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The Roselle Register from Roselle, Illinois • Page 13

Location:
Roselle, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PADDOCK PUBLICATIONS MAE. 22, 1968 Spring Is Blossoming with Brides-TchBe Roberta Haynie Addison residents, the Robert B. Haynies, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Roberta Ann, to ar- nold P. Consdorf son of the Arnold P. Consdorfs of Park Ridge.

A May 11 wedding is planned by the engaged couple. Miss Haynie was graduated from Trinity High School in River Forest and attended the College of St. Teresa in Winona, Minn, and the University of Illinois, Champaign. She is now employed in the parent buying department of toys at Sears, Roebuck Co. Mr.

Consdorf was graduated from Taft High School, Chicago, and has a bachelor of Science and master of Science degree in Journalism from Northwestern University. He is publications editor for a national organization in the health field. Suzan Miller Mrs. Margaret L. Miller of Schiller Park is announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of her daughter, Suzan Margaret of Wood Dale, to Sgt.

William L. Weihofen, USAF, Sewart Air Force Base, Tennessee. Sgt. Weihofen is the son of Mr. and Mrs.

William L. Weihofen Sr. of Wood Dale. The wedding will take place Saturday, March 30, in First Evangelical United Brethren Church, Bensenville. After a honeymoon in Indiana and Tennessee, Miss Gilbert plans to return to work at Schwinn Sales in Elk Grove Village until Sgt.

Weihofen finishes his tour of duty with the Air Force in August. The couple will then make their home in the Wood Dale area. Carol Jaquet Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Jaquet of Arlington Heights are announcing the engagement of their daughter, Carol, to William Schwantz, son of Mr.

and Mrs. G. W. Schwantz, 725 W. Hill Road, Palatine.

The couple is planning a February wedding. Miss Jaquet is a graduate of Arlington High School and is employed at Spotnails, Inc. Her fiance is a graduate of Palatine High School and is employed at Howell Tractor Equipment Co. Withdrawal Japan withdrew from the League of Natiwis, March 27, 1933. New York passed a compulsory education law, March 27, 1928.

MerrUee Bukowski Miss Merrilee Hall Bukowski and her fiance, George Robert Wilkinson, son of Mrs. George W. Wilkinson of Iowa City, Iowa, have set an Aug. 24 wedding date. The engagement and approaching marriage are announced by Miss parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Robert H. Bukowski of Arlington Heights. Both young peoole attend Iowa State University where Miss Bukowski is studying elementary education in the School of Home Economics and her fiance is completing his undergraduate work in Civil Engineering. Miss Bukowski, a graduate of Arlington High School, is a member of Pi Beta Phi Sorority.

Her fiance is a member of Phi Delta Theta Fraternity. Penne Decker The engagement of Miss Penne Decker to Jerome Michael Kleis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ole Kleis of Deerfield, is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Brandon Decker, Middlesax Drive, Long Grove. An Oct. 12 wedding is planned. Miss Decker, a graduate of Ela-Vernon High School, attended Butler University for one year and now works for IBG in Prairie View. Mr.

Kleis was graduated from Deerfield High School and is employed as an engineering technician by the Illinois State Division of Highways in Elgin. Good Fishing Russia announced renewal of Russo-Japanese fishing pacts, March 26, 1943. Vivian Gilbert At a traditional ceremony at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, formal announcement was made of the engagement of Miss Vivian Gilbert, daughter of the Russell Gilberts, 26S Drive, Wood Dale, and Grant W. Gundestrup, son of the Frank W. Gundestrups of Napa, Calif.

Both young people are students at Brigham Young University. Mr. Gundestrup will graduate this year in political science and plans to get a in business administration. He has already fulfilled a mission in Denmark for the Mormon Church. Miss Gilbert, a graduate of Fenton High School and a sophomore at Brigham Young, will complete her imdergradu- ate work in sociology and certify in secondary feducation.

Marilyn Peterson A June 15 wedding is planned by Miss Marilyn Peterson and her fiance Daniel Holmes, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Holmes, 619 Fairview, Arlington Heights. The engagement and approaching marriage is announced by Miss parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Ralph Peterson of Worth, 111 Mr. Holmes is a graduate of Arlington High School and both he and his fiancee are students at Tennessee Temple in Chattanooga, Tenn. Tbe wedding will take place in the Donald Smith Baptist Church in 0 a Lawn. after which the couple will reside in California. The couple plan to marry in August in the Mra'mon Temple in Oakland, Calif.

Something Besides Flowers To See at World Garden Show The World Flower and Garden Show that opens tomorow (Saturday) at the Chicago Amphitheatre will offer visitors several special displays besides its many flower and garden exhibits. Art Mobile, the first traveling art museum in the nation, will be on exhibit. Dedicated in Springfield last summer, the 53-foot long vehicle was designed as a teaching museum to bring art to children and adults in Illinois and serve as an in-service center for teachers. The art work, ranging from original art from Egyptian times to the present, is on loan from five major galleries in the country including the Art Institute and the Field Museum in Chicago, the National Gallerj-- of Art in Washington, D. the Krannert fiud Silk and Wool Ensemble Fox Cuffs Dyed to Match Sizes 6 to 18 Route 72 at 58 HIGGINS GOLF SHOPPING CENTER SCHAUMBURG PHONE 894-6717 jCuof Art Museum of the University of Illinois and the Olsen Foundation.

Visitors interested in rare fish will be delighted to see the fish exhibit co-sponsored by Mid-West Aquarists, Mid- West Guppy Club and Shedd Aquarium. More than 200 aquariums will be filled with unusual fish from tropical waters of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Included in the Shedd rare fish section will be Butterfly fish, Pufferfish, Damsels, Lion fish and Trigger fish. For the fourth consecutive year camera fans will have full run of the flower show at a special early opening for their exclusive benefit Sunday, March 24. Admission is at 8 a.m.

Sunday, and camera buffs will have free run of the show until 10:30, unhampered by regular crowds. Of particular appeal to the camera-carrying visitors will be Photo Garden, which in addition to colorful flowers will have live multicolored Mandarin ducks swimming in a pond. This show will have as its theme the Sesquicentennial of Illinois. Also celebrating its 150th birthday will be the faith, which will commemorate its founding with a special anniversary garden demonstrating the meticulous gardening technique of the faith, which will A perennial favorite feature of the garden show is the garden walk prepared by the Chicago Horticultural Society and several small garden clubs. This garden walk will include a chess game garden created by Lake Forest Garden Club, an early Illinois scene illustrating the of the wilderness area of Illinois by the Garden Club of Barrington, a year-round garden by the Garden Club of Kenilworth and Victorian rose and contemporary gardens by the Winnetka Garden Club.

Demo Club Has New Officers Bloomingdale Township Democratic Club met recently at the Embers Restaurant for the annual installation of officers. A cocktail hour and dinner preceded the business session. FLOWER MAKING IS FUN for Mrs. PhUip Link, Itasca, at left, and Mrs. C.

R. Howell, Bensenville. They are preparing decorations for the and luncheon and show of North DuPage Unit of Memorial Hospital Guild, set for Friday, March 29, at 12:30 p.m. at Itasca Country Club. Unit members will model ensembles from Country Club Fashions oi Elmhurst.

Tickets are available by calling (Staff Photo) PWP Dance Is March 30 Ladies Aid To Sponsor Food Show A homemaker demonstration on Fashions and will be sponsored by the Ladies Aid of Calvary Lutheran Church, Wood Dale, on Thursday evening, March 28.8 Guests are invited to the 7:45 p.m. program to be given by Miss Ruth J. Williams, food and homemaking consultant. Miss Williams will prepsffe a variety of dishes for special luncheon and dinner menus. She has a background of extensive lectures, cooking demonstrations and radio and television programs to her credit, and is a specialist in consumer services.

Tickets for the show may be obtained from Mrs. M. Ruehr- danz, 766-1984. The church is located at Wood Dale Road and Montrose Avenue. Tuesday Coffee For Newcomers Elk Grove Village Newcomers Club will hold its monthly coffee for new women in the area Tuesday, March 26, at 8:30 p.m.

This coffee will give new residents a chance to meet and learn the functions of the club. Anyone who has not received an invitation may call 437-2442. The club, a service and social organization, is open to all women in Elk Grove and surrounding communities. Th interested in further information may contact the membership chairman, Mrs. Walter Schramm at 437-2442.

Suburban Especially Bargain Mart Top Buys: Antiques BARRINGTON The Club of Countryside School, County Line Road, Barrington, has scheduled a rummage sale for Saturday, March 23, to be held at the school. Hours will be 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. ST. CHARLES Batavia Unit of the Auxiliary of Community Hospital, Geneva, has slated its 11th annual Fox VaUey Antique Show and Sale for March 27-29 in the exhibition hall of Kane County Fairgrounds, Randall Road, just west of St.

Charles. Thirty registered dealers will display their antiques. There will also be a variety of foods available at a snack bar. The show opens March 27 at 11 a.m. and closes March 29 at 5 p.m.

Proceeds will go into the scholarship fund. ARLINGTON HEIGHTS Chapter- Xof the PEO Sisterhood will hold a rummage sale on Friday, March 29, in St. Episcopal Church, Kirchoff Road, Arlington Heights. Hours are from noon to 8 p.m. Proceeds will support the Inte rnational Scholarship Fund.

BENSENVILLE The Viking Drum and Bugle Corps, affiliated with St. Alexis Church, Bensenville, will hold a rummage sale Monday, April 1, in the church hall, Barron and Wood Streets. Sale hours will be from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. PALATINE Palatine Nurses Club is holding a rummage sale on April 5 6 in Palatine Legion Hall 122 W.

Palatine Road. Benefit Film Is Tonight Tonight (Friday) Seventh District Women are presenting a color motion picture tour of the Grand Canyon. Sponsored by the Conservation Division of the Illinois Federation of Clubs and the Rolling Meadows Park District, the film will be shown at 8 p.m. in Southminster Presbyter i a Church, Arlington Heights. Proceeds will go toward creating a nature area for the children at Clearbrook Center in Rolling Meadows.

Tickets will be available at the door and all in the community are invited. JfoMWL anmuO IS NOW AT If tarUcm or CARPET INC. New officers of Parents without Northwest Suburban Chapter 168, will be installed in a candlelight ceremony Saturday, March 30. The installation will be held at the annual installa- Mrs. Harold Degenhardt of Glen Ellyn, chairman of the Central Democratic Cmnmittee of DuPage County, conducted the rites.

Newly installed are Mrs. Edward Rossi of Wheaton, president; Mrs. Robert Mahon, Keeneyville, vice president; Mrs. Alex Trembus, Roselle, secrietary; Mrs. Fred Miskanis, Roselle, corresponding secretary; Mrs.

William Firmstone, Bloomingdale, treasure. tion dinner dance to be held at the Concord Inn. The affair will begin with cocktails at 7:30 followed by dinner at 8:30, installation at 9:30 and dancing until 2 a.m. Installed as president will be Joseph Eschenbrenner of Arlington Heights. Vice presidents are Michael Bonner of Mount Prospect, Mel Frye of Elk Grove Village and Mrs.

Nancy Pain of Palatine. Mrs. Char Crawford of Palatine is secretary and Mrs. Betty Thompson of Hoffman Estates, treasurer. All members and other single parents are invited.

Those interested may contact the secretary at 358-4406. A SPRING CORSAGE by MARILYN HALLMAN i Surprise Mother with a Spring flower to wear in her lapel. You can make a fluffy carnation from a piece of pastel-colored facial tissue and a pipe cleaner. Fold the tissue in half. Cut along the fold so that you have two separate pieces, one on top of the other (A).

(If your mother has pinking shears, cut both edges with them.) Starting at the bottom edge, gradually pinch the length of the tissue together at the center (B). Twist one end of a pipe cleaner securely around the center. Pinch the bottom of the flower so that the petals are pushed up and together. Optly separate all the layers of tissue (C). And your carnation is ready to wear..

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About The Roselle Register Archive

Pages Available:
16,474
Years Available:
1966-1973