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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 20 Jan 1971, p. 2

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PAGE 2-PLAINDEALER-WED. JANUARY 20, 1971 r iA MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM W. TERRY BRIDAL COUPLE -- Miss Beth Marie Glysing, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth G. Glysing of 1303 W. Northeast Shore drive, McHenry, became the bride of Mr. William W. Terry, son of Mrs. George H. Terry of New Albany, Pa., Saturday, Nov. 28. They repeated their vows before Rev. Bartz in St. Peter's Lutheran church, Arlington Heights. JANUARY 21, - Catholic Daughters of Ameri­ ca -- Regular Meeting -- K. of C. Hall -- 8 p.m. JANUARY.22 First Annual Meeting -- Church Women United Lake Re­ gion--Christ the King Church, Wonder Lake -- 9:30 a.m. JANUARY 23 Spaghetti Dinner -- Spon­ sored By Cub Pack 459, Lake­ land Park -- V.F.W. Clubhouse -- 5 to 8 p.m. JANUARY 25 McHenry Senior Citizens Club Meeting --7:30 P.M., East Campus Cafeteria. Installation Of Officers. McHenry Woman's Club Board Meeting -- 9:30 -- City Hall -- 11 A.M. -- Board Tours Pioneer Center. Monthly Meeting -- Home and Hearth Homemakers -- Mrs. Girard Toussaint Home, 3914 W. Grand Avenue -- 8 p.m. JANUARY 26 O.E.S. Stated Meeting -- Ac- cacia Hall -- 8 p.m. JANUARY 28 McHenry Garden Club Meet­ ing -- Home Of Mrs. Herbert Rothering, 315 Timothy Lane, Edgebrook Heights. JANUARY 30 First Annual Old Fashioned Square And Ballroom Dance -- Sponsored By Knights of Col­ umbus & Checker Board Squares -- V.F.W. Hall -- 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. Mental Health Speaker For Newcomers Group James C. Kurtz, ACSW, su­ pervising social worker for the Family Service and Mental Health clinic, was guest speak­ er at the Town and Country Newcomers club meeting Tues­ day evening at Faith Presby­ terian church. Mr. Kurtz spoke on the drug problem and explain**, that drugs are not something new. They have been in existence in one form or another since time began. Only in the past few years has it become prev­ alent with the middle to upper class in the cities and suburbs. Many reasons were given for the young person experiment­ ing, such as anxieties, frus­ trations and parental guidance. Following the question and answer period, Mrs. John Gun- derson, president of the club, conducted a short business meeting and introduced guests. Mrs. Carl Grinstead, first vice-president, advised the members and guests of a hus­ band and wife bowling party which will be held the end of January. Anyone interested who has not been contacted should call Mrs John Gunderson or Mrs. Carl Grinstead. • After, the meeting, refresh­ ments were served by Mrs. Richard Howie, refreshment chairman, assisted by Mes- dames Paul Burns, Clyde Kan- gas, John Holmgreen, Jerry Bukowski and Tony Toncredi. Church Women United V. F. W AUXILIARY NEWS By Gerry Breede Marge Moreth, Membership chairman, reported that 131 members had paid their 1971 dues to date, which brings the paid membership up to approx­ imately 85 percent. Those who have not paid as yet have an­ other week in which to do it so we may reach the 100 per­ cent before the end of this month. Send them directly to the membership chairman. Sunshine Chairman Florence Tussey reported a get-we 11 card had been sent to Margaret Kusch. Sincere get-well wish­ es are sent her way and also to our secretary, Barbara Kuck, who will be at home conval­ escing when this news reaches you. Voice of Democracy Chair­ man June Schmunk reported that we were unable to hold a local contest due to the fact the McHenry high school was not on the mailing list and by the time she had received the information it was too late for us to conduct one this year. The regular Downey Veterans hospital visit which was Dec. 16 was attended by Irene Stol- ler, Florence Tussey, Mer­ cedes Morenz, Dora Krocker, Ethel Hagberg, Alyce Kowal and Hospital Chairman Mary Kuemmel. Gifts were distri­ buted* which had been donated auxiliary members and by collections of cash at the post home. Mary read a letter of appreciation for all the hours donated by the members of the auxiliary at the hospital. Americanism Chairman Bar­ bara Kuck reported that a cash donation of $15 had been sent to the West campus high school to help replace the American flag which had been destroyed there. Marge Moreth took time to make a beautiful afghan to raise funds for the Cancer fund. A decision was made to hold an Easter egg hunt for Jthe chil­ dren of post and auxiliary mem­ bers. Watch for the date which will be announced by the Chair­ man Vi Abbink. The attendance dinner will be attended by sixteen mem­ bers, they are the ones who attended at least ten of the regular meetings. Mary Kuem­ mel will contact all of them when she has selected a date and pl^ce. Our riext regular meeting will be held Monday, Feb. 8. New Arrivals McHENRY HOSPITAL Mr. andMrs.RuebenPedraza of McHenry welcomed a son on Jan. 12. MEMORIAL HOSPITAL WOODSTOCK Mr. and Mrs. Peter Parisi announce the birth of a son Jan. 11. A girl was born Jan. 11 to Mr. and Mrs. Gary Ritter. t. Lt. Col. and Mrs. James K. Murphy of Ft. Leavenworth, Kan., announce the birth of a son, Sean Francis, on Dec. 29 at the Munson Army hospital in Ft. Leavenworth. His paternal grandmother is Mrs. James E. Murphy of Chicago and the ma­ ternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. T. Eltoft of McHenry. ATTENDS CONVENTION Mrs. James Batz (the for­ mer Elaine Schmitt of Johns- burg) recently attended a con­ vention in a Chicago hotel in the interest of the retarded. Mrs. Richard Nixon, wife of the President, was present at the convention. Mrs. Batz is a registered physical therapist at the Easter Seal center in Wood­ stock. Church Women United, Lake region, will have the first an­ nual meeting Friday, Jan. 22, at 9:30 a.m. at Christ Hie King church in Wonder Lake. A panel discussion, "Break­ through with Love", will be pre­ sented by Devonna Frisbie, Woodstock, Dorothy Haddick, McHenry, Sister Rebecca Mar­ ie, Wonder Lake and Pat Seil- ing of Crystal Lake. Music will be provided by "Tics" (Teens in Christian Service) under the direction of Henry Koehl. Members of Church Women United come together from all religious denominations in a visible fellowship, to witness their faith in Jesus Christ as Divine Lord and Savior, enabled by His spirit to draw together in every neighborhood and na­ tion as instruments of his rec­ onciling love. All church women are invit­ ed and urged to attend. Baby­ sitters will be provided. Anyone wishirtg further information should contact Mrs. Harry Stinespring, III, Crystal Lake, Mrs. David Cain, McHenry, or Mrs. Leslie Kiddoo, Woodstock. WEEKLY RECIPE By Sarah Anne Sheridan Legend has it that the hush puppies originated around the campfire when they were tos­ sed to the hounds to keep them quiet. They are a must to com­ pliment fried seafood dishes. However, they are enjoyed quite often in our home as the main bread served with vegi- tables, especially cooked sal­ ad greens. Hush Puppies 2 c. com meal 1 t. soda 1 t. salt 6 T. chopped onion 2 T. flour 1 T. baking powder 1 egg 2 c. buttermilk Redjfjepper, to taste Mix all dry ingredients, add chopped onion; then milk and egg, beaten together. Drop by small teaspoonfuls into very hot, deep fat. They will float when done. Drain on brown paper. Recipe will make 8 gen­ erous servings. JANUARY 31 Bake Sale -- Sponsored By St. Patrick's Ladies Guild -- St. Patrick's Church Hall -- After All Masses. FEBRUARY! McHenry Senior Citizens Club Executive Committee Meeting; - 1:45 p.m., Land­ mark School. FEBRUARY 4 Lakeland Park Women's Club Meeting; - 12:30p.m., Lakeland Park Community House. Mary Dobbins and Tressa Collins, Hostesses. FEBRUARY 8 McHenry Senior Citizens Club Meeting -- 7:30 p.m. East Campus Cafeteria -- Valentine Party -- Music and Sing- Along. FEBRUARY 9 O.E.S. Stated Meeting -- Ac- cacia Hall -- 8 p.m. FEBRUARY 10 Valentine Salad Luncheon & Card Party -- Sponsored By St. Patrick's Ladies Guild -- Church Hall -- Serving 1 :30 to 1 p.m. FEBRUARY 13 St. John's Home & School Ass'n. Dance -- "Sweetheart S w i n g " - - C o m m u n i t y C l u b Building -- 9 a.m. to 1 a.m. Friendship Club Pot-Luck' Dinner and Meeting; -- 6 p.m. First United Methodist Church Dining Room. Program -- Dor­ othy and Eric Steinbiss. FEBRUARY 22 McHenry Senior Citizens Club Meeting -- 7:30 p.m. East Campus Cafeteria. Card Party for Members. Woman's Club At Highlands To Meet Jan. 22 The January meeting of the Pistakee Highland's Woman's club will be a surprise ban­ quet, and members are urged to have their reservations in to Mrs. Craig Thoren, member­ ship chairman, by Friday, Jan. 22. The meeting will begin promptly at 7 p.m. The December meeting of the club was held early because of Christmas. The Community center where the ladies meet was gaily and festively adorned with decorations presented by Edward Burda. The meeting was the club's thirteenth anniver-^ sary and honored their past presidents. Mrs. Peter Nielsen announc­ ed that the club had purchased a toboggan for the Woodstock Children's home as a group Christmas present. The club also viewed a safety film which presented the dangers of "Poi­ sons in the Home." After a rousing songfest of carols, the members enjoyed sandwiches and treats made by hostesses, Mrs. Tom Cusack, Mrs. Craig Thoren, Mrs. Ted Wroblewski, Mrs. Peter Neilsen, Mrs. Da­ vid Wipper, Mrs. Harold Bichler and Mrs. Glen Jor- genson. HEALTH ANO BEAUTY For the promotion of health, one should take systematic daily exercise. Walking in the fresh air improves the lung ca­ pacity and increases the peri­ staltic movements of the^ntes- tines, which helps to overcome constipation. When walking the chest should be held well up to facilitate deep breaching. Round shoulders and flat chests are ugly and ungainly. They not only make an un­ pleasant impression on behold­ ers, but they are productive of disease. This posture cramps the lungs and prevents proper breathing. A noted physician says that a "round shouldered person is one who is carrying his chest behind instead of in front of him." He says further that "this deformity not only gives a person a weak and un­ g r a c e f u l a p p e a r a n c e b u t l e s ­ sens the breathing capacity Extension Unit Plans POETS CORNER Social Security Talk At a recent meeting, Mr Katharine Neumann, Extensio: adviser, announced a program on Social Security which will be open to the public. It will be held March 3 at 1 p.m. at the Farm Bureau building, Woodstock. Mrs. Neumann also reported on a program planning confer­ ence in Aurora which she and Susan Ross, assistant Exten­ sion adviser, attended Dec. 14-15. Mrs. Neumann, an area specialist in femily life, pre­ sented program ideas and re­ source material to the group. Family life topics are being stressed for the 70's. Miss Ross reported on the changing image of 4-H. It is expanding from a rural organi­ zation to an increasingly urban one. The University of Illinois is planning a three-year cam­ paign to explain the growing program to the public and pro­ mote membership. Television will be used to give more youth a chance to participate in the 4-H program by watching a weekly program. Starting in March, 1971, a photography project will be available by this method. A young adults program for single persons aged 18-28 has been started in McHenry coun­ ty. Anyone interested in this may obtain more information by writing Cooperative Extension Service, P.O. Box 431, Wood­ stock, 111. The Illinois Homemakers Ex­ tension association's annual meeting will be held Jan. 28- 29 in Urbana. Mrs. Alice Plencner and Mrs. Shirley Nichols were selected for the nominating committee for the Extension council. * IT'S JUST A LITTLE JOKE OF MINE If I tell you I don't need you, If I say I don't want you, And if I say I don't love you, If s just a little joke of mine. If I don't believe in making a date, Waiting for you when you're late, And say I despise all your styles Remember, it's just a little joke of mine. Remember, everything will be fine, You'll have to understand, Whenever I hold your hand, Because this is a big dream of mine, by Henry W. Cieslak Wonder Lake" Woman's Club Will Hear Review Post-Nuptial Shower For Mrs. Schmitt A post-nuptial, surprise mis­ cellaneous shower for Mrs. Dale Schmitt was held recently at the Knights of Columbus hall in McHenry. Games were play­ ed and a buffet supper was served to sixty guests. Hostesses for the shower were Miss Lynn Weber and Mrs. Robert Griffith, sister of the bridegroom, both of McHenry. The hall was decorated with pink and white streamers. Mrs. Schmitt is the former Daniala Rudolph Berntheusel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wal­ ter Rudolph of Frankfurt, West Germany. The bridegroom i& the son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Schmitt of 1207 S. Crystal Lake road, McHenry. The young people were married in Wood­ stock Dec. 26, attended by Miss Lynn Weber, a friend, and the bridegroom's brother, Neal Schmitt, of McHenry. A recep­ tion followed. The bridegroom graduated from McHenry high school in 1966. He met his new wife while he was serving with the Army in Germany. He is employed in Algonquin. Former Drug Addicts Will Speak At School Monday evening, Jan. 25, at 7:30, the Hilltop Parents organ­ ization will have two former ad­ dicts from Gateway house in Lake Villa present to speak on drugs and their experience with them. A display on drugs will be available. The public is invited to at­ tend this meeting, which is held at Hilltop school. and l^ads to inactivity of the upper part of the lungs, thus inviting tuberculosis and other diseases, which arise from the lodgement of germs in the in­ active and weakened portions of the lung tissues." Sitting in a slumped, relaxed position with the chest flat, the shoulders hunched, is conduc­ tive to congestion in the ab­ dominal region. The relaxing of the abdominal muscles due to the bad posture above describ­ ed, tends to cause prolapse of all the viscera including the liver, kidneys and stomach. When one sits erect the chest is elevated, the abdominal mus­ cles are tense and hold the organs in their proper position, allowing the free circulation of blood through the body. Bad habits in sitting, standi ing and walking cause conges­ tions which bring on diseases of various sorts and are pro­ ductive of headaches, back­ aches, and other distressing symptoms. Improper posture is conducive to indigestion as well as other bodily ills. D I A L - A - D E V O T I O N FABRICS YARNS * NOTIONS HALLMARK CARDS PHONE CANDLES FOR ALL OCCASIONS AT. COUNTRYSIDE FABRIC SH0PPE 7129 Barnard Mill Rd. Wonder Lake 653-7699 Hear God's Word Wherever You Are. Try Us Once RICHARD'S CLEANERS 1208 N. Green St. \'\ QUALITY / OPEN Monday Thru Saturday 7AM to 6PM Tips For The Homemaker Greasy stains may ride right on through the weekly laundry and still remain when you re­ move your , clothes from the dryer. If you still see the stains, they're probably fairly well set by then, says Katharine Neu­ mann, McHenry county Exten­ sion adviser. Although some grease stains wash out with regular laundry methods, it's best to pretreat them first. Begin with simple methods of pretreatment. Work liquid detergent, shampoo or a paste of laundry detergent into the stain. Let the spotted ar­ ticle stand approximately 30 minutes, and then wash it in the usual manner. Often yoif 11 need special pa­ tience to remove stains from modern man-made garments with their special finishes. In­ stead of scrubbing, bend the fab­ ric to work the detergent into the stain. Vigorous rubbing may change thjg color or appearance of the fabric. If the stain persists after washing, try a grease solvent. Place the stained side of the fabric against a blotter of paper toweling. Next, working from the underside of the garment, sponge the stain thoroughly with the solvent. The story of a "Safari by Jet" will be related by Van Sells at the meeting of the Won­ der Lake Woman's club Thurs­ day, Jan. 21. The book, writ­ ten by a Maryknoll Sister, tells of a trip through esoteric parts of the world to visit the Mary­ knoll nuns at their work. Mrs. Sells is a radio news­ caster, writer and editor. She has been on the staff of Ra­ dio Station WKRS at Wauke- gan for more than seventeen years. For six years she was city editor of the Woodstock Daily Sentinel and prior to that, worked on other newspapers a- round the state including the McHenry Plaindealer. Mrs. Sells has been giving book reviews for many years and specializes in the dramat­ ic story-teller type of approach. She is one of only a limited number of women members Uf the Illinois News Broadcasters association which* is made up of on-the-air people in radio and television. In private life she is Mrs. Fred Sells of Wonder Lake, and is the mother of two daughters. This Jan. 21 meeting will take place at 8 p.m. Members and their guests are reminded that it will be held at Christ he King Catholic church, 5006 . Wonder Lake road. t Home-Hearth Unit Discusses Hemlines For '71 The Home and Hearth unit of Illinois Homemakers Exten­ sion association will meet Mon­ day evening, Jan. 25, at 8 o'­ clock in the home of Mrs. Gir- Because fumes from grease solvents may be toxic, and flam­ mable, use them only in a room with adequate ventilation and well away from open flames. And keep small children away from the work area. Many of the fumes are heavier than air and may affect your child more than you. Sometimes, yellow stains ap­ pear after the solvent treament if age or heat has set the or­ iginal stain. To remove this stain, use a bleach that's safe for the fabric. ard Toussaint, 3914 W. Grand avenue, McHenry. Roll call for this meeting will be "What is Your 197L Hem­ line and Why". The lesson will be "Guide for Buying Dresses" given by Mrs. Lois Jacobs and Mrs. Pat Muskoven. Women interested in joining the unit are invited to attend this meeting. For further in­ formation, phone the McHenry County Home Economics Co­ operative Extehsion ' office at 11909 McConnell road, Wood­ stock. Mrs. E.R. Pieroni, Unit Reporter SPAGHETTI DINNER A spaghetti dinner will be served Saturday, Jan. 23, from 5 to 8 p.m. at the V.F.W. clubhouse, sponsored by Cub Pack 459, Lakeland Park. Tick­ ets will be available at the door. r, McHENRY MARK! PLACE spurgeons WE KEEP PRICES DOl̂ January Sale!y Pi i i i i t i, m Every 5.99 Spring Dress for Misses, Half-Sizes, Super-Sizes 2*,, *9 THIS WEEK ONLY STORE HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9-8:30 Sat. 9-6:00 Sun. 12-5:00 These are mighty fancy values at regular price--at 2 for $9 they re super-special so why not declare Spring this very week--and save 2.98! Every 5.99 spring dress in stock for misses, half-sizes an^ super-sizes included! Cottons, blends, bondeds and otto-tucks in coat styles, step-ins, zips and shifts. And we haven't' finished counting the colors! The earlier you pick, the surer you II find your favorites--dash in now--this week only! / BEAUTY SALON HOURS: Mon.-Wed. 9-6:00 Thur.-Fri. 9-8:30 Sat. 9-6:00 C h d r ^ e i t t i t t h e f r i e n d l y s t o r e t h a t p u t s y o u f i r s t b y k e e p i n g p r i c e s d o w n I

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