'X Three -- Page Four THt McHENRY PLAINDEAp8 Thursday, January l3> 1960 ( Continued from Page 3 ) • and Mr. Ronald Klapperich exchanged marriage vows at St. Patrick's Catholic church. Sept. 28 -- Miss Cynthia Rourke became the bride of -Nicholas J. Freund. OCTOBER Oct. 2 -- In a ceremony performed at the Ringwdod Methodist church Miss Patricia Low of Ringwood was united In marriage with Mr. David Jarries Miller. St. Patrick's Catholic church in Ottawa, 111., was the scene of' the wedding of Miss Eleanore Wirfs and Mr. Terry M. Cross. Oct. 9 -- Miss Gail Marquart became the bride of Mr. Thomas F. Burke at St. Mary's Catholic church. Oct. 16---Miss Sandra Louise Miller and Mr. Dennis Lennon , exchanged wedding vows at St. Peter's, Catholic church, Spiring Grove. In a ceremony performed in St. Mary's Catholic church Miss Mary Kay Adams became the bride of Mr. Dennis C. Diedrich. Oct. 2:3 -- St. Patrick's Catholic church was the setting for the wedding of Miss Kathleen Conway and Mr. Donald Mercure. Oct. 30 -- Miss Eileen Bruscato became the bride of Mr. Jack Buxton at Christ the King church in Wonder Lake. At the same church Miss Sarah Marie Russell and Gerald Gayeski repeated their wedding vows before Rev. Fr. James Vanderpool. Miss Nancy Weber was married to Mr. Joseph Charles Majercik of Wonder Lake at St. John the Baptist church in Johnsburg. 4 NOVEMBER Nov. 6 -- Miss Patricia Lee Bolton exchanged wedding vows' with Mr. John Colomer of Sunnyside at St. Patrick's Catholic church. Miss Nancy Lynn Burg of McCullom Lake became the bride of Mr. John Richard Lucarz of Wonder Lake at Christ the King Catholic church, Wonder Lake. Nov. 20 -- Kenneth William Martin claimed Miss Bonnie Lee Ream as his bride at St. Patrick's Catholic church. Nov. 27 --Miss Lois Rice of Wonder Lake became the bride of Mr. Dennis Dalby o( Mc- Ilenry at Christ the King Catholic church. DECEMBER "Dec. 4 -- In Immanuel Lutheran church. Crystal Lake. Miss Louise Marie Schiller became the wife of Gregory Paul Burg, Jr. MUSEUM SETS RECORD Attendance at C h i c a g o's Museum of Science and Industry, "frequently described as the city's leading tourist attraction. hit an all-time high during 1965 when it entertained 3,044,307 visitors, it is announced by Lenox R. Lohr, its president, a former Mc- Henry resident. This compares with the 2,906,567 visitors of a year previous. The past year also saw new all-time attendance records chalked up for a single month, a single week, and a single day. The busiest month was last August when 499,386 guests passed through the Museum's doors. Its biggest week was from Aug. 2 to 8 when 122,675 persons were checked in. And the biggest day in its 32-year existence occurred last Dec. 12 when, attracted by the colorful Polish native Christmas pageantry presented that day as part of the annual "Christmas Around the World" festival, 47,251 visitors were recorded. COUPLES WED FIFTY YEARS OR MORE IN '65 MARCH •March 1 --Mr. and Mrs. R^P. Esser of McCullom Lake celebrated their golden wedding anniversary. March 9 -- Mr. and Mrs. Victor Pedretti of 2806 E. .Hickory Drive, Wonder View, Wond e r L a k e , c e l e b r a t e d t h e i r golden wedding anniversary. APRIL April 8 -- Mr. and Mrs. Barney Graff, former residents of McCullom Lake celebrated their golden wedding anniversary at their home in St. Petersburg, Fla. MAY May 8 -- Mr. and Mrs. Burton N. French of "2313 N. Alton, McCullom Lake, were honored on their golden wedding anniversary at a dinner and reception held in the Legion home. May 23 -- Mr. and Mrs. Henry G. Heinle, Sr., of„Janesville. Wis., observed their golden wedding anniversary. They are former residents of Spring Grove. JUNE, June 16 -- Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Tonyan observed their golden wedding anniversary. June 26 -- Mr. and Mrs. William Barth, Sr., of N. Orchard Beach were honored with a surprise dinner for their fiftieth wedding anniversary. June 24-- Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Robi.son of Woodstock, former r e s i d e n t s , c e l e b r a t e d t h e i r golden wedding anniversary at a f a m i l y d i n n e r i n L a k e Geneva. JULY July 21 -- Mr. and Mrs. W. Ed Bacon celebrated their golden wedding anniversary. AUGUST Aug. 7 -- Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Prftz observed their fifty-seventh wedding anniversary at a family party held at the Mc- Henry Country club. Aug. 17 -- Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ehredt celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary at open house held at their home near Volo.. 5 Aug. 19 -- Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph DeVries of Lakeland Park observed their golden wedding anniversary at7' the home of their son, William, in McHenry. SEPTEMBER Sept. 4 -- Mr. and Mrs. Mathias J. ^^yen celebrated their sixty-fourth wedding anniversary ^with a family party. Sept. 11 -- Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Koch celebrated their golden wedding anniversary at a family dinner in Antioch. Sept. 16 -- Mr. and Mrs. Carl G. Larson, parents of Arnold Larson of McHenry, c elebrated their golden wedding anniversary at an open house at their home in Crystal Lake. OCTOBER Oct. 27 -- "Mj^and Mrs. Peter M. Freupd oTMobnsburg observed their golden wedding anniversary. : NOVEMBER Nov. 6 -- Mr. and Mrs. Nick P. Diedrich of Volo celebrated their golden wedding anniversary. Nov. 16 -- Mr. and The ears of a cricket are in his legs, and a snake hears through his feeler, or tongue. Attend FFA Conference V • • " ' i'-fl'i., d • ii •Hif ^it-ill FARM BUREAU m CONFERENCE (REGISTRATION) LAKEMOOR- LILYMOSS S"i SCHUERR 380-2040 HOLD MONTHLY VILLAGE MEETING THURSDAY, JAN. 13 This evening at 8 p.m. is the monthly meeting of the village of Lakemoor. It will be held at the fire-community building on route 120. About 350 Illinois Future Farmers of America leaders attended the annual Farm Burcau-FFA conference on the campus of Illinois State university in Normal recently. Registering from McHenry county is Douglas Noe, Marengo, seated. Standing, left to right, are Russell Rudolph^ 'McHenry, Tom Lich, Harvard; and Bernhard Unzner, Woodstock. k "Don't squander your opportunity. to get a good education," Wm. J. Kuhfuss, president of the Illinois Agricultural a s s o c i a t i o n ( s t a t e - w i d e F a r m Bureau), told mpre than 350 Future Farmers of America leaders recently in Bloomington. Kuhfuss spoke during a session of the three-day Farm Bureau-FFA conference sponsored by ttije IAA and affiliated companies in Bloomir.gton-Normal. He said young farmers are being faced with more and more important decisions every day and urged the top FFA members in Illinois attending the recent conference to equip themselves with the best education they can to help make the right decisio^J that surely face them. People can get an education the easy way in school or the hard way through trial and error, Kuhfuss said. Nowhere else in the world can all who desire to become educated do so easily as in the United.. States, he said. FFA members from more than seventy-five Illinois counties attended the conference which stressed farmer cooperatives and the ways in which farmers have developed services to improve rural living and profits. Conferees visited the home office of the IAA in Bloomington ' and discussed the cooperative way of doing business with staff members of the IAA and affiliated companies. JOINS MANAGEMENT SOCIETY Jesse David Harris, son of Dr. James F. Harris of 5506 George Street, Richmond, has become a member of the Society for Advancement of Management at Southern Illinois university, where he is a student. Tlu SAM is a recognized national nrofessional management org nizalion that has 108 members in its SIU chapter. Harris, who attended Richmond- Burton Community high school and the Institute of Aviation at the University of Illinois before enrolling at Southern, is a cadet major in the Air Force ROTC program at SIU. He also is a member of the Arnold Air society and Alpha Eta Rho, professional aviation fraternity. Frank Blake were married fifty years and observed the day with a family celebration. NovjT 17 -- Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schaefer observed the golden anniversary of their wedding. ^ DECEMBER Dec. 2 -- Mr. and Mrs. Louis F. Rogers, Sr., of Lakeland Park celebrated their * golden wedding anniversary at a family dinner party. Attend Church Sunday Be modern with Nuw Beaulyl New feue/ NEW LAVATORY FAUCET I WEBER Plbg. & Hig. 2801 \V. Lincoln Rd. Phone 385-0855 ;T IN Specializing in MllM'S LU 12 noon to 2 p.m. FINE FOODS -- COURTEOUS' SERVICE 1 Mile North of Wauconda on Old Route 12 Phone J A 6-2929 Hie only way we could make a Catalina look even better would be to show you its price tag. Because stretching back for nearly 18 feet behind that dashing front end is everything that would make pricing a Catalina the next logical step: A 389-cu. in. V-8. Wide-Track wheels. Nylon carpets. A* patkage of safety features including seat belts front and rear. And one of the roomiest trunks "in the field. Come In, take on and price out a tiger at your Pontiac dealers-a good place to buy ueed cars, too. FARM CENSUS ANALYZED Crop production on Illinois farms has increased roughly two-fifths in a little more than a decade, yet Illinois farm numbers declined from 203,000 in 1950 to 144,000 in 1964, according tQ. an analyses of the assessor's 1964 Annual State Farm Census released by the Illinois Department of Agricult u r e . T h e n u m b e r , s i z e a n d production of farms and livestock tabulations are shown by counties and districts. The increased output per farm unit and pef man have come about through rapid changes in farm technology and increasing specialization. Large farming units have taken on greater importance, according to the report. One-third of the state's farms today account fof about two-thirds of its production. Copies may be obtained from 1966 Vehicle Stickers And Dog License Are now available for the residents of Lakemoor. You can , purchase your vehicle sticker or dog license from the village clerk, Pat Morrison at 119 Valley View. Please no Sundays. You must show your dog's current rabies certificate in order to purchase the dog's license. Sympathies No words can express our deepest, sympathies to Helen Haines on the loss of her mother, Orrilla Sammons. Orrilla passed away* Wednesday, Jan. 5, at the McHenry hospital where she had been a patient since Dec. i4. Qijrilla had been a resident oKLil^nioor for the past 12 years. ' Jan. 3. Hostesses for the January meeting were Marylyn LoPresti and Kay Meyer. Winner of the monthly prize was Eunice Tobey. The next monthly meeting will be held Monday, Feb. 7, in the dining room of Club Lilymoor at S p.m: Hostesses for the February meeting are Lill Neumann, Ann Novak and Marge Polinski. At this time the auxiliary would like to welcome two members, Estelle Katchke and Chris Sances. Bundle of Joy Congratulations go to Bud and Alma Hueckstaedt on becoming grandparents. Wee one Steven Lee made his entrance into this big world Friday, Dec. 31, weighing in at 7 lbs. 3 oz. The proud parents are Lee and Cheryl Sheaffer of Williamsport, Penn. HOME I am'happy to report that Helen Haines and Bill Holleilbach are now home from th0 hospital. Here's hoping you are both in the best of health now. Get-Well Wishes go to Lee Bassi'a son, Vic, Jr. Vic was operated on Thursday, Jan.. 6, at the Sherman hospital in Elgin. delated Birthday Greetings go to Ann Novak who celebrated her big day on the eighth of this month. Guests of Roy and Eunice Tottey Sunday, Jan. 2, were Frank and Lorraine Tobey and children, Dale and Donald. Ladies League Held their monthly meeting Wednesday, Jan. 5. After the b u s i n e s s w a s d i s c u s s e d a n d t a k e n c a r e o f b u n c o w a s played. Winners were Florence M i x , L u G r a v e n s t u k a n d Sophie Paterson. Booby went to Rose Zelenka. On Dec. 18 the women had their annual Christmas party and grab bag. All had a good time. Auxiliary News The Woman's auxiliary held its monthly meeting Monday, the Illinois Department of Agriculture, Division of Agriculture Statistics, P. fO. Box 429, Springfield, 111. Ready for in sthing new nsurance? LEE B. KORTEMEFER Off. 888-2000 Res. 388-0975 Now Country Companies agents have it--even if you live in town. Broad coverage, low rates, fast claims service. Through Mid-America Fire and Marine Insurance Company, Country Companies agents now can provide 'em all--wherever you live. ^ Make a date to get the details. Your Country Companies Agent covtrmr wi • mmm mmut • cvm*r ustnift mo Mtma «*r *m mo* LOW SNOW Let a Gas dryer brighten the 60 most miserable days of the year. Special trial offer. T- Wide-Track Pontiao -POMT1AC COMPANY 1112 N. Front Street SLEET, SNOW, WIND, RAIN--no doubt about it, we'll get our share during the next 60 days. Now's the ideal time to let a gas dryer help you ignore the weather. Take advantage of our 60-day Proof of Performance offer and learn how wonderful a gas clothes dryer can be. Just visit any Northern Illinois Gas showroom or have one of our representatives call on yo«w Select the model you'd like to try for 60.day$. Choose from one of these leading makes: Ha milton, Norge, Philco-Bendix, Speed Queen, Whirlpool. If you decide not to keep the dryer, we*! pick it up and refund any payments you have made. Low monthly payments can be arranged, with up to 36 months to pay. Gas dryers dry big loads for just a penny-- about one-fourth the cost of other automatics. What you save in operating costs practically pays for your dryer! Gas dryers pay other dividends, too. They're kind to your clothes; save you work, time and trouble. Try one for 60 days. It'lJ put spring in your step. PHONE: 385*2081 NORTHERN A ILLINOIS flG/XS / ;ie iure to tee Mary Martin in "Peter Pan", Friday, January 21st, at 6:30 p.m. on NBC