Page 4 NORENE HARRISON WEDS The wedding of Miss Norene Ann Harrison and Donald Edward Gieser took place on Saturday, June 11, at 7:30 o‘clock in the evening at the First United Evanâ€" gelical church, the Rev. Masser The bride is the daughter of the William Lee Harrisons of 442 Linâ€" coln avenue and the bridegroom is the son of the Fred Giesers of 419 McDaniels avenue. The bride was lovely in a whiul satin gown with a long train. 'l'he‘ fingertip veil she wore hung from a crown of orange &lossoms. She carried white roses. Miss Doris Gieser, sister of the bridegroom, attended as maid of honor. She was gowned in turâ€" quoise and carried dark red roses. The bridesmaids, Miss Rosemary Dell and Miss Eleanor Zagalia, were in pale pink ice taffeta and their bouquets were of pink roses. Best man was Llioyd Botker and the ushers were Alan Harriâ€" son, brother of the bride, and Philip Minorini. ‘The bride‘s mother wore aqua complemented by a pink hat and white accedsories. Her corsage was of pink roses. The brideâ€" groom‘s mother was in beige crepe and her corsage was of yellow Miss Daisy Fisher sang, accomâ€" panied by Miss Romayne Gunsâ€" A garden reception followed the candlelight ceremony at the home of the bride‘sâ€"parents. About two hundred attended. Following a ten day honeymoon in northern Wisconsin, the young couple will reside on Homewood avenue. Brth the bride and bridegroom are graduates of Highland Park high school, and she studied voice at Bob Jones university in Greenâ€" ville, South Carolina. TOURING EUROPE Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Allenby (Julie Zischke), who have just finished a year of study at the University of Geneva in Switzâ€" erland, and Mrs. Allenby‘s mother, Mrs. H. A. Zischke, formerly of 100 Hazel avenue, are touring Europe this summer. They will return to the United States on August 19. After a month‘s visit with Mr. Allenby‘s mother, Mrs. Allenby, Sr. of 555 Forest aveâ€" nue, they will go on to Toronto, Canada, where Mr. Allenby will work further toward his doctorate and will teach physics. Mr. Allenby received his masâ€" ter‘s degree in physics at Dartâ€" mouth last June and has worked toward his doctorate in Geneva. Mrs. Allenby siurfljd history. TWENTYâ€"FIFTH WEDDING ANNIVERSARA Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth B. Lacyl of 1645 Dato avenue will be hosts at an "at home" on Sunday afterâ€" noong June 19; in celebration of their tWentyâ€"fifth wedding .anniâ€" versary, June 18. Their daughter, Betty, a student at Purdue uniâ€" versity, will be here for the occaâ€" sion, returning the next day to attend Purdue‘s summer session. The following day Mrs. Lacy, her other daughter, Margaret, and‘ Mr. Lacy‘s mother, Mrs. Van A. Lacy of Miami, Florida, will leave for a week‘s visit with friends and relatives in the east. After a few days‘ visit in Vermillion, Ohio, Miss Lacy will return home. Her mother and grandmother will go on to New England. After a week in the east, Mrs. Lacy will be joined by her husâ€" band and they plan to go on to Barrington, Nova Scotia, Mrs. Lacy‘s home, for a month‘s visit with relatives. They will tour the maritime â€" provinces â€" before _ reâ€" turning west, and then go on to their summer home in Rhinelandâ€" er, Wisconsin, until fall. PRIMP SHOP ‘The Misses Becky Dean and Billie Pigati announce ~ the apening of their new Beauty Shop â€"â€" specializing in cold waves, popular prices. Waukegan at Highwood Ave.â€"Second Floor In Highland Park 396 North Avenue ANNOUNCING Eve. by Appointment) of the ASSISTANT DIRECTOR AT LAKE GENEVA CONVENTION Mrs. Chester Kyle, 1540 Judâ€" son avenue, National art director of Sigma Sigma Sigma sorority, is to be one of the assistant diâ€" rectors of the sorority‘s regional convention to be held June 24 through:June 26 at College Camp, Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. d College and alumni_ chapter members of Sigma Sigma Sigma from the middle western states will gather at College Camp for their Trailways Convention. Mrs. Richard Vander Veen of Grand Rapids, Michigan, Nationâ€" al rush chairman, will be the conâ€" vention director, and Mrs. W. M. Dunham of Muskogie, Oklahoma, national executive secretary, is to be the officer in charge. BETROTHED Mr. and Mrs. Frank S. Spring of 114 S. Deere Park drive anâ€" nounced the betrothal of their daughter, Nancy, to William M. Bertles, Jr., son of the senior Bertles of Tuckerstown, Bermuda, and Glen Cove, New York, at a small tea on Sunday. The wedding will take place in the early fall. Mr. Bertles came on from the east for the party. Miss Spring is a graduate of the North Shore Country Day school and Smith college. Her fiance is a graduate of Brooks School and of Yale university. At present he is attending Harvard School of Business Administration. f VISITING IN SWEDEN Visiting relatives in Smaland, Sweden, is Mrs. Ellen Anderson of Chicago, formerly of Highland Park. She left three weeks ago and plans to be gone six months. Gowned in ivory satin made with a seed pearl outline around the neck, wrists and scolloped train, wearing a fingertip: veil which fell from a halo of seed pearls, and carrying three white orchids surrounded by stephanoâ€" tis, Miss Esther Claire Hayes beâ€" came the bride of Chase McKenâ€" zie Smith, Jr. on Saturday, June 11, at 8 p.m. in Trinity Episcopal ESTHER HAYES, A BRIDE church. The Rev. Charles U. Harâ€" ris heard the exchange of nuptial vows, The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Martin Hayes of 316 Roger Williams avenue and the bridegroom is the son of the senior Smiths of 269 Laure] avenue. Miss Shirley Jayne Hayes atâ€" tended her sister as maid of honâ€" or. Her gown was shell pink taffeâ€" ‘ta and lace and she carried garâ€" denias, tinted the same shade, blue delphinium and ivy. The bridesmaids were Miss Edith Allen of Bannockburn, Mrs. Chauncey Frisbie, III of Kankakee, Mrs Thomas Mavory of Highland Park and â€" Mrs. Schuyler Watrdus of Riverside. Their dresses were of sky blue taffeta and lace:and their bouquets were of shell pink gar denias and ivy. ‘ Raymond M. Hayes, Jr., brothâ€" er of the bride, served as best man and the ushers were Vance Smith, Jr. of Chicago, cousin of the bridegroom, Thomas Mavery of Highland Park, Robert Smith of Chicago, Edward Snyder of River Forest and Thomas Walsh of Highland Park. m The bride‘s mother chose a gown of aqua chiffon and her orâ€" chid chiffon hat was trimmed with matching lilacs. Her corsage was of the same shade of lavender. The bridegroom‘s mother was in rose beige crepe, made with a lace yoke. Hre net hat matched her gown. Her corsage was of green orchids. North Shore Florist and Landscape Service JOS. KOLBECK Telephone Highland Park 2064 Ta..-m“:.lm Service 0 9 FOR EVERY OCCASION 290 Greenwood Avenue _ Glences, Hlincis FLOWER S Mrs. Elroy F. Langill, the forâ€" mer Janet Elizabeth Morrissey. The â€" Morrisseyâ€"Langill _ wedding was an event of May 21 at the Immaculate Conception church. A reception at the Orrington hotel, Evanston, followed _ the reremony. Mr. Smith and his bride are now spending two weeks at Sea Island, Georgia. On their return they will live in Highland Park. Out of town guests included Mr. and Mrs. David C. Babeock of Birmingham, Michigan, uncle and aunt of the bride, and Mr. gnd Mrs. David Ross, of Streator, Illiâ€" nois, uncle and aunt of the brideâ€" groom. On Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Thomâ€" as Brown of 446 Lincoin place returned from a two and a half months‘ visit in Scotland. They HOME FROM SCOTLAND Eacn year, educational institutions in Chicago and Northern Illinois undertake millions of dollars worth of research for industry. The varied projects range from cookies (Northern Illinois is a great food processing cenâ€" ter) to cyclotrons (Northern Illinois has the largest private enterprise in the world for the study of atomic science). _In an age of rapid technological change, teamwork beâ€" tween education and industry is of major importance to the industries of Chicago and Northern Illinois. Industry provides funds, both for basic and applied research. It also furnishes a vast array of facts developed in industry‘s own laboratories. Educational institutions provide the jective viewpoint vital to research. Important, also, are the unparalleled library facilities of Northern Illinois, for today library research is a basic prerequisite to successful THE PRESS TERRITORIAL INFORMATION DEPARTMENT PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS Bekeving in the odventages of Chicago cad Northers Wieoi, this company has beee and in concentrating solely on the advescemeat of the terridary it secverâ€"cooparating with Hlieois ageacies heving simdar ahjectiver, Lt. Col. and Mrs. Ray Cox and daughter, Marilee, are visiting with Mrs. Cox‘s mother, Mrs. George B. Lake of 330 Bloom street. Mrs. Cox and her young daughter joined Col. Cox in Manâ€" ila a year ago, after he had been stationed there for a year and a half. They are on a two months‘ leave before going on to his new station. THORSENâ€"HASKINS NUPTIALS The marriage of Miss Nancy Thorsen and Robert Winthrop Haskins took place on Saturday, June 11, at 3:30 o‘clock in the afternoon at the Glencoe Union church. The Rev. Robert Stubbs performed the ceremony. The bride is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Arnold M. Thorsen of 675 N. Ridge road and the bridegroom is the son of the Franklin Vance Nelsons of 1610 Broadview aveâ€" nue For further information, write The bride wore an heirloom .n-ulouinculnan.u Minnema of Northfield. Made of applique of lace. Her tulle veil, fingertip length, fell from a crown headdress. She carried a shower bouquet of pink Delight roses. The bridegroom‘s sister, Mrs. Thomas Frey, attended as of honor. The gown she wore was of white embroidered organdy over aqua taffeta, Her bouquet and headband were of light pink carnations. _ Carolyn Thnma.! young sister of the bride, and Mary Romane, her cousin, acted as junior bridesmaids. Carolyn‘s dress was of pink frosted organdy with a net Bertha collar, and Mary‘s, similarly made, was of yellow. Each wore a large blue sash, and carried white baskets filled with bachelor buttons, pink carnations and white stock. Listen to the Garden Club of the Air at 7:30 Every Thursday over WKRS (106.7) Now Available In . 1 peck, 2 peck and bushel Sturdy, lined burlap bagsâ€"at and economical endeavor in every scientific field. ‘This research partnership in Northern Illinois has alâ€" ready been fruitful. New and improved products and processes helped arm America during the war. They have aided the record outpouring of peacetime goods and servâ€" the improved quality and lower production costs that have resulted from research. As the volume of research sponsored by industry in educational institutions is growing almost daily, it is inâ€" evitable that it will continue to yield impressive diviâ€" dends in Northern Illinois. tional center and a major manufacturing communityâ€" makes the region increasingly attractive to forwardâ€"looking industrialists. It is the growth area of the nation. ices since the war. Every user of goods has benefited by PINKOUS Productive Peat Co. (Continued on page 5) Productive Peat 1818 :.;ol:n-hluo.ï¬_*. County Line Road KEEP BUICKS BEST North Shore Buick Co. 30 Years In Highland Park Authorized Sales & Service 110 S. First St _ Tol. 496 ROYAL OAK STABLES YOU‘LL SEE WHY BUICKS BEST