McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 16 Feb 1967, p. 15

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SomiYsiDe ESTATES W| Stpwtwm-iH Wit MorleninBerg--385-S418 SCOUTS HOLD ANNUAL BLUE, GOLD DINNER Cub Scout Pact 452 and their parents enjoyed a most delicious roast beef and chicken dinner at Marian Central high on Sunday afternoon; Feb. 5. Frdm the good turnout it was apparent the heavy snowfall did not keep anyone away. Those from the Estates were the Bud Kennebecks and Alan, the Jerry Olsens and Ernie, the Tom Hanahans and Tommy, the Jim Williams' and Jimmy, Dale Maule and Patrick, and the Ken SegerstToms and Steven. The boys made the table decorations using paper log cabins as name cards. One large cabin centered the table with a flag flying the appropriate den number. Bags of small trinkets were passed to everyone^!you needed was a little imagination to create something. After dinner a movie was shown explaining Cub Scouts and how it teaches a boy to accept responsibility and bring him closer to his parents. Service pins were given to the very deserving Scout Masters and den mothers who so willingly give their time ta the boys. The Cub Scouts were awarded for their deeds. Ernie Olsen received a denner bar, Bear badge; gold arrow and three silver arrows. Tom Hanahan received an assistant denner bar, Bear badge and gold arrow. Jim Williams received a Hon badge; gold arrow and three silver arrows. Pat Maule received a lion badge; gold and silver arrow. Steven Ssgerstrom received a wolf badge and gold arrow. Hie color guard retrieved the colors and a closing prayer was said by Rev. Atherton. BIRTHDAY CELEBRATIONS Little Anthony Cina celebrated his second birthday a day early. Saturday evening Grandma Cina and one of Joe's aunts came to bestow their best wishes. Before they left for home they enjoyed cake and ice cream. Earl Fry had a very pleasant surprise on his birthday. Berrdce prepared his favorite pie and also bought a beautiful cake. While Bernice ^as outbid Earl was at work, ToWryprepared an angelfood cake very gayly' decorated. Well, Earl not very many people arp lucky enough to have two birthday cakes and an apple pie. Berni«e*s sister and her husband stopped in to help Earl celebrate. Later in the evening Carol Kennebeck dropped in to bring her congratulations. Donald Fiedler was disappointed when Sunday morning came around and he looked out the window and saw all the new snow plus the snow that was still coming down. It was his birthday and he was to have a big celebration with some friends and relatives from Chicago. He knew no one could come now. But his mother still prepared the turkey dinner with all the trimmings and he celebrated with his mother and fa- . ther and three brothers. The day was still pretty special as his father had been stranded for a week in DesPlaines because of the snow and was able to make it home on Thursday. Stan Walczynski, Jr., missed seeing a few people at his party because of the storm butprandpa Holtfodt was there along with the rest of the family to make his twelfth birthday a happy one. ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION Bob and Betty Lakowski celebrated their nineteenth wedding anniversary on Saturday at a lovely restaurant in Crystal Lake. The Von Obstfelders from the village joined them for a most enjoyable evening. Also, they were completely surprised with gifts from their children, Mary and Jane and John. They had been saving their allowance and earnings and went to great lengths to carry out their special surprise. JOIN THE EASTER PARADE IN STYLE We hope you ladies will not forget the meeting of the Lucky Ladies Club on Feb. 22, at 8 p.m. at the home of Carol Kennebeck. There will be hats galore to try on in the latest fashions and at reasonable prices. You are all welcome and please bring a guest. OOPS, WE GOOFED In typing the column of Feb. 2, -LILY (SHIRLEY 8CHI/KKH W-U4S AppeiD® M<§w Vol®§@ f?®!ce The village of Lahemoor held its monthly meeting Thursday, Feb. 9. At this meeting William Bukovsky was appointed patrolman for the Lakemoor police. Hie fire-community building is undergoing remodeling on the second floor. Work is not yet completed but it really is shaping up very nicely. TRUSTEE ELECTION Two men have filed their pettion for village trustee in the forth coming election in April. They are Harry Brady and Herbert Brossman. If anyone wishes to run for village trustee please pick up the forms from the village clerk Pat Morrison at her home, in the evening only. The deadline for filing is Tuesday, Feb. 28. You have a little over a week to file if you are interested in running for village trustee. OFFICERS AND Board of directors meeting for the Lilymoor association was held Wednesday Feb. 8 at the home of Bud Hueckstaedt. The next officers and board of directors meeting will be held at the home of Lewis Besserud Wednesday March 8, at 8 p.m. NEW MEMBERS The Lilymoor association at this time welcomes twelve new members to the association. They are R. Minton, O. Maher, C. Efeperson, E. Krich, T. Courtemash, R. Biesecker, C. Abel, C. Ferguson, F. Svododa, P. Rathke, E. Kolbinger and C. Burke. BEACH PROJECT The work on the beaches has been hampered by the heavy snows but will continue as soon as possible. 900 tons of sand has been ordered to be spread on both beach areas. Work had already begun on the big beach when the snow fell. We have received $925. from forty-four residents to date. In order to do a finished job much more is needed. Please get on the band wagon. Donate now. You do not have to be a property owner to donate to the beaches. SYMPATHIES No words can express our deepest sympathies to Russell we somehow skipped a sentence1 making the following error: Paul McDonald will be eighteen and Stan Walczynski, Jr., will be twelve. So sorry about that boys! LEFTY Betty Lakowski broke her hand a few weeks ago. feeing that it was her right hand, she found herself quite helpless to do even the simplest of things. Luckily the children were able to carry on for her. The bandages have been removed and except for some temporary stiffness all is well now. BIRTHDAY GREETING Happy birthday today to Jerry Whalen and Ernie Von Oepen. Tomorrow Margaret Beer celebrates with Kenny Simmons who will be eight. Katherine Bute shares Feb. 18 withNonnie Lindstrom and Kathy Senkerik who becomes eighteen. Celestine Mickels has her day on Feb. 20. Kasey Anderson will be eleven (Mi Feb. 21 with Johnny Kanter who will be eight. On Feb. 22 Irene Roy shares the day with Bobby Von Oepen who will be five. Many happy returns of the day to each of you. HERE AND THERE Gladys Kayler spent a day in Addison at the home of her sister who had recently undergone surgery. Andy and JoAnn Eichhorn with Jo Ann's brother and, his wife went out for a very pleasant evening. They bowled a few games and before returning home they all enjoyed pizza. SPECIAL REQUEST We have again been asked to please remove all cars parked on the roads. It is most difficult to plow around them and if the cars are damaged, the township is not responsible. Sjpecial credit goes to the men who have put in so many extra hours keeping the roads well cleared even with the record breaking snowfall. HAPPY ANNIVERSARY Best wishes to Roy and Ve Schroeder on Feb. 16 for thirtytwo years of togetherness. On Feb. 17 Rose and Mike Tillich celebrate twenty-eight years of matrimony. Many more happy years to each of you. HOLIDAY HILLS NEWS INEZ YOUNG MS-MI* FEBRUARY 16, 1967 - McHENRY PLAIN DEALER^ PAGE 3, SECTION f WOMAN'S CLUB OBSERVES TENTH ANNIVERSARY A special anniversary was observed last Monday, as it was on Feb. 13,1957, that the Holiday Hills Woman's Club held their first meeting at the home of Rita Oleyar. Thru the past ten years the women have expended most of their efforts for the improvement and benefit of the subdivision and its young people* including swimming lessons, beach improvement, baseball diamonds, parties and parades, to name just a few. In all of these endeavors the women ijaVe been led by the following ' p r e s i d e n t s ; Gerry Breede, Mary Jungwirth, Charis Ary, Mary Mahon, Joan Schroeder and Vi Abbink. Congratulations to the Woman's Club! RE-ELECT VI ABBINK Vi Abbink was re-elected as president of the Holiday Hills Woman's Club at their monthly meeting held on Wednesday, Feb. 8. Serving with her for the coming year are Leone Kathan as vice president, Dee Wegener as treasurer, PhylHarper, Secretary, and Dot Gabriel and Midge Teuber as social cochairmen. Orchids to last years officers for, a job well done, Vi Abbink, lielen Boettcher, vice president, Mickey Walters, treasurer, Phyl Harper, secretary and fiot Gabriel, social chairman. SPAGHETTI DINNER Check the date, Sunday, April 2, for a spaghetti dinner to be held at Casey's. Tickets will be available from any of the members of the Woman's Club. SWIMMING REGISTRATIONf Just a note of cheer to assure you that this weather can't last That is all folks. See you next week. Brown on the loss of his wife, Doris who passed away Sunday, Feb. 5, at a Chicago hospital. She is survived by her husband, Russell, daughter, Mrs. Janet Brown of Ohio and a son, Lawrence Crosley, of California. Russell and his wife, Doris, have been residents of Lakemoor for several years. OUR SERVICEMEN Gene Bolda who is in the Air Force left the week of Feb. 6 for a year's tour ofdutyinTur- . key. GET WELL Wishes go to Vernon (Smokey to all of his many friends) Lahre is in the McHenry hospital very seriously ill. It would be very nice if he could hear from you with your cards. We are alf hoping you get well real soon, Smokey. • LLEGE IN NOW! MS *11:$ THE TOP ARTISTS&ACTS NIGHTLY DAVID KOMA8ME mi Ml onlMWra CkIs3Q®'o Hut Supper dub what lb* gFGcS eraSefUtommb begin SHERMAN HOUSE CUffc • UStlSo ° Randolph • R MHI flagrantly provocative . piscatorial viands w luncheon, dinner, cocktails with politicians and celebrities CELTIC MOM Chicago's u Tipple at OUcago'o great seafood tamse longest bar SHEEMAM HOUSE Clark ° KatidoEph ° LaSalle F©p reservations: FR 2-2100 AN ELC S SUNSET INN Specializing in BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCH 12 noon to 2 p.m. WWE FOODS -- C®TOT!©US SERVICE 1 Mile North Wancoiida on @M M@©2© 12 Phone JA 6-2929 WATER SOFTENERS SALES - SERVICE - RENTALS SERVICE AUTHORIZED DEALER ON ALL MAKES FILTERS ODOR CONTROL CHLOMRTAOTON - MINERAL, REPLACEMENT BAM1C FIHAMCIMG CHEMICALS HOME SALT DELIVERY IRON REMOVAL 4 YES WE KENT I If you are now raiming out of soft | water with an exchange rental unit sec how our fully automatic gives you your | moitpv'n worth. TOM HUMANN WATEPL CONDITIONING Phone 3§§=3093 2!@3 W. CHURCH iov FREE Waflos- TosS JOHNSOURG -- McHENRY forever. Our swimming instructor for lessons to be held at the lake beach has been contacted, and a schedule set iq>. The same gal who did such a fine job last year will begin lessons (Hi June 22. Why tell you about it inFebruary??7Because registration begins right now. Be the first on the list to register your children for swimming lessons, call Mary Mahon at 385-5955. We'd like to see every child learn how to swim for his own enjoyment as well as safety. The early registration will allow the committee the necessary time for all of the preliminary work. ' GREETINGS Happy birthday to Johnny Boettcher cm Feb. 17, Janet Harper on Feb. 18 and Julia Ann Mahon on Feb. 20. A happy anniversary €o Bonnie and John Haie on Feb. 20. Have you paid your H.H.O, P.A. dues??? ROTARY MEWS Young people should be made aware of the dangers inherent in misuse of prescription drugs, a representative of a major pharmaceutical firm has advised. •Vic Griseto, a representative for Smith Kline & French Laboratories, Philadelphia, urged parents and others who deal with youth to emphasize that "only the weak and emotionally crippled abuse drugs to face life and only the dull and ignorant abuse drugs to enjoy life." Addressing the McHenry Rotary club, he said the prescription products most often abused are the amphetamine and barbiturate drugs. Each has a different effect and both are medically useful and important, he added. "Only wtien these drugs are taken for other than their intended medical purposes, or in excessive doses, are there serious risks involved in their use," he said. Drug abuse is not confined to young people, Griseto said, nor is it exclusively a city problem. Drug abusers can be found in any kind of community and from all walks of life. "The adult abuser5^of drugs usually has< a history 'of social maladjustment," Griseto said. "The pressures and demands of society are too much for him to bear. Often he has a background of family difficulties, disciplinary problems in school and trouble with the police." But for the juvenile drug abuser this pattern does not necessarily apply, Griseto said. "A significant fact is that juvenile drug abuse seldom takes place by ones and twos. It is usually in a gang or party setting. Somebody starts it and everyone else goes along for fear of appearing 'chickerP." Mr. Griseto advised parents to know where their children spend their time and with whom. If their behavior changes drastically, he said, the familyphysician should examine the youngster. He said the amphetamine abuser who takes large doses usually is jumpy, excited and sweating, the pupils of the eyes are dilated and he may have had breath and hand tremor. "Frequently he has gone a long time without sleep, and with little food. Despite his apparent wakefulness, he may actually be extremely fatigued and on the vergfe^of sudden collapse." V. The barbiturate abuser taking large doses may pass through a stage in which he is extremely, restless, hostile and quarrelsome, Griseto said, but more frequently the drug's sedative effects are evident. Speech is slurred, the user walks unsteadily and he resembles a drunk in almost every way except that there is no smell of alcohol about him. Mr. Griseto said his firm "strongly supports" federal legislation to help control the drug abuse problem. But, he added, laws are not enough. They must be enforced. "Probably nothing handicaps the police officer in control of juveniles more than the apathy of parents and public," he declared. "It has been known since Roman times that enforcement of a law will be just as effective as the public wants it to be, and no more." TITLE CHANGE ANNOUNCED FOR CROP PROGRAM Hie "Christian Rural Overseas Program"-kno\yh more popularly as CROP-will now be known as "Church World Service Community Appeals." The change of name was announced hy Albert W. Farmer, director of the program, at a meeting commemorating the twentieth anniversary of CROP. Mr. Farmer emphasizes that the name "CROP" is not being dropped. "The letters in CROP", he says, "do not now stand for anything except FOOD - food for the hungry and assistance to them to provide more food for themselves." In explaining the change, which was approved last fall by its national committee but -not announced until recently, Mr. Farmer states that the percentage of total U.S. population living on farms has decreased from 19 percent to 7 percent, since CROP was founded 1947. "Increasingly," he says," "CROP was not solely rural." CROP, which began in Kansas in 1947 as the "Wheat for- Relief" appeal, has distributed more than $69 million in government-donated foods, exported $17H million of high protein food, seed, fertilizer, and equipment, and transferred $2 1/3 million to other agencies during the twenty years of its community appeal. Aid has been given to persons in more than forty countries. contriNffS Appearing before Judge Charles Smith in Branch m court last Thursday, Betty J. Blennei£&f 2312 Orchard Beach, McHenfy? was charged with improper usp of registration and fined $10 and $5 costs. For driving on the wrong side of the highway she received a similar fine. ALUMINUM SIDING 1 Fireproof -- Waterproof -- Rusipniot Reynolds -- Alsco AL8CO Premium "SO" SkHng with the DuPnat FMik Life of the Building Written Guarantee Storm Window*, B&ofo S A^ntng* MctHbury Window & Awning Co. aSIH W. Waukeian Rd. McHenry, III PHONE 885-1180 USE 7HE iSSIFIE END - OF - THE - MONTH TIRE SALE 4 - Ply Blackwall Tires FEB. 16 6.00 - IS -- $14.00 6.50 - IS -- *14.50 7.00 - IS -- $15.50 7.88 7 00 14 14 $17.50 7.75 7.75 8.25 8.15 8.55 8.45 14 15 14 15 14 15 $18.25 $19*00 $2M0 TCHE CHAINS Tractor* Truck £ass©ag©r @5? Vol! Bail© for All Cars Up to $5 Trade In McHenry Ire Mart 8981 W. Main St PHONE 888-0294 m. On the prowl for persnickety prospects me / y , see m 0 mtCKS! 'A &.3L 67 Fleetside pickup If you're a fussy truck buyer, try this '67 Chevy Your Chevrolet dealer has a demonstrator waiting to show you its sleek new look, burly new build and bright new cab. (Not to mention the smooth ride and easy handling.) It's the latest in pickups--try it and see for yourself! Try the brand new breed of Chevy trucks at your Chevrolet dealer's. 12-5318 CLARK CHEVROLET SALES 008 N. FRONT STREET McHENRY. ILLINOIS PHONE 388-0377 j

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