Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 Jan 1966, p. 9

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

W-... \ Thursday, January 27i 1966 THE McHENBY PLAINDEALER Section Two -- Page One Va9iant Viscounts C^r'aig Barrows of 1006 W. Hilltop, McHenry, is the 15-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Barrows. He has been a bugler with the Viscounts for the past year. A sophomore in McHenry high school, he lists swimming and water skiing as his hobbies. Craig hopes to continue on to college after graduation. Mike Sobackl, 16, has been with the Viscounts for the past two years. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sobacki of 2219 Manor lane, McHenry. A junior in McHenry high school at the present time, he is interested in football, wrestling, track and band. He intends to enroll in Southern Illinois university. P. erAonalA Mr. and Mrs. Charles Vycital joined former members of a square dance group from Woodstock and Harvard for dinner at a popular eating place near Woodstock recently and later spent an enjoyable evening reminiscing at the Glen Burmeister home in Woodstock. The Richard Sednr family of Waukegan spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bienapfl. Mesdames Marian Brolin, Helen Jurack, Lillian Bolger, Eleanor Foley, Dolores Kreuger and Genevieve Knox members of Delta Kappa Gamma and guests, Mrs. Mary Vycital and Mrs. Edna Olsen, spent a recent day in Chicago where they enjoyed dinner and saw the puppet show at local restaurant. Dr. and Mrs. James Wiater arrived Friday from " Long Beach, Calif., for a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Althoff, and other relatives. They are spending the week between McHenry and Chicago where he is attending a medical convention and next Friday will go to Jefferson, Wis., to see their son, Jim, who is in school there before returning to their home. Gary Vycital arrived home Friday from his studies at the College of St. Thomas in St. 'aul, Minn., to spend a mid- »mester break with his parems, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Vy cital MrV-an&XMrs. Leslie Olsen, Sr., were Sunday afternoon and evening guests in the Leslie Olsen, Jr., home in Crystal Lake. Mrs. Tina Kist of Chicago has been spending several days with relatives here. Gary Lockwood returned to his school work at Iowa Wesleyan college in Mount Pleasant, Iowa, Mond iy. after a few days vacation with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Lockwood. Other visitors in their home or^ S't'irday were Mr and Mrs. William Behrens of Capron. Miss Lillian Behrens of LaGrange, Miss Amanda Behrens of Woodstock and the Lavern Lockwood family of Lake Geneva, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Phannenstill visited in the -home of their daughter, Mrs. Richard Antonsen, in Evans ton Saturday. Mrs. Peter J. Schaefer attended a pink and blue shower given for her daughter, Mrs. Mada Molter, in Genoa City, Wis., Wednesday of last week. Mrs. David Powers returned home Saturday from a few days visit in the home of her daughter, Mrs. George Freund, in Woodstock. Judy Bernish, Linda Kunz and Ricky Piatt motored to Naperville, Sunday, to pick up Rich Smith who came home to spend a few days with his parents, the LeRoy Smiths, before resuming his classes at North Central college. Mr. Louise McMahon of Chicago was a Sunday visitor in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Pat Moriarity. Messrs. and Mesdames William Bolger, Eugene Dowe, Robert Afeld, LeRoy Smith, Robert Smith and Hubert Smith were among the folks from here who attended a farewell dinner and party for Bob Knox and Donald Passfield of Woodstock at the VFW hall in Marengo, Saturday evening. Employees of the telphone company, Mr. Knox, brother of Mrs. Hubert Smith, is being transferred to Rock Island and Mr. Passfield, brother of Mrs. Robert Smith, is being sent to Springfield. Mr. and Mrs. John McNisli and Mr. and Mrs. George Jones of Richmond were here Sunday to attend a party for their n<*W^ grandson. Miihael John McNish, son of the John McNislies, who was clnistcned at Shepherd of the Hills church on that day. Miss Lynn Reihansperger is home from her studies at the University of Wisconsin for a mid-semester break with her parents, Mr. and. Mrs. Herb Reihansperger. Harrison Murphy of Peekskill, 6N. Y., is spending the week with his daughter, Mrs. Kathy Speckman, who accompanied him to Chicago Wednesday to attend graduation exercises at Lane Technical high school. His grandson, Michael Murphy, a member of the class, has been accepted at Loyola university where he will enter in the fall. Mrs. Richard Stenger, who has been visiting her mother, Mrs. William Spencer, for several days, left Wednesday for her former home in San Carlos, Calif., where she will visit friends before returning to her home in Bristol, England. While here she was guest of honor at a dinner for a group of relatives given by her mother at her home last Saturday in observance of her birthday. Mr. and Mrs. L. Antonsen, former McHenry residents, are spending the week with relatives here enroute to their home in Martinsville, N. J., from a trip to California. and Arizona. In the later place they visited her cousin, Edward Michels, in Sun City. Recently, two ships pulled into the harbor at Cobh, Ireland, within an hour of each other. One was the 33,525 ton liner America, which" crossed in 5 days, with 1649 passengers and crew members; the other was a 7 ton sailboat, the Atea, 42 days out of New York, with one person comprising the passenger list and crew combined, man, per day. FUNCTION OF COMMITTEES IN CHURCH LISTED Most people learn something about the various branches of the government which help the country function as a whole. But how many know about the various committees which help a church function? Pastor D. • D. Johnson of Shepherd of The Hills Lutheran church, McHenry, felt that this knowledge was especially lacking in Shepherd of The Hills, a six-month-old mission congregation. Thus was born the big "uncover operation." Each committee was asked to work up a display that/^explained the work they performed and its contribution to the congregation. These displays were to be in the narthex of the church for three weeks. It was felt that this time span would give all members and visitors the opportunity to study each display and see all the work which often makes a non-committee mem, ber wonder just what it those committees do The parish education committee made a striking white staircase with a gold crucifix at the top. The seven stairs were labled Baptism, Education in the Home, Sunday S c h o o l , C o n f i r m a i o n , B i b l e Family Worship. The saircase was set off by a lectern which held a large tablet of paper. The Committee on Church Property displayed a floor to ceiling te-pee to illustrate and enlist help in their chiefs and Indian program of care for the- grounds and building. A family of chiefs and a family of Indians would care for the grounds and building each week. The Committee on Stewardship and Finance had a table displaying the committee's function of strengthening the contributions of each member's time, thought, talents and finances. The display included posters, talent sheets, contribution envelopes, the annual report and the church directory? The Worship committee had a large table display. Posters explained the work to be done, ;e memit is a^ such as ushering, singing in the choir and serving in the altar guild. The Evangelism committee had a camper tent set up. Posters expluincd the importance of spreading the gospel and methods the committee was using to do NO. The great "uncover operation" wap a huge success. NAME DIRECTORS FOR CEMETERY ASSOCIATION At the annual meeting held recently, the Ostend Cemetery association re-elected the three directors whose terms were expiring to ne wsix-year terms. Those returned to office were Allen Dimon, McHenry; Miss Alice Clark, Woodstock; and Miss Sylvia Richardson, Crystal Lake. The business meeting disclosed that the trust fund which had its beginning in January of 1963 had now suroassed ^the $3,000 mark and that the investment thereof was returning an income which has so far kept the cemetery finances in the black. Following the association meeting, the newly elected directors reorganized their board by re-naming to office all incumbent officers as follows: Allen Dimon, president; Miss Alice Clark, vice-president; Eugene Eppel, secretary; and Mrs. Grace ^-Thompson, treasurer. Other directors are Everett Thomas, Country Club road, Woodstock, and Miss Sylvia Richardson, Crystal Lake. GOODWILL FOUNDERS DAY During January Goodwill Industries observes the annual Founders Day of its inception as an agency serving the handicapped men and women, Mrs. Agnes T. Adams, local representative, said when she reported that the Goodwill truck will be in this area, Monday, Jan. 31. Mrs. Adams may be reached at 385-0863. The annual Founders Day wa§ Jan. 19 and is commemorated each year on the birth date of the organization's founder, Dr. Edgar J. Helms, who originated the first Goodwill Industries in Boston .Mass., in 1902. . n t> •, Quality Radiator Repair By Factory-Trained Radiator Specialists 12 Years Experience Every Job A.O-TESTED For Tour Added Protection. ALL WORK ^GUARANTEED -- PROMPT SERVICE Complete Stock of Rebuilt and New Wdiatorg Complete Stock of Original Equip. Heater Control Valves ADAMS BR@S. Nexi So VoFoW. 8004 W. Kosjfaa ISO R Slav. Phone 385-0783 McHeory, III. What would happen if everybody caught Olds 88 Swing Fever? 5885588 TORONADO-INSPlRED DELTA W HOUOAY SEDAty Mass happiness. You may not be immune to Olds 88 Swing Fever (few (oiks are). But that's okay. Your Olds Dealer has a wonderful new cure: A Rocket Action Olds 88! And the choice of prescription is yours: Elegant new Delta 88 . . . action-packed new Dynamic . . . low-priced Jetstar. All Rocket powered ... all Olds styled . . . and all priced to make waiting for spring downright foolhardy. Feel your temperature rising? That's Swing Fever. Quick.' Head for your Oldsmobile Dealer's .. open your mouth and »ay "yeah!" LOOK TO OLDS FOR THE NEW! Nguhtt*- ooff* «tvha»y road: when you OLDS 88 WM s\\ II PIN(. Till. COL MR* SS OUT FRONT IJ\J66 TOtOMAM) • MHrTV-CMNT • OUT* M • DYNAMIC »• • KTftTAR M • CUTLAtf • P-IS • VISTA CftUltCR • ..in a Rocket Action Car. AL COLLI I MICK - OLDSMOBILE. IXC. 907 X. Front St NYE AGENCY Ifour Jriendlif Pharmacy, '325 N. Riverside Dr. itiita JUST A FEW OF MANY VALUES CHECK, OUR CIRCULAR SEE OUR STORE AS ALWAYS -- S&H Stamps & Values from McHenry's Friendly Pharmacy THURS., FRI„ SAT. JAN. 27, 28 & 29 READING ASS !< KODapak I -AaTf/OCC I i mm .'Xfr ,.v-V • V fi -- * Folds Je pocket sira. \ 39" / INSTA-FLASH Camera I Cut From $11.95 Complete JF Antimony '% g Jewelry \ CASES 1 Embossed. Design choice & ^w-,. Or a-Ton $2.29 IFerrydoffhi ZIPPER SUIT Full length zipper. In Colors. %. 79 j? .4r^re,rin.r% Kit NOW.... $ $ 1 % Ul TOOTH BRUSHI 39 V2'\ % & J' .-r* j» «*• McHenry's lis H • • COFFEE MUGS 10-oz. size for the big drinker. m ' FliE $3.59 LAUREL Pi >Year guarantee. UT TO.... Most c Complete i With any $2.00 purchase of ^ > items in this Sale. Offer void where sfcsi1: prohibited by law. c Cosmetic s Selection Works 5-8 hours on any type water. From ECAZ. Holiday Overstock Closeout - Tussy - Yardley - Rubenstein and many others - Last Chance Special - Elizabeth Arden's Blue Grass ALL '/2 PRICE Watch for the Yardley Soap Sale CUT TO.... 3 $2o2$ UTS $3.69 12-Drawer ci 53c Justrife FINK L0T0ON BEHHGENT, -• • 4: •• • 22-or $1.95 RAY-O-VAC 2-Cell BfflBirmqi FOJSIMK. NATIONALLY ADVERTISED (JSc Alka Seltzer 36c 13 Hair Spray AQUA NET 59c Keg. 75c Largo Size POLIDENT 45c (iiletlc Super Blue Blades 15 for 69c PSPTO BISMAL 61c 1 <>z. Ointment Preparation H .... 79c Res;. SI.00 -- Shirk HOT LATHER .... 66c Re-. 89e Prell Concentrate 56c Resr. 81.09 -- 4'2 oz. SCORE 69c (Quantities Limited) ADULT 48's 98c Walgreens GLYCERIN S@JPP@SSTORie , REGULAR §2.00 Table Tennis Set. a k ¥ES¥= 15) I o !©m-Siii GLOVES 47 RM0METERS 89s Clinical fEVER Til ni?fB M£ WITH CASE.. $6.95 CoumseSor C Compact, with handle. 4 Colors. c CUT C49 ¥©.... • J

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy