McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 12 Nov 1971, p. 15

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Lakeland Park Carole Humann 385-1605 Announce New Correspondent For Lakeland Park I am very happy to announce that the column has a new correspondent. Dorothy Lense has consented toigive it a whirl and will begin with the first December column whose deadline date is Nov. 29.1 hope sincerely that each of you will give her a big helping hand with lots of news. Her phone number is 385-6517. I will be your in­ terim correspondent for the next two columns while Dorothy learns the whys and wherefores of being a correspondent. Several people called offering to help and many expressed their concern at having no column and all offers of help are greatly ap­ preciated. BROWNIE TROOP 464 The Brownies held their investiture ceremony on Tuesday, Nov. 9 at the com­ munity house. Members of their families were guests for the day. The girls who were officially invested as Brownies in Troop 464 were Lonnie Jett, Linda Ackeret, Dawn Parisi, Denise Ahlgrim, Wendy Waller, Michelle Kreutzer, Debbie Wijas, Julie Nylander, Terri Nuss, Diane Comstock and Lori Hansen. They received their Brownie pin, which must be worn upside down until they do a good deed. One year pins were received by Sherri Drake, Kelly Sweider, Linda Wooten, Sue Hansen, Nancy Altergott, Nancy Lingeman, Gail Hutt and Sandy Wohlert. Leaders for Troop 464 are Mrs. Richard Wohlert and Mrs. Robert Hutt. The troop meets every Tuesday afternoon from 3:30 to 4:30 at the home of Mrs. Wohlert. GIRL SCOUT TROOP 320 The Girl Scouts started their meeting on Oct. 27. We studied the promise and the laws. In two weeks, on Nov. 17 the new girls will be invested. Our families will be invited to at­ tend the Investiture. Scribe, Sandy Wooten. BOWLING BITS The team standings as the bowlers approach an evening of serious bowling are as follows - The Stand-ins are first with 13-3 followed by U-Yours with YLxk- 3'/2. The Boomers are third with 10-6 and there is a three way tie your week ahead BY DR. A.W. DAMIS Forecast Period: November 14 -- November 20. ARIES This stellar cycle happens to be a period when Mar. 21 - Apr. 19 you will discover that a lie sometimes functions as well as the truth. But, it would be wise for you not to forget that part of your statement which is truth and that which is fiction. TAURUS Many under your sign will contemplate spending Apr. 20 - May 20 a rather large sum of money. Those Taurians who are the exception, might be thinking in terms of changing their environment. In any case, you are inclined toward materialistic possessions. GEMINI Your chart clearly shows that you have dis- May 21 - June 20 cussed your relationship with a member of the opposite sex in a very indiscreet manner. Reper­ cussions, this week, are likely. MOONCHILD According to your chart entirely too much of June 21 - July 22 your time will be devoted to fulfilling the needs of self-centered associates. Furthermore, you may have to hide a disappointment. LEO Don't permit yourself to be bullied by coersive July 23 - Aug. 22 tactics. Many members of your sign will be con­ fronted with an ultimatum. So, adjust your thinking toward holding your ground -- don't give an inch. VIRGO Avoid unpleasant subjects, especially with a Aug. 23 - Sept. 22 member of the opposite sex. Do your best to improve your existing romance pattern, other­ wise, the ingredients for a parting of the way will thrive LIBRA It's time to exert greater effort toward your Sept. 23 - Oct. 22 routine tasks. You are entering a phase of going overboard for romances and ideals that are be­ yond your grasp. SCORPIO Your sign, more than others will be subject to Oct. 23 - Nov. 21 treachery and double dealing. It's strongly ad­ vised that you take no one into your confidence during the present cosmic cycle. There's no one you can really count on! SAGfTTARIUS It's nostalgia time for your sign. You will be Nov. 22 - Dec. 21 taking a trip down memory lane. What is more, there is an outside possibility that you might be hearing from an old, old friend. CAPRICORN Most signs would consider the following advice Dec. 22 - Jan. 19 as being too much work. But, you Capricorn, will do your best if you take on an additional task, this week. AQUARIUS The touch, smell and feel of Fall should jolt Jan. 20 - Feb. 18 you with an extra surge of energy. You will be riding herd with optimism. In fact, there is very little that can stop you now. PISCES It always happens at the most opportune time. Feb. 19 - Mar. 20 Someone who does not really have a genuine interest in your welfare will ask questions that are entirely too personal. PERSONALITY PROFILE For your Sun Sign Analyiit, tend the day, month, year and ploce of birth, plus 50« for pottage and handling to Or. Andrew W. Damit, P.O. Box 12766, St. Petersburg, Florida 33733. They haven't increased in value at all. But don't wait until fire reduces your under- insured home to ashes to find out. See me and I'll explain how a State Farm Homeown­ ers Policy with Inflation Cov­ erage can keep your home insured for all it's worth. DENNIS CONWAY STATI IARM 4k INSURANCf 3315 West em St. Mc Henry 385"711I STATE FARM Fire and Casualty Company Home Office Bloomington, Illinois lor fourth position with the Cofiins, the Do-Nothings and the Lucky Seven tied at 9-7 each. There is a two way tie for seventh position between the Partners and the Ball of Confusion each of whom has 8- 8. The Grumpy Bottoms are ninth with 5V2-IOV2. The Weigh- Outs are tenth with 5-11 and the Tops are still optimistic with 4- 12 for eleventh spot. Twelfth place is still held by the Exhibitioners with their 3-13 record. The men with high series are Ron Bierman with a 563 scratch and Tom Connor with 610 with handicap. Roy Apel holds the high scratch game of 243. The gals with high series are Juanita Grant with 509 scratch and Terry Arroyo with 607 handicap: Barb Meurer has a high game scratch with 176. COMMUNITY HOUSE SCHEDULE Thursday, Nov. 11 - Lakeland Merry-Makers 4-H club - 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 13 - Tri - County Five Watters - 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 16 Boy Scouts meeting - 7-8 p.m. LPPOA regular board meeting - 8 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 17 - Girl Scout Investiture - 3:45-5:30. Check with Jo Rizzo at 385-2728 for permission to use the com­ munity house before making plans. PARTY DAZE Congrats to Rosalie and Stan Slonina who are celebrating another year of wedded bliss on Nov. 13. Mike Hammer is the man of the hour on that day. Bud and Jan Walker are celebrating 36 years of togetherness on Nov. 14. Mary Daurio and Mark Koch share the fifteenth for their birthday. Nov. 16 is a big day for Steve Knor, Paulette Rizzo and Wilma Crane. It is the first birthday of Charles Jumper, Jr. Nov. 17 is the fourteenth wedding anniversary of Curt and Maria Bremer. Kelly Fandre, Lori Widhelm and Joann Schabow share honors for the day also. Scott Kuhns has a birthday on Nov. 18. Best wishes to all. ZJhe ZVoity Clinic Lois is puzzled, for she thinks love at first sight violates the rule that all love must be earned. So study this case with care. And if you are a victim of such a romance, be doubly careful. For you have a 50-50 chance of an unhappy marriage. So send for the "Rating Scales" below to help break any unwise love hyp­ nosis ! By - George W. Crane, Ph. D., M.D. CASE J-509: Lois T., aged^O, is in love. / "Dr. Crane," she protested, "I have heard you say that all love must be earned and developed. "So how do you explain the fact that I fell in love at first sight with Larry? "It was at a dance. I had never seen him before in my entire life. My boy friend and I were dancing. "As we passed Larry and his date, I happened to look into Larry's eyes and I almost collapsed! "For my heart leaped into my throat and I felt butterflies in my tummy. "I grew trembly and my knees almost buckled under me, for I fell completely in love with Larry at that very instant. "Doesn't this disprove your statement that all love must be earned?" FIRST SIGHT LOVE No; it doesn't. Yet Larry fell heir to the AND THEN I would like to express my appreciation again to all the people with kind words, but a column needs more than that so please call. The Law Serves You Using Lethal Weapons To Protect Property Legal Only Under Certain Conditions How far can you go in protecting your own property? If you post a sign warning "trespassers will be shot" can you simply start blasting away at anyone who sets foot on your land" The law states that a person is justified in using force to protect his home, but only under a specific and rigid set of circumstances. If an intruder is entering his home and he "reasonably believes" that the only way to stop him is with force, he can do so. But this doesn't mean he can start shooting. The law states that he would be justified in using force that is intended to kill or do great bodily harm ONLY if the entry is made in a violent or riotous manner and he has reason to believe he is preventing a personal assault or a felony in the house. As for property other than the home itself, the Illinois State Bar association says the law makes it clear that the use of force is justified only in getting the intruder off the property. Again, potentially lethal force may be used only when the person reasonably believes that it is necessary to prevent a forcible felony. This would include robbery, burglary, murder and arson as well as any other felony in which violence may be committed against an individual. DECORATE For The HOLIDAYS... VINYL-VINYL COATED Special Groups Of 15 Books from the WARNER COMPANY SALE RUNS NOV. 12 THRU DEC. 4 Benjamin Moore-Murphy Paints Art Supplies-Picture Frames-Carpet Olympic Stains-Wallpaper-Door Mirrors LAKELAND PAINT SPOT 4400 W. Rte. 120 Mc Henry Phone 385-7100 )y instantaneous love of Lois, though he himself had never shown her any gallantry nor favors nor even seen her before. So how could her love for him have been previously earned? Well, Larry simply was a physical composite of her Dad, plus her older brother. These two men had earned her devotion and affection by hundreds of thoughtful acts all throughout her childhood. Because of the incest taboo, she didn't think of them as potential marriage prospects. So she had stored up almost 20 years of love and affection' for a certain type of masculine personality. When she chanced to look into Larry's eyes at the dance, something about him "triggered" the discharge of all her pent-up love former Dad and her brother. It often may be the shape of a person 's nose or his ears or chin or hair, or some minor way of gesturing or the tone of his voice or his walk, etc. But the newcomer simply possesses this common PAGE denominator, a.- it . winch causes the release ol a htetimo of stored affection Larry unwittingly stole the cumulative emotional bank account" which her Dad and brother had b nit up And Larry didn't even dream of the devastating emotional effect his glance had produced in Lois. Nor did he realize that he was, in effect, exerting almost a hypnotic power over her Love at first sight is a very real thing. In fact, that's how I fell in love with my wife when 1 was only 16 years old. My heart did a flipflop and I never got over it, though I played the field for about 12 years more to be sure I wasn't a victim of an unwise hypnotic spell. Luckily, I fell in love with a lovely girl at a church Young People's meeting. But I might have been smitten by a tavern habitue, for in love at first sight, you are almost helplessly hypnotized in a moment of time. Many divorces thus arise from such romances, for reason and logic are by-passed by the suffusion of emotion that instantly engulfs the victim. If, like me, you fall in love at first sight with a wonderful person, that's superb. But it 's a 50-50 chance, for you can also be smitten by an unsuitable member of the opposite sex. So send for my "Test for Sweethearts," en­ closing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents. 15-PLAINDEALER-FRIDAY, T personals"! Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schoewer were in Waukegan Monday to attend the funeral of Mrs. Mary Fellens. Sunday guests in the Schoewer home were Mr. and Mrs. William Schmeling of Rockford. Mrs. Bob Kenny of Elkhorn, Wis., was a Sunday visitor in the home of her mother, Mrs. Joseph J. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kessler of Kenosha, Wis., spent the weekend in the John Thennes home and on Sunday ac­ companied Mr. and Mrs. Thennes to Stockton to visit Father Clarence Thennes. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Zoia and family of Minneapolis, Minn., spent the weekend _ with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Phalin.andon Sunday attended •> the golden wedding celebration for Mr. and Mrs. Phalin. ^ \ Mr. and Mrs. Jay Seymour and family of Dowagiac. Mich., and Sister Diane of Addison were weekend guests of their parents the John R. Frewids. Mrs. Anna Barron of Milwaukee, Wis., visited old friends in McHenry this week. (Always write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper, en- cluding a long stamped, ad­ dressed envelope and 20 cents to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his booklets.) NOVEMBER 12, 1971 LARGEST ... At Cape Ken­ nedy, Fla., first stage of the most advanced and largest spacecraft in the Orbiting So­ lar Observatory (OSO) series is scheduled for launch by Na­ tional Aeronautics and Space Administration aboard a Delta . launch vehicle. The Observa­ tory will collect valuable data from scientists who study the sun. Primary objective is to study the kolar corona. The outermost (Jayer of the solar atmosphere^^/normallv seen only during total solar eclipses, will be photographed. TO HELP BEEKEEPERS Beekeepers in Illinois must register with the Department of Agriculture during November, Director Gordon L. Ropp said last week Purpose of the registration is to locate the bee colonies so they may be provided with protection from disease and insecticides. There is no fee for registering and forms may be obtained by writing Eugene Killion, Division of Apiary Inspection, 522 S. Jefferson, Paris, 111. INFLATION FIGHTERS RED MITCHELL OLDS 98 COUPE see Them All In Mitchell's New Showroom^ A MITCHELL DEAL STARTS WHERE THE PRICE FREEZE ENDS. SEE WHY TODAY! BUICK ELECTRA SPORT COUPE -PLUS- • OPELS & • GMC TRUCKS Stop Shopping Around. NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY! BY NOW, YOU'VE PROBABLY SEEN THEM ALL. BUT WHEN IT COMES RIGHT DOWN TO BUYING, DON'T YOU ACTUALLY WANT (1)The luxury of a BUICK or OLDS and (2) The BEST DEAL ANYWHERE? THEN, TALK TO RED... HE SPEAKS YOUR LANGUAGE. THE LARGEST SELECTION OF LATE MODEL USED CARS IN McHENRY COUNTY AT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS AT Mitchell •virri->WM Buiek - Olds - OpH

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