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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 15 Jul 1983, p. 2

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•AhzonV *UN \ ± / j PAGE 2- PI.AiNDF.ALER - FRIDAY. J! 1 jl5.1KB ! dl/{o±tI!u <£ocLCLC \ ! / Celebrate 50th Anniversary MR. AND MRS. BERT COENS Bert and Marie Coens, 2508 Huemann, McHenry, will celebrate the occasion of their fiftieth wedding anniversary at a get-together in their home far immediate family members and friends, Sunday, July 17. The couple was married in Waukegan, 111. July 20,1933 and Mr. Coens was in the shoe business m Chicago for 50 years. They have two sons, Jim and Bob; six grandchildren and 12 great­ grandchildren. STAFF PHOTO-WAYNE GAYLORD 15th YEAR REUNION > The graduating class of 1968 from -tane Tech high school will be leelebrating its fifteenth class reunion Nov 4,1983. All alumni are requested to contact Judy at 677-4949 as soon as possible, or write Class Reunion, P. O. Box 844, Skokie, 111. 60077. - TED L. ROLANDER, M.D. IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THE ASSOCIATION OF MICHAEL C. VIDAS, M.D. IN THE PRACTICE OF OTOLARYNGOLOGY AND FACIAL PLASTIC AND RECONSTUCTIVE SURGERY 1110-R N.GREEN ST. McHENRY (815) 344-2050 330 W. TERRA COTTA AVE. CRYSTAL LAKE (815)455-0850 COMMUNITY CALENDAR I Senior Woik-ln • Center JULY 15 NAIM-St. Margaret Chapter- regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.--Oak Room-Montini Middle School. I JULY 16 Chicken Barbecue-Ringwood United Methodist Church-serving, 4:30 to 7:30 p.m.-tickets, 653-3294 or 385-8037. JULY 17 *• Combined Worship ' Service-- Ringwood United Methodist Church- 10:30 a.m.-Isaiah 53. JULY 18 T.H.E.O.S.-annual Catered Picnic- home of Mae Stinespring-3329 Bay View lane-"White Elephant" sale, 3:30 p.m.-dinner, 5:30 p.m.-- reservations, Lyda Radisch, 385-2754- guests welcome. JULY 21 Catholic Daughters of America- regular business meeting, 7:30 p.m - Liberty Hall. McHenry Senior Citizen's club- annual picnic-Petersen Park, 10:30 a.m.-bring lunch, chair, picnic card table and paid up membership card. JULY 22-31 Fiesta Days-30 fun-packed events in 10 fun-filled days-"McHenry: Seasons Four!" theme. JULY 24 John M. & Elizabeth Schmitt family picnic-Petersen Park-noon. JULY 25 McHenry Woman's Club-Board Meeting, 10 a.m.--McHenry Public Library. McHenry Area Toastmasters Club- 8 p.m.-Chapel Hill Country Club- Guests Welcome. McHenry Senior Citizen's club- meeting, 1 p.m.-East campus. JULY 26 McHenry Garden Club-Meeting and Lunch--ll:30 a.m.-McHenry Country Club. AUGUST 8 McHenry Senior Citizen's club- meeting, 1 p.m.-East campus. AUGUST 11 McHenry Co. Genealogical Soc.- monthly meeting, 7:30 p.m.-Grace Lutheran church Fellowship Hall- Washington St. (Rt. 120) & Tryon St., Woodstock-"Use of Quarterlies and Newsletters in Research". AUGUST 13 McHenry Area Toastmasters Club- 9 a.m.--McH^fl^untryNgjMb" Guests Welcome. "AUGUST 14 St. Patrick'shParish Picnic- Petersen Park, Area A-12 p.m to 6 p.m.-games, music, prizes, refresh­ ments-Fun for All. AUGUST 17 McHenry Senior Citizen's club- annual boat ride-Lake Geneva, Wis.~ bus pickup, 10:30 a.m. at Market Place-bus, boat ride, lunch on boat- reservations at once-Ruth Fradell, 385-6586. AUGUST 22 McHenry Senior Citizen's club- meeting, 1 p.m.-East campus. McHenry Area Toastmasters club- 8 p.m.-Chapel Hill Country club- guests welcome. Meals are served Monday through Friday at the McHenry Walk-In Center beginning at 11:45 a.m. Reservations must be made by 1:30 p:m. the day before at 385-8260. The menu for the week of July 18 through July 22 is as follows: July 18: Beef stew with vegetables, lettuce salad, hard roll, cherry cob­ bler, milk. July 19: Baked pork with gravy, green beans, peach with cottage cheese salad, breads, carrot cake, milk. July 20: Baked chicken, tiny new Jtatoes, mixed garden salad, roll, it in season, cheese, milk. July 21: Macaroni and cheese (with hot dog slices incorporated), peas, fresh salad, breads, fruit jello, milk. July 22: Salisbury steak, whipped potatoes with gravy, stir fried tomatoes, zucchini, green peppers and onions, breads, vanilla pudding with berries, milk.. pota fruit * WILLIAM DIESEL AND PHYLLIS WRIGHT ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - James and Addle Wright of McHenry Announce the engagement of their daughter Phyllis, to William Diesel, son of Fred and Lorraine Diesel of Crystal Lake. The bride elect graduated from QffcHenry Community high school in 1978. The future bridegroom is a 1974 aduate of Crystal Lake high school. The couple is planning an Oct. 1, 1983 edding. STAFF PHOTO-WAYNE GAYLORD YOUNG SINGLE PARENTS Tuesday evening, July 19, North Shore Chapter of Young Single Parents will have a 50's-60's dance. Good music, cash bar and socializing will be the 'bill of fare'. Doors will open at 8:30 p.m. at the Wheeling- Northbrook Holiday Inn, Milwaukee avenue between Willow and Lake- Euclid. For more information about this group, call 432-2475. MARRIAGE LICENSES | Applications for marriage licences were recently made at McHenry County Clerk's office by: Thomas G. Ketchum, Jr., and Kimberly Kohon, both McHenry; Robin W. Hancock, McHenry, and Karen A. Winkler, Waterford, Wis.; Jaime C. Mantel, Spring Grove, and Vicki L. Kuglin, McHenry; Gerald M. Lezon and Deborah M. Shaban, both McHenry. SINGLES DANCE All singles are invited to a Com­ bined Club Singles Dance featuring singles radio program disc jockey, A1 Berglund, from 7 p.m. to midnight Sunday, July 17, at the Marriott O'Hare, 8535 W. Higgins, Chicago. It is co-sponsored by Singles and Com­ pany, the Northwest Singles Assn., Aware Singles Group, and Insight for Singles of Evanston. For information, call 769-2800. DISCUSSION, DANCE The Aware Singles group invites all singles to a discussion on "Favorite Places To Go On A Date" at 8:30 p.m. Friday, July 15, at the Arlington Park Hilton, Euclid avenue and Rohlwing road, Arlington Heights. At 9 p.m. there will be a dance with live music. For more information, call Aware at 777-1005. NEW NAME FOR CLUB "Real People, Singles", a popular, over age 30 group, has changed its name and is now known as "Chapter One, Singles". The weekly, live music dance is now held at Windjammer lounge, Route 173, west of Antioch, on Sunday at 8 p.m. For more in­ formation, call 385-5070. Exchange Wedding Vows \ The opportunity for FISH to act as a good neighbor depends first of all on the telephone. Our McHenry An­ swering Service provides 24-hour response for incoming calls, which is one of the primary reasons fa* the success of FISH in our community. We have a staff of "telephone volunteers", each donating one day of the month, ready to be contacted by the answering service, and, hopefully, able to find a way to be of help. We receive many interesting and varied calls. Often transportation to doctors' offices or to the hospital; a need for a ride to a grocery store, usually because the family driver is ill. We have driven people to the Social Security office and to the courthouse. Often the caller is asking for advice as to where special help can be obtained. Sometimes a caller needs someone to listen. Our volunteers can be very helpful. But, of course, our greatest number of requests are for emergency food. During May we were asked to help 18 ' families ; on the Fourth of July we had four requests that morning for food. Obviously, we are always in need of this food. We also have requests for a dresser, a double bed frame and sheets, double bed size. In trying to fulfill all these obligations, you can see we also need more FISH volunteers and urgently request help. Those willing to offer some of their time are requested to phone 385-0258. FISH ha^)een glad to be-of help to our adopted family this'last month.' t They have had illness as well as physical handicaps to deal with. <J' FISH has many friends who find ways to help - sometimes they are quite imaginative. Last month a man won a five-pound candy bar - really, five pounds. He took it with him out to dinner that evening and offered everyone there the opportunity to win his big candy bar, with the proceeds going to FISH. They all got into the spirit of this and a donation of $100 was sent to us. Nice going! AFW MR. AND MRS. RICK PIDGEON It's a well known belief that love will find a way. Ricky and Tammy (Scott) Pidgeon can attest to the veracity of that statement, but both will agree that it wasn't'easy. On their fourth try at a marriage ceremony, the couple exchanged nuptial vows Tuesday morning, July 12, before Judge Leonard Brody. It was eight months ago, in November of 1982, that the young folks planned a simple ceremony but money prevented them from carrying out those plans. In January, their families said, "Too young", a deterrent that was reinforced by the fact that the groom- to-be lost a part-time job. In March, the ceremony was postponed again when his mother was unexpectedly hospitalized in Wisconsin. In an attempt to cir­ cumvent the new roadblock, the couple tried to get married in that state but residency requirements, together, with other problems, forced another postponement. In the courthouse chambers of Judge Brody last Tuesday, at 11:03 a.m.. the couple finally exchanged A Growing Child Until the second birthday, children spend most of their energies prac­ ticing motor skills - creeping, climbing, walking. But at two they broaden their skills and redirect their energies to the practice of words, according to Growing Child, the monthly child development newsletter. If you listen to a two year old's pre- sleep talk when he is in his crib, you will hear fascinating monologues which contain such features as rhyth­ mic patterning, rhyme and melodic sequences. A distinguished linguist, Roman Jacobsen, says the child's first speech resembles exercise drills which appear in textbooks for the self- teaching of a foreign language! Let's look at some examples: "Like a piggy, had a pink one, pish, pish, piggy". Here he is playing with the "pi" sound. Next, he plays with word sub­ stitution: "What eat? Eat soup? Eat cookie? Eat Mommy?" And then he appears, without any motive except pleasure, to play with nonsense, although some will label it alliteration and poetry: "Lump go Teddy, not ring, ring, knock, knock, knock, lake, cake, cans, clap, clap, clap, dan, dan, dan". Vocabulary takes a big spurt at about two years. Some children will speak clearly from the beginning while others may be hard to un­ derstand and require an interpreter.' Common types of articulation errors vows and began their married life together. The bride, the former Tammy Irene Scott, is the daughter of Claude and Stella Keller of Fairfield, 111. The bridegroom, Rick Lee Pidgeon, is the son of Dewane and Treva Pidgeon, 1509 54th street, Kenosha, Wis. Tammy wore a sleeveless, floor length white cotton dress featuring a smocked bodice, enhanced' with embroidered motifs, an empire waist, and eyelet ruffle straps. Two wide ruffles accented the bottom of the skirt. The maid of honor was Teresa Cloney of Wonder Lake. She was attired for the occasion in an off- white, street-length flowered dress with straps. The best man was Michael Cloney of Wonder Lake. The bride attended Crystal Lake Central high school. Her husband graduated from McHenry West, campus in l<)80 and is presently employed at Jewel Food Store in Woodstock. They are residing at Wonder Lake. are "tove" for "stove", "banket" for "blanket", "fank you" for "thank you", "Wodjer" for "Roger", "bedi" for "very" and "wif' for "with". At this age these articulation errors are to be expected. Even when you try to help the child correct his mistakes, it doesn't matter if he isn't ready. You may tell him to say "stove" but he will continue to say "tove". It isn't that he fails to hear you say the "s" sound in stove. He knows it's there. He just cannot yet blend it with the "t". Toddlers are word-hungry. They want to know the names of everything in sight. They ask in two ways: "What's dat?" or by naming the object, raising the voice, (as in "Cookie?) which is a way of asking us to verify the accuracy of the naming. Ideally it would be nice if you could answer all questions, but this is im­ possible. Do the best you can, and then be honest. When you run out of stamina or patience, say, "I'm tired. No more questions until later". Divorces INTRODUCTORY OFFER STUDENT CUT Levis MENSWEAH » STRAIGHT- LEG REG. $21.50 DENIM JEANS 25w - 29w $18,s ft Arizona sun 3321 W. ELM ST. McHENRY 385-1833 «ss|i '"III MUSIC ELECTRONICS GIGANTIC INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE! SAVINGS OF 40%, 50% OR EVEN 60% SO^ 1tc^cS ANY REASONABLE OffER WON'T BE REFUSED! 3719 W. ELM ST., McHENRY 385-4646 Joan I. Roderick and Robert J. Roderick; Pamela J. Wettstein and Gerald L. Wettstein; Cindy Hudson and Edwin Hudson. Lois L. Willis and Wilfred L. Willis; Tammy L. Leffelman and Dennis G. Leffelman; Jeannie A. Williams and Ballard A. Williams. Donna Vopatek and Joseph Vopatek; David G. Winters and Gail A; Winters; Irene G. Christenson and Karl W. Christenson. Ethel Bruce and William H. Bruce; Janice C. Beima and John L. Beima; David J. Tietjen and Reba J. Tietjen; Linda L. Konczak and Norbert J. Konczak. PROFESSIONAL NURSING CARE BY REGISTERED NURSES (815) 728-1698 ALL PHASES OF IN- HOME NURSING CARE HONE NURSING & HEALTH CARE SERVICE HOME HEALTH NURSING IS AVAILABLE TQ ANYONf SUFFERING FROM AN ACUTE OR CHRONIC ILLNESS OR RECOVERING FROM SURGERY OR AN ACCIDENT. WE ARE ESPECIALLY SKILLED IN INDIVIDUALIZED WORK WITH THE PHYSICIAN, THE PATIENT AND THE PATIENT'S FAMILY/ ! (THIS IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY SERVICE!

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