jhnt_2016-08-22

Page 1

M OND A Y , A UG US T 22, 20 16 • $1.0 0

HERALD NEWS The

SPORTS

TheHerald-News.com

A FEST OF CRAFTS

All-American Defender Tim Smith seeks to lead USF to playoffs / 17 LOCAL NEWS

Hikes weighed Increases proposed for Joliet water and sewer rates / 4 PETS

Pets of Week

Variety of cats, dogs awaiting adoption at local shelters / 24

Hopstring Fest brings out craft brewers, local bands and more / 3 Prostate Cancer Screenings

TODAY’S WEATHER

FREE EVENT: Sept. 15 & 28 Silver Cross Hospital Campus, Pavilion A Register to attend at www.silvercross.org. Advanced Urology Associates will offer a private digital rectal exam along with a PSA blood test for men who are 45-75 years old OR are over age 40 with a family history of prostate cancer.

HIGH

LOW

79 58

Plenty of sunshine today with low humidity. However, the humidity will increase closer to the evening as a cold front approaches from the east. Complete forecast on page 5


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

2

HERALD NEWS The

TheHerald-News.com OFFICE 2175 Oneida St. Joliet, IL 60435 815-280-4100 Fax: 815-729-2019 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday- Friday NEWSROOM 815-280-4100 Fax: 815-729-2019 news@theherald-news.com SUBSCRIBER SERVICES 800-397-9397 customerservice@shawmedia.com 6 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday, 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. Saturday Missed your paper? If you have not received your paper by 7 a.m. Monday-Friday, or by 8 a.m. Sunday, call 800-397-9397 by 10 a.m. for same-day redelivery. SUBSCRIPTIONS Monday-Friday: $1.00 / issue Sunday: $1.50 / issue Basic weekly rate: $6.50 Basic annual rate: $338 To subscribe, make a payment or discuss your delivery, contact Customer Service. CLASSIFIED SALES 877-264-CLAS (2527) classified@shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898 LEGAL NOTICES publicnotice@theherald-news.com 877-264-2527 Fax: 630-368-8809 RETAIL ADVERTISING 815-280-4101 OBITUARIES 877-264-2527 obits@theherald-news.com General Manager Steve Vanisko 815-280-4103 svanisko@shawmedia.com Editor Kate Schott 815-280-4119 kschott@shawmedia.com

The Herald-News and TheHerald-News.com are a division of Shaw Media. All rights reserved. Copyright 2016

THEN

& NOW A weekly feature by The Herald-News

The World’s Columbian Exposition – Chicago In the late 19th century, a reform movement that sought to improve the nation’s cities through beautification gained wide exposure through the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. The fair expressed the ideals of the “City Beautiful” reformers through the creation of a “White City” of architecture and infrastructure built in the Beaux Arts style, which was a shining example of city planning. The World’s Columbian Exposition transformed the city of Chicago in 1893 and influenced the city’s development for decades to come. The Columbian Exposition, also known as the Chicago World’s Fair, was located in Jackson Park, at the current site of the Museum of Science and Industry, the University of Chicago and the Midway Plaisance. The six-month event drew an estimated 27 million visitors, 14 million from outside the United States, at a time when the population of Chicago was just more than 1 million. The Columbian Exposition celebrated, one year late, the 400th anniversary of Christopher Columbus’ “discovery” of the Americas. Chicago competed with cities such as New York and St. Louis for the right to host the fair. Exposition planners wanted to demonstrate Chicago’s international stature just 22 years after much of the city center had been destroyed by fire. Promoters also wanted to focus on the progress, change and innovation that happened in America since the end of the Civil War. Daniel Burnham served as the fair’s lead architect and oversaw the design and planning of the fair’s main buildings. These massive, neoclassical structures came to be known, collectively, as the White City. Despite their imposing appearance, the buildings were made from wood frames wrapped in staff, a white color plaster mixture that created the illusion of stone. The White City lasted for six months, the length of the fair. The exposi-

WHERE IT’S AT

• Relevant information • Marketing Solutions • Community Advocates

THEN

Advice ........................................ 27-28 Classified...................................30-39 Comics ................................ 25-26, 30 Cover story ................................. 3, 15 Lottery.............................................. 13 Nation/World ............................13-14 Obituaries ...................................11-12

David Belden and the Local History Project digital collections

The Then photograph shows a view of the Ferris wheel looking east from the Midway Plaisance.

NOW

OLD POSTCARD IMAGES SOUGHT FOR PUBLICATION David Belden is a history teacher at Minooka Community High School and currently is publishing local postcard books with Arcadia Publishing in his Local History classes. He and his students are looking for old Joliet photos and postcards, and images from Joliet’s parks, for a new publication. Photographer Christine O’Brien is an English teacher at Minooka Community High School and currently edits and writes books with Arcadia. If you are interested in contributing a postcard image, email dbelden@ mchs.net or localhistory@ mchs.net; or call 815-4672140, ext. 260.

The Now image shows a similar view of the Midway Plaisance today. Photo provided by Christine O’Brien

tion closed in late October 1893; and that winter, a number of the buildings were destroyed by fire. Just as the organizers had hoped, the scale and grandeur of the Columbian World’s Exposition surpassed any previous international exhibition. It featured a grand display of nearly 200 buildings, and it brought in people and cultures from 46 countries. There were many other magnificent structures at the fair, such as the Machinery Hall, the Manufacture and Liberal Arts Building, and the Electricity Building, among others. The Palace of Fine Arts was designed as a fireproof building to protect valuable paintings on display. This building was one of two designed to be permanent. Today, the Palace has become the Museum of Science and Industry. Burnham officially challenged all American engineers to design and build a structure so special that it even could outperform the Eiffel Tower. A 33-yearold civil engineer from Pennsylvania, George Ferris Jr., arrived in Chicago and learned about the challenge. Ferris

Opinion............................................. 16 Pets ...................................................24 Puzzles ....................................... 27-28 Sports..........................................17-23 State ................................................. 12 Television ........................................29 Weather .............................................5

ON THE COVER

sketched out and submitted a plan for a huge “observation wheel” in full detail, including the ticket price. Ferris had found investors who were willing to cover the construction cost to build the structure. The Ferris wheel quickly became the top attraction at the Exposition. The magnificent wheel featured 36 huge and elegant cars, each of which could fit 60 people for a total of 2,160 passengers. Visitors paid 50 cents each to ride the attraction. The ticket for a 20-minute ride was equal to the exposition’s general admission fee. On an average day, nearly 10,000 people rode the wheel. With nearly five months of operation, the wheel carried 1.5 million passengers and generated $750,000 for the Ferris Wheel Co. By the end of the Exposition, the Ferris wheel had become the symbol of American’s national pride at the fair. While the wheel was not meant to be a permanent structure like the Eiffel Tower, the Ferris Wheel came to embody the significant characteristics of 19th-century America – technology, mobility, innovation and change.

Joel Rakoski (left) with the Joliet Brewers Guild hands a free sample of beer to Kelvin Huges at Saturday’s fifth annual Hopstring Fest, a beer festival with live music at Silver Cross Field in Joliet. See story page 3.

Photo by Larry W. Kane for Shaw Media

CORRECTIONS

Accuracy is important to The Herald-News and it wants to correct mistakes promptly. Please call errors to our attention by phone at 815-280-4100.


COVER STORY

3

Hopstring Fest in Joliet combines craft beer and other crafts By BOB OKON

bokon@shawmedia.com JOLIET – Craft beers and live bands. What more could you want? Maybe a guy who walks on machete blades and drives a nail up his nose with a sledgehammer? Hopstring Fest had that, too. The fifth Hopstring Fest at Silver Cross Field on Saturday brought craft beer and local music lovers looking for what Matt Streibich called a “mellow” time. “It’s always been a pretty mellow fest,” Streibich said. “People are mellow, listen to some music and have some fun.” And drink some uniquely brewed beers, of course, which Streibich and his friends in the Joliet Brewers Guild helped provide. “We have 15 beers on tap,” said Streibich, secretary of the Guild. “We’re giving away free samples of the beer and asking for donations to MorningStar Mission.” The annual event is organized by Mike and Kathy owners of More online Trizna, Chicago Street Bar and Grill, along with what Mike called “a core group of friends.” Thirty bands were playing throughout the Visit this story at event, about half TheHerald-News. of them from the Com for video from Joliet region and the other half from Hopstring Fest. farther but not too far, Trizna said. The brewers were independent and local or regional. The vendors? “All local – every one of them,” Trizna said. Hopstring Fest-goers like local. “Every second or third person I walk by pats me on the back and says, ‘Hey Triz, this is great,’ ” Trizna said. “I don’t have to have the appreciation. But it’s great that people come year in and year out because they enjoy it.” Hopstring Fest is not complicated. “I like the music here a lot. All the people are very nice here,” said Cheyenne Helix of Joliet, who was running a “Make Your Own Necklace” booth. The price for a necklace was $2. “It’s a craft-focused event,” said

Photos by Larry W. Kane for Shaw Media

Michael Shehan and the Prairie Ghosts perform Saturday at the fifth annual Hopstring Fest, a beer festival with live music held at Silver Cross Field in Joliet.

ABOVE: Stephanie Green enjoys corn on the cob as Scott McNeil listens to Chris Flood perform Saturday for the festival. RIGHT: Lisa Behounek of Joliet looks at beer mugs to buy from Ryan Bothwell of Bothwell Pottery in Brookfield. Jason Janes, head brewer at Metal Monkey Brewing, a craft brewery in Romeoville. “There’s craft soda down there. There’s craft beer. There’s craft art. I think it’s great.” There were craft mixed drinks, too. And,then there was Tom Hill,

whose craft was a bit unusual. Hill heads the Carnival of Curiosity and Chaos out of Chicago. He and his fellow performers were doing acrobatics in midafternoon. Later, Hill said, he would be doing flesh-hook suspension.

“The hook pierces your flesh, and you’re lifted off the ground,” Hill said. “We’ll be doing that later tonight. Too many kids around. … During the day, it’s more family-friendly circus acts –

See HOPSTRING, page 15

The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

‘A PRETTY MELLOW FEST’


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

4

LOCAL NEWS

Have a news tip?

Contact Kate Schott at 815-280-4119 or kschott@shawmedia.com

Get text alerts Stay informed during breaking news. Sign up for breaking news text and email alerts at TheHerald-News.com.

Joliet proposing hikes in water, sewer rates By BOB OKON

bokon@shawmedia.com JOLIET – The city of Joliet’s Utilities Department has proposed a 12.5 percent increase in water and sewer rates in November and continued increases through 2025. The proposal comes a year after the City Council put off a proposed 9 percent increase until an efficiency study was done to determine where the department could save money. The efficiency report, presented earlier this month, concluded that the city needs to spend more on preventive maintenance and hire more people, but it did not identify any large cost savings.

“We should be doing 2 percent of our water mains and sewer mains a year. We’re doing less than 1 percent. And we have some large EPA mandates that we need to fund.”

said staff is scheduled to make a presentation to the full council at the Sept. 19 meeting. If the council approves the rate hike in October, it would go into effect Nov. 1, Turk said. The proposed increases would pay for improvements mandated by the Environmental Protection Agency. Finance Director James Ghedotte said the increases also would fund regular line replacements recommended James Ghedotte for the water and sewer system as a City of Joliet finance director preventive maintenance program. “We should be doing 2 percent of our water mains and sewer mains a year,” The rate increase proposal was pre- Ghedotte said. “We’re doing less than 1 sented last week to the council’s Fi- percent. And we have some large EPA nance Committee. mandates that we need to fund.” Committee Chairman Michael Turk The future rate increases, accord-

ing to the analysis presented last week to the Finance Committee, would be: • 10.5 percent in 2017 • 4 percent in 2018 • 4 percent in 2019 • 8.5 percent in 2020 • 8.5 percent in 2021 • 8 percent in 2022 • 5 percent in 2023 • 3 percent in 2024 • 2 percent in 2025 The Water and Sewer Fund cash balance is projected to drop from $26 million this year to $13 million in 2017 without a rate increase. The cash balance would decline in future years until 2024, when there would be a $3.3 million deficit, according to the analysis.

Richland D-88A celebrates back-to-school, volunteer efforts By FELIX SARVER

fsarver@shawmedia.com CREST HILL – Efforts by volunteers from Mississippi to clean up Richland District 88A were celebrated last week with a back-to-school event filled with entertainment and food. Richland Superintendent Michael Early stood Thursday in the parking lot of the elementary school section of the district where the celebration took place. Around him were dozens of parents, teachers and children enjoying music and food. Several bounce houses were set up for the children. “What a great way to kick off the school year,” Early said. During the past week, volunteers who are part of the We Care Campaign came from Yazoo City, Mississippi, to wash windows, do landscaping and other work for the two-school Crest Hill district that has just under 950 students. We Care Campaign is part of the Three Rivers Baptist Association. Thursday’s back-to-school event was a culmination of the week’s work, said Clint Ritchie, a pastor for First Baptist Church in Yazoo City and We Care Campaign volunteer. He said the volunteers came to do tasks the school needed that the district didn’t have the manpower to do before the new academic year began. “We were able to come in and show we care about Crest Hill,” Ritchie said. Early said the volunteers “put a spit shine” on the district’s buildings and grounds and that they were a “great, great group of people.” “They have been like a triage. It’s

Parents, children and Richland District 88A staff enjoy a backto-school event Thursday at the Crest Hill campus. Felix Sarver – fsarver@ shawmedia.com

unbelievable what they’ve been doing,” he said. Richland Principal Kelly Whyte she got in contact with the We Care Campaign volunteers in early summer and that after they did the cleaning and landscaping work, they offered to do a back-to-school event for the students. Early said Thursday’s event was part of the district’s improvement

plan, as officials talked about having a back-to-school picnic, and this event fit right in. Whyte said the best part of the event was seeing the connections being made among teachers, parents and administrators. “Our theme this year is making connections,” Whyte said, “and this goes along with what we’re hoping to do in the community.”

More online Visit this article at TheHerald-News.com to view video of the Richland back-to-school event.


Call J&A Today, Sleep Tight Tonight!

TODAY’S WEATHER BROUGHT TO YOU BY

815-723-9383

SEVEN-DAYFORECAST FORECAST WILL COUNTY SEVEN-DAY FORFOR WILL COUNTY TODAY

TUESDAY

79 58

Mostly sunny and comfortable

WEDNESDAY

81 66

81 69

Mostly sunny and nice

ALMANAC

78/58

Harvard

Belvidere 78/59

79/61

Rockford

78/60

78/61

DeKalb

78/61

80/59

80/59

Pontiac

City

79/58

80/60

Paxton

79/60

Hoopeston

78/57

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

REGIONAL CITIES City

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

SUN AND MOON Sunrise today .......................... 6:09 a.m. Sunset today ........................... 7:41 p.m. Moonrise today ...................... 10:26 p.m. Moonset today ....................... 10:55 a.m. Sunrise tomorrow .................... 6:10 a.m. Sunset tomorrow ..................... 7:40 p.m. Moonrise tomorrow ............... 11:05 p.m. Moonset tomorrow ................ 12:05 p.m.

79 79 79 78 79 78 79 79 80 78 79

58 59 58 62 64 59 63 61 58 57 60

Tuesday Hi Lo W

s s s s s s s s s s s

82 80 80 82 82 80 82 82 81 80 83

66 66 67 67 68 65 68 66 68 66 66

s s s s s s s s s s s

Last

New

First

Full

Aug 24

Sep 1

Sep 9

Sep 16

La Salle Munster Naperville Ottawa Peoria Pontiac Rock Island South Bend Springfield Terre Haute Waukegan

Today Hi Lo W

79 78 79 80 81 80 81 76 81 80 78

61 60 58 59 62 58 59 58 61 57 61

s s s s s s s s s s s

Tuesday Hi Lo W

82 81 81 82 82 81 83 80 82 83 82

68 66 66 68 69 68 69 63 71 66 66

s s s s s s s s s s s

ILLINOIS RIVER STAGES

Miami 93/77

near Russell 7 near Gurnee 7 at Lincolnshire 12.5 near Des Plaines 15

3.77 2.15 7.09 9.02

+0.24 +0.44 +0.64 +0.66

Frost on Aug. 22, 1816, damaged crops as far south as North Carolina and led to widespread food shortages. The year 1816 is known as the “year without a summer.”

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Austin Baltimore Billings Boise Boston Burlington, VT Charlotte Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Knoxville Las Vegas Little Rock

Today Hi Lo W

81 58 89 87 83 90 87 81 71 89 80 78 86 91 83 78 87 89 79 83 85 97 84

60 56 71 74 60 53 54 62 54 65 60 61 74 58 65 60 76 76 59 65 62 78 72

t r pc t s s s pc pc s s s t t s s pc t s s s t pc

Tuesday Hi Lo W

84 62 89 90 83 76 82 78 80 89 84 83 92 86 83 83 88 91 82 81 88 99 87

58 57 71 74 62 49 54 65 62 67 64 64 73 56 71 63 76 76 66 71 67 79 75

c sh pc pc s pc s s pc s s s c t pc s c pc s t s pc t

City

Today Hi Lo W

Tuesday Hi Lo W

City

Today Hi Lo W

Tuesday Hi Lo W

Los Angeles 82 63 s 81 64 s Louisville 83 61 s 85 68 s Memphis 86 72 pc 88 75 pc Miami 93 77 pc 93 77 pc Milwaukee 80 64 s 84 69 s Minneapolis 82 67 s 85 69 s Nashville 85 62 s 89 69 s New Orleans 92 78 t 93 78 t New York City 81 63 s 81 67 s Oklahoma City 87 71 pc 87 72 t Omaha 85 66 s 85 69 t Orlando 93 76 t 93 77 t Philadelphia 84 63 s 83 65 s Phoenix 101 80 pc 100 78 pc Pittsburgh 77 58 pc 82 61 s Portland, ME 77 53 r 79 58 s Portland, OR 77 55 pc 81 58 s Sacramento 85 57 s 88 56 s St. Louis 84 66 s 85 73 s Salt Lake City 92 69 s 89 62 t San Diego 77 66 pc 76 68 pc Seattle 73 54 pc 79 58 s Wash., DC 86 67 s 86 68 s

WORLD CITIES

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

WEATHER HISTORY

MOON PHASES

City

at River Forest at Riverside near Lemont at Lyons

16 7 10 --

Prs

5.71 4.20 7.61 13.18

Chg

none +1.21 +0.58 none

WEATHER TRIVIA™ Q: In what month do most flash floods occur?

July

1

Aurora Bloomington Champaign Chicago Deerfield DeKalb Elmhurst Gary Hammond Kankakee Kenosha

Today Hi Lo W

A:

4

78/58

Chatsworth

Bloomington

6

Houston 89/76

NATIONAL CITIES

Watseka

79/59

79/59

6

El Paso 85/68

78/57

Streator

Reading as of Sunday

4

Atlanta 89/71

Kankakee

AIR QUALITY TODAY

UV INDEX

New York 81/63 Washington 86/67

Kansas City 83/65

Los Angeles 82/63

Gary

79/58

Ottawa

Eureka

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

Denver 91/58

79/61

Joliet

79/61

Detroit 78/60

Chicago 78/62

Orland Park 78/62

La Salle

Data as of Sunday Trees Grass Weeds Molds absent low moderate high very high Source: National Allergy Bureau

78/62

Hammond

79/58

79/59

San Francisco 68/57

Chicago

Aurora

Sandwich

POLLEN COUNT

79/66

79/65

79/58

81 65

Partial sunshine

Minneapolis 82/67

Evanston

Oak Park

St. Charles

78/59

79/63

79/59

78/60

Billings 90/53

Arlington Heights

Elgin

Hampshire

A t-storm possible

84 62

Seattle 73/54

Waukegan

Crystal Lake

78/61

Rather cloudy

82 65

MONDAY

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

79/60

79/60

SUNDAY

NATIONAL WEATHER

Kenosha

McHenry

SATURDAY

78 58

Couple of showers, Pleasant with clouds t-storms and sun

Lake Geneva

TEMPERATURES High ................................................... 74° Low ................................................... 59° Normal high ....................................... 82° Normal low ........................................ 63° Record high .......................... 94° in 1980 Record low ........................... 51° in 2012 Peak wind ...................... WNW at 10 mph PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 3 p.m. yest. ......... 0.50” Month to date ................................. 2.10” Normal month to date ..................... 2.91” Year to date .................................. 18.39” Normal year to date ...................... 24.53”

FRIDAY

82 57

T-storms, strong late

Joliet Regional Airport through 3 p.m. yest.

1

THURSDAY

City

Today Hi Lo W

Tuesday Hi Lo W

Athens 94 78 s 91 73 t Auckland 60 49 c 60 47 pc Baghdad 117 81 s 116 80 s Beijing 90 74 pc 84 74 c Berlin 74 59 pc 75 58 pc Buenos Aires 67 43 s 69 47 s Cairo 96 78 s 96 77 s Damascus 103 71 s 103 75 s Dublin 67 57 r 64 51 r Havana 92 75 pc 91 75 s Hong Kong 89 81 s 89 80 pc Jerusalem 86 69 s 87 71 s Johannesburg 66 39 s 67 38 s

London Madrid Mexico City Moscow New Delhi Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Sydney Tokyo Toronto

78 96 74 81 94 82 70 89 93 88 64 84 75

57 69 54 62 81 59 61 67 74 80 50 80 56

pc s t pc c s r s s t sh r pc

84 98 73 85 92 88 72 87 92 88 64 85 84

64 68 55 63 81 65 63 67 74 79 53 78 61

pc s t pc pc s pc s pc t r t s

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

5 The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

WEATHER


By BRITTANY KEEPERMAN

bkeeperman@shawmedia.com Metra plans to launch a fare study Sept. 1 that could lead to rate, zone and ticketing changes for commuters. The agency has not undergone a study such as this since its 1984 inception, and it has contracted California-based Four Nine Technologies to complete the work and develop recommendations for a potential change. Metra will pay no more than $315,300, according to the contract. “This team will play a significant role in partnering with our agency to evaluate our fare structure and make creative recommendations for changes,” Metra Board Chairman Martin Oberman said in a written statement. “The entire Metra Board feels strongly that we need to do this important work, particularly in light of our many funding needs and our major funding challenges.” Metra operates 11 routes over 488 miles throughout Cook, DuPage, Will, Lake, Kane and McHenry counties. There are 241 Metra stations, includ-

ing more than a dozen in Will County for the four routes that run through various parts of the county. The study comes on the heels of an Aug. 9 announcement that Metra would postpone the search for a vendor to build 367 rail cars. New cars are part of the company’s $2.4 billion modernization plan, but a lack of state funding makes major capital improvements difficult – the cars could cost more than $3 million each, Metra said. The study will examine the distance-based rate model it currently uses. Different cities along the train route are grouped into zones. As the train moves closer to the city, fares decrease, and riders are charged according to the zone where they boarded. Ten-ride, monthly and weekend passes also are available, which can reduce cost for daily commuters. Final recommendations for possible change most likely will come next summer, according to Metra Rail presentation documents. Metra last raised its rates by 2 percent Feb. 1.

Lost her weight. Gained back her health.

Changed her life.

Amy Kern lost 120 pounds in a year after having laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy with BMI Surgery at Silver Cross Hospital. Learn about the advantages and risks of weight loss surgery. Visit bmisurgery.org to attend a FREE Obesity & Health: Is Weight Loss Surgery Right for You? informational session, any Wednesday from 5:45-7 p.m.

Professional Employer hotline is 877-842-3976 ext 17 Thursday September 8, 2016 10:00am - 2:00pm To receive an Express Lane Pass, send resume to resume@expoexpertsllc.com (Enter: AttendingCJF in Subject Line)

Skilled Trades and Manufacturing Mega Career Fair

The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

Metra to look at rate, zone structures in study of fares

Thursday September 8, 2016 10:00am - 2:00pm Candidates must have at least 2 years of related work experience in their Field.

Drury Conference Center D rury LLane ane C onfference C entter 100 Drury Lane, Oakbrook Terrace, IL Sponsored by

Silver Cross Hospital Campus • 1890 Silver Cross Blvd. • Suite 260 • New Lenox

Mega Career Fair

|LOCAL NEWS

6


7

A VIRTUALLY INVISIBLE HEARING DEVICE. 5 DAY DAYS ONLY • AUG. 22nd - 26th By Appointment Only

TM

The QLeaf Lite™, a virtually invisible personal sound amplifier that fits comfortably in the ear canal.

TM

The YTango Lite™ receiver is placed inside the ear where it picks up and amplifies clear, natural so sound.

(Enlarged to show detail)

(Enlarged to show detail) (En

• Monday, August 22, 2016

For mild amplification in special situations. Individual results may vary. QLeaf Lite and YTango hearing devices are not custom molded devices. Not all ears will physically accommodate these devices.

Also Availabl Al Available: labl

450

$

OFF MSRP

On a Pair of AQ Premium Digital Hearing Aids

YOUR CE! CHOI

FREE Video Otoscopy & Hearing Screening

Expires: 8/26/2016

Expires: 8/26/2016

©2013 AccuQuest Hearing Centers

©2013 AccuQuest Hearing Centers

NOTICE! CATERPILLAR EMPLOYEES & RETIREES

Dawn Kovacik, M.A., CCC-A

Certified Audiologist License # 147-000011

Your hearing aid benefit could be up to $5,000 with us! Call today for more info!

Audiology & Hearing Centers Call Today to Schedule Your Appointment:

(888) 270-8544 Joliet 3077 West Jefferson St., Suite 206

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

THE HERALD-NEWS | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

Introducing the QLeaf Lite™:

PROMO CODE N-HRN-367-FP-C


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

|LOCAL NEWS

8

Crisis Line of Will County to celebrate 40th year Saturday By MIKE MALLORY

mmallory@shawmedia.com JOLIET – On Saturday, the Crisis Line of Will and Grundy Counties will celebrate its 40th anniversary with a laid-back celebration at the Joliet Area Historical Museum. While it is a small agency, 40 years signifies the extensive amount of help the nonprofit has provided in times of need. The organization offers aroundthe-clock services, such as information and referrals, telephone counseling and support, suicide prevention and intervention, and reassurance calls. But Executive Director Michele Batara said that Saturday will be a time to celebrate 40 years while hopefully getting the word out more about the organization, and potentially raising some funds in the process. “We’re not expecting thousands of dollars,” Batara said. “But we can always use the support.” For $30, attendees can enjoy – from 6 to 10 p.m. – live entertainment, food and entrance to the Joliet Area Historical Museum’s exhibits. Soul Motion – a cover band that plays soul, classic R & B, funk, blues,

If you go n WHAT: Crisis Line of Will and Grundy Counties 40th anniversary celebration/fundraiser n WHEN: 6 to 10 p.m. Saturday n WHERE: Joliet Area Historical Museum, 204 N. Ottawa St. in Joliet n COST: $30 n INFO: www.crisisline247.org or 815-744-5280 classic rock and more – will perform. Cutting Edge Catering will grill burgers, chicken, hot dogs and brats on-site. There will be a silent auction and various raffles. Batara said it will be a family-friendly evening. “There’s no program to this,” Batara said. “Families can come out and find out what services the Crisis Line offers in the process.” The organization always is open to adding volunteers. Batara said the Crisis Line typically asks for a four-hour commitment per week. “We look for people who want to give back,” Batara said. “We look for compassionate people, because we deal with many different issues.” She said prospective volunteers must participate in training.

SAVES THE MIDDAY

Power up your ride with the new Rock Island midday express • • • •

Save up to 20 minutes between the suburbs and downtown Choose from three inbound and two outbound express trains Leave work early on a convenient 1:30 p.m. outbound express Ideal for midday trips into the city

Visit metrarail.com for details and buy tickets now with the new Ventra App.

Bunions Congratulations! NAIL PROBLEMS

AreYou Looking for Full-TimeWork? Start the next step of your job search with BACK TO WORK 50+ in Chicago. Our team can help you update your job search strategies, practice for interviewing and networking, and enroll in training programs that employers value.

Congratulations to Dr. Steven Overpeck for being named in “Guide to America’s Top Podiatrists” Consumer’s Research Council of America for 6 years in a row!

CALL TOLL FREE (855) 850–2525

Dr. Overpeck

Board Certified in Foot Surgery and Reconstructive Rear Foot and Ankle Surgery Named one of America’s Top Podiatrists for 2010-2015 by SLD Industries, Inc Most Insurance Honored Medicare Participant

• Register for a Smart Strategies for 50+ Jobseekers Workshop near you where you can: – Learn about the 7 Smart Strategies you need to get back into the workforce

Blue Shield Preferred Provider

– Apply for the BACK TO WORK 50+ Coaching and Training Program • Order AARP Foundation’s free job search guide

Sa Habla Español

To learn more, visit: www.aarp.org/backtowork50plus

Physician and Surgeon of the Foot and Ankle

CHICAGO COOK WORKFORCE PA RTNERSHIP This program is available to all, without regard to race, color, national origin, disability, sex, age, political affiliation, or religion. SM-CL0362663


VIEWS Kris Stadalsky route instead. Dzieken started out riding, but decided to get out and walk. “I walked about half the parade route,” he said. People applauded and waved, and if Dzieken noticed a youngster with a sad face along the route, he made sure to get real close, smile and wave. “It was very enjoyable for me,” Dzieken said. The parade committee bought about 2,000 flags to hand out to attendees and the veterans to get people into a patriotic mood, Cimaroli said. “A lot of younger people don’t understand the whole veteran thing,” Cimaroli said. “Sometimes, our vets

get lost in the shuffle.” Overall, it was a great parade, she said, with lots of participation from local groups and people. Amy Singletary helped out with the veterans. They met at Channahon United Methodist Church and were bused over to the parade. Singletary walked with them along the route. She loved working the crowd, shaking hands with onlookers, and getting them to applaud and honor the veterans. “Some of the people stood up and clapped – that was amazing,” Singletary said. “But others didn’t, and that was sad. Not everybody knows to do that.” Singletary was taken by one man who got up from his viewing spot to come over and shake the hand of a veteran walking in the parade. The vets then got him to walk along the rest of the way with them.

All the veterans who participated were treated to lunch at the Three Rivers Festival via food coupons, and a concert by the Joliet American Legion Band. Singletary said she would like to see even more veterans participate in future Three Rivers Fest parades. “We will be happy to have them every year walking in the parade,” she said. While Dzieken would have liked to see more veterans participate, he was honored to be one of the many grand marshals – something he hadn’t expected. “All in all, they put a really good one over on us,” he chuckled. “I thought that was really great.”

• Kris Stadalsky writes about people and issues in areas southwest of Joliet. Reach her at writestuff56@ comcast.net.

AN EXTRAORDINARY LIFE

‘You would have never known he had cancer’

Bill Allen didn’t let ACC interfere with his goals By DENISE M. BARAN–UNLAND dunland@shawmedia.com

MINOOKA – Bill Allen of Minooka was just 18 in the summer of 2006 when the severe jaw pain hit. He was referred to a specialist in temporomandibular joint disorders. An MRI showed a tumor on his right salivary gland. A specialist removed the tumor, and a biopsy showed Bill had a rare glandular cancer: adenoid cystic carcinoma. It already was at stage 4. Bill had only one thought. “He was going to beat it,” said his mother, Carol Allen. For a time, it seemed likely that Bill might do so. In September 2006, Bill began chemotherapy and radiation. A neuroma was removed from the surgery site the following December and, two years after that, two small tumors were removed from Bill’s left lung, followed by the removal of two nodes. In July 2012, another tumor was removed from the same lung. But during that surgery, larger

tumors in the lung and pleura were found. This meant surgery no longer was an option, and Bill had exhausted other cancer-fighting treatments, Carol said. At that point, Bill turned to experimental treatments and clinical trials, and he continued to live his life. “Unless you knew Bill on a personal level, you would have never known he had cancer,” Bill’s wife, Ashliegh Allen, wrote in an email. Bill had grown up helping his parents on their farm. He belonged to 4-H. He played saxophone and violin in grade school, and he became an Eagle Scout. He played tennis while attending Joliet Catholic Academy, as well as worked for Minooka Pharmacy. He continued working for the pharmacy while studying psychology at the University of St. Francis, where Bill also played tennis. After graduation in 2010, Bill became employed by Costco Wholesale in Oak Brook. In 2013, Bill became a pharmacy training coordinator for Costco Wholesale and moved to Washington – all while fighting cancer. “He wanted to be a regular guy,” Carol said. “I think it pushed him to work hard.” Ashliegh said she began dating Bill in 2009 – when she was 19 and he was 22 – and married him in 2014. Early in their relationship, Bill offered Ashliegh a “Get out of jail free card.” She

the point of attending many of the band’s concerts, even those overseas – and found encouragement in the music. “He’d listen to Dave’s music when getting radiation treatments,” said Bill’s father, Charles Allen. One of Bill’s favorite songs by the band was “#41,” which includes this verse: “I will go in this way. And find my own way out.” That summed up Bill’s logical, fighting approach to his disease, Ashliegh feels. “There were plenty of times we both felt overwhelmed, but the thing about Bill is that he never wanted to give up,” Ashliegh said. “He swore he would fight to the end, and he did.” Photo provided Eventually, the cancer spread to Bill Allen poses with his wife, Ashliegh Al- Bill’s bones, Carol said, which was extremely painful for him. In 2015, len. Bill went on disability. He died Jan. refused it, and she’s glad she did. 24, 2016, at age 29. “I learned to trust him and put his Ashliegh said his memory continneeds before my own,” Ashliegh said. ues to inspire his family and friends. Bill was an “outdoorsy” guy. He “Bill is a light in this world,” she liked people watching, sitting outside said. and feeling the breeze, and visiting The Attack ACC Foundation will dog parks with his two dogs, Bailey, hold its annual fundraiser on Sept. 11 a 7-year-old poodle/bichon therapy at the Hickory Creek Preserve, Hickdog; and a Lucy, a 3-year-old beagle ory Hollow, 10501 LaPorte Road in dachshund. Mokena. For information, visit www. Bill also had a sarcastic sense of attackacc.org. humor and loved to tell jokes, Ashliegh said, but he mostly liked help• To feature someone in “An ing and hoped to earn his master’s Extraordinary Life,” contact Denise degree in psychology. He was also a M. Baran-Unland at 815-280-4122 or huge fan of Dave Matthews Band – to dunland@shawmedia.com.

• Monday, August 22, 2016

The theme of this year’s Three Rivers Festival in Channahon was “A Salute to America,” so it seemed like a perfect idea to honor our veterans as the grand marshals of the parade on the festival’s last day. “Everyone was on the same page [choosing veterans for the job],” said Karen Cimaroli, co-chairwoman of the parade committee. American Legion Post 294 Riders of Morris came out on their motorcycles. Minooka American Legion Post 1188 followed behind carrying banners as they walked. Channahon resident Hank Dzieken, a World War II Navy veteran, believes that, at 90, he might have been the oldest parade marshal in attendance. Morris Hospital donated two air-conditioned buses to transport the veterans (the drivers were veterans as well), but many chose to walk the

LOCAL NEWS | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

Parade in Channahon honors veterans

9


10

Open Mon-Sat. 5 pm Open Sun. 4 pm

Syl’s The Party Specialist!

Jody’sHot Dogs Gyro Plate

PRIME RIB DINNER

with Extra Meat & Fries

$5.99

Expires 8/31/16

PURCHASE $50 WORTH OF GIFT CERTIFICATES AND RECEIVE A $10 GIFT CERTIFICATE FREE!

326 Republic Ave. Joliet

Open for luncheons for private parties min. 30.

815.729.0251

829 Moen Ave., Rockdale • 815.725.1977 • Syls.com

SM-CL0363651

A Family Tradition of Excellence!

Tim Dimmick SEWER CLEANERS

Let us help make your party a success something we’ve been doing for over 30 years!

The ORIGINAL Dimmick-3rd Generation. Don’t be misled by others!!!

Residential Main Line Electric Power Rodding Only

$125

Kitchen Sinks

Call us about your party today!

Only

Big or small, full meals or just sides... We have what’s right for you!

$75

with Coupon, Expires August 31, 2017

(815) 729-0009 · 1358 West Jefferson St.,Joliet

(815) 693-3092 • (815) 592-8764 • (815) 729-4839

bobandsis.com | bobandsiscatering@sbcglobal.net

SM-CL0363234

SM-CL0363235

CALL US FOR ALL YOUR PHARMACY NEEDS Our Full Service Pharmacy offers FREE Delivery and 24 Hour answering service.

(While it lasts)

FRI., SAT., SUN. Starting at $18.95

Pharmacy • Oxygen • Beds • Wheelchairs • Ostomy • Skin Care 692 Theodore Street, Joliet, IL 60435 815-744-4600 www.remcomedical.com

Independently owned & operated by Tim Dimmick. 3rd Generation Serving Joliet & Will County

S

Expires 8/31/16

Contact Patti at 815-725-1977

SA VE AD THI

99¢

For all occasions - Multiple private rooms with menus to satisfy your budget.

SA VE

SM-CL0363395

Hot Dogs

SM-CL0363233

The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

| THE HERALD-NEWS

MONEY SAVING MONDAY

To advertise on this page please call 815-280-4101


By BEN NUCKOLS

The Associated Press

Founding guitarist of 3 Doors Down Matt Roberts dies

WEST BEND, Wis. – Guitarist Matt Roberts, a founding member of the rock band 3 Doors Down, has died in Wisconsin. The 38-year-old was in West Bend to perform at a benefit. The West Bend Police Department says someone called authorities around 7 a.m. Saturday to report an unconscious man in a hotel hallway. Police and firefighters found Roberts dead. The police statement says there were no signs of trauma and that the cause of death was not immediately known. An autopsy was planned for Sunday. Roberts left 3 Doors Down in 2012 for health reasons. According to Billboard, he helped found the band with vocalist Brad Arnold and bassist Todd Harrell. They were all natives of Escatawpa, Mississippi. The band’s biggest hit was the 2000 song “Kryptonite,” which was nominated for a Grammy Award.

Italian soprano Daniela Dessi dies at 59 after brief illness

MILAN – Italy’s La Scala opera house says soprano Daniela Dessi has died. She was 59. Last month, Dessi wrote to her fans on Facebook saying she had to cancel all her summer performances due to an undisclosed health problem. The ANSA news agency quoted her companion, Fabio Armiliato, as saying she died in Brescia after a “brief, terrible and incomprehensible illness.” In a statement Saturday, La Scala said Dessi’s solid technique, strong temperament and “rare interpretative sensibility” made her one of the “most notable figures on the international operatic scene.” It added that her performances “remain among the unforgettable pages of La Scala’s history from recent decades.” Aside from La Scala, Dessi performed in major opera houses, including the Metropolitan in New York, Vienna’s Staatsoper and the Deutsche Oper in Berlin.

– Wire reports

OBITUARIES HELEN M. NUGENT Born: Feb. 17, 1924 Died: Aug. 18, 2016

Helen M. Nugent (nee Kuhn), age 92, of Manhattan – a time to be born and a time to die: God called on Aug. 18, 2016, at her appointed time. Helen found the positive in all persons and things. She was a loving wife, wonderful mother and caring friend/neighbor. Her devoted husband and high school sweetheart, Edward M Nugent, preceded her in death in 2006. Helen and Ed were married on April 24, 1948. She is survived by her loving children, Dale (Lois) Nugent, Jean (Bernard) Petak, Mary Lou Nugent and Rita (Bob) Herrick; her grandchildren, Chris (Marx) Drath, Jeff Petak, Gina Petak and Janelle Petak; a precious great-grandchild, Morgan Drath; a sister-in-law, Doris Kuhn; and a brother-in-law, Bill Reilly. Affectionately called Aunt Helen, she is survived by several Kuhn and Nugent nieces and nephews. Aunt Helen always enjoyed hearing what the younger folks were doing. Preceded in death by her parents, George and Margaret Kuhn (nee Murphy); brothers, Vernon (Bud) Kuhn and Robert (Bob) Kuhn;

sister, Bernice Reilly; her parents-in-law, Michael and Elizabeth Nugent (nee Guildenzoph); brothers-in-law, Gerald (Anna Marie) Russ, Earl (Margaret) Nugent and Ray (Kay) Nugent; sister-in-law, Margaret (Peg), (Don) Borchardt; and several nieces and nephews. Helen was a proud graduate of Peotone Community High School, the Class of 1942. She was a longtime member of St. Joseph’s Church, Manhattan, St. Joseph’s Council of Catholic Women and the Red Hat Society. Helen’s favorite job was working as a special education coordinator for the Southern Will County Cooperative. Helen always had a big heart, especially for the special-needs children and less fortunate. We are grateful for the love and compassion provided to Helen by her dedicated caregiver, Jenny Henry Payne. Visitation for Helen M. Nugent will be Monday, Aug. 22, 3 to 7 p.m. at the Forsythe Gould Funeral Home. Funeral services will be from the Forsythe Gould Funeral Home at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 23, to St Joseph’s Church, 235 W. North St., Manhattan, for a Mass of Christian Burial at 10 a.m. Interment will be at Mount St. Patrick Cemetery, Wilton Center. Memorials: St Joseph Catholic School, Manhattan, and the Franciscan Portiuncula Center for Prayer, Frankfort.

How to submit

LILLIAN TATROE Lillian Tatroe, age 89, late of New Lenox. Died peacefully at Senior Star at Weber Place Aug. 19, 2016. She is survived by her loving husband of 65 years, Robert Tatroe; two sons, Stephen (Renee) Tatroe and Brian (Terri) Tatroe; one daughter, Marian (Ron) Youngren; 12 grandchildren, Karyn (Walt) Tejan, Sonia (Jeff) Eberspacher, Stefan (Beth) Tatroe, Kalyssa (Dave) Soucy, Chrisanna (Justin) Olson, Dustin Tatroe, Blake (Sarah) Tatroe, Candyce (Tom) Jordan, Ryan (Nicla) Renner, Brett (Emily) Renner, Colton Youngren and Ian Youngren; 11 great-grandchildren, Andrew, Alex, Sam, Ben, Braden, Aurora, Jonas, Callan, Brendan, Francesca and Karley; her sister, Ann Hucek; and two nephews, Mark and Russell Hucek. Lillian was preceded in death by her parents, Geza and Helen Szakonyi; and her

Send obituary information to obits@TheHerald-News.com or call 815-526-4438. Notices are accepted until 3 p.m. for the next day’s edition. Obituaries also appear online at TheHerald-News.com/obits where you may sign the guest book, send flowers or make a memorial donation. brother-in-law, Raymond Hucek. Lillian retired in 1987 from the Illinois Department of Corrections. She was an active member of St Jude Church New Lenox. In lieu of flowers, donations to St Jude Children’s Hospital would be appreciated. Her funeral will take place Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. from Hickey Memorial Chapel, 442 E. Lincoln Highway, New Lenox, to St. Jude Church, 2401 W. Second Ave., New Lenox, for 11 a.m. Mass. Entombment will be in Resurrection Cemetery. Visitation will be Wednesday from 8:30 to 10:30 a.m. For information, call 815-485-8697.

11

• Monday, August 22, 2016

WASHINGTON – George E. Curry, a journalist, civil-rights activist and publisher whose syndicated column ran in hundreds of black-owned newspapers around the United States, has died. He was 69. Curry, of Laurel, Maryland, died suddenly on Saturday at Washington Adventist Hospital in Takoma Park, Maryland, after he was taken to the emergency room there, his sister, Charlotte Purvis, said Sunday. Curry’s syndicated col- George E. umn was carried in more Curry than 200 African-American-owned newspapers, and he served two stints as editor-in-chief of the National Newspaper Publishers Association, a news service for black papers. He also served as editor-in-chief of Emerge magazine in the 1990s, and within the past year, he had been raising money to relaunch Emerge as a digital magazine covering racial injustice and other issues important to the black communi-

ty. He became the first African-American to be elected president of the American Society of Magazine Editors. He was a frequent commentator on Black Entertainment Television and on the Rev. Al Sharpton’s radio show. “I am saddened beyond words upon hearing of the death of George Curry,” Sharpton tweeted Sunday. “He was a giant and trailblazer. RIP.” A native of Tuscaloosa, Alabama, Curry graduated from Knoxville College in Tennessee, where he edited the school paper and played football. He worked as a reporter for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Sports Illustrated and the Chicago Tribune. “George E. Curry was a giant in journalism,” Rep. G.K. Butterfield, D-N.C., the chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, said in a statement. “He stood on the front lines of the civil-rights era and used his voice to tell our stories when others would not.” While at Emerge, he led a four-year campaign to win the release of Kemba Smith, a woman sentenced to 24 years in prison for her minor role in a drug ring. Emerge ran a cover story on Smith in 1996 called “Kemba’s Nightmare.” President Bill Clinton pardoned Smith in 2000.

OBITUARY BRIEFS

OBITUARIES | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

Prominent black journalist, publisher George Curry dies


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

12

STATE

Ill. latest state to expand domestic workers’ rights By SOPHIA TAREEN The Associated Press

CHICAGO – Left out of federal labor law written decades ago, nannies, housekeepers and private caregivers are gaining legal protections in a growing number of states, with Illinois becoming the latest to establish a domestic workers’ “bill of rights.” The Illinois rules, signed by Gov. Bruce Rauner this month, extend sexual harassment protections as well as minimum-wage pay and a guaranteed one day off in a seven-day work week to the domestic workforce, which is mostly female and immigrant heavy. Six other states have similar laws, but Illinois is now the first in the Midwest, and advocates said they hope to expand their efforts into the southern states. Backers said the laws are needed because domestic workers are particularly vulnerable to exploitation: They work alone at odd hours and often live where they work. The pay can be measly and for immigrants, language and legal status can complicate things. Last week, a Minnesota woman was charged with allegedly beating and starving a woman she brought from

ILLINOIS ROUNDUP

News from across the state

1

Feds in terror case want max term for ex-Illinois guardsman

CHICAGO – Prosecutors want a federal judge next month to impose the maximum 30-year prison sentence on a former Illinois National Guard soldier who plotted to attack a military armory in his home state, saying in a new filing that “betraying one’s country while in its service is a particularly grave crime.” Hasan Edmonds, 23, of Aurora, deserves the stiffest penalty available under the law because he violated the oath he took when he joined the National Guard to defend the United States against all enemies, a government sentencing memorandum filed Friday in Chicago federal court said. Edmonds devised a plan for

AP photo

Magdalena Zylinksa, a domestic worker, is seen Wednesday in Elmwood Park. China to work as a nanny up to 18 hours a day. “Working in someone’s home and the aspect of it being invisible work from the public view ... it leaves a lot of room for workers to be mistreated,” said Yomara Velez, an organizer with the New York-based National Domestic Workers Alliance. There are an estimated 2 million domestic workers in the country, 93 percent are women and one-third are immigrant, according to the Economic Policy Institute, based in Washington

him to travel to the Middle East and join Islamic State fighters while his cousin, 30-year-old Jonas Edmonds, attacked the National Guard armory in Joliet. The goal, prosecutors said, was to kill as many as 150 people at the facility. The filing calls Hasan Edmonds’ plot “a contemptible betrayal of both the Nation’s trust and his fellow soldiers.” Under plea agreements, Hasan Edmonds pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiring to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization. Jonas Edmonds pleaded guilty to conspiring to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization and lying to federal agents. The cousins, both U.S. citizens, are scheduled for sentencing Sept. 16. Jonas Edmonds faces a maximum 23-year prison term. Prosecutors have asked U.S. District Judge John Z. Lee to also sentence the men to lifetime periods of supervised release once out of prison.

2

D.C. Household employees – including maids and cooks – weren’t included in 1930s labor law, though federal rules have since changed. New York became the first state to add basic rights for domestic workers, outlining rules for overtime pay, days off and discrimination protections in 2010. Hawaii, Massachusetts, Oregon and Connecticut also added protections. California established temporary overtime pay rules for private domestic workers in 2013 and legislators approved an expansion this week. But Gov. Jerry Brown initially rejected a 2012 version of the plan over concerns about adding regulations and the cost and financial burden for families. Those same questions were raised in Illinois, particularly with an initial version of legislation that noted vacation and overtime requirements. Republicans opposed to an earlier draft, along with a home care association, had questions about how hours would be tracked. But State Rep. Elizabeth Hernandez, a suburban Chicago Democrat who sponsored the measure, said it was pared back, amending four state laws to include domestic workers. The law then passed with bipartisan sup-

Special meaning for honorary highways in central Illinois

PEORIA – Nearly two dozen stretches of roadways across central Illinois are designated to memorialize someone. An Illinois Department of Transportation report said there are 22 such designated pieces of roadway in the 12 counties of the department’s Fourth District, which runs from south of the Quad Cities to the McLean County line. The honors often go to military members or public safety workers who have died in the line of duty or community leaders, the Journal Star reported. During the last several months, state lawmakers have voted five times to name a section of a state-controlled road for an honoree. A third are bridges. Others are on state roads running through the towns, and some are on interstate highways. Fifteen such segments fall within the Tri-County Area, which has the largest population

port before being signed by Rauner, a Republican. Magdalena Zylinksa, a Polish immigrant, said the rules were desperately needed. She’s worked as a nanny, caregiver and housekeeper around Chicago for years. As a live-in caregiver, she worked seven days straight and had to share a room with the elderly woman she tended. As a nanny for two children, she worked from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m., and was paid $40 daily. There were also safety concerns, such as when a male resident of a home where she cleaned and washed clothes with another worker would undress and linger in the laundry room. At the time, Zylinksa was living in the country illegally. She’d overstayed her tourist visa and was afraid to call police. “We didn’t think about anything else,” she said. “We were scared we were going to lose the (housekeeping job) and lose the money.” She’s since obtained legal status and said the new law will make things far easier. National advocates said they’ll use the Illinois model as a blueprint.

in the IDOT district. Brown highway markers are placed at each end of memorial or honorary roads. The signs cost a few hundred dollars each. “It’s a very emotional process to go through, and it’s meaningful,” said Rep. Mike Unes, R-East Peoria.

er, “fearing for his life,” fired into the vehicle. The driver sped off again, and eventually four people jumped out. Three suspects were arrested, and the fourth later arrived at a hospital with multiple gunshot wounds not deemed life-threatening, police said.

3

4

State trooper shoots, wounds Chicago carjacking suspect

CHICAGO – Illinois State Police officials said a trooper shot and wounded a teenage boy who was inside a fleeing stolen vehicle on Chicago’s South Side. State police told The Chicago Sun-Times that the vehicle was reported stolen at gunpoint earlier Saturday. A trooper later spotted the vehicle and tried to pull it over about 6:50 p.m. The vehicle sped away, but eventually was caught in traffic at the northbound Chinatown ramp. Police said that when troopers approached the stopped vehicle, the driver tried to run one of them over. They said one troop-

Arrest made in Illinois State Fair stabbing

Illinois State Police said a 17-year-old girl has been arrested in the weekend stabbing of a 16-year-old girl at the Illinois State Fair. A statement from the agency said the stabbing occurred Saturday night in the carnival area of the fair in Springfield. The statement said the girl was expected to be released from the hospital Sunday. It describes the incident as “isolated.” The Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office, the Springfield Police Department and the Conservation Police aided the investigation.

– Wire reports


NATION&WORLD

13

ILLINOIS LOTTERY

Midday Pick 3: 0-1-1 Midday Pick 4: 2-8-2-5 Evening Pick 3: 3-9-1 Evening Pick 4: 3-2-3-1 Lucky Day Lotto Midday: 14-21-28-34-40 Lucky Day Lotto Evening: 7-24-27-33-45 Lotto jackpot: $3.75 million MEGA MILLIONS

Est. jackpot: $69 million

POWERBALL Est. jackpot: $127 million

INDIANA LOTTERY Daily 3 Midday: 5-9-7 Daily 3 Evening: 1-3-7 Daily 4 Midday: 3-8-2-3 Daily 4 Evening: 3-7-7-7 Cash 5: 14-15-16-17-34 Est. Lotto jackpot: $1 million

Crime scene tape marks the home Sunday on Jim Platt Road near Citronelle, Ala., where authorities said five people were killed Saturday.

WISCONSIN LOTTERY Pick 3: 0-4-0 Pick 4: 8-6-6-1 SuperCash: 3-5-16-20-22-35 Badger 5: 6-9-10-22-30

NATION & WORLD BRIEFS Mars. Somalia bombings kill 17 at government HQ, market Kim Binsted, principal inves-

MOGADISHU, Somalia – A suicide bomber detonated an explosives-laden vehicle at the gates of a local government headquarters in Somalia while another bomber targeted a nearby marketplace, killing at least 17 people and wounding more than 30 others, police said Sunday. Abdisalam Yusuf with the police said one bomber rammed the car into a checkpoint in Galkayo town Sunday morning after reaching the main gate of Puntland’s local government. Puntland, a semi-autonomous state in northern Somalia, controls the northern part of the town, while the southern part is controlled by rival regional state Galmudug. The al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab group claimed responsibility for the attack.

Yearlong Mars simulation nears end on Mauna Loa

HILO, Hawaii – Six scientists are close to wrapping up a year of near isolation in a Mars simulation on a Hawaii mountain. The scientists are housed in a dome on Mauna Loa and can go outside only in spacesuits, the Hawaii Tribune-Herald reported. They manage limited resources while conducting research and working to avoid personal conflicts. Communication is delayed the 20 minutes, the length it would take to relay messages from

tigator for the Hawaii Space Exploration Analog and Simulation, said this simulation is the second-longest of its kind after a mission that lasted 520 days in Russia. Mauna Loa soil is similar to what would be found on Mars. The area’s high elevation means almost no plant growth.

Turkey suicide bomber who killed 51 was child

ISTANBUL – A child suicide bomber killed at least 51 people and wounded nearly 70 others at a Kurdish wedding party near Turkey’s border with Syria, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Sunday, decrying the attack as an apparent attempt by Islamic State extremists to destabilize the nation by exploiting ethnic and religious tensions. “As of now, the preliminary conclusions by our governor’s office and the police establishment point to an attack by Daesh,” Erdogan said, using another common term for IS. The bombing late Saturday in Gaziantep was the deadliest attack in Turkey this year. It comes amid ongoing struggles between the government and Kurdish militants linked to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party, known as the PKK, and as the country is still reeling from the aftermath of last month’s failed coup attempt.

– Wire reports

AP photo

Suspect’s ex-girlfriend lived at Alabama home where 5 slain By JEFF MARTIN

The Associated Press ATLANTA – The suspect in the killing of five people at a home in Alabama attacked them while they slept and then abducted his estranged girlfriend and an infant – both of whom were found alive, authorities said Sunday. It could take investigators days to sort out the grisly murder scene in Citronelle, a small town 30 miles northwest of Mobile. Authorities said the dead were found Saturday afternoon inside the home and included a pregnant woman. The crime was of a magnitude rarely if ever seen in this corner of rural, southern Alabama, Mobile County sheriff’s Capt. Paul Burch said. “It’s unprecedented here,” Burch told The Associated Press. Earlier, Burch told reporters at the scene that investigators expect to be at the scene for a couple of days. “It’s obviously a horrific scene,” he said. Mobile County District Attorney Ashley Rich told reporters near the scene that in her 20-year career as a prosecutor, she’s never encountered a crime “where there were five people who were brutally and viciously murdered, and that’s what we have here.” She said “multiple weapons” were used. Derrick Dearman, 27, of Leakesville, Mississippi, was taken into custody after he walked into the sheriff’s office in Greene County, Mississippi, about 20 miles west of Citronelle, Burch said. Dearman was accompanied by his father when he showed up at the sheriff’s department and surrendered Saturday afternoon, the Alabama sheriff’s office

said in a statement. Dearman has confessed to the crimes, Burch told the news site Al.com. “He’s been cooperative,” Burch told the AP on Sunday. Dearman will be charged with six counts of capital murder, Mobile County sheriff’s spokeswoman Lori Myles said Sunday. Five counts stem from the killing of the adults, and the additional count is because one of the slaying victims, 22-year-old Chelsea Marie Reed, was five months’ pregnant, Myles said. The other four killed were identified by sheriff’s officials as Shannon Melissa Randall, 35; Justin Kaleb Reed, 23; Joseph Adam Turner, 26; and Robert Lee Brown, also 26. Prosecutors have already begun the process of trying to extradite Dearman from Mississippi to Alabama, Burch said on Sunday. The sheriff of Greene County, Stanley McLeod, could not be reached for comment Sunday. Though connections between Dearman and the five people killed were not immediately clear, investigators have determined that his ex-girlfriend, Laneta Lester, had gone to the home on Aug. 19 to get away from an abusive relationship with Dearman, the sheriff’s office said in a statement. Lester was staying with a relative there. Around 1 a.m. Saturday, someone inside the residence called 911 and reported that Dearman was on the property, the statement said. Citronelle police came to the house, but Dearman had left before the officers arrived, sheriff’s officials said. Later, sometime between 1:15 a.m. and daylight Saturday, Dearman returned to the home and attacked the victims while they were sleeping, the statement said.

The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

LOTTERY


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

| NATION

14

When schools are threatened, learning time is lost By KANTELE FRANKO The Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio – The prosecutor calls it “bomb week,” his shorthand for eight school threats – many written in school bathrooms or on notes – over a few days in May that set off evacuations and investigations, parental panic, and the rumor mill of students linked by cellphones and social media in his Ohio county. Track athletes missed an end-ofseason competition, and some high schoolers started carrying their car keys with them instead of leaving them in lockers, just in case, Warren County prosecutor David Fornshell said. One mother complained that a girl who uses an insulin pump had taken it off for gym class and had to evacuate without it. “Nobody who sends their kids to school should have to go through that kind of stress and that type of disruption,” Fornshell said. Such violent or disruptive threats are increasing nationwide, according to police, school employees, security consultants and others, blamed sometimes on local students and sometimes on outsiders seeking to cause disruptions or a big emergency response. State and local agencies don’t track the threats, meaning there’s no formal accounting of the collective costs. The disruptions typically aren’t long enough to merit makeup classes, but the learning time lost to evacuations and cancellations adds up, as do the hours police spend responding and investigating. Less measurable but still significant are the ways threats can dent staff and students’ sense of security even when they’re false alarms, as they almost always are. “Schools are in a really bad position,” said researcher Amy Klinger, of the nonprofit Educator’s School Safety Network. “People are going to be mad if you evacuate; people are going to be upset if you don’t evacuate.” The number of school bomb threats the last academic year alone, based on media reports, was at least 1,267, about twice as many as in 2012-13, said Klinger, who also teaches educational administration at Ohio’s Ashland University. Her group estimates there were about eight bomb threats per school day last year, and that doesn’t include other threats of violence and disruption. Massachusetts had the most in that tally at 135 bomb threats, followed by Ohio with 96. Because administrators and police can’t simply ignore threats , they grapple with the fallout while trying to deter copycats.

An emergency worker directs a volunteer with simulated injuries during a training exercise in May for an active shooter at Hopewell Elementary School in West Chester, Ohio. Violent or disruptive threats are increasing nationwide, according to authorities. AP file photo

“Schools are in a really bad position. People are going to be mad if you evacuate; people are going to be upset if you don’t evacuate.” Amy Klinger

researcher for Educator’s School Safety Network In Ohio, more than 170 school threats were reported in the 2015-16 school year, according to an Associated Press tally based on police updates and media coverage. Threats of bombs, shootings and unspecified violence were called in, written as notes, scrawled on walls and shared via social media and apps. More than 100 Ohio public school districts, or about one in every six districts, dealt with at least one threat, as did a handful of private and charter schools and several college-level facilities. Ohio-based consulting firm National School Safety and Security Services had flagged the state as having more school threats – 64 – than any other state in the first half of the previous academic year. The firm said it studied more than 800 threats around the country in that period, up from 315 in a similar span a year earlier. At least a couple of the recent Ohio threats occurred one day in late May when dozens of threats were made against schools nationwide as officials investigated whether it might be a case of “swatting,” when hoaxers playing online games anonymously make threats online or by phone to trigger big responses from police and SWAT teams. Some of those schools evacuated; others didn’t. Months earlier, an email threat-

ening a large-scale jihadi attack had prompted the Los Angeles Unified School District to cancel classes for a day in December, while school officials in New York City quickly dismissed a similar email as a hoax. Schools where students and visitors entered freely a decade or two ago now have surveillance cameras, locked doors and special security procedures. The National Association of School Resource Officers estimates the number of such officers in schools has grown to between 14,000 and 20,000, some armed. And teachers are sometimes perceived as first responders. Lawmakers in Maine, New York, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and elsewhere have explored strengthening penalties for school threats. In Ohio, lawmakers are proposing legislation to let schools expel students for months for making certain kinds of threats and have them evaluated to determine whether they’re a danger to themselves or others. The bill, supported by associations representing school boards, superintendents and school business managers, also would let districts and law enforcement agencies seek restitution from a student’s parents for the costs of responding to their threat. One supporter of the measure, Hilliard Superintendent John Mar-

schhausen, whose suburban Columbus district had a student accused of threatening a school shooting, described threats “an all too frequent reality.” At least half of the Ohio threats last school year led to evacuations, dismissals or cancellation of classes or activities, according to AP’s analysis. The frequency of evacuations concerns Lt. Joe Hendry, a veteran Kent State University police officer and a trainer and consultant on threat responses. There’s no catch-all response for schools, he said, but he suggests they consider whether it would be better to evaluate the legitimacy of a threat before automatically or habitually evacuating. Besides the disruption, security experts note that neatly filing out of a building and gathering masses of people in one place potentially puts them in further jeopardy if someone wants to target them. People intending real violence don’t generally call ahead, Hendry said, so “I’m more worried about the threat that I don’t know about rather than the threat that I do.” Even the false alarms can have broad consequences, and the prosecutor overseeing the “bomb week” cases is trying to drive home that point. A handful of students were blamed for those threats, including a 12-yearold girl. Fornshell said he would ask a judge to make those found responsible for evacuations write handwritten apology letters to each of the hundreds of affected families in the district – perhaps 1,500 or more, depending on the district – in addition to time in juvenile detention or any other discipline.


15

COVER STORY | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

Elise Londergon, 4, runs after bubbles blown by her mother, Andrea, during Saturday’s festival.

• HOPSTRING

Continued from page 3

Larry W. Kane for Shaw Media

Andrew Polykandriotis, owner/master brewer at Elder Brewing Co., gives a free sample to Jack Adamic at Saturday’s fifth annual Hopstring Fest, a beer festival with live music at Silver Cross Field in Joliet. Elder Brewing is new to Joliet and is set to open later this year on East Cass Street.

Pizza For “U” $20 Voucher for $10 Must purchase voucher at www.PlanitSave.com to receive discount. See voucher for complete details.

www.PlanitSave.com Facebook.com/PlanitHerald

• Monday, August 22, 2016

aerial acrobatics.” Before the night was done, Hill would walk across machete blades, drive a nail into his nose, and lie on a bed of nails as people from the crowd walked over him. But for most of people who go to Hopstring Fest, it’s mainly about the beer and the music. “It’s a really great time,” said Rachel Ellinger of Joliet. “It’s nice to have something like this so close to home. You

don’t have to travel to Chicago. You see a lot of these kind of events in Chicago.” “It’s a nice, relaxed atmosphere,” said Carl Minuth of Manhattan. “It’s fun. It’s a great spirit.” Sue Regis, who owns Sue Regis Glass Art, was demonstrating her craft at Hopstring Fest. She and Trizna both own businesses downtown. “I love what Mike’s doing,” Regis said. “He’s bringing the artists and musicians together. He’s bringing them all together in one spot. We’re enjoying good music and good beer.”


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

16

OPINIONS

WRITE TO US: Letters must include the author's full name, address, and phone number. Letters are limited to 300 words; must be free of libelous content and personal attacks; and are subject to editing for length and clarity at the discretion of the editor. Send to news@TheHerald-News.com or The Herald-News, Letters to the editor, 2175 Oneida St., Joliet, IL 60405.

AREA LEGISLATORS

202-225-3515

President Barack Obama The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. NW Washington, DC 20500 202-456-1414 Comment: 202-456-1111

Randy M. Hultgren, R (14th District) 1797 W. State St., Suite A Geneva, IL 60134 630-232-7104 332 Cannon House Office Bldg. Washington, DC 20515 202-225-2976

Gov. Bruce Rauner 207 Statehouse Springfield, IL 62706 800-642-3112

Adam Kinzinger, R (16th District) 628 Columbus St., Suite 507 Ottawa, IL 61350 815-431-9271

U.S. SENATORS Dick Durbin, D-Ill. 230 S. Dearborn, Suite 3892 Chicago, IL 60604 312-353-4952

1221 Longworth House Office Bldg. Washington, DC 20515 202-225-3635

711 Hart Senate Office Building Washington, DC 20510 202-224-2152

STATE SENATORS

Mark Kirk, R-Ill. 230 S. Dearborn, Suite 3900 Chicago, IL 60604 312-886-3506

Napoleon Harris, D-Flossmoor (15th District) 369 E. 147th St., Unit H Harvey, IL 60426 708-893-0552

387 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, DC 20510 202-224-2854

M-108 Capitol Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-8066

U.S. REPRESENTATIVES

Donne E. Trotter, D-Chicago (17th District) 8729 S. State St. Chicago, IL 60619 773-933-7715

Bobby L. Rush, D (1st District) 3235 147th St. Midlothian, IL 60445 708-385-9550

627 Capitol Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-3201

2268 Rayburn House Office Bldg. Washington, DC 20515 202-225-4372

Michael E. Hastings, D-Orland Park (19th District) 813 School Road Matteson, IL 60443 708-283-4125

Robin Kelly, D (2nd District) 600 Holiday Plaza Drive, Suite 505 Matteson, IL 60445 708-679-0078 2419 Rayburn House Office Bldg. Washington, DC 20515 202-225-0773 Daniel William Lipinski, D (3rd District) Central Square Bldg. 222 E. 9th St., 109 Lockport, IL 60441 815-838-1990 1717 Longworth House Office Bldg. Washington, DC 20515 202-225-5701 Bill Foster, D (11th District) 195 Springfield Ave., Suite 102 Joliet, IL 60435 815-280-5876 1224 Longworth House Office Bldg. Washington, DC 20515

THE FIRST

AMENDMENT

307A Capitol Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-9595 Michael G. Connelly, R-Naperville (21st District) 1725 S. Naperville Road, Suite 200 Wheaton, IL 60189 630-682-8101 M103E State Capitol Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-8192

Sue Rezin, R-Morris (38th District) 103 Fifth Street PO Box 260 Peru, IL 61354 815- 220-8720 309I Capitol Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-3840 Toi Hutchinson,

D-Olympia Fields (40th District) 222 Vollmer Road, Suite 2C Chicago Heights, IL 60411 708-756-0882 121C Capitol Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-7419 Christine Radogno, R-Lemont (41st District) 1011 State St., Ste. 210 Lemont, IL 60439 630-243-0800 108A Statehouse Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-9407 Linda Holmes, D-Aurora (42nd District) 76 S. LaSalle St., Unit 202 Aurora, IL 60505 630-801-8985 129 Capitol Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-0422 Pat McGuire, D-Joliet (43rd District) 2200 Weber Road Crest Hill, IL 60403 815-207-4445 311-B Capitol Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-8800 Jennifer BertinoTarrant, D-Shorewood (49th District) 15300 Route 59, Unit 202 Plainfield, IL 60544 815-254-4211 617D Capitol Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-0052

STATE REPRESENTATIVES Thaddeus Jones, D-Calumet City (29th District) 1910 Sibley Blvd. 708-933-6018 240-W Stratton Office Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-8087 Elgie R. Sims Jr., D-Chicago (34th District) 8729 S. State St. Chicago, IL 60619 773-783-8800 200-1S Stratton Office Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-6476 Margo McDermed, R-Mokena (37th District) 11032 W Lincoln Highway

Frankfort, IL 60423 204-N Stratton Office Building Springfield, IL 62706 Al Riley, D-Olympia Fields (38th District) 3649 W. 183rd St., Suite 102 Hazel Crest, IL 60429 708-799-4364 262-W Stratton Office Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-558-1007 Darlene Senger, R-Naperville (41st District) 401 S. Main St., Suite 300 Naperville, IL 60540 630-420-3008 211-N Stratton Office Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-6507 John Anthony, R-Plainfield (75th District) 3605 N. State Route 47, Suite F PO Box 808 Morris, IL 60450-0808 815-416-1475 201-N Stratton Office Building Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-5997 Kate Cloonen, D-Kankakee (79th District) 1 Dearbourn Square, Suite 419 Kankakee, IL 60901 815-939-1983 235-E Stratton Office Building

Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-5981 Anthony DeLuca, D-Chicago Heights (80th District) 195 W. Joe Orr Road, Suite 201 Chicago Heights, IL 60411 708-754-7900 271-S Stratton Office Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-1719 Ron Sandack, R-Downers Grove (81st District) 633 Rogers St., Suite 103 Downers Grove, IL 60515 630-737-0504 200-1N Stratton Office Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-6578 Jim Durkin, R-Western Springs (82nd District) 915 55th St., Suite 202 Western Springs, IL 60558 708-246-1104 632 Capitol Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-0494 Stephanie A. Kifowit, D-Oswego (84th District) 1677 Montgomery Road, Suite 116 Aurora, IL 60504 630-585-1308 200-3S Stratton Office Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-8028

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.

Emily McAsey, D-Romeoville (85th District) 209 W. Romeo Road Romeoville, IL 60446 815-372-0085 237-E Stratton Office Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-4179 Lawrence “Larry” Walsh Jr., D-Joliet (86th District) 121 Springfield Ave. Joliet, IL 60435 815-730-8600 292-S Stratton Office Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-8090 Mark Batinick, R-Oswego (97th District) 24047 W. Lockport St., Suite 213 Plainfield, IL 60544 815-254-0000 232-N Stratton Office Building Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-1331 Natalie A. Manley, D-Joliet (98th District) 2701 Black Road, Suite 201 Joliet, IL 60435 815-725-2741 242A-W Stratton Office Bldg. Springfield, IL 62706 217-782-3316


SPORTS

17

University of St. Francis defensive lineman Tim Smith makes a big hit on a quarterback last year. Smith ranked fourth in the NAIA in tackles for losses and seventh in sacks, earning NAIA All-American second-team honors and was also selected as the MSFA Midwest League Defensive Player of the Year. Provided photo

Defensive standout Smith aims to lead USF to playoffs By CURT HERRON

cherron@shawmedia.com JOLIET – While Tim Smith was understandably humbled to be selected as both an NAIA All-American and his conference’s defensive MVP a year ago, there was something missing from the campaign that the University of St. Francis defensive lineman really wanted. And that was seeing the Fighting Saints earn a spot in the NAIA playoffs after finishing 8-3 and winning a share

NEW 20N1E6W D2O0D16GEDO DG CHALLCEN HG ALELRENGER E HELLCH ATELCLHCRAOTM CEHROME EDITIOENDI TION

of the Mid-States Football Association Midwest League championship. After falling to Saint Xavier, 34-28, in last season’s opener, USF won eight of its last 10 games to finish 4-1 in the MSFA. But while the Cougars earned the conference’s automatic berth, the 18th-ranked Saints weren’t selected as one of the at-large picks to the 16-team event. The path to the postseason is just as challenging this year for the Saints, who are 17th in the NAIA preseason rankings. They open Sept. 3 at No. 10

Saint Xavier, play at Division III Wisconsin-Platteville the next week and are at Missouri Baptist on Sept. 17. After playing their next four games at Joliet Memorial Stadium, they close with three of their last four on the road, with the lone home game Nov. 5 against No. 1 Marian. “We just use it as a chip on our shoulder and don’t let it bother us and use it to motivate us to do even better than last year,” Smith said of missing last year’s playoffs. “Our motto is just 1-0. So this year’s schedule is nothing

new since we faced ranked teams last year and ranked teams before, as well. We just have to keep pushing and play one game at a time.” The Saints return plenty of skilled players on both sides of the ball and also will have several talented newcomers who figure to complement those who are returning, and that should again place coach Joe Curry’s program among the best teams in the nation.

See SMITH, page 18

BUILD YOURS TODAY EXCLUSIVELY AT 8355 W. 159TH ST., TINLEY PARK

888-835-5933

BETTENHAUSENAUTO.COM

SALES HOURS: Mon-Thurs 8am-8pm, Fri-Sat 8am-6pm | SERVICE HOURS: Mon-Fri 7:30am-6pm, Sat 7:30am-4pm | Se Habla Español Pregunte Por Gerardo, David o Jose

The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

ALL-AMERICAN KID


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

| SPORTS

18

Roark’s ERA leads Nationals’ starters 43 hits and struck out 40 in 58 innings. Overall, including the first half of the season at Double-A Trenton, Enns is 13-4 with a 1.62 ERA and 114 strikeouts in 128 innings.

VIEWS Dick Goss Of this and that, beginning with the big leagues: The Washington Nationals are steaming toward the National League East title and the playoffs thanks in no small part to right-hander Tanner Roark, a Wilmington graduate who has been a consistent element in the starting rotation. Roark (13-6) lost a chance for his 14th victory Friday night in Atlanta when the bullpen was unable to hold a 6-3 eighth-inning lead. The Braves tied the game that inning, and Washington won, 7-6, with a run in the top of the ninth. The Nationals’ rotation is considered one of baseball’s best, and Roark has the best ERA among the starters. He is 13-6 with a 2.87 ERA. In 1631/3 innings, he has allowed 139 hits and 51 walks while striking out 130. Meanwhile, the Braves’ Mike Foltynewicz (Minooka) continues to show signs that he is about to hit his stride as a major league starting pitcher. He is 6-5 with a 4.45 ERA. In 16 starts, he has pitched 89 innings, yielding 89 hits and 28 walks while striking out 76. Left-hander Tony Cingrani, the Cincinnati Reds’ closer, has pitched very well since early June, with only one stinker of an appearance in nearly three months. That one came Aug. 8, when he al-

LATZ TO KENT STATE

AP photo

Washington Nationals starting pitcher Tanner Roark delivers to a Braves batter in the first inning Friday in Atlanta. lowed five runs in two-thirds of an inning in the bottom of the ninth to lose to St. Louis. Cingrani has 15 saves in 20 opportunities and is 2-4 with a 3.68 ERA. He has appeared in 53 games and pitched 511/3 innings.

IN THE MINORS

We recently discussed former Illinois teammates Tyler Jay (Lemont) and Kevin Duchene (Joliet Catholic) being on the disabled list with their teams in the Minnesota and Oakland organizations. Earlier, we noted that first baseman Sam Travis (Providence), who had risen through the ranks in the Boston organization and was hitting well at Triple-A this season, was

• SMITH

Continued from page 17 USF figures to have a very productive offense, so it will again be critical for the defense to come up big as it did a year ago, when it ranked third in the NAIA in scoring defense (15.5 points) and 13th in total defense (317.9 yards), to avoid letting games turn into shootouts. “I feel really good about our defense,” Smith said. “We’ve got a lot of new guys coming in, and they’re really fast, and we have a lot of veterans back who did really well last year. We

lost for the season in late May with an ACL tear. Shortstop Dean Anna (Lincoln-Way East), playing for the Cardinals’ Triple-A team at Memphis, also had a stint on the DL in early August, but he returned to the active roster this weekend. Anna is hitting .267 with 17 doubles, a triple, two home runs and 39 RBIs. He is one of two area products who seemingly are potential September callups, when major league teams can expand their rosters. The other is left-handed pitcher Dietrich Enns (Lincoln-Way East). Enns is 6-2 with a 1.24 ERA in 58 innings for Scranton/ Wilkes-Barre, the Yankees’ Triple-A team. He has allowed

hustle a lot and we always go after the ball. Our No. 1 priority is not just stopping the other team, but also getting turnovers and scoring on defense. “Everyone on our defense works together, kind of like we’re in sync, we’re not separate and don’t rely on one group too much. The D-linemen provide the pressure, the linebackers help clean up when the linemen push them out toward them and the backfield helps with the turnovers, as well.” Smith, a 6-3, 245-pounder from Oregon, Illinois, earned second-team All-American honors and was the MSFA Midwest League Defensive

A couple of baseball transfers: Left-hander Jake Latz (Lemont), the Illinois High School Pitcher of the Year in 2014, is the second local product to transfer from Louisiana State. After two injury-plagued seasons with the Tigers, Latz transferred earlier this summer to Kent State and will be a redshirt sophomore. Right-hander Jake Godfrey (Providence) spent his freshman season at LSU before transferring to Northwest Florida State, a Division I junior college. He pitched there in the spring and committed to Arizona State for the 2017 season. Latz will sit out next season because he transferred to another Division I school. He could have been eligible immediately had he gone to a junior college, as Godfrey did. He threw only 81/3 innings – all this season – at LSU as he battled elbow issues. Latz, Godfrey and Latz’s high school batterymate, catcher Mike Papierski (Lemont), were members of LSU’s highly regarded recruiting class of 2014. Only Papierski remains there. Latz, meanwhile, will be a teammate of former Herald-News Player of the Year Dylan Rosa (Providence), who has had two solid

Player of the Year after ranking fourth in the NAIA in tackles for losses (21) and seventh in sacks (10). He was third on his team with 57 tackles, had 114 negative yards on his 21 TFLs and recorded multiple sacks four times. As a result of his performance a year ago, Smith was selected to the Sporting News NAIA Preseason All-America Team. While that’s obviously a big deal to any player, the individual accolades don’t mean as much to him as just being a good teammate. “I use my teammates to motivate me, so that I’ll do better to make sure that I’m not letting them down,” Smith said. “And we just feed off of each oth-

offensive seasons at Kent State. On the local high school front, versatile left-handed hitting KC Simonich, a major force in JCA’s lineup, has transferred to Lemont, where he will play his senior season. He is committed to Texas Tech.

SCHEIBE ON MURPHY

Kelly Murphy (JCA) and the U.S. women’s volleyball team claimed the bronze medal Saturday with a four-set victory over Netherlands in the Summer Olympics at Rio de Janeiro. Murphy finished the match with five kills, one block kill, one ace and one dig. Among her teammates was Wheaton St. Francis graduate Kelsey Robinson, who had one dig. For many years, St. Francis and JCA were rivals as the best in Class 3A. “I couldn’t be more happy for Kelly and Kelsey for getting bronze and representing the state of Illinois like they have done,” JCA coach Christine Scheibe said. “Both were able to contribute in important, meaningful ways throughout the match and throughout the tournament. “This has to be a dream come true for them. To think, nine years ago Kelly was playing against Kelsey for a supersectional in 2007, and now they’re on the floor together for Team USA taking a bronze medal in the Olympics. It speaks very well for the talent level of volleyball in Class 3A and in the state.”

er’s energy.” Smith likes the resiliency that he and his Saints teammates bring to the field. That quality helped to produce a special season a year ago, and USF is looking forward to more of the same in 2016 with the ultimate goal being a postseason berth. “One of the things that I like about our team is that we are incredibly durable, both mentally and physically,” Smith said. “Sometimes we get hit with injuries, but then it’s the next man up and then when the other guy comes back, he’s ready to go. And when we get hit with a loss, we come back even harder to try to get the win.”


YOUTH BASEBALL

By DICK GOSS

dgoss@shawmedia.com

Photo provided

The St Joe’s Blue 10U travel baseball team won a big tournament in Elizabethtown, Kentucky, and a couple of other tournaments this summer. The team has a 99-13-1 record over the past three years.

Kemp, Juan Rico, Graham Roesel, programs like the Illinois Sparks and Jimmy Sharp, Jackson Smith, Tanner The Edge were doing. They posted havThompson, Michael Tuman and Owen ing tryouts, and we followed their lead. Young. “The good thing is that going to fullAssistant coaches were Jim Sharp, Jeff Young and Dave Gahan. Chignoli’s, Thompson’s and Gimbel’s dads are among other parents who have solid athletic backgrounds. Besides building the 99-13-1 record, the St. Joe’s 10U team won 12 tournaments over the past three years, including events in Jacksonville, Illinois; Milwaukee; and Elizabethtown, Kentucky. They were local Pinto World Series champions as 8-year-olds. “We had tryouts at the end of last season, when we decided to go to fulltime travel, and we had 42 kids from outside of St. Joe’s show up, although our actual team has remained intact,” JCA, Minooka, Morris, Joliet Central, Kemp said. “We watched what travel

2016 High School

Football Preview Featuring season previews on your favorite local teams:

High School Football online fan photo gallery each week Tweet your Friday night photos to

@HeraldNewsSport and use

#jhnfanphotos

Joliet West, Plainfield Central, Plainfield South, Romeoville, Lincoln-Way Central, Lincoln-Way West, Providence & Lockport

Coming Thursday August 25, 2016 in

• Monday, August 22, 2016

JOLIET – Post a record of 99-13-1 over three years, and it is safe to say you’re a pretty good baseball team. However, Bart Kemp, coach of the St. Joe’s Blue 10U travel team, says there is more to it than that. “We have a group of parents who are very knowledgeable and very supportive, but they let their kids be coached,” Kemp said. “I’ve been spoiled. I have had 18 years with Jared (Voss, coaching in the Joliet Catholic program) and six years at St. Joe’s. We have very good kids from good families at St. Joe’s. “The way these kids have played and the way they have acted, this is a direct reflection on the parents. I’m a firm believer that if kids are getting along on the field, parents are getting along off the field. This team is a perfect example of that.” Kemp said this was the first year St. Joe’s fielded full-time travel teams on the 10U, 11U and 12U levels. There were travel teams previously, but the participants also played a homeleague schedule. “St Joe’s saw what was going on everywhere else,” Kemp said. “Last year, these kids played in-house and basically were the all-stars at the end of the year. “We went to the board in the fall and said we are going to start falling behind if we don’t offer a full-time travel option. If we have a full-time travel team, the ‘B’ team then becomes the in-house all-star team. The board listened and agreed. We have had great support in everything we do from the St. Joe’s board members.” The St. Joe’s 10U roster consisted of Jim Anderson, Christian Chignoli, Jake Gahan, Jake Gimbel, Tommy

time travel has not hurt the numbers as far as the overall St. Joe’s league goes. We do have an outstanding program at St. Joe’s, and I referred some kids who tried out with us to the people in charge at St. Joe’s.” The 10U travel team uses the St. Joe’s Mustang field for home games. “Wednesdays are off days in the home league, so we tried to have games then, and then Saturday and Sunday afternoons we played home games,” Kemp said. “Of course, after school got out, we got in a lot more tournaments.” Everyone knows travel ball is expensive. As Kemp said, “Ninety percent of what we do is through fundraising and parents’ costs.” The dedication of the parents and kids and the parents’ financial outlays have paid dividends. The numbers in the St. Joe’s home league have held steady, and home-league kids who would not otherwise have been allstars have the opportunity to experience all-star competition. Positives from the creation of fulltime travel teams at St. Joe’s are evident.

SPORTS | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

Another big year for St. Joe’s travel team

19


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

| SPORTS

20 WHITE SOX 4, ATHLETICS 2

Quintana earns 10th victory By MATT CARLSON The Associated Press

CHICAGO – Backed by enough runs and some nifty defense, Jose Quintana finally reached a personal milestone he’s been craving. Quintana pitched into the eighth inning to earn a career-best 10th win and Jose Abreu homered for the second straight game to lead the White Sox to a 4-2 victory over the Oakland Athletics on Sunday. “This was really special for me,” Quintana said. “When the year started, (winning 10) was my first goal. “All my guys, teammates, celebrated with me.” Todd Frazier had three hits and drove in two runs, and Justin Morneau added an RBI double in a three-run first as the White Sox took the final two games of the series and handed Oakland its seventh loss in eight games. Tim Anderson also had three hits. Khris Davis hit his 32nd homer, a two-run shot off Quintana (10-9), who finished with nine wins in each of the previous three seasons. The lefthander allowed struck out six and walked one in this one while allowing eight hits, and improved to 5-1 with a 2.25 ERA in his past nine starts. Frazier said the normally reserved Quintana was “just yelling and screaming like a little kid” when the White Sox re-entered their clubhouse. “He deserves it,” Frazier said.

AP photo

White Sox starter Jose Quintana throws against the Oakland Athletics during the first inning of a baseball game Sunday at U.S. Cellular Field. “Sometimes you gotta get like that in this game.” Quintana, who entered with a run support average of 3.31 per nine innings pitched – second lowest in the AL – got more help than usual from his teammates, both offensively and defensively. Center fielder J.B. Shuck made two great catches, including a running grab of Ryon Healy’s hard-hit line drive with two outs in the first and runners on second and third. The Sox staked Quintana to a 3-0

lead in the bottom half. “It helps a lot... with the lack of run support he’s had over a period of time,” manager Robin Ventura said. “After that point, he was pretty strong.” Quintana got two quick strikes on Jake Smolinski to lead off the eighth, but walked him and then was replaced by Nate Jones. After Jones tossed a scoreless inning, David Robertson got the last three outs for his 32nd save in 38 chances.

Hammel roughed up in first inning The Associated Press

DENVER – Jason Hammel came to Coors Field on a roll but was roughed up by the Colorado Rockies. Nolan Arenado broke out of a slump in a big way, hitting two homers and driving in six runs Sunday to boost the Rockies to an 11-4 win over the Cubs. Arenado hit a three-run homer during a seven-run burst in the first inning that included three Cubs errors, then added another three-run drive in the fourth. Hammel (13-6) had been 6-0 with a 0.95 ERA since the All-Star break before getting hit hard. The Rockies scored 10 runs off him, six earned, in 31/3 innings.

Slammers crushed by Gateway in finale SUBMITTED REPORTS

ROCKIES 11, CUBS 4

By MICHAEL KELLY

AREA ROUNDUP

“An oil painting it was not,” Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. “We gave them too many opportunities and we made Jason have to get six outs (in the first inning). We started making too many mistakes and we put Jason behind the proverbial 8-ball.” Addison Russell homered twice, his 16th and 17th, and Anthony Rizzo had two hits for the Cubs. Arenado leads the majors with 104 RBIs – he had a big league-high 130 last year – and tops the NL with 32 home runs. The All-Star third baseman was 1 of 16 on the Rockies’ homestand before getting four hits. He passed Cubs slugger Kris Bryant for the NL homer lead. Jorge De La Rosa (8-7) tossed eight innings and delivered a two-run sin-

gle in the first as the Rockies quickly ended Hammel’s 22-inning scoreless streak. De La Rosa scattered four hits and struck out six in matching his longest outing since last Sept. 16. Russell was the only batter to reach second base against the lefty, who outpitched his former teammate. “A lot of foul balls today off my slider and two mistakes to Arenado,” Hammel said. “That was pretty much the story. “We’ll forget about it. It’s not going to bother me. I was pitching great up until this point and it’s one of those outliers and we will just move on.” Arenado’s first homer hugged the left-field foul pole to start the early outburst. Tony Wolters had a two-run double and De La Rosa added his single.

SAUGET – One day after rolling to an easy 16-0 win over Gateway, the Joliet Slammers gave up 14 runs in the first four innings Sunday and lost, 17-6, as they dropped the rubber game of a weekend series with the Grizzlies. With Washington claiming an 8-1 victory over Schaumburg, the Slammers (44-39) saw their lead in the Frontier League’s East Division slip to 2½ games. Josh Bunselmeyer went 4 for 6 with five RBIs and three runs scored to lead Gateway (42-43), while Brandon Thomas drove in four runs and Tyler Tewell and Sam Fischer added three RBI apiece. Slammers starter Spencer Medick took the loss after only lasting two innings. Gateway hit five home runs while the Slammers got a home run from Carter Bell, his 12th of the season. Jon Pusateri allowed no runs on one hit during 31/3 innings of relief to collect the victory. The Slammers had just one hit in the last five innings and fanned eight times. Joliet, which was outhit 18-8, led 3-0 in the top of the second and was tied at 4-4 going into the bottom of the third before the hosts broke things open with a six-run inning. Melvin Rodriguez drove in two runs while Marc Flores had two hits and scored twice for Joliet, which hosts Windy City in a three-game series beginning Tuesday.

GIRLS GOLF

Lincoln-Way Central at Fenwick Invite: The Knights finished fifth with

a 324 as Bri Bolden shot an even-par 73 to place fourth while Grace Curran fired a 76 to claim seventh place.

BOYS GOLF

Peotone at Sandwich Invite: The Blue Devils took third place as Jake Nietfeldt won with 35 Stableford points (77 score), while Paul Douglas (25 points, 84 score) finished seventh.


MLB NATIONAL LEAGUE

AMERICAN LEAGUE

GB — 12 15 25 25

AP photo

The ASSOCIATED PRESS RIO DE JANEIRO – Shaking to samba and expressing a sense of longing with uniquely Brazilian words, Olympians and fans said goodbye to the Rio Games with one last big bash that was both revelatory and a sigh of relief. The closing ceremony Sunday celebrated the 16-day spectacle that was the Rio Games, which combined numerous highlights with ugly and even bizarre episodes that sometimes overshadowed competition. Cariocas – as Rio’s residents are known – weren’t swayed by the issues that led up to these Olympics, and braved rain and strong winds on the final night to cap their moment in the worldwide spotlight. While South America’s first Olympics are over, safely and with a grandiose finale, many problems remain. Still, Brazil showed Sunday that it still definitely knows how to party. “These were marvelous Olympic Games in the ‘marvelous city,’ ” International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach said, playing off the “cidade maravilhosa” nickname of Brazil’s postcard city of inviting coastlines, yearround sun and lush tropical vegetation. While the stadium erupted in applause at that declaration, a few minutes later there were boos of sadness when Bach announced: “I declare the Games of the XXXI Olympiad closed.” The closing ceremony in iconic Maracana Stadium was also meant to take care of some business – formally signaling the transition to the 2020 Summer Olympics in Japan. But Sunday’s party was all about

Brazil, designed to be more low-key than the opening, which focused heavily on Rio. The ceremony featured original footage of Alberto Santos Dumont, the man that Brazilians recognize as the inventor of the airplane. The theme, “Brazilians can do with their bare hands,” was a nod to the emerging economy of the world’s fifth most populous nation. Dressed in colorful feathers, dozens of dancers formed in the shape of the arches of Lapa, a popular area of Rio akin to Roman ruins, then morphed to make the shape of iconic Sugarloaf before quickly changing again, this time to the official 2016 symbol. Samba legend Martinho da Vila, whose tunes make their way into many popular telenovelas, sang “Carinhoso,” or “Affectionate.” Olympians poured in under light rain, waving their flags while many shook their bodies to samba-infused pop that made the stadium feel like a Carnival parade. Britain’s athletes wore shoes with soles that lit up in changing colors of red, white and blue, while Tongan taekwondo athlete Pita Taufatofua danced onstage in a grass skirt as a DJ performed, reprising a moment that captured attention when he carried the flag for his country during the opening ceremony. The show widened its lens to greater Brazil, a massive country with a land mass slightly larger than the continental United States. There was a tribute to cave paintings of some of the first inhabitants of the Americas, in Serra da Capivara, in Northeastern Brazil, today one of the nation’s poorest regions.

GB — ½ 8½ 15½ 17½

Sunday’s Results L.A. Dodgers 4, Cincinnati 0 Atlanta 7, Washington 6 (10 inn.) Miami 3, Pittsburgh 2 St. Louis 9, Philadelphia 0 Colorado 11, Cubs 4 Milwaukee 7, Seattle 6 San Diego 9, Arizona 1 N.Y. Mets 2, San Francisco 0 Monday’s Games Cubs (Lester 13-4) at San Diego (Jackson 3-3), 9:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Kazmir 10-6) at Cincinnati (Bailey 2-1), 11:35 a.m. Houston (Fister 11-8) at Pittsburgh (Taillon 3-2), 6:05 p.m. Washington (Strasburg 15-4) at Baltimore (Bundy 6-4), 6:05 p.m. Colorado (Bettis 10-6) at Milwaukee (Nelson 6-13), 6:20 p.m. Atlanta (Foltynewicz 6-5) at Arizona (Godley 4-2), 8:40 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Philadelphia at White Sox, 7:10 p.m. Cubs at San Diego, 9:10 p.m. Houston at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m. Washington at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m. Kansas City at Miami, 6:10 p.m. Texas at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m. Colorado at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m. Atlanta at Arizona, 8:40 p.m. San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.

GB — 7 8 12½ 23 GB — ½ 2½ 6½ 17 GB — 6 8½ 19½ 20½

Sunday’s Results White Sox 4, Oakland 2 Detroit 10, Boston 5 Cleveland 3, Toronto 2 Tampa Bay 8, Texas 4 Houston 5, Baltimore 3 Kansas City 2, Minnesota 1 L.A. Angels 2, N.Y. Yankees 0 Milwaukee 7, Seattle 6 Monday’s Games Houston (Fister 11-8) at Pittsburgh (Taillon 3-2), 6:05 p.m. Washington (Strasburg 15-4) at Baltimore (Bundy 6-4), 6:05 p.m. Boston (Price 11-8) at Tampa Bay (Snell 4-5), 6:10 p.m. Cleveland (Carrasco 8-6) at Oakland (Triggs 0-1), 9:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 6-10) at Seattle (Martin 1-2), 9:10 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Philadelphia at White Sox, 7:10 p.m. Houston at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m. Washington at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m. L.A. Angels at Toronto, 6:07 p.m. Boston at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m. Kansas City at Miami, 6:10 p.m. Texas at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m. Cleveland at Oakland, 9:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.

MLS EASTERN CONFERENCE

W New York City FC 11 Toronto FC 11 New York 10 Philadelphia 9 Montreal 8 D.C. United 6 Orlando City 5 New England 6 Columbus 4 Fire 5

L 7 7 9 9 7 8 6 11 8 11

T Pts 8 41 7 40 7 37 7 34 9 33 10 28 13 28 8 26 11 23 7 22

GF 44 37 45 43 38 26 38 29 31 25

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

W 13 11 11 11 9 8 7 8 8

L 7 3 8 11 4 9 7 12 12

T Pts 6 45 10 43 7 40 5 38 11 38 8 32 10 31 6 30 3 27

GF 39 27 37 32 38 36 26 34 26

GA 43 26 35 40 37 30 41 46 38 32 GA 34 20 36 30 24 36 27 43 30

Houston 5 10 9 24 27 30 Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Sunday’s Results New York 2, D.C. United 2 (tie) Portland at Seattle (n) Wednesday’s Games Los Angeles at Fire, 7:30 p.m, Philadelphia at Columbus, 6:30 p.m. Toronto FC at Orlando City, 6:30 p.m. D.C. United at Montreal, 6:30 p.m. Seattle at Houston, 8 p.m. New England at San Jose, 9:30 p.m. Friday’s Games Colorado at Real Salt Lake, 7 p.m. Saturday’s Games Fire at D.C. United, 6 p.m. Kansas City at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. San Jose at Columbus, 6:30 p.m. Montreal at Toronto, 6:30 p.m. FC Dallas at Houston, 8 p.m. Vancouver at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m.

FRONTIER LEAGUE East Division W L Pct. Slammers 44 39 .530 Washington 41 41 .500 Lake Erie 39 45 .464 Schaumburg 37 47 .440 Traverse City 36 46 .439 Windy City 36 47 .434 West Division W L Pct. Southern Illinois 56 28 .667 Evansville 47 36 .566 River City 43 42 .506 Normal 42 41 .506 Gateway 42 43 .494 Florence 38 46 .452

GB — 2½ 5½ 7½ 7½ 8 GB — 8½ 13½ 13½ 14½ 18

Sunday’s Games Gateway 17, Slammers 6 Lake Erie 3, Traverse City 2 River City 8, Windy City 6 Washington 8, Schaumburg 1 Southern Illinois 13, Normal 9 Evansville 6, Florence 1 Traverse City 7, Lake Erie 1 Monday’s Games No games scheduled Tuesday’s Games Windy City at Slammers, 7:05 p.m. Lake Erie at Schaumburg, 6:30 p.m. Normal at Evansville, 6:35 p.m. Florence at Southern Illinois, 7:05 p.m.

NFL PRESEASON Thursday’s Games Atlanta at Miami, 7 p.m. Dallas at Seattle, 9 p.m. Friday’s Games New England at Carolina, 6:30 p.m. Buffalo at Washington, 6:30 p.m. Pittsburgh at New Orleans, 7 p.m. Cleveland at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m. Green Bay at San Francisco, 9 p.m. Saturday’s Games

Kansas City at Bears, noon Philadelphia at Indianapolis, 6 p.m. Detroit at Baltimore, 6 p.m. N.Y. Giants at N.Y. Jets, 6:30 p.m. Tennessee at Oakland, 7 p.m. Los Angeles at Denver, 8 p.m. Sunday’s Games San Diego at Minnesota, noon Arizona at Houston, 3 p.m. Cincinnati at Jacksonville, 7 p.m.

LOCAL SCHEDULE MONDAY’S EVENTS VOLLEYBALL Lincoln-Way West at Oak Forest, 6 p.m. Lincoln-Way East at Wilmington, 6 p.m. SOCCER JCA at Earlville Invite Sandburg at Lemont, 4:45 p.m. Joliet West at Reavis Tournament Windy City Classic Joliet Central vs. De La Salle

GOLF PGA TOUR

Sunday At Sedgefield CC Greensboro, N.C. Purse: $5.6 million Yardage: 7,127; Par: 70 Final Si Woo Kim 68-60-64-67—259 Luke Donald 65-68-64-67—264 H. Matsuyama 66-64-68-67—265 Brandt Snedeker 65-68-65-67—265 R. Cabrera Bello 63-68-65-70—266 Billy Horschel 66-68-64-68—266 Graeme McDowell 68-66-64-68—266 Brett Stegmaier 66-67-69-64—266 Johnson Wagner 66-68-65-67—266 Bud Cauley 67-69-64-67—267 Jim Furyk 66-64-67-70—267 Kevin Kisner 70-67-67-63—267 Kevin Na 63-67-67-70—267 Blayne Barber 67-70-65-66—268 Stewart Cink 70-66-68-64—268 Scott Langley 67-70-62-69—268 D.A. Points 70-66-63-69—268 Kyle Stanley 69-65-66-68—268 Shawn Stefani 66-70-66-66—268 Roberto Castro 72-64-68-65—269 Brice Garnett 69-68-67-65—269 Thomas Aiken 68-66-69-67—270 Jason Dufner 70-67-66-67—270 Robert Garrigus 67-67-69-67—270 Lucas Glover 69-61-73-67—270 Geoff Ogilvy 71-65-68-66—270 Rickie Fowler 67-67-68-68—270 Bill Haas 66-68-65-71—270 Jerry Kelly 67-68-65-70—270 Sean O’Hair 69-68-64-69—270 Patrick Reed 66-71-64-69—270 Tim Wilkinson 69-67-64-70—270

-21 -16 -15 -15 -14 -14 -14 -14 -14 -13 -13 -13 -13 -12 -12 -12 -12 -12 -12 -11 -11 -10 -10 -10 -10 -10 -10 -10 -10 -10 -10 -10

NASCAR Sunday At Bristol Motor Speedway Bristol, Tenn. Lap length: .533 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (24) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 500 laps, 0 rating, 44 points. 2. (25) Ricky Stenhouse Jr, Ford, 500, 0, 39. 3. (2) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 500, 0, 39. 4. (13) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 500, 0, 37. 5. (12) Chris Buescher, Ford, 500, 0, 36. 6. (1) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 500, 0, 36. 7. (16) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 500, 0, 34. 8. (28) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 500, 0, 33. 9. (8) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 500, 0, 32. 10. (10) Joey Logano, Ford, 500, 0, 32. 11. (11) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 500, 0, 30. 12. (22) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 500, 0, 29. 13. (19) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 500, 0, 28. 14. (17) Aric Almirola, Ford, 500, 0, 27. 15. (6) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 500, 0, 27.

21

• Monday, August 22, 2016

Reflections and pride in final Rio Olympics party

GB — 8½ 11½ 16 28½

Central Division W L Pct 71 51 .582 65 59 .524 64 60 .516 59 64 .480 49 75 .395 East Division W L Pct Toronto 70 54 .565 Boston 69 54 .561 Baltimore 67 56 .545 New York 63 60 .512 Tampa Bay 52 70 .426 West Division W L Pct Texas 73 52 .584 Seattle 66 57 .537 Houston 64 60 .516 Oakland 53 71 .427 Los Angeles 52 72 .419

Cleveland Detroit Kansas City White Sox Minnesota

MLB 6 p.m.: Washington at Baltimore, MLB 9 p.m.: Cubs at San Diego, CSN Youth baseball 10 a.m.: Little League World Series, consolation game, Emilia, Italy vs. Bend, Ore., ESPN Noon: Little League World Series, elimination game, Aguadulce, Panama vs. Sydney, ESPN 2 p.m.: Little League World Series, elimination game, Endwell, N.Y. vs. Goodlettsville, Tenn., ESPN 5 p.m.: Little League World Series, elimination game, Vancouver, B.C. vs. Seoul, ESPN 7 p.m.: Little League World Series, elimination game, Johnston, Iowa vs. Bowling Green, Ky., ESPN Horse racing 3 p.m.: Saratoga Live, Summer Colony Stakes, FS2

SPORTS | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

Central Division W L Pct 78 45 .634 66 57 .537 62 59 .512 53 70 .431 53 70 .431 East Division W L Pct Washington 73 50 .593 Miami 65 59 .524 New York 62 62 .500 Philadelphia 58 67 .464 Atlanta 45 79 .363 West Division W L Pct Los Angeles 68 55 .553 San Francisco 68 56 .548 Colorado 60 64 .484 San Diego 53 71 .427 Arizona 51 73 .411

Cubs St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati Milwaukee

People watch Britain’s athletes parade into Maracana stadium Sunday during the closing ceremony at the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

WHAT TO WATCH


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

| SPORTS

22 Final medal count

AP photo

Members of the United States’ basketball team stand for the national anthem Sunday after accepting their gold medals at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

MEN’S BASKETBALL: U.S. 96, SERBIA 66

U.S. men romp to gold By BRIAN MAHONEY The Associated Press

RIO DE JANEIRO – The trip wasn’t always easy, although they arrived at their expected destination. The players on the U.S. Olympic men’s basketball team never doubted they would be standing on the gold-medal platform, even after some close calls in Rio and criticisms they lacked the usual big names and bigger wins. “I know there was kind of a lot of buzz around us not playing well a couple of games, two, three games in the early round,” Carmelo Anthony said, “but the way that we locked in and the way that we focused in to be able to have this gold medal around our necks was special.” Saving their best for last in a tournament that had been tough, the Americans convincingly won their third straight gold medal, beating Serbia, 9666, on Sunday. “We came here and despite what people are saying about this group, being less talented and not blowing teams

out, we did a good job of bottling all that up and unleashed it on Serbia,” forward Paul George said. Kevin Durant scored 30 points in the final game with the national team for Mike Krzyzewski, who took the Americans back to the top and leaves with them there after becoming the first coach to win three Olympic gold medals. “To go home as gold medalists and leave Coach K off with another gold was one of our main goals as well,” Durant said. Anthony also picked up his third gold to go with a bronze, becoming the most decorated male in Olympic basketball history. The U.S. beat Serbia by just 94-91 in pool play, holding on when Bogdan Bogdanovic missed a 3-pointer at the buzzer. This rematch looked nothing like that meeting, but it did resemble the final of the 2014 Basketball World Cup, which the Americans won, 129-92. “To come out there and play as well as we did against a team that had stepped up their play as well, it showed that we came together at the right

time,” Durant said. Anthony checked back into the rout in the final minutes so he could grab a seventh rebound, passing David Robinson for the U.S. record with the 125th in his Olympic career. He had already become the leading scorer earlier in the tournament, capping an Olympic career that began with disappointment as a member of the U.S. team that finished third in 2004. The Americans haven’t lost since, winning 25 straight in the Olympics. A few of the victories were more difficult than usual in this tournament, where half the Americans’ eight games were decided by 10 points or fewer. Krzyzewski said it didn’t matter how the Americans won, that there would be no questions as long as they did. And there was no doubt they would Sunday once Durant heated up. He had also scored 30 in the 2012 gold-medal game, after he poured in a U.S.-record 38 in one game en route to the MVP of the 2010 world basketball championship. He is already the Americans’ No. 2 career scorer in the Olympics in just two appearances.

Nation United States China Britain Russia Germany France Japan Australia Italy Canada South Korea Netherlands Brazil New Zealand Azerbaijan Spain Kazakhstan Hungary Denmark Kenya Uzbekistan Jamaica Cuba Sweden Ukraine Poland Croatia South Africa Czech Republic Belarus Colombia Iran Serbia Turkey Ethiopia Switzerland North Korea Georgia Greece Belgium Thailand Romania Malaysia Mexico Argentina Slovakia Armenia Slovenia Lithuania Norway Indonesia Taiwan Bulgaria Venezuela Egypt Tunisia Bahrain Vietnam Bahamas Independent Ivory Coast Algeria Ireland India Mongolia Israel Fiji Jordan Kosovo Puerto Rico Singapore Tajikistan Burundi Grenada Niger Philippines Qatar Austria Dominican Republic Estonia Finland Kyrgyzstan Moldova Morocco Nigeria Portugal Trinidad & Tobago United Arab Emirates

G 46 26 27 19 17 10 12 8 8 4 9 8 7 4 1 7 3 8 2 6 4 6 5 2 2 2 5 2 1 1 3 3 2 1 1 3 2 2 3 2 2 1 0 0 3 2 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

S 37 18 23 18 10 18 8 11 12 3 3 7 6 9 7 4 5 3 6 6 2 3 2 6 5 3 3 6 2 4 2 1 4 3 2 2 3 1 1 2 2 1 4 3 1 2 3 2 1 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

B 38 26 17 19 15 14 21 10 8 15 9 4 6 5 10 6 9 4 7 1 7 2 4 3 4 6 2 2 7 4 3 4 2 4 5 2 2 4 2 2 2 3 1 2 0 0 0 1 3 4 0 2 2 2 3 3 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

T 121 70 67 56 42 42 41 29 28 22 21 19 19 18 18 17 17 15 15 13 13 11 11 11 11 11 10 10 10 9 8 8 8 8 8 7 7 7 6 6 6 5 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1


23

By TIM REYNOLDS

The Associated Press

AP file photo

The United States’ Ryan Lochte checks his time in a men’s 4x200-meter freestyle heat during the swimming competitions at the 2016 Summer Olympics on Aug. 9 in Rio de Janeiro. fronted them and asked them to pay for the damage; Lochte first offered a very different story. “I over-exaggerated the story,” Lochte told NBC in an interview that aired Saturday. In a separate interview with a Brazilian network, he blamed the mess on his “immaturity.” Whatever additional scrutiny U.S. athletes faced after the swimming episode didn’t seem to hurt their performance. “Hopefully the lesson learned more than anything else is you’re representing your country, you’re representing your sport, you’re representing a movement,” Blackmun said. “So you need to conduct yourself in a way that makes us all proud.” There were plenty of those examples. Michael Phelps won six medals in Rio, sprinting star Allyson Felix increased her Olympic gold collection to six and gymnast Simone Biles won five medals plus got the honor of being the U.S. flagbearer for Sunday’s closing ceremony. Phelps carried the flag into the opening of what he says will be his final games, and now the bearer role – as well as maybe the role of being the face of the U.S. Olympic team – belongs to Biles. “It’s a huge honor,” said the 4-foot8 Biles, though she noted she’s a bit

worried about handling the weight of the flag. Stories like hers and many others were the ones the USOC would have preferred to see dominate discussion as the Rio Games end, instead of incessant talk about a mess that could have been easily avoided. “The things that you do are going to be magnified and the mistakes that you make are going to have a light shined on them in a way that’s going to make it very difficult for you to overcome,” Blackmun said. USA Swimming and the IOC both could sanction Lochte. IOC member Anita DeFrantz of the U.S. said it’s possible that Olympic officials could simply decide to let the USOC handle the matter. DeFrantz made no effort to hide her disdain for the incident. “They have forever put themselves on the kind of list that you don’t want to be remembered for,” she told The Associated Press. “I wish I could feel sorry for them. Instead I feel that they should have been honest from the beginning. What they did was wrong, but what was even more wrong, it was ridiculous that they didn’t stand up and tell the truth. “Who would have it hurt to tell the truth? No one. And who did it hurt not to tell the truth? It insulted a whole nation.”

RIO DE JANEIRO – Two Mongolian wrestling coaches stripped off their clothing to protest the result of a bronze medal match, a bizarre turn in a day where officiating was highly criticized. The scene began after Uzbekisatn’s Ikhtiyor Navruzov appeared to have lost to Mandakhnaran Ganzorig, 7-6, at 65 kilograms Sunday. Uzbekistan challenged the scoring, believing that the Mongolian was fleeing instead of fighting because he was running around in celebration with less than 10 seconds left. Navruzov – whose quarterfinal match resulted in the dismissal of all three officials involved after a questionable late call – won his challenge and the match on criteria. Ganzorig, who had already started celebrating, fell to his knees in disappointment. The Mongolian coaches went much further. Byambarenchin Bayaraa took his shoes and shirt off and threw them to the mat in disgust in front of the officials. Tsenrenbataar Tsostbayar stripped all the way down to his blue briefs. The Brazilian crowd started chanting “Mongolia! Mongolia!”

Kenya’s Kipchoge wins gold in men’s marathon

RIO DE JANEIRO – Eliud Kipchoge of Kenya smiled as he crossed the finish line and later directed cheering fans from the podium. The one color of Olympic medal he lacked in his illustrious career finally is his. Kipchoge grabbed the lead in the marathon Sunday around the 21-mile mark and finished off his first Olympic victory in this event in a time of 2 hours, 8 minutes and 44 seconds. Feyisa Lilesa, of Ethiopia, won the silver medal and American Galen Rupp, running only his second marathon, added bronze to the silver he won in the 10,000 meters in London.

Snyder becomes youngest U.S. Olympic wrestling champion

RIO DE JANEIRO – American wrestler Kyle Snyder won gold on Sunday, becoming the youngest Olympic wrestling champion in U.S. history. The 20-year-old Snyder beat Khetag Goziumov of Azerbaijan, 2-1, for gold at 97 kilograms during the men’s freestyle tournament Sunday.

– Wire reports

• Monday, August 22, 2016

RIO DE JANEIRO – Whatever celebration the U.S. Olympic Committee has planned for its return home after a wildly successful Rio de Janeiro Games on the competition front will likely be short-lived. USOC CEO Scott Blackmun promised Sunday that “further action” will be coming, perhaps soon, against 12time Olympic medalist Ryan Lochte and three of his U.S. swimming teammates after the story of an armed robbery following a night of partying unraveled and led to Lochte acknowledging he embellished the tale. Blackmun stopped short of suggesting what any discipline might be, including whether Lochte should ever be allowed to swim for his country again. “We all understand that they let down our athletes. They let down Americans,” Blackmun said. “And they really let down our hosts in Rio who did such a wonderful job, and we feel very badly about that. I think we ended up in the right place in terms of being able to shine a light on what really happened there.” Blackmun said he did not think that the story involving Lochte and the three teammates – all were gold medalists in Rio as part of U.S. swimming relay teams – should be the lasting image of a games where Americans dominated the medal count. Add up all those golds, silvers and bronzes, and no U.S. team ever won more at a fully attended Olympics. But even USOC chairman Larry Probst said the scandal overshadowed some successes. “It’s really disappointing that this took place, completely inappropriate,” said Probst, who also is an International Olympic Committee member. “I think the four swimmers are well aware of that now. And unfortunately it has overshadowed some really amazing performances by a lot of great athletes.” Lochte’s impact on the Rio Games truly started long after his work in the pool was complete. He and teammates Jack Conger, Gunnar Bentz and James Feigen went out clubbing on the night the swimming competition ended. Police have said the swimmers vandalized a bathroom at the gas station and armed guards con-

Mongolian wrestling coaches strip off clothes in protest

SPORTS | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

USOC: More actions coming in Ryan Lochte’s Olympic scandal

BRIEFS


*The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

• Monday, August 22, 2016

| PETS

24

Martha is a super sweet 11-month-old terrier-whippet mix and a real sweetheart. Meet Martha at the Wags 2 Wishes rescue center at 23907 W. Industrial Drive North, Plainfield, or visit www.w2wrescue.com.

Lucinda is a sweet kitty. She gets so excited when people come to visit that she will run around the house; however, she interacts in her own time. She needs a family – preferably with no other pets – willing to learn and respect her cues and respect them. For information, call Humane Haven Animal Shelter at 630-378-4208 or email humanehaven@gmail.com

Squirt is an 8-year-old male tabby who is very friendly and laid-back. He would make the perfect companion. Call the Will County Humane Society at 815-741-0695 or visit willcountyhumane.com. Simon is a 2-year-old male chi-weenie who is a total lovebug. Meet Simon at the Wags 2 Wishes rescue center at 23907 W. Industrial Drive North, Plainfield, or visit www. w2wrescue.com.

Tike is a 1-year-old beagle/husky mix who would do best with kids over age 6 due to his playful nature. Contact Hopeful Tails Animal Rescue at hopefultailsadoptions@ outlook.com.

Faith is an adorable little wirehair rat terrier doll. She’s cute, cuddly and very affectionate once she gets to know you; and she loves companionship. She walks well on a leash and is fun and curious. Children should be at least 4 years old and her family shouldn’t be away from home for long hours. For information, call Humane Haven Animal Shelter at 630-378-4208 or email humanehaven@gmail.com.

Tinsel is a 2-year-old shepherd and Weimaraner mix who absolutely loves water. Give her a kiddie pool and she has a blast. Contact Hopeful Tails Animal Rescue at hopefultailsadoptions@outlook.com.

James Bond is a 3-year-old neutered male domestic short hair. He is friendly, loves to be petted and will follow you around looking for attention. He is FIV positive and would need to be the only cat in a home. Contact Wendy at NAWS Illinois Humane Society: 708-478-5102 or wendy@nawsus. org. Visit www.nawsus.org.

Announcing

Low Cost Vaccination Clinics 1st Saturday of the month 12pm-3pm

Shorewood Animal Hospital, LLC Dexter is a 2-year-old Doberman/pit bull mix who is great with children, cats and Kismet is a 9-year-old lap cat. He is laid- other dogs. He needs an active family and back, affectionate, adventurous, brave and a big yard to play in. Call the Will County playful. Call Joliet Township Animal Control Humane Society at 815-741-0695 or visit at 815-725-0333. willcountyhumane.com.

Serving the Shorewood Community since 1976 504 Brookforest Ave. (Rt.59), Shorewood

815-744-2082

Please call for an appointment and pricing details. SM-CL0369370


FUN&GAMES

25 Beetle Bailey

Big Nate

Blondie

The Born Loser

Dilbert

Frazz

Monty

Non Sequitur

Pearls Before Swine

The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

Arlo & Janis


Pickles

The Family Circus

The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

| FUN & GAMES

26

Rose is Rose

Soup to Nutz The Argyle Sweater

Crankshaft

Frank & Ernest


SUDOKU

ASK DOCTOR K Anthony L. Komaroff Some studies led doctors to add corticosteroid drugs such as prednisone to the treatment of shingles. However, as more studies of this treatment have been completed, it looks as though these medicines may offer more risks than benefits. You should also gently rinse your skin rash and blisters once or twice daily with cool water. Your doctor may suggest that you use antibiotic ointment on open areas. Shingles usually takes seven to 10 days to run its course. Blisters may take several weeks to disappear completely. The duration of pain is highly variable. Most people’s pain decreases within two or three months. However, a small number of people develop post-herpetic neuralgia and continue to have pain for many months, or even years. Different medications from those used during the attack of shingles are effective. These include tricyclic drugs, gabapentin and pregabalin. These drugs alter the way your central nervous system perceives pain signals. If the pain is severe, then the more potent drugs used for the pain of shingles may also be helpful. These include oxycodone, morphine and methadone. Other treatments for post-herpetic neuralgia being evaluated, but as yet unproven, include capsaicin, topical lidocaine and acupuncture. A shingles vaccine is recommended for most adults age 60 and older. Even though treatment is effective, nothing beats preventing the condition in the first place.

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

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

PREVIOUS SOLUTION

27

• Monday, August 22, 2016 *

Dear Dr. K: I’ve been diagnosed with shingles. What can I take for the pain? Dear Reader: Shingles, also known as herpes zoster or just zoster, is caused by the varicella-zoster virus. It is the same virus that causes chickenpox. Once you have had chickenpox, the varicella-zoster virus remains in your body’s nerve tissues. It is inactive, but it can be reactivated later in life. This causes shingles. When the virus reactivates, it causes a burning or tingling sensation in the affected areas. A few days later, the virus causes a blistery rash. Your affected skin may be so painful and sensitive that you cannot even stand having your clothing touching the area. One patient of mine with shingles on his forearm switched for several weeks to wearing a short-sleeved shirt to the office, something he never had worn to work before. If you’re over age 50 and have had shingles pain for less than three days, the current recommendations call for doctors to prescribe antiviral medicine to kill the virus that causes shingles. (If you are younger than 50 and very uncomfortable from shingles that began in the last three days, your doctor may still prescribe antiviral therapy.) The two medicines recommended most often are famciclovir (Famvir) and valacyclovir (Valtrex). These antiviral medications not only help shorten the days of pain that you have, they also help reduce the risk of long-lasting shingles pain, a condition called post-herpetic neuralgia. The pain that accompanies shingles can be intense. If the antiviral medicine does not provide enough relief, you can take additional pain medicines. Start with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and acetaminophen. If necessary, your doctor will prescribe more potent pain medicines; these include codeine, tramadol and (when the pain is very severe) oxycodone.

CROSSWORD

FUN & GAMES | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

Antiviral meds ease shingles pain


48 Victory symbol with the fingers 49 Take too far

55 TV screen option, in brief 58 O.K.’d 60 Survive 62 Surface to drive on

O R E O

A D R I A N I I

C H A S M S

R E N T A L

L I O N K I N G E E Y O R E

R E V U E

A G E E

S T E P S

N E S T

JUMBLE

6 Yachting competition

54 Scoundrel

C O S T

Y O G A M A T S

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

A M I D E

W A R A T H O M E

S S P O R L E A D E A E L E N Y T O L A T I F I X E R I F E G E M A W A R Q U I N T U R N I S I N G C A N M U L O A R O A N E N

3 One of three at the base of a Steinway

5 Succulent flowering plants

51 ___ on a true story

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

2 Black-and-white cookie

4 North Atlantic fish

A D O R E

| FUN & GAMES The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

47 King toppers

C O M I C

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

D E N S

a girl is in the seventh grade is fine, but she should hold off on the mascara for another year or two.

C R A G

Wondering In The Suburbs Dear Wondering: A touch of lip gloss when

S T EWP C O U R A A Y R I D N O N S MP G H E E O OWD P P A L E E Y E D E L A C V E R D O A V E L E N D U N EWM SW I N

ceiving physical therapy in perpetuity? If not, be patient. Wait until it is finished and find out whether her job offers vacation time. If it does, invite her to visit and show her what the big city has to offer. If she can’t get away, you may have to “entice” her by sending her videos of all the fun things she could be doing if she lived closer. I can’t guarantee it will work because it’s possible she’s happy with her life the way it is. However, if she’s not, it might be an effective way to whet her appetite. Dear Abby: At what age do you believe it is appropriate for a girl to start wearing makeup? I don’t mean lipstick and huge amounts of eye shadow, but a bit of mascara and lip gloss? –

45 Pound repeatedly

R E G H A T O T O P T E E A D H I D E A UMM E O K N V E D A Y T S

Gal In San Francisco Dear City Gal: Does your mother plan to be re-

44 Animation frame

P C A I O L A D O N E O H S P O E S S D E L A O L P E D O W N

pened, you should have reported it to animal control and given them the address of the homeowner. If the dog’s owner didn’t volunteer to see you got help for your injury – and that includes your emotional trauma – you should discuss it with a lawyer. If that dog had been a large one, you could have been seriously injured. Go online to the Humane Society’s helpful section on this topic, www.nodogbites. org. As for my thoughts, I think you should resume your exercise routine whenever the weather permits. Dear Abby: My 62-year-old mother is living in a small town with little to offer her. She says the only reason she stays is because her job provides benefits and she’s going through physical therapy. Mom is single, has no potential prospects and no social life outside of church. Her friends are all married or have moved away. I feel like she’s not living her life fully, and I wish she could find the courage to leave. How can I convince her to be OK with the unknown and move to the big city? – City

43 Assessed visually

V E R D I

gan Dear Shell-shocked: When the attack hap-

36 Professional on a 63 Seinfeld’s catwalk neighbor whose name is spoken 37 With it as an epithet 38 “All Day Strong. 64 Short, quick runs All Day Long” 65 Some playground sloganeer equipment 40 Glass of public radio DOWN 41 Ancient Greek theaters 1 Price

S P A R

Dear Abby: For DEAR ABBY health reasons, I had been Jeanne walking during Phillips my lunch break at work. That ended last summer when someone unleashed his dog between his house and his car. The dog saw me on the sidewalk, charged, jumped on me and bit me. Thankfully, I put my arm up, so it only got my arm, but now I’m terrified to walk outside for fear of being attacked again. The bite was nothing compared to the trauma. I’m afraid the fear will be with me for the rest of my life. No one thinks their dog would hurt someone, but I learned the hard way it’s not always true. I wish dog owners would be more responsible, not only for their sake, but also for their dog’s and other people’s. Do you have any thoughts? – Shell-shocked In Michi-

ACROSS 1 Police vehicle 7 Vessel for slow cooking 14 Baltimore ballplayer 15 Bravery 16 Sailor, informally 17 Harvest festival events 18 Heavy weight 19 Bond girl Shirley 21 Beginning 22 “C’mon, quit it!” 24 Fuel efficiency fig. 25 Mafia bigwig 27 Snicker 29 Workplaces for R.N.s 32 City on the Black Sea 34 Pulitzer-winning writer Maureen 35 Dog, cat or maybe a parrot

A P O P

walker attacked by dog

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD

B A R S

28 Fear lingers after lunch

T R A I N S

S T A M P E D E

7 Make a digital image of 8 Yo-yo or doll

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

14

19 22

20

11

12

13

29

30

31

56

57

21

23

24

26

27

32

28

33

34

36

35

37

40

41

44

45

52

38

42 46

47

49

53

39

43

48

58

10

17

18

51

9

15

16

25

8

50

54 59

55 60

62

63

64

65

9 Annual celebration when PUZZLE BY JACOB STULBERG a 12-star flag 29 Place for airing 42 Word before may be flown an opinion … or north or after what five of this payment 10 Twist, as a wet puzzle’s Down towel answers contain? 43 High dice rolls 11 Cushions 46 “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” girl 12 Pulitzer-winning 30 “Side by Side by Sondheim,” e.g. James 48 “La Traviata” composer 13 Home composed 31 Stairs of twigs 50 Extend, as a subscription 17 Large gem in the 33 Decline, as a ramp Smithsonian 51 Taverns

61

54 Janitor’s ringful 56 Steep, rugged cliff 57 Paneled rooms, maybe 59 Brewery container

61 Bad record for 20 Body part with a 37 ___ and haw 52 Each a motorist, for nail 39 Pb, to a chemist 53 Argue (with) short 23 Extension from a fire truck Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 7,000 past 24 Kitten’s cry puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). 25 Joke teller Read about and comment on each puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay. 26 Love to bits Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords. 28 Use a pogo stick


Movies

’: In Stereo (CC): Closed captioned (G): General audience (PG): Parental guidance (14): Parents strongly cautioned (M): Mature audiences only (N): New show.

6:00 BROADCAST

6:30

6:00 BASIC CABLE

8:00

8:30

9:00

9:30

10:00

10:30

11:00

11:30

2 Broke Girls Mom (14) (CC) Odd Couple sNews (N) Late Show-Colbert (N) Corden (N) Scorpion ’ (14) (CC) Mom ’ (14-L) Running Wild-Bear Grylls (N) sNews (N) Tonight Show-J. Fallon (N) Meyers (N) American Ninja Warrior (N) ’ (PG) (CC) (DVS) Mistresses (N) (14) (CC) (DVS) sNews (N) Jimmy Kimmel Live (N) (14) Nightline (N) Bachelor in Paradise (N) ’ (14-D,L) (CC) sWGN News at Nine (N) (CC) sWGN News at Friends (PG) Friends (14) Raymond Supergirl ’ (14-V) (CC) Supergirl ’ (14-V) (CC) Family Ties Family Ties Jeffersons Jeffersons All in Family All in Family Barney Miller Barney Miller Johnny Carson ’ (PG) (CC) sChicago (N) Inside Poldark (N) ’ (CC) I Miss Downton Abbey! ’ (G) (CC) I Miss Downton Abbey! (N) ’ (G) (CC) MotorWeek Autoline This sDW News (PG) Tavis Smiley NOVA Sunken Allied ships in France. ’ (PG) (CC) (DVS) Charlie Rose (N) ’ (CC) 2 Broke Girls Seinfeld (PG) Seinfeld (PG) King King s7 Eyewitness News (N) Engagement Family Guy ’ 2 Broke Girls Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Hot, Cleveland Hot, Cleveland American Dad King of Hill There Yet? There Yet? Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Happy Days Gilligan’s Isle Hogan Heroes Hogan Heroes Carol Burnett Perry Mason (PG) (CC) Twilight Zone Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Xena: Warrior Princess (PG) Hercules: Journeys Star Trek: Voyager ’ (PG-V) NYPD Blue ’ (14-L,V) (CC) Bernie Mac Bernie Mac In the Cut One Love On Deadly Ground (’94) ›› The Glimmer Man (’96) ›‡ Steven Seagal. sNews (N) Mod Fam TMZ (PG) (CC) Dish Nation TMZ Live (PG) So You Think You Can Dance (N) (Live) ’ (PG-D,L) (CC) Criminal Minds ’ (14-L,V) Criminal Minds ’ (14-L,V) Criminal Minds ’ (14-L,V) Criminal Minds ’ (14-D,L,V) Criminal Minds ’ (14-V) Sin Senos Si Hay Paraiso (N) Senora Acero 3: La Coyo (N) sTelemundo (N) nTitulares, Mas Sin Senos Si Hay Paraiso (N) Silvana Sin Lana (N) ’ (SS) Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Big Bang How I Met The Simpsons How I Met Anger Anger Moises, Los 10 (N) La Ronca de Oro (N) El Principe (N) (14) sNoticias 66: sNoticiero (N) Yago (N) ’ (14) Narcos (N) (MA) Un Camino hacia el (N) sNoticias 66: Edicion Nocturna nContacto Deportivo (N) Tres Veces Ana (N) ’ (14)

6:30

7:00

7:30

8:00

8:30

9:00

9:30

10:00

10:30

11:00

11:30

Bars (N) The First 48 The First 48 ’ (14) (CC) The First 48 ’ (PG) (CC) The First 48 ’ (14) (CC) The First 48 ’ (PG) (CC) The First 48 ’ (PG) (CC) Making the Mob: Chicago (N) Making the Mob: Chicago Pearl Harbor (’01) ›› Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett. (CC) Pearl Harbor (’01) ›› (CC) Lone Star Law ’ (14) (CC) Yukon Men ’ (PG) (CC) Yukon Men ’ (PG) (CC) Yukon Men ’ (PG) (CC) Lone Star Law ’ (14) (CC) Yukon Men ’ (PG) (CC) Martin ’ (PG) Martin ’ (PG) Soul Men (’08) ›› Samuel L. Jackson. Estranged singers reunite for a tribute concert. (CC) Martin ’ (PG) Martin ’ (PG) The Wendy Williams Show ’ nBTN Live MIchigan nBTN Live nWisconsin Football Classic MIchigan nBTN Live nBTN Live Housewives/OC Housewives/OC (N) Housewives/OC (N) Odd Mom (N) Odd Mom Out Happens Housewives/OC Housewives Steve Austin’s Broken Skull Smokey Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Smokey and the Bandit (’77) ››› Burt Reynolds, Sally Field. Futurama (CC) Futurama (CC) South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park Daily Show At Midnight South Park South Park nSportsTalk (N) nSportsNet (N) nRed Bull Signature Series (PG) nPregame (N) nMLB Baseball Chicago Cubs at San Diego Padres. (N Subject to Blackout) (Live)(CC) Misfit Garage: Fired Up (N) Misfit Garage ’ (14) (CC) Misfit Garage (N) ’ (14) (CC) Misfit Garage ’ (14) (CC) Elena Bizaardvark K.C. Under. Girl Meets Bizaardvark Best Friends Liv-Mad. Girl Meets Best Friends Meet the Robinsons (’07) ››› (CC) E! News (N) (PG) (CC) The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians E! News (N) (PG) (CC) n2016 LLWS (N) n2016 Little League World Series (N) nBaseball Tonight (N)(CC) nSportsCenter (N) (Live)(CC) nSportsCenter (N) (Live)(CC) nSportsCenter (N) (Live)(CC) nSC Featured (N) nE:60 (N) nNFL Great (N) nNFL’s Greatest Games (N) nArm Wrestling nArm Wrestling Rachael Ray’s Kids Cook-Off Star Kids (Series Premiere) (N) Cake Wars (N) (G) Cake Wars (N) (G) Chopped (G) Cake Wars (G) Guilt (Season Finale) (N) (CC) Cheer (Series Premiere) (N) Han. Montana Han. Montana (4:30) The Princess Diaries The 700 Club ’ (G) (CC) The Fosters (N) ’ (14-D,L,S) (5:00) The Croods (’13) ››› Despicable Me 2 (’13) ››› Voices of Steve Carell. (CC) Despicable Me 2 (’13) ››› Voices of Steve Carell. (CC) Man of the House (’05) ›› Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls The Middle ’ The Middle ’ The Middle ’ The Middle ’ Love It or List It (G) (CC) Tiny House Tiny House Tiny (N) Tiny (N) Hunters (N) Hunt Intl (N) Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House American Pickers (PG) (CC) American Pickers (PG) (CC) American Pickers (PG-L) (CC) American Pickers (PG) (CC) American Pickers (PG) (CC) American Pickers ’ (PG) Wild Oats (’16) Premiere. Demi Moore, Jessica Lange. (CC) (5:00) The Ex (’06) › (CC) The Ugly Truth (’09) ›‡ Katherine Heigl. (CC) The Ugly Truth (’09) ›‡ Teen OG (Season Premiere) Teen Mom OG (N) (PG) (CC) Teen Mom OG ’ (PG) Teen Mom OG ’ (PG) (CC) Unlocking the Truth ’ (14) Teen Mom OG ’ (PG) (CC) PAW (N) Shimmer (N) SpongeBob SpongeBob Full House (G) Full House (G) Full House (G) Full House (G) Friends (PG-D) Friends (PG-D) Friends (PG-D) Friends (PG) Dateline on OWN (PG) (CC) Dateline on OWN (PG) (CC) Dateline on OWN (PG) (CC) Dateline on OWN ’ (PG) Dateline on OWN ’ (PG) Dateline on OWN ’ (PG) My Wife-Kids Precious (’09) ›››‡ Gabourey Sidibe, Mo’Nique. (CC) Precious (’09) ›››‡ Premiere. Gabourey Sidibe, Mo’Nique. (CC) Beyond Scared Straight (14) Beyond Scared Straight (14) Beyond Scared Straight (14) Beyond Scared Straight (14) Beyond Scared Straight (14) Cops (14-V) Cops (PG-L) (4:00) Skyfall (’12) (CC) Land of the Lost (’09) ›‡ Will Ferrell, Anna Friel. (CC) Hulk (’03) ››‡ Eric Bana. Scientist Bruce Banner transforms into a powerful brute. Conan (N) (14) (CC) 2 Broke Girls Conan (14) Family Guy ’ Family Guy ’ Family Guy ’ American Dad American Dad Family Guy ’ Family Guy ’ Full Frontal Private Lives The Last of Mrs. Cheyney They Were Expendable (’45) ›››‡ Robert Montgomery. (CC) (DVS) Lady in the Lake (’46) ›› Robert Montgomery. (CC) 90 Day (Season Premiere) (N) 90 Day Fiance ’ (PG) (CC) Too Close to Home (Series Premiere) (N) ’ (CC) Too Close to Home Anna’s secret is revealed. ’ (CC) Supernatural Wretched TV Life is Best Dare to Love Liberty Univ. Convocation Robison Next Level Paid Program Paid Program The 700 Club (N) ’ (G) (CC) Rizzoli & Isles (14-V) Rizzoli & Isles (N) (14-L,V) Major Crimes (N) (14) (CC) Rizzoli & Isles (14-L,V) Law & Order (14) (CC) (DVS) Castle ’ (PG-L,V) (CC) (DVS) Teen Titans Teen Titans King of Hill Cleveland American Dad American Dad Family Guy ’ Family Guy ’ Bob’s Burgers Bob’s Burgers Chicken Squidbillies Bizarre Foods America (PG) Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Delicious Delicious Secret Eat (N) Secret Eat (N) Delicious Delicious Delicious Delicious Andy Griffith Andy Griffith The Andy Griffith Show (PG) Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Queen of the South (14) CSI: Crime Scene Investigat’n Mod Fam Mod Fam nWWE Monday Night RAW (N) (Live) ’ (PG)(CC) Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood Love & Hip Hop (N) T.I.-Tiny (N) Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood T.I. and Tiny VH1 Live! (N) Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood VH1 Live! (14)

HOROSCOPE By EUGENIA LAST

Newspaper Enterprise Association TODAY – Take the initiative and make changes that will encourage a better domestic life or the formation of a business you can run from home. Variety is good for the soul. Engage in the things that excite you mentally and physically and will bring you greater financial security. Live, love and laugh. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) – Your attitude will make a difference as to how others treat you. Optimism is a good way to attract opportunities. If you believe in yourself, so will everyone else. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) – Cut to the chase and take care of legal, contractual and financial mat-

ters quickly. If you let your emotions run the show, you will lose your equilibrium. Don’t let someone else take charge. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) – Secretive actions will lead to trouble. Honesty will bring about the results you want in the quickest manner. Refuse to let anyone bully or put pressure on you. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) – Put your energy into an employment search, personal improvements and striving for financial gain. Size up your situation and make reasonable changes that will lead to concrete results. Ask and you will receive. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) – Nothing will be as it appears. Don’t rely on hearsay; get to the root of the matter and decide what’s best for you. Now is not the time to be a follower.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) – Emotional game-playing is best ignored. You are best off focusing on personal growth and doing what will bring the highest rewards rather than trying to accommodate someone else’s demands. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) – Embrace change, work hard and strive to turn a plan into a reality. Live life according to your rules, and don’t give in to others’ emotional demands. Be true to yourself. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) – You need to put greater emphasis on love, romance and relationships. You can bring about favorable changes if you work with someone you care about to build a stable future. ARIES (March 21-April 19) – Don’t leave anything to chance. Making plans that you can adjust along

the way will lead to your success. Stay alert and be ready to take advantage of an opportunity. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) – You will come out on top if you are prepared to give your all. Making plans with children or family or socializing with peers or friends will boost your confidence. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) – Take command, but don’t antagonize someone who is stubborn or likely to fight back. Keep your life simple and focus on personal improvements, not on trying to change others. CANCER (June 21-July 22) – Unexpected changes must not be allowed to throw you off course. If you adjust to whatever transpires and carry on, you will reach your goal and surpass your expectations.

29

• Monday, August 22, 2016

A&E AMC ANIMAL BET BIGTEN BRAVO CMT COM CSN DISC DISN E! ESPN ESPN2 FOOD FREE FX HALL HGTV HIST LIFE MTV NICK OWN OXY SPIKE SYFY TBS TCM TLC TLN TNT TOON TRAVEL TVLAND USA VH1

7:30

n Sports

TELEVISION | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

ET (N) CBS 2 sNews (N) Hollywood (N) NBC 5 sNews (N) Wheel Fortune ABC 7 sNews (N) Two/Half Men WGN 9 Two/Half Men Good Times ANT 9.2 Good Times PBS 11 sPBS NewsHour (N) ’ (CC) PBS 20 Charlie Rose ’ (CC) Mike & Molly CIU 26 Mike & Molly U2 26.2 Jerry Springer ’ (14) (CC) M*A*S*H (PG) ME 26.3 M*A*S*H (PG) ME2 26.4 Star Trek: Next Generation Bernie Mac BNC 26.5 Bernie Mac Mod Fam FOX 32 Big Bang ION 38 Criminal Minds ’ (14-L,V) TEL 44 Caso Cerrado: Edicion (N) Family Feud MY 50 Family Feud TF 60 (5:00) Mi corazon es tuyo (N) UNI 66 La Rosa de Guadalupe (N)

7:00

s News


30 CLASSIFIED •

Monday, August 22, 2016 • The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com For Better or For Worse

BOOKKEEPER

Immediate opening part time bookkeeper for local established accounting firm. Previous work experience in an accounting firm preferred but will consider candidate with 2 years bookkeeping on the job experience. Practical knowledge of all aspects of bookkeeping and computer skills required. Fax or email resume and work history

to: (815) 485-5197 or kemlassoc@yahoo.com

Vintage Hamilton – Dietzgen Drafting Table – 1930 Era, Drafting Machine Attached, 31x42, $150 815-290-5022

JOLIET - ST. MARYS NATIVITY CEMETERY

Grave # 7A, Lot 2, Sect 16, $700. 815-729-2056

★ ADOPTION ★

ACCOUNTANT/BOOKKEEPING

International Steel Distribution Company is seeking an Accountant/Bookkeeping position to fulfill the following duties at Seneca, IL. branch. Compensation commensurate with experience. Send resume and three professional references required to: balexander@pipe-piling.com

CUSTODIAL POSITIONS

GCA Services Group (Exelon Dresden Nuclear Station) is hiring full time custodial positions. Starting wage is $9.60 per hour. All shifts available. Opportunity for advancement. Benefits offered upon eligibility. 40 hour work week with opportunities for overtime and double time. Must pass all site specific training and testing. A criminal background check, results of which are not necessarily a bar to employment, and a drug screen are required. EOE.

Contact Account Manager @ 815-416-3049 for applications and interviews.

EXECUTIVE SECRETARY

Lockport Area Special Education Cooperative is a looking for an Executive Secretary to the Executive Director. Experience in school office setting preferred but not necessary. Must have skills with MS Office modules and accounts payable processing. Salary and benefits competitive. Complete application at www.lasec.org or contact 815-838-8080 for more information.

At Home-Mom & Loving Attorney Dad will LOVE & CHERISH baby forever! Expenses paid. 1-800-775-4013 ★ Lisa & Anthony ★ New Information

LOST SHELTIE KALLIE

Please do not call her or chase her. If seen please call (815) 290-9531 LOST: SWEATER-TAN CARTIGAN (3/4 sleeves) Lost on Sat. 8/13 at the Car Show. Please call: 815-674-4147

West Highland Terrier

JOB FAIR Friday, August 25 9am-2pm Elite Staffing

421 N Bolingbrook Dr, Bolingbrook, IL 60440 630-759-1910 llopez@elitestaffinginc.com

Work available ASAP -- General Labor Pick/Packers, Forklift Operators, Material Handlers, Line Leaders

$9.25-12.00/hr DOE 1st shift: 6am-1:30pm 2nd shift: 3:30pm-11pm

SPOTTER / DRIVER

Exp'd Warehouse Spotter/Drivers needed for busy N. & S. Suburban and Chicagoland locations. CDL not required. Must have 1 year yard Spotting experience. All Shifts and weekends. OT avail. Health benefits after 90 days. Great starting pay. Nationwide Company. Start immediately. Call 815-955-9078 JOBS ANNOUNCEMENTS STUFF VEHICLES REAL ESTATE SERVICES LEGALS Find it all right here in The Herald-News Classified

Female, all white, lost on Wed, 8/17 in McKinley Woods in Channahon. Please call 815-467-0566 or cell 815-370-0734 Kenmore sewing machine in cabinet. Does work call 815-729-2113 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 TheHerald-News.com

Vintage Full Size Four Poster Bed $150.00 Vintage Brass Floor Lamp $40.00 4 Corn Flower Blue Square Bowls $40.00 Twin Size Wood Day Bed with Trundle $200.00

815-263-7272

2000 32ft Jayco Eagle Trailer, EXC COND!

Couch, table, queen bed, $5500. 815-436-2669

2007 Utility Trailer, 5x8, $300/firm 815-723-5806

2015 Royal Travel 5th Wheel, 39', Self-Contained 2BR, 4 Slide-Outs, Island Kitchen, King Size Bed, Garden Tub, W/D, 3 A/C's, Loaded with Upgrades! $41,500 815-258-3085

MOTORCYCLES WANTED

Mobile Green House – 1 Year Old, 8ftW by 7ftL by 8ftH, $50 815-838-6947 350 POUNDS STEEL WEIGHT SET

Olympic Bench Included. Asking $250 or best offer Call Jarhead at 312-770-0684 Powered by:

2000 Buick LeSabre - Runs Smooth

93+K mi, good engine, $1200. 815-341-8794 2000 Buick Lesabre – 190k, Cold A/C, Needs Wheel Barrings, $2000/OBO 779-875-4299

Cathedral Area, 414 Oneida St, 1BR, All Utilities

Included, $675/mo + sec. 815-254-4357 Lv Msg. Place your Classified ad online 24/7 at: www.TheHerald-News.com/PlaceAnAd


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016 •

CLASSIFIED 31

Professional *Spacious Floor Plans *24-Hr Emergency Maintenance *Laundry Facilities in Each Building *Minutes from Metra, Pace, Schools, Downtown Joliet

815-722-7556

350 N. Broadway, Joliet, IL 60435 Office hours 9am-4:30pm M-F

Joliet - Updated Studio / 1BR Utilities Included Elevator, Laundry, Great Views, Near Bus and Downtown, $499 - $649/mo. 815-726-2000 Jolietrentalunits.com Joliet ~ St Pats, Clean Quiet 2BR, Heat, Water stove, fridge, garage, $875/mo. 815-342-9969

Morris 2BR - Balcony, Appliances, No Pets $725/mo. Call 815-318-5300 or 630-631-7774 Near Glenwood Ave., Large Pretty 3BR, 1.5BA Updated kit, open floor plan, appl, D/W, 4 ceiling fans, 2 A/C's. 815-744-5141 Off Essington Rd, Joliet, Cute 2BR Condo 1st flr, Open flr plan, appl, D/W, 2 A/C's, ceil fans, close to laundry, tiny dog. 815-744-1155 Twin Oaks West, Clean 2BR, Open Floor Plan Appl, D/W, blt in micro, 2 A/C's, ceilng fans, free carport, rent special. 815-744-1155

LOCATION LOCATION LOCATION

To receive an Express Lane Pass, send resume to resume@expoexpertsllc.com (Enter: AttendingCJF in Subject Line)

Search home listings online through

Visit TheHerald-News.com/realestate

Minooka - Awesome 2BR, 2BA Townhome

Walk-out lower Level, patio and deck, 2 car garage. No pet/smoking, $1250/mo. 815-528-5692

AVAILABLE NOW! JOLIET & WILL COUNTY

2, 3, & 4 Bedroom Homes. Call now or visit our website for more info www.protown.org or call 815-722-1389

Joliet 1214 Richmond St., 2BR, Appl, Bsmt

Garage, no pets, $1200/mo + sec. 815-351-4997

Joliet/West Side - Rent To Own 2BR $1200 & 3BR $1395 + Dep.

Newly Remodeled, All New Inside, 2.5CGAR, Double City Lot, Fenced Yard, Pets Welcome. Enclosed Front Porch. 815-474-9054

Joliet - Downtown - Conveniently Located Newly updated, clean furnished rooms, elevator, utilities incl, $91/wk, $395/mo. 815-722-1212

Joliet ~ Big Clean, Furnished, Wood Floors Fridge, Microwave, Laundry, Elevator. On Bus Line. $105/wk, $455/mo. 815-726-2000 Morris $15 Sq Ft, up to 1,032 Sq Ft Office Space for Lease, 2 blocks from Courthouse, P.O., Banks, etc. Century 21 Coleman-Hornsby 815-942-9190

Employer hotline is 877-842-3976 ext 17 Thursday September 8, 2016 10:00am - 2:00pm

Have a news tip? Contact Kate Schott at 815-280-4119 or kschott@shawmedia.com

We are At Your Service! The Herald-News reaches Will County 6 days a week Plus TheHerald-News.com is available 24/7.

Call to advertise in the At Your Service directory.

877-264-2527

classified@shawsuburban.com

JOBS ANNOUNCEMENTS STUFF VEHICLES REAL ESTATE SERVICES LEGALS The Herald-News Classified and online at: TheHerald-News.com

Skilled Trades and Manufacturing Mega Career Fair

Studio, 1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms Income Restricted Apartments

Mega Career Fair

Accepting Applications

Sarasota, FL Beautiful 1-2BR, 2BA Condo's on Siesta, Lido & Longboat Keyes. Call for info. Dick Dow 815-342-1033 Premier Sotheby's

Thursday September 8, 2016 10:00am - 2:00pm Candidates must have at least 2 years of related work experience in their Field.

Drury LLane ane C onfference C entter Drury Conference Center 100 Drury Lane, Oakbrook Terrace, IL Sponsored by

The Herald-News Classified 877-264-2527 TheHerald-News.com

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 FREE today at TheHerald-News.com

Follow The Herald-News on Twitter Will County area breaking news, entertainment news, feature stories and more! @Joliet_HN The Herald-News Classified It works.


32 CLASSIFIED •

Monday, August 22, 2016 • The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

GUTTER SPECIALIST

Asphalt Paving & Sealcoating

Boswell Blacktop Paving

5” & 6” Seamless Aluminum Gutters Siding, Soffit, Fascia Residential Roofing Custom Colors Available

Driveways Parking lots Resurfacing Sealcoatings Patchwork & Repairs. Free Estimates Fully Insured

708-301-5700

815-462-3511

THE DECK DOCTORS

PRESSURE WASHING STAINING SEALING “Total Wood Care” Painting & Repairs Decks Fences Siding, Playsets Concrete, Etc. Insured Free Estimates

SOUTHWEST AUTO SALVAGE

JERRY'S LAWNCARE Very Low Rates Lawn Care, Bush Hogging General Clean Up, Haul Away 815-405-1644

Quality Isn't Expensive.... It's Priceless!

FREE ESTIMATES

815-726-5900

HANDYWORKS SERVICES

815-729-3383 815-325-1792 A division of A-1 Decorating

WE BUY JUNK CARS LOCKPORT, IL

Domestic 815-723-6878

Foreign 815-722-4629

“THE PLACE FOR PARTS” Since 1980 www.southwestauto.net

CENTURY DRYWALL

Drywall Hanging Taping Patching & Repairs Plaster Repair

Jerry

630-258-4861

ZOBEL ELECTRIC

All Residential Work Breaker Boxes & Back Up Generators Installed LOCALLY Owned & Operated Free Estimates Licensed/Insured

815-741-4024 815-823-2300

Fully Insured 20+ yrs in remodeling and restoration

815-705-6509

HANDYWORKS SERVICES Painting & Decorating

AJD Sons Landscaping

Weekly lawn mowing Clean up Mulch Stone Sod Seed Dirt Trees & Plants Patios Retaining walls Brick Pavers

Free Estimates!

815-462-0026

Fully Insured 815-705-6509 20+Yrs. Exp.

JOHN'S PAINTING

Interior/Exterior Drywall Repairs, Free Estimates 25 yrs Experience Fully Insured Locally Owned.

ILLINOIS ELECTRICAL SERVICES Residential/Commercial

815-207-3835

Back-up Em. Generators Panel/Service Upgrade Swim Pools/Hot Tubs

Free Estimates Licensed & Insured 815-722-2402

K&B Concrete Inc.

Jose Zavala Landscape

Fully Insured – Since 1993 Driveways Sidewalks Patios Foundations Stamped Concrete Additions Garage Excavating Hauling

Lawn Maintenance Flowers Trees Shrubs Tree Removal Retaining Walls Brick Pavers, Mulch, Decorative Stone & rock Asphalt Removal Sod Ground Leveling Doing Concrete Specializing in California Finishing

( Laborers' Needed ) 815-838-9322 Follow The Herald-News on Twitter @Joliet_HN Get Text Alerts! Stay informed during breaking news. Sign up for breaking news text and email alerts at TheHerald-News.com The Herald-News Classified It works.

The Herald-News Classified Call today to place your ad

877-264-2527

The Herald-News Classified It works.

Call today to place your ad

877-264-2527

Free Estimates Cell: 815-719-0615 Buying? Selling? Renting? Hiring?

DON'T NEED IT? SELL IT FAST!

To place an ad, call 877-264-2527

The Herald-News Classified

The Herald-News Classified

Call 877-264-2527 or TheHerald-News.com

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

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

Highlight and border your ad!

877-264-2527

www.TheHerald-News.com


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016 •

CLASSIFIED 33

BRIDGE by Phillip Alder

ALL THINGS TREES

STUMP GRINDING & TREE SERVICE

DO YOU HAVE UNSIGHTLY TREE or BUSH STUMPS?

Tired of mowing around them?

Call us for Fast, Friendly Service Remove your Stumps Today !!

815-693-6122

LOW COST ROOFING LLC. Tear Offs Lay-overs Repairs Soffit Fascia Gutters

815-955-8794 Free Estimates Locally Owned Licensed Bonded & Insured

BREAKING NEWS available 24/7 at TheHerald-News.com

The Herald-News Classified It works.

Our Great Garage Sale Guarantee! If it rains on your sale, we will run your ad again the next week for FREE! Call 877-264-2527 or email: classified@shawsuburban.com The Herald-News Classified

Benjamin Disraeli, twice the British prime minister in the 19th century, said, “Patience is a necessary ingredient of genius.” One clear difference between bridge geniuses -- experts -- and less-capable players is the speed with which they take tricks when on defense. In this deal, how should the declarer-play and defense proceed after West leads the heart king against three no-trump? It was reasonable for North to use Stayman, despite his poor spades. If South also had four spades and weak diamonds, four spades could have been the best contract. South starts with seven top tricks: one spade, one heart, one diamond and four clubs. He has finesses available in both rounded suits, and it is logical to start with the diamonds, because if that finesse wins, declarer is home. South should duck dummy’s heart ace twice and take the third round. In this way, he learns the good news that hearts are 4-3, not 5-2. Then he takes the diamond finesse. What happens next? Many Wests would win the trick to cash the last heart. But then South will get into the dummy with the club queen and, perforce, take the spade finesse, and with this layout he would collect two spades, one heart, two diamonds and four clubs. A genius West will duck the first diamond. Then declarer would surely cross to the club queen and repeat the diamond finesse. Now West produces his king, cashes the last heart, and exits with a club. Then South cannot get into the dummy to take the spade finesse and will end down one.


34 CLASSIFIED •

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE 12TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT WILL COUNTY - JOLIET, ILLINOIS Central Mortgage Company PLAINTIFF Vs. Ahmad J. Zayyad a/k/a Ahmaad J. Zayyad; Zayyad; Anaam A. Firstech, Inc.; International Modern Investment, Inc. d/b/a Liberty Wholesale; State of Illinois; Bridlewood Estates Homeowners Association; Fifth Third Bank DEFENDANTS 15 CH 00735 NOTICE BY PUBLICATION NOTICE IS GIVEN TO YOU: Bridlewood Estates Homeowners Association That this case has been commenced in this Court against you and other defendants, praying

Monday, August 22, 2016 • The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

yo pray g for the foreclosure of a certain Mortgage conveying the premises described as follows, to-wit: COMMONLY KNOWN AS: 12561 Anand Brook Drive Orland Park, IL 60467 and which said Mortgage was made by: Ahmad J. Zayyad a/k/a Ahmaad J. Zayyad Anaam A. Zayyad the Mortgagor(s), to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as Nominee for Paramount Home Loan Corp., as Mortgagee, and recorded in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds of Will County, Illinois, as Document No. R2010007797; and for other relief; that summons was duly issued out of said Court against you as provided by law and that the said suit is now pending. NOW, THEREFORE, UNLESS YOU file your answer or otherwise file your appearance in this case in the Office of the Clerk of this Court, Pamela J. McGuire Clerk of the Court 57 N. Ottawa Street Joliet, IL 60432 on or before September 14, 2016, A DEFAULT MAY BE ENTERED AGAINST YOU AT ANY TIME AFTER THAT DAY AND A

JUDGMENT MAY BE ENTERED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PRAYER OF SAID COMPLAINT. CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. Attorneys for Plaintiff 15W030 North Frontage Road, Suite 100 Burr Ridge, IL 60527 (630) 794-5300 DuPage # 15170 Winnebago # 531 Our File No. 14-15-03963 NOTE: This law firm is a debt collector. I700972 (Published in the Herald-News August 15, 22, 29, 2016)

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 12TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT WILL COUNTY - JOLIET, ILLINOIS FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION ("FANNIE MAE"), A CORPORATION ORGANIZED AND EXISTING UNDER THE LAWS OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, PLAINTIFF vs. EFREN DEL TORO, JR.; JUANITA NEGRETE; WEBSTER BANK, N.A.;

CATON RIDGE HOMEOWNERS UNKNOWN ASSOCIATION; OWNERS AND NON-RECORD CLAIMANTS, DEFENDANT 16 CH 898 PUBLICATION NOTICE The requisite affidavit for publication having been filed, notice is hereby given to you, EFREN DEL TORO, JR.; JUANITA and UNKNOWN NEGRETE; OWNERS AND NONRECORD CLAIMANTS, Defendant in the above entitled suit, that the said suit has been commenced in the Circuit Court of the 12th Judicial Circuit, Will County, Illinois by the plaintiff against you and other defendant, praying for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage conveying the premises described as follows to wit: LOT 782 IN CATON RIDGE WEST SUBDIVISION UNIT 4, A SUBDIVISION OF THAT PART OF SECTION 31, TOWNSHIP 36 NORTH, RANGE 9, EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED MAY 12, 2004 AS DOCUMENT NO. R2004-84126, IN WILL COUNTY, ILLINOIS. COMMON ADDRESS:

6506 Denali Ridge Drive, Plainfield, IL 60586 P.I.N.: 06-03-31-401-017-0000 and which said mortgage was signed by EFREN DEL TORO, JR., JUANITA NEGRETE, mortgagor, to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee for American Mortgage Network, Inc., dba AMNET Mortgage,, as Mortgagee, and recorded in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds of Will County as Document No. R2006201427; and for such other relief prayed; that summons was duly issued out of the Circuit Court of Will County against you as provided by law, and that the said suit is now pending. YOU MAY STILL BE ABLE TO SAVE YOUR HOME. DO NOT IGNORE THIS DOCUMENT. By order of the Chief Judge of the Circuit Court of the Twelfth Judicial Circuit, this case is set for Mandatory Mediation on September 1, 2016 at 1:30 pm at the Will County Court Annex-3rd Floor (Arbitration Center), 57 N. Ottawa Street, Joliet, Illinois. A lender representative will be present along with a court appointed mediator to discuss options that you may have and to pre-screen you for a

pr yo potential mortgage modification. For further information on the mediation process, please see the attached NOTICE OF MANDATORY MEDIATION. YOU MUST APPEAR ON THE MEDIATION DATE GIVEN OR YOUR RIGHT TO MEDIATION WILL TERMINATE. NOW THEREFORE, UNLESS YOU, the said above defendant, file your answer to the Complaint in said suit or otherwise make your appearance therein, in the Office of the Clerk of this Court in Will County at Will County Court House 14 West Jefferson Street, Joliet, IL 60432 on or before the September 7, 2016, default may be entered against you at any time after that day and a judgment entered in accordance with the prayer of said complaint. PAMELA J.MCGUIRE, Circuit Clerk Johnson, Blumberg, & Associates, LLC 230 W. Monroe Street, Suite 1125 Chicago, Illinois 60606 Email: ilpleadings@johnsonblumberg.com Ph. 312-541-9710 / Fax 312-541-9711

JB&A # IL 14 0283 I699755 (Published in the Herald-News August 8, 15, 22, 2016)

PUBLIC NOTICE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA STATE OF ILLINOIS COUNT OF WILL IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE TWELFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT ESTATE OF )2016 Donald L. Corp )P Deceased )327 Notice is given of the death of Donald L. Corp whose address was 3031 Saganashkee Lane Naperville IL 60564 Letters of Office were issued on July 21, 2016 to Sandra M. Zeck, 511 Gregory Lane, Plano IL 60545 as: INDEPENDENT EXECUTOR whose attorney is Scott C. Cleal, P.C. 800 E Roosevelt Rd., B-222 Glen Ellyn IL 60137 NOTICE TO HEIRS

AND LEGATEES Notice is hereby given to Sandra M. Zeck, 511 Gregory Lane, Plano, IL 60545 Donald E. Corp, 1163 Flanders Court, Aurora, IL 60502 Ryan Corp, 1163 Flanders Court, Aurora, IL 60502 Elizabeth Corp, 1163 Flanders Court, Aurora, IL 60502 Kirsten Corp, 1163 Flanders Court, Aurora, IL 60502 Darcy Milder, 33958 Mill Creek Circle, Adel, IA 50003 To probate a will and whose name and address is not stated in the petition to admit the will to probate, that an order was entered by the Court on July 14, 2016 admitting the will to probate. Within 42 days after the effective date of the original order of admission, you may file a petition with the Court to require proof of the will by testimony of the witnesses to the will in open court or other evidence, as provided in section 6-21 of the Probate Act of 1975 (755 ILCS 5/6-21). You will also have the right under section 8-2 of the

PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/5/2013 Certificate Number ...................................12-03374 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at ........... 816 Pin Oak Ln., University Park, IL 60484 Legal Description or Property Index No. ..... 21-14-13-102-015-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Leon Teague, Sr., PO Box 287 , Kankakee, IL 60901 Current Resident, 816 Pin Oak Ln. , University Park, IL 60484 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 21-14-13-102-015-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $3557.87. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215208

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/4/2013 Certificate Number ...................................12-01123 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at .......................... Lockport Rd., Lockport, IL 60441 Legal Description or Property Index No. ..... 11-04-34-403-015-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Juan Daniel Almazan, 810 Chase Ave. , Joliet, IL 60432 Juan Daniel Almazan, 5550 S Albany Ave. , Chicago, IL 60629 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 11-04-34-403-015-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/4/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $501.19. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215061

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/4/2013 Certificate Number .................................. 12-01124 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at .......................... Lockport Rd., Lockport, IL 60441 Legal Description or Property Index No. ..... 11-04-34-403-016-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Juan Daniel Almazan, 810 Chase Ave. , Joliet, IL 60432 Juan Daniel Almazan, 5550 S Albany Ave. , Chicago, IL 60629 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 11-04-34-403-016-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/4/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $501.19. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215063

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/4/2013 Certificate Number ...................................12-01177 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at ............................ Harvard St., Lockport, IL 60441 Legal Description or Property Index No. ..... 11-04-34-427-001-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Efren Mendoza, 511 Harvard Ave. , Lockport, WI 60441 Firststar Bank Milwaukee, 2600 N. Mayfair Rd. , Milwaukee, WI 53226 Property Asset Management, Inc., 105 W Adams Ste 3000 CO Noonan & Lieberman, Attys. Chicago, IL 60603 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 11-04-34-427-001-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/4/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $501.19. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215064


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016 • Probate Act of 1975 (755 ILCS 5/8-1) to contest the validity of the will by filing a petition with the Court within 6 months after the admission of the will to probate. The estate will be administered without Court Supervision, unless under section 28-4 of the Probate Act of 1975 (755 ILCS 5/28-4) any interested person terminates independent adminisk tration at any time by mailing or delivering a petition to terminate to the Circuit Court Clerk. Claims against the estate may be filed in the Office of Pamala J. McGuire Circuit Court Clerk, 14 W. Jefferson Street, Joliet, Illinois, or with the representative or both on or before March 1, 2017, any claim not filed within that period is barred. tCopies of a claim filed with the Circuit Court Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the representative and to the attorney, if any, within ten (10) days after it has been filed with the Circuit Clerk.

Scott C. Cleal P.C. Attorney No. 6190347 Attorney For: Estate 800 E. Roosevelt Rd. B-222 Glen Ellyn IL 60137 630-357-9444 (Published in the Herald-News on August 8, 15, 22, 2016)1213720

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by the Board of Education of School District 88A, in the County of Will, State of Illinois, that a BUDGET for School District 88A for the Fiscal Year beginning July 1, 2016, will be on file and conveniently available for public inspection at the Richland School District Office, 1919 Caton Farm Road, Crest Hill, Illinois, from 8:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m. on August 18, 2016 through September 21, 2016. NOTICE IS FURTHER HEREBY GIVEN THAT a public hearing on said budget will be held at 7:00 p.m. on the 21st of September, 2016 at the Richland School Media Center, located in School District 88A. DATED the 17th day of August,

2016.

day

ugus

/s/ Sam Chellino, Secretary Board of Education School District 88A Will County, Illinois August 22, 2016 The Herald-News 1217878

PUBLIC NOTICE The CITY OF CREST HILL is soliciting for proposals for an REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS for a PROFESSIONAL SERVICE AGREEMENT in regards to the WATER WELL SYSTEM Interested firms should contact the City of Crest Hill Public Works Department at 815-7238671 to obtain a copy of the RFP or by picking one up at City Hall located at 1610 Plainfield Rd., Crest Hill, IL 60403. (Published in the Herald-News August 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 2016) 1215523

CLASSIFIED 35

BREAKING NEWS available 24/7 at TheHerald-News.com Publisher's Notice: All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation of discrimination." Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. The toll-free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/4/2013 Certificate Number ...................................12-02085 Sold for General Taxes of (year) .............. 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at ....................... 1108 Jackson St., Joliet, IL 60443 Legal Description or Property Index No. ......30-07-11-314-010-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Green Bananas, LLC , 53 W Jackson Blvd. Ste 601 CO DAndrea & Assoc LTD, Chicago, IL 60604 Current Resident, 1108 Jackson St. , Joliet, IL 60443 Green Bananas, LLC , 730 S May St. CO Jeanne Kerkstra, Reg. Agent Chicago, IL 60607 Green Bananas, LLC , 161 Tower Dr. Unit E , Burr Ridge, IL 60527 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 30-07-11-314-010-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/4/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $508.25. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215065

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/5/2013 Certificate Number .................................. 12-02884 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at ........ Francis Road & 115th St., Mokena, IL 60441 Legal Description or Property Index No. ..... 19-09-07-403-022-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Cerwin Family Trust , 202 San Carlos Rd. , Minooka, IL 60447 Current Resident, Francis Road & 115th St. , Mokena, IL 60441 Bruce Cerwin, 30064 Calle Halcon Temecula, CA 92592 Steve Cerwin, 30064 Calle Halcon , Temecula, CA 92592 Hernal Wagner, 30064 Calle Halcon, Temecula, CA 92592 Marilyn Mathews, 30064 Calle Halcon , Temecula, CA 92592 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 19-09-07-403-022-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $860.67. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215067

PUBLIC NOTICE

INVITATION TO BID SUV Vehicle Will County Center for Community Concerns is seeking bids for a 20162017 SUV vehicle. Specifications can be obtained by contacting Maureen Pool, Operations Manager at (815) 722-0722, extension 222. Sealed envelopes containing bids must be marked “WCCCC Vehicle Bid” and received at the office at 2455 Glenwood Avenue, Joliet IL 60435 before 2:00 p.m. on Wednesday, August 31, 2016 at which time they will be publically opened and evaluated. WCCCC reserves the right to reject any and all bids. August 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 28, 2016 The Herald-News 1217894

PUBLIC NOTICE TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/5/2013 Certificate Number ...................................12-03199 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at ....... 15130 W Quincy Circl., Manhattan, IL 60442 Legal Description or Property Index No. ..... 14-12-16-101-087-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 6811 Hickory St. , Tinley Park, IL 60477 Current Resident, 15130 W Quincy Circl. , Manhattan, IL 60442 LASALLE BANK , 135 S. LaSalle CO Highest Officer Chicago, IL 60603 Zausa Development Corp., 6688 Joliet Rd. Ste 213 , Countryside, IL 60525 Republic Bank of Chicago, 2221 Camden Ct., Oak Brook, IL 60523 BANK OF AMERICA, NA , 200 S. College St. CO Highest Offricer, Charlotte, NC 28255 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 17400 Oak Park Ave. ,Tinley Park, IL 60477 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 180 N. LaSalle St. #3150 CO Barry Greenburg, Reg. Agent,Chicago, IL 60601 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 8515 W 128th St. , Palos Park, IL 60464 Bank of America, NA , 100 North Tryon St. CO Highest Officer, Charlotte, NC 28255 LASALLE BANK , 155 E. Market St. CO A. Michelle Ragucci, Atty., Indianapolis, IN 46204 Bank of America, NA , 351 West Camden St. CO The Corporation Trust Inc., Baltimore, MD 21201 Republic Bank of Chicago, 1510 75th St. , Darien, IL 60561 Republic Bank of Chicago, 131 S Dearborn 30th Fl CO Holland & Knight, Attorneys, Chicago, IL 60603 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 14-12-16-101-087-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $3002.30. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215071

PUBLIC NOTICE TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/5/2013 Certificate Number ...................................12-03969 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at .................... N Railroad St., Braidwood, IL 60408 Legal Description or Property Index No. ..... 02-24-08-102-031-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale wil expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Weathersby Properties Inc., 9540 Sandridge Ind Ct. Ste A , Morris, IL 60450 Weathersby Properties Inc., 207 S Water ST. Co Jeffrey Fisher, Reg. Agent, Wilmington, IL 60481 Weathersby Properties Inc., 5461 N Camino De La Culebra Tucson, AZ 85750 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 02-24-08-102-031-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $543.60. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215281

The Herald-News Classified

877-264-2527 TheHerald-News.com/classified

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

DON'T NEED IT? SELL IT FAST! The Herald-News Call 877-264-2527

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

Highlight and border your ad!

877-264-2527

www.TheHerald-News.com

Find the help you need

At Your Service In print daily Online 24/7


36 CLASSIFIED •

Monday, August 22, 2016 • The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/5/2013 Certificate Number ...................................12-03200 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at ....... 15106 W. Quincy Circ., Manhattan, IL 60442 Legal Description or Property Index No. ......14-12-16-101-106-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 6811 Hickory St. , Tinley Park, IL 60477 Current Resident, 15106 W. Quincy Circ. , Manhattan, IL 60442 Republic Bank of Chicago, 2221 Camden Ct. Oak Brook, IL 60523 LASALLE BANK , 135 S. LaSalle CO Highest Officer, Chicago, IL 60603 BANK OF AMERICA, NA , 200 S. College St.CO Highest Offricer, Charlotte, NC 28255 Zausa Development Corp., 6688 Joliet Rd. Ste 213 , Countryside, IL 60525 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 17400 Oak Park Ave. ,Tinley Park, IL 60477 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 180 N. LaSalle St. #3150 CO Barry Greenburg, Reg. Agent,Chicago, IL 60601 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 8515 W 128th St. , Palos Park, IL 60464 Bank of America, NA , 100 North Tryon St. CO Highest Officer, Charlotte, NC 28255 LASALLE BANK , 155 E. Market St. CO A. Michelle Ragucci, Atty., Indianapolis, IN 46204 Bank of America, NA , 351 West Camden St. CO The Corporation Trust Inc., Baltimore, MD 21201 Republic Bank of Chicago, 1510 75th St. , Darien, IL 60561 Republic Bank of Chicago, 131 S Dearborn 30th Fl CO Holland & Knight, Attorneys, Chicago, IL 60603 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 14-12-16-101-106-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $2979.98. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215075

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/5/2013 Certificate Number ...................................12-03201 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at ....... 15048 W. Quincy Circ., Manhattan, IL 60442 Legal Description or Property Index No. ......14-12-16-101-118-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 6811 Hickory St. , Tinley Park, IL 60477 Current Resident, 15048 W. Quincy Circ. , Manhattan, IL 60442 LASALLE BANK , 135 S. LaSalle CO Highest Officer Chicago, IL 60603 BANK OF AMERICA, NA , 200 S. College St. CO Highest Offricer, Charlotte, NC 28255 Republic Bank of Chicago, 2221 Camden Ct., Oak Brook, IL 60523 Zausa Development Corp., 6688 Joliet Rd. Ste 213 , Countryside, IL 60525 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 17400 Oak Park Ave. ,Tinley Park, IL 60477 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 180 N. LaSalle St. #3150 CO Barry Greenburg, Reg. Agent,Chicago, IL 60601 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 8515 W 128th St. , Palos Park, IL 60464 Bank of America, NA , 100 North Tryon St. CO Highest Officer, Charlotte, NC 28255 LASALLE BANK , 155 E. Market St. CO A. Michelle Ragucci, Atty., Indianapolis, IN 46204 Bank of America, NA , 351 West Camden St. CO The Corporation Trust Inc., Baltimore, MD 21201 Republic Bank of Chicago, 1510 75th St. , Darien, IL 60561 Republic Bank of Chicago, 131 S Dearborn 30th Fl CO Holland & Knight, Attorneys, Chicago, IL 60603 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 14-12-16-101-118-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $2979.98. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215077

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/5/2013 Certificate Number ...................................12-03202 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at ...... 15040 W. Quincy Circ., Manhattan, IL 60442 Legal Description or Property Index No. ..... 14-12-16-101-122-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 6811 Hickory St. , Tinley Park, IL 60477 Current Resident, 15040 W. Quincy Circ. , Manhattan, IL 60442 LASALLE BANK , 135 S. LaSalle CO Highest Officer Chicago, IL 60603 BANK OF AMERICA, NA , 200 S. College St. CO Highest Offricer, Charlotte, NC 28255 Republic Bank of Chicago, 2221 Camden Ct., Oak Brook, IL 60523 Zausa Development Corp., 6688 Joliet Rd. Ste 213 , Countryside, IL 60525 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 17400 Oak Park Ave. ,Tinley Park, IL 60477 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 180 N. LaSalle St. #3150 CO Barry Greenburg, Reg. Agent,Chicago, IL 60601 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 8515 W 128th St. , Palos Park, IL 60464 Bank of America, NA , 100 North Tryon St. CO Highest Officer, Charlotte, NC 28255 LASALLE BANK , 155 E. Market St. CO A. Michelle Ragucci, Atty., Indianapolis, IN 46204 Bank of America, NA , 351 West Camden St. CO The Corporation Trust Inc., Baltimore, MD 21201 Republic Bank of Chicago, 1510 75th St. , Darien, IL 60561 Republic Bank of Chicago, 131 S Dearborn 30th Fl CO Holland & Knight, Attorneys, Chicago, IL 60603 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 14-12-16-101-122-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $2979.98. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215088

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/5/2013 Certificate Number ...................................12-03203 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at ........ 15026 W Quincy Circ., Manhattan, IL 60442 Legal Description or Property Index No. ..... 14-12-16-101-129-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 6811 Hickory St. , Tinley Park, IL 60477 Current Resident, 15026 W Quincy Circ. , Manhattan, IL 60442 Republic Bank of Chicago, 2221 Camden Ct. Oak Brook, IL 60523 LASALLE BANK , 135 S. LaSalle CO Highest Officer, Chicago, IL 60603 BANK OF AMERICA, NA , 200 S. College St.CO Highest Offricer, Charlotte, NC 28255 Zausa Development Corp., 6688 Joliet Rd. Ste 213 , Countryside, IL 60525 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 17400 Oak Park Ave. ,Tinley Park, IL 60477 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 180 N. LaSalle St. #3150 CO Barry Greenburg, Reg. Agent,Chicago, IL 60601 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 8515 W 128th St. , Palos Park, IL 60464 Bank of America, NA , 100 North Tryon St. CO Highest Officer, Charlotte, NC 28255 LASALLE BANK , 155 E. Market St. CO A. Michelle Ragucci, Atty., Indianapolis, IN 46204 Bank of America, NA , 351 West Camden St. CO The Corporation Trust Inc., Baltimore, MD 21201 Republic Bank of Chicago, 1510 75th St. , Darien, IL 60561 Republic Bank of Chicago, 131 S Dearborn 30th Fl CO Holland & Knight, Attorneys, Chicago, IL 60603 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 14-12-16-101-129-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $2979.98. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215102


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016 •

CLASSIFIED 37

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ............................. Will Date Premises Sold ...................... 12/5/2013 Certificate Number ....................... 12-03204 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ......... N/A Inst. No. ................................... N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at ....... 15020 W. Quincy Circ., Manhattan, IL 60442 Legal Description or Property Index No. ... 14-12-16-101-132-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 6811 Hickory St. , Tinley Park, IL 60477 Current Resident, 15020 W. Quincy Circ. , Manhattan, IL 60442 LASALLE BANK , 135 S. LaSalle CO Highest Officer Chicago, IL 60603 BANK OF AMERICA, NA , 200 S. College St. CO Highest Offricer, Charlotte, NC 28255 Republic Bank of Chicago, 2221 Camden Ct., Oak Brook, IL 60523 Zausa Development Corp., 6688 Joliet Rd. Ste 213 , Countryside, IL 60525 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 17400 Oak Park Ave. ,Tinley Park, IL 60477 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 180 N. LaSalle St. #3150 CO Barry Greenburg, Reg. Agent,Chicago, IL 60601 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 8515 W 128th St. , Palos Park, IL 60464 Bank of America, NA , 100 North Tryon St. CO Highest Officer, Charlotte, NC 28255 LASALLE BANK , 155 E. Market St. CO A. Michelle Ragucci, Atty., Indianapolis, IN 46204 Bank of America, NA , 351 West Camden St. CO The Corporation Trust Inc., Baltimore, MD 21201 Republic Bank of Chicago, 1510 75th St. , Darien, IL 60561 Republic Bank of Chicago, 131 S Dearborn 30th Fl CO Holland & Knight, Attorneys, Chicago, IL 60603 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 14-12-16-101-132-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $2979.98. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215118

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/5/2013 Certificate Number ...................................12-03205 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at ........ 15123 W Quincy Circ., Manhattan, IL 60442 Legal Description or Property Index No. .... 14-12-16-101-143-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 6811 Hickory St. , Tinley Park, IL 60477 Current Resident, 15123 W Quincy Circ. , Manhattan, IL 60442 BANK OF AMERICA, NA , 200 S. College St. CO Highest Offricer Charlotte, NC 28255 Republic Bank of Chicago, 2221 Camden Ct. , Oak Brook, IL 60523 LASALLE BANK , 135 S. LaSalleCO Highest Officer, Chicago, IL 60603 Zausa Development Corp., 6688 Joliet Rd. Ste 213 , Countryside, IL 60525 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 17400 Oak Park Ave. ,Tinley Park, IL 60477 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 180 N. LaSalle St. #3150 CO Barry Greenburg, Reg. Agent,Chicago, IL 60601 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 8515 W 128th St. , Palos Park, IL 60464 Bank of America, NA , 100 North Tryon St. CO Highest Officer, Charlotte, NC 28255 LASALLE BANK , 155 E. Market St. CO A. Michelle Ragucci, Atty., Indianapolis, IN 46204 Bank of America, NA , 351 West Camden St. CO The Corporation Trust Inc., Baltimore, MD 21201 Republic Bank of Chicago, 1510 75th St. , Darien, IL 60561 Republic Bank of Chicago, 131 S Dearborn 30th Fl CO Holland & Knight, Attorneys, Chicago, IL 60603 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 14-12-16-101-143-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $1415.38. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215131

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/5/2013 Certificate Number ...................................12-03206 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at ............ 15125 Quincy Circ., Manhattan, IL 60442 Legal Description or Property Index No. ..... 14-12-16-101-144-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 6811 Hickory St. , Tinley Park, IL 60477 Current Resident, 15125 Quincy Circ. , Manhattan, IL 60442 BANK OF AMERICA, NA , 200 S. College St. CO Highest Offricer Charlotte, NC 28255 LASALLE BANK , 135 S. LaSalle CO Highest Officer, Chicago, IL 60603 Republic Bank of Chicago, 2221 Camden Ct., Oak Brook, IL 60523 Zausa Development Corp., 6688 Joliet Rd. Ste 213 , Countryside, IL 60525 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 17400 Oak Park Ave. ,Tinley Park, IL 60477 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 180 N. LaSalle St. #3150 CO Barry Greenburg, Reg. Agent,Chicago, IL 60601 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 8515 W 128th St. , Palos Park, IL 60464 Bank of America, NA , 100 North Tryon St. CO Highest Officer, Charlotte, NC 28255 LASALLE BANK , 155 E. Market St. CO A. Michelle Ragucci, Atty., Indianapolis, IN 46204 Bank of America, NA , 351 West Camden St. CO The Corporation Trust Inc., Baltimore, MD 21201 Republic Bank of Chicago, 1510 75th St. , Darien, IL 60561 Republic Bank of Chicago, 131 S Dearborn 30th Fl CO Holland & Knight, Attorneys, Chicago, IL 60603 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 14-12-16-101-144-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $1415.38. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215151

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/5/2013 Certificate Number ...................................12-03207 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at ............ 15133 Quincy Circ., Manhattan, IL 60442 Legal Description or Property Index No. .... 14-12-16-101-147-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 6811 Hickory St. , Tinley Park, IL 60477 Current Resident, 15133 Quincy Circ. , Manhattan, IL 60442 BANK OF AMERICA, NA , 200 S. College St. CO Highest Offricer Charlotte, NC 28255 LASALLE BANK , 135 S. LaSalle CO Highest Officer, Chicago, IL 60603 Republic Bank of Chicago, 2221 Camden Ct., Oak Brook, IL 60523 Zausa Development Corp., 6688 Joliet Rd. Ste 213 , Countryside, IL 60525 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 17400 Oak Park Ave. ,Tinley Park, IL 60477 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 180 N. LaSalle St. #3150 CO Barry Greenburg, Reg. Agent,Chicago, IL 60601 Eastern & Smith Manhattan LLC, 8515 W 128th St. , Palos Park, IL 60464 Bank of America, NA , 100 North Tryon St. CO Highest Officer, Charlotte, NC 28255 LASALLE BANK , 155 E. Market St. CO A. Michelle Ragucci, Atty., Indianapolis, IN 46204 Bank of America, NA , 351 West Camden St. CO The Corporation Trust Inc., Baltimore, MD 21201 Republic Bank of Chicago, 1510 75th St. , Darien, IL 60561 Republic Bank of Chicago, 131 S Dearborn 30th Fl CO Holland & Knight, Attorneys, Chicago, IL 60603 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 14-12-16-101-147-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $1415.38. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215168

ww.uwwill.org


38 CLASSIFIED •

Monday, August 22, 2016 • The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ...................... 12/5/2013 Certificate Number ....................... 12-03811 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at ......................... E Buried Oak Dr., Crete, IL 60417 Legal Description or Property Index No. ..... 23-16-08-102-006-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Tameka Conley , 302 Torre Trl , Stockbridge, IL 30281 Bruce Bozich , 11800 South 75th Ave. , Palos Heights, IL 60463 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 23-16-08-102-006-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $1335.84. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215248

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of .............................................. Will Date Premises Sold ................................ 12/5/2013 Certificate Number .................................. 12-03812 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number .............. N/A Warrant No. .......................................... N/A Inst. No. ................................................ N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at ......................... E Buried Oak Dr., Crete, IL 60417 Legal Description or Property Index No. ......23-16-08-102-007-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Tameka Conley , 302 Torre Trl , Stockbridge, IL 30281 Bruce Bozich , 11800 South 75th Ave. , Palos Heights, IL 60463 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 23-16-08-102-007-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $1335.84. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215264

Need To Contact Us?

LEGAL NOTICE CITY OF JOLIET ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS BID 2201-0916 2016 /2017 and 2017/2018 SNOW PLOWING OF VARIOUS MUNICIPAL LOTS The City of Joliet, Illinois does hereby invite sealed bids for the snow plowing and salting of various Joliet Municipal Lots for the 2016/2017 and 2017/2018 winter seasons. There will be a MANDATORY pre-bid on Tuesday, August 30, 2016 AT 11 a.m. in the City of Joliet's Planning Conference Room located at 150 W. Jefferson St., Joliet, IL 60432. Those that plan to submit a bid must attend the meeting and sign in. Bids will be received at the Office of the City Clerk, City of Joliet Municipal Building, 150 West Jefferson Street, Joliet, Illinois 60432, until 10 a.m. local time on Wednesday, September 7, 2016 at which time they will be opened and publicly read aloud. Those desiring to submit a bid may examine the bid documents and detailed specifications in the City of Joliet Purchasing Division, 150 W. Jefferson St., Joliet, IL 60432 between the hours of 8:00 A.M. and 4:30 P.M., Monday through Friday. Electronic copies can be downloaded free of charge at http://www.cityofjoliet.info/bids-proposals. All bidders will be required to submit Bid Security in the form of a Bid Bond, Certified Check or Cashier's Check payable to the City of Joliet in the amount of Two Hundred and Fifty Dollars ($250.00). All Bidding Document holders should sign up for RSS feeds at http://cityofjoliet.info/departments/finance/purchasing/bids-proposals/labor-and-services and provide your first and last name and email address to automatically receive addendums. Addendums will also be posted on the City of Joliet's website at http://www.cityofjoliet.info/bidsproposals. The potential vendor/contractor remains responsible for obtaining all addenda to the original specification so they should check the specific bid page before submitting a bid to make sure they have received all addendums to a specific contract. The successful bidder will be required to provide a Certificate of Insurance as set forth in the Invitation of Bid and the General Terms & Conditions. The City of Joliet has a local qualified bidder ordinance that would apply to this contract. To apply to be a local qualified bidder please go to http://www.cityofjoliet.info/departments/finance/purchasing/ prequalification-process. There is no fee to apply to be a local qualified bidder. The City of Joliet reserves the right to reject any and all proposals, parts of any and all proposals or to waive technical errors or omissions in submitted proposals. No submitted bid may be withdrawn until a period of thirty (30) days after the bid opening date, without written consent of the City of Joliet. The Contract shall be subject to the provisions of the Prevailing Wage Act (820 ILCS 130/1 et seq.) to the extent required by law and the City of Joliet Procurement Code (Section 2-430 - 2-453 of the Code of Ordinances). _______________________________________________________ BID DOCUMENT FEE: $50.00 - Electronic download is free James D. Hock City Manager Margaret E. McEvilly Contract Administrator (Published in the Herald-News August 22, 24, 2016) 1217895

PUBLIC NOTICE TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/5/2013 Certificate Number ...................................12-04009 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at .......................... S Irish Ln., Custer Park, IL 60481 Legal Description or Property Index No. ..... 01-25-28-300-024-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Ester Quiroz , 4745 N 28th Dr. , Phoenix, 85017 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 01-25-28-300-024-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $2344.00. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215291

Would you like to subscribe or do you have a question about your delivery?

(800) 397-9397 To place a Classified Ad

877-264-CLAS (2527) For Retail Advertising

815-526-4489 K C

CHRONICLE

Do you a News Tip or Story Idea? 2175have Oneida Street, Joliet, IL 60435 TheHerald-News.com 630-845-5355


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016 •

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/5/2013 Certificate Number ...................................12-03412 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at ........... 514 Landau Rd., University Park, IL 60484 Legal Description or Property Index No. ..... 21-14-13-207-025-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" David Pittman, 514 Landau Rd. , University Park, IL 60484 Current Resident, 514 Landau Rd. , University Park, IL 60484 Alice Louis, 514 Landau Rd. University Park, IL 60484 David Pittman, 900 W Benson , Iowa City, IA 52241 Alice Louis, 1532 Fifth St., Coralville, IA 52241 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 21-14-13-207-025-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $5621.59. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215217

TAX DEED NO. 2016-TX-000270 FILED 7/21/2016 TAKE NOTICE County of ...............................................Will Date Premises Sold ................................. 12/5/2013 Certificate Number ...................................12-03509 Sold for General Taxes of (year) ............... 2012 payable 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and special assessment number ...............N/A Warrant No. ........................................... N/A Inst. No. .................................................N/A THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at .................. 5008 W Ribbon Dr., Monee, IL 60449 Legal Description or Property Index No. ..... 21-14-21-412-035-0000 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on 12/1/2016. The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 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 12/1/2016. This matter is set for hearing in the Circuit Court of this county in Joliet, Illinois, on 12/14/2016. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at the time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before 12/1/2016 by applying to the County Clerk of Will County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Joliet, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk: ADDRESS: 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60432 PHONE: 815-740-4615 /s/ Purchaser or Assignee (Ty Webb LLC) Dated: February 3, 2016 NOTICE TO: Nancy Schultz Voots, County Clerk of Will County, Illinois Claimants, Judgment Creditors, and Decree Creditors, if any of the above described as "Unknown Owners" "Unknown owners or parties interested in said land or lots" Huntington Custom Homes LLC, 17280 S Cicero Ave. , Country Club Hills, IL 60478 Current Resident, 5008 W Ribbon Dr. , Monee, IL 60449 Huntington Custom Homes LLC, 10530 Louetta Dr. Overland Park, IL 60467 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO 35 ILCS 200/22-20 A) A Petition for Tax Deed was filed on 7/21/2016. B) Petitioner intends to make application for an order on the petition that a tax deed issue on or after 12/1/2016. C) The property is described in the take notice and has a parcel number of 21-14-21-412-035-0000. D) The property was sold at tax sale on 12/5/2013. E) The property was sold for taxes and special assessments in the amount of $1098.13. F) The date on which the period of redemption will expire is 12/1/2016. (Published in the Joliet Herald-News, August 22, 23, 24, 2016) 1215237

HIRE CLOSER. HIRE HAPPIER. Why look far and wide for the best local talent? Just visit ChicagoJobs.com. Offering thousands of career candidate profiles, Chicagoland’s most comprehensive online job boards attract the most qualified local job seekers in a wide variety of industries and skill sets. Look to ChicagoJobs.com for employees who live close to the place your business calls home.

Shaw Media is a partner of ChicagoJobs.com.

CLASSIFIED 39


40

| THE HERALD-NEWS

WANTED

People who hear but do not understand to try the new hearing aid technology.

The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Monday, August 22, 2016

Are you or someone you know struggling with hearing loss and understanding? If you have difficulty hearing, especially in noisy situations, we invite you to try the latest in digital hearing aid technology. Joliet & Mokena Hearing Aid Centers will perform hearing tests FREE OF CHARGE. Please call immediately to schedule y our FREE hearing test appointment to determine if the new Widex hearing technology is right for you.

NEW HEARING TECHNOLOGY Now Available And Barely Visible! • Widex technology comes in all styles including the barely visible in-the-canal model. • StereoZoom & UltraZoom technology. • 3 year warranty, including loss and damage. If your hearing test results show improvement in speech understanding while wearing Widex technology and if you choose to retain the hearing aids, you will receive $500 OFF our regular price per instrument ($1,000 off per set). Offer applies to Widex Unique 440, 330, 220 and 110 models.

100% Money Back Satisfaction Guarantee on this Widex offer.

Take advantage of these money saving offers!

HEARING AS EASY AS 1-2-3 WITH WIDEX HEARING.

$995

MICRO COMPUTER CHIP

August 22-26, 2016 Joliet and Mokena Hearing Centers

Joliet Hearing Aid Center 2295 Essington Road • (815) 553-1718 SM-CL0363886

Mokena Hearing Aid Center 11041 Front Street • (708) 390-7777


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

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