SPORTS State playoffs Morris native Reents leads Wilmington / 13 Giving Tuesday Grundy organizations participate in program / 7 LOCAL NEWS Minooka board Superintendent to receive official letter / 6 LOCAL NEWS CARING AND SHARING Community Thanksgiving has its most successful year yet /3 FRIDAY November 28, 2014 • $1.00 MorrisDailyHerald.com Facebook.com/MorrisDailyHerald @MorrisHerald SERVING THE MORRIS AREA SINCE 1880
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SPORTS
State playoffsMorris native Reentsleads Wilmington / 13
Giving TuesdayGrundyorganizationsparticipate in program / 7
LOCAL NEWS
Minooka boardSuperintendent toreceive official letter / 6
LOCAL NEWS
CARING ANDSHARINGCommunity Thanksgiving has itsmost successful year yet / 3
FRIDAY N o v e m b e r 2 8 , 2 0 1 4 • $ 1 . 0 0
MorrisDailyHerald.com Facebook.com/MorrisDailyHerald @MorrisHeraldSERVING THE MORRIS AREA SINCE 1880
Morris
DailyHerald/morrisdailyherald.com
•Friday,Novem
ber28,2014|P
UBLIC
RECO
RDLEONARD J. BOLSBorn: Jan. 30, 1920; inMorris, ILDied:Nov. 24, 2014; inMorris, IL
Leonard J. Bols,age 94, of AuxSable Twp.,Minooka,passed awayNovember 24, 2014,at Park Pointe inMorris.
Born Jan. 30, 1920, inMorris,Leonardwas a son of the late JohnandCatherine (Broderick) Bols. OnFeb. 14, 1944, LeonardmarriedWinonaDavies in Immaculate ConceptionCatholic Church inMorris. Togetherthey farmed and raised their familyin the ruralMorris andMinooka area.Leonard farmedhis entire life, and ear-ly on raised registeredHolstein dairycattle. Thereafter he focused ongrainfarmingwith his son until retiring.Leonardwas amember of St.Mary’s
Catholic Church inMinooka, TheMinooka LionsClub, and in years pastbelonged to the PureMilk Association.He served on theGrundyCountyBoard for 28 years,where hewasboth chairman and vice chairmanformany years. Leonardworked onvarious committees during his tenure,andwill bemost remembered forbeing chairmanof theGrundyCountyBuildingCommission,which designedand oversaw the construction of thecurrent GrundyCountyAdministrativeBuilding. A very civicmindedman,Leonard also served asAux SableTownship Supervisor for 36 years andwas a former boardmemberwiththeGrundyCounty FarmBureau. Inhis free time, Leonard bowled on a
Monday night league, loved to danceand play cards, and took pleasure ingolf andwoodworking.Survivors include his children, Kathy
(Dan) Friant andBernie (Debbie) Bols,both ofMinooka andKimSchaefer ofMorris; (8) grandchildren, Jeff (Amy)Friant of Naperville, Kristin (Peter)Thomas of Schaumburg, Dave (Becca)Bols of Channahon, Kelly (Trent) OlsonofMorris, Ryan Schaefer ofMilwau-kee, Nick Schaefer (Nicole Bromberek)ofMazon, Alan Schaefer of NewYork,NY andBrittany Schaefer of St Louis;(8) great grandchildren,Moira, KeeganandKeira Friant, Ellie andOwenThom-as andMason, Caleb andNorahBols;one sister, Eleanor (the late Keith)Jackson ofManteno; and one brother,Edwin (Ruth) Bols ofMorris, aswell asnumerous nieces and nephews.Leonardwas preceded in death by
his parents;wife,Winona onMay 7,2014; and two sisters, Frances (How-ard) Clennon andKathleen (Robert)Lawrence.Visitation and video tributewill be
Friday, November 28th between thehours of 4:00 and8:00p.m. at ReevesFuneral Home, 408 E.WashingtonSt. inMorris (815-942-2500). Funeralserviceswill followSaturdaymorningat 10:30 a.m. in St.Mary’s CatholicChurch, 303W. St.Mary’s St. inMinooka. AMass of Christian Burialwill be celebratedwith Reverend TuanVanNguyen officiating. Burialwill be inSt.Mary’s Cemetery,Minooka.Pallbearerswill be Leonard’s grand-
children: Jeff Friant, Kristin Thomas,DaveBols, Kelly Olson, Ryan Schaefer,Nick Schaefer, Alan Schaefer andBrit-tany Schaefer. Honorary pallbearerswill be JimThomas andRobCraig.
Preferredmemorialsmay bemadeas gifts in Leonard’smemory to theSaintMary’sMajorMaintenance Fund,or to a charity of the donor’s choosing.Friendsmay sign the online guest
book or send private condolencesto the family by logging onto:www.ReevesFuneral.com
BRUCEH. DERBYBorn:Oct. 28, 1950; in Tuscola, ILDied:Nov. 24, 2014; inMorris, IL
BruceH. Derby,age 64, ofMorris,passed awayMonday afternoon,November 24, 2014,atMorris Hospitalwith his loving family
by his side.Funeral serviceswill be held on Sat-
urday, November 29, 2014, at 10:00a.m., at Fruland Funeral Home, 121W. Jefferson St., inMorris, with Rev.Robert Noesen officiating. Intermentwill follow in St.Mary’s Cemetery inPesotum, Illinois. Visitationwill beheld from4:00 to 8:00 p.m., on Fridayat the funeral home.Born onOctober 28, 1950, in Tusco-
la, Illinois, hewas the son of Phillip andBeverly (Bane) Derby. He graduatedfromVilla GroveHigh Schoolwith theclass of 1969, and later attended JolietJunior College. BrucemarriedMarthaDianeWalker, and she precededhim in 1988. Later hemarried Joyce
Meador, and they lived all of theirmar-ried life in Coal City.After 20 plus years , he retired from
Lyondell Chemical Company.He is survived by his lovingwife,
Joyce ofMazon; five sons,Mi-chael(Angela) Derby of Poplar,MO,Matthew (Carolyn) Derby of Coal City,IL, Dustin (Sara) Derby of Davenport,IA, ChadDerby of Scottsborro, ALand Johnny Crumof Versailles, IL;two daughters, Rachael (Phillip)Hargis of Cincinnati, OH andMelanie(Lucas)Lammers of St. Peters,MO;step-mother, KayDerby of KY; sixteen,grandchildren, AndrewKendall, Cory,Samantha, Ashley, Shannon, Jordan,Alexis andMadisonDerby, Bobby,Bryan and Brandan Smith andCaseyandHarley Hargis and Evan Lammers,Emmalyssa and Ivan Crum; threegreat grandchildren, Ashton, Henryand Kaysen; three sisters, ConnieBuberle, Bernita Barbarka andDebbieDarnell; two brothers, Phillip DerbyJr. and Eric Derby; several nieces andnephews.Preceding him in deathwere his
parents.Hewas amember of the Loyal Order
ofMoose LodgeNo. 967 inMorris.Brucewas a fan of the Chicago
Bears andCubs, enjoyed cooking,drawing, golfing,woodworking, fish-ing and spending timewith his familyand grandchildren.Memorialsmay be given toMoose-
hart.Formore information, call the
funeral home at 815-942-0700 or signthe private online guestbook atwww.frulandfuneralhome.com
Accuracy is important to theMorris Daily Herald and it wants tocorrect mistakes promptly. Please
call errors to our attention by phoneat 815-942-3221, ext. 2030; or [email protected].
The Morris Daily Herald (USPA 363-560).This paper is owned and published by theMorris Publishing Company, an IllinoisCorporation office and place of business,1804 N. Division St., P.O. Box 749, Morris,IL, 60450, 815-942-3221, daily Tuesdaythrough Saturday except holidays.
The Morris Daily Herald andMorrisDailyHerald.com are a division of
Shaw Media.Periodicals postage paid at Morris, Illinois,
and additional post offices.POSTMASTER: Send address changes toMorris Daily Herald, 1804 N. Division St.,
Morris, IL 60450.
All rights reserved.Copyright 2014
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Don’t miss the 32nd Annual
Saturday, December 6, 20149:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Morris Community High School Rec Center1000 Union StreetMorris, IL 60450
• Concession stand all day• Free coat check• Strollers allowed
Morris Community High School sophomore Bulmaro Torres serves thefree Thanksgiving meal offered at his Uncle Al Lopez’s restaurant onThursday in downtown Morris.
MORRIS – Rich Meyer andLuella Kellogg met in 2006when they started exercis-ing together. Instead of beingalone this Thanksgiving, thetwo decided to enjoy Thanks-giving together at Al’s Dinerin Morris.
“I think it’s wonderfulto be able to sit with a goodfriend, and today is a goodday to do it,” Meyer said.
This is Kellogg’s fourthyear enjoying Thanksgiv-ing at Al’s where communi-ty members Phil Ortiz, GaryRockis, Jim Baum and Al Lo-pez have come together withI Care International to serveThanksgiving dinner to thosewho don’t want to be alone onThanksgiving.
“My kids have somethingelse to do today, and I don’twant to cook,” Kellogg said.“There [are] no leftovers, nocleanup this way.”
Meyer said it was hisfirst time coming and wasn’taware the event was heldeach year until Kellogg invit-ed him to join her after shefound out he was going to bealone on Thanksgiving, aswell.
The free Thanksgivingmeal started 12 years ago togive the community a place togo. The meal is served by vol-unteers and Lopez’s familymembers. There is no bill forthe traditional Thanksgivingmeal or the service.
Bulmaro Torres, a sopho-more at Morris CommunityHigh School, spent his dayhelping serve the steadystream of people who filedinto his uncle’s restaurant.
“I wanted to be helpful tothe people who come here,”Torres said. “It’s been busytoday, because sometimespeople don’t have family andthey need help from others.”
Melinda Cisco spent thisyear serving others, as well.It was her first time at Al’sfor Thanksgiving.
“I just wanted to helpout, we always eat here andit’s good that people know
the community does this forthem,” Cisco said.
Selma Irwin came fromJoliet to have Thanksgivingwith Mike Painter and Sha-ron LaFontaine who havebeen coming to dinner for thepast five years at the down-town Morris restaurant.
“It’s always very good,”Painter said. “I don’t haveroom in my small apartmentto cook and serve a turkey,and this beats cooking athome.”
Lopez starts preparing forthe holiday feast the day be-fore prepping nine, 18- to 20-pound turkeys with all thetrimmings to feed those whojust need somewhere to go.
“This is the biggest crowdwe’ve ever served,” Lopezsaid. “We have enough toserve 190 plates, and we arealmost out of food.”
He said while no reserva-tions have been required thepast 12 years, he may have tostart because as of yesterdayhe only knew of about 36 peo-
ple who were coming to eat.One long table at the back
of the diner was filled withhis family who all come toenjoy the day together whileserving others.
His Thanksgiving Day
starts at 5 a.m. and goes wellinto the early evening ashe cleans up from the day’sevents, but he said he doesn’tmind.
“I’ll keep doing it as longas I am here, because a lot of
people have no place to go, nofamily,” he said.
He said he is especial-ly grateful to everyone whomakes pies and bread and do-nates to the cause each year,freeing up some of his time.
Al Lopez and his extended family enjoy their Thanksgiving at his downtown Morris diner, where they not only eat their Thanksgiving meal, butthey also serve the community a free meal and give those who are alone somewhere to spend their holiday with others.
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BRIEFDryer fire damages halfof Braidwood duplexBRAIDWOOD–A dryer fire dam-
aged half of a duplexWednesdayin Braidwood.Fire Chief Ken Heberer said the
fire began at 10:34 a.m. at a unitin the 500 block of North CenterStreet. The adult son and daughterof the resident were home at thetime, but escapedwithout injury.
No onewas home in the adjacentunit, whichwas not damaged.Heberer said it appears the blaze
started in a clothes dryer andcaused about $20,000 in damageto a bathroom, kitchen and livingroom. Also damaged or destroyedin the fire were $10,000worth ofthe duplex’s contents, Heberersaid.
– Brian Stanley
Technology Committee approves GIS data sharing for nonprofits agreementBy NICK SAMUEL
MORRIS – Local nonprofitorganizations are a step closerto being able to use Geograph-ical Information Systems datafor free thanks to a proposedsharing agreement.
The Technology/ElectionsCommittee members unani-mously approved Tuesday theGIS data sharing for nonprof-its agreement, which is set togo before the full board for ap-proval Dec. 9.
C o u n t y B o a r d C h a i r -man Ron Severson said GIScharges companies for mak-ing maps, and previous datasharing agreements allow GISto share data with governmentagencies for free.
“They just wanted to in-clude nonprofits. With thisagreement, they can give thatstuff out for free,” Seversonsaid Wednesday.
Committee Chairman Da-
vid Welter said there’s noreason why the county wouldwant to charge nonprofits andthe community for data. Headded the county has workedwith the Morris Fire Protec-tion and Ambulance Districtto provide maps to the depart-ment.
David Ostrander, GIS co-ordinator for Grundy County,said GIS sells data at 35 centsper parcel. He added GrundyCounty has 2,600 parcels.
He decided to propose thenew nonprofit agreement andpresent it to the committeeafter last week he received aparcel data request from Brit-taney Ross of Elevate Energy,a Chicago-based nonprofit thatspecializes in electricity pric-ing and efficiency programs.
“She got the ball rolling byasking for this data,” Ostrand-er said. “It’s the first timeanyone from a nonprofit hasasked.”
Ostrander said the agree-
ment will allow nonprofits tohave a whole copy of a dataset so staff can run their ownanalysis. The coordinator add-ed he has had data requestsfor different county boarddistricts and anything that ismappable.
“This has to do with datathat can be visualized in amap, such as parcel and realestate information, parcelboundaries, addresses, taxcodes, city and rural zoning,all that geographical specificinformation,” Ostrander said.
Jeanine Otte, manager of
marketing and strategy forElevate Energy, said the non-profit uses GIS data to im-prove energy efficiency designand implementation for com-munities.
“If a municipality knowscertain buildings are usingmore energy than other build-ings, it can prioritize energyuse for those buildings. It’sa smart use of resources andsaves money for residents,”Otte said Wednesday.
Ostrander said the datasharing agreement has a stip-ulation that states the organi-
zation has to be performinga specific project for GrundyCounty or a governmentalunit. He added organizationsaren’t allowed to sell the data.
Information on the ElevateEnergy project was not imme-diately available, but Otte saidthe project would be related toimproving energy efficiency.
If the County Board ap-proves the agreement, Os-trander said he will sit downwith representatives from El-evate Energy to ensure theywill follow the stipulationswhen using the shared data.
Morris
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TODAY SAT SUN MON TUE TODAY
3631
4841
5019
2917
3524
3623
3925
Bill BellisChief MeteorologistBill BellisChief MeteorologistChief MeteorologistChief Meteorologist
WED THU
Mostly cloudy Rather cloudy,breezy andmilder
Cloudy andbreezy with a
shower
Partly sunny andmuch colder
Mostly cloudy Sunny intervals;ice at night
Clouds andintervals ofsunshine
Washington41/31
New York38/27
Miami70/60
Atlanta50/34
Detroit29/27
Houston68/56
Chicago34/30
Minneapolis26/22
Kansas City54/42
El Paso66/38
Denver71/42
Billings51/24
Los Angeles81/56
San Francisco61/53
Seattle52/32
National WeatherSeven-Day Forecast for Grundy County
0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High;8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme
10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m.
1 1 1 0
UV Index
Precipitation24 hours through 3 p.m. yest. ............ traceMonth to date ................................... 0.89”Normal month to date ....................... 2.77”Year to date .................................... 21.32”Normal year to date ........................ 33.96”
Fld: flood stage. Prs: stage in feet at 7 a.m Thursday. Chg: change in previous 24 hours.Station Fld Prs Chg Station Fld Prs ChgMorris .................. 13 ..... 7.84 .... -0.87Marseilles L&D ... 473 ... 14.23 .... -0.44Ottawa ............... 463 . 459.89 ... +0.01Starved Rock L&D 450 446.68 .... -0.17
Anchorage 27 20 s 27 18 cAtlanta 50 34 s 60 44 pcBaltimore 38 25 s 46 33 pcBillings 51 24 pc 26 -2 snBoise 53 42 c 51 22 rBoston 37 22 sn 36 31 pcCharlotte 47 30 s 55 37 sChicago 34 30 c 46 40 cCincinnati 38 32 s 51 48 cDallas 67 51 s 74 59 pcDenver 71 42 pc 67 40 pcDes Moines 40 31 pc 52 28 pcHonolulu 83 72 pc 82 71 pcHouston 68 56 s 76 61 pcIndianapolis 37 31 pc 49 46 cKansas City 54 42 s 59 42 pcLas Vegas 71 47 s 73 48 sLos Angeles 81 56 s 72 56 s
Louisville 43 36 s 55 53 cMiami 70 60 pc 76 67 sMilwaukee 31 27 sf 42 36 cMinneapolis 26 22 i 39 17 pcNashville 50 38 s 59 54 cNew Orleans 62 49 s 71 57 cNew York City 38 27 s 40 39 pcOklahoma City 66 45 s 74 47 pcOmaha 50 32 pc 57 27 sOrlando 62 45 s 72 53 sPhiladelphia 38 26 s 43 36 pcPhoenix 82 51 s 79 52 pcPittsburgh 32 26 pc 46 41 cSt. Louis 50 39 pc 61 51 pcSalt Lake City 60 40 pc 57 41 cSan Francisco 61 53 r 59 53 rSeattle 52 32 r 36 26 snWashington, DC 41 31 s 49 39 pc
Today Saturday Today Saturday
Athens 60 56 sh 65 59 cBaghdad 65 44 pc 64 41 sBeijing 49 28 s 45 33 cBerlin 36 27 s 33 26 pcBuenos Aires 85 70 s 87 65 pcCairo 70 55 s 72 56 pcCalgary 9 -9 sn 0 -8 snJerusalem 56 44 pc 57 46 cJohannesburg 78 55 pc 77 56 cLondon 56 47 pc 54 41 pcMadrid 51 44 r 59 48 shManila 90 77 pc 88 77 t
Mexico City 68 40 s 72 42 sMoscow 22 16 c 23 12 pcNassau 76 68 c 77 70 sNew Delhi 82 55 pc 82 52 pcParis 58 41 pc 53 37 pcRio de Janeiro 77 72 r 78 71 shRome 69 58 sh 70 57 pcSeoul 50 38 r 57 41 pcSingapore 88 76 t 87 77 tSydney 74 64 s 79 66 sTokyo 63 59 c 67 57 rToronto 29 21 pc 39 35 sf
World Weather
City Hi Lo W Hi Lo W City Hi Lo W Hi Lo WToday Saturday Today Saturday
Regional Weather
Aurora 35 29 c 47 37 cBloomington 38 33 pc 51 44 cChampaign 39 31 pc 51 44 cDeerfield 33 31 c 44 39 cGary 37 34 c 48 43 cHammond 41 33 pc 51 46 cJoliet 35 31 c 47 38 cKankakee 35 31 c 49 43 c
Kenosha 32 27 sf 44 37 cLa Salle 37 32 pc 47 38 cMunster 34 31 c 46 41 cNaperville 33 30 c 45 39 cOttawa 36 32 pc 47 39 cPeoria 41 35 pc 53 40 pcPontiac 39 33 pc 50 45 cWaukegan 32 30 sf 44 37 c
Oak Lawn35/33Oak Lawn
Hammond41/33
Oak Park
JolietPeotone
Kankakee
Ottawa
Streator
De Kalb
Aurora
Morris
Yorkville
Sandwich
Coal City
Elgin
34/32
35/3134/31
35/31
36/32
37/33
32/28
35/29
36/31
34/30
34/30
36/31
33/29
Chicago
Evanston
34/30
34/32
Shown are noon postions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Weather HistoryArctic winds dropped temperatures to aslow as 32 below zero in Minnesota on Nov.28, 1989. One year later, 60 new recordsfor warmth were set in the Midwest andNortheast.
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
WEATHER DAILY FORECASTTo receive daily weather forecast text alerts on your mobile phone, visitMorrisDailyHerald.com.
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Nettle Creek School second-grade students dressed as Native Amer-icans to celebrate Thanksgiving at school Tuesday where they wereserved a traditional Thanksgiving feast. The feast at Nettle CreekSchool is catered byWeits Cafe and hosted by the PTO. Kindergartenthrough third-grade students dressed as either turkeys, pilgrims orNative Americans to celebrate the holiday.
Gegenheimer to receive official letterBy KRIS STADALSKY
Shaw Media Correspondent
MINOOKA – The MinookaConsolidated School District201 board voted to have a let-ter drafted to SuperintendentAl Gegenheimer respondingto allegations of unprofes-sional conduct at a priorboard meeting.
The board of education vot-ed, 5-1, to have the district’sattorney draft the letter at aspecial meeting Wednesdaynight, following a closed ses-sion of over an hour. Boardmember Kevin Hannon wasabsent.
Board member John Clu-cas voted against the motion.
Following the meeting,board President Jim Satori-us said the official correspon-dence will be a letter of clar-
ification and a directive offuture conduct.
District 201 Attorney BarbErikson said the letter is tech-nically a reprimand becausethe board approved a motionNov. 20 to formally reprimandthe superintendent.
“The focus of the directiveis to move forward,” Eriksonsaid. “It’s not negative in na-ture, it’s constructive.”
The controversy startedat the Oct. 22 board meetingover a survey that was to bedistributed to parents, viateachers at an upcoming par-ent/teacher conference.
Board member KristanCrouch was asked to create afirst draft of the survey pri-or to that meeting, Satoriussaid after Wednesday’s meet-ing. There also was inputfrom other board members,
he said.“There was some collabo-
ration of the survey with theboard on it,” Satorius said. “Itneeded a lot more.”
It was during the boarddiscussion Oct. 22 that thingsgot heated between Gegen-heimer and Crouch, as wellas between other board mem-bers.
Board members chose notto comment about the inci-dent or the action. Gegen-heimer said he did not wantto comment on it either.
The actual survey was nev-er released by the board of ed-ucation, Satorius said. It willnow be re-worked and collab-orated on with the teacher’sunion.
When asked if the issueis now over, Satorius said,“That should be the end of it.”
MARYSCRIBNERBorn: Jan. 24, 1937; in Decatur, IL.Died:Nov. 27, 2014; in Dwight, IL
Mary Scribner 77 of Dwightpassed away at Heritage HealthNov. 27, 2014, 5:00 AM. Privateservice is planned at a later date.Mary was born Jan. 24, 1937 toDelmar & Vena Bertman Hawkins inDecatur, Ill. She is survived by herHusband John. Cremation rites willbe accorded.
STEPHENWILKEY
StephenWilkey 64 of Dwight passedaway at his homeof natural causesNov. 26, 2014, at 11:05 AM. Hisarrangements are pending at HagerMemorial Home, Dwight.
• OBITUARIESContinued from page 2
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adno=
0291513For more information on how to get
involved, contact:
We give thanks on Thanksgiving, go to the mallon Black Friday, and browse the web on
Cyber Monday. Now we have a day dedicatedto giving back.
On #Giving Tuesday, December 2, nonprofits,families, businesses and students around the
world come together for one common purpose:to celebrate generosity and to give.
These Grundy County Organizations areall participating in #Giving Tuesday:
102 Liberty Street, Morris815-941-0852 • cfgrundycounty.com
Big Brothers Big Sisters ofWill & Grundy Counties
Catholic Charities, Dioceseof Joliet
Coal City Public Library DistrictCommunity Foundation
of Grundy CountyEaster Seals Joliet Region
Grundy County Farm BureauFoundation
Grundy County Housing AuthorityGrundy-Three Rivers Habitat
for Humanity
Morris Family YMCANew Community Christian Church
Rainbow Council, Boy Scoutsof America
Special Connections ofGrundy County
Stepping StonesUniversity of Illinois Extension
We Care of Grundy CountyWill-Grundy Center for
Independent Living
NOTICE OF PROPOSED PROPERTY TAX LEVYFOR JOLIET JUNIOR COLLEGE, DISTRICT NO. 525I. A public hearing to approve a proposed property tax levy for Joliet
Junior College, Illinois Community College District No. 525, Countiesof Will, Grundy, Livingston, Cook, Kendall, LaSalle and Kankakee, andState of Illinois, for 2014 will be held on Tuesday, December 9, 2014,at noon at Joliet Junior College City Center Campus, 214 North OttawaStreet, Joliet, Illinois.
Any person desiring to appear at the public hearing and presenttestimony to the taxing district may contact Judy Mitchell, VicePresident, Administrative Services, 1215 Houbolt Road, Joliet, Illinois,60431, telephone number (815) 280-2346.
II. The corporate and special purpose property taxes extended or abatedfor 2013 were $46,985,346.
The proposed corporate and special purpose property taxes to belevied for 2014 are $48,822,000. This represents a 3.91% increaseover the previous year.
III. The property taxes were extended for debt service and public buildingcommission leases for 2013 were $5,747,932.
The estimated property taxes to be levied for debt service and buildingcommission leases for 2014 are $5,982,606. This represents a 4.08%increase from the previous year.
IV. The total property taxes extended or abated for 2013 were $52,733,278.
Theestimated totalproperty taxes tobe levied for2014are$54,804,606.This represents a 3.93% increase over the previous year. adno=0295799
Grundy organizations participating in Giving TuesdayBy HEIDI LITCHFIELD
MORRIS – The CommunityFoundation of Grundy Countyhas partnered with nonprof-it agencies that serve GrundyCounty for “Giving Tuesday.”
“It goes with ThanksgivingThursday, Black Friday, ShopLocal Saturday and Cyber Mon-day,” said Julie Buck, execu-tive director of the CommunityFoundation of Grundy County.
On Tuesday, a global initia-tive will ask charities, families,businesses, community centersand students around the worldto come together for one com-mon purpose: “to celebrate gen-erosity and to give.”
In Illinois, Donors Forumis coordinating this initiative,and has one bold goal: $12 mil-lion raised by Illinois nonprof-its from 100,000 individual do-nors – in one day.
Buck said the hope locallyis that those planning a year-end gift to their favorite chari-
ty will make it Tuesday to addto the day’s total, to help reachthis goal.
A page on the CommunityFoundation website lists the lo-cal charities participating.
New Community ChristianChurch pastor Kevin Yandellsaid the church joined the Giv-ing Tuesday push because heloves the concept behind it.
“The concept caught myattention,” he said. “We doBlack Friday and Cyber Mon-day. This gives us a special dayto think about giving. Giving
back is what the holidays areabout.”
His congregation is goodabout giving, and it has dis-cussed how the money raisedTuesday will be used, Yandellsaid.
“We’ve earmarked it backto the community,” he said.
“We’ve been increasing ourfund to give back to the commu-nity when needed.”
The fund has paid rent fora Grundy County Housing Au-thority resident and sponsoreddifferent community fundrais-ers, among other things, Yan-dell said.
Seventeen organizations areparticipating in Grundy Coun-ty and offer a variety of givingopportunities no matter whereyou like to donate your money.
Organizations include BigBrothers Big Sisters of Will andGrundy Counties, Universityof Illinois Extension, CatholicCharities and Grundy CountyFarm Bureau.
Tami Sender with People forChannahon Parks Foundationsaid her organization got onboard and will use money col-lected toward a $2 million capi-tal campaign to complete workon Arroyo Trails, a 75-acre parkthat will serve residents at nocharge.
“We really think Giving
A list of area nonprofits participat-ing in Giving Tuesday:• Big Brothers Big Sisters ofWill &Grundy Counties• Catholic Charities, Diocese of Joliet• Channahon Parks Foundation• Community Foundation of GrundyCounty• Easter Seals Joliet Region• Grundy County Farm Bureau
Foundation• Grundy County Housing Authority• Grundy-Three Rivers Habitat forHumanity•Morris Community YMCA•Morris Hospital & HealthcareCenters• New Community Christian Church• Rainbow Council, Boy Scouts ofAmerica
• Special Connections of GrundyCounty• Stepping Stones• University of Illinois Extension•We Care of Grundy County•Will-Grundy Center for Indepen-dent LivingFor information or to donate to an
organization, visit www.cfgrundy-county.com
How to help
See GIVING, page 8
Morris
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beginning Wednesday,December 10th
at our office1804 N. Division St.,
Morris
2015
CalendarTuesday is an interesting con-cept,” Sender said. “Instead ofspending money shopping forgifts or for yourself, you cangive to persons in need or toyour favorite not-for-profit. I re-ally like the concept of giving toothers in need.”
Easter Seals Joliet Regionexecutive director Deb Condotti
said she thinks it’s important togive people the opportunity togive and focusing the attentionon Giving Tuesday makes senseespecially during the holidayseason.
“We so appreciate charitablegifts of all levels,” Condotti said.
Easter Seals will use giftsgiven Tuesday for their AutismServices which is funded byphilanthropy, United Way andpublic support.
Buck said many charities of-fer online donation collection,in addition to in-person collec-tion, for Tuesday, so she com-piled a list. It includes websitelinks as well as phone numbersand addresses of the organiza-tions participating.
Buck said Wednesday thefoundation will announce thetotal raised from the initiativeboth in Grundy County and inIllinois.
• GIVINGContinued from page 7
TODAY –Don’t be limited bywhat othersdo or say.Make improvements thatmeansomething to you, not to thosewhowantsomething from you. Be true to your ide-als and youwill dominate anyone tryingto put you down or get the better of you.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) – Don’tmake promises you can’t keep. If youaren’t ready tomake a commitment, betruthful andmove on. Hurt feelingswillresult if you say one thing and do another.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) – Take aclose look at your personal papers. Put allyour documents and information in order.It will feel good to have loose ends tied upbefore the end of the year.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) – You are like-ly to hear unpleasant news. Try to reactresponsibly, not emotionally. Everythingwill get better if you are patient and dealwithmatters as they arise.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) – Youwill faceopposition if you are too vocal. Unless you
are asked for advice, keep your opinionsto yourself. Work on self-improvementand personal advancement.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) – You are ridinga crest, so don’t let anyone or anythingslow you down. You are headed for thetop, and any unnecessary delays couldalter the positive outcome you are after.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) –When host-ing a group of people, add special touchesthat are sure to please. The thoughtyou put behind your effort is equally asimportant as the final product.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) – If you are toodemanding, expect to face opposition. Berespectful of the people you are dealingwith if youwant to be better treated inreturn. It’s about give and take.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) – Youwill feeldown today,making it necessary to put apositive spin onwhatever you do. Be thefirst to offer a smile, compliment or kindword, and good thingswill happen.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) – It’s surprising howmany useful connections can bemadewhen you volunteer your time or services.Don’t pass up a chance to help others.Increased visibilitywill be beneficial.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) – It’s time totake ownership. Take charge of yourresponsibilities and face the consequenc-es of your actions. Don’t blame others foryour situation; just do something about it.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) – A chanceencounterwill blossom into a fabulous,long-lasting friendship. Get out andsocialize so that you canmeet peoplefrom differentwalks of life. It may be timeto spice things up.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) – Youmaywant to call a trucewith someone you’refightingwith. Accept your share of theblame andmove on. Life is too short tohold grudges orwaste time arguing.
FRIDAY’S HOROSCOPES
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DEVOTIONS How to submit Devotions appears every Friday and features news about local faith communities. Submissions can beemailed to [email protected]. Submissions are subject to editing for length, style and grammar.
Morris church to relaxin holiday seasonMORRIS – Grace Lutheran
church will gather at 7 p.m.Dec. 3. This service is availableto give you a spiritual “break”from the hectic scheduleDecember brings.In Mark 6:31, Jesus invited
his disciples to “come away”during a very hectic time ofministry. Advent worship is atime to do just that – comeaway for a short time andfocus on the reason for theseason. Grace Lutheran isacross from the Morris Munic-ipal Airport, north on Route 47.You also are invited to join thechurch at 9:30 a.m. Sundaymorning.
Piano concert to beheld at Coal City churchCOAL CITY – Coal City United
Methodist Church, 6805 E.McArdle Road in Coal City,invites you to join them Dec. 6for some special events.The “Hallelujah” Soup Supper
will be held from 4 to 7 p.m.Dec. 6. The homemade soupswill be cheesy potato and chili.Each meal includes choice ofsoup, a sandwich, crackers,beverage, ice cream and des-sert. Carryouts will be availableand tickets will be sold at thedoor.The cost is $8 for adults and
children ages 13 and older; $4for children ages 6 to 12; $2 forchildren age 3 to 5; and chil-dren age 2 and under eat free.All proceeds go to the church’sbuilding fund.Also on Dec. 6, Sunshine
Circle will be holding its annualcookie sale during the soupsupper. You will have theopportunity to buy a platefulof home baked cookies for $6a plate.From 3 to 4 p.m., just before
the “Hallelujah” Soup Supper, aconcert will be held of the pia-no and vocal students of ClareEveritt and Shanan D’Agostino.
The concert is free, and every-one is invited to attend.
an Church, 2904 N. 32nd Road,Seneca, is presenting its 66thannual Scandinavian ChristmasProgram at 7 p.m., Dec. 7.Singers and musicians from
around the area have beeninvited to perform. Also, thecongregation youth, dressedin Norwegian attire, will singseveral Christmas Carols.The program will end withaudience participation in thesinging of carols. After theprogram, everyone is invitedto the fellowship hour wherepeople will enjoy Norwegiandelicacies.The community is invited to
attend. For information, call815-357-6514.
Channahon churchCookie Walk scheduledCHANNAHON – The Channa-
hon United Methodist Womenare sponsoring the 10th AnnualChristmas Cookie Walk on Dec.13 to raise funds for mission
work benefiting women andchildren.The Cookie Walk will begin
at 9 a.m. at the church, 24751W. Eames St. in Channahon,and last until the cookies aregone. Cookies will be sold bythe bucket for $12.50 a bucket(about 2 pounds of cookies).For information, call 815-467-5275.
Braceville church hostingChristmas supperBRACEVILLE – At 5 p.m.,
Dec. 14, the Braceville Unit-ed Methodist Church wouldlike to invite everyone in thecommunity to this year’s Com-munity Christmas Supper. Itwill be held at the Godley ParkDistrict Gym, 500 S. KankakeeSt., Godley.A special program is being
offered by the children’s andyouth ministries of the church.The main meat dishes willbe provided, but everyone isasked to bring a side dish topass. Drinks, dessert, dec-orations and tableware willbe provided by the NurtureOutreach and Witness com-mittee. Contact the church at
815-237-8512 before Dec. 8 toreserve seats.
Blue Christmas Serviceset at Braceville UMCBRACEVILLE – At 6 p.m. Dec.
22 a Blue Christmas WorshipService will be held at theBraceville United MethodistChurch, 106 W. Gould St.,Braceville, along with the CoalCity United Methodist Church.Many people, during the
Christmas season, suffer withpain, loss, isolation and grief.
This service is offered to thosethat are struggling at this timeof year with hope that it canease and acknowledge thestruggles that some of us facewhile providing a safe placeof rest, comfort and healing.The service will be lead byPastor Bennett Woods andPastor Wally Carlson. After theservice a time of fellowshipwill be held. For information,contact the church office at815-237-8512.
– Morris Daily Herald
CHURCH BULLETINS
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EDWARD JONESJim Feeney101 George St. • 815-942-5056
EDWARD JONESTammy Johnson • 640 S. Broadway,Coal City • 815-634-0205
FRULAND FUNERAL HOME121 W. Jefferson Street815-942-0700
HARRINGTON’S FINE JEWELRYMichael Harrington Graduate Gemologist308 Liberty St. - 815-942-2348
HEARTLAND BANKProviding financial solutions since 1865.Minooka: 500 Bob Blair Rd.815-467-4474Newark: Rt. 71 & Union St.815-695-5113
JAMES R. BURROUGHSTri-County Management Services Inc.“The Answer to all your Accounting Needs”815-942-4147118 E. Jackson St, Morris
THE SPONSORS OF THE CHURCH PAGE INVITE YOU TO WORSHIP IN THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE THIS WEEK!
AMBASSADORS FORCHRIST
702 E. North St. - Phone: 942-6214.Pastor, W.C. Stinette
Rev. John HornicakSaturday Mass 4pm,Sunday Mass 10am
Morris
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12 SPORTS
Wilmington head coach and Morris nativeJeff Reents (right) hugs an assistant after
Wilmington’s win over St. Joseph-Ogden in theClass 3A quarterfinals Nov. 15 at Wilmington
John Patsch file photo for Shaw Media
GOING FOR THE GOLDMorris native Jeff Reents leads Wilmington into Class 3A title game / 13
SPORTS|Morris
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Morris native Reents to guideWilmington in Class 3A title gameBy DRAKE SKLEBA
Shaw Media Correspondent
WILMINGTON – Wilming-ton athletic director Joe Barbichas added responsibilities thisweek as the undefeated Wild-cats football team travels to theUniversity of Illinois.
At 4 p.m. today, Wilmington(13-0) will take on undefeat-ed Williamsville (13-0) for theIHSA Class 3A state footballchampionship.
Among Barbic’s many re-sponsibilities this week was toround up the members of the2014 “Wilmington Experience”for their trip down Route 47this morning. That means get-ting all the Wilmington Har-ley-Davidson club members,the Illinois Artillery group thatprovides the ear-shatteringCivil War cannon for Wildcathome games, the WilmingtonFire Department, high schoolmarching band, cheerleadersand pompom squads all togeth-er.
It also includes the 5,742 res-idents of Wilmington, who pro-vide the pregame festivities atWildcat home football games.
The Class 3A title game isshaping up as a classic. The un-defeated Bullets, champions ofthe Sangamo Conference, haveoutscored their 13 opponents,452-92. On Saturday, Williams-ville scored three times in thefourth quarter and crusheddownstate Mount Carmel, 42-8,in a semifinal in Williamsville.Williamsville has outscoredits four playoff foes, 139-38. Inthe second round, New Berlin(8-3) gave the Bullets a scare be-fore falling, 14-10.
“That’s what state cham-pionship games are for,” saidWilmington coach Jeff Re-ents, a 1988 Morris graduatewho starred as a linebackerfor the Redskins. “Two unde-feated football teams battlingfor a state championship. I amthrilled for the kids, our schooland our great community
“Back in August, at the90-degree two-a-days, I knewwe had an outstanding groupthat could have a great regularseason. To go 13-0 and make itto state, one needs some breaks,and I feel we received a gooddraw.
“Nonetheless, we have
played outstanding footballthis fall. Our offense has beenunstoppable. Defensively, wehave played at a high level allyear. Our special teams havebeen very good, too. It would begreat if we can play well Fridayand bring home a state champi-onship.”
Williamsville is led by6-foot-2, 210-pound senior quar-terback Luke Bleyer. He hasthrown for more than 2,500yards and 20 touchdowns. Se-nior wide receiver Danny Da-kin has caught 45 passes formore 800 yards and 10 touch-downs. Sophomore Jace Frank-lin leads the ground attackwith more than 850 yards and14 touchdowns.
On defense, seniors NickCox and Kyle Kent both havemore than 100 tackles. Kenthas seven sacks and Cox six. Se-nior John Karras has 11 sacks.
“Williamsville runs a spreadoffense,” said Reents, who dou-bles as the Wildcats’ defensivecoordinator. “They’re good atthe skill positions. They canrun and pass, and they defi-nitely have good speed. Theyhave a state championship typeof team. This is the one teamwe will have played that is thesame as we are from a speedstandpoint.
“They do a lot of reading outof their spread. They remindme a little of Manteno. Theyprefer to run, but they alsohave the weapons to throw theball.”
Wilmington has outscored
its 13 opponents, 467-152. Inthe playoffs the Wildcats, haveoutscored opponents, 159-39.Included was a heart-stopping20-19 quarterfinal win over St.Joseph-Ogden.
Wilmington is led bythe “NickCat” backfield ofClass 3A all-stater Nick McWil-liams and junior Nick Haw-kins. McWilliams has rushedfor 1,342 yards and scored his23rd and 24th touchdownsin Saturday’s 46-13 semifinalwin over Byron. Hawkins hasrushed for 1,109 yards with 13touchdowns.
Senior quarterback MasonSouthall is a threat with hisarm and legs. Southall has runfor more than 500 yards andthrown for more than 800. All-stater Alex Zlomie and seniorJoe Mann, the leading tacklerfrom his inside linebacker post,are Southall’s favorite targets.
The offensive line of tack-les Derek Kirchner and BaileyBoswell, guards Alex Sirianiand Kyal Davis and center BenStuder has played well.
Zlomie, along with Southall,anchors the Wildcat secondary.Kirchner and senior nose tack-le Mason Del Angel have feast-ed on enemy quarterbacks inthe postseason.
John Patsch file photo for Shaw Media
Wilmington back Nick Hawkins runs as Byron’s Griffin Thatcher tries to rip the ball loose during Wilming-ton’s win over St. Joseph-Ogden in the Class 3A quarterfinals Nov. 15 at Wilmington.
After the game
Here’s what some of the Wildcatsplayers said after the semifinal winof Byron:Ziomie: “We’re very proud to be
the first Wilmington team to go tostate since 2003. We want to bringhome the state championship.”Mann: “Here at Wilmington it is
all about team. Solo achievementsare secondary.”McWilliams: “It’s unreal, amazing
to be going to state.”Nick Hawkins: ‘It’s going to be a
great experience for us.”Del Angel: “It’s ridiculous. When
I was a little kid, I dreamed of goingdownstate. It’s really happening.”
To place a classified ad, call 800-589-8237.
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DETROIT – The first-quar-ter scoring drought ended. TheBears jumped out to a 14-3 lead,and all seemed well Thursday atFord Field.
Could they pull off the upset?Nope.Instead, Detroit outscored
the Bears, 31-3, the rest of theway, en route to a 34-17 win, andthe Bears’ offense that seemedto have the right plan early onagainst a stout Lions defense didwhat it’s done so many timesthis season: stalled.
“Penalties, we shot ourselvesin the foot a couple of times ear-ly in the game,” tight end Mar-tellus Bennett said. “Had somedrives going, then a couple hold-ings. Different penalties on theoffense really set us back, putus behind the chains. What doyou call on a third-and-20, third-and-17?”
Five times in the loss, theBears faced a third down andmore than 10 yards to go, con-verting only one of those situ-ations. The penalty that stungthe most was Roberto Garza’sholding penalty in the secondquarter, negating a 22-yard gain
by Bennett to the Lions’ 20 whenthe Bears had the lead.
“We got down in there withthe throw to Marty and had apenalty that took us back,” coachMarc Trestman said. “If you getbehind the chains against a de-
fense like this, it’s difficult.”For the most part, the Bears
did a good job neutralizing de-fensive tackle Ndamukong Suh,as he did not record a tackle, butwhen a young, banged-up de-fense couldn’t stop quarterback
Matthew Stafford and receiverCalvin Johnson, the Bears’ of-fense couldn’t keep up.
“We had to try to get the ballout on the edges just to kind ofswitch it up a little bit. Yeah, itworked great in the first half, we
didn’t come out and execute likewe needed to in the second half,”left tackle Jermon Bushrod said.“Again, I’ll give you the samespeech every time, we have mo-ments where we move it, thenwe get stalled and then do whatwe had to do.”
The Bears are averaging 21.1points a game, 21st in the league,a year after finishing second inthe NFL in points.
They had a good drive afterhalftime, going 63 yards on 13plays, but couldn’t convert athird-and-3 from Detroit’s 17-yard line and settled for a fieldgoal.
“We just didn’t do enough,and we couldn’t overcome theadversity that we had during thecourse of the game and match-ing score for score,” Trestmansaid. “We couldn’t do that.”
The Bears ran the ball withMatt Forte a total of five times,an incredibly low number, evenagainst the league’s best rundefense, but Trestman believeswwall the quick throws are anextension of the run game.
However, like the rest of theoffense that everyone saw clickin the first quarter, Trestmansaid of those passes, “We justcouldn’t sustain it.”
Jay Cutler calls the play in a second half huddle during the game against Tampa Bay on Sunday at Soldier Field. TheBears lost to the Detroit Lions, 34-17, on Thanksgiving in Detroit.
BEARS EXTRA3 things that worked
1 First-quarter offense:The Bears finally ended
their first-quarter scoringdrought, and looked greatearly on with the short-passing game. Jay Cutlercompleted 7 of 8 passesand threw two touchdownpasses to Alshon Jeffery.
2 Punting: Rookie PatO’Donnell had his best
punting game of the sea-son, or at least since thewin in Atlanta – maybe it’ssomething about domes?His six punts went for a netaverage of 45.7 yards, tyinga season-high. O’Donnell’sgross punting average was48.0 yards, and he pinnedthe Lions inside the 20 threetimes.
3 First-half run defense:The Bears were able
to get the Lions into somethird-and-long situations,favorable for a banged-updefense, because of stoutplay up front early on, hold-ing Joique Bell to 16 yardson eight carries beforehalftime.
3 that didn’t
1 Second quarter: Aftera great start, the Bears
couldn’t stop the Lions inthe second, allowing 21points. Matthew Staffordwas 14 of 16 passing for 196yards and two scores in thequarter. The offense didn’thelp, either, punting twicewhen given opportunities toextend or retake the lead.
2 Pass coverage: KyleFuller, likely not at 100
percent, was overmatchedfacing Johnson, and hedidn’t get a ton of help fromthe rest of the defensivebacks, either. Stafford foundreceivers and running backsopen in the Bears’ defensewith ease, completing 75.6percent of his passes to ninedifferent receivers. Johnsonhad 11 catches for 146 yardsand two scores.
3 Running game: Weirdto see something
involving Matt Forte in thiscategory, but the Bearsclearly didn’t think theycould run the ball, andthen fell behind to boot. Hefinished tying a career-low
with five carries for 6 yards,and the Bears rushed for 13yards, tied for the third-few-est in franchise history.
3 moments thatmattered
1 With a 14-10 leadmidway through the
second quarter, Cutler foundMartellus Bennett for a 22-yard gain to the Lions’ 20.However, Roberto Garza heldNdamukong Suh, nullifyingthe play. Cutler threw back-to-back incomplete passes,and the Bears had to punt.The Lions finished the halfwith 14 consecutive points.
2The defense that hadbeen abysmal in the
second quarter opened thesecond half by forcing athree-and-out. The offensehad it at midfield, facingsecond-and-8, and Ben-nett dropped a pass. On thenext play, Cutler went forMarquess Wilson down thesideline, who made a nicecatch, but was just out ofbounds. The Bears punted,and the Lions put the gameaway on their next drive.
3 Trailing 24-17, theBears had the Lions in
a third-and-4 from Detroit’s11-yard line after a greatpunt. Stafford thread theneedle to Golden Tate, butit was a pass that DemontreHurst should have knockeddown, if not intercepted. Heread the play and was rightthere, just got boxed out byTate and missed the ball. TheLions got first downs on fiveof their next six plays, thenscored the game-sealingtouchdown to start thefourth quarter.
What now?
Record: 5-7What it means: Any hopeshad for a miraculous playoffrun are all but over. TheBears fall three games backof the Lions in the NFC North.What’s next:The Bearsdon’t get a long weekend,as they’ll get back to workSunday before hosting TonyRomo, Dez Bryant and theCowboys on Thursday night.
Morris,Minooka gridiron alumni square off tonightSTAFF REPORTS
MINOOKA – They are backin orange and black. Again.
After a successful inaugu-ral event last year, MinookaCommunity High School alumsare holding the second annualAlumni Football game againstalums of Morris CommunityHigh School on Friday at Mi-nooka High School’s CentralCampus in Minooka, accordingto a news release from Minooka.
Kickoff is at 7 p.m., and ad-mission at the gate is $5 a per-son.
Last year’s game, whichwas played in frigid conditions,drew a crowd of more than 700people, Minooka High Schoolsaid in the news release.
While the game ended in atie at 8, more than 100 partici-pants from Minooka – includingfootball players, band members,cheerleaders, poms and choirmembers – enjoyed the event.
“This event raised closeto $4,500,” one of the event’sorganizers, Karianne Craig(Cronkite), Minooka Class of1999, said in the news release.“We are working hard to makethis year’s event even more suc-cessful.”
Proceeds from the event
went on to establish a stadiumfund with the Minooka Athlet-ic Boosters, which is now beingused for “spirit” upkeep of theCentral Campus Athletic Stadi-um.
The support of sponsors thisyear will play a large role in thelevel of success for this year’sevent.
“This year’s sponsors in-clude: Diamond Sponsors– Channahon Township andD’Arcy Automobiles; PlatinumSponsors – Minooka Creameryand Mesirow Financial; andGold Sponsors – BMO HarrisBank Channahon, GreenscapeServices, The Landahl Familyand STR Partners,” Craig said.“We are excited to have these
sponsors on board, and areeven more excited that we willbe able to use this as a spring-board to an even more success-ful event.”
A “flashback prom” washeld in September by the al-ums that raised $1,200 as well.Minooka football program al-ums from the Class of 2004 andolder are invited to participatein the event. For information,contact Craig at [email protected] or visit mi-nookaalumnigame.webs.com.
GIRLS BASKETBALLCoal City 38, Beecher 35:At the
Beecher Tournament, MadisonBunton led Coal City (3-2) with
18 points, while tournamentMVP Nicole Borgetti and CarlyPavlis each scored six.
WRESTLINGSeneca wins twice: The Fight-
ing Irish claimed wins of 42-19 over Amboy and 62-10 overMendota to start their seasonTuesday. Double winners wereBrody McNabb (113), SageFriese (138), Zach Russell (160),Dayton Coyle (170), Bryce Coyle
ris 37: Tyler Spiezio led Morriswith 14 points in the Redskins’season opener, while NathanWantland scored eight points.
Morris Freshman B 30, Ponti-ac 26: Collin Kingsbury pacedMorris with 10 points, while Ty-ler Dunne scored eight.
Craig Lincoln for Shaw Media
With two seconds to go in the inaugural Minooka-Morris alumni foot-ball game, the Minooka Indians block David Valdivia’s field goal endingthe game in a tie at 8. The teams faced off Saturday in Minooka.
Boys Basketball: Gardner-South Wilmington vs. Immacu-late Conception (Coal City Turkey Tournament), Saturday,6 p.m.http://shawurl.com/1kypBoys Basketball:Morris vs. Serena (Coal City Turkey Tour-nament), today, 6 p.m.http://shawurl.com/1kyqBoys Basketball:Morris vs. Coal City (Coal City TurkeyTournament), Saturday, 7:30 p.m.http://shawurl.com/1kysGirls Basketball: Plainfield North vs. Minooka, Dec. 5, 5:45p.m.Dates and times of scheduled events are subject tochange.http://shawurl.com/1kyt
GAMES ON HIGH SCHOOL CUBE
There are always things for which to be thankfulNovember finally decided
to let us share in its famousholiday. The Thanksgiving cel-ebration arrived and passed.My mind almost can’t handlethe realization that from coast-to-coast nearly all Americanssat down, ate, and watchedfootball. The simple fact thatwe live in a country where thatis even possible is somethingto be grateful for.
For most folks, that scenar-io played out once again, andit will in the following years.But for all too many, that isn’twhat this holiday felt like.For some, this could be thefirst Thanksgiving alone. Forothers, it might just be anotherreminder of what basic needsthey don’t have. And stillothers might ask the question,“What do I have to be thankfulfor?”
The Reverend Robert Sathu-
ri, from the United MethodistChurch, started his Communi-ty Thanksgiving message onTuesday evening saying weshould be thankful for the littlethings, even the automaticdishwasher.
I couldn’t help but smile.He is absolutely right. It isall too easy to get caught upin the things that we don’tpossess. We pass right throughthe outdoors everyday. Thereare moments that we reallyappreciate it. There are a lot ofmoments though, when we areso caught up in the little an-noyances, that we forget abouthow blessed we are with whatGod has surrounded us with.
Each morning I am thank-ful for the vast universe welive in. I step out of my housein complete darkness andlook to the heavens. I pause,everyday, and look to the stars.
I take a moment to admiretheir beauty and watch themsparkle. In that instant my dayis set in order knowing that Iam just a very small piece ina giant plan. I am thankful forthat little mental adjustmentbefore I head to work.
I am thankful for the wildthings we are surrounded by.I admire the whitetail deer,crossing the road in front ofme. He pauses, cranes hisneck my way and watches meapproach. Then he continueson his way. His instincts deter-mine his routine, just like hispredecessors for millennia be-fore him. He is a beautiful crea-ture, God’s creature, which we
often take for granted.I am thankful for the haunt-
ing hoot of a great horned owl.The mysterious, often heardbut hardly seen, predator isking of the night. Perfectly cre-ated for stalking the darknesswith stealthy efficiency. Eachtime his call cuts through thebreaking dawn my skin crawlswith goose bumps. That specialmoment is something to appre-ciate and cherish.
I am thankful for all thehours I spent with family thissummer fishing. My phone isfull of photos taken. Each oneis a memory that beckons backto warmer days, longer hoursof sunshine, and thousandsof laughs. The simple act ofcasting a line together is sucha powerful magnet that drawsfamily and friends togeth-er. I will never take that forgranted.
I am thankful for longevening walks with my wife.Passing by nature, holdingher hand, and letting her talkabout her day is a gift. It costsnothing, yet means everything.Only the outdoors can providesuch a setting for couples tostay strong together and let thestresses of the day melt away.
Yes, there are things to bethankful for. Even when ourlives seem to be falling apart,the bills piling up, or medi-cal woes stressing us to thepoint of breaking, we can findsomething to be joyful in. Looksmall. Look all around. Findthe constants in your life andenjoy them.
History: Understand traditions and holidays of the U.S.A.
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Find the words in the puzzle,then in this week’s Kid Scoop
stories and activities.
Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognized identicalwords. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns.
TURKEY
PILGRIM
SQUANTO
PATUXET
INDIANS
BRAVES
MASSASOIT
HUSKS
SAILED
SHIP
GAME
GROW
FIRE
BOYS
Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Identify fact and opinion inexpository text; read from a variety of sources including the newspaper.
Make new fact and opinion cards usingsentences you find in the newspaper. Cutout some sentences that are facts and somethat are opinions. Glue them onto heavypaper for cards. Play the Pilgrim Gameusing your new cards.
Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Followsimple written directions.
Can you find your way throughthe turkey’s tail feathers?
Write about the people, things, and/orevents for which you are thankful.
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•Friday,Novem
ber28,2014
18
DR. CUMBA –A MORRIS GEMTo the Editor:For the past 40 years, I have
had the pleasure to witnessDr. Cesario Cumba wear manyhats. My journey with himbegan when I was in first gradeand met my best friend for life,his oldest daughter Mayette.As anyone can relate, in gradeschool I spent countless hoursat Mayette’s house. What Iremember most about mysleepovers at Cumba’s housewas hearing Dr. Cumba leavein the middle of the night toattend to sick patients in needat the hospital. Also, I remem-ber hearing him early in themorning, again, leave beforedawn to go scrub in for surgery.Back then, I was amazed by hisdedication to his profession andhave witnessed that dedicationin all aspects of his life.I have seen him wear the
father hat and as of late thegrandfather hat. All who knowDr. Cumba know that he is 100percent dedicated to his family,and that is where he finds truejoy. He has supported his chil-
dren through every single thingthey have wanted to explore:Law school, medical school,private university’s businessprograms, large wedding cele-brations, fun family vacations… Dr. Cumba knows how towork hard and also how torelax, especially with his wife,four wonderful children, and 12grandchildren.I have seen Dr. Cumba, myself
as a patient. He has been myone and only family doctor formy entire life. The compassionhe shows to his patients isheartwarming. He provides hispatients with excellent careand compassion.I have been a pharmaceutical
rep for 23 years and I used tosee Dr. Cumba as a customerof mine for part of that time.If you were to ask any rep
in the industry, they wouldsay that Dr. Cumba is a fair,competent, respectful, disci-plined, hard-working, and kinddoctor to call on. I bring thisup because back in the day hewould ask companies to donatemedicine for his mission tripsto the Philippines, where he andLilia would go to serve others inneed … always serving others.During this Thanksgiving
week, I wanted to stop and givethanks that our communityhas such a fine physician. I amhonored to know Dr. Cumba asa father to my best friend, asa personal doctor of mine, asa customer back in the day, asa servant to others, and mostimportantly, as a lifelong friend.
Joan LinesMorris
OPINIONPicking up theslack for women
St. Vincent’s Hospital wentfrom lifesaver to bankrupt toclosed to construction site forluxury condominiums in whatseemed the twinkle of an eyein lower Manhattan.
Its end created a void. It wasa place of births, last breaths,long and grueling nights, closecalls and emergency care.
Its closure is made no lesstraumatic by the memoryof words spoken by St. JohnPaul II when he visited theseshores in 1987. He told Catholichealth care workers: “Yourhealth care ministry ... is oneof the most significant serviceswhich the Catholic Churchoffers to society in the name ofJesus Christ.”
But it is precisely becauseof that service that RonaldRak found himself walking theemptied halls of St. Vincent’sfour years ago. Rak is the CEOand president of St. Peter’sHealthcare System in NewJersey. What he saw saddenedhim: derelict operating rooms,empty offices, vacant hallways;a place of aid and healing be-ginning to uneasily vanish.
The Gianna Center caresfor women in a way that isforeign to much of health caretoday. The scandal of women’shealth care is that problemsaren’t solved, complicationsaren’t investigated and dis-pensing quick fixes and pillsare all too often the protocol.But Gianna is somethingdifferent.
Rak went immediately tothe Gianna Center that day,and St. Peter’s would soonbring Gianna under its wing,seeing it as not only “criticalto the care of women in NewYork City,” but as possibly the“genesis” of something more,Rak says.
That was the beginning ofthe National Gianna Center forWomen’s Health, which hasexpanded from Manhattan to
14 cities, building a businessmodel and even undertakinglegislative outreach so thatalternative health care, rootedin Catholic social teaching but(as the Gospel teaches), notexclusive to Catholics, can beaccessible.
The Gianna Center existsin no small part to serve as anopen door to women facingunplanned pregnancies, offer-ing support and counsel thatoften goes by the wayside insecular hospitals. The Giannamessage, Dr. Anne Nolte,Gianna’s director, explained,is: “We’re going to make sureyou’re healthy and your babyis healthy and do whatever ittakes to help you get throughthis.”
Rak points to the possibil-ity of transforming women’shealth care in America. Thisfrom a Church, he pointsout, that is still often paint-ed as anti-women, even asmodern popes have stressedthe importance of the femaleperspective. I don’t expect tosee it on the cover of a lead-ing women’s glossy anytimesoon, but Gianna might just beleading a whole new feministmovement, one, with doctorslike Anne Nolte, in a revivedtradition of the sisterhood thatbuilt St. Vincent’s in the firstplace.
• Kathryn Jean Lopez issenior fellow at the Nation-al Review Institute, edi-tor-at-large of National ReviewOnline and founding directorof Catholic Voices USA. Sheserves on Cardinal Dolan’sPro-Life Commission with Dr.Nolte. She can be contacted [email protected].
VOICE OF THE PEOPLEWe welcome original letters on public issues. Letters must include the au-thor’s full name, home address, and day and evening telephone numbers,which are required in the event author must be contacted for clarification.Addresses and phone numbers are not published. Letters are limited to400 words, and must be free of libelous content and personal attacks. Allletters are subject to editing for length and clarity at the sole discretion ofthe editor. Email letters to [email protected]. Mail to MorrisDaily Herald, Letters to the editor, 1804 N. Division St., Morris, IL 60450.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
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.THE FIRSTAMENDMENT
Kathryn JeanLopez
VIEWS
Morris
DailyHerald
/morrisdailyherald.com
•Friday,Novem
ber28,201419
CROSSWORD SUDOKU BRIDGE by Phillip Alder
CELEBRITY CIPHER
PUZZLES
Australian Bridge (australian-bridge.com) changed owners earlierthis year. It is now published andedited by Brad Coles. Appearingbimonthly, it contains the typicaltournament reports, bidding hands topractice with your partner, and a bid-ding panel on which experts answerfive questions. But it also has a higherpercentage of instructional materialthan most magazines.
This deal was provided by DannyRoth from England. How should Southplan the play in six spades after Westleads the heart queen?
North’s jump to five spades wasslam-invitational. In the United States,North (if employing transfer bids andSmolen) would have rebid an artificialfour hearts to send the same mes-sage. This has the advantages thatthe partnership can stop in game andthat the opener can use some form ofBlackwood. (And after two no-trump- three clubs - three hearts, threespades invites a slam in hearts.)
South starts with only 10 tricks:four spades, two hearts, threediamonds and one club. The best lineis to take two club ruffs in the Southhand to get the spade-trick total upto six.
Here, with spades 3-2, it does notmatter where declarer wins the firsttrick, but just in case trumps are 4-1,he should take it with his heart kingand lead the club king.
Suppose that East wins with hisace and returns a heart. South takesthat with dummy’s ace, cashes theclub queen, ruffs a club high, leadsthe spade four to dummy’s eight, ruffsthe last club, overtakes his remainingspade with dummy’s ace, drawstrumps and claims.
The other magazinefrom down under
Morris
DailyHerald/morrisdailyherald.com
•Friday,Novem
ber28,2014
20
Big Nate
Crankshaft
Stone Soup
Dilbert
Garfield
Frank & Earnest
Soup to Nutz
The Born Loser
Rose Is Rose
Arlo & Janis
COMICS
TELEVISION&ADVICE|
Morris
DailyHerald
/morrisdailyherald.com
•Friday,Novem
ber28,201421’: In Stereo (CC): Closed captioned (G): General audience (PG): Parental guidance (14): Parents strongly cautioned (M): Mature audiences only (N): New show. Movies s News n Sports
ABC 7 sNews (N) Wheel (N) Amer. Funniest Home Videos Shark Tank (PG-L) (CC) 20/20 (N) ’ (PG) (CC) sNews (N) Jimmy Kimmel Live (14-D,L) Nightline (N)
WGN 9 Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Grandma Got Run Over Panda Holiday Madagascar sWGN News at Nine (N) (CC) Name Game Friends (PG) Friends (14) Raymond
ANT 9.2 Bewitched (G) Bewitched (G) All in Family All in Family Diff. Strokes Diff. Strokes Sanford & Son Sanford & Son Good Times Good Times 3’s Company 3’s Company
PBS 11 sPBS NewsHour (N) ’ (CC) Suze Orman’s Financial Solutions for You ’ (G) (CC) Kristin Chenoweth: Coming Home (N) ’ (G) Suze Orman’s Financial Solutions for You (G)
PBS 20 Masterpiece Inspector Morse (G) (CC) Inspector Morse ’ (Part 2 of 2) (G) (CC) The Last Morse ’ (G) (CC) sJournal (G) Tavis Smiley Charlie Rose (N) ’ (CC)
FOX 32 Big Bang Mod Fam MasterChef (PG-L) (CC) (DVS) Gotham (14-D,L,V) (CC) (DVS) sNews (N) Mod Fam TMZ (PG) (CC) Dish Nation TMZ Live (PG)
ION 38 Blue Bloods ’ (14-L) (CC) Blue Bloods ’ (14-L,V) (CC) Blue Bloods ’ (14-L,V) (CC) Rookie Blue ’ (PG-L,V) (CC) Rookie Blue ’ (PG-V) (CC) Rookie Blue ’ (PG-L) (CC)
TEL 44 Caso Cerrado: Edicion Reina de Corazones (N) (SS) Los Miserables (N) ’ (SS) Los Miserables ’ (SS) sTelemundo (N) nTitulares, Mas Los Miserables ’ (SS)
MY 50 Family Feud Family Feud Bones ’ (14-D,L) (CC) Bones ’ (14-D,L) (CC) Big Bang The Simpsons How I Met How I Met Anger Anger
TF 60 Miss Congeniality (’00) ›› Sandra Bullock. (SS) Pablo Escobar: El Patron (N) En la Boca del Lobo (N) (SS) nContacto Deportivo(SS) El Chivo (N) (14-D,L,S,V) (SS)
UNI 66 La Gata (N) (14) (SS) Mi Corazon Es Tuyo (N) (SS) Hasta el Fin del Mundo (N) La Malquerida (N) (14) (SS) sNoticias 66: sNoticiero (N) La Que No Podia Amar (N)
A&E Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty ’ (PG) (CC) Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby (’06) ››‡ Country Buck$ Country Buck$ Duck Dynasty ’ (PG) (CC)
AMC First Blood Rambo: First Blood Part II (’85) ››‡ Sylvester Stallone. Rambo III (’88) ››‡ Sylvester Stallone, Richard Crenna. (CC) The Walking Dead (MA-L,V)
BET Why Did I Get Married? (’07) ››‡ Tyler Perry, Janet Jackson. (CC) Madea’s Big Happy Family A woman tries to tell her family about her terminal illness. (PG-L)
BIGTEN nCollege Basketball Monmouth at Maryland. (N) (Live) nCollege Basketball UNC-Greensboro at Indiana. (N) (Live) nBTN Live nTiebreaker
BRAVO Bee Movie (PG’07) ››‡ How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days (PG-13’03) ›› Kate Hudson. American Pie 2 (R’01) Jason Biggs.
CMT (5:30) The Guardian (’06) ››‡ Kevin Costner, Ashton Kutcher. CMT Crossroads (N) (PG) CMT Crossroads (PG) (CC) Pure Country (’92) ››› (CC)
COM Jeff Dunham: All Over the South Park South Park (14) (CC) All-Star South Park (14) (CC) Team America
CSN nFootball (N) nSportsNite (N) nHigh School Football IHSA Class 4A, State Championship: Teams TBA. (N) nIHSA State nSportsNet (N) nSportsNet (N) nPro Football nChicago Huddl
DISN Dog (N) Girl Meets (N) Jessie (Season Finale) (N) (G) Star-Rebels Gravity Falls I Didn’t Do It Liv & Maddie Girl Meets Liv & Maddie Dog With Blog Austin & Ally
E! E! News (N) (PG) Sex & the City Sex & the City Sex & the City Sex & the City The Soup (14) Sex & the City E! News (N) (PG) White Chicks (’04) ››ESPN nSportCtr (N) nFootball (N) nCollege Football Virginia at Virginia Tech. From Lane Stadium in Blacksburg, Va. (N)(CC) nSportsCenter (N) (Live)(CC) nSportsCenter (N) (Live)(CC)
FAM Ratatouille Toy-TERROR! The Hunger Games (’12) ››› Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson. The 700 Club ’ (G) (CC) Home Alone 3 (’97) ›‡FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners (N) Diners, Drive Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives
FX (4:30) Death Race (’08) ›› Battleship (’12) ›› Taylor Kitsch, Alexander Skarsgrd. Earth comes under attack from a superior alien force. Battleship (’12) ›› Taylor Kitsch.
HALL (5:00) Angels Sing (’13) A Bride for Christmas (’12) Arielle Kebbel, Andrew Walker. (G) The Christmas Ornament (’13) Kellie Martin. Annie Claus Is Coming
HGTV Beach Bargain Beach Bargain Love It or List It (G) (CC) Love It or List It (G) (CC) Hunters (N) Hunt Intl (N) Hunters Hunters Int’l Love It or List It (G) (CC)
HIST American Pickers (PG-L) (CC) American Pickers (PG) (CC) American Pickers (PG-L) (CC) American Pickers (PG) (CC) Pawnography Pawnography American Pickers (PG) (CC)
LIFE (5:00) Merry In-Laws (PG) Christmas With the Kranks (’04) ›› Premiere. Tim Allen. Crazy for Christmas (’05) ››› Andrea Roth. (CC) Christmas With the Kranks
MTV (3:50) ATL Beauty Shop (’05) ››‡ Queen Latifah, Alicia Silverstone. MTV Special ’ (PG)
NICK Santa Hunters (’14) Premiere. (G) (CC) Nicky, Ricky Full House (G) Full House (G) Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Friends (PG) Friends (PG) How I Met Your Mother (CC)
OWN 20/20 on OWN ’ (14-V) (CC) 20/20 on OWN ’ (14-V) (CC) 20/20 on OWN (N) ’ (14) Dateline on OWN (14-V) (CC) 20/20 on OWN ’ (14-V) (CC) 20/20 on OWN ’ (14)
OXY Fix My Choir (PG) Next Friday (’00) ›› Premiere. Ice Cube, Mike Epps. Next Friday (’00) ›› Ice Cube, Mike Epps. White Chicks
SYFY Haven (N) (14) nWWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) ’ (PG)(CC) Z Nation (N) Haven (14) Z Nation
TBS (4:30) Fred Claus (’07) ›› Big Bang Big Bang Deal With (N) Four Christmases (’08) ›› Vince Vaughn. (DVS) Deal With It Cougar Town Cougar Town
TCM (5:00) Psycho (’60) ›››› Road to Utopia (’45) ››› Bing Crosby. (CC) Sullivan’s Travels (’41) ›››› Joel McCrea. (CC) It Happened One Night (’34) ›››› (CC)
TLC What Not to Wear (PG) (CC) What Not to Wear (PG) (CC) Say Yes (N) Say Yes (N) Borrowed (N) Borrowed (N) Say Yes Say Yes Borrowed Borrowed
TLN The 700 Club ’ (G) (CC) Camp Meeting (PG) Life Focus Ministry Specl Gaither Homecoming (G) Robison Christian Life 10 Struggles People Like
TNT On the Menu (PG-D,L) (CC) On the Menu (N) (PG-D,L) Battle: Los Angeles (’11) ›› Aaron Eckhart, Michelle Rodriguez. (CC) (DVS) On the Menu (PG-D,L) (CC) Hawaii Five-0
TOON Adventure (N) Regular Show King of Hill King of Hill Cleveland Cleveland American Dad American Dad Family Guy ’ Family Guy ’ Chicken Heart-Holler
TRAVEL Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum (N) Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum
TVLAND Gilligan’s Isle Gilligan’s Island (G) (CC) Gilligan’s Isle Raymond Raymond King King King King King King
USA Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Bridesmaids (’11) ›››VH1 (4:30) Never Been Kissed ›› Dazed and Confused (’93) ››› Jason London, Wiley Wiggins. Caddyshack (’80) ››‡ Chevy Chase, Rodney Dangerfield.
CIU 26 Mike & Molly Mike & Molly House/Payne House/Payne There Yet? There Yet? Family Guy ’ Raising Hope Seinfeld (PG) Seinfeld (PG) King King
U2 26.2 Jerry Springer ’ (14) (CC) nAHL Hockey Chicago Wolves at Rockford IceHogs. (N) (Live) American Dad King of Hill Cleveland King of Hill
ME 26.3 M*A*S*H (PG) M*A*S*H (PG) Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Hogan Heroes Gilligan’s Isle Odd Couple Odd Couple Cheers (PG) Perry Mason (PG) (CC) Adam-12 (PG)
ME2 26.4 Hawaii Five-0 (PG) (CC) Gunsmoke (G) (CC) Marshal Dillon Marshal Dillon Rawhide (PG) Bullwinkle Andy Griffith Andy Griffith I Love Lucy
BNC 26.5 Newlywed Newlywed Above the Law (’88) ››‡ Steven Seagal. (CC) Hard to Kill (’90) ›› Steven Seagal, Kelly LeBrock. Rumble in the Bronx (’95)
BASIC CABLE
BROADCAST
Dear Doctor K: Can you ex-plain how Botox reduces linesand wrinkles?
Dear Reader: “Botox” isshort for “botulinum toxin.”Botulinum toxin injectionswere first used for cosmeticpurposes in the late 1980s.Since then, this therapy hasgained quite a following. In2012, these injections were theleading nonsurgical cosmeticprocedure in the United Statesamong men and women innearly all age groups.
Why is this treatment forwrinkles and frown lines sopopular? Botulinum toxininjections are quite effectiveat temporarily smoothing awrinkled face, brow or neck.Over time, they slow theformation of deeper, morepermanent facial lines. Theyare relatively affordable; they
have very few risks; and theyrequire no recovery time.
Wrinkles and frown linesare caused, in part, by the tugof muscles beneath the skin.The tug causes smooth skinto form wrinkles and creases.Botox relaxes the muscles thatare tugging on the skin.
Botulinum toxin is aprotein produced by bacteria.If you ingest these bacteria inimproperly preserved foods,or if they infect a wound, theycan cause botulism. Botulismis a rare but potentially deadlydisease.
But when Botox is used fora cosmetic procedure, it is in
small and harmless amounts.Tiny doses of sterile, purifiedbotulinum toxin are injectedinto specific muscle sites.The solution doesn’t enterthe bloodstream, and theprocedure causes no harm.The amount used in a cosmet-ic treatment is far less thanthe amount needed to causeillness.
Botulinum toxin worksby blocking the release ofacetylcholine. This chem-ical messenger helps trig-ger muscle movement. Byblocking acetylcholine in afew strategic areas, the toxininhibits selected muscles fromcontracting. As a result, themuscles controlling facial ex-pressions relax and creases inthe skin smooth out. Becausethe muscle can’t contract, newcreases don’t form. (I’ve put
an illustration showing howbotulinum toxin works on mywebsite, AskDoctorK.com.)
Botulinum toxin injectionstake just minutes and don’tcause much discomfort. Youmay notice mild redness, mi-nor headaches or occasionallyminor bruising. The mus-cle-relaxing, wrinkle-reducingresults usually last for aboutthree or four months.
Many people worry thatbotulinum toxin injectionswill leave them with an unnat-ural expression or with frozenfeatures. But when done well,these injections shouldn’tdrastically change your abili-ty to form facial expressions.In rare cases, injections nearthe upper eyelids or eye-brows may make them drooptemporarily. But side effectsare typically uncommon and
minimal.Following its introduction
for cosmetic purposes, Botoxalso is being used to treat agrowing number of medi-cal conditions. All of theseconditions involve muscletension that can be relievedby Botox. Examples includeoveractive bladder, symptomsof an enlarged prostate, exces-sive sweating, tremors andother uncontrollable musclespasms, and even migraineheadaches.
You’ve heard the phrase,“Too much of a good thing canbe bad”? Well, Botox teachesus that a very small amount ofa bad thing can do good.
• Write Doctor K at askdoc-tork.com, or Ask Doctor K, 10Shattuck St., Second Floor,Boston, MA 02115.
Botox uses cosmetically harmless and effectiveAnthony L.Komaroff
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PUBLIC AUCTIONLaSalle County Farmland
Miller Township252.21 +/- Total Acres
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 201410:30 A.M.
The following described farmland will be offered by Public Auction.Sale day location: Fairfield Inn & Suites - Meeting Room -
3000 Fairfield Lane, Ottawa, IL 61350.Details: Two Tracts totaling 252.21 (+/-) acres of farmland located in Section 18, Miller Township, LaSalleCounty, Illinois, of which 207.32 (+/-) acres are tillable. Tracts I and II share PIN 16-18-203-000 and PIN16-18-300-000.
TRACT I: 135.231 (+/-) acres located in the N.E. 1/4 of Section 18, Miller Township, LaSalle County, Illinois.TRACT II: 119.143 (+/-) acres located in the S.W. 1/4 of Section 18, Miller Township, LaSalle County, Illinois.
The ASCS Office records show the Tract I and Tract II soil types to be Bryce, Elliott, Swygert and Warsaw.
Plat of Survey, Soil Maps, Title Commitment and proposed Contract For The Sale Of Real Estate available bycontacting Sellers' Attorney.
TERMS AND CONDITIONS:1. The premises are being sold in an “as-is” only basis.2. Tracts will be sold on a per surveyed acre basis, separately.3. Survey provided by Sellers.4. The sale is subject to easements of record.5. The successful bidder will be required to enter into a standard sales contract. 10% of the contract
purchase price will be due immediately following the auction. The balance will be due and payable on orbefore January 16, 2015.
6. The sellers shall provide a title insurance policy in the amount of the purchase price.7. The estimated 2014 real estate taxes due and payable in 2015 will be credited by the Sellers to the Buyer.8. Tenancy for the 2015 crop year is open.9. This information is believed to be accurate. However, it is strongly urged that all prospective Buyers
thoroughly research all pertinent data and to draw their own conclusions.10.All announcements made the day of the sale take precedence over any previously printed material.11.The Sellers reserve the right to reject any and all bids, and no bid will be binding until its acceptance by
the Sellers as evidenced by Sellers' signatures on the sales contract.12.For additional information or to view the property, contact Attorney Jonathan F. Brandt at
815-223-0191.*** OPEN TENANCY FOR 2015 ***
SELLERS: Alverta A. Erickson, Trustee of the Alverta A. Erickson Revocable Living Trust Agreementdated November 13, 2007, and Phyllis Potter.
Attorney for Sellers:JONATHAN F. BRANDT
DUNCAN & BRANDT, P.C.1800 Fourth Street, Peru, IL 61354
Large newly remodeled one and twobedroom apt’s. in quiet building. Beautifulkitchens with granite countertops andnew appliances. New baths with walk-inshower. New floor coverings throughout.We furnish gas, heat, water, basic andexpanded cable. All apts. have patios or decks.Laundry on premises.
Bathroom
SEE MORE PHOTOS AND FLOOR PLANS AT:
adno=0290550
JACKETMens blue jacket with
airplane design on the back.It's sentimental, had cell phonein the pocket. 815-370-7635
OFFICE POSITION, PART TIME3 Weekdays + 1 Weekend Day;
9am to 1pmAll office procedures to be com-puterized, including Ten Jrnls;Chk Deposits, Wrk Tickets, etc.Working knowledge of Excel &Word. Working knowledge ofinternet. Ability to copy, scan,file, answer phone, help tenants,perform all office tasks, etc.
CLASS A CDL DRIVERwith tanker endorsementneeded for local environ-mental company. CleanMVR, 23 years of age, drugfree required. Home daily.Illinois Recovery Group
2390 S. BroadwayBraceville, IL.Call for more
info: 815-230-7290
METAL BUILDINGLABORERS WANTEDCall: 815-941-0700
LOST DOGHusky/Shepard female dog
went missing on 11/17 in theGoose Lake Area. Her name is
Lyra. She has on a purplecollar with tags and an orange
shock collar, Please call with ANYinformation - 815-343-2785
Morris - Lost Dog,11/20/14
Lost at Three RiversRest area on I-80
WestboundLong Hair DoxieBrown & White,
his name is Danny !Blue Collar and a Plaid
Collar w/tags,please call if seen435-477-2056 or435-477-2055
WALKING CANELarge, very heavy. Lost atSpeedway Gas Station onBlack Rd and Rt. 59 inShorewood. REWARD!
815-467-6058
CAT “MURPHY”REWARD $300
Murphy is still missing. Pleasehelp us find him. He is a cute
male neutered cat, six years old,has a crooked ear, honey beigecolor. Please call if you see him.
We Miss Him Terribly!815-236-2233
Certified NursingAssistants - Part/full time
Do you love to work with peo-ple? Do you want to make a dif-ference in someone's life? Isgreat customer service your spe-cialty? Heritage Woods ofDwight, an affordable assistedlifestyle community, is currentlyaccepting applications for con-scientious and caring C.N.A's for3rd shift.Please complete an application
at 701 E. Mazon, Dwight.Resumes may be e-mailed to
Consolidated School District60C is accepting applications
for a secretary position.Please submit a letter of interestand resume to Superintendent
Kathy Perry at 4040 N. DivisionSt., Morris, IL 60450.
Please contact Saratoga Schoolat 815-416-1709
for further information.
Let us help you with assisting andcaring for your elderly loved one(s)
helping them with keeping theirindependence and dignity at home.In Grundy & LaSalle County areas.
For info, please call1-815-735-5253.
Call the Federal TradeCommission toll-free at
1-877-FTC-HELPto find out how to avoid jobplacement scams, or visit
www.ftc.gov.A public service
message from theMorris Daily Herald
and the FTC.
Going...Going...
Gone!
Advertise inthe Morris DailyHerald Classified.
See the results!
800-589-8237
CLASSIFIEDGets Results!
800-589-8237
We care aboutaccuracy, but
occasionally errors do occur.PLEASE CHECK YOUR AD
for errors thefirst day of publication.If by typographical error,
goods are advertised at lessthan correct price or misrep-resented by erroneous copy,the Morris Daily Herald willpublish a correction in the
first available ensuing issue.If a credit is deemed neces-sary, you will find us to begenerous and reasonable.
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CLASSIFIED800-589-8237
All real estateadvertised herein is subjectto the Federal Fair Housing
Act, which makes it illegal toadvertise any
preference, limitation, or dis-crimination based on race,
color, religion, sex,handicap, familial status, ornational origin or intention tomake any such preference,limitation, or discrimination.We will not knowingly ac-
cept any advertising for realestate which is in violation of
the law. All persons arehereby informed that alldwellings advertised areavailable on an equal
opportunity basis
Get the job you wantMorrisDailyHerald.com /jobs
NOTICEPursuant to the Business Op-portunity Sales Law of 1995,every business opportunitymust be registered with theIllinois Securities Depart-
ment. Protect yourself andget the facts before you handover your hard earned mon-
ey by contacting theIllinois Secretary ofState's SecuritiesDepartment at
1-800-628-7937.(This notice providedas a public service
Sat., January 17, 2015 10:00 amAuction Location: Saratoga Twp. Hall locatedone mile North of Morris on Rt 47Property Location: 4 miles North of Morris onRt 47, then 2 miles East on Sherrill Road.(NE ¼ of Sec 2, Saratoga Twp.)
Tract 1: West 70 Acres, Tillable landTract 2: East 81 Acres, Tillable land
(2 building permits are available on each tract.)
Owner: Edmondson Family TrustSeller’s Atty: Don Black, Morris IL 815-942-0594
Terms: $50,000 Earnest Money per tract and Close by Feb17, 2015. For complete terms, maps & info, contactagency for a brochure or go to richardaolson.com.
Farm Land Auction
151 Acres - Two TractsSaratoga Twp, Grundy County IL
Richard A. Olson & Assoc. Inc.Morris IL 815-942-4266Dick Olson 815-258-3003Erik Olson 815-931-0699
Real Estate Brokerage - Auctions - Land Salesadno=0291521
Sat., December 20, 2014 - 10:00 amAuction Location: Jones-Eez BBQ Restaurant551 W Kennedy Rd, Braidwood IL...1/2 mile East ofthe I-55 Reed Road - Exit 233Property Location: From Braidwood at Rt 113 &Rt 53, Go Southwest on Rt 53 1/4 mile, then 1/2 mileSouth on Center St.Property Description: Tract 1 consists of approx.12 Acres of wooded & tillable land overlooking aprivate lake which is not included in the sale.Tract 2 consists of approx. 20 Acres of wooded &tillable land with a 30x36’ pole blg.Terms: $10,000 down and Close by Jan. 20, 2015.
Owner: Fatlan EstateSeller’s Atty. Jennifer Lynch (815) 725-8000.
For complete terms, maps & info, contact agency fora brochure or go to richardaolson.com.
Estate Land Auction
Lake View - Tillable - Wooded12 Acres & 20 Acres, Reed Twp.Will County, Braidwood IL
Richard A. Olson & Assoc.Morris IL 815-942-4266Dick Olson 815-258-3003Erik Olson 815-931-0699
Real Estate Brokerage - Auctions - Land Salesadno=0291471
Saturday, December 6 at 10amAuction Location: Newark American Legion Post #459, 13000 Fennel Rd, Newark, ILFarm Location: 5 mi West of Lisbon on US-52, then ½ mile South on County Line Rd.
Mark Johnson Estate - 257 Acres - Sec 30 & 315 ADJOINING TRACTS INCLUDING RANCH HOME
TRACT 1: 62 Acres m.o.l. – All Tillable – Two Road FrontagesCrop Productivity Index 125.8 (170 Corn/54 Beans/67 Wheat)Soils: Graymont Silt Loam; Chenoa Silty Clay Loam; Varna Silt Loam.SIX Building Permits are available with this tract.
TRACT 5: 5.26 Acres – Ranch Home, Crib, Pole Building & Windmill.Soils: Varna Silt Loam & El Paso Silty Clay Loam run along County road.
Tel: 815-942-4266 Info on website!531 W Bedford Rd, Morris, IL 60450
www.richardaolson.com
LAND AUCTION - 257 AcresBig Grove Twp – Kendall County, IL
Attorney Don Black, Morris IL 815-942-0594
Please check
our website
for additional
upcoming
auctions,
Aerial Maps,
Soil Maps,
Flyers,
Photos and
much more.
adn
o=
0290327
Sat., December 13, 2014 - 10:00 amAuction Location: Dwight VFW, 506 S. Old Rt 66Property Location: One mile west of Dwight onRt 17, then 1 ½ miles south on 2400 E. Road
Terms: $30,000 down per Tract & close in 30 days.For more complete info go to richardaolson.com orcall office for brochure.
Land Auction
160 Ac - 3 Contiguous Tracts
Dwight Twp. - Livingston County IL
Richard A. Olson & Assoc.Morris IL 815 942-4266Dick Olson 815-258-3003Erik Olson 815-931-0699
Real Estate Brokerage | Auctions | Land Appraisals
All Tillable Land withNo Buildings
Friday, Dec. 12th, 2014 - 1:00 PM
Auction Location: Mazon American Legion Hall.508 Depot St, Mazon IL 60444Property Location: Tract 1 & 2 located 2½ milessouth of Mazon. The Southeast ¼ of Sec 34, MazonTwp.159 Acres offered as W 80 Acres & E 79 Acres.Tract 3 located approx. 7 miles southwest of Mazon.The W½ of SW 1/4, Sec 25, Highland Twp. 80 Ac.
Seller’s Atty: John Coffey (312) 372-2345
Terms: $50,000 down per tract & close by Jan 12,2015. For complete terms, maps & info, contactagency for a brochure or go to richardaolson.com.
Land Auction
239 Acres - 3 TractsMazon & Highland Twp - Grundy County IL
Sale Conducted byRichard A. Olson & Assoc.Morris IL 815-942-4266Dick Olson 815-258-3003Erik Olson 815-931-0699
Real Estate Brokerage - Auctions - Land Salesadno=0291462
FIREWOOD - $85 FACE CORD –DELIVERED. 815-823-9685
FREE HOLIDAY GIFTTO A GOOD HOME!
Older Cat in GOOD HEALTHVet checked, she needs a forever
home! My gift to you is the12 days of Christmas delight!
Publisher's Notice: All real estateadvertising in this newspaper is sub-ject to the Fair Housing Act whichmakes it illegal to advertise "anypreference, limitation or discrimina-tion based on race, color, religion,sex, handicap, familial status or na-tional origin, or an intention, tomake any such preference, limita-tion of discrimination." Familial sta-tus includes children under the ageof 18 living with parents or legalcustodians, pregnant women andpeople securing custody of childrenunder 18.This newspaper will not knowinglyaccept any advertising for real es-tate which is in violation of the law.Our readers are hereby informedthat all dwellings advertised in thisnewspaper are available on anequal opportunity basis. To com-plain of discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. The toll-free telephone number for the hear-ing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.
KEEPSAFE StorageSm. units 10x11, Lg. units 11x30
6 Month & Yearly Discounts!815-942-2192
Morris Bi-Level Country Home2 Bdrm, 1 ½ bath, garage,C/A, easy access to I80,avail now, no pets/smkg.
$975+deposit 815-735 1161
MORRIS1 & 2 BEDROOM
815-942-6776
MORRIS 3 BEDROOM815-942-6776
SencecaSleeping Rooms
815-942-6776
MCC STORAGEFenced In
20% Discount815-942-2256
Morris 5 Bedroom, 3.5 BathFull fin basement, 2.5 car garage.$1750/mo with option to buy.
815-255-2755
SENECA ~ SMALL 1 BEDROOMQuiet building, appliances, A/C.
No pets/smoking. $500/mo,$500/sec + lease. 815-357-8365
PUBLIC NOTICE
IN THE CIRCUIT COURTOF THE 13TH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT GRUNDY COUNTY -MORRIS, ILLINOIS
JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NA-TIONAL ASSOCIATION
Plaintiff,-v.-
MATTHEW P. TOWNSEND, et alDefendant
13 CH 00204NOTICE OF SALE PUBLIC NO-
TICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pur-suant to a Judgment of Foreclosureand Sale entered in the abovecause on June 27, 2014, an agentfor The Judicial Sales Corporation,will at 9:00 AM on March 23,2015, at the Grundy County Court-
101 E. Waverly St.(corner of Route 47 and Waverly)
815-942-1133
JANUARY 1, 2013 – DECEMBER 31, 2013
Top Properties
adno
=029
1805
FEATUREDFEATURED
FEATUREDNEW LISTING REDUCED
FEATURED
$350,000• MORRIS• Sprawling 3 BR, 4 BA country ranch• Huge family room & bright open kitchen• Central vac, wheelchair acc hallways & doorways• Bsmt has bonus room & BR has heated floors
$134,950
• MORRIS• Cute 2 BR, 1 BA country estate awaits• Updated kitchen, spacious LR and bonus room• Bedrooms have hardwood floors• Huge outbuilding on over an acre
• MORRIS• 3 BR, 1.5 BA home w/open floor plan• Newer HVAC, roof, seamless gutters w/screens,
energy eff storms & water heater• 2 car gar, patio, fenced backyard
$130,000 $120,000
• MORRIS• Come see this large 3 BR/2 BA home• Newer water heater, sump pump system
and septic system• Above ground pool with heater
$179,500• SENECA• Great commercial location.• Vacant lot on Rt. 170 & block building w/
overhead doors.• Property to north available as well.
$174,000
•MINOOKA• Spacious 3 BR, 2.5 BA home• Located in a quiet neighborhood• Living, dining, family rooms• 17 x 11 loft www.advantagerealty.com
Free consultation on all real estate issues
900 West Rt. 6, Morris 1-815-942-5252
Thousands Of Homes At Your Fingertips!
Joan Eslinger, Owner/Broker • John W. Hynds, Owner
Joan Eslinger • 815-791-5875 Pidge Smith • 815-482-5880Steve Barr • 815-671-6701 Deb Roth • 815-354-5252Tammy Hall 815-791-9910 Mary Michael Roth • 815-671-6019Tony Hall 815-791-9881 Stephen“Wax”Stangland • 815-922-1269
To view our listings go to:
Single Family • Commercial • Farms • Multi FamilyReal Estate Investments • Property Management....
ffsbweb.com1-800-443-8780
124 E. Main St.Morris, IL 60450
adno=0290552
T.J. TempletonInvestment/CommercialLoan Officer1-800-443-8780 Ext. 3224
Rachel KrugLoan Officer1-800-443-8780 Ext. 3221
Commitment ~ ServiceExpertise
NMLS ID #835455
NMLS ID #579165
Matt MooneyhamLoan Officer1-800-443-8780 Ext. 3220
NMLS ID #1168291
On-Line Mortgage Applicationsat www.grundybank.comCall or stop by today!
DAVEBROZOVICH
Vice President
Full ServiceTotal Commitment
201 Liberty Street, Morris(815) 942-0130
FAX: (815) 942-4208
adno
=02
9053
3
dy yhouse, 111 East Washington Streetfront door entrance, MORRIS, IL,60450, sell at public auction to thehighest bidder, as set forth below,the following described real estate:
Commonly known as 1403DAHLGREN LANE, MINOOKA, IL60447 Property Index No. 03-14-128-014. The real estate is im-proved with a condo/townhouse.Sale terms: 25% down of the high-est bid by certified funds at theclose of the sale payable to The Ju-dicial Sales Corporation. No thirdparty checks will be accepted. Thebalance, including the Judicial salefee for Abandoned ResidentialProperty Municipality Relief Fund,which is calculated on residentialreal estate at the rate of $1 for each$1,000 or fraction thereof of theamount paid by the purchaser notto exceed $300, in certifiedfunds/or wire transfer, is due withintwenty-four (24) hours. No feeshall be paid by the mortgagee ac-quiring the residential real estatepursuant to its credit bid at the saleor by any mortgagee, judgmentcreditor, or other lienor acquiringthe residential real estate whoserights in and to the residential realestate arose prior to the sale. Thesubject property is subject to gener-al real estate taxes, special assess-ments, or special taxes leviedagainst said real estate and is of-fered for sale without any represen-tation as to quality or quantity of ti-tle and without recourse to Plaintiffand in "AS IS" condition. The sale isfurther subject to confirmation bythe court. Upon payment in full ofthe amount bid, the purchaser willreceive a Certificate of Sale that willentitle the purchaser to a deed tothe real estate after confirmation ofthe sale. The property will NOT beopen for inspection and plaintiffmakes no representation as to the
prcondition of the property. Prospec-tive bidders are admonished tocheck the court file to verify all in-formation. If this property is a con-dominium unit, the purchaser ofthe unit at the foreclosure sale, oth-er than a mortgagee, shall pay theassessments and the legal fees re-quired by The Condominium Prop-erty Act, 765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1)and (g)(4). If this property is acondominium unit which is part ofa common interest community, thepurchaser of the unit at the foreclo-sure sale other than a mortgageeshall pay the assessments requiredby The Condominium Property Act,765 ILCS 605/18.5(g-1). IF YOUARE THE MORTGAGOR (HOME-OWNER), YOU HAVE THE RIGHTTO REMAIN IN POSSESSION FOR30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF AN OR-DER OF POSSESSION, IN ACCOR-DANCE WITH SECTION 15-1701(C) OF THE ILLINOIS MORTGAGEFORECLOSURE LAW. Effective May1st, 2014 you will need a photoidentification issued by a govern-ment agency (driver's license,passport, etc.) in order to gain en-try into the foreclosure sale room inCook County and the same identifi-cation for sales held at other countyvenues. For information, examinethe court file or contact Plaintiff's at-torney: CODILIS & ASSOCIATES,P.C., 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGEROAD, SUITE 100, BURR RIDGE, IL60527, (630) 794-9876 Pleaserefer to file number 14-13-24627.THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPORA-TION One South Wacker Drive,24th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312) 236-SALE You canalso visit The Judicial Sales Corpo-ration at www.tjsc.com for a 7 daystatus report of pending sales.CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C.15W030 NORTH FRONTAGEROAD, SUITE 100 BURR RIDGE, IL
60527 (630) 794-5300 AttorneyFile No. 14-13-24627 AttorneyARDC No. 00468002 Case Num-ber: 13 CH 00204 TJSC#: 34-19556 NOTE: Pursuant to the FairDebt Collection Practices Act, youare advised that Plaintiff's attorneyis deemed to be a debt collector at-tempting to collect a debt and anyinformation obtained will be usedfor that purpose.I634686
(Published in the Morris DailyHerald, November 28, December 5& 12, 2014.)
PUBLIC NOTICE
IN THE CIRCUIT COURTOF THE 13TH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT GRUNDY COUNTY -MORRIS, ILLINOIS
JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NA-TIONAL ASSOCIATION
Plaintiff,-v.-
MATTHEW P. TOWNSEND, et alDefendant
13 CH 00204NOTICE OF SALE PUBLIC NO-
TICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pur-suant to a Judgment of Foreclosureand Sale entered in the abovecause on June 27, 2014, an agentfor The Judicial Sales Corporation,
rpwill at 9:00 AM on March 23,2015, at the Grundy County Court-house, 111 East Washington Streetfront door entrance, MORRIS, IL,60450, sell at public auction to thehighest bidder, as set forth below,the following described real estate:
THAT PART OF LOT 622 INLAKEWOOD TRAILS UNIT 2A, BE-ING A SUBDIVISION OF PART OFTHE NORTHWEST 1/4 OF THENORTHEAST 1/4 OF SECTION 14AND PART OF THE NORTH 1/2 OFTHE NORTHWEST 1/4 OF SECTION14, ALL IN TOWNSHIP 34 NORTH,RANGE 8, EAST OF THE THIRDPRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, ACCORDINGTO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDEDJULY 19, 2004 AS DOCUMENTNUMBER 436615, DESCRIBED ASFOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT THESOUTHEASTERLY CORNER OF SAIDLOT 622; THENCE NORTH 87 DE-GREES 13 MINUTES 27 SECONDSWEST, 120.00 FEET; THENCENORTH 02 DEGREES 48 MINUTES33 SECONDS EAST, 39.75 FEET;THENCE SOUTH 87 DEGREES 13MINUTES 27 SECONDS EAST,120.00 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 02DEGREES 46 MINUTES, 36 SEC-ONDS WEST, 39.75 FEET TO THEPOINT OF BEGINNING, IN AUXTOWNSHIP, GRUNDY COUNTY,ILLINOIS.
Commonly known as 1403DAHLGREN LANE, MINOOKA, IL60447 Property Index No. 03-14-128-014. The real estate is im-proved with a condo/townhouse.Sale terms: 25% down of the high-est bid by certified funds at theclose of the sale payable to The Ju-dicial Sales Corporation. No thirdparty checks will be accepted. Thebalance, including the Judicial salefee for Abandoned ResidentialProperty Municipality Relief Fund,which is calculated on residentialreal estate at the rate of $1 for each
Notice is hereby given that theAnnual Meeting of the GrundyCounty 4-H Association will beheld on Wednesday, December3, 2014 at 7:00 p.m. The meet-ing will be in the meeting room ofthe University of Illinois GrundyCounty Extension Office locatedat 4004 N. Division St. (FarmBureau Building); Morris, Illinois.
The purpose of this meetingwill be to elect directors for theensuing year, and to transact thenecessary business of the organi-zation.
Steve Jorstad, PresidentGrundy County
4-H AssociationNovember 26, 2014
(Published in the Morris DailyHerald, November 28, 2014.)
$1,000 or fraction thereof of theamount paid by the purchaser notto exceed $300, in certifiedfunds/or wire transfer, is due withintwenty-four (24) hours. No feeshall be paid by the mortgagee ac-quiring the residential real estatepursuant to its credit bid at the saleor by any mortgagee, judgmentcreditor, or other lienor acquiringthe residential real estate whoserights in and to the residential realestate arose prior to the sale. Thesubject property is subject to gener-al real estate taxes, special assess-ments, or special taxes leviedagainst said real estate and is of-fered for sale without any represen-tation as to quality or quantity of ti-tle and without recourse to Plaintiffand in "AS IS" condition. The sale isfurther subject to confirmation bythe court. Upon payment in full ofthe amount bid, the purchaser willreceive a Certificate of Sale that willentitle the purchaser to a deed tothe real estate after confirmation ofthe sale. The property will NOT beopen for inspection and plaintiffmakes no representation as to thecondition of the property. Prospec-tive bidders are admonished tocheck the court file to verify all in-formation. If this property is a con-dominium unit, the purchaser ofthe unit at the foreclosure sale, oth-er than a mortgagee, shall pay theassessments and the legal fees re-quired by The Condominium Prop-erty Act, 765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1)and (g)(4). If this property is acondominium unit which is part ofa common interest community, thepurchaser of the unit at the foreclo-sure sale other than a mortgageeshall pay the assessments requiredby The Condominium Property Act,765 ILCS 605/18.5(g-1). IF YOUARE THE MORTGAGOR (HOME-OWNER), YOU HAVE THE RIGHTTO REMAIN IN POSSESSION FOR30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF AN OR-DER OF POSSESSION, IN ACCOR-DANCE WITH SECTION 15-1701(C) OF THE ILLINOIS MORTGAGEFORECLOSURE LAW. Effective May1st, 2014 you will need a photoidentification issued by a govern-ment agency (driver's license,passport, etc.) in order to gain en-try into the foreclosure sale room inCook County and the same identifi-cation for sales held at other countyvenues. For information, examinethe court file or contact Plaintiff's at-torney: CODILIS & ASSOCIATES,P.C., 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGEROAD, SUITE 100, BURR RIDGE, IL60527, (630) 794-9876 Pleaserefer to file number 14-13-24627.THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPORA-TION One South Wacker Drive,24th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312) 236-SALE You canalso visit The Judicial Sales Corpo-ration at www.tjsc.com for a 7 daystatus report of pending sales.CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C.15W030 NORTH FRONTAGEROAD, SUITE 100 BURR RIDGE, IL60527 (630) 794-5300 AttorneyFile No. 14-13-24627 AttorneyARDC No. 00468002 Case Num-ber: 13 CH 00204 TJSC#: 34-19556 NOTE: Pursuant to the FairDebt Collection Practices Act, youare advised that Plaintiff's attorneyis deemed to be a debt collector at-tempting to collect a debt and anyinformation obtained will be usedfor that purpose.I634686
(Published in the Morris DailyHerald, November 28, December 5& 12, 2014.)
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