HEAR" R. WALSH i|Word cornea ia from the McHenry " leball Uum Ant the i played ana protested by Crystal Lake at Johnsburg will be ' lyed over on Angut 11th at Johna- ,This should be a bi$ attraction. 'v * you nerer can tell what Yon had better mark next An««s*l*h, down ea yonrJ The Idftae tea aw at 1 §•» Cenway'a Co-eds the Case E«|ks on ov local Thm McHenry 8hamroeks travelled to Crystal Lain last Baadaj, took a UkfaMr fee the keaatiful and nactoaa • hi«Uy-reted BSD wing last batters, fc« _. . . 19 to 4 mm mm his left _ oat tea akaped vcp a1 Wtley on the SKOOND IN LEAGU1 Next Oanday will end the second round of ptay in the McHenry Oomrty BaaelNul Lmim, with the exception taro .ln the second Johnaborr and ud tamed the The firls want as to Mot teWing Lakers f tot yea tMa wnek a>--I «nifta big Jkn l*dan's pHehins performance attraction artw&rted for. Manday,1 atood oot aa excellent. He allowed ISth. liar have a a%kt'only six kits, issoed no walks, struck (• o'clock) adtadnled with tke1 ant ten batters and made seven M M .™» w x»«ur j. . *™ Girta* * ** *P "* g*M»« Cbunty Baseball Lsame that the Fw** 2"* °*J jw^wit^wM made in the rLnt Ka ------ 'Shamrock outfield, farther evidence recent came played and protested sight*: that Jim's offevints were not being A Jnlter fyiyi»f his dubs tfid clouted.; iroondt mlUnf to th# tolf touii ' MlCckeyw Wandt was the opposing - iuur bm« »i«wb m wi^ icq m -- -- -- -v-- -- Frank Kempher standing waitin* morodsman and was a much better I percentage hitting. Huntley's Allfor a raraca man to deliver hisi*0"™*" than would in- Star catcher, Siffrist, had three safe -, Algonquin beat Harvard 5 car. How could Frank know the -d»cate. A flock of errors, especially j tyows to lead his mates. Sunday. nM<rht i„ . h-li !car was left in front of the barber 5* »• high-throw variety, gave. Harvard comes to Johnsburg next Svieww ooff tth!^e rrClr«yfsatadl Lake team lWast sh°P ewMer than expected and that W2?dt • lot of extra toil. Sunday. he F WM reJ>ting. onPfoQt ^ The Shamrocks got two men on - - base in the first inning as Tom eighth „Ma afforded a comfortable margin. . The standings through last Sun- Harry Preund's single, double and day ***** Johnsburg in first place, triple earned the honors of the day i *he only J?nde'®a$®d t*5*™ m for distance hitting. Howie Freund's I T**®. McHenry Shamrocks Sunday would lead us to lay our two-bits on Johnsburg. : Of course, Crystal Lake's record is better than they showed last Sunday and iMlttle in , ;That Crystal Lake park is a tteauty. Wnile McHenry won't have the same type of grounds, it" is Johnsburg -- 1# Laundryman Les Adams was plenty thev will lw nrimpd for PU»1«1 about .the buttons having j™ secona mmnir proauceo a o. this popped off the front of Ernie * Datte™for «*>*"*. but sgain L this game. . Freund's shirts until he learned that ^ little matter of a base hit was Hi Ernie is the papa of twin boys. tHat a high class municipal ,our Sox out of last place stic field will develop next year. - , A. P. Freund is giving A lot of 6 TO 4; CASK EAGLES time, thought and a parcel of land ngjrp HKWRROYft 1 TO 1 toward the new park. This will bej®*^* flfiWBJiy IO, * aTU 1 located west of the present ball! , diamond. . That is, it will be if sporto followers can carry out their dreams. McHenry is a lively sports town and should promote a recreation center for all ages. It will take planning and management. What doesn't? was resting on? foot on bumper of his own caii as he gaaed J**®® 1 . ,, --T - -- , down the street? ' Bolger hit safely and Harold Still-, Howie Freund, ss ... , ing walked, but couldn't get them Smith, rf around. , n. Freund, cf ...... The second inning produced a! B. Meyers, Sb ...... L. Freund, 2b ....; Harry Freund, c m not forthcoming. Gerry Larkin and E. Meyers, lb _____ Bill Bolger led off with safe blows | Anderson, lb .. „ . ., „ .. , , „ , and Larry Stilling advanced them A. Jacka<m, If *•?!£ with a sacrifice bunt. Wendt got W. Kreuteer, p _ w Bolger on strikes and Conway on^laj ---- % to the third baseman. Totals «^.a.».««».41 Jim Larkin's single to center and ' Haatley --• 4 . AB '•Sonny" Miller's triple to left ©enter j Remus, 2b gave the Shamrocks two runs in the O'Rourke, rf tiiird. Miller made the circuit when H. Waltser, ss .-- 5 the throw-in to third went wild. Frank, Sb 4 Some rather inadequate effort in W. Waltser, rf • ~.....5 ce outneld AB ...5 ,.„.5 -,...5 ;„..4 > .....5 _,5 3 •MtMvM.l Richmond went twelve innings to beat Hebron 5 to 4. Reports of the McHenry - Crystal Lake and Johnsburg - Huntley games ap- *KA-*8 APPLEg Weeolowski, 90 years <0d, a ^rrington miller, is eating gjft .P^® til®®® days made with fruit from a pear tree. Several J*"* sgo, Mr. Wesolowski grafted sua anole twig on the pear t this is the first year it is timndanthr. On the pear-la^.. f® P*wd branch which is drooping with the weight of yellow trans-1 parent apples. Originally a Kiefter, the tree is producing four varieties of pears besides the apples. FATALLY INJURED Carl R. Brasel, 46, Barrington, proprietor of the Brasel Heating Service firm, waib fatally injured last week when his truck was demolished MT it the hflntti) mmmI ' her huaband died, said ttn route to Elgin to supplies for a h* SSy'tT*" rington. .A-1 ^ J, twi For supper some Sunday nigbi, Iqf apple waffles. Just add one art three-fourths cups grated or flMftp , chopped apple to one standard mm< ' fle batter recipe. Bake until n galA> en brown and serve piping hot, sprinkled with sugar and cinnamosk Subscribe for The Plaindealer H V'4! 2 1 2 ' t 3 <• P 1 Q pear elsewhere on this page. Second Round Standings Johnsburg 5 McHenrv 5 Crystal Lake ....* 4. Richmond ..............8 Algonquin 2 Hebron 2 Huntley 0 Harvard 0 1.000 .838 .800 .500 .333 .333 .000 JW CO OPS TKIK T. N. T.'S, ^Sk th, Crytta) Lalte wtfleH h.l~d th.;Sclwlt., P J than ever last week as they; gave ^ ^ sixth. Gerry Larkin's Sigrist, c 5 " " .5 .4 10 R 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 0 ,42 i.T„. j _ rt'n winners in the sixth. . _ . fly between right and center fell Dwyer, lb 2! untouched for a two-base hit. Bill Boxleitner, If h>t safely to left, racing! around to third on the throw-in. Totals Larkin scoring. Two-base htta: ^ after Mich nre-Ball Meyers took Hits by Jin» Larkin and Harold • grist. Three base hits StilMng. plus tv o throwing errors,!K Meyers, H. Whltaer. Archie Erdangen, well-known ^^Ti c<?pt®*^ «^>®c^*tors|added two runs in the seventh. by: Sthults, 4; Kreutser, 10. Bases snorts promoter, was at the micro-, witnessed a P»tcher^8 "Tr1*. 1 Crystal Lake put on a mild up-1 on balls off: Schulta, 2; Kreutser, 2. phone last Sunday giving out the Harry' Conwav rf ^Newboys and ^ in the wventh bunching three j Efry-bg-gUy report on the Shamrock. S* of their six hits and scoring their i tfrystal Lake game. score untUtibe two runs. Mavis, a nifty looking ball 1 and 1. The Eagles pushed across led off with his second hit i Games Next Sunday: 14'. - McHenry at Hebrbtt. • H J HU^-.VvV Crystal Lake at Huntley > * 01, "\ : Richmond at Algonquin. • N Harvard at Johnsburg. . J i . , THESE NEW STREAMLINE 1 TRAINS ANNOUNCED FOR 5 j 1947 BY NORTH WESTERN - A new Chicago-Omaha streamliner,; 9' operating on a fast daytime schedi- jule, will be inaugurated by the Chi- Railway Harry Freund, Si lite: Harry Freund,; cago and North Western Struck out System in 1947 as part of its program of expending its famous "400" fleet, it was announced recently by . .. , , ... . , . > one in the sixth and two Archie managed that nifty basket- seventh to win 4 to 1. "r, player, lea off with nis second mt1 1 . . , and duplicated an earlier feat of; ball team from Hinckley that used, ^'Vh- iith 4hits8 aS-18t*«l?n* R®c®1^ bat*. Eibisch rolled I ^<k nlatv lluvaa iVrilliM* «aa«Man wifl I ped tne Newsboys w!tn 4^nits^ ai-1 ou^ ^ ge^nd base and Krause tapped 1 H. L. Williams, president of the rail •wny system. I_ Williams said the new green and yellow train, similar in design to Many Marching Feel the "-tOO's," will operate on a daily __ r~*. • ___ j schedule comparable to that of the MrPto?™tlt5Tmtof1th? totUri5r^S?hIuM?lW^t?Skt!jg«^Tt •ch0«d *> 0K d m"^* ' ftS?TO? MS ties H. IMS known; ,K. » f.mKd ^the Vandal !" _ .. .. „ : D. Higgins, having fanned -,. ^ ^ .. to "The Old Fox" eana as the fel-'^. • uie Newsboys meet thO|two previous appearances at bat, l«sders -- Hannibal, _ law who wore Sinatrif ties before Co"°Ps ?n ^ firBt «^me Con* clouted a triple into the leftfield hordes, the Mohammedans. Charle- the late afternoon or early evening finatra dWor^) way facing Meyers. trees. Larkin got Wendt on strikes' magna, Napoleon, and others. The | of the same day Hie train will '*» 1 Sf* to^end the rally. _ , j present frontier was established in ®P^»te on^a similar schedule from The old country schools are going w_fL®8 opt of existence a--nda districts conWeber facing Low. solidating. ., ! As a boy we had occasion to visit j Ik couple of country schools and j always left green-eyed. Second Round Standiaga Co-Ops - 4 0 1.000 Case Eagles 3 1 .760 Newsboys 1 S .250 T.N.T.'s 0 4 .000 BOX SCORES How come those guys could wear Co-Ope -- i AB T nnnrYnii A overalls to school" when we had to A T i,L "4 put on knickers ... then go to all1 £" " J %?J*2HL}0I chan*inK into overalls i R. Miller, if after school? j Smith, cf ....4 Country school yards, with their i Rla^e lb ^ wells and other convenient items,: '« became famous through the years N i i*f « fw picnic ground.. . Country school teachers of days 1 yone by were pretty rugged indiv-' * ' iduals. They had to get to their! T«f«i. --;---- mt achools early enough to build a fire | T «»»_••••••*••** » and get the place in readiness for1 wn.";. * !* 1h .**" A the onslaught at bell time. 1 L. Freund, p 3 2 H to.end , . In the eighth W. Bolger's second 116B9 when the Peace of the Pyrenees j 0l"ah* to Chicago, hit was not handled cleanly by the, ended a long war between France JJ1. centerfielder and "Guv" rested on an(« Snain .. ? service will consist of air-cort» second base when Dick Conway sent fl ro<rinn. 1 d»t»oned coaches, parlor cars, dmety a fly ball to right field. The ball and tap-diner-lounge car, all of the bounced off Schauble's glove and "\®.ny tradiUona of the Middle ages most modern design. The tram will Conway sped to third. still prevail. At one point high in be pulled by a 4,000-horsepower The Shamrocks continued to hit, the Basque country, for example, a ; Diesel-electric locomotive. the ninth and the Lake boys small group of Frenchmen and Span- 1 The Chicago-Omaha streamliner is tribute of three TTiey must have had something •a the bait Some pretty good stufSa VM MTL MM/1 2 NEAR NN6S10N.tl. MM A TOX> 'SSdcouSSS StmmrrJf HESTER OILS ' fT%m Bast Far FUEL OIL GASOLINE * LUBRICANTS Weat of C. ft N-W. R. It£ a WEST McHENRY, ILL. " TELEPHONE M'HENRT 144 Totala Caae Kaglsa -- 4 AB H. Freund, 2b -- 4 H. Freund, c --J& . Krauae, Sb -- --J , Freund, ss --...2 Weber, p ....--...A G. Freund, rf ^ Murphy, If .--.........-- .3 Miller, rf .2 Huck, lb 2 Bolger, lb ROUND LAKE nn>ATv AUGUST 2 _ aisopjt v Walter Pftfaatr Rudy Tommy Mtftiodile wmm Billy Goels# lOckey Qo)d yersus Al WlHkoisr . Freund, of ...-- LOOSe, rf ...HMMMMMW...1 Weingart, rf .»«wm-..»».1 6 R 1 1 1 • 0 0 1 J-continued to co-operate in the way1 iards gathers once a year for the the third new train announced by " the North Western for service in 1^47. Next year through streamliner service will be inaugurated between Chicago, Rochester and Mankato, Minn., via Madison, Wis., and between Chicago and Ashland, Wisu, through the heart of that state's famous north woods area. In all cases the trains will operate on fast daytime schedules The 19*47 ' expansion of "400* streamliner service will be the result of the purchase by the North Western system of forty-six streara- 12 H * of error making. H. Stilling led off former to pay a J: with a hit. "Sonny" Miller laid heifers. The ceremony dates offl« * down a perfect bunt along third ciaUy from a locai treaty of i375> 2 "^ting it out for a hit.; which states that the custom has I Stilling Pulled the rarity of going ^ in effect ..from al, tim „ lT™ Wp w ufl e error at third base let Harrrr5yU i"n iw!it!h .. After the. .h ei.f ers are transfer•ure_d{2, the last run. However helpful, the 1 »® i*1®" 01 both nations place their error wasn't necessary because hands over a frontier stone and • Moose" Wagner's hit followed and «wear an oath of peace. Then they would have driven In the run. The game was expected to be much closer and, no doubt, would , have been if the Laker's hadn't had *' one of those bad days in the field. ~ But, errors or no errors, Jim Larkin ^ was too good a pitcher last Sunday * to deserve anything but victory. ?! Shamrocks -- 7 AB •J Conway, ss 6 * T. Bolger, 2b 4 if J. Larkin, p 5 0 H. Stilling, If ...» 4 m , -- -- S. Miller, 8b 6 Totals ."-••••'--SO 4 10 G. Larkin, lb 6 Score by Inninga B. Bolger, cf - 2b 5 T.N.T. .002 002 0 -- 4 10 3 £ StilEi, rf _.. . . .. ^ Co-Ope 103 110 x--6 12 1 W. BcS«J c Two-base hita: Johsaon, L. JYeund. * Murnhv cf 1 Homo run: Smith. Struck out by: j vK2ier rf' * L. Freund. 0: Mayers. 11. Bases on w*ner» " bolls off: L Freund. 0; Mem. 6. Winning pitcher: Meyers. Umpires: Smith and Low. Join in a feast--and the heifers arc sold back to the French Come out and watch the Plain- lined passenger train cars, fifteen dealer Newsboys play ball! 2,000 - horsepower and one 1,000 - f1 Struck out Bolger. FOR SALE TWO-STORY BUILDING Now occupied by Trigin's Place Located at McOULLOM LAKE RALPH TRIGIN 4pt 1, West XeEeoiir M 2 6 Two-baae hita: G. Larkin. Threebase hita: Miller: D. Higgina. Baaes on balla off: Wendt, 1; Larkin, 0. ut by: Wendt, 4; Larkin, by pitcher: fay Wendt: W. 0 Sacrifice hit: L. Stilling. T ROUGH RUDY KAY TO 1. «?i MEET KING PALMER tf 1 0 0, WJEDDING DANCE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7 NELL'S PAVILION JOHNSBURG, ILL. Barbara Horick's Orchestra AL M I L L E D s IN ROUND LAKE BOUT Totals .26 4 6 Score by Innings Case Eagles ....010 001 2 -- 4$ 1 Newsboys 010 000 0--1 '4 1 Three-base hit: H. Freund. Struck out by: Weber, 5; Conway, 8. Bases ; on balls off: Weber, 6; Coaway, 4. Winning pitcher: Weber. Umpires: Low and Smith. Walter Palmer, king of the heavy eights, places his title belt at stak« next Friday night when he wrestles i weights, places title belt at stake Crisp Veils & restore crispneas to veils, press them between t«*> sheeta ef waxed paper. Rudy Kay in the sixty-minute main event at the Round Lake Arena, situiated in^the Round Lake business disj trict. I This match is the most important event staged this season and fans will see a clash that several Chicago promoters tried to obtain. Kay ia one of the roughest grapplers in the nation and Palmer facea the first grave threat that he haa experienced in months. If You Want To CatcH ~ GOOD FISH-- * You need the best of Thck&e. We hare been fortunate in securing a shipment cf Reels and miscellaneous necessities Car fishermen. Oome in early if yon want some!! . J FLASH lefaw* this Thnraday msralag, »: sat reel we had. 8ony|7 Another item which, has been on the 'out list' for some time is POCKET KNIVES . . . Twelve different kinds to select fro*. Better get yours ' • E. H. NICKELS HDWB. " MID-SUMMER D A N C TEEN :Given By, CLUB OF LILY CLUB ULYM00R 120, Wmt .tl JH&l Mb imtOlMa v'K •-f Saturday Eve., Augilst 3 8:30 TILL f U f- o Masic by Joe Tomer's Orohesti* KHTKKIADnraT 1 u|C pIFIK'UP PHONE 20 206 S. Greeq St McHENRY SOUTH CAROUMA 95 Qri|i«ll FOR CANNING ELBCtTA--U.S. No. I •• IAR»I--1 IMIMS «MI YAUNCIA ranges 5«65< ^ GRE£N SEEDLESS bV Grapes ft29* 3 n». 2* 4UCHBS Ol WtALIHT 2ui25( YELLOW MY Onions 3 ***• 10* NEW CROf--MOUNTAIN GKOWN > Green Peas. • . . . . 151 LONG WHITE U. S. NO: 1 QUALIff^ Potatoes T... ii1 .10-39^ ENRICHES! Mm vm pmvf WM , ^ "S , # • **•' • I -w ^ n ; 1 w I 3;,: XJ *.* ^ 4 _ t * ^ ~ r ^ w -' 7 J. .JL AMSSICAN HOMK SAUERKRAUT....*^ •MM CUT S9SAM ASPARAGUS..... .srsr auNA HEI. . \st» M-OGL f|| MM EF CAMKLL*S SOUP 2^23* LORD M(m PRfNCH STYU FANCY QUALITY HO.I SAo e CAN IF ry« GLASS If SUNS WEST FANCY QUALITY CUT GREEII BEANS 2-29* •OTTLE 9T26* HOME BRAND SLICED Kstfcsr Piddst "HZ 29* SUNSHINE HI HO rr-o-MY •-03L K ORSST -*• •;» mo. POfULAR tSANOS IN UCB«S» STOflB Hrsiys. TM Vfiram a a CTH wa-- KSiBtmcm CARROTS OR BEETS 3-25c WMH ««MMU URSSOY SOTF CATT SB LVX IVORY TBM SOAPca. «B CARS.. 1B NATIONAL FOOD STORED