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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 11 Nov 1981, p. 5

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Lakemoor-Lilymoor Area Margaret Karas 385-4934 Columnist Back To Work It was great going, but we are happy to be back. Bruno and I took a two-week jaunt through Illinois, Missouri and Arkansas, and saw some of the interesting, magnificent, beautiful parts of these areas. •< Nauvoo, our first stop, is rich with Illinois history. Then, on to Hannibal, Mo., "Where Mark Twain lives again". Seeing the ad­ ventures of Tom Sawyer in miniature, and actually walking' where young Sam Clemens grew up and going through his boyhood home, was really capturing a moment in history. , Fantastic Caverns at Springfield, Mo., was the next highlight, with beautiful mineral deposits. The history of this cave included a time when it was used as headquarters for the Ku- Klux-Klan, and as a speakeasy, with gambling during the days of prohibition. The Saunders Memorial museum in the little town oi\ Berryville, Ark., was a delight. The finest private gun collection, including some used by Jesse James, Billy the Kid and Annie Oakley, is here. Eureka Springs, Ark., is a place of beauty, in­ spiration and history. The giant statue of the "Christ of the Ozarks" was magnificent to see, as it stands on top of Magnetic Mountain. The Elna M. Smith foundation collection of over 7,000 bibles in 625 languages and 3,000 primitive manuscripts found in the Bible museum, makes one more aware of the magnitude of God. We spent a lovely warm sunny day in Murfreesboro, Ark., in the Crater of Diamonds State Park, sif­ ting through the dirt for a . diamond. Hot Springs are synonymous with baths, so we went to historic. Bathhouse Row, and spent two .luxurious hours being i bathed and massaged. I Several days were spent with former Lakemoor residents Ann and Paul Starzyk, who are now living near Prim, Ark. Fishing in Bull Shoals Lake and the White River was very negative in fish, but pleasant in scenery. Then on to say "Hello" to former Lilymoorites, Edye and Joe Fitts at Marion, 111. All is well there, with Joe busy at the VFW lodge, and Edye joining all the local clubs and busy with her beautiful handwork. Our last stop was in ' DeKalb, to visit with daughter Maribeth. She made a delicious dinner for us and fellow student Chris Goetschel of Johnsburg and surprise guest David Ed­ wards of Sunnyside. A happy ending to an interesting time • away from our Lakemoor Lilymoor area. SPOOK SUCCESS The "Spook House" was made up by members of the Lilymoor association, the Meyer, Crosswell, Gurske, Goodwin, Mentzer and Jones families. Jim Johnson supplied the location and also fun hay rides for the children. Arrangements Now Have Been Made for You to Travel Nearly Two Thousand Years In Only Eleven Days to the HOLY LAND with the Bible as your guide­ book, under spiritual direction of Father James G. St Mary '•1699 Naw York Feb. 1- Moty Scripture comes alive for you as you walk the Way of the Cross. Your faltti takes deeper meaning as your pray where stood the stable In Bethlehem or kneel in the Garden of Gethsemane. visit Naza many You will gaze out over the Jordan Valley from atop the Mount of Jericho, vis" ~ reth. Cana. Mount of Beadtbdes other places PAPAL AUDIENCE On your return you'll stop for a pilgrim s visit to Rome an a thorough tour of the Vatican and the Eternal City. Th# first atap Is to sand In this coupon today. By return mail you wrfM racatva a (act- packad loidar which tails you what you cy •xpact awry womant of an imfofgatMia ! wTVflSSXd ftatf I McHanry. HI 00060 i Dear Father: •00841 Connie Meyer and Sherrie Jones started the spook house trip. That lovely creature who received the title of "Miss Mummy of 1961 (or was it 9810) was really Dottie Mentzer. Norm Croswell was the cutter-off of heads with his favorite toy, the guillotine. The head on the table was none other than Robert Gurske. Brother Anthony was Dracula, and father Skip was that horror with the chain saw called the "Chain saw Santa". Kathy Goodwin and Dawn Meyer were the witchiest of witches. Kary Goodwin was the master of the sword, none other than Zoro. The grizzly gorilla was Scott Meyer and Randy Jones was the ghost. The bake and ticket sales were handled by Phyllis Croswell, Laura Meyer, Mitzi Gurske and Nancy Hueckstaedt. LAKEMOOR NEWS The Vehicle stickers will be available Dec. 1 at the village hall for residents of Lakemoor. An open meeting will be held Tuesday, Nov. 24, at 7:30 p.m., instead of the usual fourth Thursday of the month. The Flood in­ surance study of the area will be on the agenda for that meeting. LILYMOOR ASSOCIATION The monthly meeting held Monday, Nov. 2, at the Meyer's residence, was very well attended. Appreciation was given to those members who had given of time and energy to make the Halloween Spook House a financial success. Results from another fund raising effort, found Kathy Good­ win, Helen Para, Star Mitchell, Frank Ross and Marion Vornkahl, and Sherry Mamma winners. The association is plan­ ning to put up more street signs before Winter. A bake sale will be held Saturday, Nov. 21, in McHenry, for which cakes, pies, cookies and candy will be needed. For information regarding the activities of Lilymoor and how you can get in­ volved,. «all 385-8568. LADIES LEAGUE The refurbished first floor meeting room in the Lakemoor^JMunicipa! building wasf^he meeting {dace for the LUy Lake Ladies league. They all appreciate not having to scale the stairs to the upstairs room. Bunco was played, with Jean Dember winning first prize, Millie Nejedly second, and Sophie Paterson, booby. Anna Brzezinski made off with the special prize. Hostess for the evening was Jean Dember, who served a favorite homemade cheese cake. Any one wishing to join these bi­ monthly festivities, should call Mrs. Walter Para, president. BIRTHDAY TIME Belated birthday wishes go to Karen Sexton who celebrated her day on Halloween. Mike Nejedly's birthday was Nov. 5, and son Ronnie Bonesz was nine years old the next day. Herb Polinski recognized' his birthdate on Nov. 7. Shawn Hager's was the same date, with sister Autumn adding a teenage year Nov. 8. LeRoy Ep­ person celebrated the same day. On Nov. 11, Tammy Sexton will be hearing "Happy birthday to you". Thomas Para has his day Nov. 15, as doeS Bill Garbacz. Nov. 16 is shared by Kerry Snow, George Nixon and Elias Betancourt. Another Betancourt, Victor, celekrates his day on the 17th. May memories and an­ ticipations all be joyous. ANY TIME, PLACE, BOOK Children's Book Week will be celebrated Nov. 15 through 21, to bring attention to the knowledge, inspiration and plain fun that can be found in books. Picture books for the little ones; stories to be read to them by parents and older siblings in times of happy sharing; books about the past to help us remember where we've been and where we are going; books of the beauty of our world; books telling tall tales of ad­ venture. By reading "any time, any place, any book", our lives will be the richer in understanding, wisdom and enjoyment. Brityg your children and come yourselves to your library at Lily Lake road, one mile south of Route 120. Call 385-6303 with your questions, Your helpful "bookie lady" wijil do her best to answer them. NUMBER NINE Melissa Rose Holzrichter made her entry into the world on Nov. 6, weighing in at 6 lbs., 11 oz< This makes Louise and Don Hipwell grandparents for the ninth time. Melissa has three siblings waiting for her at home in Wonder Lake. COMMUNITY CALENDAR Nov. 11 - Veteran's day. A time for remembrance and thanksgiving--for those gone and those still giving. Nov 12 « Lakemoor Village meeting, 8 p.m. Nov. 15-21 - Library Week, "Any time, any place, any book". Nov. 16 - Free blood pressure screening, 7-8 p.m., Lakemoor Municipal building. Nov. 21 - Bake sale, Lilymoor association, McHenry State Bank and Market Place, 9 to 12. Nov. 24 - Lakemoor open meeting, 7:30 p.m. PRESIDENT SENDS*--» CONDOLENCE A letter from the White House, Washington, D.C., was received by the family of Brian Baker and Lilyann waited for the children to get home before opening it. The spurgeons | Dear • i Please send your colorful Vlr"« "I Name J Address J G t y . ^ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ? » P _ Custom- made Drapery SALE i* 400 fabrics and colors to choose from Come pleated and fan-loldea ready to hang Available lined, self-lined or unlined v* Weighted corners Just bring us your window sizes : Sok Edb Swrfiy, Nov. 22,1991 3t 5-4100 letter, signed, Ronald Reagan, President of the United States, expressed sadness at Brian's death, and gave our country's appreciation for Brian's service in the Vietnam war. I can hear Brian chortling over this, "Well, I'll be ..." GOD BLESS New Telescope ForMCC PAG!. 5 • PLAINDEALER - WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11,1M1 McHenry County college has a new telescope for use by its students .through the efforts of a college trustee and a county resident. The telescope, a 6-inch reflecting telescope with an _ . . ultra heavy duty mount, was TOD HOIlOr given to the McHenry » County College foundation by John R. Veugeler, and in turn donated to the college. College Trustee Anthony Montinl Named telescope in his home, un­ freezing the axes and Honor Students At At the end of the first quarter of study, Montini Middle school placed 59 students on its honor roll. To make the honor roll, a student must have a grade point average of 3.00 ("B") or better in the eight academic subjects. A 4.00 would represent a straight ("A") average. The top honor students cited are: 3.86, Michael Freund (grade 7); 3.75, Sharon Snow, Jennifer Freund, Bridgid Lean, Julie Stumpf, Julie Bowman, Tanja Nuhsbaum and Laura Yegge; 3.71, Susan Bassi; 3.50, Jennifer Tonyan, Mary Kate Winn, Carol Masulunes and Susan Sharp. replacing the mirror with one from an old MCC telescope which Wujcik described as "something less than desirable." He then painted the fiberglass tube and added the MCC logo. Wujcik explains that the refurbished telescope has unusually heavy duty mounts which will keep it from vibrating while students use it for observing the stars and planets. In addition to finding the telescope and arranging for its donation, Wujcik has been pursuing having an observatory for astronomy classes included in future plans for the college cam­ pus. He said the observatory could be located on top of a college building. Wujcik is involved in forming a local or college affiliated club for astronomy enthusiasts. MCC will offer an astronomy course again in the summer of 1982. * • * • A new idea is the poison to some minds that refuse to be educated. • • * * Definition: Self-control --something we tell our children they should have. PREPARE FOR SHOW The Woodstock Musical Theatre Company is ac­ cepting applications through Nov. 15 for the positions of director, and assistant director for Agatha Christie's The Mousetrap, to be presented Feb. 12,13,14 & 18, 19, 20. Wayne Enger of Algonquin will produce this mystery theatre. Auditions for the show will be the week of Jan. 11. Persons in­ terested in set design, set construction, lighting, sound, properties, costumes, make-up and stage crew are also needed, and may contact the Woodstock Musical Theatre company in care of Kathie Cornelia, Personnel committee, W.M.T.C., P.O. Box 613, Woodstock. IL. Obey the rules of the road if you would like to live longer. • • • • In case you haven't realized it, 1981 is moving along. | The McHenry Plaindealer fj HI! WmI flm StrsO ;usn 335-200) Established I07S McHanry. Illinois MOM Mmmm 015-305-0170 Published (vary Wa^natdaf I Friday K McHanry. Illinois Second Class Postafo Pold at McHenry. Illinois •y McHCNRY FU0USHING COMPANY dt POSTMASTER Send address changes lo McHenry Pleindeoler, 3012 VY Elm St. McHenry. Illinois 40050 Subscribers ere requested to provide immediate notice of change at address to The McHenry Plaindealer. 3012 VY Elm St. McHenry. III. 50060 A deduction ot one month from the expiration ot a subscription will be mado where a chenge oi address 1s provided through the Post OHice department Peel Best For hard-boiled eggs, use the oldest ones you have on hand; fresh eggs are harder to peel when cooked. ENJOY RESTAURANT QUALITY AT HOME (815) 385-8300 SPENGEL meat packing corp. Federal Establishment No. 5701 1313 W. OLD SAY RD. PISTAKEE BAY McHenry, III. *0050 Thomas C. Miller-Publisher MIMIC R Adele Froehlich-Editor NEWSPAPER , sm - - - - * NATIONAL NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES Year $15.50 In McHotiry County Year $24.00 Ovtalds McHenry County s 101*5 Hurry-Sal* Ends Sunday, Nov. 15th! This Week! Savings at25%off Levi's Fashion Tops Men's Washable Sweaters 5 .do5 Reg. $7 to $14 This week save 25% on great looking sweaters! Jacquard skis, V-necks, sleeve less vests. Mostly all acrylics; hand­ some solids and combinations in S-M-L-XL. Shop now and save. Reg. $19 This week! The jeans top no wardrobe can be vithout! The soft, warm feel of flannel in a 100% woven cotton shirt In powerful plaids of blue, brown or red/ green S-M-L-XL. fa WJ u ^ Men's Western Shirts 3 Reg. $8 This week! Crew neck, raglan sleeve cover-ups of 80% Fortrel® poly, 20% cotton Navy, light blue, chocolate, royal, burgundy, gunmetal. Sizes S-M-L-XL. Great Buys! All Men's Outerwear Reg. $10 This week! Our pre-shrunk cotton flannel shirt in six jterrific plaids! With pearlized snaps, western yoke and tail bottom. Choose a few in sizes S-M-L-XL. Top Value! All Boys' Outerwear Reg. $15 to $50 [This Wookl Our entire! stock of fashionable, com­ fortably warm, well-made coats are on sale! Choose from down-look parkas, sheepherder styles, western looks, vests and more! In denim, nylon, corduroy. With quilt and pile linings, hoods, fake fur trims. Sizes S-XL 36-44. Hurry in for best selection! •9*19" Reg. $12 to $26 This week save 25% on our entire stock of parkas, zip-off sleeve ski jackets, vests, more! Denims, nylons, corduroys. Quilted and pile linings, hoods, fake fur trims. Sizes 4-7, 8-20.

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