HT N ^ -* ^ \ ' - •»' -•< - • • '<i» •. » .' ; •«»*•# ^ JT" r. f, February, IS, 1996 »,"* •*£•?"* If ».-*»•> + «•»-•' * *-<t|IaSj<«"^ C» ->-» *• ~ •" < .* . - Pag* FN* HIGH 80H00L FIVES ^ WIH FROM RICHMOND ; IfcHemr rolled up a total of 51 points Friday night to take a decisive victory from the Richmond , aquad. Richmond was very much in the game daring the first half, the score stand* ing 19-16 in McHenry's favor as the half ended. Nine points separated the two teams as the third quarter ended 36 to 26. Even at this point the crowd seemed to fear that Richmond's scoring machine might bring them up too close for comfort in the last period. With the starting lineup of Kramer £t center, Beckenbaugh and Adams at forward, Clarence Anderson and Vernt »sFveund at guard, playing together for all but a few minutes in the third quarter, McHenry presented the smoothest working combination that has been seen this year. The combination worked with a finesse that has seldom been approached during past games. There was speed and dash in the whole crew as they pranced through their paces. Bob Beckenbaugh led the scoring with eight field goals and two free throws. ; Coach Reed sent in a complete new lineup late in the game, but rushed ( YOU BB FANS; A TWICWOLO SPORTS TALE CHICAGO "WHITE SOX" HERE IN 1914 ~A$' the request of several baseball fans in the community the Plaindealer is reprinting the following writeup, which appeared in columns back in the year 1914. Other games will be reprinted from time to time if this proves interesting to the readers. Your requests for reprints will be granted. Cub fans may want the game of 1915. SPORTS EDITOR/ Bodie. Roth was safe on Koob's error, while Delehanty and Warner retired Manda for the third out. Three more runs were registered in tJjjp sixth by the Sox. Baker, the first man up in the round, hit to center for three bases. Faber was given free transportation to first: Demmitt rolled on to Koob, who threw to plate just too late to get Demmitt and as a result all hands were safe. Both base .runners advanced a peg on Blackburne's sacrifae. Blackburne took Weaver's placeNat short in the sixth ning. Bodie dnew a base on bails, 'ournier grounded to Koob, who threw the batter out at first, Faber the" PlaindeaTer scoring and Demmitt going to third. I Mayer shot one thru Riley, the error ' allowing--Demmitt to score. Roth went out on a long fly to opfergelt ; at center. j The past pair of tallies for the j visitop came in the seventh session. | Bending, now pitching for the home j team, hit Manda, the first man up in BOWLING NEWS SOX DAY A BIG SUCCESS 1409 People See Chicago Teep Win Over McHenry - Yesterday was White Spx day in McHenry and to say the veiy least it proved one glorious success. ... . , .- , • The distinguished guests arrived J,,.civuunie. BK.ieu ^ !n ,.W]ien !t aPP**r- here from Chicago on the 10:18 train. while Brailsford copped Bodie's fly. that Richmond had found new life, Thcy were met at the depot by the! : That fel low, Ehorn refused to accqp* committee of representative business} CHICAGO " defeat and kept popping away at the men of the village and were at once ! Jj. tfo F"^' He led j conveyed to the Riverside Hohse via I Demmitt, If 8 2 the visitors with 17 points. Ford cars kindly donated for the event Weaver ss * In spite of the speed of the game fey the hhstling .Ford dealer, John R. Blackburne, ss only 15 fouls were called, Richmond Knox. ' After partaking of a light lunch at the Riverside, the athletes with members of the reception committee and the McHenry baseball players boarded the passenger boat Gladene .this round. Brailsford dropped fiber's easy fly, the error allowing Manda to reach second. Beth runners advanced a peg on Faber's sacrifice. Demmitt hit to Koob. Warner let Koob's throw get away from him and the runners on the foot paths scored. Blackburne skied out to Opfergelt, having only six marked against them. I McHenry scored seven points from the1 free throw line while Richmond scored nine. j The second team got off to a slow Bodie, cf ournier, lb ayer, c Roth, rf ............. Manda, 2b ......... Baker, 3b ......... 8 ^ ku' came back strong to take for a trip up Fox River to Pistakee Walsh. n an overtime contest by a 19 to 17 g&y This took up about an hour and Faber. p score. The score stood 17 all as the a half, after which dinner was par^1 final gun ended the regulation time. taken at the Riverside This game had the crowd howling dliring the final minutes of excitement. McHENRY -- 51 Adams, f ............ Beckenbaugh, f. Taxman, f Knox, f .... Kramer, c ........... Miller, c -- Freund, g , C. Anderson, g .. G, Anderson, g .. P. Juaten,rg .....„ ' B 5 8 1 0 ............... 4 ......... 0 ....< ... 1 3 ..v.- 0 ; 0 Out of town people began to arrive shortly after dinner and by 1:30 o'clock automobiles and other vehicles 1 .......... 0 "HI! 0 ... 1 0 2 8 0 3 1 0 7 12 2 1 1 0 0 Totals .... McHEKRY 12 10 27 7 3 Totals .... RICHMOND -- 85 B Shorn, f 6' Anderson, f .......... $ Bowman, f ................ 1 Vogel, c ................ 3 Bell, g 0 GlbbS, g 0 •m i o R H P A E Riley, ss 0 0 1 S i were beginning to take up the space Comiskey, Sb ................ 0 0 0 0 0 along the side lines of the baseball Wicks, rf 114 0 0 diamond. The attendance came up to Opfergelt, cf'..... 0 0 1 10 expectations, the crowd numbering Bending, p 0 17 10 close onto 1,400 people. Warner, lb - 0 111 2 Everything passed off to a most Koob, 2b 0 0 7 1 2 orderly.manner. The crowd behaved Grant, c 0 0 3 0 1 well and everyone present enjoyed the Delehanty, p ............... 0 0 0 0 0 afternoon's matinee in spite of the Sahlberg, p. 0 0 0 2,1 rfne-sidedness. Behlke, If ........0 0 0 0 0 Sahlberg, McHenry's plucky little; . ------ port sider, opened the game for Mc- Totals 1 3 24 9 7 T Henry while he had as his opponent I ' Score by Innings • . none other than Big Ed. 'W alsh, whalchicago 1 1 0 0 5 3 2 0' x--12 irup until two years ago was the pride McHenry 00010000 0-- 1 I of the pitching staff of the White Sox Two base Hit--Demmitt, Three i and one of the leading pitchers in the Base Hit--Baker. Home Run--Mayer. The Foresters wound up another six weeks- of bowling last Friday night with the following standings: Team No. 3 -15,653. Team No. 1--15,539 Team No. 2----15,316 Team No. 4 14,808 Team No. 3 led by Eld Smith were high for the six week period. They trimmed Wink el's team No. 2 Friday i^ight, 2612-2453. Staith led his team with a 224 game and 605 series. Victor Freund led the losers, rolling a 202 game and 554 series. Herb Simon's team No. 1 bowled a total of 2433 pins to trim George Justen's team No. 4 and also to replace the Winkel team in second place standing. Clarence Stilling was high man with a 582 series. A1 Justen led the losers with a 559 total. At a meeting following the bowling match, prizes' were awarded for the past six weeks. Leo Winkel won the sa£k of flour donated by John Bolger for the high single game. Red's mark was 246. A smoking stand donated by Jacob Justen and Sons was , won by George Justen and given badk as a prize in the next match. A box of Monogram Cigars donated' by Vernon Knox for the largest increase in average was won by Jack Theis, who increased his average 8 points. The Forester Pin donated by A.. E. Nye was ^on by Paul Karls for his 63.1 total in'" a' three game series. Ed Smith's team won two gallons of cider donated by Toots Eddy. Prizes for the coming six weeks/are: High single game for individual- One quart of choice liquor donated by Earl Monear. High Team--Two quarts of ice cream to each man. Donated by Felix Unti. High Increase in Average--5-lb. box of candy, donated by Jac^.Thies. High series -of. three weeks--Smoking stand by George Justen. Low team for 6 weeks--Case of McHenry Lager beer donated by Leo Heimer. The Old Timers continued with close matches. Schaefer's team scor. ed a 2551-2514 victory over the Bacons. Page's 546 average was high on the Schaefer team with Covalt's 540 leading those present. Freund was high on the Bacon team with a 525 series. Granger's team, led by Adams with a 237 game and 586 series, beat Sayler's boys 2584 to 2561. Smith led the losers, rolling a 550 series. "SO I HEAR" by EARL WALSH Vern "White Hope" Harrison, the eminent story teller, wants a longer column this week. He says our efforts on the rest of the sport page are wasted--he just reads "So I Hear." We aim to please. Jake Stoffel, the noted fisherman, would like some reprints of old baseball games played in McHenry way back when he was a boy. He would also like to have some baseball problems presented. Again, thtf reader is right. We will look up a game and print it elsewhere on "the sport page. You Will find a problem at the end of the column. The answer will appear next week. --r • • Leo Conway /would like more "Things I'd .like to see again."' We have done this bit of looking backward twice, but vnll harve some more soon. Speak right up folks, you have what you want in "So I He«r." Another group of readers hands in this little story. They say that Coach Reed was found last Friday afternoon before the Richmond game playing mournful tunes on what they termed a "bass fiddle." They want the story printed and, since the smashing victory, insist that the coach strike off a few soulful notes before each game from now on. We fear that superstition has crept in as others attribute our win to a broken shoe string or two. One of the most loyal team rooters, Mrs. George Stilling, hoofed it in to the game and suffered broken shoe strings in the huge snow banks that defied all travelers. C. O. F. TEAM NO. ONEAmerican league. Left on Bases--Chicago, 6; McHenry, Sahlberg pitched the first four in- 6. Hit by Pitcher--Baker, Warner. Totals 13 9 6 EMPIRE PROGRAM CHANGED There was no show at the Empire - .. , . . .. , „ tteater Monday .right .nd the popS..r ?f 1'!^ nings, during which time he allowed the leaguers but five hits and struck out three men. Walsh pitched the first five innings and his record was three hits, one run and' seven strikeouts. The visitors also got two runs. fRed" Delehanty took up the task Struck Out By Walsh, 7; by Faber, 5; by Sahlberg, 3; by Delehanty, 2; by Bending, 1. Bases on Balls off Sahlberg, 1; off Delehanty, 1.- Umpire-- Howard. Stililng ......... Knox Karls Bolger ........... Simon .wwu.;;., 204 181 197--582 14i . 184 150--476 ...... 183 233 131--547 209 156 211--565 204 147 202--553 The five subs who entered the Richmond game long enough to score a basket on a pass that went from Knox to Taxman to the net, want it known that tl^py were in on the scoring. Without that basket, who knows, maybe we couldn't have gone over the 50 mark. All jokes aside, those same five men, "Bud" Miller, Knox, Taxman, Glenn Anderson and Paul Justen would make a pretty snappy com* bination all in their own right. ~ ~~ picture, "So Red the Rose,'* which was scheduled for Sunday and Monday nights will be shown at a later date. Because of the'blocked highways the film, which is brought by truck, did not arrive. "Hands Across the Table," which was shown Saturday night, was repeated Sunday night, much to the delight of several of the young people who did not get to see ft Saturday night. McHenry, Illinois Weekdays--1:10--9:1© C. S. T. THURSDAY -- FRIDAY "IF YOU COULD ONLY COOK'• . SATURDAY ~~ FEBRUARY 15 "MILLIONS IN THE AIR" SUNDAY -- MONDAY Myrna Lov -- Soencer Trac ^ "WHIPSAW'V --r--ALSO--Selected Shorts Matinee--3 p. m., Continuous " TUESDAY "Your Uncle Dudley" WED., THUR., FRI "ANNIE OAKLEY" in the fifth inning and went thru that an4 the succeeding inning with more or less trouble. "Red" didn't seem to have much, as the Chicagoans pounded his offerings to every corner of the lot. In two innings that he graced the mound he allowed five hits, hit one batter, issued two passes and struck out two men. Eight runs were registered by the visitors in these two rounds. Bending pitched the last two innings and was given a round of applause when he took his place in the pitchers' box in the seventh inning, Altho the White Sox got two runs in the seventh and eighth, they were a result of poor support, as Louie allowed nary a hit and struck out one man. , For Chicago, Faber relieved Walsh in the fifth and had little trouble in setting the locals down without a hit or run. Besides this, he is credited with eight strike outs. One of the best fielding stunts of the day was Opfergelt's catch of Bodie's hard drive in the third inning. Opfergelt ran from deep to short center and picked the drive • off the end of his shoe strings. After catching the ball he turned a complete sommersault, but hung on to the sphere for .the out. The work was warmly applauded by the multitude in attendance. In the sixth inning he THIS AND THAT Turtle oil, refined and perfumed, is now used in cosmetics. The people of this country make nearly 25,IX*),000,000 telephone calls a yenr. . Here Is one suggested way of figuring the number of calorics a school child needs each day: multiply the child's weight by ten. SHARPS AND FLATS Silk hats are again becoming popular in lx>ndon. .Dundee, Scotland, pedestrian crossings. has afcollsbei A process server conmandeered tbe elevator in the Washington tmnumert to serve a writ oa a man at the t*rj» of the shaft. When llgfatnibg recently struck a tree in the East Randesh Jangle of India It left the core, from top to root* a track of charcoal, A burning glass nearly 10 feet In diameter has been constructed to test the possibility of harnessing solar heat for industrial purposes. • 942 900 891 2733 TEAM NO. FOUIt-- Unti ....; --160 138 103--401 Schaefer 164 159 169--492 Weber 177 157 202--536 A. Justeii ........... 174 182 203--559 G. Justen 189 144 139--472 864 780 816 2460 TEAM NO. TWO-- V. Freund 160 192 202--554 G. Freund 162 157 120--429 Thennes 145 197 141--483 Sutton .... 159 143 160--462 Wiaksi 201 172 152--525 In the second team game LeRoy Hettermann pulled what might be called the play of the evening. Little Roy dashed back to his guard position and leaped through the air like the man on the flying trapeze to smear a pass that was just settling in the .hands of a wide-open forward. It was ' a desperate chance that proved a slick piece of defensive work. I After the game, Refere Brunswick declared the game was one of the two fastest he has worked. There were : two referees and both were plenty busy. Saw Bill Brunswick at the game. He played some basketball for McHenry back in another day. He runs [a garage in Genoa Junction now. 817 861 775 2453 TEAM NO/THREE-- Heimer Thies - Nye «... SteCfes 188 149 131--468 157 160 164--481 196 187 184--567 165 190 136--191 178 203 224--605 Snow or no snow, we «can't stay away from baseball any longer. No matter how much news there is to read, a baseball story always looms before our eyes and holds * magnetic spell over us. 886 887 839 2612 OLD TBAM Hughes w«r Karls Freund TIMERS' . TWOCLUB 148 200 167--515 194 149 179--522 165 146 142--453 193 192 140--525 Bacon 148 172 179--199 Major league teams are preparing for a take off this month for the sunny states. ' 848 859 1807 2514 TEAM NO. FOUR-- »i>ODSTOCK FRIDAY--ONLY FEBRUARY 14 Biward Everett Horton in "Your Uncle Dudley" SATURDAY ONLY The Year's Greatest Laugh Hit! Joan Blondell -- Glenda Farrell Hugh Herbert -- Allan Jenkins MISS PACIFIC FLEET' SUNDAY -- MONDAY Claudette Colbert -- -- Fred MacMurray "THE BRIDE COMES HOME" Musical Comedy in Color • Cartoon 15c TUESDAY 15c Sixteen Western Stars! "POWDERSMOKE RAN***-" WEDNKbbAi .luotidifA • Berber* Marshall -- Jean Arthur "IF YOU COULD ONLY COOK" FEBRUARY CAPTAIN Y 2S - 24 BLOOD" Bananas France 20 made another beautiful running catch | of Koth's long drive to deep cente*. I .. , Both catches were of the big league variety and the distinguished guests had to admit that the work was exceptional and would do credit to any big leaguer. Mcrxenry's lone tally came in the four inning. Opfergelt singled past short and was sacrificed to second by Bending. Delehanty skied out to Roth j in right field. Koob shot a hot bound- j er right at Walsh. Walsh juggled the ball a moment and then made a Uid tnrow to fifst, the ^all rolling out into the wilderness. The error allow-1 ed Opfergelt to score from second. Chicago's first run - came in the first inning. Demmitt opened the round with a two base hit to center ! and came home on Weaver's single ' to left. Weaver was advanced to! third on Bodie's single to center. Fournier bounced one to Sally. Sally ' threw to Warner at first, who started! down the first base line to tag the j runner and also off Weaver, "who started for home on the play. Weave* made a daring dash for the plate, but Warner's throw had beat him there and he was waved out by the umpire. In the meantime Fournier had reached first. Fournier was caught stealing and Mayer fanned. Five more white hosed gents crossed the counting pan in the fifth stanze ( "Red" Delehanty, who had taken the box, hit Baker, the first man up. Walsh struck out. Baker went to second on a passed ball and on to third when "Red" made a bad throw to second in his attempt to get Baker off the bag. Demmitt singled to center, the hit scoring Baker. Demmitt stole second and came home on Weaver's single to center. Weaver stole second and came home on Bodie's single to left. Bodie stole second and third while Fournier was fanning. Mayer straightened out one of "Red's" that old custom of ducking successful candidates for local offices in the horse trough i^i the public square. Searchlights, telephones, loudspeakers, and. a patent sling, worked by one man, which can lower anything to the ground, are fitted to a new fire engine in London. A woman's .battalion lias been formed in Cuba in preparation for future revolts. All the feminine warriors are uniformed and receive daily military Instructions. Beavis Covalt Johnson Page Schaefer .......... 165 165 165-^495 168 180 192--540 136 138 163--437 182 182 182--546 186 187 160--533 We note that owners have almost unanimously gone on record as advocating that players follow Larrupin' Lou Gehrig's three "R's" during off season--"reading, rest and relaxation." Charlie Grimm disagrees somewhat. He says that players should get plenty of walking exercise such as hunting. Steve O'Neill, of Cleveland, doesn't object to gymnasium work, but warns his pitchers against handball or other sport that might endanger their salary arms. dough--but, that's nothing, you've wished the same thing. . . . Wonder where the time goes--days, weeks, months, years--must have wasted a 1 lot of time along the line. . . , What would our grandparents think of the radio--My grandfather refused to believe the graphaphone or music box-- thought somebody was playing a joke on him. ... Wonder if our Primary election laws will ever change--may have relatives on opposite tickets-- or even friends, ... Oh Me! Oh My! --Betcha^ftl have a heated garage next year--Echo: Said that-last year . ... Wish I could get up a basketball team of Andersons--plenty of boys; I guess--John has a couple of girls ; there that could fill in OK--Maybe | better make it a baseball team-- j Would like to challenge some other team of brothers and sisters. . . . Most of our little feathered friends, the birds, have good sense---tour south in winter--talce a little fly north for themselves in the summer--no permanent home to worry about--rio decorating-- no /upkeep--no taxes--just build a little shack for themselves wherever they land---not so dumb the gypsy is cropping out on me. . . . Just happened to think that the snow shoveling crew think they deserve mention in "So I Hear"--Nice going men and more power--Thought they had shoveled themselves out of a job last week, but that was all taken care of in the Saturday deluge--It's an ill wind that blow's no good--And it's a queer wind that brings no snow. . . . Wonder if fiying machines will ever be used as commonly as automobiles-- Since the perfection of* radio I'll believe anything. . . . Did someone say, "If Winter Comes, Can Spring be Far Behind?" We are asking--Wonder if Santa Claus got back home before this weather--Haven't heard anything about the old boy lately--Such fading popularity!--He'll come back strong though. ... The lost art of flipping bobs hag been revived and the boyB report grand success--Little armies may be seen these days tramping around in search--We did the same things. ... Why did the Boston Braves have to change that name to Bees--Youll have to read many a wisecrack or pun or sport pages about that name--Bees in the cellar is no joke; . . . Wonder if Lon Warneke's arm will be OK this season. . . . Wonder if A1 Simmons will hit a home run his first game with the Tigers--It's been his habit with other teams. . . . AI Krause says that last Sunday was the first time he was without newspapers in all his years in the news business--Sunday without a paper is like ham without eggs, a pen without ink, George Burns without Grade Allen--Figure one out for yourself-- Six Years Ago Revived MAACS trimmed 'Skokie Reds 26 to 19r MCHS Basketeers took 1 point- victory frcm Hebron, It was 9 to 8 game. Schreiner scored McHenry's only field goal. Ten Years Ago High school teams won two games from Woodstock. Captain Whiting and Overton were the big guns. Fifteen Years Ago Hebron Tribune: Messrs. Miller and Justen, fathers of Henry Miller and Frank Justen of McHenry, were here last Saturday night to witness the game in which their sons played on the famous Rascals team. Both gentlemen were highly pleeased with the exhibition and were more than astonished at the crowd that packed the building until there was scarcely standing room around the floor. A recent article in the McHenry paper stated that „"At a recent basketball game in Hebron everyone was present at the game but three and these were und/er the care of the doctor," and both of the McHenry fathers expressed themselves of being satisfied that even these three whe were previously sick were well and present at the game Saturday night. Hebron people! certainly enjoy basketball and the Rascals as a drawing card surely pot up the clever games that the peopls like to see. Nearly every town for miles around was represented on Siturday night and nearly everyone stayed for the dance. Basketball is sure the one big indoor sport for cojnmuhity. , - > Baseball Question Bases are loaded, two dowft, batter hits to shortstop, who throws to second but} misses his man. Runner between second and third is trapped (no one covering,third base) and eventual* ly tagged. Man on third in the mean» time crosses home plate and was on the player's bench when the out wu finally made. Does this run eMvttC "-Jul LYONS SEEN AS BIG FIGURE IN NEXT ASSEMBLY maii from Libertyville is looming large on the political horizon, with veteran observers predicting that he may rise to tall heights should the GOP. elephant stampede the Democratic donkey next November. The young man is State Represent* ative Richard J, Lyons, one of the most talkative members of the present assembly, mixing his words with humOr and sting. He is probably watched more by Democratic Speaker John P. Devine, Dixon, than any e# the Republican members. Lyons, too, has a host of followers on the Democratic side and has occasionally been an annoyance to Devine to see some of them flock to tfc* Libertyville solon's support when the latter has a measure which he is trying to advance. Lyons, a dapper dresser, is ready to take part in any debate and if titers isn't any he starts one. He is generally always smiling when he is shooting darts at the Democrat*, although he asures the latter there is no partisan politics in what he says. Lyons has had his eye on the speakership for some time. He was a candidate for it before the 1934 election, but the Democrats won house control again, and so he is marking time until after the coming election when, he feels sure, the G.O.P. will go o«t to win. YOUR GIZZARD CAPSULE Change of scenery sometimes helps. Babe Herman hit only .235 in twentysix games with Pittsburg last year. After going to the Reds he hit 100 $3T" TEAM NO. THREE-- Barbian 169 169 Pries 164 1(3 Goodell '156 188 Smith 205 173 S^|«r 167 172 j6g 5Q7 Lefty Grove says his arm will be 164 .92 back in shape this year--which makes us wonder what he means. Didn't he win twenty games for Boston last year. .. 150--494 172 --550 179--518 % OUR NEIGHBORS were a luxury years ago. fruit lo Hardy and fierce hyenas are found in all sections of Ethiopia. , A reformatory of 5,300 bandits has been established In China. The Congo region of Africa has been under Belgian rule 50 years. Scotland is claiming It prodUees the finest moleskin in the world. r Holland has 17,000 acres d«<r6fed to the cultivation of flower bulbs.- Putting rings through children's noses has been banned in Tripoli. More than 100 patients and a doctor were poisoned recently, in a Osaka (Japan) sanitarium. Much of the Australia's gold belt, which Is 2.000 miles long and 800 miles wide, fctt neter been -touched,-according to a government report. GOLD ~ SEAL EGCi MASH mixed fast ones for a circuit clout over the freah daily at the Fanners Mill. Phone left field fence, the hit also scoring 29. 38-2 861 866 -834 2561 TEAM NO. ONE-- Wattles 124 115 159--398 Schaefer 177 152 194--523 Perkins 211 159 167--537 Adams 181 168 237--586 ganger 179 194 167--540 ! They say. there were no friendships Ion the diamond for Ty Cobb. He'd [treat you to a dinner ajt night and spike you the next day if .you got in his way. 872^ 788 924 2584 SCHOOLS WERE CLOSED MONDAY Schools were closed Monday, but it was decided to open Tuesday and to continue sessions regularly as any more time off would necessitate the making up of the days at the, end of the school year. -r- Supt. C. H. Duker was seen to anxiously scan the unbroken expanse of drifted highway to Crystal Lake, worried as to how his teachers were to return to McHenry in time to open school Tuesday morning. Miss Stevens, Miss Taylor and Miss O'Gara and Mr. and Mrs. Ellis went to Chicago for the weekend and Mrs. Rulien was in Woodstock. The superintendent's problem was solved, however, when the snow plow went through Tuesday morning, opening the highway to Crystal Lake, where he met the teachers at the train shortly after noon Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis, who were returning to McHehry in their automobile, were stalled at Wheeling, later getting to Crystal Lake and finally to McHenry Tuesday. Subscribe for The Plafnflsaler. Minus the ©Id 'wiratter^'-iB'a^'^iiuth', the Yanks played to 250,000 fewer customers last year. This represents more than $100,000 in cash: Which leads Eddie Brietz, of the Associated Press, to ask if the Babe earned his $80,000 per. 'A review shows that third basemen lack class in the present crop of major leaguers. The champion Tig-rs are looking for a; man to take jfarvin Owen's spot. The Cardinal will send Pepper Martin to right field and put" Charley Gelbert on third. Pie Traynor, once king of thiH sackers, is getting old. So is Jimmy Dykes, but he plans to take the hot spot another year or so. Another great shortstop of a few yeans back, Travis Jackson, figures to crowd out all comers for the Giant's third base job. Bill Werber and Cecil Travis figure to romp the outer gardens, come next April. Stan Hack of the Cubs will do and do very nicely. Snowbound Musings Wonder where Jim Fay is now and jw he's getting along ?--Maybe i im» wasn't the best athlete we ever saw, but he was so dog-gonned determined that nothing could stop him. . . . Never see Eddie Matthews--Hear he's going to school--Miss his chatter-- Could drop in the di g store to say, Hello, and darned if be wouldn't sell me something. . . Wish I had lotsa 'jf GETS ALL 3 KINDS j • OF WOJBMS i m Most fowls have Tapee BbS * Ptaa u wan as Rotito* WornM • AH tfcrva ktnds graaUy riiwl «gg production. 4 • Ths Gloard Capsule Is mMl • effective again* every hind v • htttUTT tt dose Ml dlpssl » o ^ d n i f b r t t a j s ; 0 or more drugs to each kind efi • worms. And Its uiedhine 19 • earned through te the ftawt " in the patented mCMLUBLI ooattng. Bafa. and man at beet results. A protfoet of the Oe* B.UeOa 4 Oet more egg* ON mM|: B layer % 0wrt Ogaule THOMAS P. BOLGIX "The McHenry Druggist" Phone 40 Green Street The second Mg week, end in A & P's month ofval ues--stock up during this great sale of foods and household RrtTBeaas 5»&»2Sc . 5£5)2tc turn mac FaacyRice . . 3lm.13c Heinz Asst'd. 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