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Alton Evening Telegraph from Alton, Illinois • Page 18

Location:
Alton, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

EVENING HSLflOftAPH AUGUST 12, September Wedding Planned By Nancy jo Ohley, Fiance MISS OHLEY Mr. and Mrs. Edmund C. Ohley, 805 Maurice are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Nancy Jo, and Thorn- ns Edward Doran, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Carl T. Doran, 1215 Liberty St. The wedding will take place Sept. 4 at noon in St. Mary's Catholic Church.

A reception will follow in Knights of Columbus Hall. The bride-elect is a 1964 graduate of Alton High School, and attended Miss Hickey's School for Secretaries, St. Louis. She is employed ns a stenographer by St. Louis Car.

Mr. Doran is a 1963 graduate of Alton High School, and is employed by Owens-Illinois Machine Parts Manufacturing, Godfrey. Program of Sacred Music Heard in 12th St. Church By JOHN I. ADES Roy E.

Stillwell, organist, and Donald J. Nevins, baritone, presented a program of sacred music Wednesday evening in the Twelfth Street Presbyterian Church. Included were works by Bach, Mendelssohn, Vivaldi, Louis Vierne, Handel, and Carl HcKinley. Both performers are from this city, Mr. Nevins a student at Southern Illinois University, Mr.

Stillwell a doctoral candidate in organ at Eastman School of Music in Rochester. The program was opened by a set of 5 preludes by Bach and closed by 4 preludes by contemporary Carl McKinley. (Most of them were chosen with Wedding Is Planned in Jerseyville MISS RUE Mr. and Mrs, Allen Rue of Jerseyville are announcing the approaching marriage of their second daughter, Linda Kay, to Fred Neal Blasa, son of Mr. and Mrs, Fred Blasa of Rte, 3, Jerseyville.

The bride-elect is a 1965 graduate of Jersey Community High School. Mr. Blasa was graduated in 1964 from the same school and is employed by Laclede Steel Co. An Oct. 22 wedding is being planned by the couple.

an ear to the modest resources of the organ at hand no can- nonadings of Langlais or Franck or Tournemire were possible.) Both sets were done on hymns of the Christian Church, but, separated by some 200 years, the differences were of considerable interest. The comfort ing pieties of Bach's architectural genius, punctuated here by the singular sadness of "My Heart is Filled with Longing" (which Mr. Stillwell carefully kept from sentimentalizing), were given a nice cadence, especially in "If Thou but Suffer" and "Our Father." "Sleepers, Wake!" seemed a bit fast for the clean execution of the intricate figures. Carl McKinley's Preludes on Traditional Hymns were extremely interesting items. Here the composer threaded the well- known melodies of such hymns as "Faith of Our Fathers" and "Come, Thou Almighty King" through the fabric of modern harmonies not too far out, but just far enough to keep the alert listener chasing the familiar melody.

Mr. Stillwell made the most of the intriguing falling minor harmonies in "Faith of Our Fathers," and of the modernity with which the composer embroidered the simplicities of Isaac Watts' "When I Survey the Wondrous Cross." Louis Vierne's "Communion" was a nicely turned portrait of the soft exaltation of the Eucharist, admirably describing a traditional ceremony in fitting modern terms. Mr. Nevins sang two Mendelssohn arias, It Is Enough" from "Elijah," a'n "0 God, Have Mercy" from "St. and "Arm, Arm Ye Brave" from Handel's "Judas Maccabaeus." Of the three, the most convincing was the "0 God, Have Mercy," through the Handel aria, "Arm, Arm" went well after the opening cadence was settles, Mr.

Nevins' diction was careful and his pilch was excellent. His voice is full, resonant, and well articulated, though he seems to be pressing a baritone into the timber of a true bass, and the result is that a certain clarity is sacrificed for a breadth of tone that seems at times to be unnatural. Ann Landers First for Fall! PRINTED PATTERN F-A-S-T fall fashion! Just 3 main parts for slimming, skimming sheath with sunburst pin tucks radiating from neckline. Choose wool. Printed Pattern 4689: Half Sizes Size requires yards 45-inch fabric.

Fifty cents in coins for each 15c for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care Alton Telegraph, 177, Pattern 243 W. 17th New York, N.Y. 10011. Print Name, Address with Zip, Size and Style Number.

BE ALERT to What's Newl Send for excitement-packed Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog. 350 design views- school, career, glamor styles. Plus coupon for free It from Catalog. 50 cents. November Wedding Planned MISS ADAMS Mr.

and Mrs. Robert E. Adams of 1017 E. Seventh are announcing the engagement of their daughter, Janet Marie, to Larry D. Hernandez, son of Mr.

and Mrs. John Hernandez, 516 Shelly St. The wedding is planned for Nov. 13 in St. Patrick's Church.

A reception at the Knights of Columbus Hull will follow. Lettuce Likes a Hearty Dressing BY CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor LOTS OF folks think nothing tastes so good on iceberg lettuce as a savory, robust dressing Thousand Island, Russian, Blue Cheese or Rouquefort. For something new in the way Of dressings, here's a combination of sour cream, two kinds of semi-soft mild cheese, celery, parsley, sweet pickle and seasonings. When this recipe came Our way, we weren't sure about adding that sweet pickle; but trying the dressing with and without it, we vote for the pickle. Know how to remove the core from a head of iceberg? According to lettuce experts, you whack the head i down on a drainboard.

Then you lift or twist out the core with your fingers. What's against using a sharp knife? Cut edges discolor. If whacking gives you no pleasure, go ahead and use a knife! When lettuce is cored and Summer Salad When iceberg lettuce is given a dressing that is Chock full of cheese, it makes a main course salad, refreshing and hearty. tt cut just before serving, you don't have to worry about discoloration. But no matter how you choose to remove the core, be sure to rinse the lettuce.

Hold the head, core side up, under cold running water. And be absolutely sure to drain it throughly. Summer Salad 1 head iceberg lettuce Vj cup commercial sour cream cup chopped parsley 2 tablespoons lemon juice teaspoon crumbled thyme Dash of garlic powder Salt and white pepper 1 cup diced sharp cheddar cheese Vi cup diced mild white cheese (such as Edam or Jack) cups thinly sliced celery Si cup sliced sweet pickle 10 slices cucumber 10 half-slices tomato Core, rinse and drain lettuce. In a mixing bowl stir together the sour cream, parsley, lemon juice, thyme, garlic powder, teaspoon salt and pepper to taste; add the cheese, celery and pickles; mix well. Cut lettuce lengthwise into 5 wedges; arrange wedges on large serving plate in spoke fashion.

Fit alternating cucumber and tomato slices between wedges; sprinkle vegetables with salt and pepper. Heap cheese mixture in center. Makes sen-ings. 1 Her Beautiful Dream Collapsed DEAR ANN; How does ft woman recover when The Love of Her Life says, "Good-bye?" I was married 'to a man who was more like a father to me than a husband. He was 20 years my senior and died after we were married I only four years.

'Then I met an attractive, Intellectually stimulating, physically exciting man. I fell love for the very first time. Ann Landers. We had a mad, ecstatic affair and I gave myself to him body and soul. We talked of marriage and I was sure we were matched In heaven.

My dreams collapsed when he told me I'd better forget about him because we were not "right" for each other. It has been several months now and I can't get him out of my mind. I compare my love with every man I meet and there is no comparison. Please tell me how can a woman recover from a broken heart? -EMPTY DEAR EMPTY: Tell yourself it is self-defeating to cling to bits and pieces of something that no longer exists. The woman who grieves over The Man Who Got Away has a talent for screening out all the unpleasant aspects of the relationship.

She remembers only the heavenly moments. As time passes and memory dims, the dead romance becomes more beautiful in death than it ever was in life. The mind can accommodate only one thought at a time. Substitute another AP Food Weekend Review Aug. 21 Plans Are Complete Plans have been completed for the wedding of Miss Beverly Schuette and Roger Ro- 1eck, which will take place at 7 p.m., Aug.

21 in Zion Lutheran Church, Bethalto. Miss Schuette has chosen Miss Edith Helmkamp of Moro to be her maid of honor; Mrs. Michael Keefe and Miss Vivian Schuette, both of Bethalto, will be bridesmaids. Larry Rosenkoetter of Indianapolis will serve as best man for Mr. Rodeck.

The Rev. Rodney Forrester of Buffalo and Michael Schuette of Moro will be groomsmen. The bride has been honored at three showers. Mrs. Roland Rodeck, Mrs.

Harlen Swift and Mrs. Donald Bublitz gave a luncheon-shower on July 3 in Chicago. On July 19, her attendants gave a surprise miscellaneous shower; and Mrs. Arthur Wilkening, Mrs. Elmer Helmkamp and Mrs.

Eugene Helmkamp entertained in her honor on July 26. It's All Very Chic By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Poultry continues to dominate the picture as the best food buy for the coming weekend. The U.S. Agriculture Department also said weekend shoppers will find good supplies of seasonal fruits and vegetables. The USA listed good meat buys as ham, beef roasts, steaks, chucks and rib roasts.

Seasonal vegetables in good quantity at the market place will be green beans, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, celery and cucumbers. Best buys in fruits will be apples, bananas, cantaloupe, grapes, honeydews, limes, orange, peaches, plums and watermelons. Looking ahead, the Agriculture Department said food prices, which have risen more than 10 per cent over year-ago levels, should reach their peak this month or next then ease but not down to last year's level. something real and constructive for the fantasy. DEAR ANN: I worked as a hotel maid for 10 years and now I work in a motel It's the same difference.

The people who drive up in the most expensive cars and have the fanciest luggage are the biggest pigs. I hope you will print something about the way folks behave when they get outside their own homes. It's disgraceful. Can you imagine grown people wiping their shoes on bedspreads and using face towels to polish their cars? Well, they do. They also spill ink on the walls, leave beer cans and whiskey bottles under the beds, and walk out with 10 cent water glasses.

They check out leaving the TV on and the dirty water in the bath tub. The worst pigs of all leave no tip for the maid who has to clean up the mess and make the room look perfect for the next guests. If you print this, thousands of hard-working women will thank UP WITH PEOPLE DEAR FED: Here it is, and you're welcome. I strongly recommend that neat folks who travel leave 50 cents a night for the maid. Pigs, who travel should leave $1.

(c) Publishers Newspaper Syndicate After-Five Club Plans Picnic Plans were discussed for the annual picnic of the After-5 Social Club at its meeting Tuesday evening in the Bonneville Club. Mrs. Joseph Shaw was hostess. The picnic will be on Aug. 29 in Forest Park, St.

Louis. Mrs. Clarence Clark will be hostess for the September meeting. V. A Lovelier You Grow Painlessly By MARY SUE MILLER A Lovely writes: I have been wearing my hair very short and curly and I am now letting it grow so that I can change to a longer, smoother style in the fall.

But at the moment my hair is a mass of straight ends, and I don't know how I will get through the growing-out period unless you can give some suggestions for better control. The Answer: Growing pains can be avoided by taking a few simple steps. Perhaps the most important is to have a hairdresser even up the ends. Never fear, very little length is lost in the process. But the head looks much neater and has a better chance for uniform growth.

Another good move is to have an uncurly or body permanent. It will keep the ends from flying and give some shape and bounce to the overall picture. It will not interfere and may help in styling a longer, smoother "do." The Family The Scene Changes at the Hamptons By JEAN SPRAIN WILSON AP Newsfcatures Writer THE HAMPTONS, N.Y. (AP) Last year the really chic thing to do here was to go discotheque dancing at the Wharf, a picturesque shipyard barn with an incongruous crystal chandelier. This year the chic crowd presses across the gangplank onto a noisy, smoky, congested, fishnet-draped, lantern-lit railroad barge once used to shuttle vegetables across New York harbor.

There they writhe on a tiny patch of mahogany to the frenzied beat of the Rascals, billed as the hottest new "rock" group in the East. It is also chic to carom through the streets in convertibles and climb out over the door; to fly kites at the country club pool; to crash houseparties after 2 a.m.; to sleep 40 winks on the floor of somebody's cottage and start all over again. The Hamptons on Long Island, site of summer homes for moneyed people, have always been chic and colorful with miles of dunes, beaches, fishing boats, windmills, and high- hedged estates hiding old mansions and sprawling, imported lawns. It was always chic but somnolent until it became very chic to have fun day and night. Especially night.

Now The Hamptons are chic and swinging. Oldtimers dispair the steady encroachment of motels and cooperative hotels; beer cans in roadside gutters; parked cars filled with sleeping, party-exhausted teen-agers too broke to invest in a night's lodging. As raspy-voiced, piano-tinkling jet set favorite, Hugh Shannon, explains it, "All of a sudden Prince Migual was on the doorstep with about 100 pieces of luggage and a lovely companion and with no place to go but my house. We managed, though." So did Carol Channing and husband, Rons Jaffe and friends, etc. eic.

The Shannon seaside cottage is always bulging and bouncing with interaa- ional fun-loving celebrities. Friday's night life get a stow start after the Long Island Kail- road Club have disgorged the last commuter and the sports cars of affluent New Yorkers have tediously crawled through two and a half hours of traffic. On Saturday and Sunday it starts at noon and lasts till dawn. Along with The Barge the chic "stops to make include the.Mid- MIRROR OF YOUR MIND Is graphology a science? Answer; Handwriting experts have studied the writing patterns of thousands of people, and related them to the character of the writers. This is something of a scientific approach, and is preferred by most reputable psychologists.

Intuitive graphology (following By Joseph Whitney handwriting with a finger and attempting to feel what the writer must have felt) is not considered a scientific approach, although some practitioners are said to have obtained useful results by using it. Are early risers effective doers? Answer: Not necessarily. When a duty calls for early rsing, and the sleeper manages to comply, he is deserving of some credit. Oddly enough there is a considerable number of people who get up early because they are lazy. For them, early rising is something of a pagan ritual; once they are out of bed they can coast through the day.

As a rute they give their least effort to toe things they must do, and avoid planning and Should baby-talk be outlawed? Aaswer: Hardly. And old- fashioned idea holds that using baby-talk with youngsters keeps them from learning the real language of life, and prolongs infancy. Since the most articulate children come from homes where toe adults are articulate, and since writers and poets are among those most addicted to baby and nonsense talk; would seem that this theory is groundless. It is more Inhibiting tor a child to live in an environment where pgopig are si trot. IMS.

Kins hamptons Country Club where Shannon, the daytime party host, becomes Shannon the nighttime saloon singer with the same sophisticates of the day encircling him worshipfully at the piano like kiddies in kindergarten. It is very chic for ladies to wear bellbottom trousers and lace pajamas to the discotheques; hair long and straight; false eye lashes; cowboy hats; sandals by night and bare feet by day; bikinis at poolside but never in the water. It is very chic for men to wear open-necked shirts and ascot ties, blazer or madras jackets and loud slacks bought at a men's store that has blue polka dotted awnings. It is very chic at The Hamptons. Burns and Lemastus Vows Said Residing at 3423 Gillham St.

are Mr. and Mrs. Terry Burns who were married Saturday in St. Patrick's Catholic Church. She is the former Miss Betty Lemastus, and is the daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Earl Lemastus, 729 Central and he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burns, 2200 Morning Star Drive. Attending the couple were Mrs.

Ron Saylor and Jerry Abert. Mike Hickman and Ronald Wolff ushered the guests. The bride wore a street length dress of white satin brocade in an A-Une style. Her veiled headpiece was secured by a satin flower cluster and she carried white and pink glamel- lias. Mrs.

Saylor wore a pink chiffon dress with a matching veiled headpiece and pink glamellias. The former Miss Lemastus is a 1963 graduate of Alton High School, and attended Southern Illinois University. She is employed by Snyder's Department Store. Mr. Burns is a 1861 graduate of Marquette High School and is attending SIU.

He is employed by Owens-minois. As soon as feasible, begin to brush-train the hah? into the lines of the projected styling. Brush-training helps hi the production of a new style and its manageability. It also lets you preview the pros and cons of your styling dream. To control heavy sections as they develop, use grip combs and hair bands.

Setting lotion and gels and holding sprays work wonders against shaggy dog effects. A wiglet just might work miracles, particularly if it's so good it looks as though you grew it! RULE YOUR WAVES What's your hair problem? You'll Hnd a way to overcome It In my IB-pane booklet. "Rule Your Waves." Advice includes: beauty treatments for oily. dry. and normal hair; ways to manage unruly locks; how to add color and highlights; tips on cutting, permanents and styling; grooming tricks.

Write Mary Sue Miller In care of the Alton Telesr. for your copy, enclosing a large, self addressed, stamped envelope and 20 cents In coin, (c) Publishers Newspaper Syndicate All Puff Stitch Curl-up, crochet and join curl-up and enjoy cozy luxury of this afghan. Puff-stitch triangles join to form hexagons. A grand way to use up odds and ends of knitting worsted. Pattern 651: crochet directions.

Thirty-five cents in coins for each 15c for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler, Alton Telegraph, 66 Needlecraft Box 161, Old Chelsea Station, New York, N. Y. 10011. Print pattern Number, Name, Address, Zip.

NEEDLECRAFT SPECTACULAR 200 designs, 3 free patterns In new 1966 Needlecraft Catalog. Knit, crochet shifts, shells, jackets, hatsl Plus toys, embroidery, quilts, morel Send 25 cents. "Decorate with Needlecraft" fabulous book, 25 patterns for decorator accessories shown In 5 idea-filled rooms. 50 cents. Send for superb Quilt complete patterns.

50 cents. Karen Ann Bedwill Is Bride Mr. and Mrs. Carl B. Bedwill of 908 Robert Drive, Godfrey, are announcing the marriage of their daughter, Karen Ann, to J.

H. Calte, formerly of Cuba. The couple was married Sunday in Cocoa, Fla. A dinner was given by the bride's aunt, Mrs. Eugene Stifel, following the wedding.

The former Miss Bedwill is employed as an IBM key punch operator at Cape Kennedy, Fla. She is a 1963 graduate of Alton High School. Mr. Calle, son tf Mr. and Mrs.

J. C. Cafle of Havanna, is employed by the "Mousetrap," a steak house The couple is making their home in Cape Kennedy, Fla. Cooking Marinated artichoke hearts (quartered) do wonders for a tossed green salad..

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About Alton Evening Telegraph Archive

Pages Available:
390,816
Years Available:
1853-1972