Kcgt 2017 03 16

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GENEVA THURS DAY , M ARC H 1 6 , 2 0 1 7 • $2 .0 0 • KC C h ro n ic l e .co m

QUITE THE ‘HELLO’ Matchmaking musical shows love never goes out of style / 3

St. Charles father shoots, kills twin teen daughters PAGE 25

Vol. 1 No. 49 | KCG

Spring

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Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| GETTING STARTED

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GENEVA Kiwanis Club hosting Rose Day fundraiser KCChronicle.com

OFFICE 333 N. Randall Road, Suite 1 , St. Charles, IL 60174 630-232-9222 Fax: 630-444-1641 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday NEWSROOM 630-845-5355 Fax: 630-444-1641 editorial@kcchronicle.com

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Weekly Group Editor Kathy Balcazar 630-845-5368 kbalcazar@shawmedia.com News Editor Tom Laue 630-845-5385 tlaue@shawmedia.com Geneva Kane County Chronicle, the successor publication to the Tri-Cities Republican, is published every Thursday in Geneva and delivered to homes by Shaw Media. Geneva Kane County Chronicle and KCChronicle.com are a division of Shaw Media.

Geneva Kane County Chronicle (USPS #018-890) is published every Thursday and delivered to homes by Shaw Media, 333 N Randall Road, Suite 2, St Charles, IL 60174. Periodical postage paid at St. Charles, IL and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address corrections to Geneva Kane County Chronicle, PO Box 250, Crystal Lake, IL 60039-0250. All rights reserved. Copyright 2017

I had the pleasure March 7 of attending a meeting of the Kiwanis Club of St. Charles at Baker Memorial United Methodist Church. It was a great meeting to attend not only because I had a fantastic lunch, but also because it was the club’s kickoff to its annual Rose Day fundraiser. During the meeting, members of the club were given informational packets about Rose Day so that they could go out into the community and sell bouquets of roses. A dozen roses can be ordered for a $20 donation. Vases can be ordered for $3 each. Customers can pick up their roses from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 25 at the Baker Community Center, 101 S. Second St., St. Charles. As the Rose Day order form states, a dozen roses can be a wonderful way to show appreciation for someone on Administrative Professionals’ Day (April 26). Or, give roses to a sweetheart, parent or anyone else, just to make them feel special. “We’re going to sell a lot of roses,” Rose Day Committee member Sally Murphy said during the club meeting. “Rose pickup day – that day is very exciting. The earlier [people] come, the

• Relevant information • Marketing Solutions • Community Advocates

The Kiwanis Club of St. Charles is taking orders for bouquets of roses. The cost is $20, and vases are $3 each. The order deadline is April 18. Order forms can be found at kiwanisofstcharles.org. Just click on “Fundraisers” and then “Rose Day.” Order forms may be mailed or faxed in. The deadline for such orders is April 14. Order pickup is from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 25 at the Baker Community Center, 101 S. Second St., St. Charles. more choices they have. It really is very organized. They’re beautiful roses.” By “choices,” Sally means selecting from a variety of rose colors. First come, first served. The deadline to order roses is April 18. Order forms can be found at kiwanisofstcharles.org. Just click on “Fundraisers” and then “Rose Day.”

County agency taking orders for fish to stock ponds

The deadline for ordering triploid grass carp is April 3. The following species must be ordered by April 14: channel catfish, Those who need fish for an existing largemouth bass, hybrid sunfish, hybrid or new pond can order fish from the Kane-DuPage Soil and Water Conservation redear, fathead minnows and bluegill. All pickups will be from 7:30 to 8:30 a.m. April District.

Kathy Balcazar is weekly group editor for the Kane County Chronicle, Elburn Herald, Sugar Grove Herald and Suburban Life Media, and is a member of the Northern Illinois Newspaper Association Board. Contact her at kbalcazar@shawmedia.com or 630-845-5368. Learn more about NINA at ninaonline.org.

22 at the district office, 2315 Dean St., St. Charles. For an order form, check the district webpage at kanedupageswcd.org or call 630-584-7960, ext. 3.

– Kane County Chronicle

WHERE IT’S AT

CORRECTIONS & CLARIFICATIONS

A&E Calendar ………………………………………… 49

Accuracy is important to the Geneva Kane County Chronicle, and we want to correct mistakes promptly. Please call errors to our attention by phone, 630-845-5355; email, geneva@shawmedia.com.

Classifieds ……………………………………………… 66 Good Natured …………………………………………… 13 Kane Weekend ……………………………………… 40

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Know more

Order forms can be mailed or faxed in. (The deadline for such orders is a few days earlier, April 14.) Those details are on the form, as well as payment information. Funds from Rose Day help the Kiwanis Club of St. Charles assist a variety of groups. Based upon the donations that the club hopes to receive this year, those groups could include Anderson Animal Shelter, CASA Kane County, Lazarus House, TriCity Family Services and more. Interested in becoming a member of the Kiwanis Club of St. Charles? You can learn more at the above website. “Our focus is children and families, especially children,” club member Mike Dohan said. “All of us here are deeply committed to that. We are looking for people who are service-oriented.”

NEWS BRIEF

InFocus Weekly ………………………………………… 11 facebook.com/ kanecounty chronicle

EDITOR’S NOTEBOOK Kathy Balcazar

Letters ………………………………………………………33 Obituaries ……………………………………………… 30 Puzzles …………………………………………………52-53 Real Estate …………………………………………… 54

ON THE COVER

Sports ………………………………………………………34

Noah Hanlon (from left), Quinn Hensley and Megan Styrna rehearse a musical number from “Hello, Dolly!” at Geneva High School.

Tales from the Motherhood ………………… 49 TV Listings …………………………………………49-51

Sandy Bressner - sbressner@shawmedia.com

Weekend 5 ………………………………………………41

Weather …………………………………………………… 7

MORNING NEWSLETTER

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Get breaking news from the Geneva Kane County Chronicle sent to your phone. Text KCCNEWS to 74574. And to sign up for more alerts – including those for prep sports, the Kane County Cougars and severe weather – or to manage your text alerts, visit http://shawurl. com/kcctexts. Message and data rates apply.

SUBMIT NEWS To submit news to the Geneva Kane County Chronicle, send a news release to geneva@ shawmedia.com. Be sure to include the time, the date and the place, as well as contact information.


By BRENDA SCHORY bschory@shawmedia.com

Photos by Sandy Bressner - sbressner@shawmedia.com

Geneva High School students rehearse a musical number from “Hello, Dolly!” at Geneva High School. The musical runs March 16 to 18.

‘Hello, Dolly!’ cast ■ Dolly Levi: Megan Styrna

“Being part of a theater got me in relationships I would not have made otherwise,” Policastro said. “It’s really connected me as part of the community, and I would not

■ Stanley: Jay Jay Santiago ■ Waiters: Jack Barrett, Eleanor

Horvath, Jay Jay Santiago, Lucy Smith, Luke Vrba ■ Cook: Audrey Carberry ■ Judge: Jack Petit ■ Policeman: Matt Granquist ■ Court clerk recorder: Aaron Tschetter ■ Paperhanger: Luke Vrba ■ Ensemble: Jack Barrett, Annie Brown, Audrey Carberry, Katie Ellis, Sydney Ginter, Matt Granquist, Alli Hardin, Maggie Hendrian, Eleanor Horvath, Tristan Morgan, Caroline Ostergard, Jack Petit, Abageal Phelan, Ana Powell, Jay Jay Santiago, Maggie Schubert, Lucy Smith, Lexie Spevak, Aaron Tschetter, Luke Vrba and Alyssa Zurow have been a part of the community had it not been for the theater.” Annika Chrusciel, 14, a freshman, plays the role of Minnie Fay, an assistant in

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(Annie Brown understudy) ■ Ernestina: Sydney Ginter (Lucy Smith understudy) ■ Ambrose Kemper: Christopher Kubiak ■ Horace Vandergelder: Jediah Nims ■ Ermengarde: Alana Policastro (Caroline Ostergard understudy) ■ Cornelius Hackl: Quinn Hensley ■ Barnaby Tucker: Noah Hanlon Minnie Fay: Annika Chrusciel (Abageal Phelan understudy) ■ Irene Molloy:- Ariela Policastro (Maggie Schubert understudy) ■ Mrs. Rose: Lucy Smith (Maggie Hendrian understudy) ■ Rudolph Reisenweber: Tristan Morgan

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

GENEVA – “Hello, Dolly!” replete with its 1890s-era matchmaking comedy-drama, will glitter on stage this week as Geneva High School students perform it as their spring musical. “Hello, Dolly!” performances will take place at 7:30 p.m. March 16, 17 and 18 in the high school auditorium, 416 McKinley Ave., Geneva. Tickets are $10 for adults and $7 for children, students through high school and senior citizens. Tickets can be ordered by email at ghsboxoffice@gmail.com. Megan Styrna, a 16-year-old sophomore, will portray the title character, Dolly Levi. “I am a big fan of Dolly,” Styrna said. “She’s very spunky and extravagant, always wants to know what’s going on and knows what to do. I strive to do that. Everyone notices her when she enters a room. She’s just very well-respected.” A soprano, Styrna said she has extensive experience in musical theater, having been in 25 musicals. They include “My Fair Lady,” last year’s high school musical in which she played a maid. Styrna also has been in nonmusical productions; she played Vicky in “Noises Off” last fall. “I do a lot of community theater,” Styrna said. “I was just in ‘Mary Poppins’ in the Marquee Youth Stage in St. Charles as Mary Poppins. I could do it the rest of my life. I’d love to go into musical theater.” Also performing in “Hello, Dolly!” is 17-year-old junior Ariela Policastro as Irene Molloy, the widow who owns a hat shop and is seeking a husband. “Being the part of Irene Molloy really suits me,” Policastro said. Although unfamiliar with the play, Policastro began researching it as soon as it was announced as the spring musical. When she got the part of Molloy, Policastro said she began researching different versions to help her understand the role. Policastro praised the school’s support of theater arts.

GETTING STARTED |

‘Hello, Dolly!’ to grace Geneva stage

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Megan Styrna plays the role of Dolly during a rehearsal of Geneva High School’s production of “Hello, Dolly!” Irene Molloy’s hat shop. “Minnie is one of the youngest characters in the show,” Chrusciel said. “My favorite part of Minnie is how much fun she is. She has so much fun filling the stage with her energy and excitement to experience love for the first time.” Director Roxanne Curtis said the play has been exciting for the cast – and a lot of work. “It’s a huge musical, and I

have a relatively small cast, so some of the students are covering multiple parts and doing it very well,” Curtis said. “It’s getting more difficult to do musicals like ‘Hello, Dolly!’ because kids are pulled in different directions – sports, jobs and clubs – and some are doing two shows at once,” Curtis said. “And then there’s that whole thing called ‘schoolwork.’ But they have just been doing a super job.”


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Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| NEWS

4 FACE TIME

Marklund’s Top Hat event breaks all previous fundraising records KANE COUNTY CHRONICLE editorial@kcchronicle.com

Brenda Schory - bschory@shawmedia.com

Get to know Steven Anderson Maple Park resident Steven Anderson, 43, was at St. Charles Bowl when he answered questions for the Kane County Chronicle’s Brenda Schory. Schory: Where did you grow up? Anderson: Colorado, Illinois, Georgia and Alabama Schory: Do you have any pets? Anderson: Three dogs: George, a wirehair terrier, and Harley and Little Bit are both rat terriers Schory: Who would play you in the movie of your life? Anderson: Ryan Reynolds Schory: First job? Anderson: A waiter Schory: As a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up? Anderson: I always wanted to be a Marine and I became that. Schory: Favorite charity? Anderson: Wounded Warrior Project Schory: Book or movie you would recommend? Anderson: “Contact” by Carl Sagan Schory: Favorite local restaurant? Anderson: The Lodge near Campton Hills Schory: What is an interesting factoid about yourself? Anderson: I met my all-time football hero, John Elway, when I was 10 and I got his autograph and a picture with him.

Marklund’s 21st annual Top Hat Ball fundraising event, The Gatsby Ball on Feb. 14, broke all past fundraising records for the nonprofit organization by netting $646,700, officials announced in a news release. The Top Hat event is the largest fundraiser of the year for Marklund, a nonprofit that serves children and adults with severe and profound developmental disabilities at campuses in Geneva, Elgin and Bloomingdale, the release stated. The Top Hat event was held at the Chicago Marriott Downtown, and the net proceeds from the Top Hat Ball have steadily grown throughout the past five years, since recording $338,700 in 2013, the release stated. Nearly 600 guests participated in the Roaring ’20s-themed fundraiser, with one of the highlights being a dollar-for-dollar match offer – up to $100,000 – which was made by an anonymous donor during the live auction portion of the evening, the release stated. The annual fundraiser helps bridge the funding gap between what it costs Marklund to care for its 174 residential clients and the $17,000 per person funding provided by the state, the release stated. “The generosity of those in attendance at this event year after year continues to amaze us,” Gil Fonger, president and CEO of Marklund stated in the release. “We are thankful and humbled that they choose to support our mission of making everyday life possible for individuals with profound disabilities.” Bud and Binna Porter of St. Charles presided over the evening’s program as co-chairmen of the event. “What a true honor it is to be chairing Marklund’s Top Hat Ball for the second year in a row,” Bud Porter stated in the release. “This organization has grown so near and dear to our hearts, and we are humbled to serve in this capacity. Each year we leave this event in amazement at the selfless giving and support of so many loyal donors – each person, truly impacting our community in big and bold ways.”

News to your phone Sign up for breaking news text and email alerts at KCChronicle.com/subscribe.

ABOVE: Sandy and Michael Herlihy of North Aurora attend the Marklund Top Hat fundraiser Feb. 14. The annual fundraiser helps bridge the funding gap between what it costs to care for its 174 residential clients and the $17,000 per person funding provided by the state. LEFT: Binna and Bud Porter of St. Charles are the co-chairs for Marklund’s Top Hat fundraiser. Photos by Chris Guillen


By BRENDA SCHORY bschory@shawmedia.com

Sandy Bressner - sbressner@shawmedia.com

Geneva School District 304 Board of Education candidates Taylor Egan (from left), Mark Grosso, Leslie Juby, David Lamb and Bill Wilson participate in a candidates forum March 7 at the Kane County Branch Court in St. Charles. initiatives, having served on task forces on exclusionary discipline in students of color and truancy in Chicago Public Schools. “It has been an absolute honor and privilege for me to be able to serve Geneva on the school board for the past eight years,” Juby said. “I hope everyone knows I worked really, really hard to make sure that our students get a quality education and our taxpayers get a very, very high return on their investment.” As a CPA and a managing director for an investment firm, Lamb said he wanted to serve a second term to help the district continue being good financial stewards. “I think we have a high-functioning board,” Lamb said. “I think we’ve done some great things in the last four years. There’s a lot of good things facing us down the road, [but] we do have

a lot of tough issues ahead of us.” “I do think my background in finance certainly helps,” Lamb said. “I work for an investment firm that specializes in school debt. I have a good grasp of what we face in our debt load.” Wilson, who has served on the board since 2001, said as a licensed structural engineer who has been involved in school construction, “I have a good understanding of what it takes to build a school and maintain a school.” Wilson said he has seen the district through good times and bad times. “I have been involved in times when we needed to make budget cuts and other times when we were able to expand our programs and continue the tradition of excellence,” Wilson said. “I have a child in high school, middle school and elementary school, so I have got a pretty good handle on issues impacting on all levels.”

Geneva City Council likely to rescind 2016 restaurant tax By BRENDA SCHORY

Restaurant owners pack the City Council chambers March 13 to speak against the 2 percent Places for Eating Tax, which is scheduled to go into effect May 1.

bschory@shawmedia.com GENEVA – After more than 2 1/2 hours of debate, Geneva aldermen voted 6-4 on March 13 to direct staff to draft an ordinance to rescind the 2 percent Places for Eating Tax for the next meeting March 20. The 2 percent tax, collected by restaurants and passed on to the city, was approved last year to provide $1.5 million in revenue the city needs to maintain its current service level for core city services, such as public works and public safety, and provide funding for capital projects and capital equipment, officials said. The tax was supposed to go into effect Jan. 1, but aldermen amended the ordinance to have it begin May 1, the start of the city’s fiscal year.

Brenda Schory bschory@shawmedia.com

But local restaurant owners spoke at the Committee of the Whole meeting March 13, several making impassioned pleas against the restaurant tax. Wildwood owner Patrick Neary, Fiora owner Michael Anastasio and Geneva Wine Cellars owner Al Buchanan told aldermen the tax is some-

thing they simply cannot afford. “We can’t pass all of it on. It will make us uncompetitive with neighboring markets,” Anastasio said. “We are probably in the most fragile competitive business there is. … The best thing is this town has people who want to come to it. This tax is a financial disincentive. It will

negatively impact all the retailers.” Buchanan said he could not see any good reason for the city to single out restaurant and packaged goods sellers for the tax. But 1st Ward Alderman Mike Bruno said because Geneva is not home rule, it has three legal options to consider: a downtown business district, a referendum for a citywide sales tax or the Places for Eating Tax. The downtown business district was resisted, and aldermen pulled the .5 percent sales tax referendum off the upcoming April 4 ballot at the request of library officials because of their $21.8 million referendum, Bruno said. “We don’t have the flexibility of a home-rule community,” Bruno said. “We don’t have many of the options people would like us to have.”

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“We’ve been able to continually reduce our debt through abatements,” Grosso said. “We’ve been able to come up with a debt reduction plan that has included the repurchase of some of our outstanding bonds. We have additional bonds to be called next year.” Grosso, who is retired from the UP Railroad, credited his business experience with changing the culture of decision-making. “We look for return on investments, while still providing a good educational experience to students,” he said. Juby, who is finishing her second term, described her experience in education as a trustee on the Illinois Math and Science Academy Board, and also as part of the Kane Excellence in Education Partnership of the Kane County Regional Education Office. A substitute teacher, Juby said she also been active in statewide education

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

Five candidates for the Geneva School District 304 Board shared their strengths and vision at a forum March 7 hosted by the League of Women Voters of Central Kane County at Kane County Branch Court in St. Charles. Four incumbents – Mark Grosso, Leslie Juby, David Lamb and Bill Wilson – and newcomer Taylor Egan are vying for four four-year terms in the April 4 consolidated election. Voters will be asked to select four of the five people on the ballot. Egan, who ran and lost in 2014, said she decided “to give it another go.” “I came into the last election having only PTO experience at one school,” Egan said. “Over the last two years, I have really focused on getting involved.” Egan is currently the president of the Geneva Academic Foundation, is a member of the Geneva Library Foundation, and is on the district’s Communication Task Force. “I’m a big believer in communication. That is at the heart of my campaign,” Egan said. “It’s important … to show what you, as taxpayers, are paying for.” Grosso, who is seeking his third term, was first elected to the board in 2009 and has been the board president since 2012. “I am running again [because] I wanted to continue the work I felt we’ve had a good start on since I joined the board,” Grosso said.

NEWS |

D-304 election hopefuls share expertise

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Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| NEWS & OPINIONS

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Library hosts forum on referendum By BRENDA SCHORY

Patrick Callahan (left) goes over the proposed design of a new Geneva Public Library with Geneva residents Anne Fleming and Al Hiller during a forum for the $21.8 million referendum to build a new library.

bschory@shawmedia.com GENEVA – Pat Baron, a resident of the Geneva Public Library District, said she is sold on the idea that the library needs a new, up-to-date building. Baron and a handful of other district residents attended the first of three community forums March 14 on the $21.8 million referendum April 4 to build a new library on the site of the former Sixth Street school. The bonds would be paid in 20 years. “So far it’s interesting,” Baron said, as residents rotated from different stations, each addressing a different aspect of the proposal – from finances to architecture to physical needs. “I came to ask questions and look at the plans. They have been very methodical in their planning, not rushed,” Baron said. “They obviously need a bigger facility.” Library board President Bob Shiffler said library officials held focus groups, assessed the current building and services, looked at 21st century library norms and peer libraries before they decided to go to referendum. “We came to several conclusions,” Shiffler said. “We are only providing about 85 percent of services that we

Sandy Bressner - sbressner@shawmedia.com

On the Web Visit KCChronicle.com to view a video associated with this story. should be providing in a 21st century library. And the reason for this is because of the space in this current building.” When the library installed a Middle Ground area for middle school students and an adult Collaboration Zone, Shiffler said they had to remove two rows of bookshelves in a trade-off. Library board member Patricia Lord said other, newer libraries have several private study rooms to offer, while Geneva has two.

While other libraries offer whole rooms to patrons for digitizing services, Geneva’s library offers a cart for its patrons, Library Director Christine Lazaris said. District resident Becky Holzhauer said she came to the forum to learn what to say to stand up to those who are against the referendum – especially the $100 more in taxes per year it would cost a taxpayer with a home valued at $300,000. “What better way to spend the money for Geneva?” Holzhauer said. “This is a legacy project. This grows our community in ways we cannot in our current building.” Additional forums will be held at 7 p.m. March 14 and at 10 a.m. March 18 at the library, 127 James St., Geneva.

Geneva library referendum on April 4 ballot During the past few months, BEYOND THE Geneva Public Library’s board BOOKSHELVES and administration have met with Paula numerous organizations throughout the community to discuss the April 4 Krapf referendum. location because of space constraints To date, they’ve talked to more than 25 civic groups, intergovernmen- and other building and site limitations. In December, the board voted tal groups, PTOs, booster groups and others to answer questions about why unanimously in favor of the April 4 referendum. and how the board concluded that a The referendum ballot question new library is the best alternative for will ask voters whether the library the library district. These sessions followed a commu- should issue $21.8 million in bonds to build a new library at 210 S. Sixth nity survey, library-sponsored focus St. The cost to a homeowner with a groups and public meetings, all held $300,000 home is $8.25 per month, or to get feedback from members of our $98.70 a year. district. The next community forum If you would like information is at 10 a.m. March 18 at Geneva Pubabout the plans, cost and amenities lic Library, 127 James St., Geneva. of a new library, visit www.gpldnewThe Geneva library building is building.org. Contact us anytime at aging and needs significant renoboard@gpld.org. vation. Meanwhile, operating costs for the facility continue to grow Library signs daily. After analyzing the building’s If you’ve noticed yellow “Vote Yes condition and reviewing community feedback, the library board concluded Geneva Library” signs popping up throughout the district, it is the work that the district’s future needs could of Citizens for Geneva Library, an not be adequately met at its current

independent group that supports the referendum. We are grateful for their support and hard work.

A note from customer service

If you’re looking for something to do during spring break, visit gpld.org. We have events and programs for all ages!

‘The librarian recommends’

Home service library assistant Megan Hrabak said, “‘Assassin’s Apprentice’ by Robin Hobb is great for fans of ‘A Game of Thrones’ by George R.R. Martin or ‘The Name of the Wind’ by Patrick Rothfuss. It’s a beautifully told fantasy epic with a focus on character exploration and engaging world building and part of a series of books.”

Paula Krapf is public relations and marketing manager for Geneva Public Library. The “Beyond the Bookshelves” column runs the third Thursday of each month. Feedback can be sent to editorial@kcchronicle. com.

Man faces felony charges for injury to Geneva cop By BRENDA SCHORY bschory@shawmedia.com

GENEVA – A DeKalb man was charged with felony aggravated assault and resisting arrest, which injured a police officer, among other charges, police reports stated. Matthew A. Wade, 33, of the 1500 block of Holmes Drive, also was charged with criminal damage to property, assault, driving under the influence, driving without insurance and driv- Matthew ing without a rear regis- A. Wade tration light, court and police records show. The charges were filed Feb. 17 and 18. The charges stem from a Feb. 17 incident that began at the Mobile gas station at 1166 E. State St. shortly before midnight, police reports stated. Wade went there to talk to a woman who had broken up with him, then used his red pickup truck to back into her car, a 1997 Infiniti I30t, then drove away, police reports stated. When police pulled him over, he spouted profanities at them, was argumentative, defiant and increasingly hostile, and eventually threw his driver’s license out the window. He exited the vehicle forcefully and advanced in an aggressive manner with his fists clenched, police reports stated. After Wade was seated in the back of the police car, he began screaming profanities and kicking the door, so officers pulled him from the vehicle and put him in restraints, but not before an officer’s finger was injured, reports stated. Wade is scheduled to appear in court March 15. The two felonies Wade is charged with have penalties of one to three years in prison and fines of up to $25,000.

NEWS BRIEF Romantic comedy ‘This is Not What I Ordered’ on tap

GENEVA – “This is Not What I Ordered,” a romantic comedy about finding love, will take place at Playhouse 38, 321 Stevens St., Suite P, Geneva. The adult production has performances scheduled for 7 p.m. March 16, 17 and 18 and 5 p.m. March 19. Tickets are $15 in advance and $20 at the door. For information or to buy tickets, visit www.genevaparks.org.

– Kane County Chronicle


WEATHER |

SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR KANE COUNTY

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WEATHER

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

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Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| NEWS

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‘Passionate about helping people’ Kim Lamansky is new chief at Tri City Health Partnership By STEPHANIE N. GRIMOLDBY editorial@kcchronicle.com ST. CHARLES – For five years, Kim Lamansky did not have health insurance. Even as president of a chamber of commerce for a Chicago suburb, she went without insurance, choosing to pay the fine the Affordable Care Act enacts on those without coverage, she said. “I chose to not [use] the marketplace because the cost was astronomical,” Lamansky said. “It was cheaper to take the fine every year. It really was. My deductible was $6,000 a year. You’re never going to hit that.” Unfortunately, during that time Lamansky fell ill and needed to see a doctor. She found a free health clinic in the Joliet area, and the people there were great, she said. “But the process made me feel ashamed and embarrassed,” she said. “There was no reason for that, it just [was].” Fast-forward to today, and Lamansky has taken over as executive director for Tri City Health Partnership, a free health clinic in St. Charles that provides services for those who are uninsured or underinsured. Only two and a half months into the position, she already loves it. And she’s vowed to make sure those visiting the clinic never feel as she did. “One of the things that drew me was the mission statement [to provide quality care in an environment of] mutual respect,” she said. “I find that so heartwarming. It really, truly is to help everybody in the community who doesn’t have [access to] services. I’m passionate about helping people who don’t have insurance, whether you’re homeless or you just need help. Everybody needs help every once in a while.”

Sandy Bressner - sbressner@shawmedia.com

Kim Lamansky begins her role as the executive director of the Tri City Health Partnership in St. Charles. The Tri City Health Partnership is a free medical and dental clinic for the uninsured and underinsured residents of Kane County.

conditions (sudden or severe, such as an injury or a cold) and chronic conditions (long-developing, such as diabetes or hypertension) to central Kane County since 2001, and in 2015, it launched a free dental clinic. The facility, located in a quaint, old converted house a block off Main Street in St. Charles, also provides eye exams, flu vaccinations, TB screenings, lab draws, women’s health services and more. Last year, the clinic referred more than 40 women to Northwestern Medicine Delnor Hospital for free mammograms, Lamansky said. And because the clinic has a great working relationship with Delnor, all lab fees are covered by the hospital. Services are provided based on income. Those making 250 percent at or below the poverty line are eligible. For a family of four, that’s about $60,000, Lamansky said. The clinic does not serve veterans or those with Medicare or MedWhat it does icaid because there are other Tri City Health Partner- options for those individuals, ship has provided free medi- and by curtailing its patients, cal services – for both acute the clinic can focus on serving

those without benefits. As executive director, Lamansky, 51, is looking to amp up the visibility of the clinic, and her background in sales and marketing fits perfectly with that vision. “For these 16 years, they’ve been able to stay busy,” she said. “There’s never a shortage of patients; there’s never a shortage of doctors.” But that doesn’t mean the clinic can’t do more. “We probably have some ability to see more patients, and maybe people just don’t know about us,” said Dr. Steve Holtsford, an ER doctor at Delnor and a longtime board member of Tri City Health Partnership. “Kim is very good at promotion, marketing, social media. I think these are all things she brings to the table. She’s only been on the job a short time and she’s reworked our logo. That really is exciting and sort of captures the connection between Tri City Health Partnership and the community. She’s working on a social media presence, already working on a fundraiser for May – she’s incredibly

motivated and excited, and we’re excited to have her.”

Who volunteers

What amazes Lamansky is that 113 professional volunteers – doctors, nurses, dental hygienists and specialists – provide the free services that are offered at Tri City Health Partnership, and the depth of their generosity has no limit. During Lamansky’s first two days on the job, the clinic’s dental vacuum pump – an $1,800 piece of equipment – broke, so Lamansky turned to Dr. John Mason, the clinic’s dental director, to find out how and where to find a replacement. Not only did he point her in the right direction, Mason – of Mason, Faith and Brammeier DDS in St. Charles – footed the bill. “It’s just incredible he would do that,” Lamansky said. “I can’t talk enough about what they’ve done here. Most of the doctors will help spread the word if someone needs something. A lot of them help us out financially. I’m overwhelmed, a lot, at the generosity of people.”

The doctors, however, say they benefit most from the experiences they share. “I think I get more out of volunteering than the patients get out of me,” Holtsford said. “It’s just extremely rewarding to know that you’re helping people just because they need it and not for the exchange of money. I have the training and expertise to help people, and these are people that need help … . That’s a very satisfying feeling.” Dr. Peter Smith, owner of St. Charles Dental, feels similarly, and noted the clinic also has a great team that makes volunteering easy. “Tri City Health is by far the most organized and ensures their patients respect what we are doing with the time we are giving them,” said Smith, who volunteers one Friday a month for four hours. “These people don’t miss appointments … . I’ve [volunteered at] other facilities, and it hasn’t been as rewarding as it’s been here at Tri City.” He also noted that having a clinic in St. Charles – where many volunteers live – means as much to them as it does to the patients. “I live in the community that I practice in,” Smith said. “I have time to give back because I don’t waste a lot of time in the car commuting. I love seeing my patients out and about … and St. Charles is a fantastic community. We’ve raised our three children here the last 18 years. … I love all the different opportunities there are for people to receive benefits and also the opportunity for people to give the benefits, to give back. … You have to give back to the community that offers so much to the families.” Plus, volunteering sets a good example for others, he said. “People think it’s an affluent community – everyone drives nice cars, the kids are dressed nice at school – but believe me, the need is there,” Smith said. “I love doing it. But also, through my [St. Charles Breakfast] Rotary Club, through this, I’m trying to press upon my children, this is what you do.”


9

THE

NEWS |

PICTURING

PAST

... with the St. Charles History Museum

In the 1940s, many communities celebrated the end of World War II with victory shows. In 1944, show performances were planned for the St. Charles High School auditorium. Because of overwhelming ticket sales, the event had to be moved to the Arcada Theatre. Photo provided by the St. Charles History Museum

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

own private showing. Businesses included Burgess-Norton, Modern Steel, Hawley Products, U.S. Printing and Lithograph, RotoColor, Howard Aircraft, Howell Co., St. Charles Manufacturing Co., Moline Malleable, and the Operadio Manufacturing Co. Because of the huge ticket sales, there were three sold-out shows, and 400 people were turned away. The 1940s were a time of loss, love and victory. Many communities According to victory show records, Operadio sold the most tickets and celebrated the end of World War II made $1,757.55, which would be with victory shows. In 1944, show performances were more than $23,000 today. More than $1,000 in profits was planned for the St. Charles High School auditorium. Because of over- raised, which today would be about whelming ticket sales, the event had $13,300. The money was used to to be moved to the Arcada Theatre. support soldiers and their families. Make sure to check out the unique The show was put on by employarchitecture of the Arcada Theees of the Operadio Manufacturing atre during the St. Charles History Company under the direction of Delos Owen. The money raised went Museum’s ’40s Night at the Arcada on March 23. The night will include to the USO. music, dancing, food, drinks, caricaA competition was created for tures and much more. local businesses to sell the most tickets to the show, and whichever For information, visit www.stcmuseum.org. business won would receive its


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SERVICE CALENDAR ASSEMBLIES OF GOD

Sanctuary Assembly of God: 1S430 Wenmoth Road. 10 a.m. Sunday service, 9 a.m. Sunday school for all ages. 7 p.m. Wednesdays. Bible studies and children’s Bible clubs are for all ages. 630-879-0785, sanctuaryag.com.

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St. Peter Catholic Church: 1891 Kaneville Road, Geneva. 7 and 8 a.m. Monday through Friday; 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Saturday; 7, 9 and 11 a.m. and 5 p.m. Sunday. School Mass at 8:45 a.m. Wednesday during school year. Call church for holy day and holiday Add a lot of curb appeal with a new Garage Door from J&D Door Sales! Let the fresh air in with a Garage Door Screen that folds out of site. Visit our website for more details at www.jdgaragedoors.com

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Get in service calendar To include your place of worship, call 877-264-2527. Mass times. Confessions: 7:30 a.m. Monday through Friday; 8:30 a.m. and 3:15 to 4:15 p.m. Saturday. 630-232-0124.

First Baptist Church of Geneva: East campus: 2300 South St. 5 p.m. Saturday; 9:15 a.m. Sunday: Traditional and Worship Cafe; 10:45 COVENANT a.m. Word & Table. West campus: 3435 Batavia Covenant Church and Preschool: Keslinger Road, 9:15 and 10:45 a.m. Sunday 1314 W. Main St., Batavia. 9:30 a.m. Sunday contemporary service; 630-232-7068, fbcg. coffee at Fellowship Hall, lower level; 10 a.m. com. Hand in Hand Christian Preschool, 630Sunday. 630-879-3721, batabiacov.com. 208-4903. Preschool: 630-879-3795.

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Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| NEWS

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LUTHERAN

Bethany Lutheran Church: 8 S. Lincoln St., Batavia. 9 and 10:30 a.m. Sunday; 10 a.m. Sunday coffee; 10:30 a.m. Sunday school; 5 to 7 p.m. monthly last Friday community supper, free to community. 630-879-3444,

bethanybatavia.org. Bethlehem Lutheran Church: 1145 N. Fifth Ave., St. Charles. 8, 9 and 10:30 a.m. Sunday; 9:15 and 10:30 a.m. Sunday school for all ages; 5:30 p.m. Saturday. 630-584-2199, bethlehemluth.org. Full-day child care/halfday preschool: 630-584-6027. Immanuel Lutheran Church and School (Missouri Synod): 950 Hart Road, Batavia. Traditional worship: 5:30 p.m. Saturday; 8 and 9:30 a.m. Sunday; Contemporary worship: 10:45 a.m. Sunday. 9:30 a.m. Sunday education hour. Day school serves preschoolers through eighth-graders. 630406-0157, ilsbatavia.org. New Hope Lutheran: 710 Western Ave., Geneva Park District, Geneva. 9 a.m. Sunday; 10:15 a.m. Sunday school, fellow and intergenerational. 630-492-0455, hewhopelcmc.org. St. Mark’s Lutheran Church and Preschool (Missouri Synod): 101 S. Sixth Ave., St. Charles. 5:30 p.m. Saturday; 8:30 and 11 a.m. Sunday; 9:45 to 10:45 a.m. education hour. 630-5848638, stmarkschurch.church. Preschool for ages 2 through pre-K: 630-584-4850.

NEWS BRIEF St. Charles Chamber to host free business expo March 25

Shop, Live, Taste Consumer Expo from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. March 25 at the Kane ST. CHARLES – The St. Charles Chamber County Fairgrounds, 525 S. Randall Road, St. Charles. The free expo showcases of Commerce will host its fourth annual

local businesses and features face painting, bouncy house, door prizes and food samples.

– Kane County Chronicle

OAK CREST DeKalb Area Retirement Center www.oakcrestdekalb.org

“Go west young man, go west….” Early Americans had the right idea when they moved west for a better life, rich with possibilities and complete with wide open spaces, room to breathe and new experiences. For me going west meant, that when it came to making a retirement decision, I only had to look a little west of my own community in Elburn to find a place that afforded me all the choice, security and opportunities I could imagine. Here at Oak Crest, I found unbelievable value and surroundings that fit my individual personality and expectations. Life in a rural community, coupled with the advantages of a state university, means I am able to participate in any number of cultural events. I also found a community of friends that warmly welcomed me and made me feel right at home. I tell everyone I meet, I have never been happier and encourage you to come by for a visit. Here at Oak Crest, you’ll discover why going west may be one of the best decisions you’ll ever make. I know it was for me.

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11

NEWS |

By Sandy Bressner, photo editor at the Kane County Chronicle

There are moments in your life you will remember forever. I can remember full specific days from my childhood and adolescence, but now as an adult, there are times I can’t remember what I ate for breakfast. The Geneva High School girls varsity basketball team will now have a lifetime to remember how it felt these last couple of weeks, as they became state champions for the first time in school history. I can only hope that the girls will have so many more amazing moments in their lives. Congratulations, ladies! Pictured: Geneva High School varsity players celebrate their supersectional win over Maine West. Sandy Bressner, follow me on Instagram @ kcchronicle and Twitter @sbressnerKCC

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Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

Time to celebrate


Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| NEWS

12

Durbin meets with officials, ECC students By BRENDA SCHORY bschory@shawmedia.com ELGIN – Since the Mayflower landed, immigrants have been a subject of debate in the United States, and now – under President Donald Trump’s immigration policy – they are in the spotlight again, said U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Illinois. On March 10 Durbin met with local legislators, public officials and about 60 students at Elgin Community College to talk about immigration issues. He said that as he has traveled around the country and the state, the level of stress and fear among immigrants has risen. And with recent deportation actions undertaken by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, they fear deportation even more. Durbin said the way to deal with the situation is to enact comprehensive immigration reform. “We have begun to see the impact Trump’s reckless executive orders [have had] – immigration raids that are tearing families apart and spreading fear in communities around the country,” Durbin said. “These executive orders are inconsistent with America’s heritage as a nation of immigrants and as a safe haven for those fleeing persecution.” Comments from students were taken during the event. Elgin resident David Jones, 21, spoke about his Polish busia – pronounced boo-SHAH – who escaped the Holocaust. “After the war, she came over here to America,” Jones said. “I listened to the countless things she encountered, and I said, ‘Wow, Busia. You went through [bad times].’” His grandmother told him it was OK. “‘I have one thing to ask of you. Make what I went through worth it,’” Jones said his grandma told him. “What makes America great is its cultural diversity,” Jones said. “There are so many people who still believe that immigrants are not a good part of our society or contribute. ... Our coun-

Photos provided by Mark Carriveau

U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Illinois, met March 10 with officials, community leaders and students at Elgin Community College to talk about President Donald Trump’s executive orders. try was founded on immigrants.” Durbin said immigrants – whether recent or several generations removed – should tell their stories in meetings with elected officials. “We are all here as immigrants to this country – but for the Native Americans who were waiting for us,” Durbin said. “I believe immigrants bring something special to this country.” Durbin, whose grandmother came to the United States from Lithuania when she was 2, said his story and the stories of all immigrants need to be told. He said both Democrats and Republicans agree that undocumented immigrants who are a danger to the community need to be deported or jailed – but the vast majority are contributors. Durbin has reintroduced bipartisan legislation known as the BRIDGE Act to offer temporary relief from deportation for young immigrants brought here as children. It is similar to the De-

Students at Elgin Community College listen to U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Illinois, speak March 10 with local leaders about immigration issues. ferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, where immigrants brought here as children can register and legally drive and go to school.

Durbin said he has spoken to Trump about maintaining DACA. “I do believe he is trying to find some way to protect DACA,” Durbin said.

NEWS BRIEFS City of St. Charles to host Arbor Day celebration April 28

tree-related programs. Entries from “Diversity in the Urban Forest” participants will be displayed at ST. CHARLES – The city of St. Charles the event. will host its annual Arbor Day celebration In honor of Arbor Day, a special tree at 4 p.m. April 28 at Lincoln Park. will be planted and dedicated at Davis The event is organized by the Tree Primary School. Commission of St. Charles. For information, contact the St. Charles Enjoy art, music, a tree raffle, free Public Works Department at 630-377perennial giveaways, tree care demon4405 or pw@stcharlesil.gov, or visit the strations, educational materials for city’s Arbor Day page at www.stcharlesil. homeowners, refreshments and special

spirit and service. Applicants can visit https://sites.google.com/a/d303.org/ St. Charles North Senior athletes counselor-s-office/scholarships-finanget new scholarship opportunity cial-aid to view and download applicaST. CHARLES – The Manski Family Foun- tions for each of the four scholarships. dation is offering four $500 scholarships Applicants can request an application to graduating seniors from St. Charles by emailing ManskiFamilyFoundation@ North High School who have also partici- gmail.com. pated in high school sports. Applications must be completely filled The $500 scholarships pertain to out and submitted by April 16. academic excellence, athletic leadership, – Kane County Chronicle gov/services/public-trees/arbor-day.


1. Woodpeckers, both male and female, are drumming.

Listen for the rapid-fire rat-a-tat of our local species as they pound on hollow trees (and gutters) to declare territories.

2. Daylight is lasting longer.

Hard to believe, but we’ve added more than 100 minutes to our day length since the winter solstice in December. Plus, we’re less than two weeks away from the spring equinox, March 20, when day and night will equal each other at 12 hours apiece.

3. Canada geese are pairing off.

They still prefer the safety of the flock at night, but these ever-present members of our suburban landscape have started “dating” during the day. Look for pairs feeding just ever-so-slightly away from each other in areas where that longer-lasting sun has melted the snow off the grass.

4. Love is in the air.

Have you smelled it? Thiol, the “active ingredient” in skunk spray, has permeated most of our neighborhoods at one time or another this season as Mephitis mephitis (Latin for Stinky stinky) goes about its courtship and mating rituals.

5. Skunks aren’t the only mammals in reproductive mode.

Squirrels, raccoons, opossums, foxes, coyotes ... all have nearly completed their breeding activities and soon will be prepping nests and dens for the arrival of offspring.

6. Male redwing blackbirds have returned.

Competition is stiff among these marsh denizens, which happen to be polygynous (one male, many females) and the early birds definitely claim the better territories. They’ll defend them fiercely throughout the breeding season. (Remember this come June, when the news will no doubt include reports of redwing “attacks” on unsuspecting folks strolling too close to a well-hidden nest. Want to ward off a strike? Stare down the little stinker. RWBBs won’t fly toward eyes.)

GOOD NATURED Pam Otto

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com KCG

How good are you at reading signs? Admittedly, some are easier to pick up on than others. Big red stop signs, for example, are pretty unmistakable (for most people, anyway). Flashing neon can be hard to miss, too. Other signs are more subtle, even though they’re all around. And right now, we’re surrounded by a bunch. They’re nature’s undeniable signs of spring. Here, in handy checklist form, are 10 of our naturalist department favorites:

Note to readers This column has been updated. It originally ran in 2014. 7. Spiders!

Next time the sun is out, find a patch of ground where the snow has melted and leaf litter is plentiful. Bet you’ll find spiders there, tiny little guys stalking even tinier insect prey.

8. Male American goldfinches are brightening.

Throughout the winter months, these guys have flitted about in drab olive-yellow. But with spring just around the corner, their plumages are beginning to change. Soon they’ll be bright yellow, just as their nickname “wild canary” implies.

9. Maple buds are swelling.

Live near a silver maple? Those giant blobs on the ends of the branches are this year’s leaves, coiled up in buds awaiting the first rush of sap. A few more warm days and cool nights, and things should really start popping.

10. Skunk cabbage is up.

Our earliest blooming wildflower, Symplocarpus foetidus, has popped up in wetlands throughout the Tri-Cities. Chemical reactions allow this plant to generate temperatures 15 to 35 degrees warmer than the surrounding air. In years where we actually have snow, this reaction would help melt any flakes covering the plant. It also serves another purpose, helping skunk cabbage spread its stinky (or fetid, as referenced in the Latin name) aroma and attract the carrion-feeding insects it requires for pollination. I suppose I could go on and on, for more signs of spring are just around the corner. Early breeding frogs and salamanders already have made their way to breeding ponds. And soon morning cloak butterflies will emerge from diapause, the insect version of hibernation. But now my phone is ringing. And that’s a sign that it’s time to stop with this talk about signs … at least for now.

Pam Otto is the manager of nature programs and interpretive services at the Hickory Knolls Discovery Center, a facility of the St. Charles Park District. She can be reached at potto@stcparks. org or 630-513-4346. Feedback on this column can be sent to editorial@kcchronicle.com.

OPINIONS |

Many signs of spring: Let’s count the ways

13

Photo provided by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service

Woodpecker species in our area have begun drumming, an annual sign their breeding season has begun. The loud, staccato pounding is used to declare territory. It is distinctly different from the softer pecking sounds the birds create when excavating a nest cavity or foraging for food.


Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

14


By RENEE TOMELL rtomell@shawmedia.com

Mahon said. McMahon also extends an invitation to Kane County youth ages 14 to 18 to enroll in the free Law Enforcement Academy taking place this summer. “The youth academy is a great program,” McMahon said. “I hope [it will] pique their interest.” He said it’s designed for young adults who are interested in careers in law enforcement to learn about the criminal justice system. The partici-

begins at 7 p.m. March 21, is gearing up for its annual Poppy Day fundraiser in May. All veterans are invited to attend the post’s meetings and join. The gatherings are held

the third Tuesday of each month at the Batavia businesses. For information on the Batavia VFW, 645 S. River St. The Poppy Batavia American Legion and its activities, Day sale will take place for two weekends, visit bataviapost504.org. May 13 and 14 and 20 and 21, at various – Kane County Chronicle

LOU’S

The joys of being a parent

If you go n WHAT: Law Enforcement Academy

orientation program n WHEN: 6:30 p.m. June 8 n WHERE: Aurora Police Department,

1200 E. Indian Trail, Aurora n INFO: Call Pam Bradley at 630-262-

5107

pants will travel across the area to visit crime labs, learn about federal resources, visit the state’s attorney’s office and meet members of the judiciary as part of the curriculum. An orientation program for parents and youth will begin at 6:30 p.m. June 8 at the Aurora Police Department, 1200 E. Indian Trail, Aurora. The academy is limited to 50 students, and the registration deadline is May 5. The academy will meet from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. June 19 to Aug. 2, capped by graduation Aug. 3. For information, call Pam Bradley, the academy director, at the Kane County State’s Attorney’s Office at 630-262-5107. Looking ahead to the election, McMahon issued a reminder that voters who observe or experience voting problems or irregularities during the consolidated election April 4 should call his office to report the problems at 630-2085328. Assistant state’s attorneys will be available to respond to any incidents.

NEWS BRIEF American Legion Post 504 gears up for annual Poppy Day sale BATAVIA – American Legion Post 504 in Batavia, whose next monthly meeting

71

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Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

ST. CHARLES – Law enforcement officers from across Kane County learned how to deal with violent incidents resulting in mass casualties at a recent police training program, whose keynote speakers dealt with the aftermath of the shooting at the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin in 2012. Joe At his monthly news McMahon briefing, Kane County State’s Attorney Joe McMahon said about 80 attended the annual training program, which also covered updates in search and seizure rules, changes in juvenile justice regulations and how to navigate the recently introduced Odyssey software program for Kane County’s case man-

agement system. The keynote speakers discussing the fatal shooting of six by a white supremacist at the Sikh Temple were Police Chief Steve Anderson and Capt. Mike Bolender of Oak Creek, Wis. McMahon said they shared the lessons learned from investigating the case along with practical tips on how law enforcement can prepare for such an event. He said keynote speakers in years past have included representatives from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and the Drug Enforcement Administration, as well as a special agent from the Chicago office of the FBI who worked on the Boston Marathon terrorist bombing attack. Attending the training program were people ranging from rookie officers to several police chiefs. “[Primarily,] the men and women who are on the street – front line,” Mc-

15

NEWS |

Kane County state’s attorney lauds special police training


Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| NEWS

16

Enjoying the March snow

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Mary Beth Nolan - For Shaw Media

Nicole Enright and boyfriend Ben Flanagan build a snowman March 13 in Fabyan Forest Preserve. They were visiting Enright’s family and decided to build a snowman. They admitted it wasn’t the best packing snow, so their creation was a bit small.

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COMMUNITY CORNER / ST. CHARLES CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

Kids will be entertained with a bounce house, face painting and more. Adults will have a chance to learn about local businesses, participate in a number of drawings and raffles, and find great, local deals offered by businesses that are close to home. The event came together thanks to the hard work of numerous St. Charles Chamber members and supporters, as well as the support of media sponsors – 103.9 FM, The Fox AM 1410, WRMN News-Talk Radio, and Shaw Media – entertainment sponsor Heartland Bank and Trust Company, and bounce house sponsor the St. Charles Park District. For information, contact Amanda Lutz, special events and marketing coordinator for the St. Charles Chamber of Commerce, 216 Riverside Ave., St. Charles, by calling 630-584-8384, or visit stcharleschamber.com, or email info@ stcharleschamber.com.

Photo provided

The St. Charles Chamber of Commerce will host the fourth annual Consumer Expo from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. March 25 at the Kane County Fairgrounds, 525 S. Randall Road, St. Charles.

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Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

Join more than 1,000 attendees from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. March 25 at the St. Charles Consumer Expo. The event, held at the Prairie Events Center at the Kane County Fairgrounds, 525 S. Randall Road in St. Charles, will feature about 100 vendors showcasing what the St. Charles community has to offer. Helping to serve the St. Charles Chamber of Commerce’s mission to provide support to local businesses and the community, as well as to urge area residents to “Shop St. Charles,” the annual Consumer Expo is free and open to the public. It is built to be a fun-filled day for residents of all ages, and will connect residents with local businesses that offer a wide array of products and services. The expo also has door prizes, giveaways, raffles, food and entertainment.

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St. Charles Consumer Expo to take place March 25


Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

18

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NEWS |

Polar Plunge

Members of the Golden Coldies, Shelley Lemons (left) and Jen Marsh who are representing the Kane County Emergency Communications dispatch center, are the last to dip into the cold lake water March 5 during the Polar Plunge in Loon Lake at Silver Springs State Park in Yorkville. Area police, firefighters, high school students and others participated in the annual event to benefit Illinois Special Olympics. Fortunately for the brave divers, the temperature was about 50 degrees when the first team sprinted into the lake’s chilly waters at 11 a.m. The local Polar Plunge was one of 22 organized by the Law Enforcement Torch Run to benefit children enrolled in the Special Olympics program throughout Illinois. Each team that participated was required to raise a minimum of $100 to support Special Olympics.

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Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

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Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

20

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21 Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

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Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| NEWS

22

POLICE REPORTS Information in Police Reports is obtained from local police departments. Individuals in Police Reports who have been charged with a crime have not been proved guilty in court.

KANE COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

• Brijido V. Guerra, 34, of the zero to 99 block of South Farnsworth Avenue in Aurora, was charged March 4 with domestic battery and possession of a controlled substance.

ST. CHARLES

• Jackelyn Martin, 35, of the 29W400 block of Ray Avenue, Winfield Township, was charged March 5 with retail theft. • Morgan M. Gonzalez, 19, of the 1700 block of Jeanette Avenue, St. Charles, was charged March 4 with theft over $500. • Mason H. Rhodes, 19, of the 1200 block of Jewel Avenue, St. Charles, was charged March 4 with possession of more than 10 grams but less than 30 grams of marijuana.

• Christopher J. Kronkow, 19, of the 1100 block of Larkspur Lane, Batavia, was charged March 7 with driving under the influence. • Kara D. Mantzke, 25, of the 100 block of Bertram Drive, Yorkville, was charged March 8 with DUI, possession of less than 10 grams of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia and improper lane use. • Dylan G. Luethje, 19, of the 1000 block of North Fifth Avenue, St. Charles, was charged March 1 with underage drinking. • Rosanna Mele, 20, of the 36W700 block of Stoneleat Drive, St. Charles Township, was charged Feb. 18 with underage drinking and unlawful use of an ID card. • Nathan W. Beebee, 27, of the 11000 block of 195th Street, Mokena, was charged Jan. 23 with burglary and retail theft. • Jessica M. Taskila, 30, of the 1100 block of Four Seasons Lane, Bolingbrook, was charged Jan. 31 with burglary and retail theft. • Taylor Vann Granato, 26, of the 600 block of North Batavia

• Jason C. Adams, 24, of the Avenue, St. Charles, was charged Jan. 25 with disorderly conduct in 2700 block of Patten Avenue, Geneva, was charged Feb. 24 filing a false police report. with possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia. GENEVA • Kelly S. Kent, 51, of the 6N800 • Jeffrey N. Ward, 58, of the block of Aurora Avenue, St. 100 block of Abbey Lane, was Charles Township, was charged charged Jan. 6 with disorderly conduct for allegedly calling 911 Feb. 26 with public intoxication. • Joseph K. Wagner, 20, of and saying he had a gun in his the 600 block of Illinois Street, back pocket when he did not. Geneva, was charged March 2 • Katherine S. Mutchler, 18, with possession of marijuana. of the 3100 block of Adamson Drive, Geneva, was charged Feb. In the same incident, Tyler A. Lechman, 18, of the 700 block of 20 with two counts of misdeNorth Street, Geneva, was also meanor domestic battery. charged March 2 with posses• Kodi J. Cervantes, 24, of sion of marijuana. the zero to 99 block of North • Christian Perez, 22, of the Andover Lane, Geneva, was 400 block of East Brown Street, charged March 3 with possession of marijuana, possession of West Chicago, was charged Feb. 25 with DUI. drug equipment, driving with a • Demarcus D. Wiggins, 19, of the suspended license and driving 3400 block of West Jackson Street, without insurance. Chicago, was charged March 2 • Magdalena Rzepecka, 49, with possession of marijuana. of the 2000 block of Sandell Lane, North Aurora, was charged BATAVIA March 3 with DUI and driving • Henedina S. Lopez-Lira, 20, of with a blood alcohol content the 500 block of Michigan Avenue, greater than 0.08 percent.

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By Gina Kraman Losing weight and revitalizing your health shouldn’t be complicated, states Dr. David Foss, doctor of chiropractic, Vital Wellness Center (VWC) in Elburn. He believes in simplifying choices to achieve lasting weight loss, which he’ll discuss at a free workshop at VWC on Thursday, March 23 from 6:30-7:30 p.m. He says, “If you want to be more alive than dead, eat foods that are more alive than dead. It’s that easy. Especially with nutrition, we have way too much information out there. So use this foundationalkeytomakesmartfoodchoices. For example: carrot versus pretzel. A natural carrot is the optimum choice, as it fulfills your need to snack on something crunchy, while supplying your brain with life-giving nutrition.” Foss urges people to “eat clean,” swapping processed foods containing artificial colors, dyes, and other non-nutritive chemicals, for fruits,

vegetables, and lean organic meats. He believes this first step fuels weight loss by nourishing bodies with energizing foods. The second step: “Drastically reduce refined sugar,” Foss says. Refined sugar causes an undesirable rapid rise in blood sugar, and provides no nutrients or minerals. It’s abundant in candy, cake, cookies, soda, flavored coffee drinks, cereals, condiments, and packaged meals. Foss’ third step is consuming “good fats” from avocados, raw nuts, pasture-raised eggs, olive oil, and coconut oil. “Coconut oil contains medium chain triglycerides, which are fatty acids that are metabolized differently than most other fats, which actually help burn body fat. It’s great for cooking, and can be added to smoothies, stirfries, soups, and other healthful meals.”

Aurora, was charged March 1 with retail theft less than $300 at Kohl’s, 251 N. Randall Road, Batavia. • Raul L. Gerena Jr., 36, of the 2100 block of Best Place, Aurora, was arrested March 2 on a Kendall County warrant for failure to appear on a traffic offense. He also was charged with driving too fast for conditions and having no valid driver’s license at Kirk Road and East Wilson Street, Batavia. • Two tractors were reported stolen March 2 from DS Containers, 1789 Hubbard Ave., Batavia. • A cellphone valued at $700 was reported stolen March 2 at a business in the 1100 block of Pierson Drive, Batavia. • Aimee R. Stewart, 29, of the 300 block of Harmony Drive, North Aurora, was charged March 2 with retail theft greater than $300 at Kohl’s, 251 N. Randall Road, Batavia. • Two mailboxes were reported damaged March 3 in the See POLICE, page 23

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backhoe’s bucket had dug up several clumps of dirt and mud, and he asked Haugen what he was doing, the report stated. Haugen replied that he was tearing down the fence to his backyard, the report stated. Haugen refused to take a Breathalyzer test and was later charged with driving under the influence. He posted $300 bond or 10 percent of $3,000 bail and is to appear in court March 15. Police contacted the backhoe’s owner, who is Haugen’s employer, who said Haugen was supposed to have the backhoe but was not supposed to be using it except for work purposes, the report stated.

By BRENDA SCHORY bschory@shawmedia.com ST. CHARLES – A Winfield Township man was charged with felony aggravated driving under the influence, according to police reports released under the Freedom of Information Act. Christopher E. Altman, 38, of the 29W500 block of Winchester Circle, Winfield Township, was charged Feb. 18 Christopher with the felony E. Altman because it was his third driving under the influence charge, reports stated. Altman also was charged with misdemeanor driving under the influence of a combination of alcohol and drugs, disobeying a traffic-control device, possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia, police and court records show.

Over 30 Years Experience

Altman was released on a personal recognizance bond and is scheduled to appear in court March 17, court records show. The felony charge has a penalty of three to seven years in prison and a fine of up to $25,000 if convicted. According to police reports, Altman was driving a black Chevrolet Malibu shortly after midnight on South 14th Street as it merges into a traffic island when police saw the vehicle turn into the wrong lane. When police pulled Altman over, he admitted to drinking three beers that night and having smoked marijuana, reports stated. Altman refused a Breathalyzer test, and when he was being put into handcuffs, he pushed the officer away, was tackled to the ground, but kept resisting and trying to push himself up, requiring the assistance of another officer, reports stated.

1200 block of East Wilson Street, Batavia, was arrested March 3 on a Batavia Police Department warrant for domestic battery. 1200 block of Bradford Circle, • Nathan R. Bucklaew, 29, of Batavia, each valued about $200. the 600 block of East Willow • Lumber valued at $1,700 was Street, Elburn, was charged reported stolen March 3 in the March 3 with speeding 26 to 600 block of Brady Way, Batavia. 35 mph over the posted limit in • Donnell L. McKinley, 38, of the the 300 block of North Batavia

Avenue, Batavia. • Fraud was reported March 3, regarding an attempt to access an account at Chase Bank, 130 S. Batavia Ave., Batavia. • Identity theft was reported March 4 about fraudulent bank account activity in the 800 block of North Randall Road, Batavia.

ST. CHARLES – A St. Charles man who was charged with driving under the influence was not driving a car but an orange backhoe on city property in the dark, police records released under the Freedom of Information Act stated. An officer on duty at 9:20 p.m. Feb. 18 saw a backhoe moving back and forth on the side of a hill at the northwest corner of South Kirk Road and Division Street, the report stated. “I thought to myself, this was suspicious,” the report stated. “It was too late for

• POLICE

Continued from page 22

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Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

utility work, being that it was close to [9:30 p.m.] It was Saturday night, and there were no safety cones, barrels or any other safety devices nearby.” When the officer pulled up and put on his lights, a man standing near the backhoe, holding his phone – possibly filming the backhoe – scampered up the hill and disappeared through an opening in the fence, the report stated. The officer ordered the driver, later identified as Jeffrey J. Haugen, 25, of the 1800 block of Chandler Avenue, to dismount from the backhoe, whereby the officer smelled a strong odor of alcohol on him, the report stated. The officer saw that the

By BRENDA SCHORY

bschory@shawmedia.com

23

NEWS |

Police reports: Man, 38, Officials charge man on a backhoe with DUI charged with felony DUI


Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| NEWS

24

St. Charles police officer earns honor for outstanding work KANE COUNTY CHRONICLE editorial@kcchronicle.com The Kane County Chiefs of Police Association, in partnership with Batavia Moose Lodge #682, has announced that the winner of the 2016 Louis Spuhler Award for outstanding police work is Officer Johnathon Losurdo of the St. Charles Police Department. The following is a summary of an incident taken from the nomination letter submitted by St. Charles Police Chief James Keegan: “On March 18, 2016, Officer Johnathon Losurdo was dispatched to a local hotel to investigate the report of a possible suicide in progress. Upon arrival he met with subjects who reported to him that a despondent female family member was in fact in the hotel room and was reportedly attempting to hang herself in the bathroom. The subjects reported that they had attempted to intervene but had been forced out of the bathroom by the female and

the door was now locked. “Officer Losurdo immediately announced his presence at the bathroom door, and after receiving no response, forced the door open. Upon gaining entry, he located an unresponsive adult female victim with a bed sheet wrapped around her neck, hanging from the shower curtain rod. Officer Losurdo immediately reacted by raising the subject’s body to relieve the pressure around her neck, then retrieved a knife from his pocket and proceeded to cut the sheet away from the curtain rod. He placed the victim on the floor and removed the sheet from her neck. As he assessed the unresponsive victim’s condition and prepared to perform other life saving measures, the victim regained partial consciousness. The subject was subsequently transported by fire department medics to receive additional medical care and did in fact survive this near tragedy. “The quick and decisive ac-

tions taken by Officer Losurdo in this incident were no doubt the difference between life and death for this individual.” The Louis Spuhler Award is named after a retired lieutenant from the Kane County Sheriff’s Office who approached the Batavia Moose Lodge with an idea to recognize the top police officer in the county. Spuhler passed away before he could see his idea put into action. The award was named in his honor. This was the 40th annual event. “Each of the 14 nominations this year was an example of the great work that officers do throughout the county on a daily basis,” said Kane County Chiefs of Police Association Award Committee Chair David Kintz “It is a difficult process for the Batavia Moose Lodge to only pick one winner. ” The event was held at Pheasant Run Resort on March 9. Geneva Mayor Kevin Burns was Photo provided the keynote speaker. He exOfficer Johnathon Losurdo (left) stands with St. Charles Chief of Popressed his gratitude to every officer for the work they do on lice James Keegan. Losurdo received the Louis Spuhler Award for outstanding police work in 2016. a daily basis.

Pre-purchase inspection Recycling aluminum a wise investment is A-OK SPONSORED BY

Winter is slowly fading and the Chicago Auto Show is in the rearview mirror so, naturally, thoughts turn to a new set of wheels and the open road. If you’re into the classier brands, maybe a Porsche, Audi or Mercedes-Benz is the ticket. “New” means a hefty price tag but, fortunately, there are some good pre-driven deals out there. Determining how good is the problem. Help comes by way of the pre-purchase inspection, and even a higher-end vehicle should have one. “I feel bad when I have to give someone the bad news,” said John Velazquez, owner of Autobahn Automotive Service of St. Charles, which primarily services German brands such as those listed above. “It looks nice, but they purchased it without anyone looking at it. It was sold ‘as is,’ and they bought themselves a huge problem,” he said. Velazquez is a big fan of pre-purchase inspections, and typically charges a couple hundred dollars.

He has seen repairs on uninspected vehicles cost a lot more, including an engine failure and need for a rebuilt transmission. Some customers end up spending anywhere from $5,000 to $15,000. The pre-purchase inspection covers everything, from a thorough road test under different conditions and at different speeds, to testing every button, switch, control and gauge. The cause of every noise is determined. All of the vehicle’s myriad systems are tested, from air conditioning to brakes to wipers, and a complete diagnostic test is run on all the control modules to find error codes and determine causes. There also is a visual inspection of the paint, trim, bumpers and fenders, tires, glass … even the upholstery. Every element in the engine compartment is inspected, including belts, hoses, battery and various connectors.

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chairs, construction products, aluminum foil and even cars. Aluminumisadurableandsustainablemetal, so much so that two-thirds of the aluminum ever produced is still in use today. And did you know you can save enough energy to operate a television for six hours by recycling just two aluminum cans? Recycling one aluminum can save enough energy to keep a 100-watt bulb burning for four hours. Having recycling bins around the workplace can be especially crucial. Soda cans are some of the most common things thrown in the trash, when they can be easily rinsed and placed in a recycling bin.

Velazquez produces a full report and discusses it with them to make sure they understand the vehicle’s actual condition.

But before putting them in the bin, make sure to rinse those items out. Leftover food residue could contaminate an entire load of items making everything unrecyclable, so be sure to keep it clean.

It may be the best couple hundred a buyer ever spent to avoid a lemon.

What happens once those items are collected?

That, in turn, means a more sustainable environment for future generations.

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Less aluminum thrown in the garbage reduces the amount of waste sent to landfills.


By BRENDA SCHORY bschory@shawmedia.com

Friends of Brittany and Tiffany Coffland console one another at a memorial outside the condominium complex, where they were found shot to death March 10 in St. Charles. A makeshift memorial is set up in honor of Brittany and Tiffany Coffland outside the condominium complex. Their father, Randall, was also found dead and their mother is hospitalized in stable condition. Photos by Sandy Bressner sbressner@shawmedia.com

while Anjum Coffland was living separately from her husband in another condominium on South Fifth Avenue in St. Charles. Kintz said he did not know how long they had been living apart. Two 9 mm handguns were recovered in the condo, but Kintz said police could not immediately confirm that they were owned by Randall Coffland,

NEWS BRIEF Memory Cafe Fox Valley announces monthly meeting

BATAVIA – The Memory Café Fox Valley’s next informal social gathering will begin at 10 a.m. March 22 in Batavia. The Memory Café Fox Valley provides an opportunity for people in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease or other forms of memory loss to connect with others in similar situations. Participants share experiences, thoughts and feelings, knowing that everything said is confidential, according to a news release.

Family members, companions, friends and caregivers also are welcome. Current participants come from St. Charles, Geneva, Batavia, Elgin, Aurora and other communities throughout Kane County. Memory Café Fox Valley usually meets from 10 to 11:30 a.m. the fourth Wednesday of the month, except November and December, at the Batavia Public Library, 10 S. Batavia Ave., Batavia. For information, call 630-643 2263 or 630-208-9151, or visit alzheimersspeaks. com/memory-cafes.

– Kane County Chronicle

nor which weapon – or both – were used in the shootings. One gun was in the vicinity of Randall Coffland; the other was found in a closet, Kintz said. Evidence technicians found a single bullet casing in the vicinity of each victim, he said. A single bullet injured both of Anjum Coffland’s legs, he said.

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Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

ST. CHARLES – Randall Coffland told a 911 dispatcher on March 10 that he shot his daughters to death, that he shot his wife, and he was going to shoot himself. “I just shot and killed my children,” Randall Coffland is heard saying on a 911 recording. “And I shot my wife. And I’m going to shoot myself … I’m going to kill myself now, too.” At a news conference March 12, St. Charles Deputy Chief David Kintz released the 911 tapes, in addition to chilling details about the deaths of 16-year-old twins Brittany S. Coffland and Tiffany S. Coffland at the hands of their father. Even as Randall Coffland was telling the 911 dispatcher what he had done, his wife, Anjum Coffland, 46, can be heard screaming to another emergency dispatcher that her husband had killed her girls and shot her in the legs. “Oh my God, my husband shot my kids!” Anjum Coffland said to the 911 operator. “My daughters are dead! … I’m going into shock. I’ve lost a lot of blood. … He’s finally lost it.” Randall Coffland, 48, and his daughters were all found with single gunshot wounds to their heads in a condominium at 450 S. First St., St. Charles, where he lived with the girls, Kintz said. An autopsy was performed on all three individuals, and the preliminary cause of death for each twin was confirmed to be a single gunshot wound to the head, according to the Kane County Coroner’s Office, while the preliminary cause of death for the father was determined to be a single self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head. Toxicology samples were collected and sent to a forensic lab. Anjum Coffland was taken to Northwestern Medicine Delnor Hospital, where she was listed in stable condition as of March 12, Kintz said. The girls would have had their 17th birthdays on March 14, Kintz said. Randall Coffland and the twins were living at the South First Street address,

“The weapons are still part of our investigation … to determine where the weapons came from. He did have a valid FOID card,” Kintz said, referring to the firearm owners identification card that gun owners are required to have. “We have no indication of a struggle, other than the violence of the crime with gunshots,” Kintz said. “As far as I know, there was nothing strewn about to show there was a fight.” One daughter was found on a couch, the other in a bedroom, he said. Police did speak to the mother at the hospital, but Kintz said he did not initially know the content of those conversations. Kintz could also not say why Anjum Coffland was at her husband’s residence that day. “We have to figure out what brought her back to the apartment,” Kintz said. Police do not know what, if anything, had triggered the chain of events, and investigators would be talking to friends and others who knew the family, Kintz said. “We don’t have anything at this point,” Kintz said. “That is part of the follow-up – we have to talk to people and determine what led to this. … This was a tragic and horrific event. Three lives were lost, and another was injured. First responders have also had to deal with the aftermath of this event, and our entire community mourns the loss of the victims.” While Kintz said the shootings are still under investigation by both his department and the Kane County Major Crimes Task Force, the official causes of death will be determined by the coroner, he said. The investigators are also in consultation with the Kane County State’s Attorney’s office, Kintz said. Randall Coffland did not have any previous history of domestic violence, Kintz said. Police were called to the Fifth Avenue address about a month ago for domestic trouble, but there were no charges, Kintz said.

25

NEWS |

St. Charles police confirm dad shot his daughters, wife


Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| NEWS

26

Friends, community mourn slain twins St. Charles East students and community members light candles March 11 during a vigil in honor of 16-year-old twins Brittany and Tiffany Coffland, who were found shot to death March 10 in a St. Charles condominium.

By BRENDA SCHORY bschory@shawmedia.com ST. CHARLES – A crowd of St. Charles East High School students, many holding candles, gathered just before dusk in the 400 block of South First Street on March 11 to honor the memories of their slain classmates, twins Brittany S. and Tiffany S. Coffland, both 16, who were juniors. An alcove at a condominium building hosted a makeshift altar to the twins and their father, their names on three crosses, flanked by prayer candles and surrounded by bouquets of flowers and stuffed animals “They were just really sweet,” Savhanna Thiry, 16, a junior, said as she struggled to hold back tears. “They always meant well. They were always super nice and super fun. I don’t think there was ever a day where they were like rude or anything. Obviously, with so many people here, they will be missed. They are no longer in our lives, but they will be forever in our hearts.” The twins and their father, Randall R. Coffland, 48, were shot to death March 10 in what police called a domestic incident. St. Charles police have confirmed that Randall Coffland shot his daughters and wife. The girls’ mother, Anjum S. Coffland, 46, was at Northwestern Medicine Delnor Hospital as of March 11, listed in stable condition, St. Charles police stated in a news release. The girls’ parents were married but living at separate addresses – their father at the First Street condominium where the shooting occurred, and their mother on South Fifth Avenue, police said. Christina Ruffino, 17, also a junior, said Brittany was her best friend sophomore year. “She was a great girl,” Ruffino said, speaking through tears. “She always had a smile on her face. She was never sad. She was extremely smart, always a good student. She was an awesome friend. I’m so disappointed to know this has happened to her and Tiffany and her dad.” Sam Rush, 17, another classmate of Brittany’s, said he wanted to pay his respects at the vigil. “She was really nice. She always had a smile on her face,”

Photos by Sandy Bressner - sbressner@ shawmedia.com

ABOVE: Members of the St. Charles East community light candles during a vigil honoring 16-year-old twins Brittany and Tiffany Coffland, who were found shot to death at home in St. Charles. LEFT: St. Charles East students and members of the community light a sky lantern during a candlelight vigil March 11. talked,” Lolis said. “She was so sweet.” Crismelle Dabu, 17, had math class with Tiffany. “She loved music,” Dabu said. “She had a really big passion for music, and she was like the sweetest person ever. She never had anything bad Paul Lencioni to say about anybody. … We Blue Goose Market managing partner used to sit next to each other in math, and we both found common interests.” Alexa Baumann, 17, also a Rush said. “She had a good sense of humor, and she was classmate of the twins, said she had different classes with both really smart.” Dimitra Lolis, 17, also knew of them. Baumann is an intern Brittany from their psycholo- at the Kane County Chronicle. “I had Tiffany in social gy class. “She sat behind me, and we studies, and Brittany was in

“We’re sad. We’re angry. We’re hurt. [Brittany Coffland] was one of our family. … We are brokenhearted.”

my psychology class and U.S. history,” Baumann said. “They were two of the nicest people.” Paul Lencioni, managing partner of the Blue Goose Market, just across the street from the apartment where the shootings occurred, said he knew Brittany as an employee for about a year. “She was one of the most wonderful kids,” Lencioni said. “We’re sad. We’re angry. We’re hurt. She was one of our family. … We are brokenhearted.” Brad Henkin, whose daughter was friends with Tiffany, said the whole situation was shocking. “Tiffany was a bright girl,”

Henkin said. “It’s a shame her life should have ended so short.” In the wake of the shootings, Mayor Ray Rogina said in a statement that St. Charles experienced a horrific personal tragedy. “Being the close-knit community we are, an incident of this nature has impact beyond the immediate family – we think about and pray for the extended family, which includes relatives, high school students and other friends,” Rogina said. “We also pray for the greater community, all of us, that we will stand tall and provide calm and peace at such a tragic moment.”


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NEWS |

North Ave., for the event. Children, ages 9 and younger, will start lining up at 9:45 a.m. Participants meet at the entrance Many businesses and Kane County gate to the River View Miniature Golf taxing districts have electronic signs Course. The program is for the following in front of their buildings, which could age groups: 2 and younger with parent; promote voter registration and early children ages 3 and 4; children ages 5 voting, stated a news release from the Kane County Clerk’s Office, which notes and 6; and children ages 7 through 9. that Kane County Clerk John Cunningham Participants are asked to bring their own baskets to collect the eggs; parents is reaching out to these establishments should limit each child to 10 eggs, the for the upcoming April 4 consolidated release stated. election. The Elburn and Countryside Fire ProtecGeneva church announces free tion District was the first participant to community supper March 21 have its sign scrolling to read “RememGENEVA – A free Community Third ber to Register to Vote” and “Vote Early,” Tuesday Supper will take place from 4:30 the release stated. Other businesses or to 7 p.m. March 21 at the United Methorganizations that wish to participate odist Church of Geneva, 211 Hamilton St., should call Chief Deputy Clerk Susan Geneva. Ericson at 630-232-5965. Visit www. Anyone wishing to donate money to kanevotes.org for information on early the supper program can do so by sending voting and registration dates. a check to the church office marked Park District invites community “Third Tuesday Suppers,” or people can donate to the “Quiet Can” that sits on for annual Easter Egg Hunt the beverage table on supper night. All ST. CHARLES – Community members funds go directly to supper expenses, a are invited to join the St. Charles Park news release stated. To learn more, call District for the annual Easter Egg Hunt 630-232-7120. at 10 a.m. April 8. Staff will be placing – Kane County Chronicle 18,000 eggs in Pottawatomie Park, 8

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28 Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

2 17 Thank you to all sponsors, businesses, organizations, and volunteers who helped support the 2017 St. Charles St. Patrick’s Parade!

Presenting Sponsor: Gerald Subaru of North Aurora Gold Sponsors: Advanced Disposal Arcada Live Kane County Chronicle McNally’s Heating & Cooling McNally’s Traditional Irish Pub

Silver Sponsors: Button Man Printing uBreakiFix Bronze Sponsors: AHC Advisors Blue Goose Market The Daily Herald Dayspring Pediatric Dentistry Rocket Fizz

Special Thanks To: City of St. Charles, The Filling Station, The Finery & Blacksmith Bar, Hotel Baker, Kelly Orthodontics, Mayor Ray Rogina and Diane, McDowell Remodeling Inc., Riverside Pizza, Solutions Networking Inc., St. Charles City Council, St. Charles History Museum, St. Charles Police Department, St. Charles Public Works, Thompson Middle School, and Yurs Funeral Home St. Patrick’s Parade Comittee: Craig Larsen (Chairperson), Alison Costanzo, Officer Ben Devol, Betsy Penny, Darlene Riebe, Jan Wilson, Jeremy Craft, Commander Jerry Gatlin, John Hughes, Rose Canfield, Shay Clarke, Steve Martin, Tony Bellafiore, Tony Whittaker, Jenna Sawicki, Laura Purdy, Alyssa Feulner, and Jake Anderson

See upcoming events at

downtownstcharles.org/events Vote today for your favorite athlete!

Seven outstanding student athletes have been nominated by th thei eirr sc ei schools to compete for the title of the March St. Charles Toyota Athlete of the Month.The athlete te rec ecei eivi ei ving vi ng the most votes wins a $500 donation for their school from St. Charles Toyota! Voting is limited to one vote per day.

www.kcchro nicle.co to vote Marcm/athlete-of-the-mon th h 13-M arch 27!

Anthony Anthon Ant honyy Delisi hon Deli Deli elisi St. Charles North Boys Basketball

Cameron Camero Cam eronn Hind ero H Hindel indel ind Batavia Gymnastics

Kathryn Kathry Kat hrynn Schm hry S Schmidt chmidt chm Burlington Central Girls Basketball

Maddy Mad dy Yel Yelle le Geneva Girls Basketball

Anthony helped the boys basketball team to a 6-3 record during the month of February. He averaged 15.4 points, 4.2 rebounds, 4.4 assists and 3.1 steals during that stretch as the North Stars competed against some of the top teams in the state, including St. Joe’s, Benet Academy and Geneva. He helped lead the team to victories against Elgin, Streamwood, Geneva and Chicago Foreman as well as a Regional Semi-Final victory against Crystal Lake Central.

Cameron has been a varsity gymnast for three years, individually qualifying for the IHSA sectionals each year. This year on vault, she was named All-Conference and qualified for state. Cameron is involved in many things at Batavia High School. Besides gymnastics, she is on the soccer team, is in four Honors Societies and on the Student Athletic Board.

Kat is a freshman who started every game for the Central Rockets Girls basketball team. She was the teams’s MVP, the leading scorer and rebounder is her first season as a varsity player. Kat was named to the 1st team All-Conference for the Kishwaukee River Conference.

Geneva Girls’ Basketball player junior Maddy Yelle. She played an incredible post season for the State Champion Geneva Vikings and was the difference maker for the Vikings in many of their games because of her strong defense and ability to attack the rim on offense. Coach Meadows says,“We have put Maddy on the other team’s best players, and she has shut them down. She has really been a key piece to our successful post-season run, on both sides of the ball. Maddy is our most athletic kid and she shows that in every game.”

Congratulations Anthony!

Congratulations Cameron!

Congratulations Kathryn!

Congratulations Maddy!

Stepha Stephanie phanie pha nie Garcia Garci Ga rcia St. Charles East Girls Track Stephanie Garcia has started the 2017 indoor season on a high note for the Lady Saints. Recently she won both the 55 and 200m dashes at the North Central Cardinal Classic featuring 18 of the top track programs in the state. She set new personal indoor records for both the 55 and 200, and is now #3 and #5 all time respectively in those events in Saints history.

Congratulations Stephanie!


29 Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com KCG

Schools participating in the Newspapers in Education program receive free copies of the newspaper, as well as specialized curriculum, lesson plans and serial stories that comply with current teaching standards. For more information, call (800) 589-9363.


OBITUARIES

| NEWS & OPINIONS

JULIE ANN MITCHELL

How to submit

Born: February 15, 1961 Died: March 9, 2017

Julie Ann Mitchell, age 56, of St. Charles, passed away March 9, 2017. She was born February 15, 1961 to Glenn and Dorothy Hammer in Harvard, Illinois and was raised in St. Charles Illinois. Julie had a successful career with the phone company and has been happily retired for five years. She is survived by her loving husband, William; son, Nicolas (Kimberly) Boatner; grand-daughters, Cecelia Marie, and Charlotte Dorothy Boatner; parents, Glenn and Dorothy Hammer; siblings, Bruce (Kathy) Hammer, Lisa (Dan) Hultine, Jason (Maggie) Hammer; numerous nieces, nephews, and countless friends. She was preceded in death by her brother, Timothy Hammer. Visitation will be 4:00 to 8:00 P.M. Thursday, March 16, 2017 at Yurs Funeral Home 1771 W. State Street, Geneva, IL 60134. Funeral Service will be 10:00 A.M. Friday, March 17, 2017 at Hossanna! Lutheran Church 36W925 Red Gate Road, St. Charles, IL 60174. For more information please call Yurs Funeral Home 630-232-7337 or www.yursfuneralhomes.com

MARY SAUPP

Born: November 27, 1943 Died: March 12, 2017 Mary Saupp, age 73, of Batavia, formerly of Elburn, passed away quietly at home, surrounded by the love and prayers of her family, Sunday, March 12, 2017. After a short but fierce illness, Mary is finally free, living strong and whole again in Heaven. She was born November 27, 1943, in Elburn, the daughter of Thomas and Isabelle (Johnson) Conville. She is survived by her loving husband, Frank Saupp; two children, Lisa (William Carmon)

Send obituary information to obits@ KCChronicle.com or call 815-526-4438. Notices are accepted until noon Tuesday for Thursday’s edition. Obituaries also appear online at KCChronicle. com/obituaries where you may sign the guest book, send flowers or make a memorial donation. Saupp and Frank(Amber) Saupp IV; eight grandchildren, Alexis Holder, Dallas Edwards, FrankSaupp V, Michael Saupp, Kathryn Lee, Patrick Lee, Elizabeth Lee and Lindsay Lee; three great-grandchildren; one brother, David Conville; several nieces, nephews, cousins and a circle of good friends. She now joins her parents, Thomas and Isabelle Conville; in-laws, Gertrude and Frank Saupp; a brother-in-law, John Saupp and sisterin-laws, Linda and Paula Conville who preceded her in death. Visitation will be from 10:00 to 11:00 a.m. on Friday March 17, with a memorial service to begin at 11:00 a.m. at the Elburn Community Congregational Church. Rev. Dr. Walter Thyng, pastor of the church, will officiate with interment to follow at Blackberry Twp. Cemetery, Elburn, IL. In lieu of flowers, the family requests contributions to be sent to H.E.L.P. at www. helpinganimals.org. Tributes may also be forwarded to the same address, the Conley Funeral Home Facebook Page, or at www.conleycare.com where you can also find her full life story.

JOHN W. WEBSTER

John W. Webster, age 71, of Geneva, IL, passed away on March 3, 2017. Arrangements by Malone Funeral Home, 630-232-8233.

STEVEN V. WEGER

Steven V. Weger, age 61, of Geneva, IL passed away on March 10, 2017. Arrangements by Malone Funeral Home, 630-232-8233.

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30

ST. CHARLES MEMORIAL WORKS 630-584-0183 1640 W. Main (Rt. 64) • St. Charles • www.stcharlesmemorialworks.com

Civic engagement offers lessons in leadership, personal development My journey from a newly enrolled student at Waubonsee Community College to president of the Waubonsee Community College Student Senate has been defined by civic engagement. Involvement in one’s community is not only an important way to give back, but it is also an opportunity that widens your network, sharpens your skills and opens your mind. During my first year at Waubonsee, I was introduced to several clubs and activities, including the Waubonsee Student Senate. I decided to run for Student Senate to gain leadership experience because I believe that if you want to positively change the world, you should start within your own community. As a student representative, I went from a senator, to vice president, to my current position as senate president. This experience has helped me grow in many ways. With this new involvement and new responsibility, I not only developed as a person, but my network and the community I built around myself grew as well. As a Waubonsee Community College student, I have learned that “student” is a word that you can mold into whatever experience you seek to gain. But I have also learned that keeping an open mind is the most important part of the journey of a student because that allows you to try new things, meet new people and discover interests and abilities in yourself that you never imagined before. Before joining Student Senate, I didn’t know how to format an email; I didn’t know how to properly use a copy machine; and I had never heard of Robert’s Rules of Order as a way

WAUBONSEE VOICES Yosemite Pinedo to conduct a meeting. But my lessons have been about more than learning new tools and skills. I also learned how to lead a group of people in a professional and efficient manner, and I learned how to shape myself as a leader. A huge part of leadership involves listening to your peers. The only way to truly understand your peers and what they want is to listen and be empathetic. Practicing these skills of listening and empathy in Student Senate has helped me to keep an open mind. I also learned to delegate tasks, work efficiently within the team and to make difficult choices and have the confidence to carry them through. But the rewards of this experience have been many: Not only have I learned all of these skills, but I have also met many people who continue to mentor me, support me and open doors for me. Civic engagement is the thread that binds a community together, and it takes many individuals to create a strong bond. While I have learned much as a student in the classroom, I have also learned so much by engaging with the community that is built around those classrooms.

Yosemite Pinedo is Student Senate president at Waubonsee Community College. The “Waubonsee Voices” column runs the third Wednesday of each month. Comments and questions can be sent to editorial@kcchronicle.com.

NEWS BRIEF more. The lecture will also cover a brief Program on raising backyard chickens hatches at Garfield Farm history of chickens and egg collection, CAMPTON HILLS – At 1 p.m. March 19, Garfield Farm Museum will host an afternoon session on raising a small flock of backyard chickens. The workshop will serve as a basic introduction to starting one’s own flock. Special projects manager and director of the chicken breeding program Dave Bauer and museum volunteer Samira Bamberger will provide instruction. Attendees will learn about chicken care, breed selection, incubation choices and

and it will include hands-on participation to learn how to handle birds. There is an $8 donation for the class. Reservations are preferred and may be made by contacting the museum at 630-584-8485 or info@garfieldfarm.org. Participants should dress for the weather and wear appropriate foot gear for winter conditions. Garfield Farm Museum is 5 miles west of Geneva, off Route 38 on Garfield Road.

– Kane County Chronicle


By CHRIS WALKER

Know more

SUGAR GROVE – Roaring laughter, excellent advice and the opportunity to flaunt what they’ve been creating during Show and Tell are all part of the experience when Sugar Grove’s Common Threads Quilt Guild meets on the second Wednesday of the month at the Sugar Grove Community Building. Members of the group often spend their Sundays at the Sugar Grove Fire Department, which has provided them with space to sew together and enjoy fellowship. “There are a lot of bigger groups around that will have national authors speak and stuff, but we’re happy with our intimate group,” Quilt Guild President Janet Lamberton said. “We’re just a group of ladies that likes to get together with each other and share our passion for fabrics and sewing, and to encourage one another.” The Quilt Guild, which was founded in 2009, has about 40 members and wouldn’t be what it is today without Jan Carroll, the original president. Carroll passed away in January. “She touched so many of our lives and is going to be missed so much,” Lamberton said. “Without her efforts, the guild wouldn’t be what it is today.” Local support also has helped the Quilt Guild thrive. “Most of us live here in Sugar Grove, but we have some nice outsiders that have joined us,” Sugar Grove resident Joan Perrin said. “The outsiders heard so many good things about us that they

To learn more about Sugar Grove’s Common Threads Quilt Guild, email ct_qt_info@ yahoo.com Members participate in a fabric strip exchange at the end of the Common Threads Quilt Guild meeting Feb. 8 at the Sugar Grove Community Building. Julie Walker - For Shaw Media

wanted to be a part of it, which is nice to know.” Unlike other quilting guilds that have membership in the hundreds, the Common Threads Quilt Guild is much smaller, and that’s one of the reasons why it’s become so popular, members said. “I got involved in quilting in 2009 and it’s a great group of ladies here, and what I really like is we have a wide age group,” Sugar Grove resident Rebecca Cromley said. “We have great stories and people, and being local, it’s convenient. There are some oth-

er guilds that are nice, but they have hundreds of people, so we like our group a lot here.” Batavia resident Deanne Simpson heard about the group from a friend about 18 months ago. She also said she appreciates its intimacy. “I like how they pull a lot from within the group to teach various things,” she said. “And it’s a very friendly group. You wouldn’t believe the number of ideas that are shared. There’s a lot of imagination. I’ve gotten a lot of good ideas by coming here.” Bonnie Lundberg had heard some

mumblings in her hometown of Sycamore about how much fun the group was having, and then heard it reiterated during a retreat. She inquired about the group a year ago and has been a fixture at the gatherings ever since. “I went to a retreat in Rochelle and someone was talking about how nice of a guild this is, so one of my other friends came down to see it and we’ve kept coming back ever since,” she said. Newcomers are welcome to stop in during one of the Wednesday sessions. To learn more about the group, email ct_qt_info@yahoo.com.

‘Laser Comedy Show’ to be held at Sugar Grove Public Library By STEFANIE FRAZIER editorial@kcchronicle.com SUGAR GROVE – People of all ages are urged to check out a laser comedy show at 11 a.m. March 25 at the Sugar Grove Public Library. The “Chris Fair: Laser Comedy Show” will be staged in Meeting Room C. The library is at 125 S. Municipal Drive. A Chicago resident, Chris Fair created the laser comedy show and improvises throughout the event. Calling himself a comedian and performing artist, Fair said he has performed in about 30 laser comedy festivals across the U.S. the past few years. “I’ve already established this is kind of my brand,” Fair said. In the laser comedy show, Fair uses laser reactive technology to create characters. They come alive when drawn with laser pens. This results in

continuous action, with voice-overs applied on top of the art. “It’s definitely going to be one of a kind,” said Aimee Marx, youth services manager at the library. “What he does Chris Fair is very different. It’s not like your typical library puppet show or library magician.” Fair called his show “alternative storytelling” and “alternative comedy.” “It’s one of the few children’s shows where they get to influence the outcome of the story,” Fair said. “I feed off of the audience.” Fair recalled an instance in which he knew there would be a unicorn character. The children knew it, too, because they had vocalized where the unicorn was. Feedback from audiences prompts him to take “notes” when creating a

story. “I can’t just have all of my cards out on the table at once,” Fair said. “When the unicorn finally emerged, I definitely got an ovation.” Attendees can expect a brainstorming session at the beginning of the show. The audience can give Fair feedback, such as what they wore for their last Halloween costume. Fair will stand behind a screen, drawing green art with laser pens while telling the story. All Fair knows is his basic formula includes a protagonist, antagonist, struggle and climax. “The good guys fight the bad guys,” Fair said. “It’s all made up on the spot.” As for voices, Fair said he usually has a male, female and child. He has voiced a “nerdy voice,” a distinct-sounding prince, and an Australian kangaroo.

Fair also can whip up a bunch of supporting characters. He has made sound effects, such as moving forward and backward through a pipe. Fair includes close-ups and bird’seye views of the story. “It’s like a live comic book,” Fair said. Toward the end of a show, some children will have a chance to draw a “bad guy” character. Fair will create superheroes to save the day, based on the audience’s suggestion. Library Director Shannon Halikias spoke positively of the upcoming show. “It’s going to be a very unique experience,” Halikias said. “It’s a blend of storytelling and interaction with the audience that participants may not have seen before.” Those interested in attending the show must register at www.sugargrove.lib.il.us.

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

editorial@kcchronicle.com

NEWS |

Quilting group stitches together special bond

31


| NEWS

32 MARCH

2 0 17

D-303 Early Childhood Program is Award of Excellence winner KANE COUNTY CHRONICLE

Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

editorial@kcchronicle.com ST. CHARLES – The St. Charles School District 303 Early Childhood Program has been designated by the Governor’s Office of Early Childhood Development as a winner of the Award of Excellence. The Award of Excellence is the highest level of the quality rating and improvement system in Illinois, and recognizes research-based best practices in specific content areas, a news release from District 303 stated. The Award demonstrates successful implementation of high-quality programming of inclusion practices for preschool-age children. District 303’s Early Childhood Program had previously been designated as a member of the Gold Circle of Quality by ExceleRate Illinois, the release stated. District 303 conducts its Early Childhood Program at four school sites: Davis Primary, Ferson Creek Elementary, Fox Ridge Elementary and Norton Creek Elementary. For information about the program, visit www. d303.org or contact the early childhood

office at 331-228-4834. Inclusion is a basic principle in early care and education. This principle guides policies and practices that are embedded throughout early childhood programs, ensuring that young children with special needs are cared for and educated alongside their peers who do not have special needs, the release stated. Federal law protects the rights of children and adults with disabilities and – more specifically – requires that preschool students be served and educated in the least restrictive environment possible with typically developing peers. The Gold Circle of Quality recognizes programs that have demonstrated quality on all 15 standards of early childhood instruction as validated by a state-approved assessor. Gold Circle programs meet or exceed specific quality benchmarks on learning environment, instructional quality, and all program administrative standards; group size and staff/child ratios; staff qualifications; and professional development. ExceleRate Illinois is under the direction of the governor’s Office of Early Childhood Development, the Illinois Department of Human Services and the Illinois State Board of Education.

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Thursdays in the Kane County Chronicle

SM-CL0356184


BOARD

Ryan Wells General Manager

Kathy Balcazar Weekly Group Editor

Tom Laue News Editor

Jason Rossi Sports Editor

Renee Tomell Kane Weekend Editor

Broadway’s ‘Dear Evan Hansen’ features music with a message

THE FIRST

AMENDMENT

THE WRITE PLACE Emma Chrusciel of loneliness and a desire to be accepted, which “Dear Evan Hansen” depicts throughout the show. I think there is a little bit of Evan in each of us, which makes the musical that much more compelling. I have yet to see the show live; it is being performed in New York City. However, that doesn’t mean the soundtrack and storyline have made any less of an impact on me – tears were streaming down my face the first time I heard some of the songs, and the show has made me more aware of the isolation others may feel and what I can do to help. I hope I get the chance to experience the music and message live someday. The chorus of the song “Disappear” from the show’s first act goes like this: “No one deserves to be forgotten, no one deserves to fade away. No one should flicker out or have any doubt that it matters that they are here. No one deserves to disappear.” Because of “Dear Evan Hansen,” millions of people have been reminded of this truth, and it just goes to show the power that one musical can have on someone’s emotions and worldview. So go listen to the cast recording (I recommend having tissues handy), read more about the plot, and if you ever get the opportunity to see this show, take it (and take me with you please!). I hope that Evan’s story continues to encourage and inspire audiences for many performances to come.

Emma Chrusciel is a junior at Geneva High School. In addition to writing, she loves Broadway musicals, playing piano and spending time with her family and friends. Her column runs every other Thursday. Contact her at editorial@ kcchronicle.com.

LETTERS Let there be heat

To the editor: I would like to publicly thank Kane County Chairman Chris Lauzen for his help in getting the LaFox Metra Station commuters a heater. As a commuter, I’ve been begging Metra via surveys and direct emails for a heater in the center track shelter for many years. With every ticket hike, Metra touts the upgrades to other stations closer in to the city, but nothing about LaFox, where we already pay some of the highest ticket prices. I wasn’t asking for the sauna-like heat that stations such as Geneva or Itasca have in their stations. You could bake muffins in there it’s so hot. Neither was I asking for a coffeestand like the one at Winfield. That lady must get up REALLY early. All I wanted was something to make it a little more tolerable than the Siberian wind

Write to us The Kane County Chronicle welcomes original letters on public issues. Letters must include the author’s full name, home address and day and evening telephone numbers. We limit letters to 400 words. All letters are subject to editing for length and clarity at the sole discretion of the editor. Letters can be emailed to letters@ kcchronicle.com, faxed to 630-444-1641 and mailed to Letters, Kane County Chronicle, 333 N. Randall Road, Suite 1, St. Charles, IL 60174.

tunnel we normally have. Each county served by Metra has at least one representative on the board. It turns out the Kane County Metra board member is hired by the Kane County chairman, Chris Lauzen. I

didn’t know the Metra board member, but I did talk to Mr. Lauzen in the past. I knew he’d be responsive, just like he was as a state senator, and he’s a genuinely nice guy. Unlike many elected officials in Chicagoland, particularly in “Crook” County, all Mr. Lauzen has ever gotten from me is my one vote and a thank you, and he didn’t even ask me for those. True to form after hearing my request, Mr. Lauzen took action, and in short order we had heat. So, to my fellow LaFox Metra riders, if you find yourself a little chilled while you wait for your train on the center track at LaFox, reach over and press that orange button and thank Chris Lauzen, the most responsive elected official I’ve ever known in 30-plus years as a voter. Ken Weinberg Geneva

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.

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

This musical surpassed everyone’s expectations by breaking box office records and selling incredible amounts of tickets. Its album reached the Billboard Top 10, something only a few shows in history have done. It has received rave reviews from both professional critics and ordinary theatregoers. And guess what? It’s not “Hamilton.” That’s right, there’s another hit musical on Broadway, one called “Dear Evan Hansen” that already has seen “Hamilton”-level impact. While I try to vary my columns so I’m not solely gushing about theater, I feel like this production deserves some adulation, so bear with me. Perhaps you’ll fall in love with it as well. “Dear Evan Hansen” revolves around a teen boy named Evan who struggles to balance his extreme social anxiety with the difficulties he faces as the son of a single mother at home. When a classmate and fellow loner named Connor commits suicide, Evan decides to take action and spread a message of kindness and acceptance around his school. In doing so, he gains the friends, popularity and even family that he always wanted. Yet Evan also finds himself tangled in a lie that is intensified by social media, and the devastating repercussions cause him to question himself and the world he lives in. What makes “Dear Evan Hansen” so unique and resonant is its relatability to today’s world. Many of the issues addressed in the show, such as mental health, family problems and social media, are deeply personal for audience members, and the impeccable portrayal of the issues by the cast truly tugs on the heartstrings. With no offense to “Phantom of the Opera” or “The Lion King,” most of us just can’t relate to being haunted by a deformed composer or becoming ruler of an animal kingdom. However, every single one of us has dealt with feelings

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OPINIONS |

OPINIONS

EDITORIAL


Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

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SPORTS

Contact sports editor Jason Rossi at 630-427-6271 or jrossi@shawmedia.com.

CHAMPIONSHIP CELEBRATION Geneva High School honors stellar winter sports finishes / 35

Geneva High School gymnastics state finalist Claire Ginsberg (left) and girls varsity basketball player Grace Loberg get together for a photo March 8 during a celebration at the school. Ginsberg, the girls basketball team state champions and the dance team state champions were honored for their accomplishments during the winter sports season. Sandy Bressner - sbressner@shawmedia.com


Geneva honors gymnast Ginsberg, state champion basketball, dance teams By CHRIS ROLLIN WALKER editorial@kcchronicle.com

• Thursday, March 16, 2017

GENEVA – Grace Loberg is a foot taller than Clare Ginsberg. Their respective athletic feats for Geneva High School are equally impressive. The two Geneva seniors were recognized along with many others during a championship celebration at the high school March 8. Geneva celebrated the girls basketball team’s Class 4A state title, the dance team winning an unprecedented fourth straight state title in January, and Ginsberg being named all-state while placing in three events and taking third in the all-around at the state finals in February. Ginsberg also won the all-around title as a freshman and led the team to second place in the state in 2015. “What a great year we’re having here at Geneva,” Vikings athletic director Dave Carli said. “From the start of fall with the boys golf team, the boys and girls cross country teams going downstate, the dance team as a fourtime state champ, Claire [Ginsberg] with four outstanding years, and now the girls basketball team. “It’s just been a great year, and you know what? We’re not satisfied yet. We still have the spring to go.” Principal Tom Rogers said the girls are more than amazing athletes – they also are champions on and off the playing field. “These trophies and the medals are incredible, but as the principal of Geneva High School, I am so thrilled to be standing here talking about top-notch young ladies,” he said. “They do a great job every day in living their lives and doing the right things and making the community at Geneva proud.” Dance team coach Amy VanWagenen believes she’s blessed to coach a great group of kids. “They’re the coolest group of kids I could ever have,” she said. “They’re so kind, so responsible and so hardworking. To be state champs four years in a row means a lot, and to think that this team had no seniors. Hopefully they’ll all be back next year.” Sophomore dancer Katie Wagner said winning the state title still hasn’t sunk in yet. “It’s still an unreal feeling,” she said. “Every time that I think that we won, it doesn’t feel real. I don’t know

SPORTS | Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

VIKING VICTORS

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Photos by Sandy Bressner - sbressner@shawmedia.com

Geneva High School athletes, coaches, fans and administrators mingle March 8 during a championship celebration at the school. The girls basketball and dance teams both won state titles, the first time in school history two teams won state in the same season. Geneva High School varsity basketball player Brie Borkowicz (center) signs a basketball March 8 during a celebration of the team’s state title. School administrators hosted the celebration that also honored the girls dance team state champion and all-state gymnast Claire Ginsberg. how to explain it.” Junior dancer Triana Lee feels the same way. “It’s amazing, and to be here is amazing,” she said. “I’m so blessed to be a part of this. It’s so cool and our coach is the best. She’s so amazing. She motivates us and pushes us to the limits. We wouldn’t be here today if not for her.” It was the first time in school history that the Vikings won two state championships in the same school year, let alone in the same season just

weeks apart. That certainly impressed Mark Grosso, the school board president. “This fall I thought nothing could top the Chicago Cubs, but I think we just did that [March 4],” he said. “Great job ladies.” Loberg, who will play volleyball at Wisconsin, had a lot to do with that successful March weekend, scoring 29 points, snagging 17 rebounds and getting five steals in wins against Fremd and Edwardsville in Normal. “This was super cool of the school to

do this for all of us,” Loberg said. “They came up with the idea of having us together and we’re all friends here so it was fun to be able to celebrate together with our parents and other people in the stands. It was very thoughtful.” Loberg doesn’t want the celebrating to end, though. “I just had the best weekend of my life [at state],” she said. “I’m still floating and we’re still celebrating. I’ve been watching the videos of the game every night. It’s so awesome.” Now, she can focus on finishing her studies – which certainly will be less thrilling – before graduating along with teammates Emily Uplegger, Kyla Chenier and Emma Harkleroad, as well as Ginsberg. “Grace and I played club soccer together for about eight years and now we’re both leaving Geneva as state champs,” Ginsberg said. “It’s amazing how this all ended. I had a great state finals weekend, which was great, and then to watch the girls win the state title was amazing. I couldn’t have asked for a better ending.”


Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

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‘A DREAM COME TRUE’

Marina Anderson earns major sponsorship, close to racing dragster By JASON ROSSI jrossi@shawmedia.com

ST. CHARLES – Inside an unassuming shop just off Route 25 in St. Charles, Marina Anderson is hard at work to become the next top drag racer in the country. She is well on her way. The 24-year-old Lombard resident earned a $1,000 sponsorship from Champion Auto Parts as part of the Search for a Champion. Now she is one of 25 finalists for the $50,000 grand prize in the same contest. Voting concludes March 23 at sfac.championautoparts.com/entry/955. “I was really nervous at the end of the voting for the first part before I found out I was a finalist. I’m even more nervous now, but I don’t have control over it even though I’m asking people to vote every day,” Anderson Sandy Bressner - sbressner@shawmedia.com said. “Honestly, I just feel lucky to be a finalist and be able to represent Cham- Marina Anderson stands next to the spoiler of her top-fuel dragster March 9 at the Anderson Family Dragster shop in St. Charles. pion this year.” The $1,000 sponsorship is nice. The process of putting the car back togeth- that would scare most people. At Byron in big prize would be game-changing moner after a winter spent breaking it down 2015, she was clocked at 1.14 seconds over Numbers to know ey for Anderson and her Anderson Famand inspecting the parts with the goal of 60 feet, but that wasn’t a full burn. Speeds ily Dragster team, which includes father getting it track ready for testing in April. in excess of 270 mph are her future. Number Scott Anderson and longtime family “Once you take off, everything The work isn’t thrilling, but it’s necof cylinders friend and crew chief Dave Daunheimer. essary to make sure the car is ready slows down,” she said. Number of spark plugs, “It’s amazing for me because Chamto go and passes the NHRA testing two per cylinder pion is such a well-known name and I process. Earning an NHRA license Finish line don’t have a lot of that backing yet,” Matakes one half-track pass and two quarGallons of fuel consumed Even though she has been working rina said. “It’s hard to put it to words ter-mile runs under six seconds. on a quarter-mile run on her car for the better part of a decade, because it’s like a dream come true. “It should be relatively easy to get the end is far from close. Being licensed Gallons per minute I’ve been working on the car for years through that, but tuning these things is just the start. The car needs to be cerfuel pump can handle and been thinking about it longer than is not as easy as it looks on television,” tified every season, which means there Cubic-inch [that], and it’s all coming to fruition.” Scott said. “You’ve got a lot of things will be more nights and weekends. That hemi engine going on there.” is just fine with Marina and her team. The end goal is to participate in four Starting line “I made a lot of life choices based on Weight, races over the summer, starting with this,” Marina said. “I went to Elmhurst Drag racing has been a big part of in pounds the Lucas Oil series in Indianapolis College because I could stay at home ... Marina’s life for almost as long as she RPMs in late April and the NHRA Division while still working on my dragster. can remember. Scott got the itch at age 3 race in Joliet in early June. Daun12 when he stumbled across a race at “That is something that sets me heimer knows there’s still work to do apart from other drivers, that I’m the Byron Dragway. After high school, he joined up with Daunheimer’s Frantic na and her crew at the shop at her dad’s to make that happen. owner, tuner and driver. I couldn’t do “We’ve worked on my car for many it without [Daunheimer and Scott], but Fueler dragster crew, which he has house, a property he specifically bought been a part of for 29 years. because it had an existing shop owned hundreds of hours and serviced it so I also love to learn all of it.” many times that everything just falls Since she was little, Marina has by former drag racer Rick Nichols. Daunheimer knows plenty about been around dragsters. She always “I couldn’t not quantify how many into place,” Daunheimer said. “That’s putting together a dragster, and he knew she wanted to race her own A-fu- hours we’ve put in,” Marina said. “Ev- where we need to be with [this car].” didn’t hesitate to praise Marina’s el dragster. ery Tuesday and Thursday night and hands-on approach and dedication to Marina, with help from her dad and every Saturday.” Go time making her dream come true. Daunheimer, who owns Competition If the typically iffy late April weath“When she decided to go do this Fabrications in Lilly Lake, started fab- Throttling up er breaks right and the team is suc- there was no question who the crew ricating her car in 2010 when she was When Marina got her car on the cessful in testing the car and passing chief was going to be, but she built the 17 years old and still in school at Wil- track for the first time, at Byron Drag- NHRA licensing, it would allow Mari- car with me. She welded with me, she lowbrook High School. way in October 2015, it was a step in na to race any NHRA, ADRL or Inter- knows how to bend tubing, she knows Work continued nights and weekends the right direction. She hopes the 2017 national Hot Rod Association races. how to cut sheet metal without cutwhile she was in college. Nights and season will bring many more. So if all goes according to plan, Mari- ting her finger off,” Daunheimer said. weekends are still busy times for MariIn early March, the team was in the na will be flying down the track at speeds “She’s the next generation.”

8 16 9 48 421 2,150 7,000


SPORTS BRIEFS

Cougars partner with Mueller for college scholarships

GENEVA – The Kane County Cougars and Mueller: Certified Public Accountants recently announced a new scholarship that will benefit accounting college students in honor of Al Mueller, founding partner of the accounting firm Mueller & Co., LLP. Alfred “Al” E. Mueller died in March 2016, but left a lasting legacy for his employees, clients and the local community through his many civic and philanthropic endeavors. The Al Mueller Memorial Scholarship Fund will provide five scholarships to deserving accounting college students at Mueller. Each of the honored students will receive $1,000 toward their education.

Rosary to host March Madness party April 3

AURORA – The Rosary High School Sports Boosters will hold a March Madness Party for the NCAA championship game at 6 p.m. April 3 at Ballydoyle, 28 W. New York St., in Aurora. The event will include a silent auction and raffles. The group also is sponsoring March Madness Boards. Buy a square on the $25 or $50 March Madness Boards,

Kaneland Youth Football announces spring combine

SUGAR GROVE – The Kaneland Youth Football League will host its first spring combine workout from noon to 4 p.m. April 8 at the Waubonsee Community College Field House in Sugar Grove. The event is free and will feature workout drills such as the 40-yard dash, high jump, shadow man tackling, cheer stations, and more. Participants are welcome at any time, but the following start times have been designated for certain age groups: flag football at noon; second- and thirdgrade players at 12:30 p.m.; fourth-graders at 1:15 p.m.; fifth-graders at 2 p.m.; sixth-graders at 2:45 p.m.; and seventhand eighth-graders at 3:15 p.m.

St. Charles man fourth at national golf tourney

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – A foursome with suburban Chicago ties put together four great rounds of golf to place fourth in the Liberty Mutual Insurance Invitational National Finals at TPC Sawgrass on March 12. Tom Brandstredt of St. Charles teamed with Rudy Cecchi (Chicago), Tony Del Ricco (Orland Park) and Tony Ross (Lemont). In August 2016, they competed against 240 amateur golfers and won the Liberty Mutual Invitational at Seven Bridges Golf Club in Woodridge. At TPC Sawgrass, they played two rounds on the Stadium Course and two rounds on the Dye’s Valley Course. It was a grueling test of the quartet’s skills, but team scores of 63, 66, 62, and 65 for a 256 total were enough to secure a fourth-place finish. The Liberty Mutual Insurance Invitational National Finals was the culmination of a series of more than 75 tournaments around the country in 2016 that raised more than $8 million for charity.

– Kane County Chronicle

Photo provided

The Kaneland Youth Basketball fifth- and sixth-grade team coached by Aurel Goglin went 9-1-1 and tied for the league championship this season. The team scored a league-high 387 points. Members of the team are Dylan Goglin (front row, from left), Connor Anderson, Owen Hampton, Adam Leach, Blake Hansen, assistant coach Castello (back row, from left), Alec Castello, Rocco Rosati, Sam Arand, Austin Goglin and head coach Aurel Goglin.

Kane County Cougars’ 5K to take place in June KANE COUNTY CHRONICLE editorial@kcchronicle.com GENEVA – The Kane County Cougars recently announced their sixth annual 5K Run/Walk will be June 3 at Northwestern Medicine Field. The event begins at 8 a.m. The charitable event has been renamed the Cougars 5K: Honoring First Responders, and is presented by Planet Fitness. A portion of the proceeds from the race will benefit the Tri Cities (Batavia, Geneva and St. Charles) Police and Fire Departments, the Kane County Sheriff’s Office, and the Forest Preserve District of Kane County Police Department. Registration is open for the event at kccougars.com and raceroster.com. The 5K, which features chip timing, will have a new course along both Kirk Road and Fabyan Parkway. Additional course details will be announced at a later date. Those who register by March 24 can take advantage of early bird pricing with a special $28 fee. After the early bird registration, pricing will increase to $33 un-

Know more Those registered by May 24 are guaranteed a commemorative race T-shirt. til May 31 and then $38 until race day. Those registered by May 24 are guaranteed a commemorative race T-shirt featuring the new Cougars 5K logo, while all participants will receive a complimentary ticket voucher valid for any Cougars game during the 2017 season. The top three male and female finishers in the 14 different age groups will receive a custom race medal. Families with children are encouraged to participate, and strollers are permitted on the course. There is a special discounted rate for participants between the ages of 5 to 18 years old. This year’s event also will include the “Cougars Inside the Park Dash” for children up to age 12. The roughly halfmile fun run, held inside the ballpark, will take place at the conclusion of the Cougars 5K Run/Walk and is just $5 per child.

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

ELBURN – The baseball and softball programs at Kaneland High School will co-host a pig roast and poker night fundraiser at 5 p.m. March 18 at the Elburn Community Center. All proceeds will benefit the teams for spring break tournaments and travel costs this year. The cost for the dinner only, which includes meat, two sides and a beverage, is $25 per person or $45 for couples. Carry-out is available. Dinner and entry into the poker tournament is $70 per person and $140 per couple. Poker only is $50 per person and $100 per couple. There also will be a silent auction with prizes that include a full pig roast event valued at $1,000, a Sharp 55-inch 4K Smart TV, a handmade Kaneland-themed poker table, Cubs, White Sox, Chicago Wolves and Kane County Cougars tickets, free passes for Kaneland High School baseball and softball summer camps, concert tickets, and numerous gift cards. To RSVP, contact Brian Aversa at Brian.Aversa@kaneland.org or Dawn Kuefler at dawn@advmicrolites.com.

and your numbers are good for all 67 games of the 2017 tournament. A special $10 board will be available for the championship game only. Admission is $35 and includes an appetizer buffet from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. and select beer, wine and soft drinks from 6 to 9 p.m. You must be 21 years of age or older to attend. The ticket price increases to $45 after the Sweet 16 on March 22. Buy tickets or squares online at www. rosaryhs.com/marchmadnessparty. All proceeds benefit Rosary athletic programs.

SPORTS |

Kaneland baseball, softball holding pig roast, poker night

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Hoops champions


Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

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Fox Valley Hawks’ season comes to end in league finals

KANE COUNTY PREPS ATHLETE OF THE WEEK

By STEPHEN GORDON editorial@kcchronicle.com

MARGARET WHITLEY Geneva Senior | Girls basketball Why Whitley was selected: Whitley, along with teammates Stephanie Hart and Grace Loberg, were named by U.S. Congressman and Geneva native Randy Hultgren in a proclamation before Congress congratulating the Geneva girls basketball team on its Class 4A state championship. Senior Margaret Whitley may have struggled shooting the ball during Geneva’s two state tournament games, but one of her biggest shots came in the final seconds of the state semifinal. Whitley’s runner just inside the free-throw line was the game-winning shot against Fremd that sent the Vikings into the state title game, where they beat Edwardsville. Whitley, who scored nine points against Fremd, had a well-rounded game as she added three rebounds and three steals to help Geneva win its first-ever game at the state finals. Not only was Whitley, the St. Charles Bank & Trust Athlete of the Week, part of Rep. Hultgren’s address, but she and her teammates also were

part of a March 8 winter sports championship celebration at Geneva High School. As part of his proclamation before Congress, Hultgren said the following while a stenographer recorded it for posterity: “I rise today to congratulate the Geneva Vikings girls basketball team on winning their first Class 4A state championship at ISU’s Redbird Arena [beating Edwardsville 41-40 on March 4]. ... I applaud coach Sarah Meadows and the Geneva Vikings on their achievement and their hard work. Go Vikings!” Video of Hultgren’s proclamation is available by visiting https://youtu.be/ pihMoOZxYK0.

This Athlete of the Week is brought to you by

GENEVA – In the end, the Fox Valley Hawks did not get as far as they thought they would this season. Finishing the season with a record of 18-7-4, the club was swept by the combined team of Addison Trail/Willowbrook/Fenton in the Illinois Suburban Hockey League Cougar Cup finals. The club also failed to get out of the second round of the combined division of the 2017 Blackhawk Cup high school hockey state tournament, suffering a 5-3 loss to Latin School of Chicago. While those disappointments will linger, there are things to look forward to with the club for next season. “While we do lose nine seniors, we will be returning 10 players back to the varsity again next season,” Hawks coach Phil Gabrielsen said. “We expect to have the same kind of team not only this spring, but for the regular season, which begins again in September.” Gabrielsen said the biggest hurdle his team had to overcome this season was the injury bug, which took on many forms. “We were just bitten by the injury bug all season long,” Gabrielsen said. “But we also suffered from a flu bug, which hit several of our players from [St. Charles] East and that kind of spread through our locker room.” While the varsity team had its inconsistent moments, Gabrielsen said he was proud of the clubs he put out on the ice. “I think what I was most proud of is the fact we put out three very competitive teams this year,” he said. “We had two JV teams this year. One of those teams went 22-0 during the reg-

“While we do lose nine seniors, we will be returning 10 players back to the varsity again next season.” Phil Gabrielsen Fox Valley Hawks coach

ular season, won the Hayes Cup [the ISHL JV title] and got to the quarterfinals of the 2017 Blackhawk Cup state tournament in the JV division.” Gabrielsen gave praise to sophomore forward Dan Shaughnessy from Geneva High School and junior forward Austin DeVitto from St. Charles East. They were among the players who stepped up when others went down with injuries. “I also thought [sophomore forward] Johnny Ambrogio stepped up for us really well on offense this year,” Gabrielsen said. “I expect him to fill a big role for us on offense next season.” The club will begin its spring league play at West Meadows Ice Arena in Rolling Meadows in April. The varsity team and two JV teams will play through mid-May before the winter season starts again later this year. As to where the Hawks will play next season, there has been discussions within the club about the possibility of moving out of the ISHL and into the Illinois High School Hockey League north central division, but Gabrielsen said it will be discussed further during the offseason. “I will say that some of those trips to Kankakee and to Indiana [for games] do get a little old after a while,” he said of playing in the ISHL Hayes division.

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                                 

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 

   

 

          

       

  

          

  

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

   

     


T H U R S DAY, M A R C H 16 , 2 0 17 • KC C h ro n i c l e . c o m

THAT’S AMORE THROUGH MARCH 19

Ambrogi’s Pizza in Elburn nears anniversary PAGE 42

‘JUICE MANIFESTO’ IS CHOCKFUL OF HEALTHY RECIPES PAGE 45


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5 THINGS TO DO IN AND AROUND KANE COUNTY

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STAGE COMEDY

WHERE: Steel Beam Theatre, 111 W. Main St., St. Charles WHEN: 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and 3 p.m. Sundays through March 19 COST & INFO: Starting at $23; steelbeamtheatre.com or 630-587-8521 ABOUT: Woody Allen’s “Don’t Drink the Water” is playing at Steel Beam Theatre. The farce follows a vacationing American family accused of spying and then trapped in a rundown U.S. embassy in a country off the tourist map.

CRANE TALK

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Photo provided

‘THE SLEEPING BEAUTY’ BALLET

WHERE: Egyptian Theatre, 135 N. Second St., DeKalb WHEN: 1 and 6 p.m. March 18 and 19 COST & INFO: Starting at $22, $17 for children younger than 12; egyptiantheatre.org, 815-758-1225 or BethFowlerSchoolOfDance.com ABOUT: Beth Fowler Dance Company will present “The Sleeping Beauty” ballet, including Lindsey Haugen, Justine McCormack, Erin Seales, Anne Fritsch and Skyler Purvis, all of St. Charles; and Kaitlyn Rollo, Samantha Scolaro and Liz Karth, all of Geneva.

‘MAD GRAVITY’

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WHERE: Riverfront Playhouse, 11 and 13 S. Water St. Mall, downtown Aurora WHEN: 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, March 10 to April 15 COST & INFO: $17, $15 for students and seniors with discounts for military and first responders and Friday shows; reservations encouraged at shawurl.com/30vk or 630-897-9496, riverfrontplayhouse.com. ABOUT: The “Mad Gravity” farce is co-directed by Patrick Deering of Batavia and Amaria Von Dran of Geneva. It’s a lighthearted look at relationships, parenting and the meaning of life as a comet speeds towards Earth. In the cast is Kirsten Carroccia of Batavia.

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WHERE: Hickory Knolls Discovery Center, 3795 Campton Hills Drive, St. Charles WHEN: 6:30 to 8 p.m. March 16 COST & INFO: $10, with registration required at 630-444-3190 or programs@ kaneforest.com ABOUT: A nature program about sandhill cranes is offered for ages 18 and older. The talk is co-sponsored by the Forest Preserve District of Kane County and the St. Charles and Geneva park districts.

Shaw Media file photo

4

Renee Tomell - rtomell@shawmedia.com

PLAYHOUSE 38 SHOW

WHERE: 7 p.m. March 16 to 18 and 5 p.m. March 19 WHEN: Playhouse 38, 321 Stevens St., Suite P, Geneva COST & INFO: $15 in advance and $20 at the door; available at genevaparks. org, 630-232-4542 or Sunset Community Center ABOUT: Described as a funny and touching comedy about searching for love, “This is Not What I Ordered” is an adult production opening at Playhouse 38. The theater is at the rear of the building bordering Wheeler Park in Geneva.

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

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KANE WEEKEND |

KANE WEEKEND


Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| KANE WEEKEND

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ABOVE: Ambrogi’s Pizza, which features an array of dishes, soon will celebrate its first anniversary in Elburn. LEFT: The sausage deluxe pizza on thin crust is just one of the options for aficionados at Ambrogi’s Pizza in Elburn. Photos by Sandy Bressner - sbressner@shawmedia.com

Ambrogi’s Pizza flying toward anniversary By RENEE TOMELL rtomell@shawmedia.com ELBURN – Pizza lovers have a fellow devotee in Denny Pitts, who this spring will celebrate the first anniversary of Ambrogi’s Pizza in Elburn, a restaurant that also features sandwiches, salads, wings, pasta, appetizers, calzones and fried chicken and shrimp entrees. Pitts brings 30 years of experience to the art of the pizza pie, beginning with his first job at age 14 at Orlando’s Pizza in Geneva. “By the time I was 17, I was the night manager,” said Pitts, who continued to work in the pizza industry and moved to Elburn about 17 years ago. The menu at Ambrogi’s offers thin, pan, Chicago style, stuffed and double dough pizza, with gluten-free crust available. “My personal favorite is Chicago style, and that’s why I put it on the menu,” Pitts said. “It’s deep-dish pizza, and it gets nice chunky tomato on top. Everyone loves it.” The form of tomato he uses is the difference between his pan pizza and deep-dish pies. The former has his signature pizza sauce under the toppings and cheese, but for his Chicago style, the cheese and other ingredients instead are crowned with chunky tomato sauce on top. He said he’s been experimenting to perfect dishes for years and likes to try new things and get feedback from people. “Finally, one day I came up with my pizza sauce recipe, [which is]

really good,” he said. “That’s what I went with. Absolutely nobody knows that recipe but me. And my dough is the same way. I built it [like] all of my recipes.” The pasta dishes are prepared fresh daily, and everything is made from scratch, he said. “I use the freshest ingredients and the finest Italian cheese I can find,” Pitts said. “I use the top of the line … of everything. It does make a difference. My Italian beef is famous here in Elburn, especially at lunch.” Pitts said he has daily specials, such as lunch sandwiches with fries and soft drink. He also offers pizza slices each day. Among the most popular sandwiches are the Italian beef, the meatball sub and his chicken parmigiana, which is available either as a sandwich or served over pasta. Pitts said his homemade garlic bread is a specialty, and works well as a sandwich option in place of the regular rolls and bread for an added twist. Also on the menu are a pure-beef, half-pound burger, Vienna hot dogs, and tiramisu as one of the desserts. “I’ve got a little bit of everything in here,” he said, adding he already has started planning specials for his oneyear anniversary celebration in May. The fast-casual restaurant seats 20 and occupies the corner of a building with large windows. The casual space

The cheesy beef sandwich with melted mozzarella paired with piping hot french fries is a favorite at Ambrogi’s Pizza near Routes 47 and 38 in Elburn. is family friendly and offers a children’s menu for ages 11 and younger. The father of two young children, Pitts knows what kids like to eat and gives them a variety of items including an 8-inch pizza. How has he enjoyed his entrepreneurship this past year? “It’s wonderful,” he said. “I’ve worked for different places, and now I can do it myself. I always wanted my own place and in the town where I live. I get to [serve] the community – being involved in fundraisers and [such]. I do as much as I can for the community.” He said he’s working seven days a week to make sure everything is

done right, and compares running the business to raising a child. “You’ve got to take care of it until you know it’s grown up enough to take care of itself,” he said. “I treat it like my children.” The restaurant offers catering and delivery to Maple Park, Campton Hills, La Fox, Kaneville, Lily Lake, Wasco, Mill Creek, Virgil, Elburn, St. Charles and Geneva. It is just south of Route 38 off Route 47 at 107 Valley Drive and is open from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday; 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday; and noon to 9 p.m. Sunday. For more information, visit ambrogispizza.com or call 630-365-2777.


43 Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

only through

MARCH 19

tickets 630.896.6666 or PARAMOUNTAURORA.COM


Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| KANE WEEKEND

44

Photos by Sandy Bressner - sbressner@shawmedia.com

Actors perform in the Steel Beam Youth Theatre production of “Looking Glass Land” in St. Charles. It was adapted from Lewis Carroll’s original “Through the Looking Glass” novel by playwright James DeVita. “Looking Glass Land” was presented March 11 and 12 at Steel Beam Theatre, 111 W. Main St. in St. Charles, on the second floor.

A youthful performance

Will Teets (from left, Hatta) and Olivia McDevitt (Alice) perform in “Looking Glass Land.” “Don’t Drink the Water,” written by Woody Allen, will be performed March 17 to 19.

LEFT: Gus Labon (White King) and Olivia McDevitt (Alice) perform in “Looking Glass Land.”

Grace Coulter (Red Queen) and Nicholas Torres (Red King) perform in the Steel Beam Youth Theatre production of “Looking Glass Land.”


MATCHA RECOVERY SHAKE

FLU JAB Serves 1

2 carrots, chopped

1 cup mineral water A pinch of ground cinnamon A pinch of cayenne pepper 1 tablespoon Manuka honey* 1-inch piece of fresh ginger, peeled and chopped 1/2 lemon, peeled 1 apple, cored and chopped 1 orange, peeled

* Manuka honey from New Zealand is touted as having anti-bacterial properties. Put all ingredients into blender in order they are listed. Blitz until smooth. Serve immediately. Juice man’s tip: For extra health benefits, add 10 drops of echinacea.

Counting juice’s many benefits “Juice Manifesto” (Chronicle Books) by Andrew Cooper offers readers more than 120 recipes for easy-to-make juices, smoothies, teas, tonics and nut milks. He also provides breakfast beverages and wholesome snacks. Cooper, co-founder of the Juiceman line of juices, swears by the delicious taste his recipes supply (see two examples below) as well as health benefits from medicinal juices that combat digestive problems. He also cites the role that smoothies can play for detoxing and promoting optimum wellness. “The amount of produce in one glass of juice can flood your body with a large amount of vitamins and en-

TOM’S COOKBOOK LIBRARY Tom Witom zymes,” Cooper writes in his introduction to the book. Among the benefits the author cites are an increased level of energy; reduced cholesterol; elimination of sugar and caffeine cravings; and improved productivity.

Journalist Tom Witom, who lives in Elgin, has written extensively for years about food and the food industry. Contact him at editorial@ kcchronicle.com.

Comfortable underwear is the way to go I love getting dressed up. I enjoy the hunt for an outfit, mostly at local consignment shops, and selecting an item that really makes me squeal. My personal style likes to show a little leg, so I stick with A-line skirts as those compliment my hippy-er figure. I happily wear make up to enhance my natural beauty, apply a little essential oil in place of perfume and slip on heels when the event calls for a change in elevation. There is one particular area, however, where I do not have a passion and that is the subject of undergarments. After a rather humorous conversation with two of my best girl friends over dinner, I came to the conclusion that there are two kinds of women: fancy-schmancy sexy panty ladies and cozy cotton, no frills Hanes girls. I, am the later. Now before you judge, I’ve lived on both sides of the lingerie fence. I used to be the fancy-schmancy sexy panty lady in college and most of my 30s, but once I really started to feel comfortable in my own spirit, I became the Albert Einstein of knickers. Remember Al, who like several geniuses in history decided not to expel any unnecessary energy on their clothing so they chose to wear the same outfits over and over and over again? I still have those scantly-clad pieces in my dresser, so old that they are practically disintegrating. But I crave simplicity now. I need no-nonsense.

life is grand and comfortable. And, can you believe it, Hewitt is still a beautiful sexy woman?! (And no, I do not work for Hanes.) I often feel like I was born in the wrong era, as my heart seems drawn to slow living and simple things like wanting chickens in my backyard and reading books with pages. So it’s only natural that I connect with the ladies that don the underwear in Hanes ads instead of the winged creatures strutting the Victoria’s Secret catwalk. Being productive and creative in my life calls for a flexibility to think clearly without distraction. And in a world of so many distractions, I can’t bother to omit any extra energy on my briefs. Any no frills, Hanes girls out there who celebrate no nonsense? Speak up so I know I’m not alone!

THE MODERN DOMESTIC WOMAN Elizabeth Rago Lingerie seriously makes me feel like I am bound and gagged and being held hostage. I’m just a simple girl and feel exhilarated by the freedom a cozy pair of undies gives me to scoot about my day, unrestricted, foot loose and fancy-free! LM Montgomery wrote, “There is no such thing as freedom on earth, only different kinds of bondages. And comparative bondages. YOU think you are free now because you’ve escaped from a peculiarly unbreakable kind of bondage. But are you? You love me THAT’S a bondage.” Breaking free from the bondage of my unmentionables was one of the most liberating things I have done in my life. I’ve noticed that my writing is more raw and honest when I’m sporting cotton instead of butt floss, and my heart seems a bit more in synch with how I’m really feeling, instead of focusing on the constant distraction of squirming in my skin. Instead, I’m happily bound to the things in my life that demand attention. And I know there are others like me in the world because – HANES. This comfy brand tells the tale of my undergarment longings in its ads and

Provided by Catherine McMahon

“ ... I’ve lived on both sides of the lingerie fence,” writes columnist Elizabeth Rago. “I used to be the fancy-schmancy sexy panty lady in college and most of my 30s, but once I really started to feel comfortable in my own spirit, I became the Albert Einstein of knickers.” had me intrigued years ago by Miss Jennifer Love-Hewitt. Frustrated by the underwear provided at a glamorous photo shoot, Hewitt retreats to her own purse to find her Hanes and then

Smitten with domestic life, but not to the point of unhealthy obsession, “The Modern Domestic Woman” author and St. Charles resident, Elizabeth Rago, is a freelance writer who spends her days writing for PB Kitchen Design in Geneva. You can visit her blog at thecircularhome. com or connect with Rago on Facebook at facebook.com/TheModernDomesticWoman. Rago’s column in the Kane County Chronicle runs the first and third Thursdays of the month. Feedback can be sent to editorial@ kcchronicle.com.

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

energy, extra antioxidants and extra crunch. Cacao is also known to elevate mood. Fact: During exercise, Sift the matcha powder into almond milk, your body loses potasand mix until no clumps remain, then put sium through sweat. “Juice all ingredients into blender. Blend until Eating a banana Manifesto” smooth. Serve immediately. boosts your potassium levels and gives you 10 percent of the Tip: Try adding some cacao nibs for extra recommended daily intake.

KANE WEEKEND |

1 teaspoon matcha (green tea powder) 1 1/2 cups almond or cashew milk 1 tablespoon natural protein powder 2 frozen bananas

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* KCG Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| KANE WEEKEND

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FOOD

Mmm, mushrooms:

Fungi rising in popularity

By SEASON STEPP More Content Now Mushrooms are one of those crazy foods that people either love or hate: mushrooms are neither fruit nor vegetable, have weird textures, and grow in dead and decaying plant matter. But fungus or not, mushrooms have been part of the human diet for thousands of years and continue to rise in popularity. As interest in food has become trendier and the local food movement has grown, so has the interest in local, unusual mushrooms. Today most areas have multiple mushroom growers that sell to nearby restaurants, markets and to the public. Additionally, many of these farms offer classes or workshops to teach an aspiring fungivore the art and science behind growing their own. Wild mushrooms are most common in the spring and fall months but cultivated and dried mushrooms can be found throughout the year. The specifications of choosing fresh mushrooms depend mostly on the species but overall, choose those with unblemished caps and smell earthy, never fishy. Refrigerate in a single layer, covered loosely with damp paper towels, allowing for air to circulate around the mushrooms. Save woody stems for stock, and dry or freeze unused mushrooms, such as shiitakes, for later use. Mushrooms complement many other ingredients, either adding to or pairing with the earthiness inherent in foods such as roasted meats, root vegetables and herbs including thyme, sage and rosemary. Using mushroom stock enhances the depth of flavor to any recipe, and can make vegetarian cooking much more exciting.

Season Stepp can be reached at season28@aol.com.

Coconut Tom Yum Gai Soup

5 cups chicken or vegetable stock 2 stalks lemongrass, bruised 4 kaffir lime leaves 2 inches ginger, peeled and sliced 8 ounces shiitake mushrooms, stems removed and caps sliced thinly 3 tablespoons fish sauce 1 tablespoon soy sauce ¼ cup cilantro leaves, stems removed and leaves chopped roughly Canola oil, for sautéing vegetables 3 shallots, peeled and minced

Photo provided

Using mushroom stock enhances the depth of flavor to any recipe, and can make vegetarian cooking much more exciting. Shiitake mushrooms (pictured) add flavor to a Coconut Tom Yum Gai Soup recipe. 4 cloves garlic, peeled and grated 1 Thai chili, seeds removed and sliced thinly 1 teaspoon brown sugar 1 cup unsweetened coconut milk Sriracha hot sauce 6-8 tablespoons lime juice

Season the soup to taste with kosher salt, Sriracha and lime juice. Garnish the finished soup with the cilantro leaves.

Mushroom, Summer Corn and Fingerling Potato Ragout

Olive oil 2 onions, peeled and diced Place the stock in a sauce pan with the lem4 garlic cloves, pressed or peeled and ongrass, kaffir lime leaves, ginger, mushroom grated stems, fish sauce, soy sauce and cilantro 4 carrots, sliced into ½-inch pieces stems. Bring to a simmer and reduce to low 4 celery ribs, chopped to keep warm. 2 bay leaves Heat a large soup pot over medium heat. 2 sprigs thyme Add oil to the pan. Once hot, add the shallots 2 cups red wine and sauté until softened, about 3 minutes. 8 ounces cremini mushrooms, cleaned Add the sliced mushroom caps and cook and sliced until most of the moisture has evaporated 2½ cups fingerling potatoes cut into and mushrooms have started to brown, about chunks 5 minutes. Add the garlic and cook until 3 tablespoons tamari soy sauce fragrant, about 1 minute. 1½ cups chicken stock Strain the chicken stock mixture. Add stock, 3 tablespoons tomato paste sliced chili and brown sugar into the soup 2 teaspoons Dijon mustard pot. Bring to a simmer for 5 minutes. 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar Reduce the heat and add coconut milk. 2 tablespoons molasses

2 cups green beans, cut into bite-sized pieces 1 zucchini, diced 3 ears corn, kernels removed Place a Dutch oven or heavy stew pot over medium heat. When the pan is hot, add enough oil to lightly cover the bottom. When the oil is hot, add the onions, garlic, carrots and celery; cook until fragrant, about 2 minutes. Add the bay leaves, thyme, and red wine and simmer uncovered for about 3 minutes. Reduce heat, and place the corn and mushrooms in the pan. Cook until the corn and mushrooms are soft, about 5 minutes. In a small bowl, whisk together the tamari, stock, tomato paste, Dijon, vinegar and molasses. Add mixture to the pot, along with the potatoes. Simmer until potatoes are soft, about 15 minutes. Add the green beans, zucchini and corn; cook until the green beans are just slightly tender, about 5 minutes. Season to taste with kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper. Serve over polenta.


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POETRY CORNER A grey heron standing at the water’s edge dark beak extended, sharp and long, fishing for what he can find.

Patiently, he stands up, unafraid and proud, beak extended to the dark, flowing water, the dank, dark water carrying

How can he know? his will finds him here, standing at the edge of time and place, in the morning on the Fox River, fishing for eternity and what he can find, for what he needs to survive.

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

What will he find and how will he know? edges of daylight and dawn will bring him what he needs to survive.

dirt, leaves, and fish as it rushes by the banks.

KANE WEEKEND |

‘Grey Heron’

Just for a moment he stands, beak pointing straight up, into the slanting sunlight, caught, extended, stopped in time. Mary Danahey, formerly of St. Charles

NEWS BRIEFS The day will run from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Healing Hands Mission plans dinner, show fundraiser March 18 March 18, and the $35 fee includes lunch. ST. CHARLES – Healing Hands Mission will present its first dinner-and-show fundraiser at 6:30 p.m. March 18 at St. John Neumann Catholic Church, 2900 E. Main St., St. Charles. The event will raise money for this summer’s medical mission to Guatemala. The show will be “Sister Bernie’s Bingo Bash.” Dinner will be from Abby’s restaurant, and there will be cocktails, live music, comedy, bingo and prizes. For tickets and additional information, visit HealingHandsMission.com.

Seminars will cover the basics of gardening, as well as some design techniques to help people be more successful. Lunch will be provided, and the day is designed for every skill level of gardening. Buy tickets by March 16 by visiting the “Upcoming Events” page at www.wasconursery.com or by calling 630-584-4424.

Third Friday Community Dinner to take place March 17 in Geneva

GENEVA – The Third Friday Community Dinner will take place from 5 to 7 p.m. March 17 at Fox Valley Presbyterian Buy tickets by March 16 Church, 227 East Side Drive, Geneva. for planting season seminars Get ready to usher in spring at the Was- The menu includes meatloaf, peas with tarragon, au gratin potatoes, rainbow Jell-O and a co Nursery and Garden Center, 41W781 Route 64, St. Charles, when it hosts a day dessert buffet with a touch of green. Hot dogs full of short, easy-to-understand presen- are available for children. Dine-in or take out is offered. For information, call 630-232-4778. tations geared to help people prepare – Shaw Media their yards for planting season.

Visit www.arcadalive.com for tickets

“Exhibitors present an assortment of the latest services and 100’s of products “

- Since 1986


* KCG Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| KANE WEEKEND

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FAMILY

Know-it-all voice assistants shaping kids By MICHAEL S. ROSENWALD

K

The Washington Post

ids adore their new robot siblings. As millions of American families buy robotic voice assistants to turn off lights, order pizzas and fetch movie times, children are eagerly co-opting the gadgets to settle dinner table disputes, answer homework questions and entertain friends at sleepover parties. Many parents have been startled and intrigued by the way these disembodied, know-it-all voices – Amazon’s Alexa, Google Home, Microsoft’s Cortana – are impacting their kids’ behavior, making them more curious but also, at times, far less polite. In just two years, the promise of the technology already has exceeded the marketing come-ons. The disabled are using voice assistants to control their homes, order groceries and listen to books. Caregivers to the elderly say the devices help with dementia, reminding users what day it is or when to take medicine. For children, the potential for transformative interactions are just as dramatic – at home and in classrooms. But psychologists, technologists and linguists are only beginning to ponder the possible perils of surrounding kids with artificial intelligence, particularly as they traverse important stages of social and language development. “How they react and treat this nonhuman entity is, to me, the biggest question,” said Sandra Calvert, a Georgetown University psychologist and director of the Children’s Digital Media Center. “And how does that subsequently affect family dynamics and social interactions with other people?” With an estimated 25 million voice assistants expected to sell this year at $40 to $180 – up from 1.7 million in 2015 – there even are ramifications for the diaper crowd. Toy giant Mattel recently announced the birth of Aristotle, a home baby monitor launching this summer that “comforts, teaches and entertains” using AI from Microsoft. As children get older, they can ask or answer questions. The company says, “Aristotle was specifically designed to grow up with a child.” Boosters of the technology say kids typically learn to acquire information using the prevailing technology of the moment – from the library card catalogue, to Google, to brief conversations with friendly, all-knowing voices. But what if these gadgets lead children, whose faces already are glued to screens, further away from situations where they learn important interpersonal skills? It’s unclear whether any of the companies involved even are paying attention to this issue. Amazon did not return a request for comment. A spokeswoman for the Partnership for AI, a new organization that includes Google, Amazon, Microsoft and other companies working on voice assistants, said nobody was available to answer questions. “These devices don’t have emotional intelligence,” said Allison Druin, a University of Maryland professor who studies how children use technology. “They have factual intelligence.” Children certainly enjoy their company, referring to Alexa like just another family member.

Photo by Bill O’Leary via The Washington Post

Asher Labovich, 13, and his 10-year-old brother, Emerson, (left) mess around with the family’s Alexa, an Amazon Echo voice assistant, while their mom, Laura Labovich, watches in Bethesda, Md.

“How they react and treat this nonhuman entity is, to me, the biggest question. And how does that subsequently affect family dynamics and social interactions with other people?” Sandra Calvert, a Georgetown University psychologist and director of the Children’s Digital Media Center

“We like to ask her a lot of really random things,” said Emerson Labovich, a fifth-grader in Bethesda, Maryland, who pesters Alexa with her older brother Asher. This winter, Emerson asked her almost every day to help count down the days until a trip to The Wizarding World of Harry Potter in Florida. “She can also rap and rhyme,” Emerson said. Today’s children will be shaped by AI much like their grandparents were shaped by new devices called television. But you couldn’t talk with a TV. Ken Yarmosh, a 36-year-old Northern Virginia app developer and founder of Savvy Apps has multiple voice assistants in his family’s home, including those made by Google and Amazon. (The Washington Post is owned by Amazon founder Jeffrey P. Bezos, whose middle name is Preston, according to Alexa.) Yarmosh’s 2-year-old son has been so enthralled by Alexa he tries to speak

with coasters and other cylindrical objects that look like Amazon’s device. Meanwhile, Yarmosh’s now 5-year-old son, in comparing his two assistants, came to believe Google knew him better. “Alexa isn’t smart enough for me,” he’d say, asking random questions his parents couldn’t answer, like how many miles it is to China. (“China is 7,248 miles away, “ Google Home says, “as the crow flies.”) In talking that way about a device plugged into a wall, Yarmosh’s son was anthropomorphizing it – which means to “ascribe human features to something,” Alexa happily explains. Humans do this a lot, Calvert said. We do it with dogs, dressing them in costumes on Halloween. We name boats. And when we encounter robots, we – especially children – treat them as near equals. In 2012, University of Washington researchers published results of a study

involving 90 children interacting with a life-size robot named Robovie. Most kids thought Robovie had “mental states” and was a “social being.” When Robovie was shoved into a closet, more than half felt it wasn’t fair. A similar emotional connection is taking hold with Alexa and other assistants – even for parents. “It’s definitely become part of our lives,” said Emerson’s mother, Laura Labovich, who then quickly corrected herself: “She’s definitely part of our lives.” The problem, Druin said, is this emotional connection sets up expectations for children devices can’t or weren’t designed to meet, causing confusion, frustration and even changes in the way kids talk or interact with adults. Yarmosh’s son thought Alexa couldn’t understand him, but it was the algorithms that couldn’t grasp the pitch in his voice or the way children formulate questions. Educators introducing these devices into classrooms and school libraries have encountered the same issue. “If Alexa doesn’t understand the question, is it Alexa’s fault or might it be the question’s fault?” said Gwyneth Jones, a librarian who uses Amazon’s device at Murray Hill Middle School in Laurel, Maryland. “People are not always going to get what they are saying, so it’s important that they learn how to ask good questions.”


my clever kid. He remained hopeful. I reached forSUNDAY my keys. Wrestling ensued. I’m how I beat 2:30still p.m.not on sure @ WFLD NASCAR Racing to the grab, my not-so-little-powerlifter butdriver yeah,has I’vea had a few years learning No better record at Phoenix International the dance. Raceway than Kevin Harvick. The“It 2014 Cuphave Champion has eight the wins would helped break there, including last year’s Camping World tension,” he whispered an hour later 500. To do so this year he’ll have to suras waited atnew thestaging DMV for Holly’s vivewe NASCAR’s format where name bedrivers called.after “Missed opportunithe topto ten the first two stages of each race earn points. for the ty.” Maybe. Hanging atStages the DMV isn’t one-mile oval Unless at Phoenix be two each exactly fun. youwill wake before at 75 laps and the final of 162 laps. dawn to get there, the line you find is @ WFLD always a6:30 longp.m. one.on It moves, but still. A Bob’s Burgers room filled with nervous people. Gah! Linda (voice of John Roberts) iswhy thrilled “I still don’t understand I’mat the prospect of chaperoning Tina’s (voice here,” he said, as we settled into the of Dan Mintz) weekend away at a “heroplastic chairs. I’d ine conference,” butasked a new him friendtoofcome Tina cheer her onwith andLinda’s reminded him she’d may interfere perfect mother-

daughter bonding fantasy in the new episode “The Grand Mama-Pest Hotel.” Back on the homefront, Louise and Gene (voices of Kristen Schaal and Eugene Mirman) for theirto weekend Readershave canplans post events the Kane alone with Bob (voice of H. Jon Benjamin). County Chronicle’s online calendar. Visit Guest voices include Jenny Slate, David planitkane.com, click “+Add Event” and Herman and Laura Silverman. follow the 7prompts. items also will p.m. on Select ^ WBBM NCIS: Los Angeles appear in the newspaper. Nell and Eric (Renee Felice Smith, Barrett Foa) go under cover to a couple’s retreat to clandestinely investigate a tech-savvy husband and wife are suspected TWO BROTHERS’ 20THwho ANNIVERSARY PARTY:of 7 being involved with the hacking of the p.m. March 16, Two Brothers Roundhouse, 205U.S. N. Treasury Department in the new episode Broadway (Route 25), downtown Aurora. It features “Getaway.” Elsewhere, Dave Flynn (guest

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trip to the DMV, a road test TALES FROM THE MOTHERHOOD Jennifer DuBose

been there on his big day, three years before. It really didn’t take much convincing, to be honest, but still. It’s the DMV. And it was but a few days into his first college spring break. There were a thousand other“Detroit places he could Adam Genei hosts Steel” have chosen to be. on ButHistory. he’s Holly’s Saturday big brother and takes his post very star Scott Grimes), a digital forensics speseriously. Yes, yes indeed. cialist, arrives from the NCIS cyber office “We can tomorrow you in San Diegocome to runback operations whileifEric want,” said a while later,Elizabeth after sheBoand Nellhe are away. Bar Paly, gush, Keiko Agena and Gabriel Tigerman sat down with us after her road test. The also guest star. woman next to us just about gasped at % WMAQ his antics.7I p.m. haveon to admit, the boy has Littlecracked Big Shots skills. His sister a smile. Good In the new “New thing, too, episode since she wasSheriff about in to Town,” pose hostthe Steve Harvey welcomes a 5-year-old for pic on her new license. But, yeah, cowboy who really knows his way around it had been a long hour for our girl. a lasso, an 8-year-old slackliner from Ja“Anyone wantguitarist a mint?” I’dEngland, asked 30 pan, a junior blues from minutes (while waited for two youngbefore girls who havewe become viral sensations and a 4-year-old geography her test), as I pulled a fistful of mints prodigy. out of my purse. 7 p.m.we on… @ WFLD “Hey, didn’t . Oh, that was a

The Simpsons Marge (voice of Julie Kavner) can’t shake her conviction that son Bart (voice of Nancy Cartwright) is on the road to abject specialinbeer aleso releases. For $20 which failure hisand life, she turns totickets, a series ofare parenting gurus for advice in the new limited, visit twobrothers20th.eventbrite.com. “A Father’s Watch.” While Bart16,gets some BOOKS BETWEEN BITES: noon March Batavia Public much-needed advice, and a touching Library, 10 S. Batavia Ave. ESPN’ s Lester Munson gift, from his grandfather (voice of Dan will review “The LastHomer Innocents” by Michael Leahy Castellaneta), (also voiced by and “All the Way: My Lifedecides on Ice” byto Jordin Tootoo. can Castellaneta) open up People a trophy store. Yeardley Smith andfree guest Brian drop by with their lunch at the event,star and items Posehn lendattheir voices. also can also be bought Chapters Coffeehouse & Café in7:30 p.m. on @ WFLD side the library. For more information, call Becky Hoag History at 630-482-9157Making or visit booksbetweenbites.com. DeborahAND (Leighton Meester) startsBY toTHE ST. STUDENT EMERGING ARTIST SHOW question relationship with Dan CHARLESher ARTS COUNCIL: through March(Adam 25, 7 S.

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license as her brother had done. (I’ll never forget the look on the big red dog’s face when Noah drove away sans parents, or the call from his cellphone, 10 minutes later. “WHAT HAPPENED???” I asked, my heart in a frenzy, but he’d merely called to ask me about the light at the corner of Fabyan and Trader Joe’s (that’s what we call it). WOW! Yes, I can still feel the adrenaline three years later, stars but I in digress.) Tea Leoni “Madam Secretary” Something else was this Sundays on different, CBS. time, too. You know that moment on back before she was infected by the viroad you watch your rus intest the day new when episode “Hair of the Dog.” sweet daughter outside and get Meanwhile, Carolwalk (Kristen Schaal) adopts into a car withona life. strange (No ofa new outlook Mary man? Steenburgen and Cleopatra Coleman also folks star. at the fense to the hard-working DMV, “strange” or not, but like it or 9 p.m. on % WMAQ Shades of Blue man” is not, for this mom, a “strange any man I don’tLopez) know.)isYeah. say it Harlee (Jennifer caughtI’ll in the middle WOW. once again (Warren again. Thatwhen was Stahl a scene I’d not Kole) leansSo onglad her harder after Wozniak imagined. it’s behind us!

(Ray Liotta) refuses to cooperate with the Feds, opting instead for his own dangerDuBose lives in Batavia ousJennifer plan to get out from under the agenwith her family. runs regcy’s thumb, in the Her new column episode “Ghost ularly in the KaneInternal Weekend section Hunt.” Elsewhere, Affairs Officerof Verco (Dov Davidoff) steps up efforts to the Kane County Chronicle. Contact discover the truth about what happened her at editorial@kcchronicle.com. to Donnie Pomp. Anna Gunn (“Breaking Bad”) and Stephen Lang guest star. 9 p.m. on _ WLS American Crime SIMON KIRKE OF BAD COMPANY: 7:30 p.m. Isaac (Richard Cabral) tries to protect Coy March 16,Jessup) Arcada Theatre, 105 E. Main St., St. (Connor from abusive conditions Charles. in Coming eventseven include Disco working the fields, asArcada Luis (Benito Martinez) himself 8sinking further into Ball II withfeels the Trammps, p.m. March 17; The abject on the farm8 p.m. in the new18; Windyservitude City Elvis Competition, March “Season Three: Episode Jeannette and George Thorogood & The2.”Destroyers, 7:30 (Felicity Huffman) suspects her family is p.m. March 21 and 22. The Club Arcada playing down a trailer fire that killedSpeaksever& Showroom will present Everett Dean & aleasy of their undocumented workers. Kimara The Lonesome tribute, 8:30(guest p.m. (Regina King) Hearts’ tries to1950s persude Shae star Ana to takewith a first March 17;Mulvoy and The Ten) Cavedwellers Tedstep Aliotta toward by 8:30 testifying against of “Lakeempowerment Shore Drive” fame, p.m. March 18. her pimp. or call 630-962-7000. Visitformer arcadalive.com

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CBS 2 News at Late Show10PM (N) (cc) Colbert◊ Superstore (N) Trial & Error Chicago Med “Monday Mourning” The Blacklist: Redemption “Opera- NBC5 News 10P (10:34) The Tonight Show Starring Late Night With (TVPG) (TVPG) (cc) (N) (TV14) (cc) tion Davenport” (TV14) (cc) (N) (cc) Jimmy Fallon (N) (TV14) Seth Meyers◊ Grey’s Anatomy (N) (TV14) (cc) (8:01) Scandal “Extinction” (N) The Catch An assassin hunts a new Eyewitness News (10:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (N) (11:37) Night(TV14) (cc) client. (N) (TV14) (cc) at 10pm (TV14) (cc) line (cc)◊ Two and a Half Two and a Half Last Man Stand- Last Man Stand- WGN News at Nine (N) (Live) (cc) WGN News at Ten Friends (TVPG) Friends (TVPG) The Middle Men (TVPG) Men (TVPG) ing (cc) ing (cc) (N) (cc) (cc) (cc) (TVPG) (cc) Chicago Tonight Patsy Cline: American Masters The life and legacy of Encore Programming Pledge specials. Encore Programming Pledge specials. Patsy Cline. (TVG) (cc) ABC7 Eyewitness News on WCIU, How I Met Your How I Met Your 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls Seinfeld (TVPG) Seinfeld (TVPG) Rules of Engage- Rules of EngageThe U (N) Mother (TV14) Mother (TV14) (TV14) (cc) (TV14) (cc) (cc) (cc) ment (cc) ment (cc) MasterChef (N) (TVPG) (cc) (8:01) Kicking & Screaming (N) Fox Chicago News at Nine (N) Modern Family The Big Bang TMZ (TVPG) (cc) Dish Nation (TV14) (cc) (TVPG) (cc) Theory (TVPG) (TVPG) (cc) Praise Max Lucado hosts; Chris Joseph Prince Brian Houston at Joel Osteen Christine Caine Praise Max Lucado hosts; Chris Max Lucado: You Can Hear Tomlin. (N) (TVG) (cc) (TVG) (cc) Hillsong TV (TVPG) (cc) (TVG) (cc) Tomlin. (TVG) (cc) Grace (TVG) God’s Voice Blue Bloods (TV14) (cc) Blue Bloods Jamie’s behavior is Blue Bloods A police officer disap- Blue Bloods “Help Me Help You” Blue Bloods “Friends in Need” questioned. (TV14) (cc) pears. (TV14) (cc) (TVPG) (cc) (TV14) (cc) La Fan (N) (TV14) (ss) La Doña (N) (TV14) (ss) El Chema (N) (TV14) (ss) Telemundo Titulares y Más La Doña (N) (TV14) (ss) (ss) The Vampire Diaries “I Was Feeling (8:01) The Vampire Diaries “For- Bones Human remains are found by Bones Block party. (TV14) (cc) The Simpsons Anger ManageEpic” (TV14) (cc) ever Yours” (TV14) (cc) a railroad. (TV14) (cc) (TVPG) (cc) ment (TV14) Moisés y los diez mandamientos Mujeres de negro Blue Demon Noticias UniNoticiero UniLaura (TV14) visión 66 visión: Edic Paid Program Food for Your Joyce Meyer Life Today With International Know the Cause Paid Program Sex Please (TVG) Paid Program Paid Program Soul James Robison Fellowship (TVPG) Pequeños Gigantes USA (N) Vino el Amor (N) (TV14) La Piloto (N) Noticias UniNoticiero UniContacto Deportivo (N) visión 66 visión: Edic

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

7:30 p.m. on _ WLS NBA Basketball Hollyinjuries passed roadlike test. SheLove, has Despite to her players Kevin a license to drive! NoCleveland thanks toCavaher LeBron James and the liers continue to keep a firm grip on their brother and me, though. lead“Mom, in the NBA’s Eastern take my car toConference pick her up, standings. Tonight for a and tell her yoursthey (thehead one west she planned matchup with the Los Angeles Clippers to use forsuffered her road test) is share in theofshop,” who have their own Noah as I grabbed myPeirce purseand on injuriessaid, including to both Paul my to The get her aftertoo school. Chrisway Paul. Clippers are holding their“No, ownno in the West. Getting healthy will need to inject extra anxiety be paramount for both teams down the at into her big day,” I replied, winking stretch.

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Best Bets A daughter’s

Pally) after she discovers he may not be the great inventor he claimed to be back in 1776. A miffed Dan thereupon takes desperate measures to retaliate in the new episode “The Boyfriend Experience.” Dr. Cobell (guest star Ben Vereen) keeps a close eye on his protege Chris (Yasdream,” then sir Lester)Noah as thesaid, latterand works to profinally achieveto tenure at the university. ceeded recount some wackyJohn dream Gemberling and Neilabout Caseyusalso appear. he’d recently had picking 8 p.m. on ^ WBBM up ginormous armfuls of mints. We laughed ourMadam heads Secretary off. Our silliness Elizabeth’s Leoni) decision to meet was Holly’s(Tea nightmare, though, one with an ailing Dalaiwe Lama offends that began when were askedChinese to leaders, threatening landmark climate produce carthan insurance card ainfew treaty withour more 200 countries the minutes earlier. Seems theElsewhere, one in my new episode “Swept Away.” Henry (Tim Daly) worries thebeen safety wallet had expired. Theabout one I’d of an undercover operative, mailed a few weeks beforewhile was Abby on my (guest star Stephanie J. Block) serves Jay desk at home. You know, in a pile. Of (Sebastian Arcellus) a custody agreement stuff! So.daughter. But all was not lost! Justand a for their Sarita Choudhury few earlier I’d called Jan days Maxwell also guest star. my insurance agent8 and her to conjure a p.m.asked on % WMAQ quote. You know, theJustice holy-smokes-IChicago now-have-two-teenagers-on-my-car-inNagel and Antonio (Joelle Carter, Jon Seda) discover during their investigasurance-policy! quote. Yeah, that one. tion“Give that ame man found savagely stabbed the damages, Bobbi,” I’d to death his did home former Navy said, andinshe —was andaemailed me a SEAL who was working on a book that copy of our whicha I’d exposed the current shockingcards, truth behind printed and placed glove top-secret mission in in theour newcar’s episode “Friendly Fire.” Stone’s (Philip Winchester) box. GOOD THING. determination to uncover Among other things and thatreveal were the true story is stymied when the Department different from three years before, of Justice intervenes, insisting that the inwhen we is made the same to formation classified. Carl pilgrimage Weathers and the DMV for thealso same rite of passage? Monica Barbaroi star. My girl declined to drive off on some 8 p.m. on @ WFLD random quest Family the dayGuy she got her Having had his fill of the healthy food Lois (voice of Alex Bornstein) “forces” him and the kids to eat, Peter (voice of Seth MacFarlane) takes typically overblown Second Ave.,toSt.correct Charles.the It’s the SCAC’s fifth annual measures situation by opening his own Needless from to say, student show,food whichtruck. drew applications 89 the menu exclusively of fattyMexico artists fromconsists the Chicago area, Pennsylvania, foods in theIt new Fat and France. is openepisode from noon“Saturated to 5 p.m. Thursday Guy.” Elsewhere, over Chris’ (voice of and Sunday, and noon to 6 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Seth Green) warnings, Meg (voice of Mila To learnjoins more,avisit stcharlesartscouncil.org. Kunis) roller derby team. “SWEENEY TODD: BARBER OF FLEET 8:30 THE p.m.DEMON on @ WFLD STREET”: The Through March 19, Paramount Last Man on EarthTheatre, 23 E. Galena Blvd.,answers Aurora. ThetoSondheim musical is Hoping to find Melissa’s (Janudescribed a Victorian-era, comedy ary Jones)asillness, Toddpitch-black and Tandy (Melfilled Rodriguez, Will Forte) some in-depth with thrills and terrors (rateddoPG-13). Tickets cost $44 research into what Melissa’s life was like to $59 at ParamountAurora.com and 630-896-6666.


Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| KANE WEEKEND

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Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

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* Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| KANE WEEKEND

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Pets can be allergic to tobacco smoke Dr. Wallace: Both of my parents smoke and so does my grandmother, and they smoke in our house. Whenever they light up, I go outside and whenever I can, I take my cat with me. I also have a pet canary, but it stays in the house. Does secondhand smoke hurt pets? My grandmother says no. – Karen, Monmouth, Illinois Karen: Pets are extremely vulnerable to secondhand tobacco smoke and may suffer from a runny nose, throat irritations and sneezing. There is a chance that even a normal, healthy pet can become allergic to cigarette smoke, increasing its chances of getting lung cancer. Caged pets such as hamsters and birds are especially prone to respiratory trouble. Whenever possible, open the windows to ventilate your house so your pets can get plenty of fresh, smoke-free air. Dr. Wallace: I just finished reading a letter from Cindy in Indiana. Her parents were divorced and she was living with her mother and never had contact with her father. Her mother told her not to contact him because she thought it was his job to make contact with her. I’d like to share my own experience in the same situation with your teen readers and I hope they will benefit from it. When I was only one year old my parents got a divorce. My father stayed in contact with me regularly until I was 8 when his visits became less frequent. He eventually stopped calling and coming to see me entirely. I felt that since he was my father that it was his responsibility to keep in touch with me. My mother never discouraged me from calling or writing to him, but she never really suggested it either. I’m 16 now and I haven’t seen him since I was 12. My advice

JUMBLE

’TWEEN 12 & 20 Robert Wallace to Cindy is to go ahead and contact your father immediately by letter or by phone! And when you reach him, tell him that you love him and miss him. I do have a wonderful stepfather, but sometimes I miss my real father and I can’t help but think that if I had made a little more effort my father and I would have been closer. My father missed my first leading role in my school play, teaching me to drive and get my driver’s license, and most of all, he missed out on knowing a pretty great daughter. My stepfather is wonderful and I love him very much, but I still wonder about the man who should be very close to me, but is only a stranger today. –

Laurie, Dallas, Texas Laurie: Thanks for sharing your

high marks in the areas of reliability, trust, honesty, morality, attitude and common sense. Some teens possess the maturity to date at age 14, while others don’t, even at 17. Most teens, however, begin dating at 15 or 16. Dating plays a very important role in a teen’s social maturation. Parents should meet their teen’s date beforehand and discuss the particulars: Where will you be going? How will you get there? What time will you be home? Teens who resist this, indicate that they lack the maturity to date. Dr. Wallace: I’m 15 and a wellliked, well-rounded student. It so happens that I’m average when it comes to grades. I have to work hard to maintain a B average. Both of my parents are college graduates and practice law. Both of them, at times, have commented on my “lack of intelligence.” About a month ago, my mom made the statement that I’d never become an attorney because I don’t have the necessary smarts. This really hurt me. Why can’t my parents accept me just the way I am? I’m doing my best. Both parents were honor students in high school and college and they don’t understand why I am not. – Name-

experience with our teen readers. Your advice is excellent. Much too often we allow pride or some other silly hang-up to keep us from renewing friendships or being close to loved ones. The one bearing the olive branch shows strength, not weakness! Dr. Wallace: I’m 15 and want to start dating, but my mom feels I should wait until I’m 17. I think 17 is out of the question. I’ll be an old maid by that time. All of my girlfriends are dating and many are going steady. I’m the fish out of water and I don’t enjoy it one bit. What age do you think a teen should start dating? Mom said that if you answer my questions, she would take what you say into consideration. – Madison, Portland,

conference with your counselor to be told that you are working up to your ability and that they should be very proud of your academic achievements. As an employer, I’d much rather have the B student who works up to his ability than the gifted A student who doesn’t have to break a sweat to get top grades and never pushes himself. Make sure your parents read my response to your letter.

their teens to date when they rate

Write to Dr. Wallace at rwallace@thegreatestgift.com.

Maine. Madison: Parents should allow

less, Springfield, Illinois Nameless: Your parents need a

Dad’s dumpster-diving causes family concern Dear Abby: I DEAR ABBY have an issue with my father Jeanne and don’t know Phillips where to turn. Dad is in his early 80s and – aside from poor eyesight – he’s in good health. I’m concerned because he has developed an unusual habit. He likes to look through the dumpsters behind the grocery store. Initially he told me it was to get old produce for compost in his garden. But I have learned that he eats some of the things he finds. I have tried telling him this is dangerous. He could cut himself digging through the trash or get food poisoning. He refuses to listen and insists that what he is doing is safe. (He is NOT forced to do this out of economic necessity. He has enough money to buy groceries.) The situation has become critical because he is now planning to cook something he found in the dumpster for a family gathering. I told him not to do it. If he does prepare food from the trash, I told him he must let people know where it came from, so they can make an informed decision about whether to eat it. Abby, please help. – Grossed Out Dear Grossed Out: If you can’t convince your father to disclose to relatives that the food he’s serving may have come from a dumpster, YOU should alert them to that possibility. Dear Abby: My 9-year-old daughter has several friends whom we love and who are good buddies for her. However, the rules in their homes are different from those at ours. One friend in particular, “Sarah,” eats a lot of junk food and watches more TV than we allow. When my daughter asks why she can’t have chips and ice cream after school, or why we watch movies only on weekends, I remind her that good food and exercise make her healthy, and with less TV she does better in school. I’m not interested in critiquing Sarah or her family, who are lovely people we really like. However, I do want to make the connection between unhealthy lifestyle choices and possible consequences because this is a subject we’ll keep revisiting as my daughter grows up. I have been trying to say things like, “Everyone makes their own decisions. This is why we do it this way,” but at 9, my daughter sees things as pretty black or white. If our way is right, then their way must be wrong. I’m totally failing at subtlety. Is there a better approach that I could take to talking about this without invoking comparisons? – Lifestyle Choices in South Dakota Dear Lifestyle Choices: Do not attempt to de-

bate this with your 9-year-old. If your daughter argues with you about your parenting style, tell her that different families have different standards and that you are doing what you think is right for yours. Period. If she needs more of an explanation, then fall back on the message you have been sending her, and in time she will understand.

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


ASK THE DOCTORS / ELIZABETH KO AND EVE GLAZIER Insoluble fiber, meanwhile, has an equally important job. Not only do the texture and “chew” that insoluble fiber adds to food make a meal more interesting, it travels relatively unchanged through the digestive tract and gives much-needed bulk to stool. This results in easier and more regular elimination. Insoluble fiber also helps to control the pH of the colon, and helps to prevent microbes from producing cancerous substances. How much fiber do you need? Current recommendations put the number at 25 grams a day for women younger than 50, and 38 grams a day for men younger than 50. For adults older than 50, the number is 21 grams a day for women, and 30 grams a day for men. Although all kinds of fiber supplements are available, they lack vitamins, minerals and micronutrients, so it’s better to eat whole foods. Most fruits, vegetables, beans, legumes and grains contain both soluble and insoluble fiber, but in differing amounts. For the best results, eat from a wide range of foods. If fiber has been missing from your diet, it’s wise to add it slowly. Make the change to a high-fiber diet too quickly and you run the risk of unpleasant side effects, such as gas. And be sure to drink plenty of liquid to keep the fiber – and your digestive tract – moving smoothly.

Eve Glazier, M.D., MBA, is an internist and assistant professor of medicine at UCLA Health. Elizabeth Ko, M.D., is an internist and primary care physician at UCLA Health.

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

PUZZLE SOLUTION

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com *

Dear Doctor: Our family went out to dinner the other night, and when I urged our kids to order a salad instead of french fries because of the dietary fiber in salads, they challenged me to explain why. I was embarrassed that all I could come up with about the benefits of fiber was “because it’s good for you.” Can you help? Dear Reader: Don’t feel bad! With your brief answer, you got right to the heart of the matter – dietary fiber is integral to a well-balanced diet and to a healthy life. It lowers your risk of heart disease, diabetes and certain cancers, prevents constipation, stabilizes blood sugar and can help you maintain a healthy weight. But kids are often natural skeptics when it comes to any kind of rules, so we’re happy to help you out with the science of why dietary fiber matters. Let’s start with what we’re referring to when we talk about fiber. Dietary fiber is the part of the fruit, vegetable or grain that your body cannot digest and absorb. It falls into two basic categories. Fiber that can dissolve in water is known as soluble fiber. Fiber that cannot dissolve in water, and which passes through the body pretty much intact, is known as insoluble fiber. Each type of fiber offers a specific health benefit. Soluble fiber dissolves in water to form a kind of gel matrix, which puts the brakes on the entire digestive process. The presence of soluble fiber slows the absorption of sugars, which stabilizes blood glucose levels. It binds cholesterol so that instead of being absorbed by the body, cholesterol is excreted. And because the stomach takes longer to empty when soluble fiber is present, you wind up feeling fuller for longer.

PUZZLE ANSWERS

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KANE WEEKEND |

Fiber integral part of healthy diet

CROSSWORD


Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

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March 16, 2017

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LEFT: Adrian Higgins’ Diane witch hazel shows after the old leaves were removed.

The Washington Post The mild winter – following the deep freezes of December – has been a boon to other plants as well, particularly the shrubs and small trees that bloom in winter, as the weather allows. One of the showiest is the winter jasmine, with its bright yellow blooms atop mounded stems. Another is the leatherleaf mahonia, a formidable hollylike shrub whose prickly foliage is leavened by sprays of golden blossoms, small and cupped and fragrant. Despite its name, the autumn-flowering cherry tree trudges through the winter, progressively but cautiously offering its pink blossoms to a cold world. Instead of being cheered by this bravura, many folks think this is the cherry blossom of early April and the sky must be falling. Maybe it is – last year was the hottest on record – but the temperature swings of winter in these parts have always seemed to define the season for me. What we are witnessing are the natural cycles of these plants, nudged along by the balminess and then checked by the returning chill. The best a gardener can hope for is that the warmth didn’t induce too much tender growth and that weather stays cold long enough to keep buds protected until it’s safe for them to open. This is the season for pruning shrubs and small trees, when they are dormant and the absence of leaves gives a clear view of what needs to be done. Fine pruning is like grooming a show dog – it makes for a fine beast – though it is done for the benefit of the plant, not the viewer. If you prune to make a woody plant conform to an idea of shape or structure, rather than help its biological needs, the results can be disastrous. In a month or so, “landscapers” will be going around dismembering crape myrtles, for payment. Competent pruning, on the other hand, lifts both the shrub (or small tree) and the spirits of the gardener. The more neglected a specimen, the more it can be improved, though the rule of thumb is not to remove more than one-third of its mass annually for fear of traumatizing the plant. This means taking the long view.

Adrian Higgins / The Washington Post

When I see an old, neglected and congested weeping Japanese maple, I know I could spend hours, days, bringing back its sculptural qualities but incrementally over several winters. There are exceptions to this conservative approach. Every two or three years, I cut back hard – but not quite to the ground, as you want some top growth remaining – my stand of winter jasmine. I know its well-established root system will produce new growth in the spring, even if it looks ragged for a few weeks. Do this in March, after final flowering, but check first to see that birds haven’t built nests. I would give the same treatment to forsythia, a shrub with little garden value but useful for forcing indoors in late winter. January’s warm spell encouraged me to tackle a shrub I’ve been meaning to clean up for the past two years; actually, it’s not just a shrub but a stand of bottlebrush buckeye, which has the distinctive leaves, candelabra blooms and chestnutlike fruit of buckeye tree species but is a large suckering shrub. I planted three sticks

20 years ago, and they now provide a valuable and handsome screen, 12 feet high and 25 feet across. The goal in pruning a shrub like this is to achieve a chalice-shaped plant with an open interior to let in air and light. First, I remove branches that are rubbing. The art to this is in imagining what the shrub would look like with either of the two candidates gone. Keep the one that enhances the overall shape. Next you take out inward-growing branches. On a suckering shrub, you want to prune at least half the erupting suckers but leave the rest as a way of revitalizing the plant. The key to winter pruning is to take your time and be conservative. If you’re not sure you’ve removed enough, come back to it the next day or next weekend with fresh eyes. I give extra attention to any young tree planted in the past three years. This is the time to establish a framework of branches that grow outward, don’t unduly shade other branches and keep the plant looking handsome. Do yourself a favor and buy a new, sharp pruning saw; it will halve the

amount of effort. Now is the time too to prune back the roses, whose little, red buds are close to bursting into life. Leave five or so canes, trimmed to about 18 inches. The same principles apply: Get there by removing stems that are diseased, weak, growing inward or rubbing. Today’s landscape roses don’t need the pruning finesse of hybrid teas. Long-handled lopping shears will work and have the added value of keeping your body away from the thorns. But don’t forget the sturdy gloves. My Diane witch hazel has a habit of retaining its dead leaves, which veil the now fully extended red blooms. Removing the leaves is a perfect “side job” while you’re out pruning stuff. Some leaves will yield to a measured pull; more stubborn ones must be cut off with the pruners. This takes care to avoid slicing through the blossoms. The other thing the winter pruner has to watch is the placement of feet. Stay away from the shoots of spring bulbs now that they have begun their march to glory.

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com KCG

By ADRIAN HIGGINS

REAL ESTATE |

It’s time for pruning – but beware of overdoing it

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KCG Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| REAL ESTATE

56

Photo provided by Laura Umansky

Interior designer Laura Umansky painted a gray rectangle on the wall of this Houston loft to soften the scale of the high ceiling and to make the room cozier.

The key to urban industrial: Personal touches By MEGAN BUERGER Special to The Washington Post Is there anything more stylish than living in a loft? It’s a chic little word, conjuring images of brick walls, sleek concrete floors and expensive views. If you’ve seen a romantic comedy in the past 10 years, the dreamboat always lives in a loft. Warehouse living has been chic since the 1970s, when an urban boom priced many Americans out of city centers and sent them in search of cheaper rents in grittier neighborhoods. And over the past decade, this look, called urban industrial, has come back in a big way. In fact, it’s so popular that it’s the chief inspiration behind mass retailers such as Restoration Hardware and Crate & Barrel. A visit to both stores’ websites finds homes with open-floor plans, exposed pipes, concrete floors and steel finishes, all signatures of the industrial aesthetic. Of course, outfitting a warehouse

with items from a chain store can feel like cheating; found objects are a better match for the building’s heritage. But you don’t need to go antiquing to do the space justice. The right mix of old and new furnishings can still make you feel as though you’re living in a part of history. “It’s about balance,” said Christopher Ritchie, a designer and furniture maker in Frederick, Md., who cut his teeth designing for Restoration Hardware and Starbucks. He now owns his own com-

Resin Ram Head skull on Metal Stand costs $88 at target.com. Peppering in playful accessories with nods to nature can warm up an industrial space. Photo provided by Target

pany, called Industrial Home. “The best way to achieve that is by adding in personal details like photos and collectibles to make it feel authentic. If you have that, the big stuff – raw wood dining tables, leather sofas – can be from anywhere. In that sense, it’s easy.” Another catch about industrial design is that even though it looks stark and cold thanks to concrete floors and aluminum pipes, a well-designed warehouse is warm and comfortable, he said. “People drool

over these spaces on Pinterest and get fixated on the catalog version of a loft, but the trick is to make it feel cozy.” To do this, start by decluttering so you can focus on your favorite furniture pieces, and try to focus on items that are both neutral and necessary. Then, cluster them to create an intimate and defined dining area, living area, entrance and so on. “Layering is key,” Ritchie said. “If you have light floors like wood or concrete, put a dark rug on top, then a light sofa, dark pillows, and go light, dark, light, dark and so on. Be sure to add in traditional accents along the way to keep it from looking like a factory or a dungeon.” Laura Umansky, an interior designer who owns a firm with offices in Aspen, Colo., and Houston, said she gets tons of requests to incorporate industrial elements into residential projects. Her biggest tip for making a loft look inviting is to ignore the ceiling height.


Photo provided by Chris Ritchie/ Industrial Home

Table Lamp, $99, westelm.com), or a group of two or three simple, matching chandeliers above the dining room table (try an aluminum shade with the Brunswick Pendant Light, $44 each, or the Industrial Rust Steel Pendant in black for a bolder look, $207 each, both at dotandbo. com). From there, pepper in playful accessories with nods to nature, such as the Lind Cowhide Round Ottoman ($429, roomandboard.com) and a resin ram skull for a tabletop ($88, target.com). More straightforward pieces, such as a metal-and-wood oversize floor mirror ($429, westelm. com), help to brighten up a living room and drive home the warehouse feeling. Above all, remember that for industrial spaces, authenticity is the name of the game. Try to weave in personal accents, such as wall art that depicts the town where you spent summers as a kid, or a colorful fleece day bed for the family dog. “A loft needs signs of human life to feel homey,” Ritchie said. “Otherwise, it’s just a warehouse.”

Industrial Design options Some places to find industrial design: ■ Industrial Home: indus-

trialhome.com ■ GoodWood:

goodwooddc. com ■ Trohv: trohvshop. com ■ Housewerks: housewerks salvage. com ■ Factory20: factory20.com These stores have large industrial selections online but are not exclusively industrial: ■ Three Potato Four: threepotatofour. com RIGHT: Carlisle Metal Dining Chairs cost $100 for two at target.com. Photo provided by Target

■ City Foundry: cityfoundry.com ■ First of a Kind: firstofakind.com ■ Dot & Bo: dotandbo.com

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com KCG

An urban industrial space, with Industrial Home’s Brooks chair at right, $1,525 at industrialhome.com; although industrial design looks stark and cold, it can be made warm and cozy with a good design.

REAL ESTATE |

“Converted warehouses tend to have super high ceilings, but that doesn’t mean you have to fill that volume,” she said. “Bring the room down to human scale by dropping the light fixtures lower to the dining table and hanging the art at the same height you would in a room with a 9-foot ceiling. For one loft project in Houston, we even painted a warm gray rectangle box on the walls so that it brings your eyes down to the TV and shelves. If the whole wall had been that color, the pieces would have gotten lost.” Paint, of course, depends on lighting. Most people’s instincts tell them to go gray in a loft space, but remember that gray requires tons of light to look moody and elegant. Consider instead a silvery white or cream, such as Sherwin-Williams’s Misty. If you want to experiment with the industrial look but don’t know where to begin, Umansky recommends trying a statement light, such as a large floor lamp (Rayne Floor Lamp, $799, roomandboard.com), brass and metal table lamps (Industrial Task

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Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

58

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The Washington Post You might see the first day of spring as the moment the magnolia blossoms open amid a newly arrived field of crocuses, but our garden plants take a different view. For them, spring isn’t a season but the confluence of phenomena that trigger growth. Some of the responses have little to do with spring – the daffodil has been growing roots since September, the grape hyacinth of early April sprouted its leaves six months before, the plump terminal bud of the rhododendron has been ages in the making. Buds break into growth based on whether the parent shrub or tree has received enough of its winter chilling hours along with sufficiently warm temperatures. Because the chilling needs differ by species, spring is a progression of awakenings over several weeks. Already, some plants have met this threshold and, with mild temperatures, are doing their thing. So what may look like the depth of winter is actually a moment that is fast slipping from our grasp. For those of us who like winter as a period of rest and stillness, I offer this advice: Put down the garden fork for a while, stow the wheelbarrow and just wander about the garden to perceive those precious February moments. The landscape skews either very large or small in winter. On the macro level, you can see the grand silhouettes of distant old trees, especially when their tracery is revealed before the season’s pale yellow skies. At the other end of the scale, you strain to discern the lengthening of the emerging bulbs one day to the next. Missing is the great middle ground of the garden, the human-scale spaces that are filled after May with small shrubs, ferns, perennials and grasses. Those beds look deceptively lifeless. Incidentally, this is the only time

ABOVE: The cotoneaster Scarlet Leader has glossy green leaves that turn purple-red in the winter. LEFT: The giant snowdrop has been blooming freely during the mild mid-Atlantic winter. Photos by Adrian Higgins / The Washington Post

you should see large areas of mulch, preferably chopped leaves. By early spring, the leaves will be half-rotted and ready to be scratched into perennial beds or dug under annual or vegetable beds before planting. Between midMay and Halloween, these spaces should be filled with plants. If they’re not, consider more perennials, ground covers, zinnias, lilies, salvias, dahlias – whatever will work in these voids. Late winter is the perfect period to think about what you might plant this spring while you take in the winter garden.

Having fully surveyed my own garden for its hibernal highlights, I dropped by Green Spring Gardens near Alexandria, Va., knowing that I would find, at the least, some interesting witch hazels in bloom. One of the showiest is an intermediate variety named Harry, a big shrub with big flowers: The orange-yellow, threadlike petals are at least an inch long, and the established plant here is 10 feet tall and 15 feet across. This may be too big for a small garden, but a real asset if you have the space. If you don’t have the space, you might consider

the winsome Luna, which at Green Spring occupies a smaller corner and seems more compact and densely flowered. In the rock garden, where the heath variety Kramer’s Red is in full red-purple flower, subtler beauty could be found in the way the red-fruited cotoneaster Scarlet Leader veils a stone with its glossy attractive leaves, green in summer but now a red purple. Cotoneaster is a tricky shrub to grow in these parts, so finding a healthy variety has added value. Clearly, the attention to good drainage is key to survivability. Elsewhere, I found a price-

less winter vignette: a colony of giant snowdrops at the flared base of an old, white-speckled sycamore tree. The tree connotes great age but, less obviously, a drift of snowdrops can represent decades of quiet, expansive self-seeding. The mildness of this mid-Atlantic winter and absence of snow have made it a banner year for snowdrops. Their precociousness and sheer delicacy grow on you, and while I have yet to come down with the fever for pricey cultivars (a malady known as galanthomania), there’s still time. I prefer spending $100 on expanding a drift of snowdrops rather than on one or two novel cultivars with yellow markings. You may read that snowdrops should be planted, or moved, only “in the green,” that is, after flowering but while still in leaf and root. I’ve found if you order bulbs early in the fall and get them in the ground as soon as they arrive, they don’t miss a beat. In another part of Green Spring, clumps of giant snowdrop are so long flowering this winter at the base of conifers (I can’t tell if they’re bald cypress or dawn redwoods) that some of them are beginning their natural decline. Descend to the woodland stream in this park and you see more of the native hardwood topography of winter, where river birches lean out and the understory of shrubs is reduced to a haze of twigs above a coffee-colored sea of fallen leaves. The American beech tree is a beacon of bright, smooth gray column, but here, as in every urban park, each tree is marred by lovers with their knives. One tree is so defaced by declarations of affection that it looks like a sailor that has had too much shore leave. Hal Loves Nancy, we are told. Hal doesn’t love trees; this one must bear his gesture for the rest of its long life. One can only hope that Nancy came to her senses and ran off with a tree-hugger.

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com KCG

By ADRIAN HIGGINS

REAL ESTATE |

Savor the stillness of winter before all heaven breaks loose

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Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

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CALL BANKRATE.COM @ 800-509-4636 Legend: The rate and annual percentage rate (APR) are effective as of 3/13/17. © 2017 Bankrate, LLC. http://www.interest.com. The APR may increase after consummation and may vary. Payments do not include amounts for taxes and insurance. The fees set forth for each advertisement above may be charged to open the plan (A) Mortgage Banker, (B) Mortgage Broker, (C) Bank, (D) S & L, (E) Credit Union, (BA) indicates Licensed Mortgage Banker, NYS Banking Dept., (BR) indicates Registered Mortgage Broker, NYS Banking Dept., (loans arranged through third parties). “Call for Rates” means actual rates were not available at press time. All rates are quoted on a minimum FICO score of 740. Illinois Mortgage Licensee. Conventional loans are based on loan amounts of $165,000. Jumbo loans are based on loan amounts of $424,101. Points quoted include discount and/or origination. Lock Days: 30-60. Annual percentage rates (APRs) are based on fully indexed rates for adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs). The APR on your specific loan may differ from the sample used. Fees reflect charges relative to the APR. If your down payment is less than 20% of the home’s value, you will be subject to private mortgage insurance, or PMI. FHA Mortgages include both UFMIP and MIP fees based on a loan amount of $165,000 with 5% down payment. VA Mortgages include funding fees based on a loan amount of $165,000 with 5% down payment. Bankrate, LLC. does not guarantee the accuracy of the information appearing above or the availability of rates and fees in this table. All rates, fees and other information are subject to change without notice. Bankrate, LLC. does not own any financial institutions. Some or all of the companies appearing in this table pay a fee to appear in this table. If you are seeking a mortgage in excess of $424,100, recent legislation may enable lenders in certain locations to provide rates that are different from those shown in the table above. Sample Repayment Terms – ex. 360 monthly payments of $5.29 per $1,000 borrowed ex. 180 monthly payments of $7.56 per $1,000 borrowed. We recommend that you contact your lender directly to determine what rates may be available to you. To appear in this table, call 800-509-4636. To report any inaccuracies, call 888-509-4636. • http://nwherald.interest.com

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on a 1 acre lot backing to acres of preserved land!! All of the baths have been renovated w/the finest materials! Spacious kitch w/SS appls opens to 4 season sunrm w/priceless year round views!! Dramatic vaulted fam rm,den w/blt-ins… Living & dining rms w/bay windows!! Master bdrm w/ luxury bath… 9 ft ceils, expansive multi-level decks, upgraded flooring & fixtures - this home is in perfect condition in a popular neighborhood.

Better than new ranch w/open floor plan, 10 ft ceils, deep pour bsmt! Super granite kitch w/SS appls - enjoy the water views from your dinette! Huge great rm, screened porch… Mbdrm in separate wing, bdrm 2 w/full bth, den… Enjoy community pool, tennis, clubhouse & more!!

home w/6,500 sq ft of living space!! 10 ft ceilings on entire 1st floor, amazing architectural details… One of a kind granite dream kitch w/commercial grade SS appls… Huge fam rm w/stone fp… Incredible walk-out bsmt w/brick archways & rec areas… Upper & lower pergola patios… Private wooded lot!!

4/10 acre lot!! Exquisite trim & moldings throughout, wide arched openings, Brazilian Cherry hwds on entire 1st floor… Chef’s kitchen w/granite & Viking commercial grade appls, vaulted dinette opens to outdoor kitchen!! Mbdrm suite w/fp, all bdrms w/volume ceils& wics… Quality finished bsmt w/richly paneled theatre rm, wine rm, rec rm & full bath… Exceptional home!!


By LINDSEY M. ROBERTS

The Parker Green Duvet’s preppy white stripes are a fun touch at pineconehill.com.

Special to The Washington Post

Photo provided by Pine Cone Hill

Kristian Krebs / Ikea

Ikea’s Fargrik 18-piece dinnerware set brings the timeless hue to your kitchen table for $25.

green just as they never tire of a view of trees. Ikea’s Fargrik 18-piece dinnerware set brings the timeless hue to your kitchen table ($25, ikea.com). • As Eiseman traveled the world to collect data for this year’s color, she took note of people wanting a healthy diet, cooking with more herbs and embracing the green-tea powder called matcha, the color of which matches Greenery almost exactly. Sip your own green tea from the color-matching Pome Mug ($14, anthropologie.com). • “Greenery is also great to use as accents in rugs and throw pillows in an otherwise neutral room,” Weitzner says. “They add uplifting energy and can elevate the mood – without creating too much intensity.” The Antibes Throw pairs the color with orange, aqua, ivory

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Batavia

450 Cleveland Ave: Sold on or before 021617 by Saleeem Mohammed to Victor Carlos 1705 Hubbard Ave: Sold on or before 020317 Barbriea Castillo; $115,000 by Prairie Properties Equity Seri to Mif Fox Valley Center For Indu; $3,637,500 Geneva 206 N Water St 103: Sold on or before 1021 Fargo Blvd: Sold on or before 020917 021617 by David L Prudden to Barbara S by Intercounty Judicial Sales Co to Dawn Hermann; $325,000 Zauner; $349,000 274 Landfield Rd: Sold on or before 020317 by Gibbons Trust to Kris E Smrekar & Debo- 1549 Kirkwood Dr: Sold on or before 020317 by Pavlik Trust to Samir Youssef & Conrah Altmann; $309,500 stance Copeland; $244,000 38W306 Glenwood Dr: Sold on or before 020917 by S Steve Carr Builders & Develope to 39W313 W Mallory Dr: Sold on or before 020317 by Carol J Magnotta to Kichang Sidney Schroeder & Sara Schroeder; $230,000 428 Madison St: Sold on or before 020217 by Curry Trust to Casey Macko; $152,500 See TRANSFERS, page 62

printed fabric. No lovelorn hand-medown in your house? You can also buy that accent chair new. We like the overscale floral on the Frankie Cream & Green Armchair. ($450, pier1.com). • “Greenery feels hopeful, happy, new and crisp,” Sanchez said. “Also, it is tying us into nature, which I believe is comforting, calm and yet upbeat, too.” The tassels on the French Tassel Shower Curtain by Serena & Lily emphasize the playfulness of the color ($78, serenaandlily.com). • Weitzner would pair Greenery with other fun colors, such as melon, lavender and sunny yellow, but she’d do it in small doses. “These happy and curious colors are easy to live with in small amounts,” she said. “They are not too sweet nor too and navy ($185, lekkerhome.com). • It’s widespread design wisdom that saturated.” Bold color doesn’t come in a smaller dose than on the hands of the the best place to try out trends is in small accessories. A classic throw or pil- Newgate Cubic Grey and White Alarm low for a sofa will do, but why not go for Table Clock ($40, cb2.com). • Greenery is more of a new-leaf the unexpected pouf? The Hand-Knitgreen, not the deeper green of plants ted Pouf by Chandra mixes green and in summer, Weitzner said. Build cream, making the pattern lively yet on that springy feeling by potting serene ($164, burkedecor.com). houseplants in the Better Homes and • Eiseman said she is seeing more Gardens Bombay Decorative Planter light fixtures in vibrant shades of ($30 for a set of two, walmart.com). green. The ceramic Lauren Table • Weitzner knows designers who Lamp, which has a traditional shape, love plastering a bright green on all reads contemporary in this glossy four walls of a room. That can be too color ($129, ballarddesigns.com). much for a bedroom, though, so try • If you love Greenery but don’t some fresh green bedding instead. The know where to incorporate it in your Parker Green Duvet’s preppy white furnishings, Eiseman recommends taking an old, shabby chair and re-cov- stripes are a fun touch ($194-$262, pineconehill.com). ering it in a solid-green or green-

Open House: March 19th, Noon to 2 p.m. 37W861 McKee St., Batavia Extraordinary Batavia country estate on 2.2 acres featuring a 7 car garage! 5 bedroom home offers 1st-floor master-perfect for inlaws. Lush landscaping and gorgeous patios. Open concept floor plan with many updates offering unlimited possibilities. Country setting yet minutes to Randall Road corridor, Metra & I-88. Text P825757 to 85377 $564,500

Peggy Brown Managing Broker/Owner

630.302.2291

SM-CL0385309

www.sevenoaksrealtyil.com

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

Pantone selected its 2017 Color of the Year, Greenery, based on research that shows everyone just wants a big, deep breath of air. “We don’t all have access to the green forest, but we do have access to things we can bring into our home environment,” said Leatrice Eiseman, executive director of the Pantone Color Institute, which advises companies on color and forecast trends. One way to do that is with this powerful color. When used on an accent wall, kitchen backsplash or throw, it will refresh and energize you. Pair it with warm whites and neutrals for a clean, tranquil vibe, or use a bright white for a fun, contemporary feel. It’s especially nice in kitchens, where it’s natural to want a fresh feeling, but also in entries and hallways, to transition between room colors. “It is a very optimistic color,” said Lori Weitzner, a textile designer in New York and author of “Ode to Color.” “Use it in the right way in your home, and it will keep your spirits high.” • One of the best places to use a bright green, Weitzner said, is in the kitchen. Add plants and herbs, but also consider a green backsplash, an accent wall or even an indoor-outdoor rug. Dash & Albert’s Samode Indoor/ Outdoor Rug pairs a vegetal green called Sprout with a warm ivory – and spills come out with a quick hosedown ($48 to $672, dashandalbert.com). • Play with Greenery in a small way with the Miguel Green Highball Glass ($7, crateandbarrel.com). Depending on how you set the table, the color changes like a chameleon. With bright whites, “it could be terrific and energetic,” Alexandria, Virginia-based interior designer Victoria Sanchez said in an email. It could also counterbalance gray or, when paired with other brights, signal a party atmosphere. • Don’t worry about this color being a mere fad. Our eyes never tire of

61

REAL ESTATE |

Favorite decor in Pantone’s Color of the Year, Greenery


OPEN HOUSE

SUN. 3/19 12-2PM 158 PICASSO, ST. CHARLES

The Luxury of Space in a home that shows like a Model has 5 Spacious Bedrooms 3.1 full baths. Cheerful Kitchen w/Granite counters, Pantry, Center Island, & separate breakfast bar. Breakfast area leads to large deck. Open & inviting family room with French doors that lead to the Heated Sunroom. 2 story Entrance leads to spacious living room open to dining room. Relaxing 1st oor den with French doors, HW oors & built ins. 2 bedrooms share a Jack & Jill bathroom. Master bedroom has 2 large walk in closets & Luxury master bath with walk in shower & double sinks. UnďŹ nished Walk out basement with bathroom rough in. Walk out to a large brick patio and enjoy entertaining in your beautiful landscaped back yard. 2.5 garage with storage area & car charger. Great location near Shopping, Bike paths and Downtown St Charles. SM-CL0384657A

FREDA CIESLICKI ABR, CRS, CIPS, GRI, SFR, RELO SPECIALIST (630) 334-6545 www.fredacieslickirealty.net

Providing Personal Service and Professional Excellence for 31 Successful Years

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Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| REAL ESTATE

62

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Continued from page 61 Yoon & Eun K Yoon; $309,000 563 Linden Ct: Sold on or before 020217 by James M Wangler to Jerome R Marzullo; $358,000

North Aurora

111 April Ln: Sold on or before 021617 by Don L Voss to Melissa Brown; $161,500 12 Juniper Dr: Sold on or before 020917 by 3 Foxes Llc to Nicholas J Fuoco Jr; $242,000 189 Poplar Pl 7: Sold on or before 020917 by Evan Thomas Homes Llc to Hedley Trust; $114,000 205 Briar Ln: Sold on or before 021617 by Sondgrass Trust to Housing Contunuum Inc; $153,000 354 Ridge Rd: Sold on or before 021617 by Jonathon M Schmidt to Andrew Michails & Margaret Michails; $222,000 641 Hammer Ln: Sold on or before 021617 by Michale D Rupert to Robert Fisher & Jennifer Fisher; $330,000 804 Hidden Creek Ln: Sold on or before 020917 by Elizabeth Kral to Erin Bily; $143,000

St. Charles

 ­ Â€ ‚ ƒ„…†ƒ‡ Â? ˆ‰Š‹ŒŽ„ƒ‰ŽŠ„„‘ Â’ Â? ˆŠƒ†Œ …Š„Ž‰‹…‰ Â? ˆŠƒ†Œ „…„Ž‘‡‰‘ “ ” • “

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• TRANSFERS

 Â†Â‹ÂƒÂ… – —  ­ Â€ ‚ ‘ƒƒ˜‹‹ — ™ ™ —

1005 Fox Chase Ln: Sold on or before 021617 by Daniel F Sheedy to Anver A Kanchwala & Shamim A Kanchwala; $445,000 1417 S 7th St: Sold on or before 020317 by Meiborg Trust to Tracy L Wedell; $191,500 205 Fellows St: Sold on or before 020217 by Wanda A Van Hiel Estate to Vohny Moeh-

Sun en Op -3PM 1

st Ju ed t Lis

ling; $230,000 2608 Royal St: Sold on or before 020917 by Kane County Sheriff to Saleem Mohammed; $311,500 4207 Prestwick Ct: Sold on or before 020217 by Pollock Trust to Incs Turus; $372,500 4N354 Derby Ln: Sold on or before 020317 by Lynn Fredericks to Michael Wiseman & Erica Wiseman; $310,000 6N291 Woodland Rd: Sold on or before 020917 by Robert O Boettcher to Brian Bailey; $338,000 6N715 Essex Ave: Sold on or before 021617 by Kerr Trust to Jesse Davila Jr; $177,500 923 Ash St: Sold on or before 021617 by Moehling Trust to Sciortino Trust; $339,000

South Elgin

258 Windsor Ct D: Sold on or before 020317 by Michael J Diehl to Kyle D Brumm; $116,000 269 Windsor Ct D: Sold on or before 020917 by Jason Leppin to Arkadiusz Paszko & Ewa Paszko; $113,000 796 Robertson Rd: Sold on or before 020317 by David J Martin to Kurtis W Mccullum; $125,000 829 Asbury Blvd: Sold on or before 020317 by K Hovnanian At Sagebrook Llc to Nathan David Drake & Charissa Daphne Drake; $488,500 838 Asbury Blvd: Sold on or before 020317 by K Hovnanian At Sagebrook Llc to Blake Loyal Martin & Kerrie Ann Israelson Martin; $404,500 846 Asbury Blvd: Sold on or before 020317 by K Hovnanian At Sagebrook Llc to Antonio Mora Cubells & Elisenda Batlles; $340,000

Sun en Op -3PM 1

Situated by Acres of Nature Preserves

Luxury and Sophistication

Impeccably Finished

Exquisitely elegant with timeless appeal and master craftsmanship set this estate apart.

Magnificent craftsman custom home boasts outstanding quality and architectural design. Attention to detail is evident in every facet of this estate. Featuring an open concept floor plan, extensive millwork, vaulted and wood coffered ceilings thru-out. Dream kitchen, luxury master suite, finished walk-out with wet bar and tremendous outdoor living area. 5N076 PRAIRIE ROSE DRIVE, ST. CHARLES $1,150,000

Flawlessly designed home overflowing with large windows providing warm lighting & unparalleled views! Meticulously maintained to perfection, this residence offers custom trim work throughout, plantation shutters, arched millwork with columns & dual staircases. Breathtaking lot w/expansive views, large deck & in walking distance to high school, park & bike trails! 4150 RIVER VIEW DRIVE, ST. CHARLES $749,900

Hardwood floors, exquisite millwork, built-ins, main floor master & tons of windows for natural lighting & beautiful views. Walk-out lower level is finished with recreation, media & Florida room w/14x7 Exerswim resistance machine. 4N580 PHEASANT RUN DRIVE, ST. CHARLES

$1,125,000

ice Pr uced d Re

Sun en Op -3PM 1

w Ne ing t Lis

Impressive Updates

Enchanting Estate

Stunning Elegance

Exceptional quality and condition! Located off Crane Road in the beautiful and quiet

This freshly remodeled, handsomely-appointed residence is majestically perched on

All of the bells and whistles you could ever imagine! One of the best homes that Fox

a hilltop overlooking 4.29 picturesque acres. This custom home boasts 5 bedrooms,

Mill has to offer situated on a spacious, professionally landscaped lot and endless

Maples subdivision. Grand two story entry. Large living room with fireplace. Dining

4.1 baths, 9’ ceilings on all levels, new hardwood floors thru-out the main floor and a

upgrades on the interior. A stunning, gourmet kitchen, main floor 5th bedroom, luxury

first floor master suite. Finished walk-out lower level, in-ground Gunnite pool and a

master suite, English basement and upgraded trim throughout. Beautifully manicured

additional first floor full bath and half bath. Finished walk out basement with kitchenette.

private, wooded back yard.

exterior with large deck.

37W452 GREY BARN RD , ST. CHARLES

38W229 GROVE HILL CT., BATAVIA

room with crown moulding and wainscoting. First floor in-law suite with full bath, plus an

$575,000

$999,000

40W389 EDGAR LEE MASTER LANE, ST. CHARLES

View These Homes and Many Others at: www.TheMcKayGroup.com

Debora McKay 630-587-4672

2690 E. Main St. • St. Charles Owned and Operated by NRT, Incorporated SM-CL0385106

ABR, Broker, CHMS • Luxury Home Specialist Relocation Specialist • Top 1% of Coldwell Banker

email: Debora@TheMcKayGroup.com

Š2015 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Real estate agents afďŹ liated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage.

$579,900


63 Saint Charles, IL 60175

(630) 377-2336 www.vestuto.com

Over 40 years of experience Call us and talk to a real person... Old fashioned personalized service.

Residential Commercial Multi Family Vacant Land

SUPERIOR SERVICE. LOWER COMMISSIONS. MORE EXPERIENCE. ACT R T N CO ING D N E P NEW LISTING

Great all brick/block building in super condition. Presently used as school and is tax exempt. Building ideal as school, church, converted to offices, day care, or senior center.This building sits on 5 beautiful acres and has easy access with plenty of parking. Good chance school might not be staying with one exception on file. Super price for this approximately 15,500 sq. foot building on 5 Acres. Offered At $1,100,000

OFFICE CONDO

Medical Office / Office space in established and highly regarded Timber Ridge medical facility. Located in the Dean St. medical complex this unit is built out and in great condition for a variety of uses. Easy access from Dean St. 1/2 block west of Randall Road makes this a fantastic location. Unit size approximately 854 sq. ft. Great pricing on this rare unit. Offered at $69,000

FOR SALE/FOR LEASE

NEW LISTING

Nice 3 bedroom home with hardwood floors an full basement. All appliances stay, as well as drapes and blinds. Home features detached garage, aluminum siding, and gas hot water heat. Home needs some work. Priced to sell. Offered at $149,900

ST CHARLES

FOR SALE/ LEASE

Great 4,000 sq. ft. all brick building in super location. Building is in super condition with all upgraded features, including upgraded lighting fixtures, and interior bathroom upgrades. This building can be leased using 4,000 sq. ft. or 2,000 sq.ft. of space with super terms. Plenty of parking on comer lot, with backyard overlooking pond. Call for details. Asking $599,900

ST. CHARLES

VACANT LAND

Great 4.4 acre lot in subdivision of custom homes. Property backs up to 240 acres of open space. Close to Metra station, and only minutes to Elburn shopping, and Randall Road. Area of prestigious homes. Offered at $299,900

VACANT LOTS

Super brick building with many offices inside. Great free standing building next to school. Have a tenant that would occupy building for that investor that wants to buy. This building is in great shape, and includes inside cafeteria with appliances. Would make great medical facility.

Located at the corner of Route 25 and Riverside Drive. Plenty of parking. 1 story, Zoning: Commercial / B-2/ Office. Leasing also available.

1.33 to 2.11 acre lots in prestigious Sunset Views subdivision. Great location: Close to town yet far enough away to enjoy the peaceful country setting. Several lots to choose from.

Offered at $775,000

Offered at $139,900

Starting at $55,000

INDUSTRIAL BUILDING

Super all brick 6,000 sq. ft. building in St. Charles. Features separate utilities with parking in front of building, and plenty parking in the back. Building has 3,000 sq. ft. up, and 3,000 sq. ft. down. Occupy one of the units for your business, and lease the other one out. Great traffic count! Call for more details.

Gross income of over $70,000 on this great 9120 sq. ft. building. Owner has plans where you can put up an additional 10,000 sq. ft. building on this 2.26 acre site. This steel building is in great condition with a fenced in area for outside storage, to bring in additional income. 4 overhead doors with plenty of parking.

Offered at $729,900

Offered at $649,900

HORSE PROPERTY

Two story 4 Bedroom home on 7 Acres. Home needs work, but has great potential for commercial, industrial, across from airport. Great horse property in neighborhood of surrounding horse properties. Features first floor den, an 2 fireplaces. Low taxes for 7 Acres.

LOCATION! LOCATION!

Stunning 5 bdrm, 4 bath home, in Wayne. Hardwood floors throughout. Home features new Viking appliances, finished basement with hardwood floors refrigerator, & dishwasher. 1st floor Bed or study and much more. Quality floor, ceiling, and crown moldings throughout home. Outside yard with many plantings and trees with wide driveway and 4 car garage. This one is a TEN, impeccable home. Offered at $569,900

For the buyer friendly service ... for the seller quick results

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

Vestuto Real Estate Corp.


Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017

| NEWS

64

Stir up some tasty cocktails for your St. Patty’s Day party SPONSORED BY

By Denise Freese Even those who aren’t Irish enjoy celebrating St. Patrick’s Day on March 17th. From wearing green (to avoid getting pinched) to throwing an Irish-themed party, there are many ways to celebrate the Luck O’ the Irish! If you plan to host a St. Patrick’s Day party, be sure to offer your guests some terrific cocktails to complement your Irish feast. Consider the following ideas from mixthatdrink.com. Irish Flag Shooters TheIrishFlagismeanttoresemblethegreen, orange and white stripes in Ireland’s flag, but is miniaturized in a shot glass. Layer 1/3 shot green creme de menthe, 1/3 shot Licor 43, and 1/3 shot Bailey’s Irish Cream. This sweet, refreshing drink will get your guests in the mood to party!

those tasty treats. In a cocktail shaker, add 3/4 ounce green creme de menthe, 3/4 ounce white cremedecacao,and3/4ouncelightcream. Add ice, shake until chilled, and strain into a cocktail glass. Irish Cola If mint isn’t your favorite, try this cross between a coke and a milkshake: in a cocktail shaker, add an ounce of Irish whiskey and an ounce of Bailey’s Irish Cream, shake, and strain into a glass. Add four ounces of cola and enjoy! Irish Coffee A great way to cap off a terrific meal is with an Irish Coffee. There are two variations; start with a cup of hot, strong coffee, and add a shot of Irish whiskey and top with whipped cream. Or for a sweeter version, replace the whiskey with a shot of Bailey’s Irish Cream. Visit The Blue Goose Market in beautiful downtown St. Charles for the ingredients to make the cocktails listed above, and for all your St. Patty’s Day party needs!

Blue Goose Market 300 S. 2nd Street, St. Charles, IL Grasshopper 630-584-0900 If you’ve run out of your Girl Scout Thin Mint www.BlueGooseMarket.com cookies, this will bring back great memories of www.facebook.com/BlueGooseMarket

th l 67 nua An

March 25 & 26, 2017 • Appraisals SUN ONLY – 10 AM-3 PM ($5 per item) • Crystal & China Repair Both Days • Door Prizes • Concessions • Handicap Accessible • Plenty of Parking


65

NEWS |

ANTIQUES AND COLLECTING

BY TERRY AND KIM KOVEL KOVELS.COM Spring brings flowers, and this year designers are using more floral prints than usual for fabrics and designs. But a picture of a plant as a decoration on dinnerware is an old idea going back to at least the 1600s. In 1761, an Encyclopedia of Danish Flowers (Flora Danica) was commissioned by King Frederik V of Denmark. Thousands of hand-colored illustrations from engraved copper plates were made that accurately showed the wild flowers and plants. It was not completed until 1874, but some of the drawings were used to decorate a banquet service in 1790. The first Flora Danica dinner set of 1,802 pieces was made for King Christian VII to give as a gift to Russian Empress Catherine II of Russia. It is said it was to make up for not helping the Russians in the country’s war with Sweden. She died before the set was finished, so it stayed in Denmark. The remaining 1,530 pieces belong to Queen Margethe II and pieces have been used for special occasions. You can still buy new dishes from the Royal Copenhagen factory or old ones at antiques shops and auctions. It is said to be the only 18th-century set that is still being made. Each piece has a single plant pictured as the decoration. Dishes can be ordered with the preferred plant. A Flora Danica platter recently sold for almost $1,000. It was decorated with “Verbascum Thapsiforme Beuspidatum Shad.” We call it a mullein or velvet plant. The tall yellow flowers are used in herbal medicine. Today there are more than 300 varieties of mullein, and more are being propagated to get more flowers, shorter flower stalks and other changes. If you own a Flora Danica piece, be very careful. Even a tiny chip in the notched edge can lower the price by half or more. *** Handbag collecting has surged in popularity since 2010 when the first large auctions were introduced. Today purses by brands, like Hermes, are sold for prices over $100,000. Sales, shows, stores and online retailers are selling used, vintage handbags. Build your collection while prices of undiscovered

brands are low. This report includes Makers information, trademarks, information on fakes, care and 130 color photos for over 75 brands. Plus a free supplement with current prices. Special Report, 8 1/2 x 5 1/2 inches, 46 pp. Available only from Kovels for $19.95 plus $4.95 postage and handling. Order by phone at 800-303-996, online at Kovels.com; or mail to Kovels, Box 22900, Beachwood, OH 44122. *** Q: I have a Cracker Jack AM radio my dad gave me when I was eight years old. It runs on a 9-volt battery. It’s in perfect condition and tunes in clearly. Is it worth anything? A: Cracker Jack was first made in 1896 by Rueckheim & Brother. The company became Rueckheim Bros. & Eckstein in 1902. Prizes were included in the packages beginning in 1912. Cracker Jack radios like this were made in the 1970s in Hong Kong for Just Products, a New York company. They sell for about $25. *** Q: My mother saved “soakies,” the plastic bottle that held shampoo or bubble bath about 25 years ago. They were shaped like bottles with people or animal heads. She bought them to use the soap and thought they would later become popular collectibles, like milk bottles. Where are they being sold? A: Soakies were popular as collectibles for a very short period of time in the late 1990s, and a few rare ones did sell for about $100. But the bottles were free and there still are a few used as packaging. Price is determined by supply and demand. There is a big supply and almost no demand. It is a suggested hobby that often doesn’t attract collectors. Glass milk bottles were not popular with bottle collectors until the rarer earlier bottles became very expensive. Today a colored milk bottle or one with a war slogan or famous dairy name are the only ones selling for more than a few dollars. Collectors also search for the old round cardboard bottle caps, which sell for 25 cents to a few dollars each to go with the bottles. *** Q: When my husband and I were digging for old bottles, we found an interesting old clay pipe bowl, but no stem. The bowl has “Wolfe 98 Tone” on

Kane County Flea Market

This 20th-century Flora Danica porcelain platter is 18 1/2 inches by 14 1/4 inches. It features a tall, yellow mullein flower. The dish is fully marked on the bottom with factory marks and the impressed number 3520. Auction price, $984 in a Skinner Inc. auction in Massachusetts. one side and 6-point star above a harp, clover and “Erin” on the other side. I don’t think it’s worth anything, but I’d like to know something about it. A: The harp is the national symbol of Ireland. The 6-point star represents the six counties of Northern Ireland. Wolfe Tone, whose full name was Theobald Wolfe Tone, was one of the leaders of the Irish rebellion of 1798. He was born in Dublin, Ireland, in 1763 and was one of the founders of the Society of United Irishmen, which sought separation from Britain. Tone went to France to get French troops to support the revolt. The first attempt, made in 1796, failed because of bad weather. The Society planned another rebellion in 1798, but the British found out about it and the leaders were captured. Wolfe Tone and the French forces were defeated before they made land. He was captured and sentenced to death but took his own life in September 1798. You must have dug in an old dump field with broken pipes from the 1800s. A local historical society might be interested in knowing about your experience and the pipe bowls. *** Q: I was given a silver bookmark by my grandmother, who was born in Holland in the early 1890s. It was hers as a child. The bookmark was dagger shape and would slip over the page. It was approximately 2 1/2 to 3 inches long and had a long burgundy tassel. It was stolen from my house. I’m looking

for prices for insurance purposes. A: It’s impossible to give an accurate value for your grandmother’s silver bookmark without seeing it and weighing it. Do you remember if it had a maker’s mark? Was it solid silver or silver plate? Was it heavy? Silver bookmarks sell for $30 to $80 and most of the value is determined by the weight of the silver. *** Tip: Doors from a garage should have inside locks. Get a strong door. We know someone who came home to find a burglar had used an axe to “open” the door. *** Terry Kovel and Kim Kovel answer questions sent to the column. By sending a letter with a question, you give full permission for use in the column or any other Kovel forum. Names, addresses or email addresses will not be published. We cannot guarantee the return of photographs, but if a stamped envelope is included, we will try. The amount of mail makes personal answers or appraisals impossible. Write to Kovels, (Name of this newspaper), King Features Syndicate, 300 W. 57th St., New York, NY 10019. *** CURRENT PRICES Current prices are recorded from antiques shows, flea markets, sales and auctions throughout the United States. Prices vary in different locations because of local economic conditions. Johnny Appleseed collector plate, porcelain, American folk heroes series, Johnny planting seeds, girl with apple, c. 1980, 9-inch diameter, $10. Irish lace collar, ivory shawl, flower blossom pattern, trailing leaf border, c. 1910, 11 x 46 inches, $50. Cowan, flower frog, dancing nude woman, scarf, opaque white, after Anna Pavlova, marked, 1925, 6 inches, $160. Side table, tiger oak, fourleaf clover shaped top, reeded apron, spindle spool legs, shaped lower shelf, ball feet, c. 1890, 29 x 24 inches, $275. Pickle castor, amber glass jar, swirl pattern, silver plate lid, base and frame, molded leaves, beading and scrollwork, 1800s, $520.

G.I. Joe lunchbox, U.S. ARMY, green canvas, brown leather trim, metal latch, plastic top handle, envelope style, 1968, 9 x 5 x 4 inches, $705. Advertising sign, Bromo Seltzer, figural nurse, pouring medicine, die-cut cardboard, easel back, 60 x 17 inches, $1,200. Tool chest, trunk shape, oak and steel, brass hardware, leather, lift lid, interior compartments, side handles, lock, 1897, 38 x 19 inches, $1,500. Jewelry box, metal, incised, oval pietra dura panels, flowers and butterflies, blue beading, lift top, finial feet, c. 1880, 6 x 8 inches, $2,450. Anna pottery bottle, reclining pig, incised railroad map, hole at rear, c. 1880, 6 inches, $3,100. *** Need prices for your antiques and collectibles? Find them at Kovels.com, our website for collectors. You can find more than 1,000,000 prices and more than 11,000 color photographs that help you determine the value of your collectibles. Study the prices. Go to the free Price Guide at Kovels.com. The website also lists publications, clubs, appraisers, auction houses, people who sell parts or repair antiques, show lists and more. Kovels.com adds to the information in this column. *** (c) 2016 by Cowles Syndicate Inc.

“BEST IN THE MIDWEST OR ANYWHERE”

ANTIQUES, COLLECTIBLES & FANCY JUNQUE

Kane County Fairgrounds

Route 64 & Randall Road in St. Charles Sat. 12pm to 5pm • Sun. 7am to 4pm

HUNDREDS OF DEALERS! SM-CL0385114

April 1 & 2 Sept. 2 & 3 2015 Schedule May 6 & 7

Sept. 30 & Oct. 1 June 3 &Oct 4 3&4 Nov. 4 & 5 JulyOct 1 & 231 & Nov 1 Dec. 2&3 August 5Dec &6 5 & 6

March - December

Admission $5.00

Children under 12 Free!

FREE PARKING (630) 377-2252

www.kanecountyfleamarket.com

3 Large Connecting Antique & Collectible Malls Featuring 3 Floors In Our Circa 1860’s Dairy Barn. “An Antiquer’s Heaven” 18th, 19th & 20th Century Treasures All In One Location. “7 Miles of Aisles” Open 7 Days, 10-5 Only 40 Miles From Kane County Near Rts 12 & 120 In Historic Volo Illinois 815-344-6062 Or VOLOSHOPPING.COM

Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

KOVELS:


66 CLASSIFIED

• Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com

DRIVERS - SEASONAL CHS Elburn is looking for SEASONAL DRIVERS to deliver agronomy products out of our Maple Park & Newark facilities. You must have a high energy level, exhibit personal integrity, have an excellent driving record and be committed to safety, and customer service. You must be able to work additional hours and weekends to meet business needs. Must have a CDL and be able to pass a DOT Drug Screen. Please apply online at www.chsinc.com/careers and reference req #9165BR (for Newark) #9166BR (for Maple Park). If you have any questions please call Stefanie Horne at 815-899-8917

FACTORY HELP NEEDED – FT

ADMINSTRATIVE ASSISTANT St Charles based medical supplies company looking for an administrative assistant. Candidates will be responsible for assisting documentations and customer service. Great communications skills. Excellent with Microsoft Office (Word and Excel). Please send resume by email to angela@allcaredirect.com

Our St. Charles location is looking for: Carpenters (cabinet installation / trim experience a plus) Painters Electricians General Labor / Warehouse staff Prior experience a must. Email resume to zwreceiving@colonydisplay.com or fax (630) 762-1002

Caregivers

BE AN ANGEL... ...A VISITING ANGEL

Join our team of compassionate, reliable caregivers to assist area seniors in their own homes with non-medical personal care, meal prep, light housework, errands, companionship. Experience with older adults preferred. Part-time hours available. Visiting Angels of the Fox Valley 630-892-1111 www.visitingangels.com

Direct Service Personnel DSP

Full Time & Part Time, Weekday & Weekend Opportunities on ALL Shifts throughout the Sugar Grove, Oswego & Plainfield areas! Must be CPR, First Aid & IDPH Registered Certified. To $11.50/hr. Your TLC can make a difference! jobs@behavioralstaffing.com or call our reps 24/7 at 877-895-3500! Driver

CDL DRIVER / MECHANIC

Farming operation looking for full / part time diversified individual willing to split time between making local deliveries and occasional mechanical work on various farm equipment & trucks. CDL Class A required.

Contact Bob at Dunteman Turf Farms 630-557-2900

We are At Your Service! Kane County Chronicle reaches Kane County 5 days a week Plus KCChronicle.com is available 24/7.

Call to advertise in the At Your Service directory.

877-264-2527

classified@shawsuburban.com

Janitor

Professional Janitor / Driver Growing injection-molding company has an immediate opening for a Professional Janitor / Driver.

SHIPPING AND RECEIVING

Looking for a detailed individual responsible for Shipping and Receiving. The hourly pay is $15.00 with no medical coverage. St. Charles, IL. Phone: 331-422-3151

DATA ENTRY CLERK The Voluntary Action Center is seeking applicants for a part time Data Clerk to assist the agency's finance division, 15 hours per week. Duties include creating & maintaining Excel files and reports, data entry, assisting with Accounts Payable and Receivables, relief for reception and other positions as needed, and other clerical support for Management. Proficiency in Microsoft Office, particularly Excel required. Experience in accounting software and clerical grant management are a plus. Must be able to maintain confidentiality, have good communication and phone skills, and the ability to be self-motivated & well organized. Continued education or Associates Degree strongly desired. Interested candidates should send resume, cover letter, and three professional references to:

Voluntary Action Center

Paul LaLonde, Assistant Executive Director 1606 Bethany Road, Sycamore, IL 60178 For full job description, please contact Paul. VAC is a drug free workplace and an EOE.

Caregiver Available – If your are looking for a caregiver who can provide patience & compassion for your loved one, call 630-841-6314

Responsibilities include: cleaning facility and running errands in company vehicle. Must be a responsible and energetic individual with a valid driver's license and good driving record. Excellent pay, great benefit package and opportunity for advancement. EOE

2 DAY GUN AUCTION Saturday March 18th Sunday March 19th 9AM 2601 Lake Land Blvd. Mattoon, IL 900 FIRE ARMS Ammo, Knives, Accessories, More! www.bauerauction.com Antique Auction No Reserve! March 19th 10AM 1504 Mulford Rd Lindenwood, IL Railroad Desk, Wood Wagon, Secretaries, Primitives, Wooden Advertising Boxes, Stained Glass, Vintage Toys, Much More! www.kitsonauctions.com CAMPERS Colman's RV We Buy/Consign Used Campers And RV's! 217-787-8653 www.colmansrv.com LOCAL DRIVERS WANTED! Be your own boss. Flexible hours. Unlimited earning potential Must be 21 with valid U.S. driver's license, insurance & reliable vehicle. Call 855-401-1161 Longaberger Baskets & More Auction March 25th 10AM Park District Bldg 601 S. Fall Paxton, IL 400+ Lots Longaberger Baskets, Pottery, Wrought Iron, MUCH MORE! strebeckauctions.com Old slot machines wanted by collector. Also buying neon signs and 40's and 50's juke boxes! Any condition! Fast cash pick-up! Call Mark 314-707-0184

Apply in person:

Chemtech Plastics, Inc.

765 Church Road, Elgin, IL 60123 or email: jobs@chemtechplastics.com

MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN

Local company in Woodridge, IL looking for an experienced Maintenance Technician. Building/Repairing machines and equipment. Auto Cad or Solidworks experienced preferred. MIG and TIG welding, electrical circuits, motor controls. Position is available for 3rd Shift. Drug screen (hair follicle), background check and physical will be completed for viable candidates. Please send resume to fax: 574-528-9626 JOBS ANNOUNCEMENTS STUFF VEHICLES REAL ESTATE SERVICES LEGALS Find it all right here in Kane County Chronicle Classified

***THE BOAT DOCK*** We Buy & Consign Used Boats! Springfield, Illinois 217-793-7300 www.theboatdock.com ***THE BOAT DOCK***

State of Illinois Surplus Property Online Auction Equipment, watches, boats, vehicles, knives, jewelry and much more iBid.illinois.gov

L.L.

Kane County Chronicle Classified It works.


Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017 •

BRIDGE by Phillip Alder

Handyman Service Home Improvements

Carpentry Electrical Painting and Misc.

630-879-5906

(Craig) Serving the Fox Valley for over 25 years (Batavia)

BOB'S PAINTING – DECORATING and DECKS RENEWED Nolan Bushnell, the founder of Atari, said, “Business is a good game -- lots of competition and a minimum of rules. You keep score with money.” Bridge is a great game -- lots of competition and, some would argue, too many laws. Sometimes you keep score with money. Players often quote axioms (“rules”), although most of them are wrong at least as often as they are right. But a few, like the Rule of Eleven and the key play in today’s deal, are always right if the appropriate conditions are met (the lead being fourth-highest in the case of the Rule of Eleven). What is the right play for East here? He is defending against four hearts, and West has led the diamond king. Note North’s four-diamond jump cue-bid. It is a splinter bid showing four-card heart support, game-going values and a singleton or void in diamonds. South, with such a weak hand, has no thought of a slam. It should be apparent to East that his side probably has to take one diamond and three spade tricks to defeat the contract. Also, it must be better for East to attack spades through declarer, rather than West’s leading around to him. So, East overtakes the diamond king with his ace. But which spade should he lead next? The normal card from J-7-6 is the six, but when you need three tricks in the suit, the correct card to lead is the jack. Now the contract goes down one. Note that if East starts with the spade six, South plays low from his hand and is safe.

CUSTOM CONCRETE Driveways & Patios Stamped Concrete Colored Concrete Waterproofing & More

RESIDENTIAL ~ COMMERCIAL Interior / Exterior Wallpapering / Wood Finishing Deck Cleaning / Restoration Call Today For an Estimate

630-728-2609

Fully Insured – Satisfaction Guaranteed

630-469-6898 Greg www.CustomConcrete-IL.com

Taber Builders, Inc.

Complete Concrete Services Foundations-Driveways-Patios Sidewalks-Stoops-Additions Stamped & Dyed Designs Foundation and Crack Repair

Residential & Commercial - Fully Insured 630-761-1634 www.taberbuilders.com

Kane County Chronicle Classified It works.

CLASSIFIED 67


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103 Came to 104 To the point 107 Tartan wearer 111 Numerical prefix 112 Big heart? 114 British can 115 Itinerary abbr. 116 “Now I’ve got it!” 117 Image on a Wisconsin state quarter

ANSWERS TO CROSSWORD

90 KPMG hiree

O N E U P

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Z O R R O

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S L E W

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R I C E

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95 Yogurt-based Indian drink 96 Employ against 97 Brand with classic “But wait, there’s more … !” infomercials 98 Leave at a loss 100 Everglades wader 101 Ballet-school supporter 102 Muff

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23 Ingredients in some London pies 28 Top story 31 Things bouncers are supposed to catch 32 Sylvan 33 Denouement 34 “A.S.A.P.!” 36 Beowulf or Gilgamesh 37 Jewelry-store gadget 40 Watch, as a criminals’ hiding spot 42 Do a wine steward’s DOWN job 1 North American 43 Waffle brand flycatcher 44 She, in Salerno 2 “S.N.L.” alum Cheri 45 Incense 3 Unloading zone 46 ____ twins of 4 Happy hour habitué 1980s-’90s TV 5 Jack ____ 47 State confidently 6 Guerrilla leader in 48 Mire “For Whom the Bell 49 Minute ____ Tolls” 50 Dispatched, as 7 Constellation near a dragon Scorpius 52 Foreign capital 8 Low-____ whose name sounds 9 8 x 10, e.g.: Abbr. like a water passage 10 Fool to San Francisco 11 Garlicky spread 57 He married Daisy Mae in 1952 12 Wouldn’t shut up 59 Homes 13 “Geez!” on the range 14 Epitome 61 Lad of simplicity 15 Condition contributed 62 Ride hard to 63 Who wrote, “I exist, by a lack of [circled that is all, and I find letters] it nauseating” 16 Rider of the 67 Branded footwear horse Tornado with open backs 17 Outdo 68 “Everything’s fine” 19 Turns into confetti 69 Think piece? 21 Seaman’s chapel 70 Capital of Togo

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S O S T H E R E F E L A D S K S E B I E D S I S O R N U S N T T Y O B I C O L K Y D U T A C R C E I E

Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).

106 Soldiers’ assignments 108 Betray surprise 109 Be behind 110 Evergreen State airport 113 [Circled letter]fueled device 118 One given a citation 119 Not so awkward 120 Hair 121 Certain navel 122 Au courant 123 “What fun!”

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1 Big hits 5 Something repeatedly hit with a thumb 13 Flat bread 18 Zeitgeist 20 Recurring theme in Philip K. Dick novels 21 Cousin of a mandrill 22 [Circled letters]filled contraption 24 Cry for more 25 Affirm one’s humanity? 26 Tangible 27 Swell 29 Capote, informally 30 World landmark built with [circled letters] 35 Being repaired, as a car 38 Spots 39 It’s hard to bear 41 Halfhearted, as support 42 Can’t wait to find out, in a way 45 [Circled letters]based drugs 51 Check out 52 Unvarnished 53 Great confusion 54 Sea serpent of old cartoons 55 Citrus hybrid 56 Bomb developed in the 1950s

58 College party epicenter, often 59 Homeland of Spartacus 60 [Circled letters]advertised establishment 63 “What did I tell you?” 64 Berried conifer 65 Existentialist Kierkegaard 66 Language heard along the Mekong 67 Banana-liqueur cocktail 69 Poorly 72 Letter on a dreidel 73 Picture displayed on a [circled letters] surface 78 Fails to 80 Kind of developer 81 Conservative portfolio asset, for short 82 Convinced 83 Worthless 84 Now hear this! 86 Obsolescent players 87 Put a stop to? 88 [Circled letter]consuming activity 91 “That’s great!” 92 Strain to avoid? 93 Stinky 94 Underlying cosmic principle 95 Ones getting all the breaks 99 Sports implement often made from [circled letters] 105 Smokers should knock it off

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IT’S ELEMENTARY BY TIMOTHY POLIN / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ


Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017 • VINTAGE MUSIC AUCTION LIVE & ONLINE MARCH 18th 12PM 8512 S. Union Road Union, IL Guitars, Banjos, Wurlitzers, Jukeboxes, Phonographs, Clocks, Music Boxes, More! Details, photos, online bidding: www.donleyauctions.com

SATURDAY, MARCH 18TH, 2017 RUNNING 2 RINGS - ONE STARTING W/COINS & JEWELRY

Lunch by: Relish the Dog

9:00 A.M.

A-1 AUTO

Maple Park Estate Sale WED & THURS 10-6 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

1950's L-Shaped Red Leather Sofa, Stove & Refrig, Table & Chairs, Jewelry, Vintage, Mid-Century, Tools, Yard Art

PUBLIC AUCTION

Kathy's Estate Sales, On Line Auctions, Liquidations & Consignments

CLASSICS WANTED

Restored or Unrestored Cars & Vintage Motorcycles Domestic / Import Cars: Mercedes, Porsche, Corvette, Ferrari's, Jaguars, Muscle Cars, Mustang & Mopars, $$ Top $$ all makes, Etc.

Owners: R. Lane, B. Fidder, R. Zanello, G. Kaske, K. Skinner, B. Berning F. Babashka, R. Case & The J Larson Estate Terms: Cash or checks w/proper I.D. Visa & Mastercard accepted. 9% Buyers Premium w/ 4% discount for cash or check. No property to be removed until settled for. All items sold “AS IS”. Number system will be used. Must have driver's license for registration. Not responsible for accidents or items after purchase. Announcements day of sale prevail over written material.

DeKalb Estate Sale FRI 4-7, SAT 9-3, SUN 10-3

GENEVA

39W855 CATLIN SQ

FURNITURE AND YARD IMPLEMENT

Saturday, March 18th from 9-3 Sunday, March 19th from 12-4 Table, Chairs, SCAG Deck Mower, Yard Tools, Lawn Spreader, Snow Blower, Roof Mount Car Rack, Back Hitch Hauler with Storage and more Call 877-264-2527

Chair - Over-Stuffed, Floral Solid Oak Computer Desk Treadmill (needs new belt) You haul. 630-308-2729

Furs - Sable Mink & Leather Jacket From the 70's, $250. Beaver Stole, great condition! $150 847-683-2105

Beer can collection from the 1970's. Few flat tops, Many in excellent shape and bottom opened. $275 or best offer. Call 815-761-5947

DINING ROOM TABLE w/ LEAF & 4 MATCHING CHAIRS

Very Clean & Nice Furniture

Round dining table 54” with leaf and 4 matching chairs. Wood veneer top with black pedestal. Free but you must pick up. Geneva. Please contact 630-797-0842 for photos and other info.

Dried Gourds for Crafting

See pics @ estatesales.net

WILL BEAT ANY QUOTE GIVEN!!

$400 - $2000

“don't wait....call 2day”!! ★★★★★★★★★★★

Advertise here for a successful garage sale!

Belvidere, IL 61008 AUCTIONEERS: LYLE LEE IL. State License #440.000200/ WI # 2863-52 JEFF MARRS # 441-001813 CLERKS & CASHIERS: LEE AUCTION SERVICE Visit our website: www.leeauctionservice.com

MOST CASH

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Comfort Station Available

COINS, ANTIQUES, COLLECTIBLES, (2)GUNS, HOUSEHOLD, YARD & TOOLS SEE WEBSITE FOR COMPLETE LISTING!!

CAR, TRUCK, SUV

815-575-5153

847-363-4814

LOCATION: BOONE CO. FAIRGROUNDS, 8791 RT. 76 BELVIDERE, IL. 61008

Located in the Goat Barn near south end. Plenty of parking. Dress Accordingly!

CLASSIFIED 69

Apples, Snake, Penquin, $2/ea. Home grown Hampshire. 847-683-2105

JOBS ANNOUNCEMENTS STUFF VEHICLES REAL ESTATE SERVICES LEGALS Kane County Chronicle Classified and online at: KCChronicle.com

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

815-814-1964

or

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 KCChronicle.com

West Harbor Residences At Reva Bay Be In Your New Home by Spring! Units are completed and ready for you. Boating season is near! West Harbor Residences at Reva Bay is a brand new apartment community in beautiful Fox Lake, IL. 5 minutes from Metra station. Shopping and entertainment is just minutes away. Residence is 2 bedrooms with 2 baths in a spacious 1,250 square feet. Larger unit also has dining room and guest bath. All new stainless steel appliances with washer/dryer included. Balconies, patios, covered and open parking. Boat slips available right at your back door. Additional storage available. Monthly rent begins at $1,425.

Heirloom Estate Sales 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 Kane County Chronicle Classified

Powered by:

1997 Jeep Grand Cherokee. $2300

New battery and new heater. 815-762-0570

847-997-6106

★★★★★★★★★★★

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


70 CLASSIFIED

• Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com DeKalb Bridges of Rivermist Sub Ranch Home Filled w/Quality

HALF ACRE OF LAND & HOME IN THE HEART OF SYCAMORE

3BR, 2BA Ranch Home! Spacious Eat in Kitchen with High End Maple Cabinetry, Great Room with Fireplace, Formal Dining Room, Beautiful Maple Floors, Full Basement with Above Ground Window Exposure, 3 Car Garage.

First Time For Sale Since 1946 Charming Enclosed Front Porch Is Just The Beginning. 3 Stories of Living Area Plus a Full Usable Basement. 4 Bedrooms, 1.5 Bathroom

CALL or TEXT NEDRA ERICSON REALTOR or EMAIL myhomes2syc@aol.com

CALL or TEXT NEDRA ERICSON, REALTOR or EMAIL myhomes2syc@aol.com

MOTORCYCLES WANTED 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

Buying? Selling? Renting? Hiring?

DON'T NEED IT? SELL IT FAST!

To place an ad, Kane County Chronicle Classified call 877-264-2527 Call 877-264-2527 or Kane County Chronicle Classified KCChronicle.com

BATAVIA - GREEN MEADOWS

Place your Classified ad online 24/7 at: www.KCChronicle.com/PlaceAnAd Kane County Chronicle Classified 877-264-2527 KCChronicle.com 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 KCChronicle.com

815-739-9997

815-739-9997

Get the job you want at KCChronicle.com/jobs

Chronicle Classified 877-264-2527

1 Bed Rm. $950/mo. 2 Bed Rm. $1,150/mo. 3 Bed Rm. $1,425/mo.

630-879-8300

Genoa 2BR, Remodeled, Close to Downtown Country setting, 1 bath, appl. 815-901-3346

PEPPER VALLEY APARTMENTS 2 Bedroom - 2 Bath $1190 - $1200 & $1220-$1230 Fireplace, heat, gas, water incl. A/C, D/W, disposal, microwave, blinds, patios, clubhouse, pool, garage avail, small pets OK.

630-232-7226 St. Charles -1BR, 1BA, A/C, Lndry, Heat Incl. $885/mo + security deposit.

630-289-7484

Geneva - 2BR, 2BA, 2 Car Garage Ideal location, new carpet, fireplace, W/D, $1450/mo, available immediately. 630-881-6217

Classified Avenue Ad Network _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Autos

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

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DONATE YOUR CAR TO CHARITY. Receive maximun value of write off for your taxes. Running or not! All conditions accepted. Free pick up. Call for details. 844-218-9545

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Having a Birthday, Anniversary, Graduation or Event Coming Up? Share It With Everyone by Placing a HAPPY AD!

Buying? Selling? Renting? Hiring? To place an ad, call 877-264-2527

Kane County Chronicle Classified 877-264-2527

Kane County Chronicle Classified

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AIRLINE MECHANIC TRAINING – Get FAA Technician certification. Approved for military benefits. Financial Aid if qualified. Job placement assisstance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 877-818-0783 www.FixJets.com

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Health & Fitness

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

DONATE YOUR CAR – 866-616-6266 FAST FREE TOWING -24hr Response – Maximum Tax Deduction – Got Knee Pain? Back Pain? Shoulder Pain? Get a UNITED BREST CANCER FDN: Providing Breast pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost to you. Medicare Cancer Information & Suppor Programs Patients Call Health Hotline Now! 1-800-900-5406 _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

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Stop paying for EXPENSIVE AUTO REPAIRS! Get discounted warranty coverage from the wholesale source, and don't pay for expensive covered repairs! Start saving now! Call 877-210-0318

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Gilberts Large Country Home 6 bedroom, 5 bath, close to I-90. $400-$600 /mo. all utilities incl. 815-761-4983

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

Help Wanted

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LOCAL DRIVERS WANTED! Be your own boss. Flexible hours. Unlimited earning potential. Must be 21 with valid U.S. Drivers license, insurance & reliable vehicle. 888-326-5825

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Employment Opportunities

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HELP WANTED!! Meke $1000 Weekly Mailing Brochures From Home! No Experience Required. Helping home workers since 2001! Genuine Opportunity. Start Immediately! www.WorkingOpp.com

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Education & Training

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

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OXYGEN – Anytime. Anywhere. No tanks to refill. No deliveries. Only 4.8 pounds and FAA approved for air travel! May be covered by medicare. Call for FREE info kit: 866-578-3313

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ATTENTION SMOKERS: Stop smoking with TBX-FREE! Clinically proven & FDA Approved! More effective than patch or gum! Fast acting – No side effects. 88% success rate! Just $1.67 per day! CALL 844-214-2710 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Home Improvement/Service Directory

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antee. Offer Expires Soon. Call now 1-888-906-1887 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

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

Updating your bathroom does not have to be expensive or take weeks to complete. Bath/Wraps make it easy. Call 855-401-7297 today for a free in home consultation.

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Misc. For Sale

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DISH TV – BEST DEAL EVER! Only $39.99/mo. Plus $14.99/mo Internet (where avail.) FREE Streaming. FREE Install (up to 6 rooms). FREE HD-DVR Call Today 800-278-1401

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

Cell phone bill too high? Call Now and see how you can Save. National 4G coverage for less! 844-209-2049

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KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killers/KIT Complete Treatment System. Available: Hardware Stores, The Home Depot, homedepot.com. Try Harris Guaranteed Roach Killers Too!

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Financial/Insurance

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

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

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72 CLASSIFIED

fice of the Clerk of the Circuit Court

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS DAISY OLVERA Plaintiff/Petitioner vs. FRANCISCO JAVIER CASTILLO GOMEZ Defendant/Respondent Case No. 17 D 51 PUBLICATION NOTICE The requisite affidavit(s) having been duly filed herein, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVNE TO ALL DEFENDANTS IN THE ABOVE ENTITLED ACTION, that said action has been commenced in said Court by the plaintiff(s), naming you as defendant(s) therein and praying For Judgment of dissolution of marriage between the parties and sole allocation of parental responsibilities of the parties' minor child with child support and parenting time reserved. and for other relief; that summons has been issued out of this Court against you as provided by law, and, that this action is still pending and undetermined in said Court. NOW, THEREFORE, unless you file your answer or otherwise make your appearance in said action in this Court, by filing the same in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court on or before April 3, 2017 IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the Seal of said Court on February 15, 2017 (Published in the Kane County Thomas M. Hartwell Chronicle on March 9, 16, 23, Clerk of the Circuit Court 2017) 1271152 (SEAL) Scott W. Sheen & Associates, P.C. Attorney for: Petitioner Atty Registration No.: 6216837 PUBLIC NOTICE 713 East Main Street Saint Charles, IL 60174 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE (630) 443-6200 SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT Attorney E-mail: Ssheen@sheenlaw.com KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS

nant. That the parties are agreeing to Dissolution of Marriage at no fault. 6. That there is no dissolution of marriage pending in any other or state. 7. That the parties have been continuously separated since August 2011, as a result of irreconcilable differences that caused and irretrievable breakdown of the marriage. 8. That past attempts to reconciliation failed and future attempts would be impracticable and not in the parties best interest. WHEREFORE, the Petitioner, Eva Alejandra Ponce Zepeda, respectfully that prays that: A. The parties are awarded a Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage dissolving the bonds of matrimony existing between the parties. B. Each party waives any claims and to maintenance, past present or future C. Each party should pay those debts they have any claim by the other. D. Each party shall retain that personal property presently in their respective possession free and clear from any claim by the other. Eva Alejandra Ponce Zepeda, (Petitioner)

of Kane County, Chancery Division, 5. • Thursday, March 16, 2017 • Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com in the courthouse in the city of St. Charles, Illinois, on or before April 21, 2017 a default may be entered against you at any time after that date and a decree entered in accordance with the prayer of the complaint. Dated: March 2, 2017

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way...

(Published in the Kane County Chronicle on March 16, 23, 30, 2017) 1353696

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS CHANCERY DIVISION CARRINGTON MORTGAGE SERVICES, LLC, Plaintiff, V. BESSIE HILL; MIDLAND FUNDING LLC; UNKNOWN OWNERS and NONRECORD CLAIMANTS, Defendants, Case No: 16 CH 684 NOTICE OF ACTION BY PUBLICATION STATE OF ILLINOIS COUNTY OF KANE In the Circuit Court of Kane County, Chancery Division. CARRINGTON MORTGAGE SERVICES, LLC. v BESSIE HILL; MIDLAND FUNDING LLC; UNKNOWN OWNERS and NONRECORD CLAIMANTS, Case No. 16 CH 684 The requisite affidavit for service by publication having been filed, notice is given you, BESSIE HILL, and UNKNOWN OWNERS and NONRECORD CLAIMANTS, defendants in the above entitled action, that an action for foreclosure was commenced in the Circuit Court of Kane County, Chancery Division, by the plaintiff against you and other defendants, praying for the foreclosure and for other relief of a certain mortgage conveying the premises described as follows: THAT PART OF THE EAST HALF OF SECTION 16, TOWNSHIP 38 NORTH, RANGE 8, EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: COMMENCING AT THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF LOT 222 OF NORTHLAKE MANOR, AURORA; THENCE SOUTH 0 DEGREES 54 MINUTES WEST 1083 FEET; THENCE NORTH 88 DEGREES 54 MINUTES WEST 914.87 FEET FOR THE POINT OF BEGINNING: THENCE NORTH 88 DEGREES 54 MINUTES WEST 78 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 0 DEGREES 54 MINUTES WEST 114.15 FEET TO THE NORTHERLY LINE OF HIGHLAND ADDITION TO AURORA, THENCE SOUTH 88 DEGREES 29 MINUTES EAST ALONG SAID NOTHERLY LINE 78 FEET TO A LINE DRAWN SOUTH 0 DEGREES 54 MINUTES WEST FROM THE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE NORTH 0 DEGREES 54 MINUTES EAST 114.72 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNIN, IN THE CITY OF AURORA, KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS Common Address: 376 Florida, Aurora, IL 60506 P.I.N.: 15-16-284-009

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PUBLIC NOTICE

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT KANE COUNTYGENEVA, ILLINOIS

Fifth Third Mortgage Company Plaintiff, vs. Jennifer Sweeney; United States of America - Department of Housing and Urban Development; Randall West Home Owners' Association; Unknown Owners and Nonrecord Claimants; Unknown Heirs and Legatees of Michael A. Sweeney; Jaclyn Sweeney; Joseph Sweeney; Richard Kuhn, as Special Representative for Michael A. Sweeney (Deceased) Defendants. Case No. 17 CH 00006 Notice to Heirs and Legatees. Notice is hereby given to you, the Unknown Heirs and Unknown Legatees of the decedent, Michael A. Sweeney, that on February 16, 2017, an order was entered by the Court, naming Richard W. Kuhn, 552 S. Washington Street, Suite 100, Naperville, Illinois 60540, Tel. No. 630-420-8228, as the Special Representative of the above-named decedent under 735 ILCS 13-1209 (Death of a Party). The cause of action for the Foreclosure of a certain Mortgage upon the (Published in Kane County premises commonly known as: IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF 807 N. Randall Road Unit #B, Au- EVA ALEJANDRA PONCE ZEPEDA Chronicle March 2, 9, 16, 2017) 1269950 rora, IL 60506 Petitioner, vs. PUBLIC NOTICE (Published in the Kane County TOMAS MARTINEZ Chronicle on March 9, 16, 23, Respondent. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT 2017) 1271172 FOR THE SIXTEENTH CASE NO. 17 D 245 JUDICIAL CIRCUIT PUBLICATION NOTICE KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS PUBLIC NOTICE 17 MR 269 The requisite affidavit for PubliNOTICE OF PUBLICATION IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE REGARDING NAME CHANGE SIXTEETH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT cation having been filed, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO ALL DEFEN- Public notice is hereby given that KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS on April 25, 2017, in Courtroom DANTS IN THE ABOVE ENTITLED In Re the Marriage of Eva Alejandra Ponce Zepeda & ACTION, that said action has been No. 250, of the Kane County Tomas Martinez commenced in the said Court by Courthouse, 100 South Third the plaintiff, naming you as defen- Street, Geneva, Illinois, at the hour of 9:00 a.m. or as soon thereafter Eva Alejandra Ponce dants therein and praying as this matter may heard, a Petition Petitioner PETITION FOR DISSOLUTION will be heard in said Courtroom for vs. and for other relief; that summons the change of name of Jacqueline Tomas Martinez has been issued out of this Court Eileen Trieb to the new name of Respondent against you as provided by law, Jacqueline Eileen Becker pur17 D 245 PETITION FOR DISSOLUTION OF and, that this action is still pending suant to 735 ILCS 5/21-101 et and undetermined in said court. seq. MARRIAGE /s/ Jacqueline Eileen Trieb NOW COMMES the Petitioner, Eva Petitioner Alejandra Ponce Zepeda, Pro Se, NOW, THEREFORE, unless you file and for his cause of action against your answer or otherwise make the Respondent Tomas Martinez, your appearance in said action in (Published in the Kane County respectfully alleges and states as this Court, by filing the same in the Chronicle on March 9, 16, 23, 2017) 1271151 follows: office of the Clerk of the Circuit 1. Petitioner is 30 years of age Court on or before April 10, 2017, resides at 20 Thrush St., Car- AN ORDER OF DEFAULT MAY BE PUBLIC NOTICE pentersville, County of Kane, ENTERED AGAINST YOU. and State of Illinois; has residIN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE ed in the State of Illinois for at February 28, 2017 SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT period exceeding ninety (90) Thomas M. Hartwell KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS days preceding the filing of Clerk of the Circuit Court this petition; and is presently (Seal) IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE domiciled in the State of IlliOF: HENRY L. FOSTER, nois. Deceased. 2. Respondent is 46 years of Eva Alejandra Ponce Zepeda General No.: 17 P 105 age; address unknown. 20 Thrush Street 3. The parties were married on Carpentersville, Il 60110 PUBLICATION NOTICE May 21, 2011, and said INDEPENDENT ADMINISTRATION marriage was registered in the (Published in the Kane County TO: CREDITORS & CLAIMANTS city of Chicago, State of Illi- Chronicle, March 9, 16, 23, 1. Notice is given of the death of nois, USA. Henry L. Foster who died on June 4. That no children were born to 2017) 1271792 25, 2016 a resident of Elgin, IL.

The mortgage was made by Bessie Hill and given to MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR COUNTRYWIDE HOME LOANS, INC. on February 24, 2003, and recorded in the office of the Recorder of Deeds in Kane County, Illinois, as document no. 2003K051169 Summons was duty issued out of the court against you as provided by law and the action is now pending. Now, therefore, unless you, as one of the above-named defendants, file your answer to the complaint in the action or otherwise make your appearance in the action, in the Office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Kane County, Chancery Division, 5. in the courthouse in the city of St. Charles, Illinois, on or before April 21, 2017 a default may be entered 6. against you at any time after that

the parties during their marriage; and that no children PUBLIC NOTICE were adopted; and the Petitioner is not currently pregIN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE nant. That the parties are agreeing SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS to Dissolution of Marriage at DAISY OLVERA no fault. That there is no dissolution of Plaintiff/Petitioner marriage pending in any oth- vs.

2. The Representative for the estate is: Alma J. Foster, 621 Preston, Elgin, IL 60120. 3. The attorney for the estate is: Russell E. Baldwin 311 N. 2nd Street, Suite 301, St. Charles, IL 60174 4. Claims against the estate may be filed on or before September 2, 2017. Claims against the estate

Russell E. Baldwin 311 N. 2nd Street, Suite 301, St. Charles, IL 60174 4. Claims against the estate may be filed on or before September 2, 2017. Claims against the estate may be filed with the clerk of the Circuit Court, P.O. Box 112, Geneva, Illinois 60134-0112, or with the Representative or both. Any claim not filed within that period is barred. Copies of a claim filed with the Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the Representative and to the attorney within ten (10) days after it has been filed. 8. The estate will be administered without Court supervision unless an interested party terminates independent administration by filing a petition to terminate under Article XXVlll 5/28-4 of the Probate Act (755 ILCS 5/28-4). (Published in the Kane County Chronicle on March 2, 9, 16, 2017) 1269994

PUBLIC NOTICE

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF PATRICIA MAHONEY WHITE 699 Glen Cove Lane Pingree Grove, Il 60140 Date and Place of Death: January 13, 2017, Kane County Case No. 17 P 116 Publication Notice Independent Administration TO: CREDITORS, CLAIMANTS, UNKNOWN HEIRS AND LEGATEES 1. Notice is hereby given of the death of Patricia Mahoney White who died on January 13, 2017, a resident of 699 Glen Cove Lane, Pingree Grove, IL 60140. 2. The Representative for the estate is Sean P. White, 728 Deer Run Drive,, Palatine, IL 60067. 3. The Attorney for the estate is: John G. Mulroe, 6687 N. Norhwest Highway, Chicago, IL 60631. 4. Claims against the estate may be filed on or before September 9, 2017. Claims against the estate may be filed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court, 540 S. Randall Rd., St. Charles, IL 60174 or with the Representative, or both. Any claim not filed within that period is barred. Copies of a claim filed with the Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the Representative and to the attorney within 10 days after it has been filed. 5. On 2/22/17 an Order Appointing the Representative was entered. 6. Within forty-two (42) days after the effective date of the original Order Admitting the Will to Probate, you may file a petition with the Court to require proof of the validity of the Will by testimony or witnesses to the Will in open Court, or other evidence, as provided in Article VI 5/6-21 (755 ILCS 5/6/21). 7. Within six (6) months after the effective date of the original Order Admitting the Will to Probate, you may file a petition with the Court to contest the validity of the Will as provided under Article VIII 5/8-1 of the Probate Act (755 ILCS 5/8-1). 8. The estate will be administrated without Court supervision unless an interested party terminates independent supervision administration by filing a petition to terminate under Article XXVIII 5/28-4 of the Probate Act (755 ILCS 5/28-4). /s/ Sean P. White Executor *signed pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 137. March 9, 16, 23, 2017 Kane County Chronicle 1279949

PUBLIC NOTICE

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF Name: RONALD R. JANES Address: 1201 HOWELL PLACE City, State, Zip: AURORA, IL 60506 Date and Place of Death: 1/15/2017- HARLINGEN, TX 17 P 128 PUBLICATION NOTICE INDEPENDENT ADMINISTRATION TO: CREDITORS, CLAIMANTS,

Date and Place of Death: 1/15/2017- HARLINGEN, TX 17 P 128 PUBLICATION NOTICE INDEPENDENT ADMINISTRATION TO: CREDITORS, CLAIMANTS, UNKNOWN HEIRS AND LEGATEES 1. Notice is hereby given of the death of RONALD R. JANES who died on JAN. 15, 2017, a resident of AURORA, Illinois. 2. The Representative for the estate is: RONDA J. POPP, 228 BRAEBURN CIR., SUGAR GROVE, IL 60554 3. The Attorney for the estate is: GERALD K. HODGE 2114 DEERPATH ROAD AURORA, IL 60506 4. Claims against the estate may be filed on or before 9/9, 2017. Claims against the estate may be filed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court, 540 S. Randall Rd., St. Charles, IL 60174 or with the Representative, or both Any claim not filed within that period is barred. Copies of a claim filed with the Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the Representative and to the attorney within I O days after it has been filed. 5. On MARCH 1, 2017 an Order Admitting the Will to Probate. 6. Within forty-two (42) days after the effective date of the original Order Admitting the Will to Probate, you may file a petition with the Court to require proof of the validity of the Will by testimony or witnesses to the Will in open Court, or other evidence, as provided in Article VI 5/6-21 (755 ILCS 5/6/21). 7. Within six (6) months after the effective date of the original Order Admitting the Will to Probate, you may file a petition with the Court to contest the validity of the Will as provided under Article VIII 5/8-1 of the Probate Act (755 ILCS 5/8-1). 8. The estate will be administrated without Court supervision unless an interested party terminates independent supervision administration by filing a petition to terminate under Article XXVIII 5/28-4 of the Probate Act (755 ILCS 5/28-4).

(Published in the Kane County Chronicle on March 9, 16, 23, 2017) 1271153

PUBLIC NOTICE

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF (DECEDENT): Bernice Z. Reed 1819 Fargo Blvd, Geneva, IL 60134 Date and Place of Death: Aurora, IL 1/1/2017 CASE NO. 17 P 148 PUBLICATION NOTICE INDEPENDENT ADMINISTRATION TO: CREDITORS, CLAIMANTS, UNKNOW HEIRS AND LEGATEES 1.Notice is hereby given of the death of Bernice Z. Reed who died on Jan. 1, 2017, a resident of Geneva, IL, Illinois. 2.The Representative for the estate is: Rose Mary Clyburn, 1520 Unionville Wawaset Road, West Chester, PA 19382 3.The Attorney for the estate is: Jennifer B. Nagle, of Kuhn Heap & Monson 552 S. Washington Suite 100 Naperville, IL 60540 4.Claims against the estate may be filed on or before September 16, 2017. Claims against the estate may be filed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court, 540 S. Randall Rd., St. Charles, IL 60174 or with the Representative, or both. Any claim not filed within that period is barred. Copies of a claim filed with the Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the Representative and to the attorney within 10 days after it has been filed. 5.On March 7, 2017 an Order Admitting the Will to Probate Appointing the Representative was entered. 6.Within forty-two (42) days after the effective date of the original Order Admitting the Will to Probate, you may file a petition with the Court to require proof of the validity


:tered. 6.Within forty-two (42) days after the effective date of the original Order Admitting the Will to Probate, you may file a petition with the Court to require proof of the validity of the Will by testimony or witnesses to the Will in open Court, or other evidence, as provided in Article VI 5/6-21 (755 ILCS 5/6/21). 7.Within six (6) months after the effective date of the original Order -Admitting the Will to Probate, you Lmay file a petition with the Court to contest the validity of the Will as :provided under Article VIII 5/8-1 of the Probate Act (755 ILCS 5/284). 8. The estate will be administrated without Court supervision unless an .interested party terminates indepenedent supervision administration by filing a petition to terminate under Artle XXVIII 5/28-4 of the Probate Act (755 ILCS 5/28-4).

.

/s/ Jennifer B. Nagle Attorney March 16, 23, 30, 2017 d - Kane County Chronicle 122669

PUBLIC NOTICE

r IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT , KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF (DECEDENT): Name: Mary Louise Robinson rAddress: 43W745 Nottingham -Drive, Elburn, IL 60119 Date and Place of Death: 12/16/2016 r Case No. 17 P 73 u PUBLICATION NOTICE INDEPENDENT ADMINISTRATION sTO: CREDITORS, CLAIMANTS, UNKNOWN HEIRS AND LEGATEES 1. Notice is hereby given of the death of Mary Louise Robinson who died on December 16, 2016, -a resident of the Village of Elburn, yCounty of Kane, Illinois. r2. The Representative for the estate is: Kent W. Robinson of 713 Highgrove Park, Houston, TX 77024 y3. The Attorney for the estate is: , Patrick M. Griffin 21 N. Fourth Street Geneva, IL 60134 4. Claims against the estate may be filed on or before 6-30-2017. Claims against the estate may be filed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court, 540 S. Randall Rd., St. Charles, IL 60174 or with the Representative, or both Any claim not filed within that period is barred. Copies of a claim filed with the Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the Representative and to the attorney within 10 days after it has been filed. 5. On February 10, 2017 an Order Admitting the Will to Probate was entered. 6. Within forty-two (42) days after the effective date of the original Order Admitting the Will to Probate, you may file a petition with the Court to require proof of the evalidity of the Will by testimony or witnesses to the Will in open Court, tor other evidence, as provided in Article VI 5/6-21 (755 ILCS 5/6/21). 7. Within six (6) months after the effective date of the original Order Admitting the Will to Probate, you may file a petition with the Court to contest the validity of the Will as ,provided under Article VIll 5/8-1 of the Probate Act (755 ILCS 5/8-1). 8. The estate will be administrated ,without Court supervision unless ean interested party terminates mindependent supervision adminisstration by filing a petition to terminate under Article XXVIII 5/284 of the Probate Act (755 ILCS 5/28-4). /s/ Kent W. Robinson Signature of Executor

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF (DECEDENT): George J. Malina 27 Winthrop New Road Sugar Grove, Illinois 60554 Date and Place of Death: December 9, 2016 Case No. 17P77 PUBLICATION NOTICE INDEPENDENT ADMINISTRATION TO: CREDITORS, CLAIMANTS, UNKNOWN HEIRS AND LEGATEES 1. Notice is hereby given of the death of George J. Malina who died on December 9, 2016, a resident of Sugar Grove, Illinois. 2. The Representative for the estate is: George K. Malina, 125 Walnut Circle, Sugar Grove, Illinois 60554 3. The Attorney for the estate is: Mari Berlin Kabbe Law Group, LLC 2323 Naperville Road, Suite 210, Naperville, Illinois 60563 4. Claims against the estate may be filed on or before September 10, 2017. Claims against the estate may be filed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court, 540 S. Randall Rd., St. Charles, IL 60174 or with the Representative, or both Any claim not filed within that period is barred. Copies of a claim filed with the Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the Representative and to the attorney within 10 days after it has been filed. 5. On February 22, 2017 an Order Admitting the Will to Probate was entered. 6. Within forty-two (42) days after the effective date of the original Order Admitting the Will to Probate, you may file a petition with the Court to require proof of the validity of the Will by testimony or witnesses to the Will in open Court, or other evidence, as provided in Article VI 5/6-21 (755 ILCS 5/6/21). 7. Within six (6) months after the effective date of the original Order Admitting the Will to Probate, you may file a petition with the Court to contest the validity of the Will as provided under Article VIII 5/8-1 of the Probate Act (755 ILCS 5/8-1). 8. The estate will be administrated without Court supervision unless an interested party terminates independent supervision administration by filing a petition to terminate under Article XXVIII 5/28-4 of the Probate Act (755 ILCS 5/28-4). George K. Malina Executor (Published in the Kane County Chronicle March 9, 16, 23, 2017) 1271571

PUBLIC NOTICE

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF (DECEDENT): Susie Tolliver 925 E. Benton St. Aurora, IL 60505 Date and Place of Death: 10/15/2016 Aurora, Illinois Case No. 17 P 85 PUBLICATION NOTICE INDEPENDENT ADMINISTRATION TO: CREDITORS AND CLAIMANTS (ONLY) 1. Notice is hereby given of the (Published in the Kane County death of Susie Tolliver who died on Chronicle March 2, 9, 16, 2017) 10/15/16, a resident of Aurora, 1269926 Illinois. r 2. The Representative for the estate Find. Buy. Sell. is: Shirley Whitaker, 925 E. Benton All in one place... HERE! , Everyday in St., Aurora, IL 60505 Kane County Chronicle Classified 3. The Attorney for the estate is:

10/15/16, a resident of Aurora, Illinois. 2. The Representative for the estate is: Shirley Whitaker, 925 E. Benton St., Aurora, IL 60505 3. The Attorney for the estate is: G. Alexander McTavish 10 W. State Street, Suite 200 Geneva, IL 60134 4. Claims against the estate may be filed on or before 08/22/2017. Claims against the estate may be filed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court, 540 S. Randall Rd., St. Charles, IL 60174 or with the Representative, or both. Any claim not filed within that period is barred. Copies of a claim filed with the Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the Representative and to the attorney witin 10 days after it has been filed. 5. The estate will be administered without Court supervision unless an interested party terminates independent supervision administration by filing a petition to terminate under Article XXVIII 5/28-4 of the Probate Act (755 ILCS 5/28-4). s/ Shirley Whitaker Signature of Executor (Published in the Kane County Chronicle March 2, 9, 16, 2017) 1268472

PUBLIC NOTICE

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF: Joyce E. Bagamery 1077 Heathrow Lane Aurora, IL 60502 Date and Place of Death: 12/30/16 Aurora, IL CASE NO. 2017 P 104 PUBLICATION NOTICE INDEPENDENT ADMINISTRATION TO: CREDITORS, CLAIMANTS, UNKNOW HEIRS AND LEGATEES 1. Notice is hereby given of the death of Joyce E. Bagamery who died on 12/30/16, a resident of Aurora, Illinois. 2. The Representative for the estate is: Kari Franz and Kristen Bagamery Warren, 9 Walnut Circle, Sugar Grove, IL 60554. 3. The Attorney for the estate is: Richard W. Kuhn 552 S. Washington St. #100 Naperville, IL 60540 4. Claims against the estate may be filed on or before September 2, 2017. Claims against the estate may be filed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court, 540 S. Randall Rd., St. Charles, IL 60174 or with the Representative, or both. Any claim not filed within that period is barred. Copies of a claim filed with the Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the Representative and to the attorney within 10 days after it has been filed. 5. On 2/16/2017 an Order Appointing the Representative was entered. 6. Within forty-two (42) days after the effective date of the original Order Admitting the Will to Probate, you may file a petition with the Court to require proof of the validity of the Will by testimony or witnesses to the Will in open Court, or other evidence, as provided in Article VI 5/6-21 (755 ILCS 5/6/21). 7. Within six (6) months after the effective date of the original Order Admitting the Will to Probate, you may file a petition with the Court to contest the validity of the Will as provided under Article VIII 5/8-1 of the Probate Act (755 ILCS

nal Order Admitting the Will to Probate, you may file a petition with the Court to contest the validity of the Will as provided under Article VIII 5/8-1 of the Probate Act (755 ILCS 5/28-4). /s/ Richard W. Kuhn Attorney March 9, 16, 23, 2017 Kane County Chronicle 1270509

AGENDA TOWN OF ST. CHARLES

The existing zoning classification of

the property is defined in Article Kane County Chronicle / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 7.4(D)(2)(h) 2017 • CLASSIFIED 1725 Dean Street XII paragraph

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF (DECEDENT): ANN JEAN WILSON 710 Mosedale Street St. Charles, IL 60174 Date and Place of Death: 01/04/17 St. Charles, IL Case No. 17 P 71 PUBLICATION NOTICE INDEPENDENT ADMINISTRATION TO: CREDITORS AND CLAIMANTS (ONLY) 1. Notice is hereby given of the death of Ann Jean Wilson who died on 01/04/17, a resident of St. Charles, Illinois. 2. The Representative for the estate is: Thomas F. Wilson. 3. The Attorney for the estate is: Jay L. Dahl, 1122 Brigham Way, Geneva, IL 60134. 4. Claims against the estate may be filed on or before 09/02/17. Claims against the estate may be filed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court, 540 S. Randall Rd., St. Charles, IL 60174 or with the Representative, or both. Any claim not filed within that period is barred. Copies of a claim filed with the Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the Representative and to the attorney witin 10 days after it has been filed. 5. On 02/02/17 an Order Admitting the Will to Probate Appointing the Representative was entered. 6. Within forty-two (42) days after the effective date of the original Order Admitting the Will to Probate, you may file a petition with the Court to require proof of the validity of the Will by testimony or witnesses to the Will in open Court, or other evidence, as provided in A rticle VI 5/6-21 (755 ILCS 5/6/21). 7. Within six (6) months after the effective date of the original Order Admitting the Will to Probate, you may file a petition with the Court to contest the validity of the Will as provided under Article VIII 5/8-1 of the Probate Act (755 ILCS 5/8-1). The estate will be administered without Court supervision unless an interested party terminates independent supervision administration by filing a petition to terminate under Article XXVIII 5/28-4 of the Probate Act (755 ILCS 5/28-4). /s/ Thomas Wilson Signature of Executor (Published in the Kane County Chronicle March 2, 9, 16, 2017) 1270052

PUBLIC NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ANNUAL TOWN MEETING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the legal voters, residents of the Town of St. Charles in the County of Kane and State of Illinois, that the Annual Town Meeting of said town will take place on Tuesday, April 11, 2017, being the second Tuesday of said month, at the hour of 7:00 p.m. at l725 Dean Street, St. Charles, (Town Hall), for the transaction of the miscellaneous business of the said town; and after a Moderator having been elected will proceed to hear and consider reports of officers and decide on such measures as may, in pursuance of law, come before the meeting. AGENDA TOWN OF ST. CHARLES 1725 Dean Street Saint Charles, IL 60174 ANNUAL MEETING APRIL 11, 2017, 7:00 P.M.

Saint Charles, IL 60174 ANNUAL MEETING APRIL 11, 2017, 7:00 P.M. AT DONALD E. SCHEIB HALL Call to Order - Clerk Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag Clerk - Moderator Fee Call for Nomination for a Moderator Motion and Second Close nomination - Motion and Second - Vote on acceptance of Moderator Moderator takes oath of office. Moderator Procedures Approve Minutes of Annual Meeting held Apri1 12, 2016 Motion and Second Annual Report of Board of Trustees for fiscal year ending February 28, 2017. Copy in hand out. Suggest Clerk read Supervisor's Financial Statement Road District Treasurer's Annual Report Treasurer's Financial Statement Cemetery Copy in hand out. Comments or Questions to the above 2017/18 Township Budget presented to the Board February 08, 2017 Published with public hearing dated February 08, 2017 Budget discussion continued to March 08, 2017 meeting. No action taken. Comments or Questions Copy in hand out. Any new business. This concludes the business section of the meeting. Motion to continue the fiscal year from March 1, 2017 to February 28, 2018. Motion to set date, time and place for next Annual Meeting. Suggest - St. Charles Township, Donald E. Scheib Hall l725 Dean St., St. Charles 2nd Tuesday of April - April 10, 2018 - 7:00 PM Motion and Second Additional business, if any. Adjourn. (Published in the Kane County Chronicle, March 16, 2016)

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE TO BIDDERS REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL The Board of Education of Geneva Community Unit School District #304 is Accepting sealed proposals for: REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS TO PERFORM AN ACTUARIAL VALUATION OF GENEVA CUSD 304'S RETIREE HEALTH INSURANCE PLAN Sealed proposals will be accepted until Wednesday, April 12, 2017 at 1:30 PM at the District Office for Geneva Community Unit School District #304, at which time they will be publicly opened and read in the Board Conference Room. To obtain proposal specifications, please contact: Donna V. Oberg, Asst. Superintendent-Business Services 227 North Fourth Street, Geneva, IL 60134 (630) 463-3030 Geneva Community Unit School District #304 reserves the right to reject any and all bids received, whenever such rejection or waiver is in the interest of Geneva Community Unit School District #304. Dr. Kent Mutchler, Secretary, Board of Education Geneva Community Unit School District 304 (Published in the Geneva Kane County Chronicle on March 16, 2017) 1271173 Wake up with Kane County Chronicle For Home Delivery, call 800-589-9363

PUBLIC NOTICE The Workforce Development Board of Kane, Kendall and DeKalb Counties is accepting public comment on modifications to the Workforce Development Plan for Local Area #5. The plan modifications must be approved by the Board prior to submittal to the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity. The plan will be available for review at http://www.countyofkane.org/WDD/ Pages/Default.aspx beginning Friday, March 17, 2017. Questions or comments may be submitted to Jenna Gonzalez via email at gonzalezjenna@countyofkane.org until Saturday, April 15, 2017. Comments are also being accepted on modifications to the Northeast Region WIOA Plan, the link to which will be made available at the same web address in early April, 2017.

described as R-1; Single Family Residence District / Special Uses / Institutional /Governmental / Religious Retreats. The name and address of the legal and beneficial owner(s) of the property for which the variation is requested is Church of God. Dated: 3/14/2017 VILLAGE OF ELBURN (Published in the Elburn Herald on March 16, 2017) 1354384

PUBLIC NOTICE

73

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS

17 MR 268 NOTICE OF PUBLICATION REGARDING NAME CHANGE Public notice is hereby given that on May 5, 2017, in Courtroom No. 250, of the Kane County Courthouse, 100 South Third Street, Geneva, Illinois, at the hour of 9:00 a.m. or as soon thereafter as this matter may heard, a Petition will be heard in said Courtroom for the change of name of Andrew Tyler Green to the new name of Andrew Tyler Cravatta pursuant to 735 ILCS 5/21-101 et seq. /s/ Andrew Tyler Green Petitioner (Published in the Elburn Herald on March 16, 23, 30, 2017) 1354135

LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC TEST CONSOLIDATED ELECTION APRIL 4, 2017 *** NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that in accordance with the Election Code of Illinois, ILCS 5/24A-9, the Kane County Election Authority, located at 719 S. Batavia Ave., Geneva, Illinois, Building B, will be conducting its public test of its automatic tabulating equipment on March 28, 2017 at 9:00 a.m. The public test is open to representatives PUBLIC NOTICE (Published in the Kane County of the political parties, the candiChronicle, Daily Chronicle, Kendall dates, the press, and the public. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT County Record on March 16, Kane County Election Authority FOR THE SIXTEENTH DATED: March 14, 2017 2017) 1353857 JUDICIAL CIRCUIT (Published in the Kane County KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS Chronicle, March 16, 2017) PUBLIC NOTICE 1354165 PUBLIC HEARING 17 MR 281 NOTICE FOR SPECIAL USE NOTICE OF PUBLICATION PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN of a REGARDING NAME CHANGE public hearing to be held before the NOTIFICACIÓN LEGAL Public notice is hereby given that Village of Elburn's Planning ComNOTIFICACIÓN DE on May 12, 2017, in Courtroom mission/Zoning Board of Appeals No. 250, of the Kane County ENSAYO PÚBLICO on April 4, 2017, at 7:00 PM at Courthouse, 100 South Third ELECCIÓN CONSOLIDADA the Village Hall of the Village of Street, Geneva, Illinois, at the hour 4 DE ABRIL, 2017 Elburn located at 301 E. North of 9:00 a.m. or as soon thereafter *** Street, Elburn, Illinois. The purpose as this matter may heard, a Petition POR LA PRESENTE SE DA NOTIFIof the public hearing is to hear will be heard in said Courtroom for comments for and against the peti- CACIÓN de que el “Ensayo de the change of name of Raul Rojas tion for special use/variance of Equipos de Tabulación automáti- Canelo to the new name of Raul Section XII of the Village of Elburn cos" requerido bajo el Código Elec- Canelo pursuant to 735 ILCS 5/21Zoning Ordinance to allow for use toral de Illinois ILCS5/24A-9 será ll- 101 et seq. as defined in Article XII paragraph evado a cabo a las 9:00 a.m. del /s/ Raul Rojas Canelo 7.4 (D)(2)(d) described as R-1; Martes 28 de Marzo, 2017 en el Petitioner Single Family Residence District / edificio “B” del Centro GubernaSpecial Uses / Institutional /Govern- mental del Condado Kane, 719 S. (Published in the Kane County mental / Hospitals and Medical Batavia Ave., Geneva, Illinois. De Chronicle on March 16, 23, 30, Clinics. for the property located at acuerdo con los provistos del Códi- 2017) 1271896 526 N. Main Street, Elburn, Illinois go Electoral, los representantes de legally described as follows: PUBLIC NOTICE los partidos políticos, los canAbbreviated Description: Lot: 2 didatos, la prensa y el público en City: Campton IN THE CIRCUIT COURT general tendrán derecho a estar en SUBD: Fellowship Deaconry FOR THE SIXTEENTH asistencia. City/Muni/Twp: CAMPTON JUDICIAL CIRCUIT The existing zoning classification of Autoridad de Elecciones del KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS the property is defined in Article Condado de Kane 17 MR 278 paragraph 7.4(D)(2)(h) FECHADO: 14 de Marzo, 2017 XII NOTICE OF PUBLICATION described as R-1; Single Family (Published in the Kane County REGARDING NAME CHANGE Residence District / Special Uses / Chronicle, March 16, 2017) Institutional /Governmental / Reli- 1354185 Public notice is hereby given that gious Retreats. The name and adon May 12, 2017, in Courtroom dress of the legal and beneficial No. 250, of the Kane County owner(s) of the property for which Courthouse, 100 South Third the variation is requested is Church Street, Geneva, Illinois, at the hour of God. of 9:00 a.m. or as soon thereafter PUBLIC NOTICE Dated: 3/14/2017 as this matter may heard, a Petition PUBLIC MEETING VILLAGE OF ELBURN will be heard in said Courtroom for Tuesday, March 28, 2017 4:00 pm to 7:00 (Published in the Elburn Herald on thepmchange of name of Lawrence Sugar Grove (Village) in partnership with Kane County, Illinois Department MarchThe 16,Village 2017) of1354384 Edward the Meucci to the new nameofof Transportation (IDOT), and the Illinois Tollway invites you to attend the Larry third public houseto Edwardmeeting Meucci(open pursuant format) regarding the planning for the potential improvements to the IL 47 (Sugar Grove Parkway) 735 ILCS 5/21-101 et interchange seq. at the I-88 (Ronald Reagan Memorial Tollway) in Kane County. /s/ Lawrence Edward Meucci The Open House Public Meeting Meeting Purpose: Petitioner will take place on: • Review the alternatives screening results Date: Tuesday, March 28, 2017 • Provide input on the(Published alternativesinto bethecarried Kaneforward County Time: 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm Chronicle on Mach 16, 23, 30, Location: Academic and Professional Center 2017) 1271811 Event Room (use North Entrance) Waubonsee Community College Route 47 at Waubonsee Drive Sugar Grove, IL 60554-9454 Exhibits will be on display and an audio-visual presentation will be operating continuously for review any time throughout the evening. The Village, Kane County, IDOT, and Illinois Tollway staff as well as project consultant representatives will be available to discuss the project and answer questions. If a reasonable accommodation is needed under the Americans with Disabilities Act, please contact Peter Johnston, phone 773.399.0112. Persons planning to attend who will need a sign language interpreter or other similar accommodations should notify the TTY/TDD number (800) 526-0844 or 711; TTY users (Spanish) (800) 501-0864 or 711; and for Telebraille dial (877) 526-6670 at least five (5) days prior to the meeting. All written correspondence regarding this project should be sent to: GRAEF Attn: Peter Johnston, P.E. 8501 W. Higgins Road - Suite 280 Chicago, IL 60631-28014 Phone: 773.399.0112 Email: SugarGroveInterchange@graef-usa.com Or submitted through the project website: www.SugarGroveInterchange.org (Published in the Kane County Chronicle on March 9, 16, 2017) 1268502


KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS

17 MR 278 74NOTICECLASSIFIED OF PUBLICATION REGARDING NAME CHANGE

Public notice is hereby given that on May 12, 2017, in Courtroom No. 250, of the Kane County Courthouse, 100 South Third Street, Geneva, Illinois, at the hour of 9:00 a.m. or as soon thereafter as this matter may heard, a Petition will be heard in said Courtroom for the change of name of Lawrence Edward Meucci to the new name of Larry Edward Meucci pursuant to 735 ILCS 5/21-101 et seq. /s/ Lawrence Edward Meucci Petitioner (Published in the Kane County Chronicle on Mach 16, 23, 30, 2017) 1271811

PUBLIC NOTICE ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE Public Notice is hereby given that on Friday, February 17, 2017 a certificate was filed in the office of the County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois, setting forth the names and addresses of all persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as: BL Properties located at: 239 S. Edgelawn Dr. Aurora, IL 60506 2/17/2017 /s/ John A. Cunningham Kane County Clerk (Published in the Kane County Chronicle on March 2, 9, 16, 2017) 1269987

PUBLIC NOTICE ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE Public Notice is hereby given that on Tuesday, February 28, 2017 a certificate was filed in the office of the County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois, setting forth the names and addresses of all persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as: AURORA SAFETY located at: 837 HOYDEN CT Sugar Grove, IL, 60554 Dated: 2/28/2017 /s/ John A. Cunningham Kane County Clerk (Published in the Kane County Chronicle on March 9, 16, 23, 2017) 1271148

PUBLIC NOTICE ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE Public Notice is hereby given that on Friday, February 24, 2017 a certificate was filed in the office of the County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois, setting forth the names and addresses of all persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as: Roush D V located at: 435 Cavalier Ct Apt 107 West Dundee, IL, 60118 Dated: 2/24/2017 /s/ John A. Cunningham Kane County Clerk (Published in the Kane County Chronicle on March 9, 16, 23, 2017) 1271149

nois, setting forth the names and

located at: addresses of all persons owning, located at: • Thursday, March 16, conducting 2017 • Kane County the Chronicle 432 Lewis /Rd.KCChronicle.com 721 N Commonwealth Ave and transacting business known as:

Fried & Fabulous Concessions

PUBLIC NOTICE ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE

located at: 50 W 790 Main St Elburn, IL, 60119

Geneva, IL 60134

Aurora, IL60506

located at: 40W051 Sunflower Ln. Elgin, IL 60124

Dated: 2/24/2017

Dated: 3/7/2017

Dated: 2/27/2017

/s/ John A. Cunningham Kane County Clerk

/s/ John A. Cunningham Kane County Clerk

/s/ John A. Cunningham Kane County Clerk

(Published in the Kane County (Published in the Kane County (Published in the Kane County Chronicle on March 9, 16, 23, Chronicle on March 16, 23, 30, Chronicle on March 2, 9, 16, Dated: 3/3/2017 2017) 1271798 2017) 1272648 2017) 1269998 Public Notice is hereby given that on Monday, February 27, 2017 a /s/ John A. Cunningham certificate was filed in the office of Kane County Clerk PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE the County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois, setting forth the names and (Published in the Kane County addresses of all persons owning, Chronicle on March 9, 16, 23, ASSUMED NAME ASSUMED NAME conducting and transacting the 2017) 1271147 PUBLICATION NOTICE PUBLICATION NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE business known as: Public Notice is hereby given that Public Notice is hereby given that ASSUMED NAME Carrie Lee Photography on Monday, February 27, 2017 a on Monday, March 6, 2017 a cerPUBLIC NOTICE PUBLICATION NOTICE certificate was filed in the office of tificate was filed in the office of the located at: the County Clerk of Kane County, County Clerk of Kane County, IlliPublic Notice is hereby given that Illinois, setting forth the names and nois, setting forth the names and ASSUMED NAME 1880 Monday Dr on Tuesday, March 07, 2017 a addresses of all persons owning, addresses of all persons owning, PUBLICATION NOTICE Elgin, IL 60123 certificate was filed in the office of conducting and transacting the conducting and transacting the Public Notice is hereby given that the County Clerk of Kane County, business known as: business known as: Dated: 2/27/2017 on Friday, February 24, 2017 a Illinois, setting forth the names and certificate was filed in the office of addresses of all persons owning, Pritchett Properties North Pickin' With Pete /s/ John A. Cunningham the County Clerk of Kane County, conducting and transacting the Kane County Clerk Illinois, setting forth the names and business known as: located at: located at: addresses of all persons owning, 40W051 Sunflower Ln. 134 Durango Drive (Published in the Kane County conducting and transacting the It's Fit Time Elgin, IL 60124 Gliberts, IL 60136 Chronicle on March 9, 16, 23, business known as: 2017) 1271150 located at: Dated: 2/27/2017 Dated: 3/6/2017 721 N Commonwealth Ave INSURGENT KINEMATICS Aurora, IL60506 PUBLIC NOTICE /s/ John A. Cunningham /s/ John A. Cunningham located at: Kane County Clerk Kane County Clerk 432 Lewis Rd. Dated: 3/7/2017 ASSUMED NAME Geneva, IL 60134 PUBLICATION NOTICE (Published in the Kane County (Published in the Kane County PUBLIC /s/ John A. Cunningham Chronicle on March 2, 9, 16, NOTICE Chronicle on March 16, 23, 30, Kane County Clerk Public Notice is hereby given that Dated: 2/24/2017 2017) 1269998 2017) 1271857 To: Moran, Melquiades, Ortencia & Gonzalez, JE; Melquiades Moran; on Tuesday, March 02, 2017 a (Published in the Kane County Ortencia Moran; Jesus E. Gonzalez; Citifinancial Services, Inc.; occu/s/ John A. Cunningham certificate was filed in the office of Chronicle on March 16, 23, 30, pants or persons in actual possession of real estate hereinafter deKane County Clerk the County Clerk of Kane County, 2017) 1272648 scribed; County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois; unknown owners and Illinois, setting forth the names and parties interested in said real estate. County NOTICE addresses of all persons owning, (Published in the Kane PUBLIC Chronicle on March 9, 16, 23, conducting and transacting the 2017) 1271798 TAX DEED NO. 17 TX 19 Filed February 10, 2017 business known as: To: Northern Trust Co, Trust #10043; First American Bank, as Successor Trustee to First American Bank of Kane County, as Trustee under TAKE NOTICE DETAIL HAND CAR WASH Trust Number 86-099; The Northern Trust Company, as Trustee under County of Kane Trust Number 10043; occupants or persons in actual possession of real Date Premises Sold October 27, 2014 located at: estate hereinafter described; County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois; unCertificate No. 2014-01179 155 E Dundee Ave known owners and parties interested in said real estate. Sold for General Taxes of 2013 East Dundee, IL, 60118 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and TAX DEED NO. 17 TX 18 Filed February 10, 2017 Special assessment number (Not Applicable) Dated: 3/2/2017 Warrant No. (Not Applicable) Inst. No. (Not Applicable) TAKE NOTICE County of Kane /s/ John A. Cunningham THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Date Premises Sold October 27, 2014 Kane County Clerk Certificate No. 2014-00942 Property located at: 117 Kings Road, Carpentersville, Illinois (Published in the Kane County Sold for General Taxes of 2013 Property Index No. 03-11-304-018 Chronicle on March 16, 23, 30, Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and Special assessment number (Not Applicable) 2017) 1272660 This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for Warrant No. (Not Applicable) Inst. No. (Not Applicable) delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will expire on August 2, 2017. THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES PUBLIC NOTICE 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 Property located at: 7 Autumn Trail, Barrington Hills, Illinois ASSUMED NAME sale or his or her assignee pays any subsequently accruing taxes or Property Index No. 03-01-327-002 PUBLICATION NOTICE special assessments to redeem the property from subsequent forfeitures or tax sales. Check with the County Clerk as to the exact amount you Public Notice is hereby given that This notice is to advise you that the above property has been sold for owe before redeeming. on Thursday, March 09, 2017 a delinquent taxes and that the period of redemption from the sale will exThis notice is also to advise you that a petition has been filed for a tax certificate was filed in the office of pire on August 2, 2017. deed which will transfer title and the right to possession of this property the County Clerk of Kane County, The amount to redeem is subject to increase at 6-month intervals from if redemption is not made on or before August 2, 2017. Illinois, setting forth the names and the date of sale and may be further increased if the purchaser at the tax addresses of all persons owning, sale or his or her assignee pays any subsequently accruing taxes or This matter is set for hearing in the Courthouse of Kane County, 100 S. conducting and transacting the special assessments to redeem the property from subsequent forfeitures Third Street, in Geneva, Illinois, on August 22, 2017 at 9:00 a.m. in or tax sales. Check with the County Clerk as to the exact amount you business known as: Room 150. owe before redeeming. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will alThis notice is also to advise you that a petition has been filed for a tax Executive Ink Art Collective ready have expired at that time. deed which will transfer title and the right to possession of this property YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF if redemption is not made on or before August 2, 2017. located at: PROPERTY 1365 N. LaFox St. Redemption can be made at any time on or before August 2, 2017 by This matter is set for hearing in the Courthouse of Kane County, 100 S. South Elgin, IL 60177 Third Street, in Geneva, Illinois, on August 22, 2017 at 9:00 a.m. in applying to the County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Geneva, Illinois. Room 150. Dated: 3/9/2017 You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will alFor further information contact the County Clerk ready have expired at that time. Address: 719 South Batavia Avenue, Building B, Geneva IL 60134 /s/ John A. Cunningham YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF Telephone: 630-232-5965 Kane County Clerk PROPERTY Oak Park Investments, Inc. Redemption can be made at any time on or before August 2, 2017 by (Published in the Kane County applying to the County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois at the Office of the MICHAEL J. WILSON & ASSOCIATES Chronicle on March 16, 23, 30, County Clerk in Geneva, Illinois. Michael J. Wilson 2017) 1272646 Attorneys at Law For further information contact the County Clerk 309 West Washington Street, Suite 1200 Address: 719 South Batavia Avenue, Building B, Geneva IL 60134 PUBLIC NOTICE Chicago, IL 60606 Telephone: 630-232-5965 312- 781-9510 Oak Park Investments, Inc. #OP-326 Purchaser or Assignee ASSUMED NAME Dated 2/10/ 2017 PUBLICATION NOTICE MICHAEL J. WILSON & ASSOCIATES Michael J. Wilson (Published in the Kane County Chronicle March 16, 23, 30, 2017.) Public Notice is hereby given that Attorneys at Law 1272743 on Friday, March 03, 2017 a cer- 309 West Washington Street, Suite 1200 tificate was filed in the office of the Chicago, IL 60606 County Clerk of Kane County, Illi- 312- 781-9510 Buying? Selling? DON'T NEED IT? nois, setting forth the names and #OP-325 Purchaser or Assignee addresses of all persons owning, Renting? Hiring? SELL IT FAST! Dated 2/10/ 2017 conducting and transacting the To place an ad, Kane County Chronicle Classified business known as: (Published in the Kane County Chronicle March 16, 23, 30, 2017.) call 877-264-2527 Call 877-264-2527 or 1272742 Kane County Chronicle Classified Fried & Fabulous Concessions KCChronicle.com

located at: 134 Durango Drive Gliberts, IL 60136

located at: 217 Virgil Street Maple Park, IL 60151

Dated: 3/6/2017

Dated: 3/3/2017

/s/ John A. Cunningham Kane County Clerk

/s/ John A. Cunningham Kane County Clerk

(Published in the Kane County (Published in the Kane County Chronicle on March 16, 23, 30, Chronicle on March 16, 23, 30, 2017) 1271857 2017) 1271849

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE

ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE

Public Notice is hereby given that on Friday, March 3, 2017 a certificate was filed in the office of the County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois, setting forth the names and addresses of all persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as:

Public Notice is hereby given that on Friday, February 24, 2017 a certificate was filed in the office of the County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois, setting forth the names and addresses of all persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as:

RBI Wash

Spring Bird

located at: 217 Virgil Street Maple Park, IL 60151

located at: 18N600 Westhill Rd, Dundee, IL, 60118

Dated: 3/3/2017

Dated: 2/24/2017

/s/ John A. Cunningham Kane County Clerk

/s/ John A. Cunningham Kane County Clerk

(Published in the Kane County (Published in the Kane County Chronicle on March 16,PUBLIC 23, 30, NOTICE Chronicle on March 2, 9, 16, 2017) 1271849 2017) 1269905 To: Mario Cruz Gonzalez; Santiago Soto; Mario Cruz Gonzalez; Jaime Dorantes; Michael Crescencio; Rafael Hernandez; Laureano Hernandez; Occupant; occupants or persons in actual possession of real estate hereinafter described; County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois; unknown owners and parties interested in said real estate. TAX DEED NO. 17 TX 20

Filed

February 10, 2017

TAKE NOTICE County of Kane Date Premises Sold October 27, 2014 Certificate No. 2014-01590 Sold for General Taxes of 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and Special assessment number (Not Applicable) Warrant No. (Not Applicable) Inst. No. (Not Applicable) THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at: 315 South Clifton Avenue, Elgin, Illinois Property Index No. 06-22-253-006 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 August 2, 2017. 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 August 2, 2017. This matter is set for hearing in the Courthouse of Kane County, 100 S. Third Street, in Geneva, Illinois, on August 22, 2017 at 9:00 a.m. in Room 150. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at that time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before August 2, 2017 by applying to the County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Geneva, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk Address: 719 South Batavia Avenue, Building B, Geneva IL 60134 Telephone: 630-232-5965 Oak Park Investments, Inc. MICHAEL J. WILSON & ASSOCIATES Michael J. Wilson Attorneys at Law 309 West Washington Street, Suite 1200 Chicago, IL 60606 312- 781-9510 #OP-331 Purchaser or Assignee Dated 2/10/ 2017 (Published in the Kane County Chronicle March 16, 23, 30, 2017.) 1272746 NEIGHBORS is news by readers, for readers, about readers. Have news to share? Send it to: neighbors@kcchronicle.com

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located at: 18N600 Westhill Rd, Dundee, IL, 60118

located at: 127 S Third St Geneva, IL 60134

located at: 483 Barrett St, Elgin, IL, 60120

located at: 520 W GALENA BLVD, 2FL AURORA, IL 60506

Dated: 2/24/2017

Dated: 3/6/2017

Dated: 2/15/2017

Dated: March 6, 2017

/s/ John A. Cunningham Kane County Clerk

/s/ John A. Cunningham Kane County Clerk

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE

ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE

Public Notice is hereby given that on Monday, March 6, 2017 a certificate was filed in the office of the ,County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois, setting forth the names and addresses of all persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as:

Public Notice is hereby given that on Wednesday, February 15, 2017 a certificate was filed in the office of the County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois, setting forth the names and addresses of all persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as:

/s/ John A. Cunningham Kane County Clerk

connection with or financial interest

in the above named business carKane / KCChronicle.com • Thursday, March 16, 2017 • ried County on under Chronicle such an assumed

/s/ John A. Cunningham Kane County Clerk

name.

Dated: 2/27/2017 /s/ John A. Cunningham Kane County Clerk

We place FREE ads for Lost or Found in Classified every day!

Call: 877-264-2527 or email: y(Published in the Kane County (Published in the Kane County (Published in the Kane County (Published in the Kane County (Published in the Kane County classified@shawsuburban.com ,Chronicle on March 2, 9, 16, Chronicle on March 16, 23, 30, Chronicle on March 2, 9, 16, Chronicle on March 9, 16, 23, Chronicle on March 16, 23, 30, 2017) 1272656 2017) 1269905 2017) 1271827 2017) 1268444 2017) 1271756 Kane County Chronicle Classified

PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE

SUPPLEMENTAL ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE Public Notice is hereby given that on Monday, February 27, 2017 a certificate was filed in the office of the County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois, concerning the business known as Tidy Chicks

Public Notice is hereby given that on Monday, March 6, 2017 a certificate was filed in the office of the County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois, setting forth the names and addresses of all persons owning, located at 1972 Sedgegrass Trail, Tea Junction Truth Sound Co conducting and transacting the Aurora, IL, 60504 which certificate business known as: sets forth the following changes in located at: located at: the operation thereof: 127 S Third St 483 Barrett St, RODRIGUEZ LAWN CUT Geneva, IL 60134 Elgin, IL, 60120 Jennifer A Gullang has ceased dolocated at: ing business under the above Dated: 3/6/2017 Dated: 2/15/2017 520 W GALENA BLVD, 2FL named business and has no further AURORA, IL 60506 connection with or financial interest /s/ John A. Cunningham /s/ John A. Cunningham in the above named business carKane County Clerk Kane County Clerk ried on under such an assumed Dated: March 6, 2017 name. County NOTICE (Published in the Kane County y(Published in the Kane PUBLIC /s/ John A. Cunningham ,Chronicle on March 16, 23, 30, Chronicle on March 2, 9, 16, Dated: 2/27/2017 Kane County Clerk 2017) 1271827 2017) 1268444 To: Hector Ortiz & Noelia Ortiz; Reymundo DeLeon; Noelia Ortiz; Ar/s/ John A. Cunningham mando Ortiz; Andere Ortiz; Hector Ortiz; Occupant; occupants or per- (Published in the Kane County Kane County Clerk sons in actual possession of real estate hereinafter described; County Chronicle on March 9, 16, 23, Clerk of Kane County, Illinois; unknown owners and parties interested in 2017) 1271756 (Published in the Kane County said real estate. Chronicle on March 16, 23, 30, PUBLIC NOTICE 2017) 1272656 TAX DEED NO. 17 TX 13 Filed February 10, 2017 TAKE NOTICE County of Kane Date Premises Sold October 27, 2014 Certificate No. 2014-00257 Sold for General Taxes of 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and Special assessment number (Not Applicable) Warrant No. (Not Applicable) Inst. No. (Not Applicable) THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at: 402 North Fordham, Aurora, Illinois Property Index No. 15-20-226-011 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 August 2, 2017. 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 August 2, 2017. This matter is set for hearing in the Courthouse of Kane County, 100 S. Third Street, in Geneva, Illinois, on August 22, 2017 at 9:00 a.m. in Room 150. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at that time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before August 2, 2017 by applying to the County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Geneva, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk Address: 719 South Batavia Avenue, Building B, Geneva IL 60134 Telephone: 630-232-5965 Oak Park Investments, Inc. MICHAEL J. WILSON & ASSOCIATES Michael J. Wilson Attorneys at Law 309 West Washington Street, Suite 1200 Chicago, IL 60606 312- 781-9510 #OP-323 Purchaser or Assignee Dated 2/10/ 2017 (Published in the Kane County Chronicle March 16, 23, 30, 2017.) 1272737

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To: Rosemary Williams; Eunice San Diego; Matthew Williams; Samuel Williams; Aaliyah Williams; Occupant; Spartan Meadows Condominium Association; occupants or persons in actual possession of real estate hereinafter described; County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois; unknown owners and parties interested in said real estate. TAX DEED NO. 17 TX 15

Filed

February 10, 2017

TAKE NOTICE County of Kane Date Premises Sold October 27, 2014 Certificate No. 2014-01579 Sold for General Taxes of 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and Special assessment number (Not Applicable) Warrant No. (Not Applicable) Inst. No. (Not Applicable) THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at: 491 South Belmont Avenue, Unit 6, Elgin, Illinois Property Index No. 06-21-402-019 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 August 2, 2017. 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 August 2, 2017. This matter is set for hearing in the Courthouse of Kane County, 100 S. Third Street, in Geneva, Illinois, on August 22, 2017 at 9:00 a.m. in Room 150. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at that time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before August 2, 2017 by applying to the County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Geneva, Illinois.

PUBLIC NOTICE To: Thomas Edward Perry; Jean Ann Perry; Jean Marie Perry; Occupant; occupants or persons in actual possession of real estate hereinafter described; County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois; unknown owners and parties interested in said real estate. TAX DEED NO. 17 TX 16

Filed

February 10, 2017

TAKE NOTICE

County of Kane Date Premises Sold October 27, 2014 Certificate No.2014-00695 Sold for General Taxes of 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and Special assessment number (Not Applicable) Warrant No. (Not Applicable) Inst. No. (Not Applicable) THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at: 1338 Hinckley Street, Montgomery, Illinois Property Index No. 15-34-405-020 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 August 2, 2017. 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 August 2, 2017. This matter is set for hearing in the Courthouse of Kane County, 100 S. Third Street, in Geneva, Illinois, on August 22, 2017 at 9:00 a.m. in Room 150. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at that time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before August 2, 2017 by applying to the County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Geneva, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk Address: 719 South Batavia Avenue, Building B, Geneva IL 60134 Telephone: 630-232-5965 Oak Park Investments, Inc. MICHAEL J. WILSON & ASSOCIATES Michael J. Wilson Attorneys at Law 309 West Washington Street, Suite 1200 Chicago, IL 60606 312- 781-9510 #OP-324 Purchaser or Assignee Dated 2/10/ 2017 (Published in the Kane County Chronicle March 16, 23, 30, 2017.) 1272739

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(Published in the Kane County Chronicle March 16, 23, 30, 2017.) 1272745

PUBLIC NOTICE

PI Telecom Infrastructure V, LLC proposes to build a 125-foot monopole communications tower (130-foot overall height). Anticipated lighting application is medium intensity dual red/white strobes if required. The Site location is 3N800 Peck Road, St. Charles, Kane County, Illinois 60175 Latitude: 41-55-23.9 N, Longitude: 88-21-30.7 W. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Antenna Structure Registration (ASR, Form 854) filing number is A1066471. ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS - Interested persons may review the application(www.fcc.gov/asr/applications) by entering the filing number. Environmental concerns may beraised by filing a Request for Environmental Review (www.fcc.gov/asr/environmentalrequest) and online filings are strongly encouraged. The mailing address to file a paper copy is: FCC Requests for Environmental Review, Attn: Ramon Williams, 445 12th Street SW, Washington, DC20554. HISTORIC PROPERTIES EFFECTS - Public comments regarding potential effects on historic properties may be submitted within 30 days from the date of this publication to: Lauren Herrnreiter, G2 Consulting Group, LLC, 1186 Heather Drive, Lake Zurich, Illinois 60047 Phone: 847353-8740, E-Mail: lherrnreiter@g2consultinggroup.com. (Published in the Kane County Chronicle on March 16, 2017) 1272347

PUBLIC NOTICE To: Gordon L. Newton; Beverly A. Newton; Occupant; The State Bank of Geneva; Midtax, Inc.; County of Kane; occupants or persons in actual possession of real estate hereinafter described; County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois; unknown owners and parties interested in said real estate. TAX DEED NO. 17 TX 17

Filed

February 10, 2017

TAKE NOTICE

County of Kane Date Premises Sold October 27, 2014 Certificate No. 2014-02105 Sold for General Taxes of 2013 Sold for Special Assessment of (Municipality) and Special assessment number (Not Applicable) Warrant No. (Not Applicable) Inst. No. (Not Applicable) THIS PROPERTY HAS BEEN SOLD FOR DELINQUENT TAXES Property located at: 1228 Rita Avenue, St. Charles, Illinois Property Index No. 09-35-327-009 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 August 2, 2017. 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 August 2, 2017. This matter is set for hearing in the Courthouse of Kane County, 100 S. Third Street, in Geneva, Illinois, on August 22, 2017 at 9:00 a.m. in Room 150. You may be present at this hearing but your right to redeem will already have expired at that time. YOU ARE URGED TO REDEEM IMMEDIATELY TO PREVENT LOSS OF PROPERTY Redemption can be made at any time on or before August 2, 2017 by applying to the County Clerk of Kane County, Illinois at the Office of the County Clerk in Geneva, Illinois. For further information contact the County Clerk Address: 719 South Batavia Avenue, Building B, Geneva IL 60134 Telephone: 630-232-5965 Oak Park Investments, Inc. MICHAEL J. WILSON & ASSOCIATES Michael J. Wilson Attorneys at Law 309 West Washington Street, Suite 1200 Chicago, IL 60606 312- 781-9510 #OP-333 Purchaser or Assignee Dated 2/10/ 2017 (Published in the Kane County Chronicle March 16, 23, 30, 2017.) 1272747

For further information contact the County Clerk Address: 719 South Batavia Avenue, Building B, Geneva IL 60134 Telephone: 630-232-5965 Oak Park Investments, Inc. MICHAEL J. WILSON & ASSOCIATES Michael J. Wilson Attorneys at Law 309 West Washington Street, Suite 1200 Chicago, IL 60606 312- 781-9510 #OP-330 Purchaser or Assignee Dated 2/10/ 2017

CLASSIFIED 75

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