McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 21 Aug 1968, p. 2

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?G. 2, - PLAINDEALER - WED., AUG?, 21, 1968 •. •"g?s3! %f£ ' ; 1KK i. Plan Hospitality Married August 17 'irJ'.' *: ?w ;£;F f?iPf -• ;•" • Bridal OSRITAL yioSii GAYLORD PHOTO MR. AND MRS. DAVID GENDE Rev. Clarence Thennes of ! Holy Cross parish, Stockton, .ill., officiated at the 2:30 nup- «ttal rite last Saturday, Aug. 17 • that united in marriage his nep- ;1iew, Mr. David Francis Gende £and Miss Mildred Elizabeth t Repky. The ceremony was solef mnized in St. Mary's Catholic i: church, McHenry. !• The bride, who resides at m 2813 N. Beachview road, Mc- Cullom Lake, is the daughter of r Mr. and Mrs. Bernard J. Rep- £ky of Rt. 1, Rockland, Wis. Mr. C Gende is the son of Mr. and **Mrs. Frank Gende of 1207 N. Riverside drive, McHenry. The charming bride wore an A-line, empire gown of white ; linen, fashioned with three- " quarter length bell sleeves, I trimmed with Venice lace. Her T removable chapel train was < also trimmed with matching t lace. She wore a linen pillbox ?• headpiece highlighted with mat- |. ching lace, to which was attacha • ed a pure. silk English illusion | bouffant veil. She carried a cas- '"*• cade of yellow gladioli and white : carnations. ' Miss Marian Repky of Rockti land, Wis., acted as maid of i honor for her sister and « bridesmaids were Miss Gerf trude Gende and Miss Jean r Gende, sisters of the groom. 2. All were attired in yellow, £ floor length, A-line empire styi- led dresses trimmed with Ven- *; ice lace. The back bodice was % - trimmed with an obie bow. They £ - wore headpieces ^consisting of * an obie bow which held a short > bouffant veil. Each had a colov nial bouquet of yellow glads and > white carnations. i Francis Gende of McHenry !v served his brother as bestman j and groomsmen were JohnGende; another brother, and Gere Thennes, of McHenry, a cousin. ^ Mrs. Rpky chose a two-piece £ yellow jacket dress withmatch- \- ing accessories, while Mrs. v, Gende was attired in a twos'; piece, light blue coat and dress y with matching accessories. Both £ had white carnation corsages. % Fifty guests enjoyed dinner \ at the Wing N' Fin clubhouse £ in the afternoon, where 250 gathered in the evening for a S reception. Mary Beth Gende was in charge of the guest book. The couple left later on a trip into northern Wisconsin. Upon their return they will reside at 2813 N. Beachview road, Mc- II Cullom Lake. The bride is a 1962 graduate PARENT - TEACHER OUTING The Valley View Parent Teacher organization (PTO) will * launch a new season with an out- T ing for teachers, parents and • children at McCullom Lake beach this Thursday, Aug. 22, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Officers hope theget-together will also launch thoughts about the approaching school term and plans to be undertaken by the organization. of Bangor high school, Bangor, Wis., and a 1966 graduate of Wisconsin State ^university, Whitewater. Her husband graduated in 1962 from McHenry high school. The new Mrs. Gende teaches seventh and eighth grade literature at Harrison elementary school, Wonder Lake. Her husband is a lineman for Commonwealth Edison in Mount Prospect. MARRIAGE LICENSES Joseph Osborne, Hebron, and Dorothy Aissen, Ringwood. David* Pertle, Crystal Lake, and Terriann Guelzow, McHenry. Henry Schweizer and Elma Dunn, both of McHenry. MCHENRY HOSPITAL Patients admitted to McHenry hospital during the past week included Wesley B. Phillips, Harry Adams, Sr., Maurice Anderson, Heidi G. Lezak, Edward Booth, Gary Handke, Alfred Zahlman, Gail E. Harms, Ralph C. Popp, Jeffrey Porter, Ann Porter, Patricia Jacobson, William Marshall, Sandra Smith, Crystal Lake; Mary A. Zickus, Barbara E. McC ready, Lawrence Matinelli, Dennis Deisenroth, Chicago; Helen C. Green, Roger A.Goodwin, Linda Galles, Lake Villa; Edward Loebig, Lavra A. Zera, Eleanore Anderson, Island Lake; Earl Weinstock, Jr., Northbrook; Genevieve Pakett, Lakemoor; Charles E. Elliston, Leona Trippon, Ruth Tiedgen, Wauconda; George R. Stanley, Albert Kuhn, Frances Johnson, Round Lake; Rose Jess,Skokie; And, John Hughes, Jr., Anna Laskowski, Miles H. Ess, Albert Hill, Charles Sanford, In4 gleside; Vivian Krueger, Be-} loit, Wis.; Jeffrey Scott, Algonquinn; Louise Hamper, Aurora; Ethel Ahlgrim, Woodstock; Gail Crokin, John Kretler, Richmond; Michael Scott, Lake Villa; Orpha Weiler, Twin Lakes, Wis.; Clyde Cummings, Fox River Grove; Audrey Jones, Wonder Lake; Robert Wyatt, New Jersey, 111.; Robert Leber, Round Lake Park; Kate Tanski, Spring Grove; Roger Wait, Round Lake Beach; Judith Dennis, Solon Mills; And, Cindy Budrech, Jeanetta Banach, Gretta E. Goodell, Frank Nechiebecki, John C.Hanson, Josephine C. Wolniak, Kenneth Grothman, Dart N. Zamastil, Jeffrey S.Koehler, Frances Counley, Antionette Luto, Kathryn Low, Vernie L. Potter, Judith Bello, Roy G. Lenninger, Marie Pavlovic, Brother Charles Carlon, Tina Licastro, Barbara M. Spencer, Karen R. Winter; Also, Shirley Romlinson, Scott Slipiec, Katharina Boeker, Rosalie Smith, Elizabeth Madden, Mildred Hinspater, Sandra M. Kucek and Elvira Ippolito, all of McHenry. HARVARD HOSPITAL Mrs. William Biggerstaff and Mrs. John DeStafanis of McHenry were patients In Harvard hospital during the past week. MEMORIAL HOSPITAL During the past week patients admitted to Memorial hospital, Woodstock, included Evelyn Barwig, Kathryn Everson, McHenry; Nancy Carlson, Ringwood; Edna Flott, Fred Hansen and Freddy Killam, Wonder Lake; and Evelyn May, Spring Grove. Mrs. Charles C. Wright and Mrs. Irwin Burger hold the largest and smallest items which will be on sale Oct. 2, Holiday Hospitality Day. Nettie's impressive cone wreath may dwarf Helen's delicate and imaginative miniature but each will be equally in demand on "The Day" when the doors open at 10 a.m. MCHENRY HOSPITAL Mr. and Mrs. John Dunford are parents of a son Aug* 10 A Son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Francis Borowski on Aug. 10 Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Mieling of Wonder Lake became parents of a daughter Aug. 11* A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Peter Olson of Wonder Lake on Aug. 11 Mr. and Mrs. James Market welcomed a son Aug. 12. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lewis announce the birth of a scm Aug. 12. A son was born Aug. 13 to Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Parfrey of Spring Grove. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Blackman of Ingelside announce the birth of a son Aug. 14. A daughter was born Atig. 15 to Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Gilio. MEMORIAL HOSPITAL On Aug. 12 a daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Tancredi nf Wonder Lake. If people are always pinning things on you, perhaps you don't have all your buttons. Most women know how to save pennies. Ifs the dollars that get away from them. "Oh, my aching head'; is what the 'Coners' probably feel but have cleverly fixed up a cure for it -- an aspirin bottle with a forlorn looking walnut head wrapped in a bandana for a stopper! This is just one of the many items being readied for Holiday Hospitality Day, on Wednesday, October 2, held each year by the Woman's auxiliary of Memorial hospital for McHenry County to benefit the hospital's buildings and expansion program. Mrs. Irwin Burger and her group of workers, the 'Coners' have been busily engaged all year making the wreaths (both large and small), the table decorations, the gaily decorated cone trees, wall hangings, dried fresh flowers, such as delphinium, pansies, etc., under glass in wooden frames handmade to order for the 'Coners' gay sparkling tree decorations, velvet ribbons for the wall with three tiny jeweled cone arrangements on each, and many more items too numerous to mention. All will be sold only on the fourteenth Holiday Hospitality Day. The 'Coners' are not novices, for under the able hands of » Nettie Burger, noted for her lectures and many appearances on flower and cone arrangements before garden groups, etc., they have become an efficient team. When Nettie is assembling a wreath, the cone cutters and wirers already have boxes of pine zinnies, chestnuts, acrons, hickory nuts (bleached and wired) ready for her sin separate boxes. Another gnfupc can be seen painting soft «^>- # rs on "Cone zinnies" for thoj$e I wreaths that use them. At another table match boxes or other small items are being delicately decorated with minute cones, flowers and nuts. "Every item, when completed, is sprayed with lacquer", says Mrs. Burger, "for by this means it should last for years. We look upon most of our work as perhaps the heirlooms of the future - at least we hope so!" One of the new wreaths this year is 10 by 15 inch in oval shape. Light cones are used, even the cut "cone zinnies" are from the light cones. These clusters are accented at the top by a larger than usual cluster of bleached hickory nuts. The whole wreath reminds one of a beautiful old fashioned picture frame. One of the workers placed the oval wreath around a mirror, hung it on the wall and even^Nettie was hard put to recognize it. The most difficult thing made by the 'Coners' is the 26-inch cone wreath. It is awkward to handle and heavy. They are special order items as a rule and given by business concerns as gifts. A quick count of one of the large wreaths showed that it' contained approximately 310 individual pieces. By the time the material for the wreath is gathered, cut, groomed, wired, assembled and finally sprayed, many, many a "woman" houris represented. The cone wreaths start in size from 3 inches on up to the largest - the 26 inch ones. They are all in great demand and are usually the first to be sold on Holiday Hospitality Day. Form Choir At County College I Reach New Peaks In Spending On Salaries, Pupils Teacher salaries have gone up about 7 per cent over the last school year, and spending per pupil has risen about 10 per cent, acording to the U.S. Office of Education. Both increases have brought new peaks in numbers of students and teachers and total spending. The survey, conducted in cooperation with state departments of education, showed the average salary for classroom teachers for the current year was $7,320, compared with $6,820 last year. Per-pupil spending totaled $623, compared with $569 last year. Total school expenditures were $31.5 billions, compared with $27.9 billions last year. AWARDS POLICY One-year grants to freshmen in the amount of $1,000 is the new way the National Merit Scholarship Corporation seeks to assist more students in paying college costs. The non-renewable yearly grants replace a four-year scholarship policy. MARIE ANN VOS Concert and practice schedules for the new McHenry County college choir lave been anounced by Marie Ann Vos, director of choral activities. Plans for a Christmas concert on Dec. 15 include a cantata by Bach with a small orchestra, traditional carols, and pieces from the Renaissance and modern repertory. The major work for the spring concert is expected to be Mozart's "Solemn Vespers". It is anticipated that the choir will sing for important college functions. Mrs. Vos points out that interested persons in the community, as well as students of the college, are invited to participate in the new choir. There,will be . tuition, and fees for enrolling in the choir, which an hour of college credit will be earned. Rehearsals for the choir will be held weekly on Thursday evenings from 7:30 to 10:00 beginning Sept. 19 at the interim campus in Crystal Lake. Mrs. Vos will be available to talk with prospective choir ifiembers on Sept. 3,4,10 and 12 from 7:30 to 9 p.m. on Sept. 6 and 9 from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. and on Sept. 11 and 12 from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Interested persons may phone the college office at 459-6800, extension 6, for an appointment. DEWANE STUDIO PHOTO MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM DECICCO In a beautiful wedding solemnized Saturday, Aug. 10, in Christ the King Catholic church, Miss Kathleen Diane Howard of Wonder Lake, became the bride of Mr. William Thomas DeCicco of McHenry. They will make their home at 2404 Manor lane, McHenry. AnnuffillyNow,ThreeMillon Teens Become Car Drivers Three million new youthful automobile drivers -- a proportionate number of them right here at home -- are added annually to the hordes of people driving millions of cars on streets and highways of this nation, according to the American Automobile Association. They are the teen-agers who come of age to qualify for driver's licenses. Many may be able to induce parents to help them acquire brand new cars of their own. Many manage to buy, with their afterschool- hours earnings, a used car. Still more youngsters manage to acquire motorcycles or scooters to get about on. Others, especially the younger ones, pedal about on bicycles. The ever increasing freedom of movement of young people operating mechanically powered vehicles is adding greatly to the problem of traffic safety for them, their school companions and the public at large. All this accounts for the spread of driver education in high schools where the principles of motor vehicle safety are instilled in these usually exuberant youngsters. But this is not enough in the opinion of most authorities. Parents t6o, must enter the scene to further caution these youngsters and to discreetly make their own independent checks of the mechanical condition of the cars their youngsters drive. This concern is doubly important if the car is old or remodeled as is often the case with a teen-ager's first car. Young drivers are always concerned about the appearance of their cars but beneath shiny surfaces, danger can lurk in the form of worn brakes or loose steering parts. Car care is as vital to the new driver's safety as is knowledge of the principles of safe driving. SONJA Sonja was trained in Europe before coming to the U.S. and working for Elizebeth Arden. She comos to Mister's as the holder of many awards in hair styling. ° JOYCE - Joyce has worked for Mister's close to 2 years having come to us from Des Plaines where she was Jmploycd in a Beauty Salon there. ROSSANNE - The newest member at Mister's with fresh new ideas in hairstyling. LARRY - Larry is the winner of several awards in hair styling and has worked in the Chicago area for 9 years. Phone 385*7550 HOURS: Mon. - Tues. - Wed. - Sat. 8:80 to 5 p.m. Thurs. A Fri. 8:30 to 9:00 p.m. Next door to National Tea OPEN EVERY SUNDAY 10 A.M.-5 P.M. spurgeons USE OUR LAY AWAY PLAN SA VE 10% Boys Fall and Winter Jackets Back-to-School Sale-Priced ! Save on sizes 3 to 8, 6 to 18 ! Reg. 3.99 to 11.99 now 3 59 to From Our Big Group: Concealed Hood Jacket Here's a box-quilted nylon jacket with a hood that folds into the collar. The warm lining is bonded Dacron® polyester. Sizes 8 to 18. 79 Reg. f 1.99 10 Boys Diagonal Corduroy Fast-Back Slacks Save a snappy 440 on these racy pants. No-iron cotton corduroy fast backs in sizes 6 to 18 ... in all the new colors! A ee Reg. 4.99 4 Boys Sweaters -- cardigans, full and mock turtle, pullovers; all sizes. 3.99 to 8.99 Boys Knit Shirts -- new fabrics, colors, and styles. Sizes 3 to 18. 1.79 .o 2.99 Boys No-Iron Sport Shirts -- choose from our big selection! 3 to 18. 1.99 to 2.99 STORE HOURS: Mon-Fri 9 A.M.-9 P.M. Sat. 9-6 Sun lO^T CHARGE 1T AT SPlJRGEQN S McHenry Market Place 4400 W. Rt. 120 McHenry, Illinois

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