Good neighbors
make life in Logan County better for all of us. LDN wants
to celebrate the organizations and individuals who are
especially caring and helpful. Please send your
suggestions for groups and people we should cover, and
provide a brief description of what they do that makes
them Good Neighbors.
E-mail to ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com.
|
|
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Education
group donates Dr. Seuss books to ALMH [MARCH
13, 2001] In
honor of Dr. Seuss’ birthday on March 2, the Lincoln Elementary
Education Association (LEEA) donated Dr. Seuss’ book "Oh, the
Places You’ll Go!" to all babies born on March 2, 2001, at
Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital.
According
to LEEA, reading aloud to a child from birth is paramount to the child’s
success as a reader. Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital sincerely
appreciates the generosity of LEEA for their donation and is sure that
the Dr. Seuss books will be treasured by the parents and babies who
receive them.
[ALMH
news release]
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|
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Adams
School students donate teddy bears to hospital [MARCH
8, 2001] Dozens
of stuffed teddy bears were donated to Abraham Lincoln Memorial
Hospital by children in kindergarten through third grade at Adams
Grade School. These classes decided to buy bears to donate to
pediatric patients rather than have a Christmas class exchange. Steven
Cosby, first grade teacher at Adams, and his students made the
presentation to the hospital.
ALMH
sincerely appreciates the thoughtfulness of the students at Adams
School in buying the teddy bears. The hospital is sure they will be
appreciated by the children and families who receive them.
[ALMH
news release]
|
ILLINI
BANK
2201
Woodlawn Rd. in Lincoln
1-888-455-4641 or 735-5400
Ask for Terry Lock or Sharon Awe
Mortgage
Refinancing
Ag Lines of Credit
Low Auto Rates
Free Checking - Debit Card
Money Market Index Account |
Claire's
Needleworks
and Frame Shop
"We
Frame It All"
On the square
217-732-8811
M-F 10-5 Sat 10-4
cmstitches@aol.com |
Tell
a friend about
Lincoln Daily
News.com |
|
|
Habitat
breaks ground in Mount Pulaski [MARCH
5, 2001] A
small crowd huddled around for the groundbreaking of the first Habitat
for Humanity House in Mount Pulaski. It was a fairly fast ceremony as
the wind whipped them, and snowflakes dominated the scene.
|
Future
inhabitant Cheryl Mittelsteadt stood by with shovel in hand,
barely containing her excitement. First, the Rev. Paul
Droegemueller blessed the site and workers in a brief prayer.
Second, George Dahmm pointed out the Habitat board members who
were in attendance. Next, Dahmm handed the ceremony back to the
pastor to see if he wanted to say anything more before Cheryl dug
in. He frankly replied, "It’s cold and she might as well go
ahead!"
So
she did.
She
displaced two shovels of soggy Mount Pulaski earth while her sons
posed beside her for a million different cameras.
Meanwhile,
the crowd, now dancing to keep warm, broke into friendly chatter.
Habitat board members, volunteers and Mount Pulaskians
intermingled and grew excited talking about the project.
Marla
Durst, Mount Pulaski city clerk, expressed her desires: "I
hope the whole entire community will come out!"
Mittelsteadt
herself did not know what to say at first but commented, "We’re
very thankful that the mayor donated this lot. And we’re excited
to be getting a home."
[to top of second
column in this article]
|
John
Bates, mayor of Mount Pulaski, also obviously excited, declared,
"I think it’s wonderful."
The
city of Mount Pulaski donated the lot to Habitat for Humanity. The
lot had been seized by the city as abandoned property. A house
that had stood on the now-vacant lot was demolished to make room
for the new one.
Depending
on the weather, the project could well be under way within the
next couple of weeks. The foundation is scheduled to be poured
within the month. "It’s up to the basement contractor and
her dad," said board member Lyle Fout, referring to
Mittelsteadt’s father. He will be aiding substantially in the
construction. The framing of the house is slated for April 5-10.
Community
members interested in getting involved can contact George Dahmm at
732-6234.
[Trisha
Youngquist]
[click
here for related article, "Future Habitat homeowner
enthusiastic"]
|
ABE
LINCOLN
PHARMACY
Just
inside the ALMH front door
Jim
White, R.Ph.
"We
Answer Your Medication Questions."
Click
here to visit our website |
Are
you getting enough...water?
ASK
the CULLIGAN MAN!
Click
here to learn more about hydration
or
call 217-735-4450
to learn more
about great-tasting reverse-osmosis fluoridated water. |
Our
staff offers more than 25 years of experience in the
automotive industry.
Greyhound
Lube At
the corner of Woodlawn and Business 55 No
Appointments Necessary |
|
|
Stuffed
animals donated [FEB.
26, 2001] The
Logan County Board
of Realtors and affiliates donated dozens of stuffed teddy bears and
other animals to Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital. Joann McCullough,
member of the Logan County Board of Realtors, made the presentation.
"So
often children who are hospitalized are facing a very traumatic
situation," said Susan Gleason, community development associate
at the hospital. "These animals help remove some of the stress
and fear by giving the children a warm friend to cuddle. We sincerely
appreciate the thoughtfulness of the Board of Realtors in collecting
these animals for ALMH. We know they will be appreciated by the
children and families who receive them."
[ALMH news release]
|
It's
Tax Time
Come
see the tax professionals at
Meier
Accounting
and
Tax Service
Dale
Meier, Enrolled Agent
519
Pulaski, Lincoln
217-735-2030 |
Tell
a friend about
Lincoln Daily
News.com |
Blue
Dog Inn
111 S. Sangamon
217-735-1743
Open
for Lunch Mon.-Sat.
Open for Dinner Tues.-Sat.
Click
here to view our
menu and gift items |
|
|
A
house has been built [FEB.
23, 2001] The newest Habitat for Humanity house is
finished after many hands worked for months to produce what stands
now at 316 N. Sherman St. A lovely bi-level with four bedrooms,
two living rooms and 1½ baths, it represents a house built with
good intentions that a family will own their own home.
[click
here to see photos]
|
While
there will always be maintenance and small finishing and
remodeling work to be done, this project is far from done. It was
recognized that now the real building begins in this place, a work
that goes on for a lifetime, the work that makes this house a home
where friends and family are welcome. This was the sentiment
expressed at the close of the dedication of the latest Habitat
house, the house that the Mark Dailey family will inhabit.
The
new owners, Mark and Isola Dailey, and children Marquita, Mark Jr.
and Malik graciously hosted a full house of friends and family at
Sunday afternoon’s open house and dedication. Prayers and
blessings by Leonard Krusemark opened and closed the ceremony. In
between Harley Petri offered an account of all who worked at the
house in his dedication remarks. Phil Dehner was on hand to
present Dailey with the keys to the house. On behalf of his
family, Mark Dailey expressed deep appreciation to all who worked
on the house. As a surprise highlight, the Dailey family honored
George Dahmm with a plaque citing his model dedication. A humbled
George read the plaque for all with tears and quavering voice.
Upon
the close of official ceremony, music, happy voices and laughter
filled the air as people lapsed into friendly conversations,
meeting and greeting old and new friends.
Contributors
and volunteer labor
A.G.
Edwards
New
Wine Fellowship
First
United Methodist Church
Cumberland
Presbyterian Church
Zion
Lutheran Church of Lincoln
Lincoln
Daily News
Mark
Gates
Lincoln
Sand & Gravel
Trinity
Episcopal Church Women
St.
Peter’s Lutheran Church of Emden
Pat
Dugan Excavation
Lincoln
Rotary
Uncle
Bubba's Outhouse
Bloomington
Pantagraph
[to top of second
column in this article]
|
Tom
Funk, attorney
Hunter
Blinds
Lincoln
Christian Church
Lincoln
Christian College
Zion
Lutheran Church of New Holland
Good
Shepherd Lutheran Church
St
John Church of Christ
Barrick
Transfer
Harold
Goodman Trucking
Zion
Lutheran Church of Clifton
Zion
Lutheran Church of Mount Pulaski
Bakers
Tree Service
Linda
Barrick - ME Realty
Union
Planters Bank
Eaton
Corporation
Lincoln
Courier
Larson
Doors
Area
Disposal
Suppliers
Mitchell-Newhouse
Lumber
Pete’s
Hardware
Illinois
Plumbing and Heating
Carpet
House
Light
House Appraisal Service
Alexander
Lumber
Sherwin-Williams
Lumberyard
Suppliers
Heartland
Industries
Board
members of Habitat for Humanity of Logan County
George
Dahmm, president
Phil
Dehner, vice president
Leonard
Krusemark, treasurer
Harley
Petri, Bill Sahs, Lyle Fout, Ken Benham, Don Begolka, Ken
Tappendorf and Rick Lee
Habitat
for Humanity of Logan County, P.O. Box 714, Lincoln, IL 62656
[Jan
Youngquist]
|
ILLINI
BANK
2201
Woodlawn Rd. in Lincoln
1-888-455-4641 or 735-5400
Ask for Terry Lock or Sharon Awe
Mortgage
Refinancing
Ag Lines of Credit
Low Auto Rates
Free Checking - Debit Card
Money Market Index Account |
Claire's
Needleworks
and Frame Shop
"We
Frame It All"
On the square
217-732-8811
M-F 10-5 Sat 10-4
cmstitches@aol.com |
Tell
a friend about
Lincoln Daily
News.com |
|
|
‘If
you eat, you qualify’
Co-op
program is a good deal
[FEB.
16, 2001] Thirty
to 40 Lincoln families are enrolled in the SHARE program in central
Illinois. SHARE is not just a local organization
—
250,000 families a
month in 17 different states are involved in this co-op program.
|
The
Self-Help And Resources Exchange (SHARE) is not another governmental
handout; rather it is a cooperative effort between various individuals
and families to buy food at bulk rates and divide the purchase between
participants. Volunteers drive all over Illinois to pick up groceries from
food warehouses and distributors.
Participants
decide each month how many portions they will purchase.
Each portion costs just $15 a month — and January’s
portions were worth $28.05 in a grocery store!
Of the dues, $14 purchases food and $1 pays for transportation.
SHARE’s
slogan is, “If you eat, you qualify.”
No maximum or minimum income is required.
John Sutton, Lincoln SHARE coordinator, and the regular Lincoln
volunteers, such as Marion Smith and Jean Garner, agree that there is
room for many more individuals and families to participate in the
co-op.
Smith
stressed two qualities of SHARE:
(1) This is a non-governmental self-help program, and (2)
it’s a good deal! Garner
appreciates that there are no income guidelines, the pick-up times are
after working hours for most individuals, and the program helps a lot
of people.
Participants
are asked to help unload, sort and reload SHARE portions on
distribution days. They
are also encouraged to do two hours of community service sometime in
the month. This may be
anything from calling on shut-ins to working for an hour or two on
distribution day.
[to
top of second column in this article]
|
A
friend of Smith asked her to help with SHARE, and she’s been
volunteering since the request. Garner has been volunteering for
a little over a year. She became involved through her
sister-in-law.
Volunteer
Smith said that each month, SHARE participants get fruits, veggies and
meats. This month, they will purchase chicken, fish, boneless
pork chops, maybe bacon or sausage, flour tortillas, apples and
oranges, potatoes, and five or six other in-season fruits and
vegetables. In addition to these food items, participants may
purchase 2.75-pound boneless rib-eye roasts for $7.50 apiece.
If
this sounds like a program you would like to join, please stop by at
the next distribution, and you can observe firsthand how the co-op
works. The next distribution will be on Friday, Feb. 23, from 4
to 5:30 p.m. at St. John United Church of Christ in Lincoln. The
church is located at 204 Seventh St. At this distribution you
may sign up for next month’s SHARE and pick up a list of future
SHARE deadlines and distributions.
If
you have any questions about SHARE or cannot stop in on the 23rd,
please call 735-2626. The orders for March must be in by March
10.
[Jean
Ann Carnley]
|
It's
Tax Time
Come
see the tax professionals at
Meier
Accounting
and
Tax Service
Dale
Meier, Enrolled Agent
519
Pulaski, Lincoln
217-735-2030 |
Tell
a friend about
Lincoln Daily
News.com |
Blue
Dog Inn
111 S. Sangamon
217-735-1743
Open
for Lunch Mon.-Sat.
Open for Dinner Tues.-Sat.
Click
here to view our
menu and gift items |
|
|
Future
Habitat homeowner enthusiastic
[FEB.
10, 2001] "I’m
extremely excited. I never could have been able to actually buy a
house at this point in my life," exults Cheryl Mittelsteadt, the
future owner of the next Habitat for Humanity house, the first to be
built in Mount Pulaski.
|
Mittelsteadt
has already begun collecting articles for a scrapbook on her new home
from tear-down of the previous house to the day she moves in.
"After all those years of paying rent, now I will be building
equity," she said of the transition from duplex renter to
homeowner. "I’m not throwing my money away, because eventually
it will be mine."
"The
kids are excited because they are getting their own rooms," she
continued. "They share one now." Mittelsteadt is the single
mother of two sons. James Thomas, called J.T., is a second grader who
loves video games, computers, Legos and drawing. Austin, who attends
kindergarten, enjoys dinosaurs, Legos and the family cat, Ethan.
Mittelsteadt’s
new home won’t come free. Following Habitat for Humanity policy, she
must work 250 hours on Habitat houses. Working Saturdays since October
2000, she has already spent 100 hours at the house under construction
at 316 Sherman St. in Lincoln. Her tasks have included spackling,
hanging siding and dry wall, and stamping ceilings.
Mittelsteadt
says she has become adept at using the drywall gun to countersink
screws.
Ceiling
stamping involves making a pattern in taping compound on the ceiling.
She described the tool she uses as "basically a big broomstick
with a block of wood and two brushes at the ends," which she
randomly twists on the ceiling to form the pattern.
"When
I came, I didn’t know anything about construction,"
Mittelsteadt admits, "but the volunteers are great. They have a
lot of patience. All the guys do around here."
George
Dahmm, president of Habitat for Humanity of Logan County, praised
Mittelsteadt’s energy. "Most of the time the one who will get
the next house doesn’t work on the current one," he said,
"so Cheryl is way ahead of the game."
In
addition to working 250 hours per adult, buyers of Habitat for
Humanity homes must pay $500 down plus 20 years of payments on an
interest-free contract for deed amounting to 70 percent of the house’s
assessed valuation. A second mortgage covering the other 30 percent is
gradually forgiven over the 20 years. Mittelsteadt expects her
payments to be about the same as her current rent.
The
prospective Habitat homeowner first fills out an application form. The
applicant cannot previously have owned a home and must be unable to
get a loan from a financial institution. Next comes a mandatory
orientation meeting and a security check. Since no government money is
involved, at least one member of the household must have a full-time
job, enabling him or her to make the monthly payments.
[to
top of second column in this article]
|
Mittelsteadt
works as a negotiator for Blue Cross Blue Shield in Springfield. Her
job is to confer with other insurance companies and attorneys to be
sure Blue Cross Blue Shield is reimbursed for losses for situations in
which the other party is at fault.
Born and
raised in Mount Pulaski, Mittelsteadt married in 1991 and divorced in
1997. In December 1997 she earned an associate’s degree in business
administration from Robert Morris College. The legal secretarial
course was her minor.
Her
whole family is involved in working toward her new home. While she is
volunteering, J.T. and Austin are cared for by her mother, Karen
Mittelsteadt, and her grandmothers, Nancy Mittelsteadt and Jocile
Gerardot. Cheryl’s father, Roger Mittelsteadt, will dig the basement
for her home.
Her
floor plan, picked from a choice of three, includes three bedrooms, a
living room, kitchen, 1½ baths and a full basement. Habitat for
Humanity International supplies the plan book. "The houses are
laid out so there’s very little waste," according to Dahmm.
The city
of Mount Pulaski donated the lot at 316 S. Vine for Mittelsteadt’s
home. "We’ve never bought a lot yet," said Dahmm. He and
his brother Wally donated the first one in 1993.
There
were only three applicants for the home in Mount Pulaski. Mittelsteadt
attributes that to unfamiliarity with the program and expects that
after people see her house there will be more applicants for the next
one. Dahmm said he hopes that once the house in Mount Pulaski is
built, other towns in the county will also become involved.
Mittelsteadt
expresses enthusiasm not only for her future home but also for the one
volunteers are currently building for Mark and Isola Dailey and their
three children. "I’m so excited for Mark and his wife that I
can hardly stand it," she exulted.
She said
she is actually enjoying her work. "It’s something new,"
she explained. "They’re a great bunch of guys. I’ve learned a
lot."
Habitat for Humanity does
not contract out any of the work on its houses. "All labor is
donated," said Leonard Krusemark of Emden, another volunteer and
secretary of the board. In response to the comment, "So there’s
nothing you can’t do," he quipped, "Nothing we won’t
try." Mittelsteadt and her sons will be the sixth family in Logan
County to benefit from that undaunted spirit.
[Lynn
Spellman]
|
ABE
LINCOLN
PHARMACY
Just
inside the ALMH front door
Jim
White, R.Ph.
"We
Answer Your Medication Questions."
Click
here to visit our website |
Are
you getting enough...water?
ASK
the CULLIGAN MAN!
Click
here to learn more about hydration
or
call 217-735-4450
to learn more
about great-tasting reverse-osmosis fluoridated water. |
Our
staff offers more than 25 years of experience in the
automotive industry.
Greyhound
Lube At
the corner of Woodlawn and Business 55 No
Appointments Necessary |
|
|
Announcements
|
A
big 'thank you' for
donations for Bryce Covert
[FEB.
8, 2000]
Bryce
Covert of Beason was recently diagnosed with cancer on the brain stem. His
elementary school, Chester-East Lincoln, is pitching in to raise money for his
medical treatment. The cancer is inoperable, so the doctors are using radiation.
According
to Amy Neece, the teacher organizing the Bryce Covert Fundraisers at
Chester-East, Bryce is happy but tired. He did attend the most recent
fund-raiser, which was this past Saturday at the school. Neece said,
"Saturday’s benefit was an overwhelming success."
Chester-East
Lincoln has had numerous fund-raisers to help the Covert family: a pancake and
sausage breakfast, 50/50 raffle, chili and hot dog lunch, bake sale, and
Pie-the-Teacher. The school has also placed Bryce Covert Fundraiser canisters in
many local businesses, placed Puritan water jugs in each Chester-East classroom,
and raffled and auctioned various items.
Pie-the-Teacher
raised at least $600. Over $800 in change has been dropped into the water jugs
at Chester-East. The 50/50 raffle brought in about $2,600. So far, about $14,000
has been raised to help alleviate Bryce Covert’s medical bills. To all those
that donated, Amy Neece would like to say an "ENORMOUS thank you."
If
you would still like to donate to the fund, just stop in at any CEFCU — there
is already a Bryce Covert Fund account.
|
|
Planning
a benefit for someone?
We'll
spread the word
As
an active member of the community, Lincoln Daily News will publish
notices of BENEFITS for people with special needs free of charge in our Good
Neighbors section. Please send details of upcoming BENEFITS to ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com.
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