thieves ripped a safe from the wall of a hotel room near the Cannes Film Festival and made off with around $1 million worth of jewelry, in a brazen late-night burglary just hours after the screening of a film about breakins at the homes of Hollywood celebrities, French officials said Friday. The apparently well-planned robbery at the Novotel hotel took place in the room of an employee of Chopard, the Swiss-based watch and jewelry maker and festival sponsor that was hosting a splashy gala event in a far ritzier hotel around the same time, officials said.

‘Idol’ finale hits new low

McGraw recasts ACM special When the producers of the Academy of Country Music’s annual television special approached Tim McGraw about the 2013 edition, the country music star immediately flashed on the program’s format. “They were tribute shows and I certainly didn’t want anything to do with that,” the 46-year-old McGraw said with a laugh. “I wasn’t ready for that yet.” Instead, McGraw decided to take the show in a new direction, recasting it as a summer tour preview for fans. “ACM Presents: Tim McGraw’s Superstar Summer Night,” taped one day after the ACM Awards last month in Las Vegas, will air 8 p.m. Sunday on CBS. McGraw invited top country stars such as his wife, Faith Hill, Taylor Swift, Lady Antebellum, Keith Urban, Jason Aldean, Luke Bryan and The Band Perry to perform, but said he was most excited by appearances of pop and rock acts such as Ne-Yo, Pitbull and John Fogerty. “There were a lot of great country artists there, but I see those guys all the time,” he joked. McGraw serves as host, sings some of his own songs and joins his fellow artists for others. Most of the invited stars perform one of their own songs during the show. He and Ne-Yo team up on “She Is.” McGraw joins Pitbull on “Felt Good on My Lips,” and he teams up with Swift and Urban on “Highway Don’t Care.” The moment that really sticks with him, though, was joining Fogerty, Aldean, Urban and Bryan for Creedence Clearwater Revival’s “Born on the Bayou.” “We were completely floored when he opened his mouth and started singing,” McGraw said of Fogerty.

Ratings for the “American Idol” finale plunged to a record low for the 12-year-old show. According to Nielsen Co. figures Friday, Candice Glover’s victory over Kree Harrison was watched by 14.3 million viewers. That’s a 33 percent drop from the year before, when 21.5 million viewers saw Phillip Phillips claim the “Idol” crown. That represented the show’s previous record low

finale audience. “American Idol” saw an even steeper 44 percent drop among advertiser-coveted young adults for Thursday’s finale. The lack of interest in the winner of this year’s contest parallels the show’s declining ratings for the season. Fox is scrambling to revive the singing contest that once dominated TV, revamping the judges’ panel and making yet-to-be detailed format changes.

‘Mad Men’ to Mr. Darcy To find their Mr. Darcy, the Guthrie Theater in Minnesota has turned to a Mad Man. Vincent Kartheiser, who plays the malcontent Pete Campbell on AMC’s “Mad Men,” will star this summer in a new Guthrie production of “Pride and Prejudice” as the brooding hero of Jane Austen’s most famous novel. “It’s interesting playing a character that people have such strong feelings about before I’ve even begun playing him,” he said. “I don’t have a lot of experience

playing famous characters and it’s an interesting expectation that lays on my head.”

Nettles goes solo Sugarland’s Jennifer Nettles is releasing a solo album. Nettles said Friday in a news release she is working with Rick Rubin and will release the album in the fall. Nettles says in the release she is “absolutely thrilled and wholly proud” to work with Rubin, an acclaimed producer who helped country act The Dixie Chicks win a best album Grammy.

George Michael injured George Michael was being treated at a hospital Friday for what his publicist called minor injuries after being a passenger in a car crash near London. A statement released Friday said the singer was in an accident Thursday night and suffered “superficial cuts and bruises.” The statement from publicist Connie Filippello said no other vehicle was involved in the crash.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Actor Bill Macy (“Maude”) is 91. Actor Robert Morse is 82. Actor Dwayne Hickman (“The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis”) is 79. Bluegrass singer-guitarist Rodney Dillard of The Dillards is 71. Country singer Joe Bonsall of the Oak Ridge Boys is 65. Keyboardist Rick Wakeman of Yes is 64. Country singer George Strait is 61. Singer Butch Tavares of Tavares is 60. Actor Chow Yun-Fat (“Anna and the King,” “The Replacement Killers”) is 58. Singer-guitarist Page Hamilton of Helmet is 53. Guitarist Barry Graul of MercyMe is 52. Singer-actress Martika is 44. Comedian Tina Fey is 43. Rapper Special Ed is 39. Musician Jack Johnson is 38. Singer Darryl Allen of Mista is 33. Actor Allen Leech (“Downton Abbey”) is 32.

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Saturday, May 18, 2013 Northwest Herald

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Sports

SECTION C

Breaking news @ www.NWHerald.com

Sports editor: Jon Styf • jstyf@shawmedia.com

IHSA CLASS 3A GIRLS TRACK AND FIELD STATE MEET

Van Vlierbergen carries relay to final Jacobs soph also qualifies in 1,600 By JOE STEVENSON joestevenson@shawmedia.com CHARLESTON – Jacobs sophomore Lauren Van Vlierbergen took the baton in the Class 3A 4x800meter relay about 25 meters behind Palatine’s Taylor Tenca and was thinking strategically. “I was just hoping to get second,” Van Vlierbergen said, figuring a strong second out of three preliminary heats would qualify her, Molly Barnes, Tori Tamburrino and Sam

More state track Read about the local Class 2A competitors at state. PAGE C5 Baran for the finals. As Van Vlierbergen pressed harder, she got closer to Tenca. “I started gaining confidence,” she said. Eventually, Van Vlierbergen passed Tenca just before the finish line, which gave the Golden Eagles the fastest qualifying time (9:16.19) from Friday’s preliminaries at the IHSA Girls Track and Field State Meet at Eastern Illinois University’s O’Brien Stadium. Van Vlierbergen also won her

heat in the 1,600 meters in a careerbest 4:55.40 and also will run in that race in Saturday’s finals. Cary-Grove will send four field athletes into the finals with Nikki Freeman and Olivia Roehri in the discus, Faith Furio in the long jump and Joslyn Nicholson in the triple jump. Huntley has Omo Tseumah (high jump) and Anthonia Moore (400) in the finals. Crystal Lake Central pole vaulter Claire Dalman qualified in her third trip to the state meet. Barnes and Tamburrino got the baton to Baran for the third leg in Jacobs’ 4x800 in good shape, but Palatine had a sizable lead. Baran was in fifth, but worked her way to

second when she handed to Van Vlierbergen. “We wanted to just do what we’ve always been doing,” Baran said, “except now it’s more competitive and it’s really hard. I just wanted to set it up for Lauren. She can put 100 percent and give everything in this race now.” Van Vlierbergen also qualified for state in the 800, but Jacobs coach Ryan Lemanski and assistant Kevin Christian scratched her from the 800 to concentrate on the 4x800 and the 1,600. In the 1,600, Van VliClark Brooks - For the Northwest Herald erbergen and Prospect’s Christin Santiago battled through the last Jacobs’ Lauren Van Vlierbergen competes Friday in the Class 2A 1,600-meter prelims lap trading the lead.

of the IHSA state meet in Charleston. She won the heat with a time of 4:55.40.

See CLASS 3A, page C5

GIRLS SOCCER: CLASS 1A G-K SECTIONAL

CLASS 3A HUNTLEY SECTIONAL

Historic win for J’burg

Huntley speeds to state

By JEFF ARNOLD jarnold@shawmedia.com GENOA – If the Johnsburg girls soccer team was to advance to a supersectional for the first time in school history, the Skyhawks figured they’d have to adhere to a specific game plan. That strategy, though, didn’t hinge on back-up goalkeeper Kelsey Stefka. At least initially. But one momentum-shifting Stefka save on a penalty kick may have been what sparked the Skyhawks in a 6-1 victory over Stillman Valley in Friday’s Class 1A Genoa-Kingston Sectional championship game. With the win, Johnsburg (136) advances to Tuesday’s 6 p.m. Hinkley-Big Rock supersectional where the Skyhawks will face either Queen of Peace or Immaculate Conception. Those two schools square off in Saturday’s Lisle Sectional title match.

See SOCCER, page C4 Kyle Grillot - kgrillot@shawmedia.com

Huntley freshman Keagan Smith (right) is greeted by senior Trevor Obecny after completing the 4x400-meter relay Friday during the Class 3A Huntley Sectional. The Red Raiders won the event to qualify for the state meet.

Red Raiders send 3 relays to next week’s state meet By PATRICK MASON pmason@shawmedia.com HUNTLEY – When Huntley 4x200meter relay anchor Mike Dollar grabbed the baton from Connor Boos on Friday, he was a few meters behind Jefferson’s DeRontae Craig, but that didn’t seem to bother the senior, as he found another gear. By the end of the turn and heading into the final straight Dollar had caught Craig, and Dollar knew he had enough energy left to pull away. He did, and the Red Raiders won the event in a school-record 1:29.66 to qualify for the state meet next weekend in Charleston. “We told ourselves that we need to dominate everyone and we did exactly that,” Dollar said. “I knew that [Craig] wasn’t going to be able to go as far and I’m really good at being able to turn it on.” Dollar said the relay had experienced issues with the transfer of the baton in past races. but Friday at the Class 3A Huntley Sectional the transfers were perfect and played a huge role in being able to advance to the state meet and breaking a school record set in 2009 in 1:30.33. “It’s great,” Huntley coach Jim

Kyle Grillot - kgrillot@shawmedia.com

Huntley senior Mike Dollar smiles after completing the 4x100-meter relay Friday, one of three relays the Red Raiders qualified for state. Rolando said. “The guys ran a great race and it’s pretty special to see them run faster than the [2009 team].” The Red Raiders also qualified in two more relays – the 4x800 and the 4x100. Craig Lambert qualified individually for the Red Raiders in the pole vault, and teammate Justin

Herbert qualified in the discus. Huntley placed second overall with 56 points behind sectional champions Grant (83). Crystal Lake Central (49) placed fifth, Cary-Grove (42) took seventh, Jacobs (38) took eighth, McHenry (37) placed 10th and Prairie Ridge and Crystal Lake

South each earned six points for 13th place. The Trojans’ Michael Gleeson won the 400 in a season-best 50.35. The senior ran the same race and state last season in 49.3. Though we wasn’t too pleased with his time he was excited that it was still good enough to earn him his third trip to the state meet. Gleeson is still working his way back to top form after missing nearly the entire season because of nagging hamstring and ankle injuries. He ran in only three meets before Friday’s sectional and hopes to be able to shave off some in the next week. “I actually felt pretty good but I’m still not where I was hoping to be at this point,” said Gleeson, who is still working to get his legs under him. “Next week is when it counts so hopefully I can get a little closer.” Aside from Gleeson, the Trojans Michael Saxon qualified for state in the 300 hurdles (39.75) after placing second and under the state qualifying time of 39.84. The Trojans also qualified their 4x400 relay, and Ricky Hurley made state in the shot put and the discus.

See TRACK, page C4

Scoreboard Friday’s championship Johnsburg 6, Stillman Valley 1

Johnsburg advances to Tuesday’s Hinckley-Big Rock Supersectional.

HUNTLEY BASEBALL

Jakubowski suspension extended NORTHWEST HERALD HUNTLEY – The District 158 school board Thursday suspended Huntley baseball coach Andy Jakubowski for the remainder of the season and playoffs after he was arrested May 11 for driving under the influence and speeding. Jakubowski had already told Huntley principal Dave Johnson this week he was suspending himself for the rest of the regular season. The district board’s suspension means Jakubowski loses his pay for the rest of the season and will not be allowed to attend games, practices or awards night. The No. 1-seeded Huntley baseball team will be without its head coach when it travels to DeKalb next week for the regional playoffs.

THE DAILY FEED Tweet from last night

What to watch

Really?

3-pointers

“All credit of this weekend’s tweets go to Katlyn Luebke. Except spelling errors those are coach Nordeen’s fault.”

Horse racing: Preakness Stakes, 3:30 p.m., NBC Orb goes for the second jewel in the Triple Crown. Post time is 5:20 p.m.

Former Ohio State star running back Maurice Clarett will try his hand at something other than football. Clarett will play for the Columbus affiliate of Tiger Rugby, the developmental program for selecting the team that will represent the U.S. at the 2016 Summer Olympics.

Michael Phelps might be coming back to the swimming world after all. Here are three Olympic athletes we’d love to see return to the Summer Olympics. 1. Kerri Walsh 2. Misty-May Treanor 3. Kobe Bryant

– @RedRaiders_GTF (Huntley girls track and field) Follow our writers on Twitter: Tom Musick – @tcmusick Jeff Arnold – @NWH_JeffArnold Joe Stevenson – @NWH_JoePrepZone

AP file photo


SPORTS

Page C2 • Saturday, May 18, 2013

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

8SPORTS SHORTS

ON CAMPUS Barry Bottino

Bears sign rookie Long to 4-year contract CHICAGO – Some sort of drama is certain to arise during the Bears’ training camp this summer, but it will have nothing to do with rookie holdouts. The Bears signed first-round pick Kyle Long on Friday, which marked the sixth and final player from the 2013 draft class to sign with the team. Long, whom the Bears selected with the No. 20 overall pick, agreed to a four-year deal plus a team option. Long is expected to compete for playing time at guard after spending one season playing offensive line at Oregon. He joins Jon Bostic, Khaseem Greene, Jordan Mills, Cornelius Washington and Marquess Wilson as draft picks to sign with the team. – Tom Musick

CLC grad Siegmeier soars to title Zach Siegmeier wasn’t about to let a little wind ruin his day Sunday in Columbus, Ohio. As a pole vaulter at the University of Minnesota, Siegmeier has done his fair share of vaulting in less than ideal conditions. “Up here in Minnesota, we’re used to that,” said Siegmeier, a Crystal Lake Central graduate. “We’ve been in full winter mode until about a week ago.” Sunday’s winds at the Big Ten Conference outdoor track and field championships were unpredictable. “The winds were all over the place,” Siegmeier said. “It went from a crosswind to a Zach headwind to a tailwind. I knew Siegmeier the winds were going to be a concern [all day].” So Siegmeier adjusted by shortening his approach to each vault. “I knew I could be more consistent with a shorter run,” he said, “but I probably wouldn’t jump as high.” Siegmeier was right on one account. He cleared 17 feet, 1 inch Sunday to win the Big Ten outdoor title less than three months after he finished 24th at the conference’s indoor meet. “It’s a huge accomplishment,” Siegmeier said. “It’s something I’ve been working toward my whole career. It’s almost a relief, that all of the hard work that I’ve put in has paid off.” Siegmeier, who earned All-Big Ten firstteam honors for his performance, missed his first two attempts at 16-11 to set up a pressure-packed third and final attempt. “I think everybody else watching was a lot more nervous than I was,” Siegmeier said with a laugh. He cleared the bar on his final attempt, then was the only vaulter to clear 17-1. “I had a feeling that was going to be the winning bar,” said Siegmeier, whose personal best is 17-5 as a collegian. Siegmeier will be one of 23 Minnesota athletes to compete beginning Thursday at the NCAA West Regional in Austin, Texas. The top 12 finishers in each event will advance to the national meet June 5 to 8 in Eugene, Ore. “It’s been a big confidence booster,” Siegmeier said of the conference title. “It lets me know that all the time and sacrifice I’ve put in is paying off.” He said advancing to nationals likely will take a new personal best. “I think it’s going to take 17-7,” he said. Headed to nationals: Crystal Lake Central grad Mitch Osborne, a senior at Wisconsin-Whitewater, has earned a bid to play in the NCAA Division III men’s tennis nationals beginning Thursday in Kalamazoo, Mich. Osborne is one half of the Warhawks’ No. 1 doubles team, which has a 15-8 record, including an eight-match winning streak with partner Ben Shkylar. They have a 9-1 record in their past 10 matches and are one of 16 doubles entrants in the tournament. Osborne, who is playing at nationals in doubles for the second year in a row, also will be part of the Whitewater squad in the team competition beginning Monday in Kalamazoo. The Warhawks are making their seventh consecutive trip to nationals as a team. Crystal Lake South grad Cam Laktash, a Whitewater sophomore, is 10-1 this season at No. 3 doubles and 6-4 playing at various singles spots in the lineup. Powered by Pyan: Carthage College softball player Vicki Pyan (Crystal Lake South) was named second-team All-Great Lakes Region by the National Fastpitch Coaches Association and second-team All-College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin this spring. Pyan, a junior who plays third base, batted .359 for No. 22 Carthage this season while leading the team in doubles (15), on-base percentage (.469) and triples (two). She also ranked second on the team in runs (31), slugging percentage (.624) and stolen bases (seven). Carthage advanced to the semifinal round of the NCAA D-III North Central Regional before its season ended with a 33-12 record. • Barry Bottino writes a weekly column and a blog about local college athletes for the Northwest Herald. Write to him at BarryOnCampus@hotmail.com, check out his On Campus blog at McHenryCountySports.com and follow him on Twitter @BarryOnCampus.

AP photo

Exercise rider Jennifer Patterson gallops Preakness Stakes favorite and Kentucky Derby winner Orb on Friday at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore in preparation for Saturday’s race.

PREAKNESS STAKES, 3:30 P.M. SATURDAY, NBC – POST TIME: 5:20 P.M.

Support for Orb grows Derby winner favorite to set up Triple Crown try By RICHARD ROSENBLATT The Associated Press BALTIMORE – Everything’s a go for Orb. The Kentucky Derby winner was in a playful mood the day before the Preakness, making faces for photographers between nibbles of grass outside his stall at Pimlico Race Course. “He’s really settled in well. He seems to be energetic about what he’s doing, so I couldn’t be more pleased,” trainer Shug McGaughey said on a warm and sunny Friday morning. “We’re excited about giving him a whirl to see if we can get it done and go on to the next step.” Getting it done would mean defeating eight rivals in the 1 3/16-mile Preakness to set up a Triple Crown try in the Belmont Stakes three weeks from Saturday. Orb is the even-money favorite, and there’s a growing feeling that this 3-year-old bay colt may be special enough to give thoroughbred racing its first Triple Crown champion since Affirmed in 1978. “We’d sure love to have that opportunity,” said McGaughey, seeming relaxed and confident. “Proba-

Preakness field The field for Saturday’s 138th Preakness Stakes, with post position, horse’s name, jockey’s name and odds: 1. Orb 2. Goldencents 3. Titletown Five 4. Departing 5. Mylute 6. Oxbow 7. Will Take Charge 8. Governor Charlie 9. Itsmyluckyday

Rosario Even Krigger 8-1 Leparoux 30-1 Hernandez Jr. 6-1 Napravnik 5-1 Stevens 15-1 Smith 12-1 Garcia 12-1 Velazquez 10-1

bly the racing world would love to see it, too. It brings a lot more attention to what we’re doing from all standpoints.” Orb extended his winning streak to five with a thrilling victory in the Derby two weeks ago, when jockey Joel Rosario patiently guided the colt from 17th to first in the final half mile over a sloppy track. In the Preakness, Orb will break from the No. 1 post, a spot that has seen only one winner – Tabasco Cat in 1994 – since 1961. “Who knows how this race is go-

ing to go, but I don’t think it will be a problem,” Rosario said of the inside post. “He’s a horse that comes from behind, so I really don’t think it will affect him. I’m just excited to go into this with a horse who has a chance to win.” A chance? While rival trainers aren’t conceding the race, most agree Orb is the best of the bunch. “Orb, he’s a freak. Right now, everybody should be rooting for Orb, except for the connections of the other horses in the race,” trainer Bob Baffert said – and he’s got a horse in the race, 12-1 choice Govenor Charlie. “Anybody who’s not rooting for Orb, there’s something mentally wrong with them.” Baffert has been there before. Three of his five Preakness winners also won the Derby, but were unable to complete the Triple Crown with a win in the Belmont. He says the Preakness is the least stressful of the three races. “There is absolutely no pressure, believe it or not, because you’ve just won the Derby,” he said. “You’re flying high and everybody’s excited. You don’t think about it. The next one [the Belmont] is the pressure.”

Blackhawks’ playoff run continues Northwest Herald sports copy editor Kevin Murphy picks his top sporting events to watch this weekend:

MUST-SEE TV Pro hockey: NHL playoffs, Western Conference semifinals, Game 2, Detroit at Blackhawks, noon Saturday, NBC Yes, the Bulls’ playoff run ended, but it’s time for some early playoff hockey, so you can get on with the rest of your day. As @tmusick noted in Friday’s paper, killing the power play has been critical. The Hawks are 20 for 20 on the penalty kill during the postseason heading into Saturday’s Game 2 of the Western Conference semifinals. That includes a 3 for 3 mark so far against Detroit.

Horse racing: NTRA, Preakness Stakes, at Baltimore, 3:30 p.m. Saturday, NBC Can Orb keep the possibility of Triple Crown winner alive? The Derby winner has a tough field against him, especially coming out of the No. 1 post.

SET THE DVR Pro basketball: NBA playoffs, Western Conference finals, Game 1,

MURPH’S ’MOTE Kevin Murphy Memphis at San Antonio, 2:30 p.m. Sunday, ABC Memphis has eliminated the Los Angeles Clippers and the Oklahoma State Thunder. Can the Grizzlies continue the trend and find a way to win on the road against the other Big Three (Tim Duncan, Tony Parker, Manu Ginobli)?

CATCH THE HIGHLIGHTS LATER Women’s lacrosse: NCAA Division I quarterfinals, Penn State at Northwestern, 7 p.m. Sunday, BTN If you’re never seen college lacrosse, here’s your chance to catch a Chicago-area program that knows how to get it done. How successful is Northwestern? Seven NCAA Division I national championships in the past eight years. Northwestern men’s basketball could use that same success.

OF NOTE College baseball: Indiana at Ohio State, 3 p.m. Saturday, BTN Cary-Grove graduate Matt

Panek looks to get Ohio State a high seed in the Big Ten Tournament next week. The Buckeyes entered the series in a three-way tie with Nebraska and Minnesota for second place in the Big Ten, while the Wolverines are tied with Illinois for fifth.

College track and field: Big Ten championships (tape delay), 10 a.m. Sunday, BTN Crystal Lake Central graduate and Minnesota junior Zach Siegmeier picked up his first Big Ten title and First Team All-Big Ten honor Sunday with a win in the pole vault, clearing 17 feet, 1 inch at Jesse Owens Stadium in Columbus, Ohio. The junior’s win Sunday marks the Gophers’ first conference title in the pole vault since Ben Peterson in 2010. Cary-Grove graduate and Illinois senior Madeline Aufmann didn’t score points in the 3,000-meter steeplechase, but the Illinois women’s team took second at the Big Ten meet. • Agree? Disagree? Is someone from the Northwest Herald coverage area going to be on TV? Let Kevin Murphy know at kmurphy@shawmedia.com.

U.S. Open champion, CBS analyst Venturi dies Ken Venturi, who overcame dehydration to win the 1964 U.S. Open and spent 35 years in the booth for CBS Sports, died Friday afternoon. He was 82. His son, Matt Venturi, said he died in a hospital in Rancho Mirage, Calif. Venturi had been hospitalized the past two months for a spinal infection, pneumonia, and then an intestinal infection that he could no longer fight. Venturi died 12 days after he was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame.

Crosby’s hat trick lifts Penguins over Senators PITTSBURGH – Sidney Crosby had his second career playoff hat trick, and the Pittsburgh Penguins beat the Ottawa Senators, 4-3, on Friday night to take a 2-0 lead in the Eastern Conference semifinals. Game 3 is Sunday in Ottawa.

Bradley follows 60 with 69, leads tourney by 3 IRVING, Texas – A day after firing a 10-under-par 60, Keegan Bradley shot a 69 that got him to 11-under 129, the lowest 36-hole total at the Byron Nelson Championship since 2001. Tom Gillis, who shot 63 in the first group of the day off the No. 10 tee, and Sang-Moon Bae (66) were tied for second, three strokes back.

Mayor: Deal to sell Kings has been signed SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson announced to screaming throngs of Kings fans Friday that the deal to sell the NBA franchise to a group led by software tycoon Vivek Ranadive has been signed. The announcement at a City Hall rally brings to an end nearly five months of maneuvering by Johnson to secure a new ownership group, convince the council to commit to building a new downtown arena, and to show the NBA that the capitol city of the most populous state in the nation has the fan base to make the venture successful.

Fiftyshadesofhay wins Black-Eyed Susan BALTIMORE – Fiftyshadesofhay made a late move to overtake Marathon Lady and win the $500,000 Black-Eyed Susan on Friday at Pimlico Race Course. – Staff, wire reports

MCC BASEBALL NOTES

Huntley graduate Kostalek joins pipeline to Chicago State By JOE STEVENSON joestevenson@shawmedia.com Like three of his McHenry County College teammates before him, Nick Kostalek was willing to overlook Chicago State’s record and focus on what the Cougars offered. Kostalek will join shortstop Chase Matheson, first baseman Matt Schmidt and

left-handed pitcher Joe Ross with the NCAA Division I Cougars next season. Chicago State was 7-41 in head coach Steve Joslyn’s first season. “I’m excited. I like the direction the program’s headed in,” said Kostalek, a sophomore from Huntley who was 9-1 for the Scots. “Coach Joslyn and his staff are doing a great job recruiting and getting players

ready. I have to give credit to administration too, it seems like it’s helping coaches to move the program.” Kostalek, a right-handed pitcher, had a 4.65 ERA in 692/3 innings for the Scots this season. MCC ended the season at 40-12 last weekend. “Nick is one of the hardest workers I’ve ever coached,” MCC coach Jared Wacker said.

Kostalek undoubtedly heard about Chicago State from Matheson, Schmidt and Ross. Joslyn was an assistant at Northern Illinois when Matheson was recruited out of McHenry. He later decided to attend MCC because NIU had no aviation major. “I considered going to Illinois State and looking to walk on,” Kostalek said. As the sea-

son progressed, the success we had contributed to me having personal success and opened a few more doors. I realized I could look at a school really looking to recruit me and bring me in and help their program.” Coel to Cornerstone: Lefty pitcher Zack Coel will attend NAIA Cornerstone University in Michigan next year and pitch. Coel, a Prairie Ridge

graduate, will reunite with former Wolves pitching coach Chuck Lowitzki. Lowitzki joined former Prairie Ridge assistant Dave Mitroff, who is head coach of Cornerstone’s new program. Enwiya to St. Norbert: Adam Enwiya, an infielder from Prairie Ridge, will play next year at D-III St. Norbert in De Pere, Wis.


Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Page C3

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

May 18 & 19

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Yesterday morning, I was getting ready for work and tried a new clothing combination. (I rolled up my skinny jeans and wore fun white sandals. Revolutionary, no. Different for me, yes.) As I was trying to decide if the look worked, I asked the Golfer in My Life. “What do you think?” “Let me see. I like it. It looks good.” With his approval, I put the other sandal on and finished packing my lunch. As I was driving to work, I suddenly thought “why did I take his word for it?” To say the least, he dresses like a golfer: nice pants and a polo shirt. Everyday. We finally found some lighter weight jeans that he wears on Casual Fridays; that was revolutionary for him. Then I realized that after fifteen years together, the Golfer and I have really gotten the hang of this relationship thing. More specifically the communication aspect of it.

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As with many long-term couples, we have fallen into certain conversation habits. Take yesterday morning. I think that he assessed the situation and realized his response would lead to two different reactions. “Looks good” would mean an easy morning for both of us. This features historical artifacts and the local “Hmmmm” would have sent me straight back families that donated them. Volunteers in historical attire will be on hand to answer your upstairs, rooting around for a different shoe questions. Don’t miss this rare opportunity to tour choice. I can tell when he really likes someinside the house, which is opened to the public thing because he will add “you look sexy.” only a few times a year. From noon to 4 p.m. Let’s not get carried away here. In return, I always ask how he played when he gets back mccdistrict.org from the golf club. I have never played a round in my life and honestly don’t know the difference between a driver and an iron. With that Please note; we try to be as accurate as possible with our events but things are subject one question, he can give me a full recap of all to change without notice. Check the listing and confirm before heading to an event. MAY 19 LIVING HISTORY OPEN HOUSE POWERS-WALKER HOURS, GLACIAL PARK, RINGWOOD

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eighteen holes and I all need to do is pepper in a few “oh really” and “wow” comments. He knows I care about his game and I can keep on being completely oblivious about the sport. Sometimes, though, we break these habits and the truth comes out. The Golfer plays guitar as another hobby. Since he plays acoustic, it is easy for him to just pick up and start strumming anywhere in the house. Most of the time, I enjoy listening to him play, even when he is learning something new. Any of you that live with musicians know it is not easy to hear the same three lines of music over and over and over when they are figuring out the notes and rhythm on a new song. But every now and then, I just get overcome with a deep disdain for a song and I flat out tell him. “ You know, I don’t like that one at all.” He seems surprised at my outbursts, probably for two reasons. One is that he likes the song and can’t understand me not feeling the same. Secondly, I have fallen into the habit of being supportive with “that sounds good” words of encouragement. The Golfer’s moments of truth with me occur when I am wearing sequins for work. I know it sounds a little sparkly but trust me, I don’t look like I am on “Dancing With The Stars: Office Edition.” Instead of a “looks good” or even a “hmmm,” he has said “I don’t like that one” accompanied by a shake of the head. But as he will keep playing that song I don’t like, I will keeping wearing that shirt with the matte silver paillettes to work anyways! Enjoy the good weekend. Autumn

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PREPS

Page C4 • Saturday, May 18, 2013

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

GIRLS SOCCER: CLASS 3A CRYSTAL LAKE SOUTH REGIONAL

Felderman’s stop sends C-G to sectional By BILL PEMSTEIN sportsdesk@nwherald.com CRYSTAL LAKE – Clearly the most interesting one-on-one battle was between Crystal Lake South’s midfielder Amy Sulikowski and Cary-Grove defender Brittany Loehner. Both seniors worked hard Friday in the Class 3A Crystal Lake South Regional final. “I’m the last person on defense,’’ Loehner said. “And [Sulikowski] played really hard. She’s one of the best players I’ve ever played against.” Those two played to a standstill, setting the tone for a matchup of rivals. A scoreless tie led to overtime, where each team scored once, and

finally penalty kicks, where Krystal Felderman made a save on South’s fourth kick. Second-seeded C-G won the shootout, 5-3, for a 2-1 victory. The Trojans will face Boylan on Tuesday in the Jacobs Sectional semifinals. “We knew we were the underdogs,’’ Loehner said. “And that was perfect for us. We knew South would come out confident. But we figured we had nothing to lose.” For the longest time it looked like neither team would be able to score. Some shots went toward the keepers, but none required difficult saves. “It was a battle,’’ C-G coach Ray Krystal said. “There was no quit on either side. The fans got their money’s worth.”

Scoreboard Friday’s championship (2) Cary-Grove 2, (1) CL South 1 (5-3 PKs)

C-G will play Boylan at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Jacobs Sectional semifinals.

Video online Watch highlights of Friday’s match between Crystal Lake South and Cary-Grove at McHenryCountySports.com. The scoreless tie went to overtime. Another 10 minutes went by with no threats. Finally, C-G’s Genna Sobieszczyk got loose. She put up a

high shot, and keeper Jaclyn Przbylski made a strong play on it, but the ball somehow trickled in for the first goal. The home team wasn’t ready to surrender. There was still six minutes to play in overtime. The time continued to trickle away from the Gators, but with 66 seconds left in the Gators’ season, sophomore Bree Marshall scored the tying goal. “We could have given up after they scored that goal,’’ South coach Anne Santucci said. “But we came back.” The match went to penalty kicks. And both keepers, Felderman for the Trojans and Przybylski were tested. C-G (10-5-1) won the title on South’s fourth shot. That’s when Felderman

made her stop. “She was strong the entire season,’’ Loehner said. Krystal agreed with that assessment. “She was close on everything,’’ Krystal said. “She’s part of an amazing senior class.” And with Felderman’s impressive stop, and a follow-up goal from senior Cory Levels, the Trojans were marching toward the sectional. South finished the season at 12-8-2. “We have a long history of a rivalry with Cary,’’ Santucci said. “We really didn’t want it to go to penalty kicks. But I really liked this team’s sense of unity. They wanted to play for each other, and that’s what they did.”

Johnsburg scores after Stefka save

GIRLS SOCCER: CLASS 2A MARENGO REGIONAL

Fast start carries Wolves to crown By CHRIS BURROWS

• SOCCER Continued from page C1

Scoreboard

cburrows@shawmedia.com MARENGO – Prairie Ridge just kept taking from Woodstock on Friday. The Wolves took their opponents’ game plan, their momentum and their playoff hopes en route to a second straight Class 2A regional championship. Top-seeded Prairie Ridge defeated the No. 3 Blue Streaks, 4-1, and advance to face Rosary in the Freeport sectional semifinals Wednesday. Veteran returning players Bri Fenton, Kelsey Bear and Jordan Reitz each scored in the game’s opening 12 minutes for the Wolves. That run set a tone that pleased their coach and stole their opponents’ thunder. “We haven’t been a first-half team for most of the season, so to score goals like that like we did right away in the first half – I was pleased,” Prairie Ridge coach J.C. Brown said. “ Now we need to do that for the rest of this run in the playoffs.” Woodstock coach Mike Golda’s plan A went out the window early. “We knew PR had a great defense and good goalkeepers, but we felt if we could get one or two early, maybe knock them in the mouth, they’d sit back a little bit,” Golda said. “It didn’t exactly happen that way.” Marissah Krueger made seven saves, and Rachael Tobias made six for Woodstock (6-14). Reitz, a senior, scored again later in the game, sophomore Larissa Dooley had two assists, and senior goalkeeper Whitney Whitehouse made five saves for the Wolves (14-2-1). “I think we’re more confident as a team,” Reitz said of this year’s playoff run, com-

Friday’s championship (1) Prairie Ridge 4, (3) Woodstock 1

Prairie Ridge will face Rosary at 5 p.m. Wednesday in the Freeport Sectional semifinals. pared to last season’s, which ended in sectionals. “Most of us have been together two years in a row, so we really want to go as far as we can this year.” Fenton scored on a long hooking shot in the match’s fifth minute. Then Bear, on a charge that beat a defender in the box, and Reitz, on a long penalty kick, scored to gain a three-goal lead that carried to halftime. But the Blue Streaks weren’t going to let their season end so easily. “We told the girls to stick with it. ‘You guys can make this happen. You can come back,’” Golda said of his halftime speech. “I switched our offense to a 3-4-3. In the first half we played kind of a 3-5-2, so I bumped two people up.” It almost worked. Woodstock sophomore Rebecca Mayber punched a pass up the field to Anna LoPatin, who turned in the box for a goal three minutes into the second half, but the Wolves were onto their opponents’ newfound momentum. “My defenders all looked at me like, ‘You see what they’re doing?’” Brown said. “I told them just to stay marked on those two girls, shut them down, and they did that.” Brown didn’t want any of the credit. “It’s always a great experience to win a regional championship, but it’s all them. It’s not me,” he said.

Kyle Grillot - kgrillot@shawmedia.com

Crystal Lake Central senior Isaiah Mosher (center) runs to victory in the finals of the 100-meter dash Friday at the Class 3A Huntley Sectional.

CLC’S Mosher qualifies for state meet in 100, long jump • TRACK Continued from page C1 Crystal Lake Central also impressed at the meet, as Isaiah Mosher qualified for two individual events. The senior won the 100 in 10.97 and was the only runner to run a sub-11 seconds in the race. He also won the long jump by jumping 22 feet, 7½ inches. Teammate Alex Baker won the 1,600 in 4:16.58 and was part of the state-qualifying 4x800 relay. “Alex and Isaiah are very special athletes,” Tigers coach Brian Seaver said. “There was some pressure to do what they needed to do and they were able to do it. We’re very excited and we have a chance to do well next week, and those two have been looking forward to this all year long and are looking forward to competing against the best.” McHenry qualified its 4x800 relay as well as a few

GIRLS SOCCER: CLASS 3A GUILFORD REGIONAL

Kyle Grillot – kgrillot@shawmedia.com

McHenry senior Will Ford competes in the pole vault Friday during the Class 3A Huntley Sectional. Ford won the pole vault and qualified for the state meet. individuals. Jesse Reiser came in second in the 3,200, and Will Ford won the pole vault at 13-9. Jacobs qualified its 4x400 and the 4x800 relays. Crystal Lake South made state in the 4x800 relay as well. Prairie Ridge senior Joe Cowlin placed third in the 3,200 with

a time of 9:19.6, besting his seed-time by more than 15 seconds. “I felt great,” Cowlin said. “I had a rough middle of the season because I’ve been sick, but I just knew that I didn’t want this to be by last race, so I went out and made sure it wasn’t.”

“It’s one game away from state, but there’s a team between us and state, and that’s the mentality I have to get into these girls,” Johnsburg coach Rob Eastland said. “We realize what we have to bring, and that’s what we have to take into the next game.” As the Skyhawks celebrated with their sectional championship plaque, Eastland told them to bottle the on-field product they put out against Stillman Valley. The Skyhawks, who got two goals apiece from Olivia Jansen and Delaney Pruitt, pelted Stillman goalkeeper Shannell Boettcher with shots from start to finish, applying pressure for 80 minutes. But the biggest shift might have come with Johnsburg leading 2-0 after goals by Jansen and Pruitt in the match’s first nine minutes. After Skyhawks goalkeeper Kadie Calmeyer was whistled for a yellow card, Stefka was forced to come in and immediately face a penalty kick. “I don’t think anybody really ever expects that kind of situation,” Stefka said. “But I knew as soon as I got called in I had a job to do, and I did what I could, and luckily, I saved it.” The senior perfectly played Haley Wenberg’s attempt, knocking it away with two hands to preserve the two-goal lead. Minutes later, Kortnee Hass redirected a Jansen free kick past Boettcher, pushing the Skyhawks’ lead to 3-0. “That was a huge moment for us,” Jansen said. “I think [Stefka] was the one that kept us in the game because that could have been a real turning point for us.”

BOYS TRACK: CLASS 2A VERNON HILLS SECTIONAL

Huntley rolls to regional title Johnsburg’s Magradze sets records By ANDREW HANSEN

Scoreboard

anhansen@shawmedia.com ROCKFORD – The Huntley girls soccer team had the revenge factor in its favor. After losing, 2-1, to McHenry on May 2 for their only Fox Valley Conference Valley Division loss of the season, the Red Raiders had something to prove in the Class 3A Guilford Regional final against the Warriors. Top-seeed Huntley responded with a 7-0 win over second-seed McHenry for its seventh straight regional title. “After what happened in the first game, we just wanted to show that we were coming out to play today,” Huntley midfielder Taryn Jakubowski said. Jakubowski and forward Deanna Hecht each scored three goals for the Red Raiders (17-4-1), as Huntley put on the offensive pressure early and didn’t let up on the Warriors (7-10-1). The Red Raiders had a few chances to score early in the match before finally finding converting at the 24-minute mark.

Friday’s championship (1) Huntley 7, (2) McHenry 0

Huntley will face Barrington at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Jacobs Sectional semifinals. Katie Costantino’s corner kick deflected off a McHenry defender for the first goal. Six minutes later, Jakubowski got her first goal of the match. The freshman midfielder got the ball in the middle off the penalty box after a Jessica Brock pass, juked a defender and the goalkeeper, and put the ball in the bottom right corner of the goal. Two minutes later, Hecht was set up for her first goal when a deflection put the ball right in front of her, and she blasted it past the keeper. “They came out and took every second they could away from McHenry today,” Red Raiders coach Kris Grabner said. “That’s what we tried to do all year, just take time away from people. Make them play when they don’t want to play.” Hecht showed off her leg

strength on her second goal, and on Jakubowski’s third. Hecht fired a shot that hit McHenry keeper Erica Patterson in the hands and bounced in for a goal with six minutes left in the first half. Hecht’s penalty kick was stopped by a diving Patterson, but Jakubowski cleaned up the deflection to complete the hat trick. Warriors coach Jim Nelson said the turf field accelerates deflections and rebounds. After getting the win in May, Nelson said Huntley’s pressure was too much. “The first goal kind of deflated us, and in a game like this, those little deflating moments can cost you,” Nelson said. The Red Raiders face Barrington on Tuesday in a Jacobs Sectional semifinal in Algonquin. After losing to Barrington last season in sectionals, Hecht said the team is looking forward to a new opportunity. “That was definitely what we worked for this season,” Hecht said. “Getting back to that stage and bringing back a victory.”

By MEGHAN MONTEMURRO mmontemurro@shawmedia.com VERNON HILLS – A week ago, Johnsburg junior Sandro Magradze set a personal best and a school record in the 300-meter intermediate hurdles. He had worked hard to achieve his goal, but he wasn’t satisfied. As an encore in his next competition Saturday at the Class 2A Vernon Hills Sectional, Magradze broke both records he set only seven days earlier in a first-place finish to secure his first state track appearance. Magradze (40.27) held off Wauconda senior Chris Bednarski by one-thousandth of a second for the win. “Over the past weeks I’ve been working on getting my steps down,” Magradze said. “[Friday] though I was doing really bad in practice. ... My other coach told me if the day before I’m doing bad it’s a sign of good luck, so I took that and worked with it.” Magradze won’t be alone next weeked at O’Brien Stadium in Charleston. Johns-

burg’s 4x800 relay team narrowly qualified for state, finishing third (8:14.24) after crossing the finish line exactly one second under the qualifying standard for the event. Richmond-Burton won the 4x800 relay in 8:10.85 to advance to state. Junior James Kaht’s second-place finish (4:31.46) in the 1,600-meter run also was good enough to qualify. “I was nervous because I wasn’t sure if we were going to hit the time,” Johnsburg coach Chris Setzler said of the relay race. “I knew it was going to be close between second and third, and then I was worrying about time. I was really pleased to look at my watch and see we made it.” Three Woodstock athletes qualified individually, led by senior Phil Krueger’s standout performance in discus. Despite windy conditions that wreaked havoc on the throwers, Krueger’s discus throw of 140 feet, 9 inches qualified him for state a second consecutive season. “I’ve been working on my release a lot and using the

whole circle with my spin,” Krueger said. “I’m looking to try and break the school record this year.” Blue Streaks senior Kyle Olesen embraced his last shot at qualifying in the high jump after last year’s disappointment of falling short in the sectional. Olesen made the most of his opportunity clearing 6-3 to become one of five jumpers to advance. Senior teammate Tyler Parsons finished second (15.28) in the 110-meter high hurdles to qualify. “Nothing,” Olesen said of what he was thinking on his state-clinching approach. “That’s the best way it can be. If you think you mess up.” A third-place finish by Harvard junior Jorge Pichardo in the 3,200 clinched his state berth by recording a time of 9:45.17. Woodstock North senior Sidney Smith advanced in the 400 with a third-place finish (50.76). In the pole vault, Marengo senior Mike Zaranski cleared a height of 13-3 for a second-place finish to qualify for state.


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

PREPS

Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Page C5

CONFERENCE ALIGNMENT

Suburban Christian Conference weighs options for 2014-15 By JOE STEVENSON joestevenson@shawmedia.com The remaining members of the Suburban Christian Conference are not sure where the future will take that league, but they are looking at several options. SCC principals met last week to discuss the future. On May 2 the announcement came that seven schools are

leaving the SCC for the Metro Suburban Conference in the 2014-15 school year. Marian Central, the lone local school in the SCC, will remain with Aurora Christian, Montini, St. Francis, Marmion (boys only) and Rosary (girls only). The fiveteam conference for football, however, leaves the SCC with a glut of nonconference dates to schedule.

Marian athletic director Mike McGovern, who will retire in June, said the SCC is considering options, most of which are driven by football. “You have to experience football scheduling to see how tough it is,” McGovern said. “It is a lot of combinations.” McGovern said the most desired plan would be to find suitable schools to join the SCC. If that does not transpire,

the SCC will look for conferences to partner with for nonconference football games. A third option would be having the remaining SCC teams join another conference. McGovern said the East Suburban Catholic Conference might consider taking in all six SCC schools in all sports, and the Chicago Catholic League, which has three divisions, might take in the

SCC schools for football only. The Fox Valley Conference has not shown an interest in inviting Marian to join, although the FVC will drop from 14 to 13 members next year when Johnsburg leaves to join the Big Northern Conference. McGovern, however, has received several calls from FVC teams wanting nonconference football games with the Hurricanes.

“I proposed the FVC [as a parter] to the SCC,” McGovern said. “They said to go ahead and do it independently. It’s a great natural [football] matchup for us.” The seven SCC schools that are leaving are Aurora Central Catholic, Chicago Christian, Guerin, Immaculate Conception, St. Edward, Walther Lutheran and Wheaton Academy.

IHSA CLASS 2A GIRLS TRACK AND FIELD STATE MEET

ROUNDUP

Marengo’s Sprague makes 2 finals

Hampshire softball wins in 12 Jordan Hook hit a walkoff double to right center to score Sara Finn in the 12th inning for the Hampshire softball team in a, 4-3, Fox Valley Conference Fox Division win against Woodstock North on Friday. Jennifer Hurst struck out six and allowed two earned runs in the complete game win. Also for the Whip-Purs, Brittany Sujet went 3 of 4 with a double and Finn had three stolen bases. Rebecca Einspahr took the loss for the Thunder but also pitched 12 innings.

By JOE STEVENSON joestevenson@shawmedia.com CHARLESTON – Marengo junior Allie Sprague mastered the idea of a closing kick Friday at the IHSA Girls Track and Field State Meet. Sprague qualified from the Class 2A 800- and 1,600-meter preliminary heats in almost identical manners, hanging right behind the leaders and squeaking out narrow wins at the finish line. Sprague’s teammate Katie Adams, the defending 1,600 champion, also will run in that final. Adams, last year’s 3,200 runner-up, is shooting to win the 3,200 and 1,600 titles in Saturday’s finals at Eastern Illinois University’s O’Brien Stadium. “I did exactly what I wanted to do, which is win both heats and get the automatic qualifier,” Sprague said. “I couldn’t have raced that 1,600 any better. I wasn’t really worried about times today.” Sprague finished in 5:12.76, edging Grayslake Central’s Claire Haggerty (5:12.80) at the finish. In the 800, Sprague nipped Burlington Central’s Kayla Wolf with a 2:15.85, by one-hundredth of a second. Hampshire’s Ashley Fouch qualified in the 400 and anchored the Whip-Purs’ 4x400 relay team with Elizabeth Evans, Nikki Dumoulin and Elizabeth Pagan. Hampshire’s Jenny Dumoulin also qualified in the shot put. Richmond-Burton senior Roxanne Kelly came through

Huntley 11, Johnsburg 1 (5 inn.): At Rosemont, Randi

Clark Brooks for Shaw Media

Burlington Central’s Kayla Wolf (left) runs ahead of Marengo’s Allie Sprague in the final lap of the Class 2A 800 meters during Friday’s preliminary competition at the IHSA State Meet in Charleston. Sprague eventually surged ahead to win the heat with Wolf coming in second. Both runners advanced to Saturday’s finals . with her season-best in the triple jump (35 feet, 10 inches) to make the finals for a second consecutive year. Adams had the best 1,600 time (5:05.50) by two seconds and is eyeing the distance double in the finals. “I’m really excited about [Saturday],” said Adams, who will run at Iowa. “This is my last day [of high school]. I want to run hard and have fun. If I do that, I’ll accomplish my goals.” Fouch had a subpar 400 race at the Burlington Central Sectional last week in 1:00.56, but Friday she blazed around the track she will call home next year on EIU’s

team. Fouch finished in 56.87 to make the finals, then helped the Whips’ 4x400 team qualify. “I prepared all week [before the sectional] and really wanted a [personal record] and a 56,” Fouch said. “But I ran it today. It’s exciting to know how I can push my running against [2A recordholder Shamier] Little [of Chicago Lindblom]. I had to come here and prove to myself that I’m capable of running those times.” Dumoulin won the Fox Valley Conference Meet shot put title with a record throw of 40-4. She threw 38-6 in her preliminary flight, which

puts her in eighth place heading into the finals. “I’m very grateful for [the finals],” Dumoulin said. “It’s a big deal here with this competition. I sure hope I have another 40. It’d be really neat to be able to do that. I hope to do that and have fun.” Kelly saw what the other competitors were jumping and did not think she would repeat as a triple jump finalist. But her first attempt, her best of the season, put her in 11th place for the finals. “I was psyching myself out. I know I can do better,” Kelly said. “I hope I can move up. That would be really cool.”

Dalman switches pole on last jump at 10-6 • CLASS 3A Continued from page C1 Van Vlierbergen made her move first, then Santiago passed her. In the final 50 meters, Van Vlierbergen had enough of a burst for a 4:55.40 finish, 0.32 ahead of Santiago. Glenbard West’s Madeline Perez (4:52.21) had the only faster qualifying time. “It’s nice to have so many people push me,” Van Vlierbergen said. “I was just trying to stay with [Santiago] and then in the last 100 meters I

NORTHWEST HERALD

gave everything I had.” Dalman cleared 11 feet to make the pole vault final, although 10-9 would have qualified. She needed her third attempt at 10-6 to keep vaulting. “I switched to a 13-foot pole [145-pound rating] for my last jump at 10-6,” Dalman said. “That was nerve-racking. My goal all season has been to make the finals after getting here last year. Hopefully tomorrow will be even more fun.” Dalman made 10-9 and 11-0 on her second attempt at each height, then the competition

was stopped. They start over in Saturday’s finals. Moore, who finished ninth last year in the 400, grabbed the final qualifying spot with a time of 56.95 seconds. “Our school record is Coryn Marzejon’s at 56.1,” Moore said. “I’d like to get in the top five and get the school record.” Furio, a senior making her first state trip, went 17-7½ on her final jump to qualify in the long jump. “My goal was to get a [personal record], I wasn’t concerned about the finals,”

Furio said. “To get that and make the finals is a double bonus.” Freeman is the freshman sister of Josh Freeman, the boys Class 3A state champion in shot put and discus last year. She and Roehri, a sophomore, have been throwing close to each other for the past three weeks. Freeman is in sixth place at 122-4; Roehri is in 10th at 120-3. “I’m just glad to be here with such a great group of girls that we have,” Freeman said. “[Saturday] I think will be a better day.”

Peterson drove in four runs for the Red Raiders (20-10) in an FVC crossover win played at the Chicago Bandits stadium. Bri Baer doubled and scored for the Skyhawks.

McHenry 17, Woodstock 0 (5 inn.): At Woodstock, Kristin Koepke struck out 13 in an FVC crossover win for the Warriors and Alex Martens drove in four and scored three runs. Kara McCaughrean tripled for the Blue Streaks only hit.

Richmond-Burton 9, Harvard 3: At Harvard, Meagan Spohr went 3 of 5 including a double for the Rockets in

a Big Northern Conference East Division win. Stephanie Stephens doubled and drove in two runs for the Hornets.

BASEBALL Johnsburg 8, Lake Forest 5: At Johnsburg, Brandon Krennrich doubled and drove in two runs for the Skyhawks (11-15) in a nonconference win.

Grayslake North 15, Woodstock 10: At Woodstock, Andy Buhrow drove in four runs for the Blue Streaks in the completion of an FVC Fox Division game from May 2.

BOYS TENNIS Cary-Grove Sectional: At Cary, After two rounds of play, all of the seeded players are still alive and will play in the quarterfinals on Saturday with the winners qualifying for the state tournament beginning on Thursday.

BOYS TRACK Sterling Sectional: Alex Pagan placed sixth in the 400 meters for Hampshire to score the Whip-Purs only points at the Class 2A sectional. Kaneland won with 151 points.

• Rob Smith contributed to this report.

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PRO BASEBALL

Page C6 • Saturday, May 18, 2013

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

METS 3, CUBS 2

Third-base coach takes blame Bell’s decision to send Barney in 8th backfires The ASSOCIATED PRESS CHICAGO – David DeJesus singled sharply to right field in the eighth inning and Darwin Barney sprinted from second base. Third-base coach David Bell sent him home with the potential tying run. Whoops! Marlon Byrd threw on the fly to catcher John Buck, and the ball beat Barney by about 15 feet. Barney didn’t even bother to slide and slowed down as Buck applied the tag, preserving the lead in the New York Mets’ 3-2 win over the Cubs on Friday.

GB — 1 2½ 4½ 9

Editor’s note: The White Sox-Angels game Friday ended too late to be included in this edition. Log on to NWHerald. com for the story.

GB — 7 7 11½ 16

Thursday’s Games White Sox at L.A. Angels (n) Pittsburgh 5, Houston 4 Cleveland 6, Seattle 3 (10 inn.) Tampa Bay 12, Baltimore 10 N.Y. Yankees 5, Toronto 0 Detroit 2, Texas 1 Boston 3, Minnesota 2 (10 inn.) Kansas City at Oakland (n) Saturday’s Games White Sox (H.Santiago 1-2) at L.A. Angels (Blanton 0-7), 3:05 p.m. Seattle (J.Saunders 3-4) at Cleveland (McAllister 3-3), 12:05 p.m. Toronto (Morrow 1-2) at N.Y. Yankees (D.Phelps 1-2), 12:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (Ro.Hernandez 2-4) at Baltimore (Jurrjens 0-0), 3:05 p.m. Houston (Bedard 0-2) at Pittsburgh (A.J.Burnett 3-4), 6:05 p.m. Boston (Dempster 2-4) at Minnesota (Diamond 3-3), 6:10 p.m. Detroit (Ani.Sanchez 4-3) at Texas (Grimm 2-3), 7:05 p.m. Kansas City (E.Santana 3-2) at Oakland (Milone 3-5), 8:05 p.m. Sunday’s Games White Sox at L.A. Angels, 2:35 p.m. Seattle at Cleveland, 12:05 p.m. Toronto at N.Y. Yankees, 12:05 p.m. Houston at Pittsburgh, 12:35 p.m. Tampa Bay at Baltimore, 12:35 p.m. Boston at Minnesota, 1:10 p.m. Kansas City at Oakland, 3:05 p.m. Detroit at Texas, 7:05 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE GB — 2½ 2½ 10 10½

100 200

bi 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3

Chicago

GB — ½ 3 5½ 6½

ab 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 2 0 0 0

r h bi 0 1 0 1 2 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Totals

31 2 6 1 3 2

E–R.Tejada (7), A.Soriano (2), Rizzo (2). DP– Chicago 1. LOB–New York 5, Chicago 3. 2B–Ankiel (2), Rizzo (12). HR–Dan.Murphy (3), D.Wright (6). SB–D.Wright (9). S–Borbon. New York Harvey W,5-0 Rice H,4 Burke H,1 Parnell S,5-7 Chicago E.Jackson L,1-6 Russell Fujikawa

IP

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R

71/3 1

5 1 0 0

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0 0 0 0

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62/3 11/3 1

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4 2 2

1/3 1/3

T–2:56. A–34,890 (41,019).

ATLANTA – Justin Upton gave Atlanta the lead with a sixth-inning grand slam and the Braves finally unveiled their full-strength lineup, beating the Los Angeles Dodgers, 8-5, on Friday night. Upton drove in five runs hitting behind Jason Heyward, who had two hits with a RBI in his first game back after having his appendix removed April 22. Cardinals 7, Brewers 6: At St. Louis, David Freese hit a grand slam for his first homer of the season during a five-run first inning for St. Louis, and the Cardinals held on to beat Milwaukee. Phillies 5, Reds 3: At Philadelphia, Domonic Brown drove in the tiebreaking run on an infield grounder in the eighth and Philadelphia snapped Cincinnati’s sixgame winning streak.

AMERICAN LEAGUE Indians 6, Mariners 3 (10 inn.): At Cleveland, Jason

DeJess cf SCastro ss Rizzo 1b ASorin lf Schrhlt rf Valuen 3b Castillo c Barney 2b EJcksn p Russell p Borbon ph Fujikw p

100 100 — 000 000 —

AP photo

Mets catcher John Buck tags out Cubs base runner Darwin Barney at home after receiving a throw from right fielder Marlon Byrd in the eighth inning Friday at Wrigley Field. Barney tried to score from second on a single by David DeJesus. The Cubs lost, 3-2.

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Red Sox 3, Twins 2 (10 inn.): At Minneapolis, Jonny

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INTERLEAGUE Pirates 5, Astros 4: at Pittsburgh, Jimmy Paredes dropped Russell Martin’s bases-loaded fly ball when he collided with second baseman Jake Elmore with two outs in the ninth, the second missed catch by a Houston right fielder, and Pittsburgh rallied past the Astros.

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h 0 0 1 3 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 8

four starts of the year, then failed to get a decision in his next four outings. “I think today, the big thing was the curveball,” Harvey said after his 19th major league start. “I had that working well and was able to throw that for a strike when I needed to.” Collins said earlier this year he would have hit for Harvey when the pitcher’s spot came up after Ankiel’s seventh-inning double. But with the Mets’ offense struggling, Collins is thinking more about pitching and defense. Harvey went up to the plate and singled to break a 2-2 tie. “That was awesome,” Harvey said. “That was huge for me.” The Cubs took a 2-1 lead in the first with three hits off Harvey, who had allowed just three first-inning hits this year.

schmidt homered twice, tied his career high with four hits and drove in four runs to lead Arizona over Miami.

METS 3, CUBS 2 r 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3

The ASSOCIATED PRESS

Diamondbacks 9, Marlins 2: At Miami, Paul Gold-

GB — 1 3½ 6 12½

Friday’s Games N.Y. Mets 3, Cubs 2 Philadelphia 5, Cincinnati 3 Pittsburgh 5, Houston 4 Arizona 9, Miami 2 Atlanta 8, L.A. Dodgers 5 St. Louis 7, Milwaukee 6 San Francisco at Colorado (n) Washington at San Diego (n) Saturday’s Games N.Y. Mets (Hefner 0-4) at Cubs (Feldman 3-3), 12:05 p.m. Cincinnati (Arroyo 3-4) at Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 4-1), 3:05 p.m. Houston (Bedard 0-2) at Pittsburgh (A.J.Burnett 3-4), 6:05 p.m. Arizona (McCarthy 0-3) at Miami (Koehler 0-1), 6:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Capuano 1-2) at Atlanta (Medlen 1-5), 6:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Estrada 3-2) at St. Louis (Lynn 6-1), 6:15 p.m. San Francisco (Lincecum 3-2) at Colorado (Chatwood 1-0), 7:10 p.m. Washington (Zimmermann 7-1) at San Diego (Stults 3-3), 7:40 p.m. Sunday’s Games N.Y. Mets at Cubs, 1:20 p.m. Arizona at Miami, 12:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Philadelphia, 12:35 p.m. Houston at Pittsburgh, 12:35 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Atlanta, 12:35 p.m. Milwaukee at St. Louis, 1:15 p.m. San Francisco at Colorado, 3:10 p.m. Washington at San Diego, 3:10 p.m.

New York ab Vldspn rf 2 Byrd ph-rf 1 DnMrp 2b 4 DWrght 3b 4 I.Davis 1b 4 Duda lf 4 Parnell p 0 Buck c 4 Ankiel cf 4 RTejad ss 4 Harvey p 3 Rice p 0 Burke p 0 Baxter lf 0 Totals 34

“Turned out it wasn’t a very close play,” Bell said. “It’s disappointing, it was the wrong decision. I just watched the replay again, and it wasn’t close. As a third base coach, you want to make the right decision, and that wasn’t the right decision.” Edwin Jackson (1-6), coming off a victory May 11 at Washington, gave up three runs and seven hits in 6⅔ innings for the Cubs. “I think it’s just been a mechanical thing, I’ve been feeling pretty good mechanically,” Jackson said. “I’ve

been able to go out and get in a rhythm early. Regardless how I feel, regardless how I look, regardless how I pitch, the objective is to come out and win the game. We battled today, but we came up short.” Matt Harvey, the Mets’ 24-year-old right-hander, got to show off his bat as well as his arm. He won his fifth straight decision, allowing two runs and five hits in 7⅓ innings, and singled in the goahead run in the seventh after Rick Ankiel’s double. “This guy is different. He’s not your run-of-the-mill young pitcher,” Mets manager Terry Collins said. “This guy has got some savvy. He’s got great confidence.” Daniel Murphy and David Wright homered for the Mets, who won consecutive games for the first time since May 1 and 3. Harvey (5-0) won his first

Upton’s You may have said you’ll never wear a hearing aid... slam lifts but with SoundLens no one will see Braves SoundLens: you’re wearing one!

GB — — 1½ 4 4½

CENTRAL DIVISION W L PCT St. Louis 27 14 .659 Cincinnati 25 17 .595 Pittsburgh 25 17 .595 Cubs 17 24 .415 Milwaukee 16 24 .400 EAST DIVISION W L PCT Atlanta 23 18 .561 Washington 22 19 .537 Philadelphia 20 22 .476 New York 16 23 .410 Miami 11 31 .262 WEST DIVISION W L PCT San Francisco 24 17 .585 Arizona 24 18 .571 Colorado 21 20 .512 San Diego 18 22 .450 Los Angeles 17 23 .425

New York Mets at Cubs, 12:05 p.m. Saturday, CSN, AM-720

MLB ROUNDUP

AMERICAN LEAGUE CENTRAL DIVISION W L PCT Cleveland 23 17 .575 Detroit 23 17 .575 Kansas City 20 17 .541 Minnesota 18 20 .474 White Sox 18 21 .462 EAST DIVISION W L PCT New York 26 16 .619 Boston 25 17 .595 Baltimore 23 18 .561 Tampa Bay 21 20 .512 Toronto 17 25 .405 WEST DIVISION W L PCT Texas 27 15 .643 Oakland 20 22 .476 Seattle 20 22 .476 Los Angeles 15 26 .366 Houston 11 31 .262

Next for the Cubs


FINE PRINT

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Page C7

FIVE-DAY PLANNER

HORSE RACING

TEAM

ARLINGTON PARK ENTRIES Saturday’s Post Time: 1 p.m. First, $14,500, Claiming $10,000, 3 yo’s & up, One And One Eighth Miles 1 Don’t Bluff Martinez 122 4-1 2 Gavilan Felix 122 15-1 3 Grandpa Gibby Hill 122 10-1 4 Duke of Rutherford Esquivel 115 9-2 5 Bobby Sands Roman 124 5-2 6 Perfect Casting Vigil 122 12-1 7 My Sonny Boy Thornton 122 2-1 Second, $39,000, Allowance, 3 yo, (fillies), Six Furlongs 1 Richieslildarling Contreras 118 6-1 2 La Song Hill 118 3-1 3 Miss Clark County Felix 118 9-2 4 Distinctive Review Roman 118 5-1 5 Flying Rapunzel Sanchez 118 5-2 6 Truly Marie Esquivel 111 4-1 Third, $12,000, Starters allowance $5,000, 3 yo’s & up, One And One Eighth Miles 1 Ideal Alluvial Thornton 124 4-1 2 Frank’s Time Hernandez 115 20-1 3 Tiger Mike Geroux 122 5-1 4 Slammy Boy Hill 122 5-1 5 Dream Commander Martinez 122 7-2 6 Mastman Sanchez 122 9-2 7 Courtly Roman 124 12-1 8 Magic Bullet Diego 122 5-1 Fourth, $39,000, Allowance, 3 yo’s & up, (fillies and mares), One And One Sixteenth Miles (Turf) 1 Lori’s Store Homeister Jr. 116 5-1 2 Hopelands Desormeaux 116 10-1 3 Penelope Perfect Castro 122 8-1 4 Joy Filled Esquivel 115 20-1 5 Keri Keri Geroux 122 7-2 6 Lordliness Felix 122 20-1 7 Gloriana Sanchez 122 6-1 8 Masquerade Baird 122 9-2 9 Bold Kitten Hill 116 3-1 Fifth, $10,500, Maiden Claiming $15,000-$10,000, 3 yo’s & up, (fillies and mares), Seven Furlongs 1 Jessamyn Lyon Desormeaux 124 10-1 2 Cape Town Woman Vigil 118 4-1 3 Bonita Rita Roman 118 20-1 4 Sydsation Martinez 124 20-1

5 Mindy Can Dance Baird 118 5-2 6 El Sanrich Castro 118 15-1 7 Holy Rosie Homeister Jr. 118 6-1 8 Silver Encore Esquivel 117 5-1 9 Jandemar’s Slew Hernandez 111 8-1 10 Spirit of a Nation Contreras 124 12-1 Sixth, $10,500, Claiming $7,500, 3 yo’s & up, One Mile 1 Costly King Diego 122 8-1 2 Proper American Geroux 122 3-1 3 Blazing Finish Montalvo 122 4-1 4 Friendian Contreras 122 12-1 5 Purplegreenandgold Hernandez 115 30-1 6 Sir Kipling Perez 122 12-1 7 Because I Win Felix 122 15-1 8 Helloagainmyfriend Vigil 122 10-1 9 Go Posse Go Esquivel 115 5-1 10 C. C. Banjo Martinez 122 9-2 Seventh, $16,000, Maiden Claiming $25,000$20,000, 3 yo’s & up, One Mile (Turf) 1 Mephisto Aristo Emigh 118 20-1 2 Classic Recital Montalvo 124 6-1 3 Casting Esquivel 111 5-2 4 Simple Man Skynyrd Baird 118 12-1 5 Large Scale Felix 124 20-1 6 Seventytwo Roman 118 30-1 7 Conserve Castro 124 5-1 8 Tap the Dream Geroux 124 4-1 9 Mr. Swagger Hill 118 7-2 Eighth, $39,000, Allowance, 3 yo’s & up, (fillies and mares), One And One Sixteenth Miles (Turf) 1 Seeking Luck (IRE) Castro 116 7-2 2 Sugar Street Thornton 122 12-1 3 Cherishd Obsession Esquivel 115 8-1 4 Delightful Daisy Desormeaux 122 8-1 5 Braden’s Dreams Emigh 122 8-1 6 Wishing Gate Homeister Jr. 116 9-2 7 Street Line Vigil 122 15-1 8 Bourbonstreetgirl Martinez 122 15-1 9 Liz Pendens Baird 116 4-1 10 Razzleberry Perez 122 8-1 Ninth, $14,000, Claiming $16,000, 3 yo’s & up, (fillies and mares), Six Furlongs 1 Age of Aquarius Hill 122 5-2 2 Lil Miss Richie Baird 116 10-1 3 Carolina Cruisin’ Perez 116 15-1

4 Ann Accolade Roman 116 10-1 5 Lydia’s Angel Esquivel 115 15-1 6 Miss Darla Martinez 116 8-1 7 Stay Foolish Diego 116 5-1 8 Bye Bye Bunting Emigh 116 3-1 9 Scorpiobdancing Castro 122 6-1 Tenth, $23,000, Claiming $25,000, 3 yo’s & up, (fillies and mares), Five Furlongs (Turf) 1 She’s Intoxicated Baird 119 6-1 1a My Place Or Yours Baird 116 6-1 2 Sweet Harp Martinez 120 10-1 3 Three Cat Rules Felix 116 20-1 4 Sharp A Esquivel 109 12-1 5 Glad It’s May Homeister Jr. 123 10-1 6 Little Miss Be Perez 120 12-1 7 Betterlegsonatable Emigh 116 4-1 8 Spring Formal Roman 116 12-1 9 Astral Desormeaux 116 5-2 10 Take What You Can Hernandez 113 5-1 Eleventh, $39,000, Allowance, 3 yo’s & up, One And One Sixteenth Miles (Turf) 1 Brim Roman 122 8-1 2 Afleet Paddy Emigh 122 12-1 3 Leal Ridge Meza 122 30-1 4 Doctor Trotter Martinez 122 8-1 5 Amen Kitten Baird 116 9-5 6 Lewis’ Anna Desormeaux 116 12-1 7 Lighthouse Pride Esquivel 115 15-1 8 Big Smooth Castro 122 20-1 9 Laythatpistoldown Perez 122 3-1 10 Big Man in Black Thornton 122 12-1 11 Reggiville Sanchez 122 30-1 12 Shine the Rocket Contreras 122 30-1 Preakness Stakes simulcast from Pimlico, $1,000,000, Stakes, 3 yo, One And Three Sixteenth Miles 1 Orb Rosario 126 1-1 2 Goldencents Krigger 126 8-1 3 Titletown Five Leparoux 126 30-1 4 Departing Hernandez Jr. 126 6-1 5 Mylute Napravnik 126 5-1 6 Oxbow Stevens 126 15-1 7 Will Take Charge Smith 126 12-1 8 Govenor Charlie Garcia 126 12-1 9 Itsmyluckyday Velazquez 126 10-1

ARLINGTON PARK RESULTS

First - Purse $39,000, Allowance, 3 yo’s & up, One Mile 5 Razzo Succo Homeister Jr. $10.60 $4.20 $3.20 7 River Lemon Desormeaux $3.80 $2.20 6 No Apologizes Perez $3.00 Late Scratches: Impetuous Power Race Time: 1:37.73 $2 Exacta (5-7), $36.00; $0.10 Superfecta (5-7-6-1), $26.61; $0.50 Trifecta (5-7-6), $34.30 Second - Purse $22,000, Starters allowance, 3 yo, One Mile 6 Believe in Kitten Hill $5.00 $3.00 $2.40 3 Rico Suave Esquivel $2.60 $2.40 7 Kitchi Warrior Roman $6.80 Late Scratches: Mr. Watanabe Too Race Time: 1:37.94 $2 Daily Double (5-6), $42.60; $2 Exacta (6-3), $11.80; $0.10 Superfecta (6-3-7-4), $37.34; $0.50 Trifecta (6-3-7), $45.35 Third - Purse $44,000, AOC $100,000, 3 yo’s & up, About One Mile (Turf) 3 Cherokee Lord Diego $34.00 $12.60 $5.20 6 Tazz Desormeaux $4.60 $2.60 1 Workin for Hops Homeister Jr. $2.60 Late Scratches: Hattaash Race Time: 1:37.21 $2 Daily Double (6-3), $101.80; $2 Exacta (3-6), $167.20; $0.10 Superfecta (3-6-1-4), $87.94; $0.50 Trifecta (3-6-1), $121.80; $1 Pic 3 (5-6-3), $413.30 Fourth - Purse $9,500, Claiming $5,000, 3 yo’s & up,

Six Furlongs 4 Retail Reger Esquivel $3.20 $2.60 $2.20 6 Telma Sanchez $16.60 $6.80 1 Wayne’s Kitten Hill $3.00 Race Time: 1:11.51 $2 Daily Double (3-4), $65.60; $2 Exacta (4-6), $49.40; $0.10 Superfecta (4-6-1-7), $46.83; $0.50 Trifecta (4-6-1), $59.75; $1 Pic 3 (6-3-4), $120.40 Fifth - Purse $9,500, Claiming $5,000, 3 yo’s & up, Six Furlongs 4 Silky Sami Esquivel $7.60 $4.20 $3.20 1 Michalina Roman $10.60 $5.00 8 Sharp Trip Vigil $3.40 Race Time: 1:12.12 $2 Daily Double (4-4), $12.00; $2 Exacta (4-1), $67.60; $0.10 Superfecta (4-1-8-5), $50.91; $0.50 Trifecta (4-1-8), $61.50; $1 Pic 3 (3-4-4), $102.10; $0.50 Pic 4 (6-3-4-4), $232.70 Sixth - Purse $38,000, Maiden special weight, 3 yo’s & up, About One Mile (Turf) 6 Sugar Kate Martinez $5.20 $3.20 $2.60 3 Simply Good Homeister Jr. $4.40 $3.20 9 I O Cashel Perez $2.60 Race Time: 1:39.88 $2 Daily Double (4-6), $26.20; $2 Exacta (6-3), $26.40; $0.10 Superfecta (6-3-9-2), $21.55; $0.50 Trifecta (6-3-9), $13.25; $1 Pic 3 (4-4-6), $22.30 Seventh - Purse $10,500, Maiden Claiming $12,500$10,000, 3 yo’s & up, Five And A Half Furlongs 9 Salutethehero Geroux $26.20 $9.80 $5.00 6 Coaches Choice Felix $7.40 $3.80 10 Romaflame Perez $6.60

SUNDAY

MONDAY

DETROIT* Noon NBC FM-97.9

Late Scratches: Mindy Can Dance, Queen Yellena Race Time: 1:05.17 $2 Daily Double (6-9), $57.60; $2 Exacta (9-6), $260.40; $0.10 Superfecta (9-6-10-8), $986.50; $0.50 Trifecta (9-610), $514.80; $1 Pic 3 (4-6-9), $192.60 Eighth - Purse $39,000, Allowance, 3 yo’s & up, About One And One Sixteenth Miles (Turf) 3 Tipsy Hill $5.00 $3.40 $2.80 2 Kitchen Boss Esquivel $8.80 $6.00 7 David’sLuckyLady Graham $4.60 Late Scratches: Perfect Step, See No Stars Race Time: 1:46.52 $2 Daily Double (9-3), $83.40; $2 Exacta (3-2), $43.20; $0.10 Superfecta (3-2-7-12), $59.66; $0.50 Trifecta (3-27), $63.95; $1 Pic 3 (6-9-3/10/13), $98.10 Ninth - Purse $24,000, Maiden Claiming $50,000$40,000, 3 yo’s & up, About One Mile (Turf) 4 Vperyod Seryoga Desormeaux $16.40 $7.40 $4.60 10 Reach for the Sky Graham $13.40 $7.20 9 Al’s Uncle Homeister Jr. $3.20 Late Scratches: Yes It’s Heart Race Time: 1:40.96 $2 Daily Double (3-4), $36.00; $2 Exacta (4-10), $218.60; $1 (4-10-9-8-1), $4530.80 Carryover $63,011.00; $0.10 Superfecta (4-10-9-8), $318.47; $0.50 Trifecta (4-10-9), $186.35; $1 Pic 3 (9-3/10/13-4), $211.50; $0.50 Pic 4 (6-9-3/10/13-4), $389.45; $0.50 Pic 5 (4-6-9-3/10/13-4), $2376.95; $1 Pic 6 (4-4-6-9-3/10/13-4), $17.50 Carryover $6,524.00; $0.10 (5-6-3-4-4-6-9-3/10/13-4), $276.26 Carryover $10,046.00

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

at Pittsburgh 6:05 p.m. CSN AM-720

at Pittsburgh 7:05 p.m. WGN AM-720

BOSTON 7:10 p.m. WCIU AM-670

BOSTON 7:10 p.m. CSN AM-670

at Detroit* 6:30 p.m. NBCSN AM-720

N.Y. METS 12:05 p.m. CSN AM-720

N.Y. METS 1:20 p.m. WGN AM-720

at L.A. Angels 3:05 p.m. Fox AM-670

at L.A. Angels 2:35 p.m. CSN AM-670

BOSTON 7:10 p.m. CSN AM-670

at Philadelphia 8 p.m. WPWR * Playoff game

ON TAP TODAY TV/Radio AUTO RACING 10 a.m.: IRL, IndyCar, Indianapolis 500 Pole Day, NBCSN 4:30 p.m.: NHRA, qualifying for Kansas Nationals, ESPN2 (same-day tape) 6 p.m.: NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Showdown and All-Star Race, SPEED

BOXING 8:15 p.m. Champion Devon Alexander (24-1-0) vs. Lee Purdy (23-1-0), for IBF welterweight title; welterweights, Lamont Peterson (31-1-1) vs. Lucas Matthysse (33-2-0), Show

Championship, last 16 and quarterinal matches, Golf Ch. Noon: PGA Tour, Byron Nelson Championship, third round, Golf Ch. 2 p.m.: PGA Tour, Byron Nelson Championship, third round, CBS 2 p.m.: Web.com Tour, BMW Charity Pro-Am, third round, at Golf Ch. 4 p.m.: LPGA, Mobile Bay Classic, third round, Golf Ch.

HORSE RACING 1:30 p.m.: NTRA, Preakness Stakes undercard, NBCSN 3:30 p.m.: NTRA, Preakness Stakes, NBC

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

COLLEGE BASEBALL

Payouts based on $2 bet except for Trifecta (.50) and Superfecta (.10) Friday’s results

SATURDAY

Noon: New York Mets at Cubs, WGN, AM-720 2:30 p.m.: White Sox at L.A. Angels, Fox, AM-670 7 p.m.: Detroit at Texas (AM-1000) or San Francisco at Colorado, MLBN

10 a.m.: UCF at East Carolina, FSN 11 a.m.: Pittsburgh at Louisville, ESPNU Noon: Michigan at Nebraska, BTN 2 p.m.: Clemson at Florida State, ESPNU 3 p.m.: Indiana at Ohio State, BTN

MEN’S COLLEGE LACROSSE

COLLEGE SOFTBALL 2 p.m.: NCAA Division I playoffs, regionals, Game 3, Baylor vs. Penn Texas A&M winner, ESPN 4:30 p.m.: NCAA Division I playoffs, regionals, Game 4, Arizona vs. Penn Texas A&M loser, ESPN 5 p.m.: NCAA Division I playoffs, regionals, ESPNU 7 p.m.: NCAA Division I playoffs, regionals, Game 5, Game 3 loser vs. Game 4 winner, ESPN2 7:30 p.m.: NCAA Division I playoffs, regionals, ESPNU

CYCLING 6 p.m.: Tour of California, Stage 7, Livermore to Mount Diablo, Calif., NBCSN (same-day tape)

EXTREME SPORTS

11:30 a.m.: NCAA Division I playoffs, quarterinal, Ohio State vs. Cornell, ESPN2 2 p.m.: NCAA Division I playoffs, quarterinal, Syracuse vs. Yale, ESPN2

NBA BASKETBALL 7 p.m.: Playoffs, conference semiinals, Game 6, New York at Indiana, ESPN

NHL HOCKEY Noon: Playoffs, conference semiinals, Game 2, Detroit at Blackhawks, NBC 8 p.m.: Playoffs, conference semiinals, Game 3, Los Angeles at San Jose, NBCSN

SOCCER

9 a.m.: X Games, ESPN 7 p.m.: X Games, ESPN2 (same-day tape)

8 p.m.: MLS, Fire at Philadelphia, WPWR

WOMEN’S COLLEGE LACROSSE

GOLF 5 a.m.: European PGA Tour, Volvo World Match Play

7 p.m.: NCAA Division I, quarterinal, BTN

PREPS GIRLS TRACK CLASS 2A STATE MEET Friday’s Local Results 4x800 relay: Woodstock (M. Beattie, G. Beattie, Hanse, Wold) 9:51.10, Hampshire (Evans, N. Dumoulin, Sztuk Vel Sztukowski, T. Dumoulin) 10:01.67, Harvard (Jacobs, Peterson, Korczak, Stricker) 10:25.69. 4x100 relay: Hampshire (Graff, Pagan, J. Dumoulin, Fouch) 50.19, Richmond-Burton (Salgado, Eisenberg, Kelly, M. Halverson) 52.35. 100 high hurdles: Langan (Marengo) 17.59. 800 meters: Sprague* (Marengo) 2:15.85. 4x200 relay: Hampshire (Pagan, Trzebunia, N. Dumoulin, J. Dumoulin) 1:48.53, Richmond-Burton (Salgado, Kelly, Zaobidny, M. Halverson) 1:49.98. 400 meters: Fouch* (Hampshire) 56.87, Stricker (Harvard) 1:00.15. 300 low hurdles: G. Beattie (Wdk) 49.06. 1,600 meters: Adams* (Marengo) 5:05.50, Sprague* (Marengo) 5:12.76. 200 meters: M. Halverson (RichmondBurton) 27.27. 4x400 relay: Hampshire* (Evans, N. Dumoulin, Pagan, Fouch) 3:59.01. Shot put: J. Dumoulin* (Hampshire) 38-6. Triple jump: Kelly* (RichmondBurton) 35-10. *-qualified for finals.

CLASS 3A STATE MEET Friday’s Local Results 4x800 relay: Jacobs* (Barnes, Tamburrino, Baran, Van Vlierbergen) 9:16.19. 100 high hurdles: Tramblay (Huntley) 15.28. 100 meters: Madda (CL Central) 12.71. 4x200 relay: Cary-Grove (Furio, Robins, Schoepke, Schulz) 1:44.44. 400 meters: Moore* (Huntley) 56.95, D’Angelo (McHenry) 58.68. 1,600 meters: Van Vlierbergen* (Jacobs) 4:55.40, Opatrny (McHenry)

5:16.88. 200 meters: Madda (CL Central) 25.72, Weber (Prairie Ridge) 26.76. Shot put: Szamlewski (McHenry) 34-6. Discus: Freeman* (Cary-Grove) 122-4, Roehri* (Cary-Grove) 120-3. High jump: Tseumah* (Huntley) 5-4, Stenard (Cary-Grove) 5-0, Wlasiuk (McHenry) no height. Long jump: Furio* (Cary-Grove) 17-72. Triple jump: Nicholson* (Cary-Grove) 36-94. Pole vault: Dalman* (CL Central) 11-0, Strom (Prairie Ridge) 10-0, Lyman (Huntley) 10-0. *qualified for finals.

200 meters: 1. Wells (Grt) 22.24* 4x400 relay: 1. Cary-Grove (Speer, Bussan, Saxson, Gleeson) 3:23.42*, 2. Jacobs (Matysek, Gierlak, Estell, Rogers) 3:27.33* Discus: 1. Lombardino (Grt) 201-6*, 2. Hurley (CG) 176-8*, 3. Herbert (Hunt) 166-4* High jump: 1. Wells (Grt) 6-9 Shot put: 1. Lombardino (Grt) 56-0*, 3. Hurley (CG) 53-11* Long jump: 1. Mosher (CLC) 22-72* Triple jump: 1. Jefferson (Aub) 45-112* Pole vault: 1. Ford (McH) 13-9*, 2. Lambert (Hunt) 13-3* *— state qualifier

BOYS TRACK

CLASS 2A VERNON HILLS SECTIONAL

CLASS 3A HUNTLEY SECTIONAL Team scores: 1. Grant 83, 2. Huntley 56, 3. Belvidere North 56, 4. Rockford Jefferson 49.5, 5. Crystal Lake Central 49, 6. Rockford Auburn 46.5, 7. Cary-Grove 42, 8. Jacobs 38, 9. Harlem, 10. McHenry 37, 11. DeKalb 28.5, 12. Hononegah, 13. Prairie Ridge 6, 14. Crystal Lake South 6, 15. Rockford Guilford 2. 4x800 relay: 1. Jacobs (Matysek, Estell, Nerja, Ross) 7:54.02*, 2. McHenry (Shawler-Clapper, Quarterman, Hying, Konstantelos) 7:54.42*, 3. Crystal Lake Central (Baker, Amato, Pitner, Talarico) 7:56.23*, 4. Crystal lake South (Henderson, Kopfman, Meador, Lenzini) 7:56.70*, 7. Huntley (Obecny, Marcuccelli, Smith, O’Donnell) 7:58.45*. 4x100 relay: 1. Huntley (Tharp, Schawrtz, Boos, Dollar) 42.74* 3200 meters: 1. Yunk (BN) 9:11.49*, 2. Reiser (McH) 9:12.05*, 3. Cowlin (PR) 9:19.60* 110 hurdles: 1. Wells (Grt) 15.10* 100 meters: 1. Mosher (CLC) 10.97* 800 meters: 1. Reynolds (Jef) 1:58.27* 4x200 relay: 1. Huntley (Schawrtz, Walker, Boos, Dollar) 1:29.66* 400 meters: 1. Gleeson (CG) 50.35* 300 hurdles: 1. Selgren (Mach) 39.75*, 2. Saxon (CG) 39.75* 1,600 meters: 1. Baker (CLC) 4:16.58*

Team scores: 1. Lakes 144; 2. Grayslake Central 76; 3. Vernon Hills 69; 4 Antioch 52; 5 St. Viator 36 6 Woodstock 31; 7 Johnsburg 29; 8 Wauconda 25 State qualifiers Long Jump: 1. Cedzidlo (Lakes) 2105.25; 2. Bednarski, (Wauc) 21-0 Pole Vault: 1. Babin, (VH) 13-3; 2. Zaranski (Mar) 13-3; 3. Foley (VH) 13-3 High Jump: 1. Agnew (VH)6-8; 2. Swindle (Lakes) 6-5; 3. Savinkov (Lakes) 6-3; 4. Facey (Ant) 6-3l 5. Olesen (Wood) 6-3 Shot Put: 1. Summers (Lakes) 53-0; 2. Craft (Ant) 51-2.50 Triple Jump: 1. Swopes (GLC) 44-5.25; 2. Arnwine (Lakes) 42-5 Discus: 1. Taylor (Ant) 144-4; 2. Krueger (Wood) 140-9 4x800 Relay: 1. Richmond-Burton 8:10.85; 2. St. Viator 8:14.10; 3. Johnsburg 8:14.24 4x100 Relay: 1. Grayslake Central 42.93; 2. Lakes 43.66 3200 Meters: 1. Brey (SV) 9:42.43; 2. Whitney (VH) 9:43.88; 3. Pichardo (Harv) 9:45.17; 4. Boyle (GLC) 9:46.99 110 Hurdles: 1. Boyer (Lakes) 15.17; 2. Parsons (Wood) 15.28 100 Meters: 1. Beutlich (Lakes) 10.97; 2. Jennings (GLC) 11.02 800 Meters: 1. Prais (Lakes)1:59.29;

Golden State 92 Sunday, May 12: Golden State 97, San Antonio 87, OT Tuesday, May 14: San Antonio 109, Golden State 91 Thursday, May 16: San Antonio 94, Golden State 82

CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS (Best-of-7) (x-if necessary)

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Memphis 4, Oklahoma City 1

Miami 4, Bulls 1 Monday, May 6: Bulls 93, Miami 86 Wednesday, May 8: Miami 115, Bulls 78 Friday, May 10: Miami 104, Bulls 94 Monday, May 13: Miami 88, Bulls 65 Wednesday, May 15: Miami 94, Bulls 91 Indiana 3, New York 2 Sunday, May 5: Indiana 102, New York 95 Tuesday, May 7: New York 105, Indiana 79 Saturday, May 11: Indiana 82, New York 71 Tuesday, May 14: Indiana 93, New York 82 Thursday, May 16: New York 85, Indiana 75 Saturday, May 18: New York at Indiana, 7 p.m. x-Monday, May 20: Indiana at New York, 7 p.m. WESTERN CONFERENCE San Antonio 4, Golden State 2 Monday, May 6: San Antonio 129, Golden State 127, 2OT Wednesday, May 8: Golden St. 100, San Antonio 91 Friday, May 10: San Antonio 102,

CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7) (x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE Miami vs. New York OR Indiana Wednesday, May 22: New York OR Indiana at Miami, 7:30 p.m. Friday, May 24: New York OR Indiana at Miami, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, May 26: Miami at New York OR Indiana, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 28: Miami at New York OR Indiana, 7:30 p.m. x-Thursday, May 30: New York OR Indiana at Miami, 7:30 p.m. x-Saturday, June 1: Miami at New York OR Indiana, 7:30 p.m. x-Monday, June 3: New York OR Indiana at Miami, 7:30 p.m.

CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS (Best-of-7) (x-if necessary)

WESTERN CONFERENCE Blackhawks 1, Detroit 0 Wednesday, May 15: Blackhawks 4, Detroit 1 Saturday, May 18: Detroit at Blackhawks, noon Monday, May 20: Blackhawks at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, May 23: Blackhawks at Detroit, 7 p.m. x-Saturday, May 25: Detroit at Blackhawks, TBD x-Monday, May 27: Blackhawks at Detroit, TBD x-Wednesday, May 29: Detroit at Blackhawks, TBD Los Angeles 1, San Jose 0 Tuesday, May 14: Los Angeles 2, San Jose 0 Thursday, May 16: Los Angeles 4, San Jose 3 Saturday, May 18: Los Angeles at San Jose, 8 p.m. Tuesday, May 21: Los Angeles at San Jose, 9 p.m. x-Thursday, May 23: San Jose at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m. x-Sunday, May 26: Los Angeles at San

Class 1A Genoa-Kingston Sectional Championship

JOHNSBURG 6, STILLMAN VALLEY 1 Johnsburg Stillman Valley

FAVORITE at Cubs at Philadelphia Arizona at Atlanta at St. Louis at Colorado Washington at Los Angeles at Cleveland at New York at Baltimore Boston Detroit at Oakland at Pittsburgh FAVORITE at Indiana at San Antonio San Antonio FAVORITE at Blackhawks at San Jose

Jose, TBD x-Tuesday, May 28: San Jose at Los Angeles, TBD EASTERN CONFERENCE Pittsburgh 2, Ottawa 0 Tuesday, May 14: Pittsburgh 4, Ottawa 1 Friday, May 17: Pittsburgh 4, Ottawa 3 Sunday, May 19: Pittsburgh at Ottawa, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 22: Pittsburgh at Ottawa. 6:30 p.m. x-Friday, May 24: Ottawa at Pittsburgh, 6:30 p.m. x-Sunday, May 26: Pittsburgh at Ottawa, TBD x-Tuesday, May 28: Ottawa at Pittsburgh, TBD Boston 1, N.Y. Rangers 0 Thursday, May 16: Boston 3, N.Y. Rangers 2, OT Sunday, May 19: N.Y. Rangers at Boston, 2 p.m. Tuesday, May 21: Boston at N.Y. Rangers, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, May 23: Boston at N.Y. Rangers, 6 p.m. x-Saturday, May 25: N.Y. Rangers at Boston TBD x-Monday, May 27: Boston at N.Y. Rangers, TBD x-Wednesday, May 29: N.Y. Rangers at Boston, TBD

3 0

3 1

– 6 – 1

First half J– Jansen (Nusser), 37:22 J- Pruitt (Jansen) , 30:55 J- Kornee Hass (Jansen), 18:21 Second half J- Pruitt (Nusser) 35:31 SV- Timm (unassisted), 23:27 J- Jansen (Hass), 22:35 J- Layton (unassisted)10:47

Championship

NHL Playoffs LINE UNDERDOG -200 Detroit -130 Los Angeles Sunday -125 N.Y. Rangers -140 at Ottawa

LINE +130 -105 +140 +165 +155 +100 +145 +120 +140 +110 +100 +120 +120 +120 +200 UNDERDOG New York Memphis +115 LINE +170 +110 +105 +120

GOLF PGA BYRON NELSON At TPC Four Seasons Resort Irving, Texas Purse: $6.7 million Yardage: 7,166; Par: 70 Second Round Leaders (a-amateur) Keegan Bradley 60-69—129 Tom Gillis 69-63—132 Sang-Moon Bae 66-66—132 John Huh 69-64—133 Ryan Palmer 65-68—133 Charl Schwartzel 63-70—133 Graham DeLaet 67-67—134 Angel Cabrera 65-69—134 Ted Potter, Jr. 64-70—134 Scott Piercy 66-68—134 Gary Woodland 69-65—134 Harris English 64-70—134 Erik Compton 72-63—135 Stephen Ames 67-68—135 Nathan Green 67-68—135 Martin Kaymer 68-67—135 Camilo Villegas 65-70—135 Martin Flores 67-68—135 Duffy Waldorf 68-67—135 Alexandre Rocha 67-68—135 Charley Hoffman 68-68—136 Ben Crane 67-69—136

1 1

- 4 - 1

First Half PR- B. Fenton (Dooley), 5’ PR- Bear (Dooley), 8’ PR- Reitz, 12’ Second Half W- LoPatin (Mayber), 43’ PR- Reitz, 66’ Goalkeeper saves: Whitehouse (PR)

Major League Baseball LINE UNDERDOG National League -140 New York -105 Cincinnati -150 at Miami -175 Los Angeles -165 Milwaukee -110 San Francisco -155 at San Diego American League -130 White Sox -150 Seattle -120 Toronto -110 Tampa Bay -130 at Minnesota -130 at Texas -130 Kansas City Interleague -220 Houston NBA Playoffs LINE O/U 4½ (177½) Sunday 4 (183½) Odds to Win Series -135 Memphis

3 0

-11 -8 -8 -7 -7 -7 -6 -6 -6 -6 -6 -6 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -4 -4

Class 3A Rockford Guilford Regional Championship

HUNTLEY 7, McHENRY 0 McHenry Huntley

0 5

0 2

- 0 - 7

First half H- Cosantino H- Jakubowski (Brock) H- Hecht (Nordeen) H- Jakubowski (Parks) H- Hecht (Nordeen) Second half H- Jakubowski (Hecht) H- Hecht (Helm) Goalkeeper saves: Patterson (M) 8; Rubino (H) 1.

BASEBALL

WP: Alvarez (4IP, 9H, 4R, 4ER, 1BB, 3K). LP: Buhrow (22/3IP, 8H, 10R, 10ER, 3BB, 4K). Top hitters: Woodstock – Turner 2-5 (2R, 2RBI, 2B), Bell 2-5 (2B, RBI), Buhrow 3-4 (2R, 4RBI), Butts 2-3 (3RBI).

JOHNSBURG 8, LAKE FOREST 5 Lake Forest Johnsburg

SOFTBALL

BOYS TENNIS

RICHMOND-BURTON 9, HARVARD 3

CARY-GROVE SECTIONAL

Rich.-Burton Harvard

G’lake North 00(10) 005 0 – 15 12 0 Woodstock 100 340 2 – 10 15 4

PRAIRIE RIDGE 4, WOODSTOCK 1 Prairie Ridge Woodstock

5, Krueger (W) 7, Tobias (W) 6.

GRAYSLAKE NORTH 15 WOODSTOCK 10

Class 2A Marengo Regional

GLANTZ-CULVER LINE

at Boston Pittsburgh

HOCKEY NHL PLAYOFFS

GIRLS SOCCER

BETTING ODDS

BASKETBALL NBA PLAYOFFS

2. Sammons (SV) 2:01.25 4x200 Relay: 1. Lakes 1:28.68; 2. Grayslake Central 1:30.15 400 Meters: 1. Ray (Lakes) 49.28; 2. Chapman (Ant) 50.32; 3. Smith (WN) 50.76 300 Hurdles: 1. Magradze (Johnsburg) 40.47; 2. Bednarski (Wauc) 40.48 1600 Meters: 1. Mohrdieck (VH) 4:23.95; 2. Kaht (RB) 4:31.46 200 Meters: 1. Cotton (VH) 22.14; 2. Hertz (Lakes) 22.41 4x400 Relay: 1. Lakes 3:24.81; 2. Antioch 3:27.81

200 002 1 – 5 5 2 102 005 x – 8 10 2

WP: Schyvinck, 1-1 (2IP, 3H, 3R, 2ER, 2BB, 0K). Top hitters: Jonhsburg – Ridout 4-4 (3R, 2B), Krennrich 3-3 (2R, 2RBI, 2B), Adams 1-3 (2RBI).

301 032 0 – 9 20 0 010 020 0 – 3 8 1

WP: Fionda (5K, 1BB, 3R, 3ER, ). LP: M. Stephens (7IP, 9R, 8ER, 0K 2BB) Top hitters: Harvard – Blazier 2-4, Stephens 1-3 (2B, 2RBI). RichmondBurton – Spohr 3-5 (2B) Schwegel 3-4.

HAMPSHIRE 4 WOODSTOCK NORTH 3 (12 INN.) Wood. North 000 001 100 010 – 3 10 4 Hampshire 010 010 000 011 – 4 13 1 WP: Hurst (12IP, 10H, 3R, 2ER, 4BB, 6K). LP: Einspahr (12IP, 13H, 4R, 1BB, 3K). Top hitters: Hampshire – Sujet 3-4 (2B), Finn 3-6 (3SB), Hook (2B, RBI).

HUNTLEY 11, JOHNSBURG 1 (5 INN.) Huntley Johnsburg

013 25 – 11 12 0 000 01 – 1 2 0

WP: Spannraft, 15-10 (5IP, 2H, 1R, 1ER, 0BB, 4K). LP: Huemann (4IP, 9H, 6R, 6ER, 3BB, 2K). Top hitters: Huntley – Peterson 4-4 (4RBI), Funke 3-4 (2B, 3RBI), Spannraft 2-3 (2R), Caputi 1-1 (2B, RBI). Johnsburg – Baer 1-2 (2B, R), Cherwin 1-2 (RBI).

MCHENRY 17 WOODSTOCK 0 (6 INN.) McHenry Woodstock

055 43 – 17 22 0 000 00 – 0 1 4

WP: Koepke (5IP, 1H, 0R, 0ER, 0BB, 13K). LP: Karafa (3IP, 12H, 10R, 9ER, 1BB, 0K). Top hitters: McHenry – Martens 4-5 (3R, 4RBI), Arns 3-4 (4R, 2 2B, RBI), Petrinich 2-3 (3B, 2RBI, 2R), Cichocki 2-4 (2B, 3RBI). Woodstock – McCaughrean 1-2 (3B).

Second round Singles Waters (Marian Central) d. Ordonez (Woodstock), 6-0, 6-1 Alas (Prairie Ridge) d. Plummer (Woodstock North), 6-2, 6-0 Jarva (CL South) d. Jensen (CaryGrove), 6-0, 6-0 Nelson (CL Central) d. Condon (McHenry), 6-0, 6-1 Wells (Johnsburg) d. Ring (Woodstock), 6-0, 6-3 Kohl (Prairie Ridge) d. Shin (Marian Central), 6-1, 6-0 Fanlon (McHenry) d. Opie (Marengo), 6-3, 6-3 Russell (Cary-Grove) d. Gleason (CL Central), 6-0, 6-1 Doubles Heydari/Henning (Prairie Ridge) d. Fischbach/Cross (Woodstock), 6-0, 6-3 Bingham/Hughes (Marian Central) d. Devore/Balleno (Woodstock North), 6-1, 6-0 O’Connell/O’Connell (CL Central) d. Harte/Robins (Cary-Grove), 6-1, 6-2 Stanek/Maher (McHenry) d. Moore/ Destephano (Johnsburg), 6-2, 6-2 Rozolis/Maas (Cary-Grove) d. Gourikrishna/Blackmore (CL Central), 6-0, 6-4 Lamar/Van Bosch (Prairie Ridge) d. Herba/Rost (Marian Central), 6-2, 6-1 Legnaioli (Johnsburg) d. Mickus/Diedrick (Marengo), 6-0, 6-1 Quitalig/Higgin (McHenry) d. Ramos/ Devlin (CL South), 6-2, 7-6 (7-2)

SCHEDULE SATURDAY

Baseball: Prairie Ridge at Stevenson, Huntley at Glenbard West, Lakes at Marian Central, Joliet West at Richmond-Burton, 10 a.m.; McHenry at Hersey (2), 11 a.m. Softball: Richmond-Burton at ZionBenton (2), Lakes at Marengo, McHenry at Quad City Super Duals, 10 a.m.; Huntley, Johnsburg at Freeport Tournament, TBA Lacrosse: CL South at Belvidere, 11 a.m.


Page C8 • Saturday, May 18, 2013

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com


Blackhawks Gameday

Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Northwest Herald • NWHerald.com/blackhawks • #CHIvsDET

GAME 2 Taking the temperature HOT BLACKHAWKS 1. Marcus Kruger: Go figure, right? The Hawks have more stars than any other organization in the league, and it’s a little-known fourth-line center (and expert penalty-killer) who is playing some of the team’s best hockey. 2. Johnny Oduya: If not for Oduya’s go-ahead goal in the third period of Game 1, we might be wondering whether the Hawks could claw back in the series. 3. Patrick Sharp: At a certain point, we’re going to start taking Sharp’s contributions (9 points in 6 playoff games) for granted. RED WINGS 1. Jimmy Howard: Although Howard was tagged with a loss in Game 1, the 29-year-old goaltender was the only reason why the Wings had a chance to win in the final period, stopping 38 of 41 shots in defeat. 2. Damien Brunner: As one of the Wings’ newest faces, Brunner was the only Detroit player to score against Corey Crawford in the series opener. 3. Justin Abdelkader: Although the feisty forward did not show up on the score sheet in Game 1, he led all players with eight hits in 17 minutes of ice time.

Awaiting Datsyuk’s next move CHICAGO – Let’s say you play for the Blackhawks. Let’s say you’re trying to defend Detroit Red Wings magician-forward Pavel Datsyuk. Nine times out of 10, you’re probably going to look foolish. That doesn’t mean you’re a bad hockey player – because you’re not. In this thought experiment, you are a great hockey player, just not as great as the Wings’ 34-year-old center. Don’t take my word for it. Ask Patrick Sharp, who so far has been the Hawks’ most valuable player of the postseason. Sharp has six goals and several key takeaways in the playoffs but still isn’t sure whether the best strategy against Datsyuk is to sit back and defend the puck or charge forward and play the body. “I mean, pick your poison,” Sharp said Friday after the Hawks practiced at the United Center. “He’s one of those guys that can be standing still and make you look silly. He’s physical, as well, so if you rush at him, he’s always got the ability to knock you over. “It’s pretty scary when he’s coming down at you with the puck.” Then again, the Hawks have an entire team that looks pretty scary to

VIEWS Tom Musick the rest of the league. They’ll look to increase their series lead to 2-0 today in the Western Conference semifinals when they host the Red Wings for a nationally televised matinee game. The Hawks are smart enough to prepare for a Game 2 pushback from the Wings, who were dominated in Wednesday’s series opener while being outscored, 4-1, and outshot, 42-21. Remarkably, Datsyuk registered no shots on goal after recording 49 points in the regular season. Another goose egg Saturday is unlikely from the talented Russian. He had seven points in seven games against the Anaheim Ducks in Round 1 and has 101 career points in the playoffs. That’s why Hawks coach Joel Quenneville told his players to pay special attention to No. 13. “Still dangerous,” said Quenneville, who coached the St. Louis Blues when Datsyuk entered the league in 2001-02. “I think that when you watch him play, there are so many things that he can

do in the course of a game. He’s still a threat no matter what situation he’s presented with. “He’s one of those players that does things nobody else can do. He does things that can wow you. So that’s an ongoing challenge.” Of the Hawks’ forwards, Patrick Kane’s playing style most closely resembles that of Datsyuk. Both have the ability to weave through defenders, and both can fire a puck to the back of the net just as easily as they can snap a perfect pass to the tape of a teammates’ stick. Those similarities are no coincidence. Although Kane is a decade younger than Datsyuk, he studied the Wings’ playmaker during his formative years as a star prospect. “He’s a great player,” Kane said. “He’s one of those guys that before I came to the NHL, any time the Red Wings were on TV, you’d try to watch because of the things he does on the ice.” Nothing foolish about that. • Northwest Herald sports columnist Tom Musick can be reached at tmusick@shawmedia.com and on Twitter @tcmusick.

BLACKHAWKS NOTES

Hawks say coach deserving of recognition By TOM MUSICK tmusick@shawmedia.com CHICAGO – Dave Bolland chuckled at the question about his gruff leader. Was Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville as intimidating as he seemed behind the bench? “No, not at all,” Bolland said with a gap-toothed smile. “He’s a teddy bear.” Make that a teddy bear with a chance to become a two-time NHL coach of the year. Quenneville, 54, was named Friday as a finalist for the Jack Adams Award, which is given every season to the league’s top coach. Other finalists for the award include Bruce Boudreau of the Anaheim Ducks and Paul MacLean of the Ottawa Senators, with the winner

to be announced during the Stanley Cup Final series next month. Thirteen seasons ago, Quenneville won the award as the coach of the St. Louis Blues. His team won the Presidents’ Trophy that season, as they did again Joel t h i s s e a s o n , Quenneville when Quenneville guided the Hawks to a 24-game point streak to start the year and a league-best 367-5 record. However, Quenneville deflected all praise to his players. “The fun factor this year working with this group is over the top,” Quenneville said. “It was a special regular

season.” Patrick Kane and his teammates said Quenneville played a big role in their success, even if he chose not to admit to it. “The thing you really learn from him is that when you play good defensively, you’re going to have more chances on the offense,” Kane said. “He really preaches coming back and being a good defensive player.” As for being a teddy bear? The description cracked up Quenneville, who could not believe it was Bolland, of all players, who uttered the words. “I haven’t been called that one before,” Quenneville said with another laugh. Wait and see: Viktor Stalberg wore a white jersey again Thursday while practicing on

the “fifth line” with Brandon Bollig and Jamal Mayers. Quenneville did not say whether Stalberg would play in Game 2 after sitting out the opener, but the Hawks’ coach typically does not change his lineup after wins. Stalberg, who will be an unrestricted free agent after the season, said he did not expect the recent benching to affect his possible future with the Hawks. “No I just think it’s part of [hockey],” Stalberg said, “And whether I’m here or not next year, we’ll see what happens.” Hawks bits: Bolland explained the reason he went after Wings forward Justin Abdelkader during Game 1. “He got me in the ‘groan’ area,” Bolland said, smiling at his intentional mispronunciation.

COLD BLACKHAWKS 1. Brandon Saad: We’re still waiting for a playoff goal from the Hawks’ rookie winger, who drew a minus-1 rating despite a 4-1 win in the series opener and recently has failed to take advantage of his time on the top line. 2. Nick Leddy: A bad delay-of-game penalty on Wednesday, not to mention a minus-1 rating, is enough to put the Minnesota native on this list. 3. Andrew Shaw: Speaking of bad penalties, Shaw was whistled twice in the first period, but luckily his teammates bailed him out on the penalty kill. RED WINGS 1. Niklas Kronwall: Shhh. Nobody tell him that the second round of the playoffs has started. Kronwall failed to show up in Game 1, notching a minus-2 rating to go along with a tripping penalty in the second period. 2. Brendan Smith: The holiday season is more than six months away, but Smith was generous enough to give Sharp the puck to set up the Hawks’ first goal. 3. Gustav Nyquist: Guilty of hooking, Nyquist watched from the penalty box as Marian Hossa scored on the power play to thrill a Game 1 crowd.

Pick to click We apologize to White Sox play-by-play announcer Ken “Hawk” Harrelson for stealing his phrase. Then again, his nickname is Hawk, so hopefully he understands. Blackhawks: Patrick Kane Although Kane has yet to score a goal in the playoffs, he has been tremendous with the puck, tallying six assists and dominating puck possession. Eventually, all of that hard work is going to pay off in the form of a game-changing goal. Red Wings: Pavel Datsyuk It’s tough to explain, but the Hawks somehow managed to hold Datsyuk to zero shots on goal during the series opener. Expect a more aggressive Datsyuk in Game 2, which means that the Hawks will need to rely on team defense instead of one player.

Three stats to know 1. Do take it away: The Hawks had 11 takeaways in Game 1 compared with only four for the Wings. Kane led the Hawks with a pair of takeaways, while nine other players notched one apiece. 2. Don’t give it away: The Hawks also protected the puck by committing only two giveaways (Michal Rozsival, Andrew Shaw) in the series opener. A similar approach will be necessary Saturday for the Hawks to go up, 2-0. 3. Home cooking: Including the first round against the Minnesota Wild, the Hawks now are 4-0 on home ice and have not lost since April 20 in a shootout against the Phoenix Coyotes.

Tweet, tweet If you’re on Twitter, here is a good account to follow during the game. @2ndCityHockey Often snarky, always timely, you can bet they’ll be watching every second. – Tom Musick tmusick@shawmedia.com

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AP photo

The Detroit Red Wings’ Pavel Datsyuk (right) controls the puck Wednesday past the Blackhawks’ Michal Handzus during Game 1 of their Western Conference semifinal series at the United Center. Datsyuk was held without a point or a shot in the Hawks’ 4-1 win.


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Page C10 • Saturday, May 18, 2013

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Business

SECTION E APPEARS INSIDE TODAY

Page E4

Breaking news @ www.NWHerald.com

Business editor: Chris Cashman • ccashman@shawmedia.com

THE MARKETS 121.18 15,354.40

Saturday, May 18, 2013 Northwest Herald

“We had to completely rebuild the kitchen from the ground up, but everything is now back the way it was.”

State jobless rate falls to 9.3 pct.

Judy McGurn, owner of the Breakers Restaurant in Crystal Lake 33.72 3,498.97

15.65 1,666.12

The Associated Press

OIL

$95.94 a barrel +$0.78

THE STOCKS Stock

Abbott Labs AbbVie AGL Resources Allstate

Apple AptarGroup AT&T Bank of Montreal Baxter CME Group Coca-Cola Comcast Covidien Dean Foods Dow Chemical Exelon Exxon Facebook Ford General Motors Google Hillshire IBM JPMorganChase Kohl’s Kraft Foods Group Live Nation McDonald’s Microsoft Modine Moto Solutions OfficeMax Pepsi Pulte Homes Safeway Sears Holdings Snap-On Southwest Air. Supervalu Target United Contint. Wal-Mart Walgreen Waste Mgmt. Wintrust Fincl.

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Change

36.59 47.17 44.18 50.00 433.26 57.07 37.44 60.41 72.94 65.17 42.97 42.64 65.77 20.95 35.82 35.15 91.76 26.25 15.08 33.42 909.18 36.60 208.44 52.30 51.58 56.11 13.88 101.54 34.87 9.82 57.84 12.00 83.80 23.95 25.15 57.53 91.67 14.38 6.95 71.06 34.75 77.87 49.61 42.39 37.64

-0.24 +0.96 +0.69 -0.16 -1.32 +0.50 +0.06 +0.04 +1.09 +0.94 -0.12 -0.23 +0.10 +0.36 +0.72 +0.36 +1.06 +0.12 +0.44 +1.03 +5.31 -0.17 +3.75 +1.33 -0.45 +0.59 +0.19 +0.42 +0.79 +0.01 +0.31 +0.25 +0.06 +0.60 +0.14 -0.01 +0.83 +0.24 +0.26 +1.06 +0.25 -0.63 +0.78 +0.40 +0.53

COMMODITIES Metal

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Change

Gold Silver Copper

1355.70 22.135 3.3125

-31.20 -0.524 +0.018

Grain (cents per bushel) Close

Corn Soybeans Oats Wheat

652.75 1448.50 375.50 683.25

Kyle Grillot - kgrillot@shawmedia.com

Susie Nelson serves customers behind the bar at the Breakers Restaurant during a recent reopening, three months after a car crashed into the restaurant. The accident caused significant damage to the kitchen as well as the exterior part of the building. “It’s a great place with excellent customers. It’s such a joy to work here,” Nelson said.

Brake for Breakers CL restaurant reopens 3 months after crash By LAWERENCE SYNETT lsynett@shawmedia.com CRYSTAL LAKE – After being closed for more than three months, the Breakers Restaurant is back to doing what it does best – mixing tropical drinks and serving up Chinese food. The Crystal Lake establishment shuttered its doors in February after a vehicle crashed into the building, located at 7728 Route 14. The accident damaged the kitchen, and more than $58,000 in repairs later, the business reopened this month. “We had to completely rebuild the kitchen from the ground up, but everything is now back the way it was,” owner Judy McGurn said. “It’s been outstanding since we reopened, so many people are glad we are back.” The Breakers remains one of the oldest restaurants in McHenry County, originally opening in 1949 after Lenny and Marion Felcman purchased the business. More than six years into the venture, the husband and wife met George Don, who was hired to run the kitchen. The current chefs at the restaurant are the grandson and granddaughter-in-law of Don. Joanne Spielman was hired in 1969 to manage the restaurant, and she took over ownership of the business more than 30 years later. Her daughter, McGurn, began working at the restaurant in 1975 as

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Live cattle Feeder cattle Lean hogs

119.55 143.525 92.40

The Breakers Restaurant What: Restaurant featuring Chinese food and tropical drinks Where: 7728 Route 14, Crystal Lake Information: Call 815-455-3494 (carry out), 815-459-9860 (reservations), or visit www. breakerstikibar.com a busgirl. She worked all aspects of the business until 2009, when she took over running the business after her mother retired.

See BREAKERS, page E2

“I Brake for the Breakers” button at the Crystal Lake restaurant.

Change

+11.25 +21.00 -2.25 -4.50

Retiring boomers driving sales of small businesses JOYCE M. ROSENBERG AP Business Writer

Livestock

Kyle Grillot – kgrillot@shawmedia.com

Breakers Restaurant employee Virginia Soldon of Crystal Lake serves customers during a recent grand reopening.

Solid hiring helped lower unemployment rates in 40 U.S. states last month, the most since November. The declines show the job market is improving throughout most of the country. Illinois’ unemployment rate fell to 9.3 percent in April, down from 9.5 percent in March. There were 2,000 fewer jobs over the month, but 40,300 more jobs than a year ago. The Labor Department said Friday that unemployment rates increased in only three states: Louisiana, Tennessee and North Dakota. Rates were unchanged in seven states. California, New York and South Carolina all reported the largest unemployment rate declines in April. Each state’s rate fell by 0.4 percentage points. The report said 30 states added jobs in April, while 18 reported fewer jobs. Nationwide, employers added 165,000 jobs in April and the unemployment rate fell to a four-year low of 7.5 percent. The economy has added an average of 208,000 jobs a month since November. That’s up from only 138,000 a month in the previous six months. Unemployment is declining in many states because the housing industry is creating jobs again. Rates have also declined because many of the unemployed have stopped looking for work. The government counts people as unemployed only if they are actively seeking jobs. Texas has created 41,500 construction jobs in the past year. That’s helped the state be the nation’s leader in job growth over the past year. The state added 33,100 jobs last month and 326,100 jobs over the past 12 months. Texas’ unemployment rate stayed at 6.4 percent in April compared with March, but has fallen from 7 percent a year ago. New York gained 25,300 jobs in April – second most among the states – and 111,600 jobs in the past year. The job gains in April helped pushed the state’s unemployment rate down to 7.8 percent from 8.2 percent in March. Some of the decline was also because people stopped looking for work. Florida added 17,000 jobs in April and 119,100 in the past year. More than half of April’s job gains were in construction. The state has gained 15,500 construction positions in the past year.

Change

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NEW YORK – Baby boomers preparing for retirement are driving a surge in small business sales, as they find more and more buyers confident enough in the improving economy to expand their own businesses through acquisitions. In the first three months of this year, the number of sales that closed jumped 56 percent from the same time in 2012, according to BizBuySell.com, an online marketplace for small businesses. Retirement was the No. 1 contributor to business sales in the fourth quarter of last year and the first quarter of 2013, according to a survey by Pepperdine University and two trade groups, the International Business Brokers Association and M&A Source. “It was almost like a light switch went on in January,” says Michael Schuster, a broker with World Business Brokers in Miami. “We started getting a lot of activity with sellers who said, ‘I don’t want to go through another downturn or tough time. I

want to see if I could sell my business.’” Sales are so strong in Florida that Schuster’s brokerage is opening two more offices in the state. Three-quarters of the sellers or potential sellers that his company sees are baby boomers, most of whom don’t have family members willing to take over their businesses. Some of these owners want to sell just part of their firms, essentially taking on a partner, because they don’t want to keep carrying all the risk themselves. Honey Rand fits the category. After 17 years of running her Tampa, Fla., public relations firm Environmental PR Group, she’s starting to think about selling. The 55-year-old wants to get away from the administrative work that goes into running a business, and focus on working with clients. “Like most people who end up starting a business, I’m really good at the work I do and I’d love the opportunity to wallow around in it,” says Rand. She’s optimistic that she’d be able to sell, because she was

AP photo

Roberta Bonoff, president and CEO of Creative Kidstuff, poses at the store in St. Paul, Minn. The toy retailer just expanded by buying a 26-year-old online and catalog toy retailer, Sensational Beginnings. Bonoff said the owner was tired and ready to sell. approached twice by prospective buyers in the last 10 years. And Rand expects that she would remain with the company for a period following a sale to help with the transition to

new management — something that many business owners do.

See BOOMERS, page E2


BUSINESS

Page E2 • Saturday, May 18, 2013

Gauge of economy’s future health up in April The Associated Press WASHINGTON – A measure of the U.S. economy’s future health rose solidly in April, buoyed by a sharp rise in applications to build homes and a better job market. The Conference Board said Friday that its index of leading indicators increased 0.6 percent last month to a reading of 95. That followed a 0.2 percent decline in March. The index is intended to signal economic conditions three to six months out. Conference Board economist Ken Goldstein said the index is 3.5 percent higher at an annual rate than it was six months ago, suggesting expansion for the economy. Goldstein said that steady job gains and a recovering housing market are driving the economy and helping offset deep federal spending cuts that threaten growth. The index is composed of 10 forward-pointing indicators. Strength in April came from the surge in building permits, a drop in applications for unemployment benefits and a rising stock market. Holding the index back in April: Weaker consumer confidence and a decline in the average hours worked at U.S. factories. A separate report Friday from showed consumer confidence jumped to near a sixyear high in early May. The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index rose to 83.7, up from 76.4 in April. Economists attributed the gain to record-high stock prices, cheaper gas and solid employment gains. “Changes in confidence don’t always filter through into changes in spending, but the omens are good,” said Amna Asaf, an economist at Capital Economics. The job market has also improved over the past six months.

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Richmond Spring Grove chamber heating up The Richmond Spring Grove Chamber of Commerce is as busy as the bees that are pollinating the spring flowers. We are offering several events for the community to get out and get involved. Coming up fast is the annual Golf Outing Wednesday at the Twin Lakes Country Club. If golf isn’t your game, you can still enjoy dinner with us, take advantage of the live and silent auctions, and participate in the Chopper Ball Drop. Chopper Ball Drop raffle tickets are available at the chamber office, Nature’s Feed and Olive Black Martini & Wine Lounge. Cost is $10 each, with a grand prize of $1,000. Proceeds go to the Richmond-Burton Scholarship Fund. The drop will take place at 5:45 p.m. during the golf outing. For more information, call 815-678-7742.

CHAMBER NEWS Laura Ferris

wine orders. You must be 21 to participate; IDs will be checked. The public is welcome to rediscover Richmond!

***

Brats cooking on the grills, people cheering on their favorite team and a day of fun is happening on June 27. It all starts at 8:30 a.m. at Tammy’s Pizza & Pasta in Spring Grove where we’ll enjoy breakfast pizza before loading the bus for the Cubs vs. Brewers 1:10 p.m. game in Milwaukee. Cost is $85 for transportation, food, and beverages. Special members price is $65. Tickets are limited, so reserve yours now.

***

The Spring Wine Walk will be held in downtown Richmond from 1 to 4 p.m. June 8. Tickets are available at the chamber office, Anderson’s Candy Shop and Olive Black Martini & Wine Lounge. There are 10 stops on the walk with three wines featured at each location. Experience the unique shops with tours and appetizers while selecting just the right wines for the summer. Each ticket is $35. The last stop of the Wine Walk will be International House of Wine & Cheese where you will receive your bonus bottle of wine, and place your

*** Do you hear the roar of the engines? The RSG chamber Charity

are going to change hands in the next 10 to 20 years,” says Bob Balaban, managing director at Headwaters MB, an investment bank based in Denver. He believes so-called ‘strategic acquisitions’ — purchases by companies looking to expand — will be a key factor in that trend. In a tight economy, companies looking to grow feel that it would take years to build up their businesses. “They have to do acquisitions to continue to grow and grow quickly,” Balaban says. Buyers appear to be ready to step up and are looking for companies that will be good fit with their existing operations. Health-care related businesses like medical billing firms, pharmacies and even medical and dental practices are particularly in demand, says Keystone’s Richards. He’s seeing less interest in restaurants and retailers, industries where profit margins are thinner and where many companies are still struggling. Schuster, the Miami broker, says he sees people who were waiting for the economy to pick up, and they’ve decided that business is good enough for them to take the plunge. “There’s a lot of people who were sitting the sidelines and could not do that anymore — the election’s over and things are getting better,” he says. Sellers are benefiting from this trend because buyers are willing to pay more money if a deal will quickly get them into the markets they want to serve, says Mike Carter, CEO of BizEquity, a company that helps businesses calculate their sales price. “For a growth company, we’re seeing them getting almost 15 percent more than what they were getting four years ago (during the recession),” he says. Creative Kidstuff, a toy retailer based in Minneapolis, just expanded by buying a 26-year-old online and catalog toy retailer, Sensational Beginnings. Roberta Bonoff, CEO of Creative Kidstuff, said the

• BOOMERS Continued from page E1 While she hasn’t definitely decided to sell just yet, she plans to talk to a broker soon. “I like to think ahead, to understand the process and the things that could affect a sale or sale price. When the time comes, or if it comes, I want to be ready. I don’t want to feel like it’s a fire sale,” she says. In California, the pace of sales is more of a “slow pickup, not a huge spike,” says Dave Richards, owner of Keystone Business Advisors, a brokerage in Westlake Village, Calif. “Baby boomers are where we’re really seeing the growth. It’s pent-up demand,” Richards says. One of those boomers is Walt Pocock. In late 2011, Pocock met with a broker to discuss possibly selling his Chino, Calif., business, Palo Verde Landscape Management Co. But he and his wife Dee, who also worked with the company, weren’t quite ready to let it go. However, selling became “something we were thinking about from then on,” Pocock said. Within a year, the 70-year-old decided he was ready to retire and Dee, 78, agreed. The difficult business climate was a factor in their decision. “The economy had not been good and it had been a struggle and we got tired of the struggle,” he said. The put the company on the market in January, and quickly had several bidders. Pocock got his full asking price, and the deal closed April 1. Now he and his wife are looking forward to traveling around the country in their motor home. Sellers like Pocock are going to keep the market for small businesses thriving for years to come. “Trillions of dollars of business value

Auto Show is fast approaching. It will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. July 28 at Scot Forge, Winn Road and Route 12, Spring Grove. Rain date is Aug. 4. We are taking registration for vehicles. The Independent Order of Odd Fellows will be roasting a pig. We also will be adding expo space to feature your business, and a flea/farmers market. Join us for this charitable event. With all this fun stuff happening in your own back yard, why would you go any other place? We hope to see you. For a full list of events and dates, check out the RSG website at www. rsgchamber.com or call the office at 815-678-7742.

• Laura Ferris is executive director of the Richmond Spring Grove Chamber of Commerce.

owner was tired and ready to sell. Bonoff declined to disclose the purchase price, but said “everybody walked away from the purchase with their needs met.” Both companies serve similar markets, but 87 percent of Creative Kidstuff’s revenue comes from its six traditional brickand-mortar stores. Buying Sensational Beginnings will allow it to expand its online operations. “We just found this as an opportunity to grow our online business and theirs and have more people get to know who we are,” Bonoff says. She has her ear to the ground for more opportunities to expand. “When the opportunity looks like the right fit, we’ll do it,” she says. BCER, an engineering firm in Arvada, Colo., bought another engineering business, Rimrock Group, which specializes in designing technological systems for new buildings and renovations. The purchase allowed BCER to immediately expand into an area of expertise it didn’t have — and that would have taken it years to develop by putting a staff together one by one. Some buyers are looking to expand into a new geographic area. Jodi Hamilton now owns both of the Dream Dinners franchises in Chicago, giving her the entire territory for the stores where customers assemble ingredients for dinners that they can pack up and take home to cook. Hamilton opened a store two years ago in the city’s Ukrainian Village neighborhood, and hoped to expand at some point. Then earlier this year, the owner of a Dream Dinners in the Roscoe Village neighborhood approached Hamilton and asked if she wanted to buy her store. It took Hamilton only about a week to say yes. She nailed down a private loan, and closed the deal. “It was too good an opportunity to pass up, knowing that we would have the entire Chicago market,” Hamilton says.

• BREAKERS Continued from page E1 “Family is very important to this place, and most of our employees have been with us for many years,” McGurn said. “My mother taught me to always keep an even temper, and how to make all those secret tropical drink recipes.” The Breakers maintains a staff of about 20 employees, eight of whom have been at the restaurant for at least 30 years. One of those employees, Kate Aschoff, started working at the restaurant in 1993 as a member of the wait staff. She left the business for a few years to pursue other ventures and returned to bartend and waitress in 2001. Aschoff took over as manager when McGurn took over ownership. “Working here is like working with family because me and Judy are like sisters,” Aschoff said. “We are such a close group of people. I have never been involved in something like this.” The drink menu features a slew of tropical concoctions, highlighted by the Mai Tai. The food menu, an array of Chinese options, is well known for its egg rolls. “Those are the two things everyone knows us for,” McGurn said. “We are going to keep doing this until we are too old to mix drinks.”

BRIDGE

Crossword Across

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“Boxing Helena” star Sherilyn Squad leader? Comic response, in Variety Greek restaurant menu subheading Realization vocalization Plumber’s union? Catcher of the rye? Dipsticks Part of the Ring of Fire Light alternative Modern resident of ancient Ebla Many gallerygoers

1 ___-Calais

(French department) 2 Imparter of 41 fruity overtones 42 3 Hub for Jordan Aviation 4 Half-pint 45 5 Eyeshades? 6 Vingt-et-un, e.g. 48 7 How some instruments are sold 51 8 Gessen who wrote the 2012 52 Putin biography “The Man 53 Without a Face” 55 9 Bayou predator 10 Cold war grp.? 60 11 “___ gather” 12 Military brass 61 13 Horror-struck, apparently 14 First moment 62 16 Goose 22 Ferry ride, say 23 Ushers in Down 24 Assault team ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 25 Depart from C A E S A R S A L A D C B S 26 Punish by fine A R C H I P E L A G O O R E 28 They get stuck in corners M A K I N G A R U N F O R I T E B E R T F O R E F R O N T 29 Arizona’s ___ Fria River L I R E B A K E S I N G E S A D J O R E L C E A S E 30 Some of a caterer’s L U G E R C O N D O S inventory M A I L E R B O S T O N 31 Upscale Italian C A R N E Y L A M B S shoe brand A N T E S H O N E Y A D S T O F U L A R K S S T E P 32 Where Captain Cook landed in S L O P S O V E R F E R M I 1770 P E R S O N A L O P I N I O N 33 “___ first …” A T M R E N E L A C O S T E W E S T R A I L M A R K E R 34 Conductor Leibowitz 1 “Spin

the Black Circle” Grammy winner of 1995 9 Sort who needs to button up 15 Buttoned up 17 Not have a hunch? 18 What shy people often have 19 Trendy tuna 20 With 22-Across, runner’s woe 21 Prohibition, e.g. 22 See 20-Across 24 City near Pyramid Lake 25 Uglify 27 “Superman II” villainess 29 Atlas offerings 37 Ivory tower setting 38 Some expressions of false humility 39 Large wire

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For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

To subscribe to the Northwest Herald, call (815) 459-8118.

By PHILLIP ALDER Newspaper Enterprise Association

We have been looking at Stayman, but exactly how it operates is inluenced by your other no-trump responses. In today’s deal, look at the South hand. Your partner opens one no-trump, showing 15-17 points. After East passes, what would you respond? The irst question is: Does your partnership use transfers into the minors? If you do, you should go via that route, perhaps responding two spades. (And then two clubs followed by three clubs would show a fourcard major, long clubs and at least enough points for game.) If, however, you do not transfer into the minors, traditionally responder bids two clubs, initially treated as Stayman, then rebids three clubs, which is a drop-dead sequence. The responder has a long club suit in a weak hand, and opener is expected to pass. More logical is to play an immediate jump to three of a minor as a sign-off. Then two clubs followed by three clubs shows a long minor (with or without a four-card major), at least enough points for game and either worry that three no-trump might fail and ive of a

minor make, or interest in a slam. In this deal, let’s assume you jump to three clubs as a sign-off. West leads the spade 10. What would you do? Note that one no-trump by North should be defeated by a heart lead. Here, you want to restrict your losers to one spade, one heart and two clubs. You should plan to take two diamond inesses and to start the club suit from the dummy (lead up to honors). If your irst trump play is from hand, you will have to lead the king to squash East’s jack -- but why guess?

Contact Phillip Alder at pdabridge@prodigy.net.


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Page E3

St. Pierre Sold on Aeroseal Duct Sealing Process By Elizabeth Harmon In 2002, Joe St. Pierre of Spring Grove solved a problem and found a business he’s passionate about. “My daughter’s bedroom was always hot in the summer and cold in the winter,” said St. Pierre, who has more than twenty years of experience in the heating and air conditioning industry. After determining that his furnace and central air conditioning were functioning properly, St. Pierre turned his attention to the ductwork, and in the process discovered Aeroseal Duct Sealing.

the system has been sealed the homeowner can save as much as a third on their heating or cooling costs,” he said. The Aeroseal process can also alleviate odors and allergens— something St. Pierre discovered when he sealed the ducts in his parent’s home. “Their house used to have this musty, crawlspace smell because the ducts passed through the crawlspace and drew in the air. My mom had allergies too, but once we sealed the ducts, guess what went away? The stinky smell and my mom’s watery eyes,” he said. Sealed ducts may also need to be cleaned less frequently, he added.

“It made such an outstanding diference that I became completely sold on this technology. It’s one of the best things I could have done with my home,” he said. Today, St. Pierre is the sales director for Aeroseal Solutions in Crystal Lake, which ofers a patented technology to seal a home’s ductwork from the inside out. The process takes about a day for the average home and can dramatically improve comfort and air quality. St. Pierre cites statistics from the U.S. Department of Energy that 25 to 40 percent of all conditioned air leaks out through the ductwork and never makes it into rooms furthest from the furnace or central air unit. “That’s why so often upstairs rooms are hot in the summer or too cold in the winter. It’s hard to properly heat or cool a house when up to 40 percent of your heat or AC is leaking into the walls,” he said. Not only does conditioned air leak out, dust from insulation leaks in. “According to the EPA, up to ninety percent of the dust in today’s homes has some form of insulation mixed in. You’re drawing some of the worst pollutants in your home right through your ducts, into your rooms and into your lungs,” said St. Pierre. Sealing the ducts closes the entry point for insulation dust and the exit point for conditioned air, making homes more comfortable, improving air quality and energy eiciency. “Once

St. Pierre’s company ofers free estimates and serves customers throughout Chicagoland, and into Wisconsin and Indiana. “We come out, we listen to the customer, take a look around and put together a plan based on what the customer needs,” he said. While ductwork might seem an unusual thing to be excited about, St. Pierre is passionate about what he does. “When you can provide a solution to a problem, whether it’s hot rooms, cold rooms or allergies, look them in the eye and tell them this will make a diference, then deliver on that…it makes it very easy to get up and go to work in the morning,” St. Pierre said.


CLASSIFIED

Page E4• Saturday, May 18, 2013

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Jobs | Real Estate | Legals | Vehicles | Stuff

LEGAL ASSISTANT

Must have Real Estate experience in fast paced law firm. Bilingual skills a plus. Email resume & salary requirements to: hrattorney@hotmail.com

Sales

Work with a small group of young adults that hand out copies of area's leading publication while explaining the benefits of home delivery. Early Evenings / Saturday mornings available.

Manufacturing Accounting

STAFF ACCOUNTANT Antioch based consumer goods company seeks a Staff Accountant. Ideal candidate will have BS degree in accounting with good analytical and communication skills. Must be an organized self starter proficient in Microsoft Office Suite. Responsibilities will include General Ledger, costing and preparing Financial Statements along with other duties. Experience required, CPA preferred. Full time position with benefits. Send resume to: khp.resume@ kayhomeproducts.com

MIG WELDERS

2nd shift (Mon-Fri) 3+ years experience. Must FIT-UP & read blueprints. Other 2nd shift openings:

Mechanical Assembler Industrial Painter Fabricator Apply in person Tue-Thur Illinois Blower 750 Industrial Dr, Ste E, Cary fax resume: 847-639-0509 or email: kjorgenson@illinoisblower.com

PLUMBER

CABINET MAKER

Looking for FT Licensed Plumber. Fax resumes to: 847-961-5013

Crystal Lake Custom Cabinet shop looking for Laminating & Vertical Panel Saw experience. 5 years. Start immediately. Only call if you have cabinet making experience. 815-790-4651

CONSTRUCTION - Local Construction Co. seeks Heavy Equip. Operators, CDL-A Drivers, and laborers. Merit Pay. Call 815-653-2214

RECEPTIONIST / OFFICE ASSISTANT McHenry Cardiology office looking for a full time Receptionist / Office assistant. This is a Monday-Friday position with NO Benefits offered. Good typing and people skills a must. Please fax resume to Jamie at 815-344-0124

Salary/commission. Average Earning Exceed $700 per week. Must have reliable vehicle. Knowledge of West/Northwest suburbs a plus.

CALL PETE @ 630-776-7418 mail/e-mail resume to: Chicagoland Crew Company 611 Austin St. Downers Grove, IL. 60515 chicrewinc@comcast.net

SHOP ASSISTANT McHenry County electrical Contractor seeking shop assistant to maintain equipment & tools, building maintenance, handle material orders and job site deliveries. Must be able to lift 80 lbs and have a good driving record. This position requires person with mechanical abilities, computer skills and good organizational skills. Experience driving with a small trailer is a plus. Electrical / construction background is a plus. Email your resume of work experience to: const-hiring@hotmail.com

Retail

TRANSPORT SERVICE CO. is hiring...

CLASS A CDL DRIVERS out of Lake in the Hills, IL We offer competitive pay, medical benefits for you and your family, paid training on product handling, paid uniforms, paid vacations, 401K & MORE! 1 year tractor-trailer experience, Tank & Hazmat endorsements (or ability to obtain) & safe driving record required.

APPLY NOW at: TheKAG.com or call (800) 871-4581 General Labor Exp'd Asphalt Maintenance Laborers experience in any of the following is required. Asphalt Paving (Laborer, Lute, Bobcat, Roller or Paver) Asphalt Sealcoating Parking Lot Striping. Asphalt Truck Driver (will also be a laborer). Must read, write and speak English and all applicants MUST have a clean CDL Class A drivers license. Please call for application, or fax a resume to 815-648-9069 (Handwritten resume is OK) Hastings Asphalt Services Inc Harvard IL 815-648-9099

ASSISTANT MANAGER ColorTyme Round Lake Beach Bolingbrook We are looking for a talented, career-oriented Assistant Manager to join our team and assist the Store Manager with the overall operation of the business. Responsibilities include: Merchandising the showroom floor; Executing sales and collections programs; Managing and maintaining inventory; Opening and closing the store; Assisting with product delivery, service and returns You: Must have positive attitude, be a team leader, and have the desire to advance; Must have a valid driver's license with a good driving record; Must have 1 or more years' experience working in a retail, management, and/or sales background. Apply within at: 328 W. Rollins Rd, Round Lake Beach (next to Big Lots) or 231 S Bolingbrook Dr, Bolingbrook, (in Food 4 Less shopping center) Having a Birthday, Anniversary, Graduation or Event Coming Up?

Social Services

THERAPIST Allendale Association, a Child Welfare, Mental Health and Special Education facility is seeking a FULL-TIME THERAPIST for our day treatment educational program at our Woodstock, IL location. Will be responsible for individual, group and family treatment for day treatment students. Masters degree in Psychology, Social Work, Counseling or related human services field. Competitive salary/benefits. Please visit www.allendale4kids.org to download application and send with a copy of your resume to:

ALLENDALE ASSOCIATION Attn: HR Dept, P.O. Box 1088 Lake Villa, IL 60046 Fax: 847-356-0290 AA/EEO

YOUR

EW CAREER IS CALLI G

The Illi ois Network for Adva ced Ma ufacturi g (INAM) a d McHe ry Cou ty College prese t…Adva ced Ma ufacturi g Certificate a d Degree Programs MCC i • • • • •

vites you to explore up a d comi g careers i : Robotics Mechatroÿics Advaÿced Maÿufacturiÿg Computer Numerical Coÿtrols (CNC) Iÿdustrial Maiÿteÿaÿce.

MCC has partÿered with maÿufacturers to ofer studeÿts the opportuÿity to traiÿ for jobs that are close to home aÿd ofer excelleÿt startiÿg salaries. Salary averages $20 per hour for someoÿe ÿew to the ield aÿd up to $40 aÿd higher with additioÿal traiÿiÿg aÿd experieÿce. Lear more about MCC’s Adva ced Ma ufacturi g Certificate a d Degree Programs at free i formatio sessio s: Tuesday May 21 at 10 a.m. Wedÿesday May 22 at 2 p.m. At the McHeÿry Couÿty Workforce Ceÿter, 500 Russel Court, Woodstock. For more i formatio , visit www.mche ry.edu/i am email kcallaha @mche ry.edu or call (815) 479-7563.

Experienced Care Provider looking for job in Crystal Lake or within 20 miles. References available. 773-308-6801 or 815-455-6628

RECEPTIONIST & TECHNICIAN Receptionist at Crystal Lake veterinary office. Open 7 days a week, position hrs between 210pm. Experience preferred. Receptionist & Technician at South Elgin office. Days & hours vary. Email: rrah2007@gmail.com Retail

Part-Time Help Wanted We need a self-motivated, cheerful person who is great with customers. Must be available weekends. Retail cashier and sales exp. req'd. See Lisa weekdays 10-2:30 at the Volo Antique Malls 27640 W. Volo Village Rd. Volo, IL. 60073

VETERINARY ASSISTANT/ TECHNICIAN PT position available. 10-15hrs/ week. Experience required. Resumes/Applications may be submitted in person, by e-mail or fax. Hebron Animal Clinic 10106 Main St. dstoerp@air-speed.net Fax: 815-648-2918

DENTAL CHAIRSIDE ASSISTANT for established & growing Dental office in Dundee area. PT/FT. Experience needed. Bilingual Spanish preferred. Fast learner. Fax resume to attn Jeannie 847-426-3269 or email: info@neufamilydental.com FRONT DESK SECRETARY / CNA Marengo. Excellent computer skills. Full time / part time. Exc benefits. Fax resume 815-479-1280

CARPET INSTALLED HALF PRICE – Semi-retired carpet cleaner will clean carpets for half price, using the Thrifty Dry Foam method. You vacuum when dry. Open areas only. Cash only. Harvard, Marengo, Woodstock areas. Free phone estimates. Gary: 815-943-4793

Eves Thurs & Fri & Sat day. Positions avail in Algonquin. Fax 847-658-4864 or Apply in person to fill out application. ROSEN HYUNDAI 789 S. Randall Rd., Algonquin Automotive

18516 Route 176 815-568-1400 Koi Pond Supply of Japan, Inc.

Are You A People-Person Looking for A Summer Job? Gary Lang Auto Group is looking for part-time greeters to work on Saturdays and two weeknights per week. No experience is necessary. We'll teach you about the vehicles. Just bring your warm and friendly personality. Must be 18 and a licensed driver. Apply in person at 1121 S. IL Route 31, McHenry, Illinois and ask for Jon Trotman or Dave Demma. Gary Lang Auto Group is a drug-free workplace.

CAREGIVER WANTED Sat. & Sun. 9am-2pm Occasionally extra hrs. English speaking, non-smkng for disabled man. Call after 10:30am 815-344-4013 in Johnsburg, IL.

Octupational Therapist/Trainer PT, good pay, flex hours, flex days, Lake In The Lakes area. Must have good medical knowledge of spine, pre-op and post-op. 847-854-6843

CAT LOST 9 months old male main coone, lost Mchenry area near Chapel Hill Road. Long hair, hair growing out of ears, and long bushy tail. Name SAMMY. Please call Lisa 815-578-9456 with ANY information. REWARD Cat – Male – Orange & White Domestic – Short Hair Mix – 7 years Old – Answers To Parcheesi – Lost In The Neighborhood Of 500 Silver Lake Rd. Cary (Has Chip) 847-639-4786 Dog Lost 5/7, near Coventry Subdivision of Crystal Lake. Orange w/white patch on chest, male, Pit Bull & Lab mix, 45-50lbs

$REWARD$ 608-228-6804 815-861-9199 Gold Chain w/Saggitarius Medal lost week of May 1, 2013 at Hinsdale Hospital. REWARD. 708-246-0106

CAREGIVERS & CNAs NOW HIRING $130 per day, 1-3 days/week. Exp. LIVE-IN Caregivers & CNAs Visiting Angels of Crystal Lake Apply online at va175.ersp.biz/employment

Mother of 4, FT/PT. Meals, fun and very educational. CPR/1st Aid Cert. Exp & Ref Avail. 262-949-9217

DRIVER

McHenryCountySports.com is McHenry County Sports

Local Milk Delivery - Huntley

DAYCARE OPENINGS!

ALGONQUIN - 2 BEDROOM Quiet and clean building with storage, laundry and parking. $800/mo. 847-401-3242

CARY HUGE 1 BEDROOM Washer/dryer in unit. Recently updated, full size kitchen, parking. $735/mo. 815-404-1354

Crystal Lake 1BR $760

Quiet building, hardwood floors, heat and water incl. No pets. 815-455-6964

CRYSTAL LAKE 2BR

!!!!!!!!!

PRAYER to the BLESSED VIRGIN

Close to metra + lots of extras, $885/mo. Call Stan 815-923-2521~815-245-6098

FOX LAKE 1 BR, Laundry on-site, no pets, Sect 8 OK, $670/mo + sec. 847-812-9830

Fox Lake Good Value!

1 & 2 Bedroom ❍ ❍

Affordable Apts. Garage Included

815-334-9380 www.cunat.com WOODSTOCK 1BR $595, 2BR $745. All appliances, D/W, wall to wall carpet. A/C, balcony/ patio, on site lndry. No pets. 847-382-2313 or 708-204-3823

Very large 1 bedroom, dining area, balcony, storage and laundry in building, no dogs, $695/mo. Agent Owned 815-814-3348

Spacious 1 & 2BR Apts HARVARD AREA Huge 3BR, 2BA loft apt. Quiet. Frplc, W/D, C/A. Fish/Swim. Pets ok. $1025/mo. 815-648-2716 HARVARD 1 MONTH FREE* Autumn Glen Luxury Apts. Spacious 2 bdrm Apts avail Free extra storage Free heat!! Pets welcome! Rents from: $800 Free 55” flat screen TV CALL TODAY! 815-943-6700 www.gallinacos.com M-F: 10am-6pm Sat: By Appt (*2nd floor units only)

MOVE-IN SPECIAL Starting at $780

Near All Shopping! Fitness Room, FREE Cable, Pets Welcome * Income Restrictions Apply Call for an Appointment to See Your New Home Today! 815-337-9600 WOODSTOCK Modern Loft Apartment ~ 2BR Historic Rogers Hall, $825/mo. NO DOGS! 815-482-4909

Woodstock Rural 1BR

Rev Anne 847-431-4014 Weddings, Blessings, Memorials, Christenings

TEXT ALERTS Sign up for TextAlerts to receive up-to-date news, weather, prep sports, coupons and more sent directly to your cell phone! Register for FREE today at

NWHerald.com

HUNTLEY – Newer 2BR 1 FREE adult pool/fitness membership. Clean, move in cond. Att garage. $1160/m. 708-456-1620

McHenry 2-3BR, 2-3BA Almost New! 2 car, appls. Rent To Own, $1150-$1250/mo. Pets OK. Available now. 815-385-5525

MCHENRY ~ 3BR, 2.5BA TH Bsmt, W/D, 2 car garage. No pets/ smoking, near NIMC, $1400/mo. Agent Owned 847-722-8911 Woodstock. Lovely 2BR, 2.5BA TH w/loft. Close to Metra, Square, Emricson. 2 car garage, full bsmnt. $1250/mo. 815-861-3507

MARENGO Duplex 2br, 2bath, full base, 1 car att gar, c/a. $900 + util 815-762-1961

WOODSTOCK 3 BEDROOM 1.5 Bath, A/C, Stove, Refrigerator, Garage, No Pets. Broker Owned. 847-683-7944 HURRY!!

All new, $650/mo, utilities incl. NO PES. 815-482-2846

WOODSTOCK STUDIO

J. S.

HEBRON 2BR CONDO

All appl, patio, private entrance. $750 - 900, garage available. 815-455-8310

Remodeled 2 full bath, W/D, $995/mo + sec, health club available. 815-509-7058

Hebron Everything New!

Say this prayer for three consecutive days and then you must publish and it will be granted to you. Grateful Thanks.

2 bedroom, 1.5 bath Condo. All appl and garage. MUST SEE! $995/mo. 815-477-8377 Lv Msg

MCHENRY 2BR CONDO

(Never known to fail)

Oh, most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel fruitful vine, splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God. Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. Oh star of the sea, help me and show me here you are my Mother. Oh Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth, I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in my necessity (make the request). There are none which can withstand your power. O Mary conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee (three times). Holy Mary, I place this prayer in your hands (three times)

Crystal Lake Quiet & Secure

WOODSTOCK COMMONS

1BR, appl, W/D. $640/mo + sec including heat. 815-355-2158

Close to Square, no pets/smoking. $435/mo + utilities + security. 815-338-1742

Cary. 3BR, 1BA. 2.5 car garage. C/A. Appls, W/D. Fenced yard, deck. Broker lic. $1250/mo+sec. 815-354-4575

DEKALB

ISLAND LAKE 2 BEDROOM Quiet building, no pets. $825 + security. 847-526-4435 Marengo Large 1 & 3 BR most utilities included Broker Owner $650 & UP 815-347-1712

Marengo Upper 1 BR Quiet bldg, heat incl, W/D on site. No dogs, no smkg, $550. 815-596-1363 McCullom Lake: 1BR, bright, clean, spacious, newly renov., secure building, no pets, no smoking, $625 Call Tom 815-388-5039

McHenry $199 Move-In Special Large 1BR, from $699. 2BR, 1.5BA from $799. Appl, carpet and laundry. 815-385-2181 Buying? Selling? Renting? Hiring? To place an ad, call 800-589-8237 Northwest Herald Classified

Immaculate 4,280 sq ft Office / Warehouse. Air conditioned office area and bathrooms Great location near airport & tollway in DeKalb.

815-754-5831

OPEN HOUSE NEW MARENGO TOWNHOME Sat. May 18 & Sun., May 19 - 11:00am-3:00pm

926 Brookside Court, Marengo $170,000

EMBROIDERER - EXPERIENCED Join our fun fast paced work environment. Flexible part time hours for experienced embroiderer. Contact us for more information at 815-260-3517

Email: classified@ shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898 or online at: www.nwherald.com

SILVERCREEK

nd

!!!!!!!!!

Happy 9th Birthday Caitlyn Parks!

Crystal Lake newly decorated 1st floor, 2BR, 2BA, condo, W/D, clubhouse, exercise room & pool, avail 6/1 $1000/mo. 815-477-2229

WOODSTOCK

Crystal Lake Large 2BR Units

CARY 3 BED 2 BATH TOWNHOME $1200 a month. Newly painted. 2 parking spaces & access to community pool. Appliances included. Contact Cindy 773-3874798 or Mike 773-419-8525

UPDATED! Randall Village. $895 + deposit. 630-669-5646

Crystal Lake Garden Apt $735 1BR, 2 floor, $800/mo, no pets/ smoking. Heat incl, near metra. Garage available. 815-344-5797

Algonquin 2BR Sharp Ranch Townhome Neutral décor, all appl incl W/D, garage, no smoking, $1025/mo. 708-302-0876

CRYSTAL LAKE 1BR CONDO

May have boat, newly remodeled. Large 2BR, 1BA, first floor. Picture windows overlooks large wooded grounds. NO PETS. $1795/mo. 630-655-2888 Cell 630-899-8899

Early AM start. CDL B req. Send Resume and MVR to: P.O. Box 1319 Crystal Lake, IL 60039. No phone calls please.

Send your Classified Advertising 24/7 to:

MCHENRY QUIET BUILDING

1 bedroom, heat and water incl. $675/mo, security deposit req. NO PETS. 815-382-6418

CRYSTAL LAKE DUPLEX ON SHORE

Found: Women's ring at the beach in McCullom Lake. Call to identify (815)341-4975

❤Ceremonies of the Heart❤ McHenry Expressive Learners Structured days of fun as you learn and rates to meet any budget. 815-236-5460

Short Terms Available W/D and Fitness Center. 815/363-0322

No smoking/pets, $795 + sec. 815-893-0059 ~ Lv Msg

We Love You!

Open House Sales of High Quality Koi of Japanese Origin We are also exhibiting equipment and goods related to KOI keeping, such as koi food, pond supplies, superb koi nets and much more.

IRISH PRAIRIE APTS

1BR Move-In Ready!

INSTALLED 815-653-7095 ~ 815-341-7822 www.mailboxpostman.com

Mom, Dad, Rylee and Shianne

10th KOI FESTIVAL MARENGO th

MCHENRY - ROUTE 31

Woodstock Studio $585/mo+sec. Efficiency $550/mo + sec.1-BR $650/mo + sec, all 3 furn'd w/all utils incl. No Pets. 815-509-5876

MAILBOX POSTS

815-219-2823

SAT, MAY 18 NOON - 5PM SUN, MAY 19th 10AM - 3PM

PT Cashier/Receptionist Northwest Herald Classified 800-589-8237 www.nwherald.com

Near square, D/W, W/D. Spacious, clean and just painted. $720/mo. 815-394-9050

ANIMAL CARE

Animal Care Persons needed. Skills needed range from cleaning to certified technicians. Must be experience with cats & dogs, with references. Call 815-355-9589

Share It With Everyone by Placing a HAPPY AD!

WE'VE GOT IT!

Woodstock Upper 1 Bedroom

PT summer care, ages 8-12. Fun house, lots of fun activities. 815-403-8407

Repaired and Re-Stretched

Veterinary

Auto Northwest Classified 800-589-8237 www.NWHerald.com

25 hours per week Part-time Office Assistant needed at our McHenry office. Must be detail oriented and have strong computer, communication and customer service skills. Minimum of 2 yrs office exp. preferred. Fluency in Spanish a plus. EOE Send cover letter & resume to: Attn: Jan 4-C: Community Coordinated Child Care 667 Ridgeview Dr. McHenry, IL 60050

Nights & weekends. Apply in person: Cardinal Wine & Liquor 305 Virginia St, Crystal Lake

Full and part time positions are needed for a Certified Veterinary Technician in our 24 hour emergency clinic. Previous experience in emergency clinic preferred but not required. We are located in the Northwest suburbs of Chicago in Crystal Lake. We are looking for a highly skilled technician with excellent interpersonal and communication skills. Schedule flexibility (days, nights, overnights) is a must, including weekends and holidays. Our facility is committed to providing excellent patient care with an emphasis on superior client service. We also take pride in providing an organized learning environment for all employees. Salary commensurate with experience. We offer a benefits package for full time that includes health insurance, Simple IRA, CE and more. Please e-mail resume to resume@aemc911.com

McHenry/Park Ridge Estates

OFFICE ASSISTANT

STOCKING – PART TIME

CERTIFIED VETERINARY TECHNICIAN

Drivers

JOIN THE 4-C TEAM!

CREW SUPERVISOR

CRYSTAL LAKE $279,900

951 WEDGEWOOD DRIVE MARY SIEWENIE C21 AFFILIATED 847-815-8878

To Advertise Your Open House Listing Call 815-526-4459, Mon.-Fri. 8:00am-4:30pm DEADLINE: Wednesday @ 2:00pm

LINE AD DEADLINE: Tues-Fri: 3pm day prior, Sat: 2pm Fri, Sun-Mon: 5pm Fri OFFICE HOURS: Mon-Fri, 8am-5pm PHONE: 815-455-4800

SUN 10-2

Brand New, “Brackmann-Built”, Ranch Duplex in Brookside Meadows. 2 BR, 2 BA with full basement for future expansion .Two units available for immediate occupancy. Located on a quiet cul-de-sac with open space behind - a perfect location! Maintenance-free Exterior with excellent custom features like: Pella Windows, 6-Panel Solid-core Doors, English Basement and many others.

RE LTOR

New eritage

Corey Brackmann (815) 482-2479

EMAIL: classified@shawsuburban.com, helpwanted@shawsuburban.com ONLINE: www.nwherald.com/classified FAX: 815-477-8898


CLASSIFIED

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

2BR, 3BA + Loft TH

Beautiful Views! Large wooded grounds, beach, may have boat, 3-4 bedroom, 1.5 bath, porches. NO PETS! $1695/mo. 630-655-2888 Cell 630-899-8899

Large master bath, full bsmt, 2 car garage. $1250/mo + sec. Age Restrictions may apply. Free Health Club Membership. Pet Friendly. 815-363-5919 Or 815-363-0322

Crystal Lake/Burton's Bridge 2 bedroom, 1 bath, W/D, fenced yard, $900/mo + security. 815-355-0358

MCHENRY ~ 4 BEDROOM

SPRING GROVE 3BR, 3BA

JOHNSBURG - 3 BR, 1 bath Nice Ranch house for rent. 1 car attached garage, C/A Johnsburg Schools. Newly remodeled. $1,100 per month. 847-274-8287

JOHNSBURG 3BR 1 bath, 2 car garage. $1000/mo. 815-814-1731 Johnsburg: 2BR, 1.5BA, 2 car heated gar., exc. cond. , avail. 7/1, $1000 815-908-9961

Marengo - Furnished Room

With cable, utilities included. $115/wk or $460/mo + deposit. 815-482-6347

Woodstock - Furnished Rooms All utilities incl. $445 - $475. Call Bill 815-260-5259

Pets OK. Dish washer, central air. $1090/mo. Available now! 773-510-3643 ~ 773-510-3117 2300 sq ft, appliances, 3 car garage, full basement, pets OK. 2150/mo + sec. 815-403-9631

CRYSTAL LAKE: VERY CLEAN 4BR, 2BA, 1 car, A/C, stove, frig., W/D, Pets OK/fee. Av. 6/1 $1375/mo. 815-355-5791

East Wonder Lake Nicely furnished room w/house priv. Utils/cable. Call for details. $460/mo+dep. 815-349-5291

McHenry Patriot Estates

Crystal Lake On Lake

Spring Grove 3BR, raised ranch, 2BA, fireplace, deck, large yard, 2 car gar., $1275/mo. 847-438-8800 Spring Grove Located 4 miles North in Camp Lake/Trevor on 1/2 acre, 3 bed 1 bath ranch on a crawl space, 2.5 det garage, newly remodeled, all appliances, Long Term Lease. $1195 mo. Land Management Properties 815-678-4771

HOUSE TO SHARE SWF (no smk/drnk) to share house in McHenry. In town. Clean & safe. Priv bdrm, bath & fam rm. $500 + 1/2 util. Nice. 815-861-6996

Woodstock ~ Single Male With 2 dogs looking to rent room in farmhouse. Full house privileges, $500/mo. 815-814-7308

Large garage spaces. Call Stan for details. 815-923-2521 or 815-245-6098 Lake In The Hills 15'Wx40'Lx16'H 12'x14' OH door, vehicles, boats, contractors, full house of furniture. Only $290/mo. 847-658-7360

Wonder Lake 2BR Raised Ranch 2 full bath, family room, 2 car garage, $1150/mo + security + ref. 815-728-0298

Woodstock: 2100sq ft, overhead door, heavy power, $750/mo. Broker Owned 815-347-1712

Wonder Lake ~ West Side

2BR, 1BA, broker owned. $825 + sec. Pets OK with deposit. Call Shawn 224-577-5521

MARENGO PRIVATE FARM

30 acres woods, 1 mile from town. 5BR, 3BA, 3000 sq ft, A/C, bsmt. Garage, heat, A/C, wood floors. $2400/mo. 312-607-6406

Wonder Lake. 2 BR.- Lrg. lot with gar., No pets. Walk to lake. $850/m + sec + utils. 847-276-5685

Crystal Lake Hurry Last One Left Clean Office Suite. 400 SF. Incl. all utils + High Speed DSL. $525/mo. 815-790-0240

Marengo. 2BR. 2 car garage. Full basement. Stove, fridge, D/W. $900/mo. 815-353-8901

McCullum Lake. Newer Doll

Wonder Lake/West Side

House Ranch, 2BR, ctrl AC, fncd. yard, pets are welcome.

Clean 2BR, DR, basement. 1 car garage, fenced yard. $985/mo. 815-388-2604

847-651-9906

Wonder Lake: large 3BR, 1BA, 1 car garage, fenced yard, east side of lake $975/month Broker Owned 815-347-1712

McHenry 2BR with Den

CRYSTAL LAKE SUN, MAY 19 10AM-2PM 951 WEDGEWOOD DR. On C. L. Golf Course Duplex 3BR, 2.5BA, full bsmt, 2 car.

On corner lot, 2 car garage, $985/mo. 815-388-2604

$279,900

MCHENRY 3BR in Winding Creek Sub 2BA, 2 Car, BSMT, Fenced yard $1650/month Riverwoods School dist. 815-363-7285

McHenry 4 Bedroom ~ Kitchen, DR, FR, laundry, appl, C/A, 2 car garage, big deck. Close to beach, $1380/mo + sec. 815-385-3269 McHenryCountySports.com is McHenry County Sports

WOODSTOCK FARMHOUSE On acreage, 3BR, 2BA. $1350/mo. Agent Owned. K. D. Schaid Appraisal 815-363-2449

Mary Siewenie C21 Affiliated 847-815-8878

Woodstock ~ 827 Laurel St.

Send your Help Wanted Advertising 24/7 to:

2BR, 1.5BA, basement, 1 car garage in lovely area. $1000/mo. No pets/smoking. 815-337-6935

Email: helpwanted@ shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898

Woodstock. 3BR, 1.5BA. Partially finished bmnt w/den & office. Nice yard, no gar., lrg driveway., Sec 8 OK. $1250/mo. 847-810-9115

P.C. Attorney for Plaintiffs PO Box 5 Marengo, IL 60152 (815) 923-2107 (Published in the Northwest Herald May 11, 18, 25, 2013 #A904)

Carpentersville Raised Ranch 2400 Sq Ft, 9 Rooms, 4BR, 3BA New appliances, carpeting, large fenced yard, deck, $285,000. 847-381-4843 ~ 708-204-3823

Crystal Lake 2BR Downtown

Wonder Lake 2 Bedroom

1 bath, fenced yard, garage avail, no pets. $900 with garage. $850 w/o garage + 1 mo sec. 815-728-8000

MCHENRY Open House SAT 5/18 & SUN 5/19 1-5 2711 BUSH TERRACE (Liberty Trails) $282,900 3 Bdrm Custom Ranch Like New 2 full baths, 3-car garage, large bsmnt 9' Ceilings thru-out, Cathedral in Great Rm Maint free brick and hardiplank exterior Pella windows, Oak doors, Fireplace Prof landscape w/sprinklers, brick patio and large open yard By Owner 815-385-4845

Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Page E5

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 22ND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OMAHA, successor by merger to CASTLE BANK, N.A., Plaintiff, vs. JUAN MOTA-SALAZAR a/k/a JUAN P. MOTA-SALAZAR and JANNET REYES, husband and wife; HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, if any; UNKNOWN OWNERS and NONRECORD LIEN CLAIMANTS, Defendants No. 12 CH 839 NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure herein entered, the Sheriff of McHenry County, Woodstock, Illinois, or his deputy, will on Thursday the 6th day of June, 2013, at the hour of 10:00 a.m., McHenry County Courthouse, Room 262, 2200 N. Seminary Avenue, Woodstock, McHenry County, Illinois sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder the property commonly known as 3601 Ellen Road, McHenry, Illinois 60050, McHenry County, Illinois. The property is residential property. This property will not be open for inspection. Terms of Sale: This real estate is being sold in an "As Is Condition" for cash and the successful bidder is required to deposit 10% of the bid amount at the time of the sale with the McHenry County Sheriff and the balance to be paid within twenty-four hours of the sale. KEITH NYGREN Sheriff of McHenry County FRANKS, GERKIN & McKENNA, P.C.

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 22ND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OMAHA, successor by merger to CASTLE BANK, N.A., Plaintiff, vs. JUAN MOTA-SALAZAR a/k/a JUAN P. MOTA-SALAZAR and JANNET REYES, husband and wife; HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, if any; UNKNOWN OWNERS and NONRECORD LIEN CLAIMANTS, Defendants No. 12 CH 839 NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure heretofore entered by said Court in the above entitled cause, Keith Nygren, Sheriff of McHenry County, Illinois will on Thursday the 6th day of June, 2013 at the hour of 10:00 a.m., McHenry County Courthouse, Room 262, 2200 N. Seminary Avenue, Woodstock, McHenry County, Illinois sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash and all singular, the following described premises and real estate in said judgment mentioned, situated in the County of McHenry and State of Illinois, or so much thereof as shall be sufficient to satisfy said judgment to wit: Part of the Northeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of Section 2, Township 44 North, Range 8 East of the Third Principal Meridian, described as follows, to-wit: Commencing at a point on the North line of said Southwest Quarter of Section 2, 66 feet East of the Northwest corner of the Northeast Quarter of said Southwest Quarter; thence South on a line parallel with the West line of the Northeast Quarter of said Southwest Quarter a distance of 400 feet to a point; thence East on a line parallel with the North line of said Southwest Quarter, a distance of 1,050 feet to a point for a place of beginning; thence East on a continuation of th la de ribed line di of

the last described line a distance of 189.2 feet to the center of the public highway; thence South along the center of said public highway a distance of 150 feet to a point; thence West on a line parallel with the North line of said Southwest Quarter, a distance of 188.9 feet to a point; thence North on a straight line a distance of 150 feet to the place of beginning, in McHenry County, Illinois. PIN No. 14-02-327-028 and 1402-327-029

on 09/19/2013. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at that time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 09/05/2013 by applying to the County Clerk of McHenry County, IL at McHenry County Government Center in Woodstock, IL. For further information contact

Together with all buildings and improvements thereon, and the tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging. This property is commonly known as 3601 Ellen Road, McHenry, Illinois 60050, McHenry County, Illinois, and is residential property. This property will not be open for inspection. Terms of Sale: This real estate is being sold in an "As Is Condition" for cash and the successful bidder is required to deposit 10% of the bid amount at the time of the sale with the MHenry COunty Sheriff and the balance to be paid within twenty-four hours of the sale. FRANKS, GERKIN & McKENNA,P.C. Attorney for Plaintiff PO Box 5 Marengo, IL 60152 (815) 923-2107 (Published in the Northwest Herald May 11, 18, 25, 2013 #A904)

PUBLIC NOTICE Legal Notice to Owners, occupants & interested parties: TAKE DEED NOTICE CASE # 10-TX-10106 County of McHenry, IL Date Premises Sold 10/18/2010 Certificate Number: 2009-00749 Sold for General Taxes of 2009 THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property (Vacant Lot) located on Chestnut Drive, Wonder Lake, IL 60097, McHenry Township, McHenry County, IL. Legal Description or Property Index No. 09-19-156-033 (old 007) This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of extended redemption from the sale will expire on 09/05/2013. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at Six (6) month intervals from the date of sale and may be further increased if the purchaser at the tax sale or his or her assignee pays any subsequently accruing taxes or special assessments to redeem the property from subsequent forfeitures or tax sales. Check with the county clerk as to the exact amount you owe before redeeming. This notice is also to advise you that a petition has been filed for a tax deed which will transfer title and the right to possession of this property if redemption is not made on or before 09/05/2013. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of McHenry County in Woodstock, Illinois at 1:30PM 09/19/2013

the County Clerk. Manoj Amin D/B/A RKNK Inc. Purchaser or Assignee. (Published in the Northwest Herald May 18, 19, 20, 2013) A958

PUBLIC NOTICE Legal Notice to Owners, occupants & interested parties: TAKE DEED NOTICE CASE # 10-TX-10105 County of McHenry, IL Date Premises Sold 10/18/2010

PUBLIC NOTICE 1 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS SECTION 00 11 13 1. Notice is hereby given by the Board of Trustees, Fox River Grove Public Library District, McHenry County, Illinois, that sealed lump sum bids will be received for the following: PROJECT:

HVAC and PLUMBING ALTERATIONS Fox River Grove Memorial Library 407 Lincoln Avenue Fox River Grove, Illinois 60012

OWNER:

Board of Trustees Fox River Grove Public Library District 407 Lincoln Avenue Fox River Grove, Illinois 60012

ARCHITECT:

RuckPate Architecture 22102 North Pepper Road, Suite 201 Barrington, Illinois 60010 (847) 381-2946 (847) 304-1218 (fax)

2. Description: generally the work may be described as follows: Replacement of certain existing HVAC equipment and plumbing piping. 3. Bids Due: bids will be received until 1:00 PM, 10 June 2013 at the Library and will be publicly opened and read at that time. 4. Document Date: the bidding documents are dated 14 May 2013 5. Document Availability: the bidding documents are available from the office of the Architect after 14 May 2013 in electronic PDF form by email at no cost. Printed sets are available from the Architect upon payment of the sum of one hundred dollars ($100.00) for one set of bidding documents, which amount shall be refunded to each party that actually submits a bid and who returns the drawings and project manuals in good condition within ten (10) days after bid opening. Documents may also be available for viewing from Dodge and Reed Construction Data. 6. Pre-Bid Meeting: a Pre-Bid Meeting will be held at the Library at 9:00 AM, 24 May 2013. Attendance is NOT mandatory. Owner's Rights: the Owner reserves the right to reject any and all bids or waive any informalities at its discretion. 7. Bonds: the successful bidder for the project is required furnish Performance and labor and material Payment Bonds in an amount equal to one hundred percent (100%) of the bid amount, with sureties to be approved by the Owner, and in the form required by the Bidding documents. 8. Insurance: the successful bidder is required to furnish insurance in form and amounts required by the Bidding documents, including guarantee of indemnity to the Owner and Architect against any and all claims which might arise for damages to persons or property due to the negligence of himself, his employees or agents, during the construction of said improvements and until the said improvement has been finally accepted as complete by the Owner. 9. Prevailing Wage: the successful bidder is shall pay not less than the prevailing rates of wages to all laborers, workmen, and mechanics performing work under this contract, as ascertained by the Illinois Department of Labor, and shall submit certified payroll records, in compliance with the Prevailing Wage Act (820 ILCS 130) and the requirements of the Bidding Documents. (Published in the Northwest Herald May 18, 2013. #A964)

Golf Rd. (Rt. 58) • Hoffman Estates, IL

800/935-5909 www.motorwerks.com

ANDERSON BMW

AVENUE CHEVROLET

360 N. Rte. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/682-4485

1998 W. McKee at Randall Road Batavia, IL

www.andersoncars.com

866/233-4837

BILL JACOBS BMW 1564 W. Ogden Ave. • Naperville, IL

800/731-5824 www.billjacobs.com

KNAUZ BMW

www.avenuechevrolet.com

MARTIN CHEVROLET 5220 W. Northwest Highway Crystal Lake, IL

www.KnauzBMW.com

MOTOR WERKS BMW Barrington & Dundee Rds. Barrington, IL

800/935-5913 www.motorwerks.com

MOTOR WERKS CERTIFIED OUTLET Late Model Luxury PreOwned Vehicles 1001 W. Higgins Rd. (Rt. 71) or 1000 W. Golf Rd. (Rt. 58) • Hoffman Estates, IL

111 S. Rte 31 • McHenry, IL

815/385-2000 www.bussford.com

SPRING HILL FORD

REICHERT BUICK 2145 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

815/338-2780 www.reichertautos.com

AUTO GROUP - GARY LANG CADILLAC

www.springhillford.com

847/669-6060

800/628-6087

www.TomPeckFord.com

www.antiochfivestar.com

866/561-8676

ZIMMERMAN FORD

www.raychevrolet.com

2525 E. Main Street • St. Charles, IL

CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE

RAY CHEVROLET 39 N. Rte. 12 • Fox Lake, IL

RAYMOND CHEVROLET

630/584-1800 www.zimmermanford.com

REICHERT CHEVROLET 2145 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

815/338-2780 www.reichertautos.com

AUTO GROUP - GARY LANG GMC Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

www.garylangauto.com

AL PIEMONTE CHEVROLET

800/935-5913 www.motorwerks.com

River Rd & Oakton, • Des Plaines, IL

SUNNYSIDE COMPANY CHRYSLER DODGE

ELGIN HYUNDAI

Route 120 • McHenry, IL

881 E. Chicago St. • Elgin, IL

815/385-7220

847/888-8222

www.sunnysidecompany.com

www.elginhyundai.com

KNAUZ HYUNDAI

888/800-6100 www.clcjd.com

SUNNYSIDE COMPANY CHRYSLER DODGE

ARLINGTON KIA IN PALATINE 1400 E. Dundee Rd., Palatine, IL

847/202-3900 www.arlingtonkia.com

RAYMOND KIA 119 Route 173 • Antioch, IL

224/603-8611

775 Rockland Road Routes 41 & 176 in the Knauz Autopark • Lake Bluff, IL Experience the best…Since 1934

www.garylangauto.com

KNAUZ MINI 409A Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL

847/604-5050 www.Knauz-mini.com

888/204-0042

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

www.billjacobs.com

888/794-5502

LAND ROVER LAKE BLUFF 375 Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL

847/604-8100 www.knauzlandrover.com

1051 W. Higgins • Hoffman Estates, IL

847/741-2100

1035 S. Rt. 31, One Mile South of Rt. 14 Crystal Lake, IL

815/459-7100 or 847/658-9050 www.paulytoyota.com

1119 S. Milwaukee Ave.• Libertyville, IL

847/816-6660 www.libertyvillemitsubishi.com

ANDERSON VOLKSWAGEN 360 N. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/682-4485 www.andersoncars.com

BILL JACOBS VOLKSWAGEN 2211 Aurora Avenue • Naperville, IL

800/720-7036 www.billjacobs.com

MOTOR WERKS PORCHE Barrington & Dundee Rds., Barrington, IL

www.oharehyundai.com CALL FOR THE LOWEST PRICES IN CHICAGOLAND

ROSEN HYUNDAI

BUSS FORD LINCOLN MERCURY

771 S. Randall Rd. • Algonquin, IL

111 S. Rte 31 • McHenry, IL

866/469-0114

815/385-2000

www.rosenrosenrosen.com

ANDERSON MAZDA Barrington & Dundee Rds. Barrington, IL

LIBERTYVILLE MITSUBISHI

www.billjacobs.com

888/553-9036

MOTOR WERKS INFINITI

1200 E. Chicago St. Elgin, IL

www.garylangauto.com

800/731-5760

River Rd & Oakton, • Des Plaines, IL

770 Dundee Ave. (Rt. 25) • Dundee, IL

ELGIN TOYOTA

www.elgintoyota.com

300 East Ogden Ave. • Hinsdale, IL

www.knauzhyundai.com

847/426-2000

www.raysuzuki.com

www.billjacobs.com

AUTO GROUP GARY LANG MITSUBISHI

847/234-2800

O’HARE HYUNDAI

888/446-8743 847/587-3300

800/295-0166

BILL JACOBS LAND ROVER HINSDALE

LAND ROVER HOFFMAN ESTATES

www.sunnysidecompany.com

360 N. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/682-4485 www.andersoncars.com

800/935-5913

BIGGERS MAZDA

www.motorwerks.com

1460 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

1320 East Chicago Street The Mazda Machine on Rt. 19, Elgin, IL

800/407-0223

847/628-6000

www.bullvalleyford.com

888/794-5502

PAULY TOYOTA

815/385-7220

BULL VALLEY FORD/ MERCURY

1564 W. Ogden Ave. • Naperville, IL

www.raymondkia.com

Route 120 • McHenry, IL

www.piemontegroup.com

BILL JACOBS MINI

www.oharehonda.com

847/683-2424

5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

815/385-2000

888/538-4492

206 S. State Street • Hampshire, IL

CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE

AUTO GROUP GARY LANG SUBARU

111 S. Rte 31 • McHenry, IL

www.garylangauto.com

O’HARE HONDA

www.antiochfivestar.com

AUTO GROUP GARY LANG KIA

BUSS FORD LINCOLN MERCURY

815/459-7100 or 847/658-9050

RAY SUZUKI

www.clcjd.com

800/628-6087

800/407-0223

PAULY SCION 1035 S. Rt. 31, One Mile South of Rt. 14 Crystal Lake, IL

23 N. Route 12 • Fox Lake

888/800-6100

105 Rt. 173 Antioch, IL

1460 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

www.motorwerks.com

866/480-9527

Barrington & Dundee Rds. Barrington, IL

200 N. Cook St. • Barrington, IL

BULL VALLEY FORD/ MERCURY

800/935-5393

www.garylangauto.com

MOTOR WERKS HONDA

FENZEL MOTOR SALES

www.Knauzcontinentalauto.com

200 N. Cook Street • Barrington, IL

888/794-5502

www.antiochfivestar.com

5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

847/234-1700

MOTOR WERKS SAAB

1107 S Rt. 31 between Crystal Lake and McHenry

800/628-6087

CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE

409 Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL

www.bullvalleyford.com

www.raymondchevrolet.com

MOTOR WERKS CADILLAC

888/794-5502

888/800-6100

847/395-3600

ANTIOCH CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

www.clcjd.com

118 Route 173 • Antioch, IL

877/226-5099

KNAUZ CONTINENTAL AUTOS

105 Rt. 173• Antioch, IL

www.garylangauto.com

AUTO GROUP - GARY LANG CHEVROLET

www.infinitihoffman.com

13900 Auto Mall Dr. • Huntley, IL

888/794-5502

www.motorwerks.com

www.st-charles.mercedesdealer.com

TOM PECK FORD

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

800/935-5923

888/280-6844

www.martin-chevy.com

105 Rt. 173 • Antioch, IL

www.garylangauto.com

225 N. Randall Road • St. Charles, IL

888/600-8053

ANTIOCH CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP

888/794-5502

1075 W. Golf Rd. Hoffman Estates, IL

800 Dundee Ave. • East Dundee, IL

www.motorwerks.com

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

MERCEDES-BENZ OF ST. CHARLES

815/459-4000

800/935-5909

AUTO GROUP - GARY LANG BUICK

INFINITI OF HOFFMAN ESTATES

ANTIOCH CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP

407 Skokie Valley Hwy. • Lake Bluff, IL

847/604-5000

BUSS FORD

800/935-5913 www.motorwerks.com

MOTOR WERKS CERTIFIED OUTLET Late Model Luxury Pre-Owned Vehicles

1001 W. Higgins Rd. (Rt. 71) or 1000 W. 1000 W. Golf Rd. (Rt. 58) Hoffman Estates, IL

800/935-5909 www.motorwerks.com

PRE-OWNED KNAUZ NORTH 2950 N. Skokie Hwy • North Chicago, IL

847/235-8300 www.knauznorth.com

BARRINGTON VOLVO 300 N. Hough (Rt. 59) • Barrington, IL

847/381-9400


CLASSIFIED

Page E6• Saturday, May 18, 2013 Certificate Number: 2009-02087 Sold for General Taxes of 2009 THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at Nunda Township, McHenry County, IL Legal Description or Property Index No. 15-29-329-006 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of extended redemption from the sale will expire on 09/05/2013. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at Six (6) month intervals from the date of sale and may be further increased if the purchaser at the tax sale or his or her assignee pays any subsequently accruing taxes or special assessments to redeem the property from subsequent forfeitures or tax sales. Check with the county clerk as to the exact amount you owe before redeeming. This notice is also to advise you that a petition has been filed for a tax deed which will transfer title and the right to possession of this property if redemption is not made on or before 09/05/2013. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of McHenry County in Woodstock, Illinois at 1:30PM on 09/19/2013. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at that time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 09/05/2013 by applying to the County Clerk of McHenry County, IL at McHenry County Government Center in Woodstock, IL. For further information contact the County Clerk. Jignesh M. Patel Purchaser or Assignee. (Published in the Northwest Herald May 18, 19, 20, 2013) A959

PUBLIC NOTICE Legal Notice to Owners, occupants & interested parties: TAKE DEED NOTICE CASE # 10-TX-10104 County of McHenry, IL Date Premises Sold 10/18/2010 Certificate No. 2009-02793 Sold for General Taxes of 2009 THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at Algonquin Township, McHenry County, IL Legal Description or Property Index No. 19-10-151-001 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of extended redemption from the sale will expire on 09/05/2013. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at Six (6) month intervals from the date of sale and may be further increased if the purchaser at the tax sale or his or her assignee pays any subsequently accruing taxes or special assessments to redeem the property from subsequent forfeitures or tax sales. Check with the county clerk as to the exact amount you owe before redeeming. This notice is also to advise you that a petition has been filed for a tax deed which will transfer title and the right to possession of this property if redemption is not made on or before 09/05/2013. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of McHenry County in Woodstock, Illinois at 1:30PM on 09/19/2013. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at that time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any

time on or before 09/05/2013 by applying to the County Clerk of McHenry County, IL at McHenry County Government Center in Woodstock, IL. For further information contact the County Clerk. Jignesh M. Patel Purchaser or Assignee. (Published in the Northwest Herald May 18, 19, 20, 2013) A957

PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on May 15, 2013 the Board of Education of Richmond-Burton Community School District 157 adopted a Resolution stating that the general prevailing rate of wages in this locality for laborers, mechanics and other workers engaged in construction work in the McHenry County area as determined by the Department of Labor of the State of Illinois as of May 8, 2013. A copy of this determination and resolution are available for review and inspection at the District 157 Office, 8311 N. Rte. 31, Richmond, Illinois. Michelle Graham, Secretary Board of Education Richmond-Burton Community High School District #157 (Published in the Northwest Herald May 18, 2013) A956

PUBLIC NOTICE ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS 2013 BITUMINOUS RESURFACING WORK SYCAMORE, ILLINOIS Sealed proposals will be received by the City of Sycamore on the 3rd day of June, 2013 up to the hour of 11:00 A.M. for bituminous resurfacing work at various locations in Sycamore, Illinois. The prevailing rates per diem wages, including legal holidays and overtime work for all classes of labor employed on the project, as furnished by the contractor shall be the prevailing scale rates in the County of DeKalb, Illinois as ascertained in accordance with the provisions of “An Act Regulating Wages of Laborers, Mechanics and Other Workmen Employed Under Contracts for Public Works: enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Illinois, approved June 26, 1941, as amended. Copies of the Bid Documents are on file for inspection and can be obtained at the Office of the City Clerk, 308 West State Street, Sycamore, Illinois at no charge. All proposals must be accompanied by a proposal guarantee consisting of a Certified or Cashier's Check, Bank Money Order or Bid Bond in an amount of not less than 5% of the total amount of the bid. The City reserves the right to reject any or all proposals and to waive or not to waive any informalities therein. By Order of the City of Sycamore, Illinois Candy Smith, City Clerk Dated this 18th day of May, 2013 (Published in the Daily Chronicle May 18, 2013. #A950)

WE'VE GOT IT! Northwest Classified 800-589-8237 www.NWHerald.com Visa, Mastercard and Discover Card accepted

PUBLIC NOTICE

1401 SAVANNA LN WOODSTOCK IL 60098.

ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE

Dated May 6, 2013

Public Notice is hereby given that on May 9, 2013, a certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk of McHenry County, Illinois, setting forth the names and postoffice address of all of the persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as

/s/ Katherine C. Schultz County Clerk (Published in the Northwest Herald May 11, 18, 25, 2013 #A912)

Dated May 9, 2013 /s/ Katherine C. Schultz County Clerk (Published in the Northwest Herald May 11, 18, 25, 2013 #A903)

PUBLIC NOTICE

ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE Public Notice is hereby given that on MAY 17, 2013, a certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk of McHenry County, Illinois, setting forth the names and postoffice address of all of the persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as PRINCREDIBLE located at 1217 TOWER LANE CARY IL 60013

ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE

Dated MAY 17, 2013 /s/ Katherine C. Schultz County Clerk

Public Notice is hereby given that on May 14, 2013, a certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk of McHenry County, Illinois, setting forth the names and postoffice address of all of the persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as

(Published in the Northwest Herald May 18, 25, June 1, 2013 #A961)

G & M ELECTRIC

ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE

located at 1291 MULBERRY LN CRYSTAL LAKE, IL 60014 Dated May 14, 2013 /s/ Katherine C. Schultz County Clerk (Published in the Northwest Herald May 18, 25, June 1, 2013. #A951)

PUBLIC NOTICE

The Illinois Classified Advertising Network (ICAN) provides advertising of a national appeal. To advertise in this section, please call ICAN directly at 217-241-1700. We recommend discretion when responding. Please refer questions & comments directly to ICAN.

PUBLIC NOTICE

CONFIDENT JOURNEYS located at 1453 TANGLEWOOD DRIVE CRYSTAL LAKE, IL 60014

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

PUBLIC NOTICE

Public Notice is hereby given that on April 25, 2013, a certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk of McHenry County, Illinois, setting forth the names and postoffice address of all of the persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as

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

located at 9013 US HWY 12, UNIT A, RICHMOND IL 60071. Dated May 14, 2013 /s/ Katherine C. Schultz County Clerk (Published in the Northwest Herald May 18, 25, June 1, 2013 #A960)

PUBLIC NOTICE

located at 5018 BARNARD MILL RD., RINGWOOD, IL 60072.

/s/ Katherine C. Schultz County Clerk (Published in the Northwest Herald May 4, 11, 18, 2013 #A847)

PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE File # 16006-A Public Notice is hereby given that on January 16, A.D. 2009, a certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk of McHenry County, Illinois, concerning the business known as ALL SERVICE CLEANING located at 519 ANDERSON DRIVE, LAKE IN THE HILLS, IL 60156, which certificate sets forth the following changes in the operation thereof: WITHDRAWAL OF NAME. Dated this 30th day of April, A.D., 2013 /s/ Katherine C. Schultz County Clerk

ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE Public Notice is hereby given that on May 6, 2013, a certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk of McHenry County, Illinois, setting forth the names and postoffice address of all of the persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as

Fully loaded, 900 miles, only $19,995. Ormsby Motors 815-459-4566

SUN, MAY 26 8-3 Adults $5 Sandwich Fair Grounds Sandwich, IL.

13 year old female Torti DLH This intelligent and curious beauty enjoys a good pet. She'd prefer to be the only pet, have a sunny spot to nap and a lap when she wants one.

NORA

(Published in the Northwest Herald May 4, 11, 18, 2013 #A837)

Call to advertise 815-455-4800 Northwest Herald Classified It works.

located at

JET

4 year old male Black DSH He originally came to us as a stray kitten. He was recently returned when his guardians were moving. He's confused and just wants to go home.

1969 Ford Mustang Conv.- Red w/ Black interior & top. Orig 250 cu in engine. Auto, ps, power top. Deluxe wheel covers. Very good cond. No rust. 58,000 miles. Real “head turner” $15,900. 815-459-1958

1994 Mustang G.T. Convt. A.T. Black tan, leather, very clean, low miles, $5,995. Ormsby Motors 815-459-4566

CATS

CATS

DSH Some cats have long hair, some have short, some like to play and some like to sleep. Come see some of our cats at the Crystal Lake Petsmart in the Adoption area during business hours or on Saturdays from 11am-1pm.

www.assisi.org • Email: info@assisi.org

815-455-9411

ANNABELLE

Australian Cattle Dog Mix 1 ½ year old female Annabelle is the sweetest Australian Cattle Dog mix we have ever seen. She is adorable and friendly and fun loving. She is a real find, and pretty too!

SHOGI

Shiba Inu/Jack Russel Mix 1 1/2 year old Male Shogi is an energetic fun loving boy. He loves to take walks and is very playful with people.

2000 Lincoln Continental

80K Mi, well maintained, $5500 815-459-9078 2002 Mitsubishi Lancer, 4 cylinder Good for HS or college student, cold air, AM/FM/CD, good tires, $2400 815-344-6711 2003 Ford Mustang $17000 40k miles. potent street rod, procharged 815-349-9443

2005 Pontiac G6, GT

2000 Jeep Grand Cherokee. Fully loaded. Leather Seats. Sun roof. 232K mi. Must see! $2600 OBO. 312-813-0765

$8500 or best offer. 92,900 mileage. Call 815-477-3586.

2007 Chrysler Touring PT Cruiser Local trade, NICE! $7,995. Ormsby Motors 815-459-4566

A Heart For Animals LIZZIE

young domestic shorthair calico She loves to be with you all the time! Please visit her at our pet adoption center in Crystal Lake.

ELWOOD

I BUY CARS, TRUCKS, VANS & SUVs

4WD, V8, Gray exterior with black leather interior, sunroof, stereo, runs good, some minor body work needed, no rust, tires near new. 141K miles. $3000 OBO. Call (815) 354-8569

2011 Chevy Traverse LT AWD, 27K miles.... What a Buy! $23,995. Ormsby Motors 815-459-4566

Will beat anyone's price by $300. Will pay extra for Honda, Toyota & Nissan

1987 Dodge Ram. Incl cap. Looks, runs great! Low miles. $750 262-203-2001 (McHenry)

815-814-1964

Utility Trailer – Flat Bed – 5ftx6ft long - $100obo 815-344-1736

2000 HONDA GL1500C VALKYRIE $5800 O.B.O. Moving, must sell. Great Bike! 847-361-3150 2005 YAMAHA V-STAR CLASSIC 1100 V-STAR CLASSIC, CUSTOM METALIC SILVER PAINT JOB, 22,433 MILES ADULT DRIVEN, MUCH MORE. $5295 OBO CASH ONLY CLEAR TITLE. 847-669-2250 2007 Moto Guzzi Breva 1100 600 mi. Guzzi bags & windshield. Serviced at 572 mi. New battery. Too top heavy for me. $10,000 OBO. Leave message 815-653-7200 2009 CF Moto 250 Fashion Scooter, automatic, 396 miles, great condition, $1500 815-477-4070 2009 HARLEY SPORTSTER 1200 custom, low miles, upgraded Harley paint set, chrome profile wheels, many extras, garage kept, $7500 847-400-4302

or

815-814-1224 !! !! !!! !! !!

WANTED: 1967 Barracuda Convertible Red w/white interior & top. Rotisserie restored. 3K mi since restoration. Excellent condition. $25,000 FIRM. 815-308-5557

OLD CARS & TRUCKS FOR

$CASH$

GARDEN SEEDS, flower & vegetable from 2012 815-338-9137 Call between 9a-9p

We pay and can Tow it away!

3rd Row Seat

Call us today: 815-338-2800

For 2001 Expedition, medium grey leather, exc cond, $100. 847-516-8015

ROUTE 14 AUTO PARTS

CONTRACTOR TOP - 8', $325. obo. 847-875-6739

Model “A” Horn (Ames) Good Condition $150 815-459-5983

Truck Tool Box – Ridgid – New Model 4100 A For Full Size Truck List Price $649 Asking $399 815-923-5879

Boots ~ Redwing

ATV TIRES (4)

Roof Rack – For 2010 Jeep Liberty – Used Once – 2 Months Old Paid $225 – Asking $100. 815-334-8278 after 3 pm

Gray Cinder Blocks. 24 & some halves. Must take all. 847-918-1360 Magazines – 75 M artha Stewart Living & 13 Hobby Farms Free 815-575-1591

Red Devils, size 25x8x12 front & 25x10x12 rear. Brand new, $300/obo 815-236-1048

1973 25ft Chris Craft Cruiser 307 V8 inboard, and trailer $2500/OBO 847-497-3692

Black , size 9 ½ D Chucka 5D Orig. $149, asking $40obo 815-338-5083 9am-9pm Dress Shirts – 10 – Arrow Button Down – Some Never Opened – White & Blue 16-32/33 $50 All 815-344-0125

www.HuskieWire.com All NIU Sports... All The Time

Bring in this ad for $5.00 off your first purchase of $25 or more

ALGONQUIN - 1435 W. Algonquin Rd (847) 658-7738 GILBERTS - 133 E. Higgins Road (847) 836-7738 www.fourlegspets.com

���!���� ���� YOUR NATURAL SOURCE OR PET OOD & MORE! ���� ���ÿ���� ���� !��ÿ � � ������ ������ �� �����

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DSH Some cats are young and some cats are young at heart. Come see Peg at the Crystal Lake Petsmart on Saturday from 11am1pm to talk about adopting your next furry friend.

JAKERS

PAISLEY

Retriever/Lab Mix 1 ½ year old female Paisley is a super affectionate sweet heart. See us on Facebook at FRIENDS OF MCHENRY COUNTY ANIMAL CONTROL for more info.

AVA

847-868-2432 www.aheartforanimals.org

3 yr. old Papillon mix 1 ½ yr. old domestic Will sit on your lap and give MISS MEOW MEOW long hair calico tons of kisses. Visit him in our Will play and cuddle all day, Pet Adoption Center! though prefers to be an only cat. Visit her in our Pet Adoption Center!

On Angels’ Wings Pet Rescue Crystal Lake

www.OnAngelsWingsinc.org • 224-688-9739

BENTLEY

American Staffordshire Terrier Mix –Young Bentley came to us from Aurora Animal Control.He is still a playful little puppy who loves people and attention. He is on the small side and does not seem to be growing much,so will probably stay on the small side.

HAPPY

815-728-1462 JOLEE

spayed short hair black 6 month old female kitten Sweet, loving and playful. See Jolee at the McHenry Petsmart.

NIKA

spayed 5 year old short hair black and white female cat Super afffectionate and sweet natured. Has a crinkled ear giving her character. See Nika at the McHenry Petco.

MICKEY

American Staffordshire Terrier -Young Happy came to Pets In Need from Waukegan Animal Control. She was picked up by the police as a stray. We estimate she is about six months old. Come meet Happy and her friends at the Petco in McHenry this Saturday from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.

neutered 1 year old short hair all gray male cat Shy at first but affectionate once he knows you. Loves other cats. See Mickey at the Algonquin Petsmart.

Animal Outreach Society www.animaloutreachsociety.org

815-385-0005

M,T,Th,F 10:30-4:30; W 10:30-6:30; Sat 10-2:30

Mount Curry/Lab Ret. Mix 1 ½ year old Female She is a very loyal, smart girl and would make a great family member. She does good around kids other dogs and cats.

Labrador Retriever Mix -Young Adult Jakers is another pet that we saved from Aurora Animal Control. He is a big boy and can be shy around people. He loves to play and has a lot of energy but will listen well for a couple of treats. He has already learned to shake!

P.O. Box 58 • Ringwood, IL 60072 e-mail: pincare@earthlink.net

See us the 2nd Sunday of each month at Crystal Lake Petco

815-459-6222 • mcac.petfinder.com Tan & White Black & White Lab Mix HALEY A Heart for Animals2 Rummage Sale 2 year old male year old Female 9amThis – 4pm He is a lover and is looking sweet girl loves to cuddle, Adoption Event 4pm some for someone who can spend play 1pm and –mastering time with him. He can curl on Sat.commands. May 18thCome meet this himself into a tight, little ball, sweet girl. Located at High Road Events just to have room on your 22 High Road in Cary 60013 lap! He does like to jump up For more information call 847-868-2432. to give hugs!

Stallion XL, hardside, good condition! $400 815-790-8567 1998 Coleman Nachez popup camper, VG condition, slide out dinette, 2 king beds, add-a-room, sleeps 8, boat/bike rails, McHenry, $3250, 815-344-0239

!! !! !!! !! !!

2002 Jeep Grand Cherokee

4 door, 82K miles, $7,995. Ormsby Motors 815-459-4566

McHenry County Department of Health Animal Control Division 100 N. Virginia St. • Crystal Lake, IL 60014 Adoption Hours:

RICKY

1988 Palomino Pop-Up Camper

* 815-575-5153 *

1994 Chrysler LeBaron

815-338-4400

DSH We have a number of cats that are looking for their forever homes. All our cats are up to date on their shots and are spay/neutered. Please call Peg with any question you may have 815-355-9589.

WILL BEAT ANY QUOTE GIVEN!! $400 - $2000 “don't wait.... call 2day”!!

1993 BMW 318iS 125K mi. White. In good condition. Clean Carfax. $1700. Waukegan. 619-805-5842 Grey, V6, 4 door, 136K miles. Garage kept, runs great! $2,200. 847-587-5875

TROLLING MOTOR

Minnkota, 5 speed, electric, $60. 847-973-2314

Located next to the Spring Grove Post Office.

Helping Paws Animal Shelter 2500 HARDING LANE, WOODSTOCK, 60098

CATS

815-385-7440

Canoe – Coleman 15ft – Exc. Cond. W/Paddles $245 815-988-8934

MOST CASH

815-970-4371

2011 Jeep Liberty with factory warranty, 6cyl, silver/black, RWD, power window/mirror. LIKE NEW. $15,295. 224-643-7744

2006 Chevrolet Trailblazer LS

YOUNG ONES YOGA

2 month old female Terrier mix She came from a kill shelter with her mom and littermates. This little brindle girl is a frisky, alert pup brimming with personality and love.

Canoe - Flat bottom by Coleman, $100.

CAR, TRUCK, SUV,

Show Cars $10, Car Corrral $20 & Specialty Trucks $20

• Natural Pet Foods & Supplies • In Home Pet Sitting • Dog Training • Doggy Daycare • Overnight Boarding CLARA

Will BUY UR USED

42nd ANNUAL AUTO SHOW

1980 Lund Power Boat 17ft. Open bow fiberglass. I/O. 160HP, Good Condition. EZ Loader trailer. Sound system. Marine Radio, Down riggers, Depth Founder, $3,500. Good Condition. 847-740-9244 Bimini Top – Fits 8ft. Wide Boat Maroon Color – Boot & Frame Inc. $125obo 815-245-7182

1990 & Newer

Dated April 25, 2013

RICHMOND DISCOUNT TOBACCO

A-1 AUTO

2013 Chevy Malibu

SECOND THAT

ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE Public Notice is hereby given that on May 14, 2013, a certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk of McHenry County, Illinois, setting forth the names and postoffice address of all of the persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as

2007 NISSAN SENTRA $9500. 815-757-0336

CALAMITY JANE

Tiger Young Female Calamity & her sister Annie Oakley are currently residing at PetVet in Huntley,meet them during business hours. Very sweet!

KITTENS

Orange Short hair Male Spring always brings kittens! We have some darling little orange boys looking for homes; maybe one could be yours?

A.S.A.P., Marengo www.ASAP-USA.org 815-568-2921

BARN CATS

See our cats daily at the Petsmarts in McHenry and Algonquin

All Types Adult Male & Female Need rodent control? Fully vetted barn cats; no charge to approved barns! All ages, colors, friendly & feral; call us for info.

Meet some of our kitties daily at Pet Vet in Huntley (8-6 M-F, 8-12 Sat)

Advertise your business here for $25.00 per week or $80.00 w/4 week run. Call Asma at 815-526-4459


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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

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SUDOKU

Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Page E7

CROSSWORD

HOROSCOPE

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TODAY - There’s a strong possibility that in coming months you will become involved in an endeavor that requires secrecy. It could either bomb or turn out better than you anticipate. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- Unless you think for yourself, others will do your brainwork for you. You might not be too happy about what they come up with. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Think through your moves carefully when it comes to financial dealings. Impulsive behavior will instigate numerous errors. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- What others think of you might be more important than usual. Be care that you don’t do anything that could lower the high esteem in which you’re now held. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Follow a previously conceived plan for a project to the letter. On-the-spot changes could seriously gum up the works. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- By being too inquisitive, you are likely to ask questions whose answers you don’t want to hear. What you don’t know can’t hurt you. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- Success is likely if you continue to use the same methods that have worked well in the past. Making revisions could throw you off course. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Don’t let your ego cause you to take an unsupportable position. Your pride can get you in some extremely hot water, if you’re not careful. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- Matters that affect your earnings must be given top priority. If something of a frivolous nature should pop up, put it on the back burner where it belongs. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Even though you might not get the last word in every instance, don’t let it frustrate you. If you’re patient, you’ll still be able to make your most important points. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- You’ll make good progress on your goals, though few will be completed. Be grateful for whatever headway you do end up making. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- When socializing with friends, find the balance between cheapness and extravagance. Don’t spend more than you can afford, but don’t hold back, either. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- A situation that has been souring a close relationship with a friend can be resolved, if you’re motivated to do it. Both parties must be forthright.

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CBS 2 News at (:35) Criminal Minds “Roadkill” CBS 2 News at CBS Evening Entertainment Tonight (N) ’ (CC) Elementary ’ (CC) (:35) CSI: Miami “Dead Woman (:35) Cold Case Criminal Minds ’ (CC) (DVS) 48 Hours (N) ’ (CC) ^ WBBM 10PM (N) (CC) Vehicular homicides. ’ (CC) Walking” Exposure to radiation. 5:00PM (N) ’ News (N) (CC) “The House” ’ To Be Announced (:32) 24/7: 138th Preakness NBC Nightly Saturday Night Live Kristen Wiig; NBC 5 Chicago (:29) Saturday Night Live (Season Finale) Host Ben (12:02) 1st Access Hollywood (N) ’ (CC) Grimm ’ (CC) % WMAQ Stakes (N) News at 10:00 Affleck; Kanye West performs. (N) ’ (CC) Secrets of the News (N) (CC) Look ’ Vampire Weekend performs. ’ Weekend ABC7 ABC World Bet onYour Baby A child tackles 20/20 “Rock ‘n’ Royalty: Billboard’s All-Stars” (N) ’ (CC) Private Practice Sheldon falls for a Private Practice A music prodigy Jeopardy! (CC) Wheel of ABC7 News ’ (CC) _ WLS Fortune (CC) the TP Takeoff. (N) ’ (CC) News ’ (CC) News book critic. ’ (CC) has a brain tumor. ’ (CC) Living Healthy Chicago’s Best Two and a Half Two and a Half Movie: ›› “Swordfish” (2001) John Travolta, Hugh Jackman. An ex-con WGN News at Nine (N) ’ (CC) 30 Rock “Jack Two and a Half Movie: ››› “The Others” (2001) Nicole Kidman. A devout woman ) WGN Chicago (CC) “Best Steaks 2” Meets Dennis” Men ’ (CC) believes ghosts inhabit her darkened island mansion. (CC) computer hacker is pulled into a high-tech heist. (CC) Men ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) Rick Steves’ This Old House Ask This Old McLaughlin As Time Goes Keeping Up (8:50) Death in (:45) Movie: ›››› “Rain Man” (1988, Comedy-Drama) Dustin Hoffman, Tom Cruise, Call the Midwife Cynthia’s patient Doc Martin New police officer + WTTW Europe (CC) By (CC) Appearances replaces Mark Mylow. (N) ’ (CC) Paradise (CC) Valeria Golino. The Oscar-winning study of an autistic man and his brother. House ’ (CC) Group (N) bullies his wife. (N) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) Antiques Roadshow A suit that Eisenhower’s Secret War Eisen- Eisenhower’s Secret War “Building Masterpiece Mystery! “Miss Marple, Series IV: They Just Seen It ’ Rev. ’ (CC) Lead Balloon Independent Lens All-male syn- Independent Lens Three teenage 4 WYCC belonged to Colonel Sanders. hower is candidate for president. Weapons, Talking Peace” ’ (CC) Do It With Mirrors” Murder is committed. ’ “Mistake” ’ chronized swim team. ’ (CC) boys from Haiti. ’ (CC) Pro Wrestling Whacked Out Cheaters His late-night liaisons with Unsealed: Alien Unsealed: ConAre We There That ’70s Show Futurama “Bend Family Guy ’ Movie: › “Primeval” (2007, Suspense) Dominic Purcell, Orlando Jones. Ring of Honor Wrestling (CC) 8 WCGV Yet? Files (N) (CC) spiracy Files (N) Report (CC) A news team hunts a giant crocodile in Africa. (CC) Sports ’ her friend. (N) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) Her” ’ (CC) That ’70s Show That ’70s Show Seinfeld “The Family Guy ’ Family Guy ’ Family Guy American Dad American Dad Family Guy ’ American Dad Futurama “Bend Futurama ’ American Dad American Dad Cheaters His late-night liaisons with : WCIU “Sibling Rivalry” ’ (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) Bookstore” ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) Her” ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) her friend. (N) ’ (CC) Love-Raymond The Office ’ Cops (CC) Ben and Kate Mancow Mash Cops “Busted!” Paid Program Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Fox 32 News at Nine (N) Hell’s Kitchen (CC) (DVS) @ WFLD MLB Baseball Great Romances (:07) Jack Lemmon: America’s Official Best of The Dust Bowl “The Great Plow Up” The dust storms of the 1930s. ’ The Mind of a P. Allen Smith’s Antiques Antiques Roadshow “Seattle” Movie: ››› “Suspicion” (1941, Suspense) Cary D WMVT Garden Home Roadshow Chef “Smoke” Everyman Oscar winner. (CC) Fest “Love IX” (CC) (DVS) Vladimir Kagan desk; oil painting. Grant, Joan Fontaine, Cedric Hardwicke. ’ Monk “Mr. Monk and the Genius” Monk New lotto girl Natalie. (CC) Psych A weather forecaster dies. Psych A tennis star disappears. Psych ’ (CC) Psych A suspicious death. (CC) Psych Talent-show judge. (CC) F WCPX Monk Monk buys a new house. Two/Half Men Big Bang News Big Bang Ben and Kate Bones “Yanks in the U.K.” (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Hell’s Kitchen (CC) (DVS) Law & Order ’ G WQRF MLB Baseball Bones “Yanks in the U.K.” The MLS Soccer: Chicago Fire at Philadelphia Union. From PPL Park in Chester, Pa. (N) (Live) Burn Notice Michael tracks down a The Closer “Manhunt” Brenda’s The Closer “Blindsided” Fritz meets Crime Stoppers EP Daily (N) ’ EP Daily (N) ’ R WPWR murder of a young British heiress. Case Files new contact. (CC) team hunts for a serial killer. Brenda’s father. (CC) (CC) (CC) CABLE 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 Bates Motel “Ocean View” (CC) Bates Motel “The Truth” (CC) Bates Motel (CC) Bates Motel (CC) (:01) Bates Motel “Underwater” (:01) Bates Motel “The Truth” (12:01) Bates Motel (CC) (A&E) Bates Motel “Trust Me” (CC) CSI: Miami A man is murdered in (4:00) Movie ›› “Firefox” (1982, Action) Clint Eastwood. A Vietnam-era Movie ››› “300” (2007, Action) Gerard Butler, Lena Headey, David Wenham. Premiere. Movie ››› “300” (2007, Action) Gerard Butler, Lena Headey, David Wenham. Badly (AMC) pilot tries to steal a Russian high-tech jet.‘PG’ (CC) Badly outnumbered Spartan warriors battle the Persian army.‘R’ (CC) outnumbered Spartan warriors battle the Persian army.‘R’ (CC) outer space. ’ (CC) (ANPL) To Be Announced Too Cute! “Curious Kittens” ’ My Cat From Hell (N) ’ My Cat From Hell ’ America’s Cutest (N) ’ My Cat From Hell ’ My Cat From Hell ’ America’s Cutest ’ Anderson Cooper Special Report Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown Anderson Cooper Special Report Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown CNN Newsroom (N) (CNN) The Situation Room House Bunny (COM) “Ace Ventura: Nature Calls” Movie: ›› “The House Bunny” (2008, Comedy) Anna Faris. (CC) Movie: ››› “Hot Tub Time Machine” (2010) John Cusack. (CC) (:15) Movie: ›› “Tommy Boy” (1995, Comedy) Chris Farley, David Spade. (CC) World Tennis Red Bull Signature Series SportsNet Cent MLB Baseball: New York Mets at Chicago Cubs. From Wrigley Field in Chicago. SportsNet Cent SportsNet Cent Fight Sports SportsNet Cent MLB Baseball (CSN) (DISC) Fast N’ Loud ’ (CC) Fast N’ Loud ’ (CC) Fast N’ Loud ’ (CC) Fast N’ Loud ’ (CC) Fast N’ Loud ’ (CC) Fast N’ Loud ’ (CC) Fast N’ Loud ’ (CC) Fast N’ Loud ’ (CC) Good Luck A.N.T. Farm (:05) Good Luck Austin & Ally ’ Dog With a Blog Jessie “A Doll’s A.N.T. Farm Good Luck Austin & Ally ’ Jessie ’ (CC) Movie ›› “Legend of the Guardians:The Owls of (:40) Jessie ’ Austin & Ally ’ Jessie ’ (CC) (DISN) Charlie (CC) Charlie (CC) (CC) Ga’Hoole” (2010) Voices of Jim Sturgess.‘PG’ (CC) (CC) “infANT” ’ (CC) Charlie (CC) ’ (CC) Outhouse” ’ “fANTasy girl” (CC) Movie: ››› “Lethal Weapon 3” (1992) Mel Gibson, Joe Pesci. L.A. Movie: ›› “G.I. Blues” (1960, Musical Comedy) Elvis (:45) Movie: ››› “Full Metal Jacket” (1987, War) Matthew Modine. (:45) Movie: ›› “Boiling Point” (1993, Action) Wesley Snipes. A Trea- “Pirates of the (ENC) Caribbean” detectives and a wild woman crush a guns-to-gangs deal. ’ (CC) Presley, Juliet Prowse. ’ (CC) Stanley Kubrick’s harrowing portrait of the Vietnam War. ’ (CC) sury agent has one week to find a comrade’s killers. ’ (CC) NBA Countdown NBA Basketball: Conference Semifinal: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) (ESPN) College Softball SportsCenter X Games: Barcelona. (Taped) E:60 Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) (CC) NBA Tonight (N) Announcement (ESPN2) NHRA Drag Racing: Kansas Nationals, Qualifying. (FAM) (4:00) Movie: ›› “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice” Movie: ››› “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1” (2010, Fantasy) Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint. Movie: ››› “Batman Begins” (2005, Action) Christian Bale, Michael Caine, Liam Neeson. America’s News Headquarters FOX Report (N) Justice With Judge Jeanine Huckabee (N) Justice With Judge Jeanine (N) Geraldo at Large ’ (CC) Red Eye (N) (FNC) Geraldo at Large ’ (CC) Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives (N) Iron Chef America Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives: Hood (FOOD) Iron Chef America UFC: Belfort vs. Rockhold (N) (Live) (FX) Movie: ›› “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen” (2009, Science Fiction) Shia LaBeouf, Megan Fox. Movie: ››› “Live Free or Die Hard” (2007) Bruce Willis. America’s computers fall under attack. The Golden Movie:“I Married Who?” (2012) Kellie Martin, Ethan Erickson. In Las Movie:“Meddling Mom” (2013, Comedy) Sonia Braga, Tony Plana. A Movie: › “Uncorked” (2010) Julie Benz, JoBeth Williams. A business- The Golden (4:00) Movie: ››› “The Wish (HALL) Vegas, a startled bride wakes up married to a famous actor. (CC) woman interferes with her daughters’ personal lives. (CC) woman meets a chef while visiting wine country. (CC) List” (2010) Jennifer Esposito. Girls ’ (CC) Girls ’ (CC) House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l Love It or List It (CC) Love It or List It (CC) Love It or List It (CC) (HGTV) House Hunters Hunters Int’l Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars (:31) Pawn Stars (:02) Pawn Stars (:32) Pawn Stars (:01) Pawn Stars (:31) Pawn Stars Pawn Stars (:31) Pawn Stars (HIST) (4:00) Most Extreme Airports Movie:“Hiding” (2012, Drama) Ana Villafañe, Jeremy Sumpter. Premiere. (:01) Movie:“Girl Fight” (2011, Docudrama) Anne Heche, James Tupper. (:02) Movie:“Hiding” (2012, Drama) Ana Villafañe, Jeremy Sumpter. Jo Movie: ››› “Accused at 17” (2009) Cynthia Gibb. A seemingly innocent (LIFE) Jo likes her new life until her past catches up to her. (CC) A video of an assault on a teen surfaces on the Internet. (CC) likes her new life until her past catches up to her. (CC) prank leads to murder, deception and a frame-up. (CC) Caught on Camera Caught on Camera Lockup Lockup: Raw Lockup: Raw Lockup: Raw Lockup: Raw “The Daily Grind” (MSNBC) Caught on Camera (MTV) (4:30) Movie: ›› “She’s the Man” (2006) Amanda Bynes. ’ Movie: ›› “50 First Dates” (2004) Adam Sandler. Premiere. ’ Movie: ›› “Happy Gilmore” (1996, Comedy) Adam Sandler. ’ Movie: ›› “50 First Dates” (2004) Adam Sandler. ’ SpongeBob Odd Parents Monsters, Alien SpongeBob SpongeBob Big Time Rush Wendell-Vinnie The Nanny ’ The Nanny ’ Friends (CC) (:33) Friends ’ (:06) Friends ’ (:39) Friends ’ George Lopez George Lopez (NICK) SpongeBob (4:30) Movie: ››› “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom” (1984, (:15) Movie: ››› “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade” (1989, Adventure) Harrison Ford, Sean Connery, Denholm Elliott. Movie: ›› “Eraser” (1996, Action) Arnold Schwarzenegger, James Caan, Vanessa Wil(SPIKE) Adventure) Harrison Ford, Kate Capshaw, Ke Huy Quan. ’ Indy’s hunt for his missing father leads to the Holy Grail. ’ liams. A government agent protects a witness from gunrunners. ’ Warehouse 13 Brother Adrian Warehouse 13 Artie tries to release Warehouse 13 Pete tries to stop a Warehouse 13 Pete investigates a Warehouse 13 “The Big Snag” Pete Riverworld A couple awake in a strange world where the soul is reborn. Riverworld (Part 2 of 2) (CC) (SYFY) is transported into a novel. (Part 1 of 2) (CC) sends deadly artifacts. ’ (CC) a deadly virus. ’ (CC) global plague. ’ (CC) series of accidents. ’ (CC) Movie: ››› “Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison” (1957, Drama) Deborah Kerr. Movie: ›››› “Bride of Frankenstein” (1935, Horror) Movie: ››› “The Private Life of Henry VIII” (1933) (:15) Movie: ››› “Murder by Death” (1976) Peter Falk, Peter Sellers. (12:15) Movie: ›› “Passport to (TCM) A Marine officer and a nun are cast upon a Pacific island. Boris Karloff, Elsa Lanchester. (CC) Charles Laughton, Elsa Lanchester. (CC) An eccentric millionaire challenges some top detectives. (CC) Destiny” (1944) Elsa Lanchester. Worst Tattoos Worst Tattoos Dateline: Real Life Mysteries ’ Dateline: Real Life Mysteries ’ Dateline: Real Life Mysteries (N) Dateline: Real Life Mysteries (N) Dateline: Real Life Mysteries ’ Dateline: Real Life Mysteries ’ Dateline: Real Life Mysteries ’ (TLC) (12:15) “Flags of Our Fathers” (TNT) (4:15) Movie: ››› “We Were Soldiers” (2002) Mel Gibson. (CC) Movie: ››› “G.I. Jane” (1997, Drama) Demi Moore, Viggo Mortensen. (CC) Movie: ››› “We Were Soldiers” (2002, War) Mel Gibson, Madeleine Stowe. (CC) (4:38) Roseanne (:16) Roseanne Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens (:12) The King of Queens (CC) King of Queens Love-Raymond (TVL) NCIS “Deliverance” Gibbs finds a NCIS “Rule Fifty-One” A Mexican NCIS “Spider and the Fly” Gibbs NCIS “Swan Song” Tracking the NCIS “Pyramid” The Port-to-Port Movie: ››› “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” (2005, Romance-Comedy) Steve Carell, Catherine Keener, Paul Rudd. (USA) drug cartel seeks revenge. (CC) Port-to-Port killer. (CC) (DVS) killer is revealed. (CC) (DVS) Three co-workers unite to help their buddy get a sex life. (CC) cryptic message. ’ (CC) must protect his loved ones. ’ T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny:The Family Hustle (7:50) Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ (8:55) Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ (VH1) I’m Married to A... ’ Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ Master of the Mix ’ Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Men at Work Last Laugh? Movie: ›› “The Replacements” (2000) Keanu Reeves. (CC) (WTBS) King of Queens King of Queens Big Bang PREMIUM 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 (10:50) Family (:20) Game of Thrones Dany (:20) “Moonrise (4:00) Movie ›› “In Time” (2011) (:15) Movie ››› “Moonrise Kingdom” (2012, Drama) Bruce Willis. A 2013 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony Inductees include Heart and Rush. (N) ’ (CC) (HBO) Tree “The Box” exchanges gifts with a slave lord. ’ Kingdom” (CC) Justin Timberlake.‘PG-13’ search party looks for a pair of love-struck runaways.‘PG-13’ (CC) “The Silence of Movie ›› “For a Good Time, Call...” (2012) Ari Movie ›› “Mr. & Mrs. Smith” (2005, Action) Brad Pitt. A husband and Movie ›› “Battleship” (2012) Taylor Kitsch, Rihanna. Premiere. Earth (:15) Zane’s the (:45) Movie “Hidden Treasures” (2013, Adult) Lovely (MAX) the Lambs” ‘R’ Jump Off (CC) girls reveal perfect gems. ’ ‘NR’ (CC) Graynor. Two roommates start a phone-sex line.‘R’ wife are assassins for rival organizations. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) comes under attack from a superior alien force. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) Jim Rome on Showtime Gigolos An intel- The Borgias ’ (:15) Boxing: Lamont Peterson vs. Lucas Martin Matthysse. Peterson vs. Matthysse; Alexan- (:45) All Access Jim Rome on Showtime Movie ››› “The School of Rock” (2003, Comedy) Jack Black, Mike (SHOW) ligence test. der vs. Brook, IBF welterweight title. From Atlantic City, N.J. (N) (Live) (CC) White. An unemployed guitarist poses as a teacher. ’ ‘PG-13’ (4:30) Movie “Son of Morning” (5:55) Movie ›› “Blues Brothers 2000” (1998) Dan Aykroyd. Elwood Movie ››› “Fright Night” (2011, Horror) Anton Yelchin. A teenager (9:50) Movie › “The Breed” (2006, Horror) Michelle Movie ››› “Fright Night” (2011, Horror) Anton (TMC) (2011) Joseph Cross. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Blues tries to start up a new Blues Brothers band.‘PG-13’ (CC) discovers that his new neighbor is a vampire. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Rodriguez, Eric Lively. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Yelchin, Colin Farrell, David Tennant. ’ ‘R’ (CC)


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Page E8• Saturday, May 18, 2013 Leather Coat – Women's - Long Black – Size Large - $100 815-323-0091 1pm-4pm

Washer & Dryer. White. Good condition. $250/both. Will separate. Waukegan 619-805-5842

Motorcycle Leather Jacket

Washer & Gas Dryer – Maytag Neptune Washer Exc. Cond. - Dryer Needs Control Board $295 For Both 815-578-8807 9a-9p

Black, (men, size 44), like new! $65 847-516-8015 Rosary – Vintage Silver/Black Made In Italy – Nice Detail $25obo & Shipping if necessary 847-961-5564 Before 9PM

WAHL APPLIANCE Reconditioned Appliances Lakemoor 815-385-1872

Chest Freezer: GE 12 cu ft., like new $125 815-337-3813 Dehumidifier – 30 Pints Per Day New In Box $119 815-344-1167

ANTIQUE OLD FARMERS HAND PUMP $145. 847-515-8012 BARN WOOD WHEELBARROW $75. 847-515-8012 Baseball Cards. Topps 1993 set. 94, '08, '12. 3000+ cards. Worth $300+ Asking $140. 815-338-4829 Basketball “Star” Cards. 200+ cards. Worth $225+ Asking $99. 815-338-4829

Reconditioned & Guaranteed Appliances: Washers, dryers, stoves, refrigerators, & dishwashers. Assured Appliance 847-293-0047

BUTTER CHURN - Antique Wooden Butter Churn 18" high, the barrel is constructed with oak wood slats & 4 brass bands & 10" diameter at the bottom tapered to 8-1/2" at the top. The dasher stick is 42" long. It is in excellent used condition and is very clean. This is a fun piece for country decoration and can be used for storage. $165. Bring cash. 815-236-1747 Child's Wardrobe Chiffarobe – Handpainted w/Fairies $125obo 815-338-4428 before 7pm

Refrigerator. Amana. 21 cu ft. Clean, runs great. White. 9 yrs old. $200. 815-236-7191

Crock J.Peck & Son 20 gallon. $175. 815-823-2929

FREEZER - Kenmore upright 13.7 Cubic feet. Temperature alarm. 2 years old. Moving, must sell $100 815-344-1442 Freezers, three of them, small, medium, large, like new, clean, must sell, between $100 and $175, three sizes. 815-575-1591

Dining Room Table

With 6 matching chairs, 7 leaves. Good condition! $300. 847-669-5530 Folding Chairs (4). Wood Slatted. Pre-1950's. Used at social events. Asking $99/all. 815-338-4829 Library Table – Oak – 1 Drawer Lower Shelf – Very Old $285 815-568-6991 9am – 9pm Museum Coffee Mugs – Norman Rockwell 1985 – Looking To The Sea, The Country Doctor, Dreams In The Antique Shop $16 All 847-639-1101

Sugar/Salt Bowl - Four Footed – Antique Pewter - $25 847-639-1101

Tablecloth ~ Irish Linen Eyelet

and 10 Napkins, white, 110Lx80W, $80. 815-459-3822 Trains – Set of 3 – 1)Bachmann Big Haulers:Thunderbolt Express w/additional Quaker State Tanker, 2)Bachmann Big Haulers:Royal Blue Passenger, 3)Thunderbolt Express:Ho Train Set. Plus Asseccories All Layed Out On 12'x7' Table $300. 815-338-5172

Sette/Antique ~ Eastlake

$150 + many more antiques. 815-382-3306 Shaker set – Antique – Pewter – Sy Poole w/Old Lady Imprint $20 847-639-1101

Vintage - Ladies – Columbia $125 815-675-6516 Vintage - Ladies – Columbia $125 815-675-6516 Wedding Kimonos – Japanese Ceremonial – Adult Size – Silk - New $140ea. 815-675-6516

Bar stools and table set, 5 stools, $35. Bedside table with wheels, FREE. DVD player FREE. Toaster oven, $10. 3-drawer stand $10. Call 262-581-0585

Exer Saucer – Even Flo – Exc. Cond. $30 847-639-6457 9am-6pm

Carpet Tiles - 50 New, rubber back, multi-colored tweed, 18x18, $3/ea. 847-639-9176

High Chair: Graco, good condition $25 847-659-1944 leave message

White, 32”x80”, $10/ea or 3 for $25. 847-848-0285

Precious Moments – New In Original Boxes w/Tags – $7ea. 847-639-3154 after 5:30p Railroad Co. Coffee Mugs – Chicago NW”400”, Wisconsin Central LTD, The Belt RR Co, of Chicago,Union Pacific,CP Rail Div.,Gateway Div. $30 All 847-639-1101

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Pre-Fold Cloth Diapers. 24/15-30 lbs. 24/30-45 lbs. 10 diaper covers. Used 1 yr. $280 value. Asking $100. 847-476-6771 Stroller. 1st Saunter. Like new, used by grandparents. $75. OBO 630-232-1982

Song Birds of the World Limited Edition 1977 Franklin Porcelain $149.95/set of 12 815-568-8154

Bicycle Ross Adventurer $50 224-678-4879 Bicycle: 10 speed $15 224-678-4879

Sugar & Creamer Pickard

Bikes (2) Fugi

Salt & Pepper, gold floral, $135. 815-459-3822

Male and female with cover. $90/both. 815-459-5424

Doors Interior 3 Panel

Windridge Memorial Park Veterans Section. 1 plot. $1100. 847-639-1821

ASHTON DRAKE WINTER BRIDE porcelain doll. $25. email: trichalin@aol.com DOLLS - 2 male cabbage patch dolls. 1 with Bears & Cubs uniforms & helmets. The other dressed in a sailor suit. $12 each or both for $20. Cash only. No returns. Call Dolores @ 815-219-0204. DOLLS - Marie Osmond Tiny Tot Porcelain Dolls. 6 dolls - 4 have boxes and tags. $125. Email for more info: trichalin@aol.com SKIS - 2 sets of vintage (1950's) wooden snow skis and 1 set of metal poles. $25. Cash only. No returns. Call Dolores 815-219-0204

Drywall Metal Outcorners

197 pieces, $25. 847-516-8015 Insulation. 25 sheets. Rigid foam. 1.5”x4'x8'. Good cond. $5/sheet Pkg $ considered. 815-385-0020 Overhead Garage Door. All glass. Aluminum Frame. 16X8' Hareware, springs incl $275. 815-742-3171

Camera Kit – Canon AE-1 35mm – Flash Unit – Power Winder – 2X Tele Convvertor – Wide Angle – Telephoto Lens – Filters – Manual Tripod & Camera Bag $150 815-568-8036

WINDOW

Computer Battery Back-up

Double hung vinyl, brand new, still in package, 31x65, $60. 815-759-5952 Windows: 2 30x30” Vinyl Sash Windows w/screens, $110 good for garage or shed 815-354-2462

600 watts. $75. 630-624-8250 Kenwood Cassette Deck: 1970's KX-830, wood cabinet, excellent condition $150 815-578-0212 Find !t here! PlanitNorthwest.com

Kenwood Receiver, 1970's KR-6030, wood cabinet excellent condition, $250 815-578-0212 PS 3 Dragon Ball 2 Ultimate Tenkaichi $35 obo 224-484-8366 TELEVISION - 61” HD TV. Excellent Shape. Only 8 yrs old. $125. Call anytime, 815-861-9864. TV - Toshiba – 36” Color Works Great $60 847-409-1838 TV's (2) 20” Stereo – Excellent Color – w/Remotes $15 each 815-568-8036 Video Game - X Box 360 Defenders Of The Core $15 224-484-8366

Weidner Master Trainer Exercise Machine In good shape. $100 847-302-7009

1956 International Farmal Cub Tractor, w/61” mower deck, runs exc. w/new battery, will deliver, asking $1800/OBO if interested, please call Jeff 815-742-3171 John Deere 3020 Powershift narrow front, new tires, runs great, excellent sheet metal, must sell $6000 815-560-1760

Exercise Station – Weider Pro – Leg Press – Lat Pull down & More $150obo 815-568-6117 after 3pm - Marengo Nordic Track Achiever Low Impact Cardio Ski Machine $20 815-568-6117 after 3pm Marengo

L shaped fuel tank for full size pick up truck w/20 gallon per minute 12 volt pump, must sell $350/OBO 815-560-1760

ARMY FOLDING OLDE COT

Treadmill-NordicTrack. Like new,10 speed 10 incline, Dual shock. MP3 plug in. Moving must sell. $200. 815-344-1442 LOCAL NEWS WHEREVER YOU GO! Up-to-date news, weather, scores & more can be sent directly to your phone! It's quick, easy & free to register at NWHerald.com

AT YOUR SERVICE

TREATMILL - Purchased in 1992 & still works fine. Pro-Form 2001 EXL treadmill with incline feature. Does not fold. Moving soon - need to sell. $35. Cash only. No returns. Photos emailed upon request. Call Dolores @ 815-219-0204.

65”x27', no mattress, $15. 815-363-5716

Bar stools w/tan seats: Rattan 4/$200 815-385-4353 BED - THOMAS THE TRAIN BED Mattress included, $250 obo. 815-861-6866, Crystal Lake Beds w/Headboards – 2 Twin Size $30 815-323-0091 1pm-4pm

In print daily Online 24/7

Visit the Local Business Directory online at NWHerald.com/localbusiness. Call to advertise 815-455-4800 D. K. QUALITY TUCKPOINTING & MASONRY

Father & Son Heating

✦ Tuckpointing ✦ Chimney Repair/Caps ✦ Brick & Stone

* Furnace & A/C Insulations * Duck Work & Gas Pipings * Commercial/Residential & Maintenance Service

Fully Insured Free Estimates

FREE ESTIMATES FULLY INSURED

Owner Is Always On Job Site!

30 + Years Established

847-525-9920 www.dkquality.com

847-630-2223

JUNK REMOVAL SERVICES ★ Springtime ★

Free Pick-Up Appliances, Electronics Any Kind of Metal or Batteries

Stonetree Landscapes Inc.

815-482-8406

*Mulch *Landscape Stone *Sand & Gravels *Topsoil *Garden Mixes *Flagstone *Boulders

LUCAS CUSTOM CONCRETE

Pick Up & Delivery

Custom Design of Patios & Driveways, Including Stamped, Color, and Exposed Concrete. We also specialize in Brick & Stone Work Bobcat & Trucking Serv. Provided

815-337-8200 stonetreelandscapes.net

We Accept Visa Mastercard & Discover

815-355-9661

✲ ✲ ✲ ✲

FLOOD & WATER DAMAGE

✲ ✲ ✲ ✲

MK Drywall / Renew Restoration Take Care of the "Mold" Before it Starts! Serving McHenry County for over 25 Years Fully Insured Call for free estimates

815-648-1515 262-770-9503

HANDYMAN SERVICES ● Power

Washing

Patios, Homes, Fences, Decks, Driveways

● Decks

LOCAL NEWS WHEREVER YOU GO! Up-to-date news, weather, scores & more can be sent directly to your phone! It's quick, easy & free to register at NWHerald.com

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● Painting ● Carpentry

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EVERCHANGING LANDSCAPING

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$50 off your first $250

♦ ♦

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Mulch Planting Lawn Maintenance Patios Walkways Retaining Walls Driveways Brick & Flagstone

FREE ESTIMATES! 815-560-1943 lisamgplus5@yahoo.com

815-823-3161

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CLASSIFIED

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com Chair – Wicker w/foot stool & pads purchased from Pier 1 $95 847-802-4049 China Cabinet ~ Beautiful Oak With glass shelves, silverware drawer & lots of storage, $200. 815-355-2158

COFFEE & SIDE TABLES

Glass and brass, oval, $75, $125/both. SOFA TALBE, Smoked Glass, $50 815-385-4353 Coffee Table & 2 End Tables: beautiful, round, set of 3, glass tops all in mint condition $100 224-587-5076 9am-9pm

COUCH ~ OVERSIZED

From Z Gallery, color gold. Good condition! $150 815-382-1249

Desk Set - 2 Piece

Wood, 20x66x29H, 36x72x29H. $80. 847-476-6771 Dining Room Hutch – Ethan Allen -Hard Rock Solid Maple – 2 Piece – Display On Top – Storage On Bottom – Exc. Cond. (Matching Drop Leaf Table Available w/2leaves $300 815-363-9999Daytime

DINING ROOM TABLE w/ leaf, 8 chairs and beautiful hutch for $550.00 Also, Kitchen Hutch @ 150.00 Call 815-482-5218 if interested. Entertainment Center Hutch Cherry Finish – Handsome Quality 43x76x22 – Pocket Doors – Picture available Via Smartphone $200obo 847-727-0235 Entertainment Center. Solid oak, convert to wine cabinet. Pictures available. $100. 815-354-2462 ETEGERE -- $60 email: trichalin@aol.com Farm Table – Oak – w/4Chairs – Great Condition 32”x48” $150. 847-890-5860 8am-9pm Folding Chairs (4). Wood Slatted. Pre-1950's. Used at social events. Asking $99/all. 815-338-4829

RECRUIT LOCAL! Target your recruitment message to McHenry County or reach our entire area. For more information, call 800-589-8237 or email: helpwanted@ shawsuburban.com

Kitchen Set – White & Brass Formica w/4 Captains Chairs - One Of A Kind - $395 815-459-8811

WE'VE GOT IT! Northwest Classified 800-589-8237 www.NWHerald.com

Kitchen/Dinette- 5 piece Oak 47" round table. Opens to 67" with leaf. 4 High Back chairs. Asking $325. 3 additional chairs for sale. Call anytime. Phone 224-5692678 Mattress. King. Brand new, still in plastic. $300. Waukegan 619-805-5842 Moving Out of State, MUST SELL! Lovely old player piano in excellent condition w/bench, cabinet filled w/music rolls and 2 crystal hurricane lamps - $1500 for all; 4-chair oak dinette set-$175; Antique coffee cart w/glass top$100; Beautiful framed pictures.various prices; Baby Fawn full body mount-$375: mounts are nice for a den or "man-cave". Johnsburg, IL 815-382-4574 Office Chair – Leather Swivel $30 Office Desk – 7 Drawer 54”x24x29” $40obo Bamboo Swing Chair w/Metal Frame & Ottoman $45obo Bamboo PaPa San Chair $45 Bamboo Princess Chair (Fan Back) $45. 815-568-8036

Recliners – 2 – Lane Brown Leather Great Shape - $400. for the pair Cash 815-459-8811

SOFA - Denim Sofa from Walter E. Smithe, 72" tight back, 2 cushion, roll arm, pleated skirt at bottom. Slight fading at the top back of sofa, not noticeable if placed against a wall. Charming and great for smaller spaces too. $275, cash only. Contact 815-347-4008. Sofa – Burgandy & Green w/Stripes & Print $50 815-323-0091 1pm-4pm

ROCKING CHAIR ~ WHITE

Like new, chair pad included, $50. 224-587-5091 Rocking chairs: white, w/wood slats, matching pair, excellent condition $100 815-578-0212 Roll Top Desk and barrel chair, $100 815-385-4353

Roll Top Desk ~ Oak

With 3 drawers, various letter holders, excellent condition! $175 815-355-2158 Room dividers (2): rattan $50 815-385-4353 Sectional – L Shape – Gray – w/Built In Recliner - $150 obo 815-568-6117 after 3pm Marengo

OFFICE CHAIR: $15 224-678-4879 Patio Furniture – 7 Piece – White Wrought Iron w/Cushions – Good Condition - $150 630-761-1421 Afternoons or evenings

Cream with small blue & cranberry flowers. Excellent condition. $100. 815-385-4353

Buying? Selling? Renting? Hiring? To place an ad, call 800-589-8237 Northwest Herald Classified

Northwest Herald Classified It works.

Sofa - 8 Feet

Sofa Sleeper – Green & Burgandy Plaid – Queen Size – Like New $300 815-455-5964 or 815-592-6252 Solid Oak Entertainment Center. Quality, like new. Lots of storage. Fits TV up to 39”. $300 obo 815-338-4058 Table w/2 Leaves & 4 Chairs plus 2 Captains - Hutch – Exc. Cond. $399 Cash 773-501-7888 Island Lake

Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Page E9 Umbrella: Grey Canvas 9ft patio umbrella w/white cast iron stand, $35 815-477-2229

Annuals for Sale

GARDENER AVAILABLE Shooting Benches (2). Cabela's. Portable. NEW. Never used. $180/both. 708-363-2004 Utah CCW Class Crystal Lake 5/25. 8-12 $100, +$51 to UT, Includes fingerprint, photo, mailing. Call Eric 815-245-7364 Utahccw.us

Bamboo blinds (6). 3 for sliding doors+1 for lrg & 2 for sm windows. Good cond. $200/OBO will sell separately. 815-385-0020 Bed Pillow ~Light Blue Velour $12. 630-624-8250

Floral Blue and Taupe, $60 815-385-1157

DINNERWARE SET – Royal Seasons Snowman Dinnerware Set. 71 piece. $50. Call anytime, 815861-9864. DISH SET – Corelle Impressions Country Morning. 55 piece Set, $25. Call anytime, 815-8619864. Grill MEMBERS MARK STAINLESS GRILL 4 Burners, a Sear, a Rotisserie/Rear Burner, and a side burner for a pot. $150. Call between 8 am and 8 pm. 815-568-0364

TV UNIT AND ETEGERE – Matching. $300. email: trichalin@aol.com

McHenryCountySports.com is McHenry County Sports

Table: round oak 50” $80 815-385-4353 TABLES - Matching COCKTAIL TABLE & END TABLE - light oak, chrome and glass. $60 email: trichalin@aol.com

Tufted Chair

All Landscape Stone, Mulch, Topsoil, Trees & Shrubs. We Deliver, Yard Now Open, Stonetree Landscapes, 815-337-8200

815-276-9461

BEAUTIFUL LAWN

Lawn Tractor – Craftsman Riding Kohler 18hp – Hydrostatic – Automatic – 42” Cut Width – Good Condition $399 obo 815-245-7182 MayFlower Landscaping Weekly Mowing & Vacation Patios, Mulch, Edging Spring & Fall Clean-up 815-215-8091

Call us for aerating, fertilizing, slit seeding, de-thatching, soil tests. 815-482-0171 Composter – Suncast – Tumbling $20 815-385-9610

Mower for Parts. MTD 7 Speed $250 or best offer 815-690-1538

Fountain – Very Decorative Concrete – Three Sections – w/Beautiful Statue On Top – Incl. Pump $150 847-587-0119

Spring Clean-Up Mulch, brick patios, tree removal, maint work. Insured. 815-355-2121

Garden tractor – Toro/Wheel Horse 12hp – Hydrostatic – 42”Mower 48” Snow Blade – Good Condition $550 815-459-5983

5 pieces, table and 4 chairs, taupe, glass top, $75. 815-385-1157

Grass Catcher – For John Deere Lawn Mower – Brand New - $20. Hostas. $3/ea or 4 for $10. 815-477-7916 Lawn Chief – Push Mower 22” Cut – Adjustable Deck $20 Firm 815-245-0407 leave message Lawn Mower – Push – 20” Cut – 3 ½ hp – Never Used – New In Box $119 815-344-1167 Lawn Mower – Push – 3 Years Old w/Catch Bag $30 224-858-4754After 5PM Lawn Mower- 21 inch Sears Briggs/ Stratton push lawn mower. New $145. 847-669-1806

AT YOUR SERVICE

ORTIZ LANDSCAPING

PATIO SET

Pond Supplies: 1 new Sunterra external pond UV Bio-Filter 2000 gal. 1 used Sunterra UV Bio-Filter 2000 gal. Large volume circulating pump. Heater, skimmer,net,& misc. fish food and misc. accessories. $225. Call 815-334-1860 after 6:00 P.M.

Raspberry Bushes

Red, big, sweet berries. $5/ea, 5 for $20. 815-477-7916 Riding Lawn Mower. Craftsman. Briggs/Straton. 9HP. 32” deck. $185 OBO. 815-861-6119 Rototiller – Yard Machine – Rear Tine – 6hp Tecumseh Engine Runs Fine – Owners Manual $300 815-861-1094

In print daily Online 24/7

Visit the Local Business Directory online at NWHerald.com/localbusiness. Call to advertise 815-455-4800 Dark Brown Mulch

$25 Cubic Yard Installed

CASA AFFORDABLE PAINTING

A. JAYNE ROOFING Free Estimates

40 Years Exp. ● ●

815-482-6990

Delivery Available!

● ● ● ●

ALL TYPES OF ROOFING

EXTERIOR/INTERIOR CEDAR STAINING TRIM PAINTING DECKS/FENCES POWER WASHING ALUM. PAINTING PROFESSIONAL KITCHEN & BATH DESIGN/REMODEL

36 Years Exp.

5% OFF With This Ad 815-334-8616 847-931-2433 BBB - Excellent O.C.F. Preferred Contractor

Angie's List Member

INSTANT SMART PHONE

FREE ESTIMATES M. Casamento 815-823-2722 800-BIG-CASA casadecorating.com

C.R.O.

Nippersink Landscape Supply

PAINTING AND DECORATING

Spring

Interior/Exterior 2 Story Foyers Trim Painting Drywall Repair Power washing Wallpaper Removal

Mulch Specials double ground triple ground ruby red top soil compost gravel

$30.00 $32.00 $45.00 $30.00 $30.00 $30.00

Free Delivery to Richmond, Spring Grove & Johnsburg

FULLY INSURED FREE ESTIMATES

For More Info, or to schedule delivery; 8713 NORTH SOLON ROAD

Chris 815-861-6270

www.mulchmania.com

815-675-0900 847-514-9671 847-833-2598

LAKEVIEW HOME IMPROVEMENTS

A. M. R. CONTRACTING, INC. #Tuckpointing #Chimney Rebuilding

Interior * Exterior Painting * Staining Cedar Staining

#All

and Repairs types of masonry work

Free Estimate. Fully Insured

BIG JOB's SMALL JOB's

All work is Guaranteed.

847-857-8783

DECK REFINISING!

In business since 1998 with an unrivaled commitment to detail and quality workmanship.

Commercial & Residential

Send your Help Wanted Advertising 24/7 to:

www.AnchorMasonry.com

Email: helpwanted@shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898

Free Estimates Fully Insured Impeccable Ref.

We are At Your Service!

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED! 815-528-0586 BREAKING NEWS

NOTICE

McHenryCountySports.com is McHenry County Sports Having a Birthday, Anniversary, Graduation or Event Coming Up? Share It With Everyone by Placing a HAPPY AD!

s ls

Northwest Herald Classified 800-589-8237 www.nwherald.com

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

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

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available 24/7 at NWHerald.com

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We've got them.

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CREATE YOUR PROFILE NOW BY PHONE OR WEB FREE!

Call to advertise in the At Your Service directory.

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Be sure to include a photo of your pet, home, auto or merchandise.

Call to advertise 800-589-8237 Or place your ad online nwherald.com/placeanad

OPEN HOUSES Watch for the Northwest Classified Open House Directory every Friday, Saturday & Sunday. Include your listing by calling 800-589-8237 or email: classified@shawsuburban.com

Advertise in print and online for one low price. Call your classified advertising representative today!

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CLASSIFIED

Page E10• Saturday, May 18, 2013 Shop Vac. Wet & Dry. 2.5 Gal. $15

630-624-8250

TOOLS - Pro engine analyzer$100. 8 shackles: (4) 6.5 tons $10 ea, (4) 8.5 tons $12 ea. Black pipefittings, various. Sanders, drills, grinders, saws & more. Some new, some used. 815-728-0131

Commode – Folding - Steel – Free Standing Or Over Toilet – Heavy Duty Up To 650lbs. - New In Box $40 815-455-3004 Walker – Red – 4 Wheeled w/2 Brakes & Seat – Like New $39 815-344-1167

Wheel Chair ~ New in Box Never used, seat 18” wide. Removable foot rests, $95. 815-578-0212

BEDSPREAD ~ NEW, FULL 54x78”, rich, dark gold floral, $90. 815-459-3822

Beer Stein w/Top - Antique From WWI, $395 815-569-2277

CANVAS SHED

12x20x9 with tarp, new in box. $325 847-669-5530

Table. Wrought Iron. 42”. Better Homes & Garden. NEW in box. $75. 815-338-4829

Tomato Planter

Upside with room for herbs. As seen in Catalogue, will sell for $30. 847-639-9176 V & V Lawn Care 815-814-8542 Lawn Maint, Gravel Clean-up from Plows, Mowing, Garden Tilling, Reasonable Rates. Free Estimates.

Coach Purses & Wallets $50 AUTHENTIC--PRICED TO SELL! 847-736-3127 andyjill@sbcglobal.net EXTERIOR SERVICE DOOR - steel with frame, 32" right hand swing, handset and deadbolt installed, half glass, no rust great condition. $60. 815-675-6462 FOLDING CHAIRS - (15) steel folding chairs, used, $2 each. Call 815-690-0235

Gas Fireplace Logs $20

847-516-8015

GLOVES ~ LATEX

BATTERIES (3)

DeWalt Power Tool batteries. 2 new and 1 used and charger. $80/all. 815-209-5665 Generator. Coleman Powermate. 10HP. 5000 watts. Like NEW. $295. 847-918-1360 Hydraulic Engine Jack on wheels $100 847-302-7009

POWER WASHER

Electric, Huskie, like new! $65. 847-516-8015 Radial Arm Saw – Craftsman w/Stand – Good Condition $95 815-385-7757

SAND BLASTER

With dust collector, 3'x4', 110V. $300. 815-455-247

With Aloe Organic, case of 1000. $55 815-578-0212 HOT WATER HEATER 30 gal gas residential. Excellent Condition/Few Months Old. $125obo. 224-357-4008 LUGGAGE – 3 Piece Samsonite Luggage Set w/ Wheels. Never Used. $75 OBO. Call anytime, 815-861-9864. PICTURE – 60"x40". Heavy. Beautiful. Original Price was $900. $200. email: trichalin@aol.com Sewing Machine: Singer, w/stool & accessories $60 815-385-4353 Slide Rules (2): 1 Keuffel Esser (polyphase) w/box, case, & manual. 2: Pickett Eckel (Trig) w/case $12/ea both $20 815-455-5903 Leave Message

Smoker – LG. SS. Masterbuilt Digital Smoker – w/$50 Of Extras – Used Twice – Exc. Cond. $200 815-455-3203 Lv. Msg. Storage Shed: Rubbermaid 74”H 65”D 63”W Easy to assemble & disassemble $200 847-658-6293

Pianos Quality Pre-Owned Pianos - Delivered & Guaranteed. 815-334-8611

Adorable Puppies

TIRE - Single Goodyear Eagle RS-A Tire (Used). Size: P215/50R17, Driven about 15000 miles. Asking $20, Call 847-658-2338, pick up in Algonquin

All puppies come with * Health Warranty * Free Vet Visit * Free Training DVD * Financing Available

TRAC PHONE

6126 Northwest Hwy (Next to Jewel, Rt 14 & Main 815-455-5479 18Wx21Hx18D on black stand with wheels. New, $60/cash. 847-639-8572

VACUUM

BIRD CAGE ~ VISION

BIRD CAGE

“Less Mess” cage, 29Wx22Hx12D. $75/cash. 847-639-8572

Wire Vehicle Pet Barrier, fits SUVs & minivans, adjusts 32-52" high, 3979" wide. $30, 815-236-4434, Crystal Lake

Electric Lift Chair – Nice Light Brown Recliner- Works Great $300 815-338-5012 or 815403-1821 Mornings or Nights Guitar Amp – Line 6 Spider Jam 75W Amp – Like New Condition w/Manual $275 815-301-7592 8am – 8pm Hurricane Lamps: Pair of antique hurricane lamps pearlized beige, w/gold medal filigree, exc. cond., $165/pair 815-861-6119 Karaoke machine: dual cassette 2 microphones, w/cassette tapes, great for parties, $75/OBO 815-861-6119 KEYBOARD - CASIO - Keys light up to teach you to play. (Can turn off lighted keys.) Can download songs from internet. Awesome Product. $100. email: trichalin@aol.com Piano – Kimball Console – Beautiful Cherry Wood – w/Bench Excellent Condition $900. 847-669-3280 Late Afternoon Piano – Upright – Narrow – w/Bench – Lt. Walnut – Cable Mfg. Good Cond. $399 847-912-1868 5pm – 10pm Buying? Selling? Renting? Hiring? To place an ad, call 800-589-8237 Northwest Herald Classified

K9S4U DOG ADOPTION EVENT May 19 1:00 PM-5:00PM @ 3720 Greenleaf Ave., Island Lake, IL. DJ, Pet Photographer, Kiss a Puppy Booth, and more. For more info call 847-6268697. Like us on Facebook, find our available pets on Petfinder.com. Parrot/Large Bird Cage w/Stand & Perches – Great Condition $100 815-355-7251

BOWLING BALLS - 1 child's 6 lb. black bowling ball with a grey bag. 1 child's blue metallic 8 lb. bowling ball with a blue bag. New holes would have to be drilled and names removed. $15 per set or both for $25. Cash only. No returns. Call Dolores @ 815-219-0204.

OPEN HOUSES Watch for the Northwest Classified Open House Directory every Friday, Saturday & Sunday. Include your listing by calling 800-589-8237 or email: classified@shawsuburban.com

#'S @ 9:30

PENNY 6 1/2 year old female Brown Tabby DSH. We should all do what gives us joy, even if it is only picking flowers or sorting laundry. Let's do something joyful together. www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-400

! COVERED BRIDGE TRAIL

GOLF CLUBS, $25 815-455-5454 Pool Table – 7ft x 3½ft – Real Slate Good Condition $350 847-516-2909 Daytime

4313 New Hampshire Trail

Snorkel Equipment Scuba Pro Fins w/boots, medium. Aqua lung mask, Phoenix snorkel $60 all 815-455-5903 Leave Message

Walkup to Hillside to New Hampshire Trail

Great Mid-Century Sale!

DOLLS - 2 foot tall Bert, Ernie & Big Bird stuffed dolls. $2 each or 3/$5. Cash only. No returns. Call Dolores @ 815-219-0204. DOLLS - 2 male cabbage patch dolls. 1 with Bears & Cubs uniforms & helmets. The other dressed in a sailor suit. $12 each or both for $20. Cash only. No returns. Call Dolores @ 815-219-0204.

WINDMILL

High Chair: Baby Trend excellent condition $25 847-659-1944 leave message, will call back

Rustic wood look with 2 planter boxes below, 4'H, $45. 815-578-0212

CARY

RC Helicopters (2)

Fly indoors or out, includes radio and chargers, $125/obo. 815-245-0717

Hot Tub. 6 ft. 4 person western red cedar elliptical shape - 440 gal. Tub only. No Heater/Seats/Cover $375. 815-356-9916 Spa: beige marble Great Lakes spa, seats 6, needs work on heating system, $395 815-459-7217

AIR CONDITIONER Window Wall Unit, 18000 BTU, 15” or 16” high or will trade. 847-639-1112

Antique and Modern Guns Old Lever Actions, Winchesters, Marlins, Savages, etc. Old Pistols and Revolvers. Cash for Collection. FFL License 815-338-4731

Aqua-Vu Scout XL-Underwater video viewing system. 7" black & white crt. 100' feet of cable. Protective soft case with zip-out sun shield. Like New! $75. 815-455-5866 Crystal Lake

CAN'T GET ENOUGH BEARS NEWS? Get Bears news on Twitter by following @bears_insider

ANTIQUE OIL OR GAS AUTOMOTIVE SIGNS And GM or Ford parts. 815-353-7668

FRI & SAT MAY 18th & 19 th 10AM - 4PM 1332 Galway Drive

Northwest Classified Call 800-589-8237

FREE Money! Sell any household item priced under $400.

Visit nwherald.com/PlaceAnAd

Pics on: estatesales.net

Conducted by Triple S

Kathy's Estate Sales 847-363-4814

CRYSTAL LAKE

630-707-7189 630-327-1427

MAY 16-19 8-4

215 2nd Street

606 Terrace Dr.

Antiques, contractor tools, furniture, collectibles, trunks, British Royalty collectibles, small kitchen appliances, and more! No early birds. Cash or PayPal only. Bring moving help for large items. Rain or shine.

(No Signs Allowed – Oakbrook Estates: Sands Rd to Terrace Dr.)

CRYSTAL LAKE

815-353-7668

DON'T NEED IT? SELL IT FAST!

Furniture By: Directional, Westnofa, Swaim, Ramseur including (dining room table & chairs, credenza, end tables, bookcases, dressers, sofas, chairs, chrome bench). Sterling Silver, Baldwin piano, Kaiser figurines, Llardros, Hummels, stemware, jewelry, Rosenthal china, Belleek, grandfather clock, art, rettan porch furniture, Navaho rug, king/queen & single beds, leather sofa & chair, flute, name brand purses & clothes, stereo, books (some 1st edition), usual kitchen misc, patio furniture, Blackhawk memorabilia & SOOOOO MUCH MORE!

Bedroom, Living Room, Family Room furniture, Coat of Arms, glassware, tools. FULL HOUSE-ALL MUST GO IN TWO DAYS!

Lionel & American Flyer Trains

FREE Classified Ad! or use this handy form.

FRI & SAT MAY 17 & 18 10AM - 4PM

GOLF BAG, $20

HOT TUB - Jasmine Platinum model - Seating for 6. Mood Lights, AM/FM/CD Stereo System, Water purification system included. 92”x92”x36” $2,200 obo. Call: 847-849-7099

CORA 2 month old female Terrier mix I like to take the time to count the colors of the sky at sunset, and to listen to the ocean's voice. We could leave our footprints at the water's edge. www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400

CRYSTAL LAKE

Duck decoys (22), various makes, including Flambeau, Remington, etc. $65 for all. 815-690-0235

Terrier Mix. Tolstoy, needs a good home. Male. 4 yrs old. 15 lbs. Very friendly, likes big dogs & cats. Neutered. Very active. Call after 6pm: 815-477-9460 BONNIE 2 month old female Jack Russell mix. I believe in saving for a sunny day. I believe that being organized is highly overrated. Until I can't find my toys. Please help me! www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400

WANTED TO BUY: Vintage or New, working or not. Bicycles, Outboard motors, fishing gear, motorcycles or mopeds, chainsaws, tools etc. Cash on the spot. Cell: 815-322-6383

Camping Tent – 6 Man – w/Porch 3 Cots – 3 sleeping Bags – Coleman Stove – Lanterns – Hibachi – Picnic Basket - $300 847-658-9866

Petland

With 400 minutes with double minutes feature. $50. 815-759-5952 Trampoline – Large – Needs Work You Disassemble & Haul $50. obo 815-344-1736 Hoover Wind Tunnel Self Propelled Bagless Upright with HEPA filter. $100/cash. 847-639-8572

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Crystal Lake

SALE BY OWNER Fri & Sat, May 17th & 18th 7am-5pm Lawn Mower, Furniture, Tools, TVs, DVD Players, Grandfather Clock, TOO MUCH TO LIST!!! Priced to Move. Everything must go.

Circa 1800 Piano, exercise equipment, Scrap Booking, Rainbow Play System & MORE!

TEXT ALERTS Sign up for TextAlerts to receive up-to-date news, weather, prep sports, coupons and more sent directly to your cell phone! Register for FREE today at

NWHerald.com

SAT ONLY 9-3 1008 BUTLER DR.

RECRUIT LOCAL! Target your recruitment message to McHenry County or reach our entire area. For more information, call 800-589-8237 or email: helpwanted@ shawsuburban.com

Headline:___________________________________________

Description:_________________________________________ __________________________________________________

Friday & Saturday 1275 Broadway Lakewood

__________________________________________________

9am - 3pm Numbers at 8:30am

Asking Price (required):________________________________ Best Time To Call:____________________________________ Phone:_____________________________________________

Cash, Visa & Mastercard Germanic Home Furniture Antique German Chests and Cabinets, Modern Sofa with Chairs and Ottoman, Tiered Tables, Table Lamps, Secretary, Plant Stands, Assorted Cabinets, Armoire, Display Cabinets, Complete

NAME:_____________________________________________

Office with Bookcases, Cradle, Pine Shelving Units, Bedroom Sets and Much More.

ADDRESS:__________________________________________ CITY__________________________STATE_____ZIP________ DAYTIME PHONE:____________________________________

Ceramics Russel Wright, Large Planters, Francoma, Pottery Barn and Much More. Metals Geneva Fluter, Antique Hammer, Planes and

E-Mail:_____________________________________________

Upgrade Your Ad " Add Bold $5 " Add A Photo $5 " Add an Attention Getter $5 " " "

Mail to: Free Ads P.O. Box 250 Crystal Lake, IL 60039-0250 " Sell an item priced Email: over $400 - $26 classified@shawsuburban.com

Ad will run one week in the Northwest Herald and on nwherald.com. One item per ad. Offer excludes real estate, businesses & pets, other restrictions may apply. We reserve the right to decline or edit the ad.

Other Tools. Pewter Figurines and Antique Pewterware. License Plates (U.S. and Europe) and More. Glassware Tiffany, Gorham, Barware, Vintage Magnifiers and Much More. Miscellaneous Jewelry, Antique Hand Tools, Cameras, Persian Rugs, Model Ships, Kitchenware, Pen Collection, Dolls, German Books, Sewing Notions, Vinyl, Legos (boxes), Electronics and Much More. See Photos at http://www.ctnorthern.com This is a CARING TRANSITIONS Sale


CLASSIFIED

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Cary

HAMPSHIRE

CRYSTAL LAKE MULTI FAMILY

Crystal Lake

MAY 16, 17, 18 8:30AM - 3PM

Thurs & Fri 8a-3p Sat 8a-12p 947 Wedgewood Dr

2 FAMILY SALE Thurs, Fri & Sat. 8am – 3pm

408 Candlewood Trail

13N340 State Route 47 th

th

May 18 -19 9am-5pm Antiques & Collectibles Cash Only

Lots of Antiques, 50” Toshiba HD TV, Recliner, Lots of Household Items, Linens & Comfortor Sets, Books, Sporting Equip, PS2 Games & More.

Between Rte 20/72 & Plank Rd

847-778-0169

Cary

JOHNSBURG ESTATE SALE, PRICED FAIRLY Furniture, bedroom, dining, living, rugs, kitchen, micro, tv, florals, books, holiday, mirror, art, storage, clothing, women & Jr. much misc. 5/16- 5/18 Thur, Fri,Sat. 8am-5pm (yellow signs) 2825 Bay Meadow Ln Bay Oaks, Johnsburg

McHenry

ESMOND NA-DA FARM BARN SALE/EVENT May 17th, 5-8pm & May 18th, 93pm. Over 30 different dealers featuring vintage, handmade, antique items + food (including organic baked goods)+ live music & much more. Named one of the BEST flea markets from coast to coast by Flea Market Style Magazine!! For more info, visit: nadafarmlife.org/events

637 Aberdeen Rd. Friday, May 17, 9-5pm, and Saturday, May 18, 9-3pm. A little bit of everything, priced to sell. Household items, computer monitors, TV, books, LOTS of toys, baby items, boys/girls clothes Newborn-5T.

Cary Fri, 9am-5pm Sat, 9am–12noon

6710 Hawthorne Friday & Saturday 8am-5pm 5827 Landcaster Circle New Gas Stove, New Bath Vanity & Sink Top, Furniture, Lamps, Electronics, Small Appliances, Housewares, Linens, Gas Lawn Mower, Tools & Gardening Items, Holiday décor, Clothing & Shoes, Toys & Games. EVERYTHING MUST GO!

ST. CHARLES

ALGONQUIN Garage/Moving Sale at

22 Twickenham Court From 9-4, on Friday and Saturday, May 17th & 18th. Selling furniture, exercise equipment, mini-fridge, books, household items, & holiday decorations. CASH Only!

ALGONQUIN Manchester Lakes Community Garage Sale

Located SE of Algonquin & Lakewood Roads

THURS, FRI, SAT 9AM - 4PM

FRI, SAT, SUN MAY 17, 18, 19 9AM - 5PM

Kane County Fairgrounds ! Inside ! Furniture, glassware, toys, old pictures, postcards, books, large amount of collectibles, jewelry, kitchen collectibles, Indian rugs, baskets & pictures, linens, blankets

Margie's Free Coffee & Cookies

See You There!

Trout Valley

Sat, May 18th 9a-3p

20 Marryat Rd Furniture, glassware, jukebox, Christmas, art work, electronics, 28 yrs miscellaneous, everything must go!

WAUCONDA ESTATE SALE May 17 & 18 9 - 4

322 Old Country Way Something for everyone! Antique collectors to Crafters, antique furniture, collectibles, craft items galore, vintage fabric, more. Pictures and full list at AgapeEstateSales.com

Wonder Lake

Sponsored By: Kelly Boulos-Kruczek @ Century 21 New Heritage 773-636-1193 Co-Sponsored By: Joe at Milestone Mortgage 224-558-2020

Barrington Friday & Saturday 8am – 3pm

550 Welch Circle Furniture, Collectibles, Clothing, Luggage, Purses, Fishing Lures, Wood Carvings, Pictures & More!

Fishing Equipment, Golf Balls & Bags, Tools, Books and Much Misc.

Furniture, collectibles, quilts, and electronics.

WONDER LAKE

THURS, FRI, SAT MAY 16, 17, 18 9AM - 5PM 5918 McCullom Lake Rd. Many Antiques, Quality Furniture, Couches, Table & Chair Sets, Coffee & End Tables, Rockers, Recliners, Bar Stools, Shelves, Home Accents, Collectibles, Toys, Books, Lots of solid wood pieces, Must see to believe! Hager, LazyBoy, Barcalounger & MUCH, MUCH MORE!!

ECKEL'S MCHENRY FLEA MARKET

3705 W. ELM Starting Mar 28 NEW HOURS THURS & FRI 11-5 SAT & SUN 8-5 815-363-3532 Having a Birthday, Anniversary, Graduation or Event Coming Up? Share It With Everyone by Placing a HAPPY AD!

Northwest Herald Classified 800-589-8237 www.nwherald.com

Brand New home goods, Holiday décor, Garden/Yard décor, LOTS of kids clothing Newborn - 10, outdoor kids toys (Water Slide/Power Wheels) Home/Office/Patio furniture

CRYSTAL LAKE

Fri, May 17 9am-4pm Sat, May 18 9am-1pm 105 East James Way Boys & girls toddler baby clothes & shoes, crib accessories, like new pink/purple toddler bed w/mattress, tricycle, vintage inlay tables, art by Fuchs, chandeliers, tools, much miscellaneous.

Cary

SAT, MAY 18

EXPECTING MOTHERS DREAM SALE!! Tons of baby clothes and kids items: Bedding, Swing, Jump Center, Pack-n-Play, Crib Bedding and MORE!! LOTS of TOYS!! Sports Cards, Crystal, House Wares, Antiques, Furniture, Books and MORE!!!

Crystal Lake MULTI-FAMILY MOVING SALE

798 DARLINGTON LANE FRI 8-4 SAT 8-2 NAME BRAND CLOTHING, VINTAGE TOYS, HASSELBLAD CAMERA, CAMPING EQUIPMENT, NEW POOL IN BOX 42" DEEP, FISHER PRICE DOLL HOUSE, TOOLS, EXERCISE BIKE & MUCH MORE!

Friday & Saturday 8am – 4pm

Proceeds to benefit Cary Methodist Church Cary

THURS, FRI, SAT MAY 16, 17, 18 8:30AM - 3:30PM Deerwood Col Holcomb Crystal Springs Rt. 176 to Walkup North to Crystal Springs, West

BARRINGTON MAY 18TH 427 EAST RUSSELL ST Sat 7 AM - 3 PM. Power tools, electronics, fishing gear, designer lamps, shades, paintings, prints, Kitchen wares, kids bikes, motorcycle helmets, toys, conference table, chairs, holiday decor, collectibles

BULL VALLEY 7304 MASON HILL RD Between Country Club Rd & Crystal Lake Rd.

Northwood Acres 1506 Mink Trail May 16th - 18th Thurs – Fri, 8am - 2pm Saturday, 9am – 12 Clothes, Furniture, Rubber Stamps, Pandora, Kitchen items, Working Dishwasher, Moen cast iron sink with fixtures, books and much more

CARY

THURS, FRI, SAT 8:30AM - 3PM Cambria Sub.

CRYSTAL LAKE

Ford 8 N Tractor, Woods mower, Brush Hog Mower, Oak Entertainment Center, Hutch w/ lighted top, Radial Arm Saw, Table Saw, TOOLS! Household Misc. TOO MUCH TO LIST! EVERYTHING MUST GO!

TV, cartop carrier, Dept 56, craft items, electronics & MORE!

SAT, MAY 18 9AM-5PM

60 N. ORIOLE TRAIL Pre-school educational items, books, puzzles, blocks, leap frogs. Kids porcelain toilet, office partitions, coffee table, craft supplies & MUCH MORE!

CRYSTAL LAKE “The Gates” Multi-Family

Watch for the Signs!

1137 Boxwood Court One day only Sat May 18th 8A-4P Moving out of state. Everything must go. Appliances, furniture, clothes, camping gear, toys, books. Priced to sell.

CARPENTERSVILLE

Gleneagle Farm Single Family Homes

Sub-Wide Annual Garage Sale THURS - SAT MAY 16-18 8AM - 4PM DIRECTIONS Enter Gleneagle Farm using Miller or Binnie Rd., off Randall Rd.

Lots of Items to be sold like... Baby/child/adult clothing, toys and furniture

Too Much To Imagine!

450 - Fri/Sat

CRYSTAL LAKE 3911 High View Drive

389 - Sat

Cumberland Gate 8

Saturday May 18th 8am - 4pm

346 - Thurs-Sat

Solid oak dining set table hutch and 10 chairs, solid oak dressers,mirror. Sofa and love seat cabinets Ferris 61 inch commercial mower, and miscellaneous no junk all good stuff.

Melrose Gate 9

Crystal Lake 836 Wedgewood Drive May 16th, 17th & 18h 8:30am – 4pm Shop Vac, Pressure Washer, Sander, B&D WorkMate, Skil Saw, Vise, Misc Shop Tools, Antique Tools, Shelving Units, Garden Tools, Hedge Trimmer, 6' Step Ladder, Art Work, Art Supplies, Frames, Trivet Collection, Antique Bed Warmer, Decorative Items, Games, Puzzles, Sporting Goods, Housewares, Redwood Picnic Table & Benches, Xmas Items, Glassware

225 - Thurs-Sat

Meridian Gate 12 332 - Thurs

Wiltshire Gate 14 347 - Thurs/Fri 464 - Thurs/Fri

Warwick Gate 16 315 - Thurs/Fri 321 - Fri/Sat 336 - Fri/Sat 343 - Thurs/Fri 441 - Thurs-Sat

Richmond Gate 20 350 - Fri/Sat

Sunset Gates 21 & 22 260 - Fri/Sat 328 - Thurs-Sat 392 - Thurs-Sat

LOTS OF FREE STUFF

South Shore

CRYSTAL LAKE

(Runs parallel with Lake Ave. to the North - One way Street along the Lake)

101 Savoy Lane

MAY 18 8AM-5PM MAY 19 10AM-5PM

HUGE KIDS GARAGE SALE Girls(0-5) & Boys(0-8) name brand clothes- Gap, Gymboree, Oshkosh. Baby gear, Maclaren stroller, Schwinn bike trailer, costumes, LOTS of Toys (Bob the Builder, Duplos, Little People, Dora, books, Elmo, Matchbox) Housewares, vacuum, frames, quilts. Too much to list!! Rain or Shine

Baby/toddler girl clothes, toys, household items & MORE!!

RECRUIT LOCAL!

Email: classified@ shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898 or online at: www.nwherald.com

Target your recruitment message to McHenry County or reach our entire area. For more information, call 800-589-8237 or email: helpwanted@ shawsuburban.com

664 - Thurs/Fri 705 - Thurs/Fri 750 - Fri/Sat 820 - Thurs-Sat 831 - Thurs-Sat 901 - Thurs/Fri 1675 - Thurs-Sat

Oxford Gate 6

CARY (at end of New Haven Dr in back of Cambria subdivision , follow pink signs off of Three Oaks) Sat 8-4, Sun 8-1

Broadway (Runs parallel with Lake Ave to the South)

Essex Gate 4

3203 New Market Avenue

Carpentersville

May 16, 17, 18 9am - 3pm “Rain or Shine” Rt. 14 to Dole Ave, South Dole becomes Lake Ave.

CRYSTAL LAKE

109 MINNIE ST.

401 COUNTRY CLUB RD. (Corner of Ringling and Country Club Roads)

Crystal Lake WEDGEWOOD Neighborhood SALE

711 - Thurs-Sat 755 - Thurs-Sat 925 - Thurs/Fri 970 - Thurs 1180 - Thurs/Fri 2125 - Thurs/Fri

Sponsored By: Jackie Nelson (815) 814-5355

BREAKING NEWS available 24/7 at NWHerald.com

Send your Classified Advertising 24/7 to: JOBS ANNOUNCEMENTS STUFF VEHICLES REAL ESTATE SERVICES LEGALS Find it all right here in Northwest Classified

FRI, SAT, & SUN MAY 17, 18, & 19

9AM - 4PM 600 Barberry Trail Large Estate Sale, Whole House & Garage

HARVARD 206 E. Brink May 16,17,18 Thursday and Friday 8 to 5 Saturday 9 to ? Lots of Turquoise Jewelry Clothes and Miscellaneous. Eveything is priced to sell

Harvard HUGE MULTI FAMILY SALE!

Fri & Sat 8a-4p 2304 Rt 23 Between Bunker Hill & Lembcke Rd.

Too much to list Priced to Sell

HARVARD

THURS, FRI, SAT 9AM - 3PM Ackman to Huntley to Boneset to Sub. Household goods, kids items, clothing & MUCH MORE!

DIFFERENT SALES EACH DAY! FOX LAKE 256 Lippincott Lane FRI. 8:30-3PM & SAT. 9AM-NOON Furniture, Neon Bar Lights, Baby Equipment, Sports Equipment, Games, Trek 7000 Model Aluminum Bike, 4 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator, Apple 2 Computers and Much Much More! Check out McHenryCountySports.com for local prep sports and video.

TEXT ALERTS

160 SAVOY LN. May 16 th - 18th Thurs-Fri 9am - 5pm Sat 9am-12pm

DOLE MANSION

PERENNIALS, ORNAMENTAL GRASSES, HERBS, TREES, PRAIRIE PLANTS, GROUND COVER & SHRUBS

NORTH SIDE MULTI HOME 10 +

Everything must go! No reasonable offer will be refused.

9AM UNTIL SOLD OUT

Sign up for TextAlerts to receive up-to-date news, weather, prep sports, coupons and more sent directly to your cell phone! Register for FREE today at

NWHerald.com

HUNTLEY

Huntley-North Bridge

May 17th & 18 th 9a-3p

TRI-GARDEN CLUBS

789 Kingston Lane Thurs 5/16 - Fri 5/17 8AM-5PM

FOX RIVER GROVE

(Countryside, Garden Gate & Green Twig)

ANNUAL PLANT SALE

CRYSTAL LAKE

23975 Hickory Nut Grove Rd.

CRYSTAL LAKE

Multi-Family Garage Sale! Crystal Lake (Coventry Area).

FOLLOW SIGNS!

Friday-Sunday 8-3 Tons of kids clothes, jackets, and shoes, maternity clothes, car seats strollers.

7026 Hiawatha

Off of Terra Cotta Rd & Wyndmuir Drive

Cary

Miller and Sleepy Hollow Road Shenandoah subdivision

Fri & Sat 5/17 & 5/18 9a-5p

WYNDMUIR SUB.

Antiques, painted milk can, crank corn counter & sorter, wooden lift top school desk, chrome coin pay phone, cast iron Dutch oven, flat irons, collector plates, Schwinn & Huffy bicycles, snow blower, vacuum, chairs, some clothing

Saturday, May 18, 2013 • Page E11

SAT, MAY 18 9AM - 4PM 18211 Rt. 173 3.5 mi E. of Harvard Cookie Jars, Copper Jello Molds, Decorative Candles, Antique Tools, Holiday décor, Games, Beanies, Craft Supplies, Collector Plates, Glassware & Books. Helping Paws Animal Shelter Garage Sale items needed. Donate items for our sale and help fund the shelter. May 24, 27 & 28 12:00 - 7:00 May 25 & 26, 10:00 - 5:00 May 29, 9:00 -12:00 No baby cribs, clothing, holiday items or large appliances. All donations are tax deductible. Donation site: Algonquin Township 3702 US Hwy 14 Community Room B

WE'VE GOT IT! Northwest Classified 800-589-8237 www.NWHerald.com Visa, Mastercard and Discover Card accepted

FRI & SAT MAY 17 & 18 8:30AM - 4PM

Prairie Oaks Subdivison ½ mile East of Outlet Mall Follow the Pink Signs Scooters, dirt bike, blackjack table, battery powered wheel chair, bikes, baby items, furniture, maternity clothes, coolers, trailer & MUCH MORE!!

HUNTLEY Garage/Estate Sales

10506 Sawgrass Household, decorator items, furniture, miscellaneous

JOHNSBURG Thur, Fri, Sat 9am - 3pm 1504 ROSEMARIE DR, next to Sunnyside Park/ Village Hall. HUGE SALE!! Tons of BOYS clothes 18 mon - 4T, GIRLS clothes Toy Storage Bin Set, PACK N PLAY w bassinet , BRITAX carseats, Toddler bed, swing, girl's bike. Lots of nice TOYS! Men & women's clothes. Bakers rack, office chair

Johnsburg

Donald Dr. off Main St.

4011 Miller Rd

Friday 5/17 & Saturday 5/18 9 to 5

(Just West of Stade Farm Market)

Bioforce and Gazelle Exercise Equipment, Collectible Wolf Plates, Miller Beer Mirrors, Tools, Kids Clothes, Bumper Pool Table, Bedroom Set, Day Bed, Roll Top Desk, Household Items, Furniture, Lawn Mower, Lawn Roller and much more.

HUNTLEY

Perennial Sale All Locally Grown Large Variety of Ornamental Grasses, Hostas, & Plants Thurs & Fri May 16th &17th 9am-5pm Sat May 18th 9am-1pm

JOHNSBURG

HUGE MULTI-FAMILY SALE, RAIN OR SHINE

Northbridge Sub. Thur-Sat 8-5 10850 Cambria Court Clothing and shoes many name brands, designer formal dresses, purses and bags, tons of name brand sports equip bats, bags, balls, trophies and plaques, Electronics, HP Laser printers, Bose Craftsmen tools, lots of mens garage stuff, books, pictures and frames, jewelery, many bathroom and kitchen items, many craft items

HUNTLEY MULTI FAMILY

MAY 16-18 Thurs – Sat 9am - 4pm

4406 Mayfair Drive Kid's clothes, boys 0-5T, girls 03T, kids bikes and ride on toys, Baby items, bed rail, Household misc., Hose reels, fake fireplace, over stove exhaust hood and much miscellaneous.

JOHNSBURG Thurs – Sat, 5/16 – 18 8:30- 5

THURS, FRI, SAT MAY 16, 17, 18 9AM - 3PM Covington Lakes Sub.

9932 & 9962 Stockton Lane LOTS OF NEW ITEMS SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE!

OPEN HOUSES Watch for the Northwest Classified Open House Directory every Friday, Saturday & Sunday. Include your listing by calling 800-589-8237 or email: classified@shawsuburban.com

1516 W. Sudeennew Drive This sale is enormous – over 1,000 exceptionally nice items in great condition from the home of a retired antiques dealer. Garden Art, Paintings, Display Cases, Marble Pillar, Advertising, Jewelry, old Schwin Bike, even a “Man's” table!

www.HuskieWire.com All NIU Sports... All The Time

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


CLASSIFIED

Page E12• Saturday, May 18, 2013

Northwest HeraldSaturday, / NWHerald.com May 18, 2013 “Mr. O enjoying his orange” Photo by: MaryAnn

Upload your photos on My Photos – McHenry County’s community photo post! Photos on My Photos are eligible to appear in print in Northwest Herald Classified. Go to NWHerald.com/myphotos

MCHENRY LAKE IN THE HILLS 643 Joseph Street May 16, 17, 18 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Girls toys, bikes, sleeping bags, play castles, end tables for her room, tools (drum sander, ban saw, drill press, etc.), portable DVD player, movies and more great stuff!

LAKE IN THE HILLS

FRI & SAT MAY 17 & 18 9AM - 4PM

(S. of Rte. 120, N. of Bull Valley Rd. Between Draper and Curran)

Look for Signs

LEGEND LAKES COMMUNITY GARAGE SALE WAY TOO MUCH TO LIST

Community Wide Sale Among 540 Homes and Townhomes Spread out in the various neighborhoods of Legend Lakes. Come browse and find your own treasures.

McHenry

3014 Arbor Drive Thursday-Friday 9am-3pm

LAKE IN THE HILLS GARAGE SALE

MCHENRY

Friday 17th & Saturday 18th, 10-4pm Bassett end tables, Oak kitchen table and chairs, New Grills, too much to mention.

Multi Home (10 +)

✿✿✿✿✿✿✿✿ FRIDAY & SATURDAY ONLY 8am- 4pm

MCHENRY

Brighton Oaks Sub. Rt. 176 to Briarwood East to Ballard South, follow signs

LAKEWOOD THURS, FRI, SAT MAY 16, 17, 18 8AM - 3PM Turnberry Trails Sub.

9718 Partridge Ln. Furniture, home décor items, teen girl designer clothes & MUCH MORE!

Marengo Craft Fair FRI & SAT MAY 17 & 18 9AM - 5PM 17015 HARMONY RD. Dried flowers, jewelry, quilts & Much, Much More! 815-923-7322

ANTIQUES IN THE PARK

SAT, MAY 18 8AM - 4PM 1450 COURT ST. Potential Vendors Call 815-814-5391 - $25

MCHENRY Fifth Annual Abbey Ridge Condominium Association and Trails of Boone Creek Community Garage Sale FRI through SUN MAY 17 - 19 9AM - 4PM Neighborhood off of Crystal Lake Ave, just north of Bull Valley

MCHENRY

MARENGO LARGE 3-Generation Garage Sale in Brookside Meadows/MARENGO:

645 HUNTERS PATH

(turn by Mr. Freeze) FRI & SAT MAY 17th & 18th 8 am - 4 pm Bedroom, Kitchen, Living Rm. Furniture, TOOLS, FISHING GEAR, 27" FLAT SCREEN TV, Pet Supplies, RECORD ALBUMS, 45's, cd's, 2 EXERCISE BIKES, MILLER LITE bar lights, Sleeping Bags, Bar Supplies, Collectibles, Women's Clothes... YOU NAME IT!!!

MARENGO

FRI & SAT 8AM-4PM 4601 W. HOME AVE. Cookbooks, couch, bath bench, walker, cane, Tupperware

& MUCH MORE!

McHenry

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

MAY 18, 9-2 4426 Hi-Point Rd.

1/2 block S. of Hampton Inn

Desks, Clothes, Tools, Gardening Supplies, Books & Much More!

CASH ONLY-RAIN OR SHINE

ALL PRICED TO SELL RAIN OR SHINE

Thurs, Fri, Sat 9am-2pm 3317 Venice Ave.

✿✿✿✿✿✿✿✿ McHenry Friday & Saturday 8:30am – 3pm

Sports, Garden Equip, Household, Small Appls, Clothes, Tools, Chrismas Decor. You name it, we probably have it!

Friday, May 17th 9am-5pm Saturday, May 18th 10am-12noon

Mchenry

Boy's (newborn-size 6), girl's (newborn to 4T), kid's shoes, maternity clothes lg/xl, women's clothes (lrg-2X) outdoor toys, swing set slide, crib bedding, car seat base, bike trailer, Dr. Brown's bottles, household items & tools.

Tons of Ladies' Clothes, Med to Lrg. Some with tags. Ladies' Shoes, Size 9, Men's Harley Davidson Clothes/Shirts Size XX, Power Tools, Tons of Household Items, Lamps, Furniture, Shelves, Wallhangings, etc.

MCHENRY HUGE 5 FAMILY SALE THURS & FRI 9 - 5 SAT 9-1

3913 Maple Ave. Off Rt. 31 by Saint Mary's Furniture, Longaberger, Amer Girl, household, Lionel, boys & girls & adult clothes toys & holiday

Fri & Sat 9a-3p

#'s at 8:30 CASH ONLY 1976 Red Chevy Monte Carlo: WOW! ONLY 23K miles! 1960 Ford Farm Tractor w/mower & grader, table & chairs, sofa, curio cabinets, glassware, china, old bottles from Chicago dump, dolls, and toys, books & linens, new kitchen items, model car collection, upright piano, tools, vintage records, and more!

Windfall Antiques

RICHMOND 11518 N U.S. 12 Thur – Sat, 8:30-3:30

HUGE MULTI-FAMILY SALE Antiques, Household, Jewelry, Clothes, Furniture, Tools, Bedding, Electronics, Artwork, Lamps, Appliances, Fishing, Camping, Books, Crafts & Garden & MUCH MORE!!!

RICHMOND KIDS FURNITURE

10706 Mallard Ln. N/E of 173 & 12 224-545-7961 5/18-19 9am-4pm toys, kids bedroom furniture, recliner, desk,and much more

SPRING GROVE

8th Annual Sundial Farms Subdivision Garage Sales

McHenry

HUGE Multi-Family

14 Homes Participating

Thurs, Fri, Sat 9:00am – 5pm Sunday: BARGAIN DAY 10:00am - 3PM

Program your GPS to the entrance of the subdivision

219 S. Draper Off Bull Valley or Curran Rd Tons of Stuff, All Priced to Sell!

MCHENRY MULTI-FAMILY GARAGE SALE 6324 Midleton Lane Legend Lakes Fri/Sat May 17 - 18 8:30AM – 3PM Barbie house, furniture, clothes, toys, books and more! All proceeds benefiting the American Cancer Society's Relay for Life! Together we can create more birthdays!

McHenry Multi-family garage sale Thurs, Fri, & Sat 9am- 4pm Sun 9am-1pm off Bay Rd. East of Chapell Hill Rd. LOTS of household items, woman's (L-XL) & junior clothes, lawn mower, few tools, TOO MUCH TO LIST!!!

MCHENRY OAKHURST SUB.

Located off Wilmot Rd. between 173 & State Park Rd.

8110 Wilmot Rd., Spring Grove 60081

Once in subdivision, circle around, and follow the arrows so you won't miss any of the sales. Something for everyone and more!

SPRING GROVE

FRI & SAT MAY 17 & 18 8AM - 4PM Furniture, tools, clothes, household & MUCH MORE!

SPRING GROVE Hosting Craft, Plant, Baking & Rummage Sale

SAT, MAY 18 9AM - 4PM Community of Faith Lutheran Church

www.gocof.org

www.estatesales.net

! Follow Signs !

Don't See What You're Looking For Today? Check Back Tomorrow! Never The Same Paper Twice! Northwest Classified 800-589-8237 www.nwherald.com

Antiques, restaurant items, furniture, household, kids & MUCH, MUCH MORE!!

www.HuskieWire.com All NIU Sports... All The Time

Consider donating to Bethesda Thrift Shop 26 Crystal Lake Plaza in Crystal Lake Sun12-4; Mon-Fri 9-7; Sat 9-5 815-455-2325

VILLAGE OF LAKEWOOD, (Turnberry) Hshld goods, toys, furniture, clothes, misc. May17/18/19 9-5 10012 Lakewood Road

VOLO

12 Families FRI & SAT MAY 17TH & 18TH 9AM-5PM Wilmot & Paddock Rds 1 ½ miles South of Chain O Lakes State Park

Jewelry, antiques, knick-knacks, sewing, books, movies, designer clothes, and more.

30563 N. HWY 12 NO EARLY BIRDS CASH ONLY Harley Davidson clothes, loveseat, coffee table, horse drawn cultivator, angel bookmarks, Snow White collectibles, Princess Pat collectibles/ compacts & MUCH MORE!

1221 Cortland Ln At the corner of Fairfield & Bonner. In Apple Country Furniture, Household Goods, Appliances, Adult's Working Clothes, Power Tools and More.

WONDER LAKE

ANNUAL DEERPATH SUB. GARAGE SALE THURS, FRI, SAT May 16, 17, 18 9AM - 5PM Thompson or Greenwood to Wondermere to Adam Drive

Couch, Love Chair & Ottoman, Papasan Chair & Matching Ottoman, Indoor Tree, Stove, Dishwasher, Microwave, Lawn Equip, Office Equip, Rubber Stamping Items, Tools, Welder, JBL Speakers, Chain Saw, Paint Sprayer, Bogen HD Tri-pod, Snare Drum Sets, 50” Gong, Fiberoptic Drum Sticks, Park Lane Jewelry, Clothing, Household Items & Much, Much More!

Wonder Lake

Furniture, TV's, Baby, Children clothing and items, kitchen items, household items.

WOODSTOCK 12207 Cooney Dr. May 17-19

WOODSTOCK HUGE

3215 BOERDERIJ WAY Off of McConnell, near Country Club Huge amount of vintage items Incl maple gate leg table, 6 chairs, enamel top kitchen cab, trunk, books, bric-a-brac; also Papasan chair, indoor fountain, area rugs, floor lamp, small compressor, boating tube, household, clothing, work bench & MUCH MORE!!

WOODSTOCK MULTI FAMILY

WOODSTOCK 14 HOMES!

Victorian Country / Neumann Homes Subdivision

Thurs 5/16 - Sat 5/18 9 am - 4 pm North of Marion Central HS From Rt 47 take 120 E to Raffel Rd or Queen Anne, take Banford to Redwing Dr or Tanager Rd Household items, toys, Little Tykes, lots of clothes, coats & shoes from infant to adult + size, baby items, toddler bed w/bedding / mattress, car seats, strollers, bikes, furniture, table, chairs, end table, sectional, breakfast nook, plants, tv, electronics, new HP all in 1 printer, dvd's, books, scrapbooking, glassware, arcade, Dept 56, and more!

WOODSTOCK Infant & children's furniture including race car bed w/mattress, clothes, coats, boots, toys, bikes, bouncy house. Refrigerator, toilets, pedestal sink, microwave, other household decor, items, and small appliances, tools.

WOODSTOCK 413 Fremont

One Day only! Saturday, May 18th 8-3 Vintage collectibles, accent pieces and some antiques. Framed art, washstand, dishes, lamps, pillows, linens, books, jewelry and plants. Quality items. No clothes.

Friday May 17th 9am-4pm Saturday May 18th 9am-1pm

740 Tara Dr.

Crafts, Kitchen, Christmas Items, Vintage Linens, Tools, RC Plates, Tom Clark Figurines, V. Bradley Purses, D. Frykman Santas, Longaburger Baskets, Toaster Oven, Travel Golf Club Bags, Picnic Bag w/ Utensils. Life Magazines, 50, 60 & 70's. All reasonably priced to go! Large collection of kites & supplies, free to good fliers... AND OTHER FREEBIES!

801 Twelve Oaks Parkway St. Johns & Powers Rd. Over 60 Vintage collectibles, American Limoges fine porcelain (bridal bouquet pattern), Roger Bros silverware (Remembrance pattern), crystal stemware, 1970's Coca Cola jackets, Longaberger baskets & access. Teak bookcase, glass console table, jewelry, electronics, Playstation 11, casual dinnerware, kitchenware, acuum, clothing: Men, women's, baby girl 0-6, crib bedding, diaper bags, bottles, bouncers, activity saucers, books, toys, toiletries, tennis rackets, fishing reels, golf clubs with bag & cart. Honda GL1800A Gold Wing Motorcyble with ABS (mint condition with many extras) 1 owner, 6,600 miles, $14,800. 16' canoe, Old Town Guide, like new, $350.

Too Much To List! SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE!

WOODSTOCK NEIGHBORHOOD GARAGE SALES St. Patrick Rd .

WOODSTOCK HUGE GARAGE SALE

866 Pleasant St.

May 18th 9-3 Furniture including antique pieces,clothes ranging from 3T to women's S-XL, kitchen items,home decor and much much more. There's a little something for everyone.

WOODSTOCK

HUGE GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH THURS 5/16 3PM-7PM FRI 5/17 8AM-3PM SAT 5/18 7AM-NOON

$3.00 A-Bag-Day Kishwaukee Valley Rd & Route 14 Benefiting The Family Health Partnership Clinic And Woodstock Area Community Ministry

400 Stewart Ave. Saturday, May 18th 7am-5pm; Sunday, May 19th, 7am-3pm

Thurs & Fri 8-6 Sat 8-3

7 + STOPS

9-4:00

Dresser, dining room set, clothes, swing set, cigar boxes, and much more.

Spa, Pool Table, Bar with Stools, Livingroom Furniture, Hall Tree, File Cabinet, Office Chair, Lamps, Pictures, Total Gym Supra Pro, NordiTrack, Exercise Bike, Fishing, Boating, Recreational and Maintenance, Pier Hardware, Ice Skates, Shed, Lawn Tools, Tools, Reptile Tanks, Party Theme Tacks, Kitchen Items, Knick-knacks, Clothing, TOO MUCH TO LIST!

Watch for the Northwest Classified Open House Directory every Friday, Saturday & Sunday. Include your listing by calling 800-589-8237 or email: classified@shawsuburban.com

14719 Pleasant Valley Rd.

MAY 17 & 18 8AM - 4PM

Located in Culdesac

May 18th 8am-2pm

DOWNSIZING SALE

OPEN HOUSES

Woodstock Fri, May 17th , 8am - 4pm Sat, May 18th , 8am - 2pm

1229 Gerry Court

4122 W Lakeshore Dr

Thurs. Fri. & Sat. May 16, 17, &18 9am-5pm

High end designer clothes, antiques, collectibles, 50” plasma TV, tons of home décor, tools + MANY MORE ITEMS!

DUTCH HOLLOW SALE

WOODSTOCK

NO PERMIT NEEDED

1560 Sandpiper Ln.

WOODSTOCK / WINSLOW ACRES

May 16th, 17th, & 18th 9am-5pm

WONDER LAKE VILLAGE WIDE

FRI & SAT MAY 17 & 18 8AM - 3PM

Saturday Half Price on Most Items.

THURS, FRI, SAT MAY 16, 17, 18 9AM - 4PM

SPRING GROVE Paddock Estates Subdivision Annual Garage Sale

May 16-19: Thurs.-Sat. 8am-5pm Sun. 9am-3pm

815-592-7464 for directions

6917 EDGEWOOD DR.

3010 E. SOLON RD.

FRI, MAY 17 8AM - 6PM SAT, MAY 18 8AM - 4PM River Road to Black Partridge

Don't Repack!

Wauconda Friday & Saturday 8am – 5pm

THURS, FRI, SAT 5/16-5/18 9AM-4PM

GARAGE/BARN SALE

Unsold Garage Sale Items?

Flags on Mailbox

3129 Cypress Ct.

BAYVIEW CT.

2301 Colby Pt. MAY 16, 17, 18 9AM - 5PM ! And Next Week ! MAY 23, 24, 25 9AM - 5PM

Saturday Only

4 Tires+Spare-Size 225/45/17, Men's and Women's 10 Speed Bikes, Snow Blower, Household and Home Decorating items.

McHenry

THURS, FRI, SAT, MAY 16, 17, 18 8:30AM - 3:30PM

MCHENRY

Legend Lakes Subdivision

Th, Fri, Sat. 5/16-5/18 8am-5pm Antiques furniture/Glassware, jewelry, clothes, unique treasures

May 18th & 19th 8a-4p Sponsored by Melissa Leetzow of Prudential First Realty 815-382-2957 Woodstock / Bull Valley Off of Bull Valley Rd., follow signs.

McHenry

WOODSTOCK

off McConnell Road

10990 Byron Court

5928-20 Dublin Ct. 3112 Riverstream Dr.

LAKEWOOD

Tear out this handy guide to the area’s best sales! Look for more sales on the other side of this page. See the garage sale map online at NWHerald.com/classified

5109 W. Malibu Ct.

Sofas, crib, changing table and lot of clothes, older girl's and boys 18mo-2T. Most items $1 or less.

308 Pocahontas Tr.

Garage Sale Guide

Fri. & Sat. May 17 & 18 9am-4pm

2580 FAIRFAX LN. Brand new twin mattress set, Little Tykes twin race car bed, ladies & boys clothes, baseball style ceiling fan, kids motorized 4-wheeler & MUCH MORE!

RIP&RUN

THE PONDS OF BULL VALLEY th 7 Annual Garage Sale

WOODSTOCK MULTI FAMILY

Fri 17th - Sat 18th 8-5

1950 JULIE ST.

FRI & SAT MAY 17 & 18 8AM - 4PM From Woodstock 47 N. Charles Rd. (Alden Rd.) L, St. Patrick Rd. L, or 14 W, Rose Farm Rd. R, Nelson Rd. L, Murray Rd. R, St. Patrick Rd. From Harvard 14 S, McGuire Rd L, Wilson Rd. R, St. Patrick Rd. Many varieties tomatoes, peppers, cukes, hosta, rasberry, & perennial plants. 42” lawn tractor, grill, heater, Ent. Center, daybed w/ trundel, end tables, recliner, clothes, sofa bed w/ 2 chairs, GE stereo w/5 disc player + speakers, printers, 12'x9' wool rug + runners, craft supplies, ladies bike, collectibles, vintage tablecloths, new scarves, cookbooks, books, kitchen items & electronics, crystal, haybine, hand tools, truck top, ab exercise machine, window A/C's, jars, jewelry, dog notecards, oak dining room table + chairs, Verlo queen size futon, Columbia jogging stroller, 2” thick milled oak for mantels etc., Bruno handicapped scooter truck and van lift, refrigerator cooler unit, new Ronson showtime rotisserie. Sat only: Kubota 60” 0-Turn mower, lawn tractor, video games, auto tools,

& MUCH, MUCH MORE!!

10" Table Saw, Serger Sewing Machine, Wood rocker, Scrap booking, Xyron Plus, Cricket, Twin Size bed, Clothes, Toys, Misc, Garage is Full!

WOODSTOCK Multi Family Sale 427 Ridgeland Ave. (2 blocks off of Dean St. Garage on Muriel)

FRI. 5/17, SAT. 5/18 AND SUN. 5/19 8AM-4PM Tons of household, decorative, collectibles, holiday items, and jewelry.

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WOODSTOCK COMMUNITY GARAGE SALE The Sonatas in Woodstock will be holding a community garage sale Fri 5/17 and Sat 5/18 9am4pm. Bake sale at 2411 Vivaldi St. Subdivision is off Ware Rd. JOBS ANNOUNCEMENTS STUFF VEHICLES REAL ESTATE SERVICES LEGALS Find it all right here in Northwest Classified

Simply create your profile by phone or online and, for the next 90-days, our professionals will match your profile to employers who are hiring right now!

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Call to advertise in the At Your Service directory. In the Northwest Herald classified everyday and on PlanitNorthwest Local Business Directory 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

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