Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Oct 1969, p. 3

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WED. OCT. 1, 1969 - PLAINDEALER - PG. 3 JUNIOR LEGION OFFICERS -- The American Legion Junior auxiliary, No. 491, held election and installation of officers at the first fall meeting. The installing officer was Mrs. Nick Miller and the installing sergeant-at-arms was Linda Durkin. In picture from left: Assistant sergeant-at-arms, Annette Hansen; historian, Janet Homo; secretary, Colleen Miller; chair­ man, Cathy Durkin; vice-chairman, Cindy Reid; chaplain, Noelle Reid; treasurer, Allison Han­ sen; and sergeant-at-arms, Michelle Petersen. Eight Et Forty Busy With Aid To Young People. The McHenry County Salon 483 of the Eight et Forty met at the home of Mrs. George Vick at Harvard on Monday evening, Sept. 22, with a pleasant eve­ ning afforded by the hostess, assisted by Mrs. Robert Duff. Mrs. Bernard Matchen, la petite chapeau, under the new regime had formal opening. Mrs. Harold Meyers told of the serious accident of thepou- voir member, Mrs. Otis Nixon, while she and her husband were vacationing in Texas. She was brought back by air ambulance and is now confined toSt. Ther- ese hospital, Waukegan, where she is a R.N. Friends may write her there. Cards were signed for her and for Mrs. First Recital At College Is Well Received Comments of "outstanding" and "a great performance" were repeatedly made by the majority of the 100 persons in attendance at the Student cen­ ter of McHenry County college recently. This response to the performance of Miss Pamela Schaefer, violinist, and Mrs. Shirley Schaefer, pianist, can only establish that the first of the recital series sponsored by McHenry County college dur­ ing the 1969-70 academic year was a success. The technical mastery of their respective instruments in difficult compositions was es­ tablished immediately by these two fine artists. What was most pleasing to the audience, how­ ever, was the artists' ability to convey the changing moods of compositions by Leclair, Copland, Mozart, Dvorak and Suk. An appreciative audience requested an encore to which the artists responded with a rendition of "Pantomine" by Manuel de Falla which was particularly well received. Dr. Marie Ann Vos, assis­ tant professor of Humanities and coordinator of the recital series, announced that the next performance would be by Gail Delente, pianist, on Oct. 5, at 3:30 p.m., in the Student cen­ ter at the college. Delbert Ogle who is a patient at Memorial hospital. Under the child welfare pro­ gram of the American Legion, $5 was contributed to the T.B. children and $5 for Cystic Fi­ brosis children's care by the salon. Under their new theme this year,"The Greatest Show On Earth", the salon is planning a busy year ahead under the big tent, to assist in the work of juvenile tuberculosis care and also Cystic Fibrosis in chil­ dren. They will endeavor to help provide, through their child welfare program, a Fibrosis Sweat Chloride Measuring sys­ tem for the National Jewish T.B. hospital. The outline work will soon be forthcoming. The partnership drive will be under the supervision of Mrs. Nick Miller, McHenry. Three applications were sub­ mitted for membership and will be accepted for enrollment at the October meeting to be held with Chapeau Mrs. Matchen. The following local commit­ tee chairmen will function this year as appointed: Child wel­ fare, Mrs. Margaret Mikota; Photo Book, Mrs. Winn Pietsch; Partnership, Mrs. Nick Miller; Trophies and Awards, Mrs. Harold Vycital, McHenry; Fi­ nance, Mrs. Mikota and Mrs. Miller. AjuwuKCMwwtT In order to better serve McHenry area brides, the Plaindealer sends wedding forms to all those whose engagements have been an­ nounced on our society page and carry a definite date. We ask that these com­ pleted forms be returned three days prior to the wed­ ding. Complete details will appear only during the week following wedding except in the case of out-of-state weddings, where an addit­ ional week is allowed. Photographs will be printed any time later, or will be included with the wedding information the first week if they accom­ pany the story. If your engagement an­ nouncement has not been published, or if the date of wedding was not known at that time, please call our office and request that a marriage form be sent. 3>la;JU eater Established 1875 3812 West Elm Street Phone 385-0170 McHenry, Illinois 60050 Published Every Wednesday & Friday at McHenry, Illinois Second Class Postage Paid at McHenry, Illinois by McHENRY PUBLISHING COMPANY Larry E. Lund - Publisher Adele Froehlich - Editor MEMBER ^̂ ĵ NEWpjAlper Akiociation - Founded 1886 SUBSCRIPTION RATES 1 Year $7.50 1 Year $S In McHenry and Lake Outside McHenry and County Lake County >.00 ^OSPJTAL obu & orrnng All County Show And Tell Day Oct. 15 The Council of the McHenry County Homemakers Extension association met recently at the Farm Bureau building, when plans were made for several members and Mrs. Katharine Neumann, extension adviser, to attend the district meeting in DeKalb. Mrs. Louie Plencner re­ ported on the progress in plan­ ning for the "All County Show and Tell Day" which will be held Oct. 15 at St. John's Lutheran church, Woodstock. It was decided that the 1970 annual meeting of the McHenry County Homemakers Extension association would be held the second or third Wednesday in April. A con mittee will make the arrangements for the loca­ tion of the meeting. The next council meeting will be held Oct. 20 at the Farm Bureau buHdfrtg? MEMORIAL HOSPITAL WOODSTOCK Patients admitted to Mem­ orial hospital, Woodstock, during the past week included Carl Ottoson, Wonder Lake; Scott Frantz, Charlotte Bailey, McHenry. HARVARD HOSPITAL Robert Seeber, Donald Cost- igan and Dwayne Oeffling of Mc­ Henry were patients during the past week in Harvard hospital. MARRIAGE LICENSES Arthur J. Nimsgern and Lin- dal Stackpool, both of Spring Grove. Charles G. Kloeckner and Charlene Bye, both of McHen­ ry. Francis Hawn, Bay City, Mich., and Rosana M. Greve, Wonder Lake. John J. Adleman and Mil­ dred M. Shoulders, both of Mc­ Henry. Stephen A. Covner, McHen­ ry, and Linda M. Supol, Cary. Jerome Jabcon, Chicago, and Jacqueline Specht, Wonder Lake. OCTOBER ll Card Party -- McHenry Moose Lodge -- lp.m. -- Spon­ sored by Lilymoor Women's Auxiliary-- Tickets Available at Door. OCTOBER 2 McHenry Garden Club -- Home of Mrs, Charles Wag­ ner -- Program By Lillian Cox. C.D. of A. Joyce Kilmer Court No. 573 -- Annual Card Party-- K. of C. Hall -- 8 p.m. -- Prizes & Refreshments. OCTOBER 4 St. Patrick's Home & School Association -- Fun Fair -- St. Patrick's School Building -- 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. OCTOBER 6 McHenry Senior Citizens Club Executive Committee Lun­ cheon and Meeting; - Noon - Lakeland Park Community House. Fox River Valley Camp No. 3251 -- R .N .A . -- R egu l ar Monthly Meeting -- Home of Mrs. Mary Kantorski--5310 W. Park View -- 8 p.m. OCTOBER 7 Women Of The Moose -- Christmas In October -- Fresh Meat Demonstration -- 8 p.m. OCTOBER 13 McHenry Senior Citizens Club - Smorgasbord Dinner At Tips For The Homemaker "BEEF STEW"? - USDA's Consumer and Mar­ keting Service inspection reg­ ulations require at least 25 percent beef, based onthe fresh weight of the meat, in the can­ ned "beef stew" prepared un­ der federal inspection. Similar requirements exist for other processed meat and poultry products. For instance, frozen meat or poultry pot pies must contain at least 25 percent meat; chili con carne, at least 40 percent meat; chili con carne with beans, at least 25 percent meat; and corned beef hash, at least 35 percent beef. MEAT INSPECTION Federal meat inspection--a tax-supported activity -- costs each man, woman and child in the United States about 50 cents per year. With inspection comes assurance that products have been prepared in sanitary sur­ roundings, are wholesome and truthfully labeled. Part of the funding for fed­ eral inspection goes to the states as grants to help them develop and operate inspection programs that meet federal standards. "WATER ADDED" When you buy ham, check the label. If the label reads "water added", the ham contains up to 10 percent added moisture af­ ter it has been cured and pro­ cessed. If the added water goes beyond 10 percent, the product would have to be labeled "im­ itation Ham" under federal in­ spection regulations. You get more for a car that doesn't look its age. A Volkswagen for instance. It costs about $1939 new. Yet after three years a VW actually sells for more than some domestic cars that originally cost $2300. „ How's that for a return on your in­ vestment. And you pretty well know that the longer you own it, the better that return gets. The reason Volkswagens hold their re­ sale value so well is that they don't change from year to year to year. Since VWs don't go out of style annu­ ally, it's hard to tell what year VW you're looking at. One problem you never run into with domestic cars. C VOLKSWAGEN OF AMt*H Crystal Lake Volkswagen, Inc Me. 14 West off 31 Open Eves. HI 9:00 CRYSTAL LAKE •15459-7100 6 p.m. - East Campus Cafe­ teria. At 7:30 p.m. - Enter­ tainment by McHenry Senior Citizens Club Band. OCTOBER 14 McHenry Woman's Club Bus Tour -- New Glarus, Wis. OCTOBER 15 Guiding Star Shrine--Fashion Demonstration -- Masonic Temple -- 8 p.m. OCTOBER 17 Rummage Sale -- Lutheran Church Ladies Aid Society -- Social Hall -- Zion Lutheran Church -- Rt. 120 W. 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. OCTOBER 20 B.P.W. Charter Night --6:30 p.m. -- V.F.W. -- Dinner Meet­ ing -- Reservations Before Oct. 10 -- Lenore Frlsby. OCTOBER 21 Riverview Camp, No. 6818 - R.N.A. -- Fall Card Party -- K. of C. Hall -- 8 p.m. OCTOBER 27 McHenry Senior Citizens Club Annual Halloween Party; - 7:30 p.m. - East Campus Cafeteria. YOUNG PEOPLE FROM AREA IN STUDENT TEACHING Illinois State university has announced that approximately 490 students in professional ed­ ucation are undertaking their teaching internships in more than 350 s choo l s thro ug ho ut I l l ­ inois. Dr. Cecilia J. Lauby, head of the Department of Profes­ sional Laboratory Experiences, said the program involves stu­ dent teaching, observation, par­ ticipation, studies of individual pupils, and research. Profes­ sional laboratory experiences prior to the internships them­ selves are usually integral parts of specific college courses. Students on teaching intern­ ships for the first nine-week term of the first semester in­ clude Evelyn Zvonar,Ringwood, first grade in Lexington, and Ann Pliner Dolan, teaching mentally retarded in Wash­ ington school, Pontiac. UGQl NOTICE BID NOTICE The City o f McHenry w i l l receive sealed bids for fur­ nishing gasoline for use in city owned vehicles, bids to be open­ ed at the regular council meet­ ing October 20, 1969. Specifi­ cations may be secured in the office of the City Clerk. The Mayor and Council reserve the r igh t t o re j ec t any and a l l bids and to consider any ad­ vantage to the City. Earl R. Walsh, City Clerk of the City of McHenry, Illinois (Pub. Oct; 1, 3, 8, 1969) Wood paneling to wallflowers ...go 'an'Tact mmmmm» brand SELF-ADHESIVE PLASTIC Want a wood paneled room? It's easy -- with CON-TACT* plastic. Looks handsome -- costs a frac­ tion of the price of real wood. Like flowered walls? It's just as easy, with the wonderful "instant decorating" vinyl plastic that goes on so smoothly, with no paste, no tacks, no tools. Best of all, these lovejy walls are easy to care for--they're washable. Come see dozens more patterns and colors--start your own decorating project now, and see how proud you'll be. 1f wide, 49t a yard FRANKLIN McHENRY, ILLINOIS WHO? If you read The McHenry Plaindealer You Know WHAT? If you read The McHenry Plaindealer You Know WHERE? If you read The McHenry Plaindealer You Know WHEN? If you read The McHenry Plaindealer You Know WHY? If you read The McHenry Plaindealer You Know HOW? To get best results Advertise In McHenry Plaindealer 385-0170

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