I <S4 LAKELAND PARK NEWS Carole Ilumann VOTERS MUST BE REGISTERED FOR CITY ELECTION In case you didn't notice another election is on the way. In April we will be voting for the city officials. The only way that you can vote is to be registered. With so many new residents in the area, ^ thought we should review the voting regulations. In order to be eligible to register a person must be 21 years of age and a resident of the state for 1 year, a resident of the county *'for 90 days and a resident of the precinct for 30 days. In Lakeland Park and Shores we belong to two precincts. Precinct 11 is the Shores areas on both sides of the highway. . Precinct 13 is the entire Park area. Precinct 11 on the south side of the highway is part of Ward 2 and' all of Precinct 13 and the part of precinct 11 ori the north side of the highway belongs to Ward 4. New voters may register at the office of Earl Walsh, the city clerk on Elm street. Registrars in our area are Mrs. Bottari, 1621 N. Pleasant. Her phone number is 385-2262. John Licastro is also a registrar 385-1605 and lives at 1603 N. North avenue. His phone is 385-1703. Call in advance toavoidmaking an unnecessary trip. WOMAN'S CLUB The next meeting of the Lakeland Park Woman'svClub will be held on Thursday, March 6, at 8:30 p.m. at the community house. All hew residents of the community are cordially invited to; attend a meeting and to join the club. The old members are also invited to return if they haven't been active lately. The gals are reminded to bring their trading stamps to this meeting. The nominating committee is accepting names. Call Petey Oakford, Nedra Eckhart or Marie Cross with your suggestions for officers. The annual spring luncheon is to be the main topic at the next meeting. It will 'be held in April at the American Legion home and tickets will be available shortly. \ " • COMMUNITY HOUSE SCHEDULE All bookings and cancellations for the community house are to be made in advance by calling Jo Rizzo at 385-2728. Tuesday, March 4 - Boy Scout Our leading lady js meeting - 7 to 9 p.m. Wed- * nesday, March 5 - Girl Scout meeting - 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Little League Registration night - 7 p.m. Thursday, March 6 - Lakeland Park Woman's Club - 8:30 p.m. Sat., March 8 - Tri County Five Watters - 7:30 p.m. Monday, March 10 - Lakeland Merry-Makers 4-H Club meeting - 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 11 - Boy Scout meeting - 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday, March 12 - Girl Scouts - 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. GIRL SCOUT TROOP 320 Feb. 19. Patrol 3 opened the • rrteeting with the flag ceremony. Permission slips were distributed for the Thinking Day program and for the cookie sale. We can start taking orders on Thursday, Feb. 27, at 3 p.m. This way all the girls have an equal chance to take orders. Mrs. Hafer is the cookie chairman. The troop will earn five cents for each box of cookies sold and we will usethis money for an outing later. Patrol 1 . and 2 served treats. The grace was "Hark to the Chimes." the colors were retired and "Taps" was sung and the meeting was over. Mary Beth Humann, Scribe. RIGHT UP YOUR ALLEY Bowling results from last week's confrontation are as follows; In first place are the Nippies with 34!^-17^. There is a three-way tie for second place among the Klik, the Sock I To Me's, and the Crooked Cranes each with 29-23. Bierman's Bombers are fifth with 27-25 and the Mosquitoes are buzzing right behind them with * 26%-25% for sixth with the 8 ball in seventh with 25%-26Ji The Bugs are behind the 8 : Ball with 25-27 for eighth place, i The Ten Pins are ninth with 24-28 and the Pandas and Jack's Team are tied for tenth with 23-29. The Er-Ki-Gr-Ke is still holding up the league with 16^35% for cellar spot. John Johnson took over the men's handicap with 651. Dick Walinski still stays high scratch with his 609. Pat Butler is women's high scratch with 469 and Polly Licastro is still tops in handicap with 652. The league will bowl again on March 1. The Klik will bowl on 1 and 2 with the Bugs. Jack's Team and the Er- Ki-Gr-Ke are on 3 and 4. Hie 8 Ball and the Ten Pins will meet on 5 and 6 and Sock It To Me and the Mosquitoes are on 7 and 8. Hie Pandas will meet Bierman's Bombers on 9 and 10 and The Crooked Cranes and the Nippies will , meet on 11 and 12. Check your schedule as the date for this match has been changed from March 8 to March 1 because of the county tournament. BIRTHDAY GREETINGS •» Many happy returns of the day to Marty Nusis who will be nine on the first and to Butch Brunow who will be thirteen. Dorothy Meineke isn't telling. Grace Campo andBuzzy Miyaki celebrate on the second. Elvira Cuevas and Sam Parisi are birthday celebrators on March 3 and Robin Leone will be three years old that day. Marge Mercure, Alma Brushaber and Pat Brunow all share the fourth for their big day. Ray Jett will be seventeen on the fifth and Mary Becker and Steve BrunoW will be ten. Todd' Janzcak will be four years old. Terri Nuss • ends the list and will celebrate her fifth birthday on March 6. Best wishes to all. ANNIVERSARY WAfLTZ Our wishes for many more happy years together for Virginia and Carmon Hodges who will celebrate twenty-eight years of marriage on March 2. Our most heartfelt sympathy is extended to Les Eckhart and his family on the death Friday of his mother, Mrs. Lelah Brant Eckhart, in Elgin. Burial was Sunday, in Attica, Indiana^ STROLLING THROUGH THE PARK Not too much to tell today. Kids missed the bus so the old chauffeur took over. Hope we get all straightened out once and for all. Spring must be here, to change the subject to one more pleasant. Jo Rizzo has tulips sprouting in her yard and also pansies are peeking their leaves through the snow along the driveway. Can't be all bad if the flowers are trying to make a come-back. Even grass cutting doesn't seem to be too onerous of a chore at this point. Wait till July to hear the other side of the record. >; A very happy birthday to Aunt Marie Boening who celebrates •her birthday on March 7. She is Bill Mueller's aunt and has recently moved to our community. Ann Leon^ is on the sick list "and is recuperating in McHenry hospital. Hopefully she will be home soon. Our very best wishes to new bride Lorraine Glover and her groom, Wayne Dannemann. They were married last Saturday in Woodstock where they will be making their home. Very happy to report that John and Dan Koch are on the mend after their accident last week. I know there is more news out there but am having a communication problenj. I've joined "the ranks of the working moms, but will be home after 2:30 every day and can receive calls . in the evening provided the line is clear.. Missed a few people . -who had news this week but . hope to catch up. Don't forget Little League registration night on Wednesday, March ->5. It starts at 7 p.m. at the community house. All the kids should have a parent with them. Movies and refreshments are the entertainment for the evening. Registration fees should be paid at this time. In case you missed the previous articles on the subject the cost will be $9 for the first boy in the family which includes cap, insurance, banquet, dance and major league ball game. Each other boy in the family will pay $5. -- PERSONALS •* Fri. Feb. 28, 1969 - Plaindealer - Sec. 2, Mrs. Emma Hartley of Chicago was a guest of her sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson and Mrs. Kathryn Worts, for several days. Mrs. Merle Davis returned home by plane last Saturday from a week's visit in the home of her daughter, Mrs. Joe Eisele, and family in Saline. Mich., where her husband motored with her the week before to spend the weekend. Miss Genevieve Knox has returned from a month's vacation at Laguna Beach, Calif., where she was accompanied by Mrs. Margaret Rasmusseri of Chicago. They called on many friends and visited several other places of interest while there. Mrs. James West of Itasca was a visitor here Sunday. Her aunt;. Mi si Ann Fri s by, who spent the past week in her home, returned to McHenry with her. Mr. and Mrs. John Thompson of Kansasyille, Wis., visited his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson, Saturday and took her, Mrs. Kathryn Worts, Mrs. Emma Hartley and Mrs. Agnes Adams out for lunch. Mrs. Edward Nickels has returned from a month's vacation in Florida where she spent three weeks in the home of her brother, Edward Dibbler, in Zephyr Hills, and a week with a niece, Mrs. Stuart Leigh, in Fort Lauderdale. Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Stilling returned Wednesday from a several days visit in the home of her sister, Mrs. Kathryn Chi cone, in Skokie. Mrs. LeRoy Conway and sister, Miss Lucy Howden of Richmond, have returned from a three weeks trip to Daytona Beach, Fla. Mrs. Laura Brennan of Chicago was a visitor in the ,home of her sister, Mrs. Alice Brooks, several days last week. Mr. and Mrs. William Jordan visited their son, William, at the Hinsdale hospital, Sunday, where he is recovering from surgery. Mrs. A.P, Freund and daughter, Mrs. Arthur Tonyan, were visitors in the Dennis Freund .home in Barrington, Tuesday, where they made the acquaintance of Mark, their newly adopted sop. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ulrich, - Mrs. Rita Ulrich, Mr.afidMrs. Thomas and son visited St. Charles relative Sunday. Mrs. Agnes Wissell was a weekend guest in the home of her son, James Wissell, in Hebron, and on Saturday attended a baby shower for a granddaughter, Mrs. Gary Golden, at Williams Bay and Sunday was a guest at a bridal shower for a nephew's brideto- be, Miss Lorraine Austin, in Burlington, Wis. The Jack Yegge family of Waukesha, Wis., spent Saturday in the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Norbert SERVICE NEWS Gunner's Mate Third Mate Richard A. Greenwood, USN, son of Mrs. William Greenwood of 7218 Huron drive, Wonder Lake, returned to San Diego, Calif., aboard the attack aircraft carrier USS Constellation. The carrier has just completed its fourth tour of combat duty off the coast of South Vietnam. While deployed, Constellation's Carrier Air Wing 14 launched 6,574 combat sorties and 4,089 support missions over Vietnam. Its totah estimate of damage or destruction to enemy targets included 424 trucks, 461 supply barges, 31 bridges, 27 anti-aircraft sites, and a 16 mile petroleum pipeline. ft . An area of some 12 square miles near Lompoc, California, is composed ,of a deposit of shells of diatoms -- microscopic sea organisms. It lakes about 40 million of these shells to fill a thimble, and the deposit is some 1)500 feet deep. Yegge, where they helped Mrs. Yegge celebrate her birthday. Master Jeffrey Yegge stayed overnight and his grandparents drove him home on Sunday. Woman first, WAF officer second. Naturally. There's no law that says a girl can't be a responsible Space-Age executive and still be every inch a girl. Feminine as can be. That's the way the Air Force likes you. Ambitious, yes, but ladylike. And there's so much room for ambition. A girl college graduate gets a choice of great executive jobs. Astronautical Engineer. Behavorial Scientist. Weather Officer. Space Systems Analyst. Administrative jobs in Accounting and Finance. Jobs in Personnel and Education. There's no end to it. You have the social life, prestige, pay, and respect of an officer. You're our leading lady. Or, if you like, our lady leader. MSgt "Hal'Shust USAF Recruiting Service 2II Water Street c Waukegan, III. 60085 Phone 623-8290 U S. AIR FORCE RECRUITING REPRESENTATIVE " BELIEVE ON THE LORD JESUS CHRIST, AND THOU. SHALT BE SAVED. "16:31 "What must I do?", the person who has a need asks. I am sure we have all found ourselves in this position at one time or another. The need of an individual varies from time to time but generally comes under the heading of physical, social or mental which often stems from an extreme spiritual need, even though the individual is an active participant in his church. Most of us will exhaust every resource we know of to find an answer to our need, yet frustratingly still find it unmet. What then is the deliverance for my particular need? The Scriptures tell us in Acts 16:31, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved." The word saved has a number of meanings that imply "to rescue as a drowning person." The Lord Jesus Christ then is the answer to our every need. Bethesda Prayer Fellowship, an interdenominational group, welcomes everyone to a three day teaching seminar with Pastor Clyde Holt from Maiden Rock Wisconsin. Services will be as following: March 2, 3-4 P.M. March 3, 8:00 P.M. March 4, 8:00 P.M. Bethesda Prayer Fellowship 3809 W. Main Street McHenry, Illinois If You Spend $3 to $6 A Week at a Coin Laundry If You Have... • Limited Space • Have Water Problems • Have Sewage Problems • Waul to Save Money on Detergent and Repairs See The Hoover Spin-Dry Washer Get the €ut Your Laundry Low Low Bill i/9 Time of Meeting 3-4 p.m. Sundays mmmfffWfffff • PETS-RUGS INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE BONUS Double S & H Green Stamps On Purchases From Stock 1" NYLON SHAG CARPET INSTALLED OVER HEAVY RUBBERIZED PAD CLEARANCE ON NYLON FOAM BACK "DOHT-YOURSELF" CARPET CASH AND CARRY $495 NYLON, HERCULON, COMMERCIAL WOOL, KODEL POLYESTER Regular $4.95 to $ 14.95 CLEARANCE PRICED FROM $$3 0»99» • »£9 9 sq. yd. M P S Remnants -- Roll Balances Used "Trade-In" Rugs CARPETS & RUGS June. Hwy. 120 & City 14. Woodstock REGULAR HOURS: 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mon., Thurs., Fri. '8 a.m. td 5 p.m. Tues., Wed., Sat. Closed Sunday Phone 815-338-1000 Carey Price! / COUPON $10 OFF at Carey Appliance Hoover Spin Dry Washer Coupon Valid Sat. March 1st. HERE'S WHY OVER 8,000.000 PEOPLE PREFER HOOVER... GOOD REASON FOR YOU TO CHOOSE HOOVER TOO! per sq. yd. \mBONUS COUPON NO. ^ Double \M s & H Green Stamps With This Coupon On Purchases From Stock OFFER EXPIRES March 8, 1969 NOT _ RETROACTIVE -- -- -- -- j w natwruu Ja ROLLS ON LARGE CASTERS Large easy rolling casters let the HOOVER , move about with complete ease. Store it In ( i one place...use it in anothei. i ina i FMKT Sfl UMD FAMILY-SIZE LOADS 7 Double Sheets plus pillow cases, 01 36 ( ( diapers, 01 12 men's shuts. Washes ev» the . most delicate things. , » TttMMIT TORI MAT •urn rr X:' TURIO-ACTION AGITATION The unique HOOVER energy disk, located on ( the bac* ot the washer tub, actually surges | water through the clothes. This remarkable , t wash action gets clothes really clean. , , SArtS Uf TO 100 6AUMS Of WAHt 100 GALLONS SAVES $$ ON WATER Uses only 1/3 the amount of watei that most automatics use. Saves up to 100 gallons < 1 every 3 loads. 1 i wrmt'j or or miUMjii SAVES $$ ON DETERGENT The washing action is so efficient, it needs 1 ' less detergent than the agitator or tumblertype washer. It has a SUDS- SAVER, loo ! ( • 4 HUTU © WASHES FAST The HOOVER washts.a full load of lundry , | in lou; minutes oi less, in a gleaming liletiM staniess steel washtub. i mais m sm err • 2 mum fS DRIES IN SECONDS The clothes are spun at the amaiing speed ol ?..v0 RPM, this enables the washer to eitiact Mac or detergents that can't be rinsed ovl 'i Laundry comes out really damp-dry. SERVICE EASY TO SERVICE Nc fears ci complicated control panels. Truly i a dc --t - yourself washer. Belt replacement is i a breeze... less need foi costly service. A Hoover Representative will be in our store Saturday 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. for demonstrations and to answer your questions. Appliance Inc. 1241 N. Green St. McHenry Phone 385-5500 SKEEN STREET MALL TTT