SFCOND SECTION - PAGE 4 - PLAINDEALER FRL. NOVEMBER 16, 1973 Lakeland Park Anne Moore 385-6448 Holiday Season Opens With Annual Snow Ball Dance A very festive event and a great way to usher in the holiday season has been planned for your enjoyment. That's the seventeenth annual snow ball dinner dance spon sored by the Lakeland Park Women's club next Saturday night, Nov. 24, at McHenry Country club. Dinner will be served at 7 p.m. and dancing to a well known orchestra will begin at 9 p.m. Even if you don't dance you can enjoy yourself wat ching your friends and neigh bors glide around the floor. A limited number of tickets will be available at the door that evening but it is suggested that you purchase your tickets in advance from Women's Club members, or contact the ticket chairlady, Lyda Radisch, 385- 2754. NEW GRANDSON! Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Jumper are once again beaming with pride as their daughter and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lewis, presented them with a new grandson. Little Daniel, who weighed 7 lbs. 11 ozs. at birth, made this debut at Moline Public Hospital on Wednesday, Nov. 7. Daniel was welcomed home not only by his proud parents, but by his five- year-old sister, Deborah. Daniel's paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lewis, Sr. of Round Lake. Our congratulations to the proud parents, happy grand parents and welcome to little Daniel Lewis! SURPRISE VISITORS Lester and Mary Dobbins were very pleased with their surprise visitors earlier this month when Les' cousin and his wife paid them a visit. Mr. and Mrs. Ansil Merry from Ef fingham, 111., drove to the Dobbins' residence and enjoyed a fun visit! While they were her Les' brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dobbins, and Les' cousins and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Dobbins, drove out from Arlington Heights so the family could have a real time of it chatting and relaxing! Mary said they all had a good time and enjoyed the surprise visit and family get-together! COMPANION DOG! Rocky, the Gacek's Irish Setter, completed the third leg of the companion dog division at the dog show last Sunday. He will receive a certificate from the American Kennel Club. Congratulations to Rocky and Sharon for a job well done! WITH SYMPATHY Our heartfelt sympathy is extended to the family of Mrs. Lucille A. Nelson. Mrs. Nelson died Nov. 2 at McHenry hospital. She had lived on Prairie Avenue for the past ten years and will be missed not only by her family but by her many neighbors and friends. ELECTED SECRETARY Heard Ms. Karen Marino was elected secretary of the McHenry County Chapter of the National Organization for Women. Would like to congratulate her and offer her best wishes with her new-found activities. DOGS A PROBLEM AGAIN It has been brought to my attention that once again loose dogs are creating many problems for residents. Gar bage cans are being knocked over and garbage scattered around yards. And, moms are worried about their children playing in their own yards who suddenly get a surprise visit from a strange dog! Please be sure your dog is secured properly. Check their chains or check for any openings in your fence where they may be sneaking out. There is a fine for dogs running loose, let alone the con sequences following any per sonal harm done by your pet. All dog owners are asked to cooperate in keeping their pets under proper supervision to help keep our community clean and safe! PAPER DRIVE TOMORROW Tomorrow is the third Saturday of November, thus the paper drive will be held from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the McHenry Market Place. Don't forget to do your part and bring your newspapers, magazines and corrugated cardboard to the Market Place. REMINDER For members of Lakeland Park Property Owners Association paying semi annually, the second in stallment of $22.50 must be paid by \November 30th or a deliquency fine of $2 will be charged. Remittances should be sent to our clerk, Mrs. Helen Strandquist, 5119 West Shore Drive. Any changes in ownership of property in our should also be mad n to Mrs. Strandquist in order for her to keep our records correct and up-to-date. CANDLE OCCASIONS Birthday wishes are ex pended to Steve Knor and Wilma Crane who share today 'for their birthday! Tomorrow Kelly Fandre, Lori Widhalm and Joann Schabow will blow out the candles on their cakes. 'Sunday Scott Kuhns will celebrate and Monday Beulah oard, John Zimny and Paul s F' e>efv*C AO14®' PATZKE HEATING AIR CONDITIONING FURNACES GUTTERS PHONE 385-5534 McHENRY EARL R. WALSH & JACK WALSH INS. F i r e , A u t o , F a r m , L i f e R e p r e s e n t i n g R E L I A B L E C O M P A N I E S 3 4 2 9 W E l m S t , M c H e n r y 38 5. 3300 DENNIS CONWAY A U T O L I F E F I R E State Farm Ins. Co. 3 3 1 5 W E I m S t . M c H e n r y , I I I 3 8 5 5 2 8 5 O r 3 8 5 7 1 1 1 McHENRY LETTER SERVICE M i m e o g r a p h i n g T y p i n g A d d r e s s i n g M a i l i n g L i s t s 3 5 0 9 W P e a r l S t . , M c H e n r y P h 3 8 5 0 2 5 8 , 3 8 5 8 0 2 0 M o n d a y t h r u S a t u r d a y Farm Equipment George P. Freund,Inc. Case - New Holland 4102 VV. Crystal Lake Rd. McHENRY Bus. 38W420 Res. 385-0227 OR. LEONARD B0TTARI 1 3 0 3 N R i c h m o n d R d , M c H e n r y E y e s e x a m i n e d C o n t a c t L e n s e s G l a s s e s f i t t e d M o n , T u e s , T h u r s , F r i . 4 6 p m , T u e s , T h u r s , F r i 7 9 p m S a t , 9 : 3 0 t o 3 0 0 P h 3 8 5 4 1 5 1 o r 3 8 5 2 2 6 2 DR. ROBERT J. PETERSON Optometrist General Practice Contact Lenses By Appointment Only Closed Thursday 4719 W Route 120, McHenry 385 7930 McHENRY COUNTY OFFICE MACHINES SALES SERVICE 8. RENTALS Mon Sat 9 5:30 Friday til 9 00 93 Grant St., Crystal Lake Ph.459 1226 RIVERSIDE OFFICE SUPPLY Furniture • Supplies 1 3 2 3 N R i v e r s i d e D r i v e M c H e n r y , I l l i n o i s 6 0 0 5 0 ADVERTISE IN THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER AIR CONDITIONING SALES & SERVICE U-HAUL Trailers & Trucks COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE & TRUCK REPAIRING ARC & GAS WELDING Guettler Service, Inc. 818 N. F ront Street 385 9831 McHENRY HOBBY SHOP FOR ALL YOUR MODELING NEEDS 3318 W. Elm (NEAR RIVERSIDE DR. McHENRY) 385-7122 Ii re l lI RADIAL TIRES FOR ALL CARS Europa Motors Inc 2318 Rte . 120 8 I 5 385 -0700 ED'S STANDARD STANDARD SERVICE EXPERT TUNE-UP ATLAS Tires, Batteries. Accessories QUALITY American Oil Products PH. 385 0720 3S17 VV. ELM STREET if RADIATORS • Cooling System Specialists • A/f? CONDITIONING • Tra i l e r H i t ches Fab r i ca t i on • STEEL SALES • /voiding & Omamentai kon • frozen Pipe Tha\mt 3(106 U. Rte. 120 McHenrv ADAMS BROS. (Next to Gem Cleaners) Phone 385-0783 feeder livestock? Repay when livestock is soldi! /the go aheadpeople talk to TERRY SCHWEBKE your local PCA planner 333 E. Jackson St Woodstock, III v Phone: 338-0334 ogers will hear the birthday [song! Patti Ann McCarthy will blew out ten candles on Tuesday! Wednesday Michelle Patterson will turn seven years old! Thanksgiving day birthday people are Dotti Becker, Jay Wimmer and Leanne Lin- dquist. Happy birthday to you all! FAMILY OF THE WEEK! Meet the Mercure Family! Richard and Marge Mercure will be celebrating their eighth wedding anniversary in April. Marge, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Parisi, has always lived in our community and Rich was formerly from Lily moor. Rich and Marge have four children. Renee will be seven next month and Robyn will celebrate her sixth birthday next month also. Ricky is almost three-years-old and their new little daughter, Richelle Kristi, is two weeks old. Rich owns and operates a gas station . He is a board member of the Lions Club, a member of the Moose and enjoys bowling with the Lakeland Park Fun League1. Obviously, Marge spends her time as a very busy wife and mother! The Mercures like to spend their spare time camping and they enjoy all the activities that go along with living in the "wilderness". KOFFEE KLUTCH I heard that the ladies responsible for the decorations for the snow ball dinner dance were so pleased with the refreshments served by Adele Arndt that they decided to turn their work session into a koffee klutch to benefit the Pioneer Center. The ladies who enjoyed the treats, the delicious spread and who contributed were: Mary Dobbins, Barbara Emory, Lyda Radisch, Sharon Gacek, Helen Strandquist, Ann Rahfinger and of course, Adele! ANNIVERSARIES THIS WEEK! Curt and Maria BremecjvUl celebrate their sixteenftt w e d d i n g a n n i v e r s a r y tomorrow. Congratulations to you both! Nov. 21 is the day of celebration for Walter and Catherine Kozicki. They will ACCREDITED - Kenneth Bergsma, village president and acting Civil Defense director of the village of Richmond; Dan Olenick, Civil Defense director of Spring Grove; and Robert Popelka, village trustee of Spring Grove are holding their certificates of accreditation awarded by John J. Shay, director of McHenry County Civil Defense. LYLE KRAUSE PHOTO Teens Eating Way To Adult Heart Disease Are teen-agers eating their way to heart disease in adulthood? Richard J. Szura, chairman of the McHenry County Heart association's fund raising campaign, thinks they are. Young people are often overweight and habits established early in life are hard to break. Obesity can celebrate their thirty-third wedding anniversary. Best wishes to you both! CUB SCOUT NEWS I understand that Cub Scout troop 162 has openings and they invite parents of interested boys to contact either Mr. Pace (385-1755) or Den Mother Sue Cox (385-5885), for further information. THANKSGIVING WISHES Next Thursday is Thanksgiving Day. It's the day set aside in the United States to give thanks to God for the blessings we have. It's also the day so many families and friends get together to show genuine appreciation for each other. It is my wish that all residents of our community will have a very happy Thanksgiving Day! & NOVEMBER 16, 17 & 18 CARNATIONS All Colors LONG STEM ROSES Red-Yellow-Pink & White $1" DOZ. *5" DOZ. ALL BULBS V2 PRICE - FREE- Refreshments - Coffee - Cookies REGISTER FOR DRAWING * 10 - '5.00 Gift Certificates * 20 Lb. Turkey * 25 Lb. Fruit Basket FREE DELIVERY Come Out And Brouse Around Our Greenhouse And 7 Acres Of Nursery Stock Countryside FLOWERSHOP & NURSERY Rt. 176 V2 Mile East of Main accelerate many car diovascular diseases--heart attack, high blood pressure, stroke and congestive heart failure. "Look at the foods they eat," says Mr. Szura. "Teen-agers and college students seldom bother with breakfast. Their lunches, even between meal snacks, are often loaded with rich calories high in cholesterol and other saturated fats and lots of refined sugar. "Grease-laden hamburgers, french fries, potato1 chips prepared in saturated fats, malted made with whole milk - all cause steady build-up of fatty tissue which can clog arteries. When the openings in these tubes carrying blood to the brain and the heart becomes blocked, strokes or heart attacks result. The potential killer lies dormant until a person reaches adulthood. Then the damage has been done. "Avoiding foods high in saturated fats doesn't mean taking all the® fun out of life," Szura continued. "It means substituting some foods for others which are equally satisfying. Pizza is fine, but skip the sausage and try onions, mushrooms or anchovies. Instead of potato chips, how about fresh nuts, raisins or other dried or whole fruits, popcorn without butter, sherbets and ice milk instead of ice cream? "Diet isn't the only concern of heart conscious youth, exercise is important too. "Most overweight teen-agers diets are much the same as their slim and trim peers. The truth is, they're often just plain lazy. A regular exercise program helps burn up fats and keeps bodies young. Not dull exercise like calisthenics (they are good for growing bodies) but swimming, dancing, bicycle riding and long walks winter and summer are better. Organized sports help too." The McHenry County Heart association offers free advice on nutrition as one of the many programs supported by money raised through the Heart fund campaign during February. In addition, diet-conscious teen agers and their parents can obtain free literature con taining low cholesterol diets and meal planning designed to keep healthy hearts. Winter means different things in different areas. In mountains, it is ski and winter sports: in northern lakes region, ice fishing. In southern resort areas, an influx of northern tourists: In sugar maple areas, gathering and processing of sap. In cities, it means a mess of dirty snow: in uncluttered areas, beauty of snow and snow matted trees, and ice covered streams. I I u Lpjgini: MODEL RB734 29900 I I o Lp-cri-nJb SELF-CLEAN TIMED-OVEN ELECTRIC RANGE MODEL RB734 • Pyrolytic Self-Clean oven cleans itself autlmatically, electrically; cleans surface-unit reflector pans, too • Oven timing clock, 60-minute reminder timer • Infinite-Heat surface-unit controls • High-speed 8-inch surface unit • Self-cleaning Calrod' plug-in surface units • Removable trim rings, lift-out drip pans • No-drip cooktop • Backsplash is easy-to-clean real porcelain enamel • Porcelain-enamel-finish cooktop and range front • Full-width storage drawer • Clean-Sweep design for easy cleaning under range • Small-appliance outlet • Oven interior light M O D E L R B 7 5 8 34995 I luLp-O-triJb SELF-CLEAN WINDOW-DOOR ELECTRIC RANGE MODEL RB758 • Pyrolytic Self-Clean oven cleans itself automatically, electrically; cleans surface-unit reflector pans, too • Patterned glass oven-door window • Fluorescent cooktop lamp • Oven timing clock. 60-minute reminder timer • Infinite-Heat surface-unit controls • Two high-speed 8-inch surface units • Self-cleaning Calrod' plug-in surface units • Removable trim rings, lift-out drip pans • No-drip cooktop • Backsplash is easy-to-clean real porcelain enamel • Porcelain-enamel-finish cooktop and range front • Two-small-appliance outlets -- one timed, one standard • Full-width storage drawer • Clean-Sweep design for easy cleaning under range LEE & RAY ELECTRIC 1005 N. FRONT ST. McHENRY PH. 385-0882 i