| At 5:30, Lincoln Police Department 
			D.A.R.E. will begin grilling free hot dogs and serving them with 
			chips and soda. The city clerk's office will provide sweet treats 
			for everyone. Members of the 
			community will be able to check out a city police squad car, city 
			fire truck and a city dump truck as well as other city vehicles for 
			everyone to see inside and out. The Lincoln Fire Department will 
			also have a fire hose open for those who want to knock out the 
			flames in the windows of the "Squirt House". The newly painted old Chautauqua 
			house and polling place will be open for the evening for those 
			curious about what's inside. The From the Ground Up group will 
			be on-site to launch this year’s Plant the Town Red project by 
			planting red tulips donated by city council members David Wilmert 
			and Kathy Horn of Ward 2 and Chuck Conzo, city treasurer. Red tulips 
			will also be available for purchase at 100 bulbs for $15 to those 
			wanting to help "plant the town red" this fall. The city of Lincoln hopes to see 
			citizens of all ages join in an evening of fun and food. For more information, contact Kathy 
			Vinyard at 732-2122 or
			
			kvinyard@cityoflincoln-il.gov. 
 
			
			
			
			 Kiwanis installs officers for the new year 
	Lincoln Kiwanis Club met Tuesday evening, 
	Sept. 24, in the Lincoln College Alumni Room for their annual dinner. 
			Bridget Schneider, past president, 
			turned over the gavel to the new president, Cindy Stover. Other new 
			officers are Perry Grieme, president-elect; Carol Mills, vice 
			president; Tom Comstock, treasurer; Stu Churchill, secretary; 
			Schneider, past president; and Marti Sawicki, Mike Booher and Bob 
			Sullivan, directors. The new officers were installed by Patrick 
			Stout, district lieutenant governor. Schneider presented the Kiwanis 
			Distinguished Service Award to C. Wayne Schrader and the Kiwanian of 
			the Year Award to Tom Comstock. Entertainment was provided by 
			Gunderman and Klink, and the dinner was prepared by chef Warren 
			Wendlandt and staff. The Kiwanis Club meets at noon on 
			Tuesdays in the Mary Pat Room at American Legion Post 263 in 
			Lincoln. 
	Kiwanis 
	is a global organization of members dedicated to serving the children of the 
	world. 
 
			
			
			 Writing 
	club to meet Oct. 8 
	Lincoln Writer's Club will meet Tuesday, Oct. 8, at 6:30 p.m. in the Alumni 
	Room of the Meyer-Evans Student Center at Lincoln College. Tom Jones, 
			author of "Lost Survivor," will be the guest speaker. Jones, a 
			Vietnam veteran, is an award-winning author, playwright and 
			producer. Everyone is invited to attend this special event.  
 
			
			
			 HSLC to host blessing of animals and 
	dedicate new pet cemetery Oct. 5 
			
            
            The Humane Society of Logan 
	County invites all pets and their owners to a blessing of animals, in the 
	spirit of St. Francis. The ceremony will be on Saturday, Oct. 5, at 2 p.m. 
	at the Humane Society, 1801 E. Lincoln Parkway in Lincoln. The Forever Home 
	Pet Cemetery, located on the grounds, will also be dedicated and officially 
	opened. Pastor Tami Werschey from Hartsburg 
			United Methodist Church and the Rev. Mark Evans from Trinity 
			Episcopal Church will conduct the dedication of the cemetery and the 
			blessing of the animals. Pets 
			should be leashed or crated. The pet cemetery is the most recent 
			program of the HSLC, created to fulfill a need in Logan County and 
			provide a source of income to support the shelter. Visitors will be invited to tour 
			the shelter and meet the newest adoptable pets. Donations of pet 
			food for the shelter and pantry will also be accepted. 
 
			
			
			
			 Lincoln 
			Jaycees now accepting Angel Tree applications online 
	The 
	Lincoln Jaycees are now accepting applications for their Angel Tree program. 
	This year the applications are online only. 
			 
            Eligible children must be between the 
			ages of 1-10 and be residents of Logan County. 
			Applications are being accepted until 
			Oct. 28, or sooner if all spots are filled. To
			
			apply or to find more information about how to donate to the
			Angel Tree, 
			visit 
			www.lincolnjaycees.com. 
 
			
			
			
			 Roger 
	McCoy named ALMH September Employee of the Month 
			
            
            Roger McCoy of Normal has been named 
			the September Employee of the Month at Abraham Lincoln Memorial 
			Hospital in Lincoln. McCoy works as a charge nurse in the emergency 
			department. He has worked for ALMH for over 13 years in total and 
			has over 30 years of experience in emergency medicine. 
			McCoy's father had a career in the 
			Army, so Roger was born in France and grew up across the United 
			States, finally settling in Illinois at the age of 14. McCoy began 
			working as a paramedic and continued his education thanks, in part, 
			to ALMH education grants and tuition reimbursements. He earned his 
			bachelor's degree in nursing in 1996 and has since earned several 
			certifications. Being an 
			emergency nurse is diverse and unpredictable. All ages with both 
			emergent and non-emergent issues from toothaches to heart attacks 
			enter the emergency room. As an emergency nurse, McCoy enjoys the 
			diversity, but he especially enjoys the interaction and teamwork 
			between employees and the different departments.  "When we are faced with a 
			challenge, it's amazing how we all pull together to find a solution. 
			ALMH is a great place to work," McCoy said. McCoy was nominated by co-worker 
			Jennifer Prather, who works in the lab department.  "Roger is always there for 
			everyone," Prather said. "He never complains and answers questions 
			with excellent, easy-to-understand examples. He makes me feel like I 
			am an important and valued employee. He makes work fun."  
	ALMH, a 25-bed critical-access hospital at 200 
	Stahlhut Drive in Lincoln, is an affiliate of Memorial Health System. The 
	hospital employs over 315 in a variety of roles. For more information, visit
	www.almh.org. 
 
			
			
			
			 Community 
	blood drive at Farmers Bank in Mount Pulaski 
	MOUNT PULASKI -- To help ensure an adequate 
	blood supply for the region, Farmers Bank, 130 S. Washington in Mount 
	Pulaski, is hosting a blood drive on Friday, Oct. 4, from 9 a.m. to noon. 
			For your convenience, call the blood 
			center to sign up toll-free at 1-866-GIVE-BLD (1-866-448-3253), or 
			schedule an appointment online at
			
			www.bloodcenterimpact.org, using sponsor code 60032. Walk-ins 
			are also welcome and truly appreciated.  Central Illinois Community Blood 
			Center, a not-for-profit organization, is the provider of lifesaving 
			blood for 14 hospitals throughout central Illinois, including 
			Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital in Lincoln and Memorial Medical 
			Center and St. John's Hospital in Springfield. CICBC is a division 
			of the Mississippi Valley Regional Blood Center, which collects over 
			180,000 units of blood annually and serves 87 hospitals in Illinois, 
			Iowa, Missouri and Wisconsin. 
 
			
			
			
			 Tourism 
	to host geocaching kickoff party this weekend 
			
            
            Are you ready for a treasure hunt? The 
			Abraham Lincoln Geocaching Trail in Logan County will officially "go 
			live" at 9 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 28. 
			There will be a kickoff party in 
			Memorial Park -- rain or shine -- from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. to celebrate 
			the new trail. The free event is open to everyone of all ages, 
			whether or not they are knowledgeable about geocaching. 
			The party will begin with a 9 a.m. 
			ribbon-cut. Tom Hankins of the Central Illinois Geocaching 
			Association will be available to explain more about the sport. Lincoln resident Marge Ott, who 
			drew the designs for the cache cards, will be on hand to sign 
			autographs. Children ages 10 and younger can participate in a free 
			old-fashioned pumpkin hunt for door prizes. Refreshments will be 
			served.  Geocaching is a modern-day treasure 
			hunt that relies on global positioning system units or GPS-empowered 
			phones to find containers known as "caches." The six caches on the 
			new trail will contain cards that can be redeemed for souvenir 
			postcards.  The new Logan County trail has 
			caches hidden at sites that relate to Abraham Lincoln and his 
			relationship to communities throughout the county. Typically, a cache is a waterproof 
			container with a logbook where the geocacher can enter the date the 
			cache was found and their established code name. Then the cache must 
			be replaced exactly as it was found. Hunters can also register their 
			finds at an official geocaching website,
			www.groundspeak.com. 
			Groundspeak offers free membership, although users have the option 
			of purchasing premium memberships.  Groundspeak's website claims 
			millions of caches and members in more than 200 countries. The 
			international sport even extends into outer space, with a cache 
			aboard the International Space Station. The Abraham Lincoln Geocaching 
			Trail in Logan County was made possible through funding from the 
			Looking for Lincoln Heritage Coalition with support of the Abraham 
			Lincoln Bicentennial Foundation, dedicated to perpetuating and 
			expanding Lincoln's vision for America and completing America's 
			unfinished work. Matching funds were made available by the Abraham 
			Lincoln Tourism Bureau of Logan County. 
 
			
			
			
			 Roll-making 
	time for the Harvest of Talents 
			
            
            You know you have arrived at the 
			Harvest of Talents for World Hunger when you enter the glass doors 
			of the Lincoln Church's Fellowship Center at 7 a.m. on the fourth 
			Saturday in October and are greeted by the sweet smell of the 
			event's "signature" caramel pecan and cinnamon rolls -- fresh from 
			the oven. The cinnamon and caramel pecan 
			breakfast rolls go back to the early years of the event, when 
			sisters Glenda Appel Allison and Gail Appel Clark volunteered, with 
			their mother's recipe in hand, to make all of the rolls to be served 
			at the 7 a.m. opening. That year, 300 rolls lined the kitchen 
			counters through the night to rise so they could be placed into the 
			ovens for baking very early in the morning. 
			Spin forward in time some two dozen 
			years to the 30th Harvest of Talents for World Hunger, and that same 
			wonderful fragrance will greet those arriving for breakfast and 
			shopping for hundreds of handmade items on Harvest Day. Steve Elkins, for many years the 
			man in charge of Harvest roll-making, is retiring from that 
			responsibility, and Melanie and Joe Schaler, together with a crew of 
			roll-making volunteers, some seasoned and others brand-new, are busy 
			producing this year's bounty of breakfast rolls at the Harvest of 
			Talents. Each of the Wednesday nights in 
			September, a group of roll-makers -- some junior high school age, 
			others well into retirement and those in between -- have donned 
			aprons and were found measuring flour, sugar, eggs, butter and other 
			baking ingredients, including lots of cinnamon, to make this year's 
			breakfast fare. Rolls have been lovingly rolled and cut and arranged 
			into baking pans to be frozen in preparation for the Harvest of 
			Talents morning and the final baking and finishing process. Between 1,700 and 2,000 caramel 
			pecan and cinnamon rolls will greet the early morning diners and 
			shoppers. But even before that, rolls will be 
			served to workers assembled at 6 a.m. to make final preparations for 
			Harvest Day. Together the workers will share a devotion offered by 
			Rick Jett, chairman of International Disaster Emergency Service, the 
			organization receiving each year's Harvest proceeds. Those standing 
			in line outside awaiting admittance will share in this devotion via 
			the church's public address system. All of this accomplished, the doors 
			of the Fellowship Center will swing open at 7 to greet early morning 
			guests. The public is encouraged to attend 
			the 30th annual Harvest of Talents for World Hunger. Hundreds of 
			handmade items, many one of a kind, will be offered for sale. 
			Luncheon will include homemade vegetable soup, sandwiches and pies. 
			In Harvest Fare, the area outside the Fellowship Center, a variety 
			of snacks will be available, including deep-fried potatoes, hot dogs 
			and walking tacos. Lincolnberry Café will offer its traditional 
			scones, brisket sandwiches, flavored coffees, hot spiced cider and 
			hot chocolate, as well as a variety of snack mixes. Entertainment 
			will be provided at midmorning by Lincoln vocalist Lesleigh Bennett 
			and the True Blue quartet from Elkhart. A 2 p.m. auction will be the 
			highlight of the day's events. Proceeds of the 30th annual event 
			will be presented to Jett, of the International Disaster Emergency 
			Service, during a service of celebration at 10 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 27, 
			in the Hargrove Chapel at Lincoln Christian University. For more information, contact the 
			office of Lincoln Christian Church, 204 N. McLean, phone 
			217-732-7618. 
 
			
			
			
			 Development 
			partnership plans 2nd annual Night Golf Outing 
	The Lincoln & Logan County 
	Development Partnership Night Golf Outing, a fall fundraiser, is planned for 
	Friday, Oct. 11, at North Greens Golf Course in Atlanta. 
			The rain date will be Saturday, Oct. 12. 
			This is a golf scramble with shotgun 
			start at 7 p.m. The course will be lit with glow sticks by tee 
			boxes, fairway markers, flags and holes. Hazards, such as water, 
			will also be marked.  Registration fee is $50 per person, 
			$200 for a team. The cost includes the 9-hole green fee, golf cart, 
			one glow ball, one glow stick and one glow necklace per participant, 
			two wristbands per car, and happy hour snacks. Extra glow items as 
			well as mulligans and alcoholic beverages will be available for 
			purchase at check-in Prizes will be awarded for first- 
			and second-place teams for longest drive, longest putt and closest 
			to the pin. Sponsorships are still available 
			for hole sponsor, $100; first-place team; second-place team; longest 
			drive; longest putt; closest to pin; and glow light sponsor, $600. 
If interested, contact the Lincoln & Logan County 
Development Partnership at 217-732-8739 or see the partnership's website at
www.lincolnlogan.com for more details 
and a registration form.  
 
			[to top of second 
			column] | 
 
 
	
			
			
			 New Holland Fire Protection District uses grant to decrease 
			personnel response time in emergencies A simple 
			text message can save a life Mason 
			City Monsanto site supports local organization NEW HOLLAND -- Many people 
	use text messaging for communicating social information, but they may not 
	realize that text messaging can help save lives. Thanks to the Mason City 
	Monsanto, the New Holland Fire Protection District will be able to purchase 
	a supplemental emergency alert notification and response system. Using a 
	$3,000 grant from the Monsanto Fund, the dispatch center can now send text 
	messages to first responders about an emergency in the area. The New Holland Fire Protection 
			District, a nonprofit in New Holland, was founded in 1948 and is 
			staffed by 25 volunteer firefighters. The district will use the 
			grant to decrease personnel response time to emergencies.  "Our department is very 
			appreciative of the Monsanto Fund's support," said Todd David, 
			co-chief of the New Holland Fire Department. "This grant will 
			directly impact the members of our community." The fire station sits on the 
			outside edge of the department's radio range, so some volunteers do 
			not receive emergency pages. The new emergency alert notification 
			and response system monitors the radio and sends a text to all 
			personnel if there is an emergency in the area. Firefighters can 
			then choose different codes to text back, which will notify the 
			station about their response status.  "The people in New Holland and the 
			surrounding area rely on the volunteers to protect their businesses, 
			homes and families," said John Endsley, Mason City Monsanto site 
			lead. "We thought the fire department was deserving of this grant 
			because these volunteers put their lives at risk to make sure our 
			community is safe."  
This year, the Monsanto Fund awarded 127 site 
grants to nonprofit organizations in 26 states. In Illinois alone, 18 site 
grants were awarded and totaled $201,100. The Monsanto Fund continues to provide 
support to organizations such as the New Holland Fire Protection District to 
help strengthen communities where farmers and Monsanto employees live and work. 
  
 
			
			
			
			 Group salvages architectural materials in 
	central Illinois 
			
            
            Have you heard the old saying 
			"Everything old is new again, eventually"? Well, that could be the 
			motto of the Old House Society of Bloomington. Laura Walden, 
			president of the group, made that point during her presentation 
			Monday evening at the monthly meeting of the Logan County 
			Genealogical & Historical Society. 
			The Old House Society has been a 
			Bloomington institution for 34 years. It started as a social group 
			whose membership got together to discuss restoration of old and 
			historic houses. They saw old houses being demolished with no 
			attempt to save valuable parts to be repurposed by people who were 
			restoring houses. The group decided to start the Old House Society 
			as a registered nonprofit tasked with saving parts of houses before 
			they ended up in a landfill. 
			From that beginning, the Old House Society has grown into a large 
			undertaking with a 6,000-square-foot warehouse containing everything 
			the staff and volunteers have been able to save when they are 
			allowed to access a house scheduled for demolition. The warehouse in 
			Bloomington is stocked with flooring, doors, headboards and 
			fireplace tile, just to name a few items. They also have a large 
			store of hardware from old houses. But the Old House Society is much 
			more than a repository of unique and hard-to-find items for 
			restorers. People who are demolishing houses 
			and give parts to the Old House Society become eligible for 
			significant tax credits, up to $5,000. In addition, the society 
			gives grants to those restoring old houses, and members receive a 10 
			percent discount at the store. The Old House Society also gives 
			clinics at their warehouse, at 214 E. Douglas in Bloomington. People 
			seeking to restore can learn the skills necessary to bring their old 
			house back to its original glory. Walden also pointed out that they 
			have a "Second Thursday" event each month. Wine and hors d'oeuvres 
			are served at a house that is undergoing restoration, including an 
			on-site tour of a work in progress. Completed restorations are given a 
			"Gift to the Street" award in the form of a bronze plaque that can 
			be placed on the house, noting the original construction year. The Old House Society also offers a 
			helping hand to other nonprofits that can benefit from their 
			expertise. The society's annual house tour 
			sells out every year. It has become such a popular event in 
			Bloomington that tickets are being limited this year to 1,000. The organization also loans items 
			from their inventory to schools that want to use them in plays and 
			class presentations. The society will also sell 
			non-architectural items they salvage from houses, and all of the 
			proceeds are given to the owner.  Walden pointed out that many of the 
			old house items they sell go into new houses, not just restorations. 
			There is a growing trend to incorporate old items into new houses to 
			give a new home the feel of an old one. Pocket doors, doors, 
			headboards and windows used for wall decoration are especially 
			popular. The Old House Society operates in a 
			large area of central Illinois, not just Bloomington. They will go 
			to the Peoria area and locations east of Bloomington. They maintain 
			additional storage space in Lexington. With all of their activity, Walden 
			said that getting the word out about the Old House Society is still 
			a problem. People tearing down old houses may not know about the 
			society, or they may think that their soon-to-be-demolished house 
			may not have anything worth salvaging. Walden begs anyone thinking about 
			demolishing a house to contact the Old House Society and let them 
			make the call on items worth saving. When the society hauls off 
			items worth saving and reusing, they save homeowners the cost of 
			having these items hauled to the landfill, and also save landfill 
			space. "The Old House Society was into 
			recycling before it became popular," Walden said. Walden herself lives in a tiny 1859 
			house that she restored in Lexington. "I have also restored several 
			old houses in Bloomington," she said. In fact, that is how she 
			became familiar with the Old House Society. She bought items from 
			them for her own projects. One thing led to another and now she is 
			head of the organization. Her personal doorknob collection 
			was on display during her presentation in Lincoln. (See
			album.) "I even frequent pawnshops trying 
			to find vintage doorknobs I can't do without," she said with a 
			laugh. Walden wants to get the word out 
			that no house should be demolished before the owner contacts the Old 
			House Society. Their experts can spot parts of houses worth saving, 
			even if an owner may not see an architectural gem. They can see a 
			door worth saving that is lurking under five coats of paint. A 
			complete spiral staircase may be their most unusual item in 
			inventory now. Her story of how that was removed intact from a house 
			was an adventure in itself. The Old House Society is 
			headquartered in Bloomington at 214 E. Douglas. The phone number is 
			309-820-0548, and the website is
			www.oldhousesociety.org. The Logan County Genealogical & 
			Historical Society, which hosted Walden's presentation in Lincoln, 
			meets monthly on the third Monday at 6:30 p.m. at their research 
			facility on Chicago Street. Volunteer members also provide research 
			for people from all over the United States who may have had 
			relatives in the Logan County area. The group is currently working 
			on a request for research from a person in Salt Lake City. The 
			nominal fee they charge for this research goes into maintaining 
			their research facility and a growing collection of Logan County 
			historic artifacts.  
[By
CURT FOX] 
 
			
			
			
			 Banned-books display at Lincoln Public Library 
	The Lincoln Public Library 
	District's annual display on banned books is available for viewing during 
	regular business hours. The interactive display encourages users to read a 
	clue and guess the title of the banned book before revealing its title. 
            The display will be in the Annex 
			through Oct. 31. For more 
			information, visit the library at 725 Pekin St. or call 732-8878. (See
			
			related article.) 
 
			
			
			
			 Blood 
			drive at Lincoln VFW Sept. 27 
	To help ensure an adequate 
	blood supply for the region, there will be a blood drive Friday, Sept. 27, 
	from noon to 3 p.m. at the Lincoln VFW Freedom Hall Event Center, 915 Fifth 
	St. 
            For your convenience, call the blood 
			center toll-free to sign up at 1-866-GIVE-BLD (1-866-448-3253), or 
			schedule an appointment online using sponsor code 60505 at
			
			www.bloodcenterimpact.org. Walk-ins are also welcome and truly 
			appreciated. 
			 Central Illinois Community Blood 
			Center, a not-for-profit organization, is the provider of lifesaving 
			blood for 14 hospitals throughout central Illinois, including 
			Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital in Lincoln and Memorial Medical 
			Center and St. John's Hospital in Springfield. CICBC is a division 
			of the Mississippi Valley Regional Blood Center, which collects over 
			180,000 units of blood annually and serves 87 hospitals in Illinois, 
			Iowa, Missouri and Wisconsin. 
 
			
			
			
			 Public 
			invited to 3rd annual Life Banquet 
			Living Alternatives 
	Pregnancy Resource Center will present their third annual Life Banquet on 
	Tuesday, Oct. 1, at the Lincoln Rec Center. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. and the 
	banquet is at 7. 
            Everyone is invited to join the 
			evening of celebration as the group shares the victory of hearts 
			touched and lives transformed through the Living Alternatives 
			Pregnancy Resource Center. 
			There is no cost to attend, but there will be an opportunity to make 
			a financial gift to this ministry. For more information, call 
			735-4838. 
 
			
			
			
			 Elkhart fall dinner lecture Oct. 13:
            Experience South Africa and sample its cuisine from the comfort of 
			your chair ELKHART -- The Elkhart 
	Historical Society is again presenting a dinner lecture series. The first 
	will be on Sunday, Oct. 13, at 4:30 p.m. at the Wild Hare Café, located in Horsefeathers at 104 Gov. Oglesby St. in Elkhart.To kick off the series, Peter Niehaus, 
			who lived and worked in South Africa for over 40 years, will talk 
			about his experiences, the culture and beauty of the Cape Province, 
			where he lived. The two 
			dinner choices are a Cape Malay chicken dish and a Cape Malay beef 
			specialty, both served with the traditional condiments. Dessert will 
			be a classic trifle. Coffee and ice teas are included. Guests are 
			welcome to bring a bottle of wine to enjoy with their meal. 
			 The ticket price for the evening is 
			$25, which includes the lecture, PowerPoint presentation and 
			complete meal, including sales tax and gratuity. Registration forms can be obtained 
			at 
			www.elkharthistoricalsociety.org or phone Gillette Ransom at 
			217-947-2238 for a reservation. Space is limited, so interested 
			parties are encouraged to book quickly. The deadline for 
			registration is Sunday, Oct. 6. 
 
			
			
			
			 Illinois 
	American Water to flush lines 
			
            
            Illinois American Water will conduct 
			water main flushing in Lincoln beginning Monday, Sept. 23, as part 
			of regular maintenance. The routine work is being done as part of an 
			annual water main flushing program that improves customer water 
			service by flushing or cleaning mineral deposits and sediment from 
			the water mains. Flushing will be during daytime hours, between 7:30 
			a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, and will continue through 
			Oct. 3. 
			 The anticipated flushing schedule for 
			Illinois American Water's Lincoln District is: 
			 
				
				
				Monday, Sept. 23 -- East of 
				railroad tracks to Pulaski Street.
				
				Tuesday, Sept. 24 -- East of 
				railroad tracks from Pulaski Street to Keokuk Street.. 
				
				
				Wednesday, Sept. 25 -- East of 
				railroad tracks from Keokuk Street to Lincolnwood, including all 
				of Mayfair. 
				
				Thursday, Sept. 26 -- Between 
				railroad tracks and Union from Decatur Street to Feldman Drive.
				
				Friday, Sept. 27 -- Between 
				Broadwell Drive and Seventh Street.
				
				Monday, Sept. 30 -- Between 
				Seventh Street and 16th Street.
				
				Tuesday, Oct. 1 -- Between 16th 
				Street and Feldman Drive.
				
				Wednesday, Oct. 2 -- West of 
				Lincoln Parkway from Fifth Street to Woodlawn. 
				Thursday, 
				Oct. 3 -- West of Lincoln Parkway on Woodlawn to Interstate 55. The water main flushing will be 
			performed by Illinois American Water crews. They will be working out 
			of white utility trucks labeled with the company logo. All employees 
			will also have photo ID badges.  No interruptions in water service 
			will occur as a result of the work. Illinois American Water advises 
			that when crews are flushing nearby, customers may experience a 
			slight drop in water pressure or discoloration of their water. Illinois American Water does not 
			foresee incidences of discoloration, but if this does occur, it is 
			recommended that customers let their cold water run to clear before 
			using it again, and refrain from doing laundry during that time. If 
			problems persist, notify Illinois American Water's customer service 
			center at 1-800-422-2782 (available 24 hours a day).  "The flushing program is designed 
			not only to maintain a high quality of water in the Lincoln 
			distribution system, but to inspect and operate fire hydrants to 
			assure they are in good working order as well," said David Schonauer, 
			operations superintendent for the Lincoln District.  
 
	
			
			
			 Atlanta 
			United Methodist Women will host winter wear giveaway 
	ATLANTA -- The Atlanta United Methodist Women 
	will have a winter wear giveaway to help families in need as they get ready 
	for cold weather. A variety of gently worn or new coats, hats, scarves, 
	gloves and some boots will be available. 
			The event will be in the basement of the Atlanta United Methodist 
			Church from 10 a.m. to noon on Saturday, Oct. 5. The church is at 
			the corner of Second and Race streets and is handicapped-accessible.
			
			 The group says, "Come find the warmth our church has to share." 
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