-:*m •"• i ' \/ ?V K*" "Stt/ViK- ' _ _ , ^ PG. 6 - PLAINDEALER- WED., SEPT. 4, 1968 mi Sportsmen May Apply Wor Permits To Hunt On Stalk Managed Hunting A reas k:M Air And Water 1? ATOMIC ENERGY MEA*IS; PEACEFUL PROSPERITY >. ' When the National Acc^l-1; erator laboratory is constructed, in Weston. - anticipated to be^ "5 ^iatory. as wellas, the iitipa^fe be felt by the colleges and uni- ?rsities. iL aboratory personnel will work with industry closely to completed in the mid 1970*8 >3 research and develop new.tech- Earl Walsh ) I HEAR Sports Editor June, July and August Are months to well remember- When baseball held our inter- 0St Now if s football and September With only thirty players turning out for practice for the McHenry High varsity, it looks like some iron men will have to carry the load through a tough season. Coach Day had some husky, rugged men in the line last year. But, graduation took its toll. It looks like the '68 line will be out-sized, unless strong reserves can be developed. The wear and tear may be too much against the heavier lines. Ray Guzzardo, Merv Schmitt and Loren Thomas are some of the pint-size guards we well remember of years gone by. Nobody pushed those fellows around. But, high school teams are much heavier since vitamins came along. We can look over the team on Friday night in the "Soap Bowl". It should be fun. When the McHenry area was considered a farming and summer resort spot some years baqk, they used to say we rolled up the sidewalks right after Labor Day. We don't roll 'em up these days in spite of a certain change when summer is just a memory. 1 i"torJ^J Oh, Pm sure the family's closer On that first cool night in fall When the flames are dancing gayly . Spelling years of love to all. While families are close, we would never exclude some true friends who have meant so much in our life. Our first editor, "Mose", had no use for poetry so we used to slip one of our efforts in S.I.H. from time to time to get his reaction. It took his mind off the Democrats. He didn't like them either. We lost a big shade^tree in our front yard last week when the Dutch Elm bug took over. Seemed like a big loss at first until reason prevailed. We are all well, thank you. Went out to look over some trees to replace our lost one. It was again established that yours truly doesn't know one tree from another unless apples are hanging on the limbs. Good thing the little woman knows or we might wind up with something rare in the front yard. Shepherd of The Hills Softball Team Wins County League Title Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church Softball team won the county league title with 12 wins and 2 losses. Last Sunday they captured second place in the league tourney. Presentation of the league trophy was made by Edward Guettler. teams participating were, Marengo, Zion, McHenry,C rystal Lake, Harvard, St. John's, Woodstock, Grace, Woodstock, and Algonquin. Team members include; Art Beck, Glen Anerson, Larry Mc- Clure, Bill Blankenhorn, Don Williams, Gunnar Nelson, Broc Olson, Alan Olson, Dick Wilhelm, Pastor Johnson, Carl Bergstrom, Bert Hagemann, John. Huff, Alan Olsen and Jim Boyer. Seems we tried our hand at poetry way back when and wrote a so called poem about the end of summer. A lady has asked us to reprint that poem, but memory fails us. If we can find it in old flies, we may give it space right here. H|re it is dear lady. You asked for it: When you're sitting around together just the family round the hearth. On the first cool night in Autumn After summer days of mirth It sort of gets you thinkin' Of the worthwhile folks you meet And you get a closer feeling Toward your own dear ones and sweet. Whether conversation's lagging Or the room is full of talk Somehow you feel they're with you Through all of life's long walk Other folks are fascinating When the party's gay and loud But, somehow they're never near you When there's a darkness and a cloud. McHenry Sportsman9s Club The McHenry Sportsmen's club is rushing the Autumn season with an Early Fall Prize Shoot Sunday September 8th at their trap range on the west side of Pistakee Bay. Shooting will start at 11 a.m. and continue until evening sets in. Shooters will compete for young fryers and Jopat tenderaged steaks in a wide range of contests in which all classes of shooters can win prizes. All of the White Bird shoots will be on the days card, as will the Hi- Lo, Annie Oakley and Protection Shoots. The public is invited to participate. All of this being preliminary to the club's big annual Championship Shoot and picnic which comes off on the following Sunday. Club members will shoot it out for the Class A, B, C, Junior, Senior and Ladies Championship. Also at stake is the club championship, with all indications pointing to a large entry and a fiercely fought set of contests to decide the winner. • At the same time, members and their families will devour over three hundred barbecued aged Jopat steaks and frankfurters, plus all the trimmings that go with it. Games and prizes for the ladies and kids will be on the all-day program* This affair is for club members only and their families. It is closed to the public. This is the only McHenry Sportsmen's club affair in which the public is not invited. A prize shoot is scheduled fyr Sunday, Sept. 22 and is open to the' public, as are all prize shoots. Northern llini Bowmen News Many bowhunters have begun their annual preseason scouting of the Wisconsin deer area, Ne cedah, C rivets, Black River Falls and the many other areas that have good deer concentrations and public hunting grounds. Deer beds, scat and especially the large deer tracks in the sand raise the bowhunter*s blood pressure in anticipation of possibly outwitting the big buck in his home habitat. Whitetail deer are very habitual and usually live their entire existence within a mile square area that is their back yard. They know each path, hill and ravine for quick safety. They know each area of tender grasses, sweetest choicest acorns, corn fields, the best brouse for their morning and evening feedings. They know each high grassy hillside for comfort in bedding down with the wind to their backs scenting any intruder and facing the valley below for any possible sign of danger. Into this back yard, the bowhunter must try to outwit the wiley whitetail and get to within 35 yards or preferably less. The deer is the professional, depending for survival on his keen senses of smell, hearing, and eyesight. The bowhunter is the amateur - for a few hours he will try to outwit the whitetail in his own back yard. Many bowhunters spend hundreds of hours in the woods enjoying not only the hunt but other creatures of nature. Birds and small animals accept him as part of their environment after only a period of 5 minutes of complete quiet on the part of the hunter. Then he is no longer an intruder in the wildlife world. Good shooting (ractice is an essential for the bowhunter. On Sunday, Sept. 15th, Northern IIlini Bowmen invite all bowhunters to their Broadhead shoot at their range on Draper Road, a mile west of McHenry. Also to enhance the enthusiasm of the bowhunter, Illinois and Wisconsin Conservation Department representatives will speak at the Northern Illini Bowmen's Sept. 19th meeting, 8 p.m. at McHenry Legion. All interested sportsmen are invited. HALF-PINT . . . Roberta Ross, 18, standing 5' 1", won over 61 different beauties 5' 2" or less in contest at Palisades Amusement Park, N.J. to select the "Queen of the Half Pints." » Springfield, 111., Aug. 28 - Sportsmen may apply now for permits to hunt on the state managed public hunting area. The Illinois Department of Conservation operates seven pheasant, two duck and two goose areas where hunting is on a permit bases. The pheasant areas are: Green River in Lee County, north of Ohio, 111.; Chain O Lakes near Fox Lake in Lake County; Des Plaines near Wilmington in Will County, Iroquois County, near Beaverville, Shelby County, near Cowden; Clinton County, east of Boulder; Richland County, near Calhoun. ^ The Duck Areas are: Rice Lake, near Banner in Fulton county; and a portion of the San - ganois-Knapp Island Area near Browning. However, Rice Lake may be closed if water level is too low to permit hunting. The goose areas are: Horseshoe Lake, near Olive Branch in Alexander County and the Union County area near Ware. The pheasant areas will be open for hunting by permit from 12 noon Saturday, Nov. 16, until 4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 8. Geese may be hunted at Horseshoe Lake and Union County Areas by permit from November 11 until the season closes. ' Upland game may be hunted without a permit on three areas before and after the permit pheasant season, November 16 to Dec. 8. Squirrels, doves, and woodcock may be hunted on the Green River, Iroquois county, and those parts of the fiesPlaines Area lying west of U.S. Rt. 66 and east of the highway north of Wilmington Wonder Lake Mustangs Win Over Rock Falls The Wonder Lake Soccer Team - THE MUSTANGS - were victorious (6-2) over the Rock Falls Twin Cities team when they played them at Blackhawk Park in Rockford on August 25. The Rock Falls team has only been in existence about five months and already have ovpr forty (40) members in their club. Next Sunday - September 8- will be a home game for the W. L. Mustangs when they play YMCA Completes its Summer Swim Program For '68 On August 16 the Lake Region YMCA completed the fourth and last session of its 1968 summer swim instruction program for the youth and adults at the Thunderbird Farm poolinCary. Badges for excellent performance in completing various steps in the Y*s National Aquatic Program were awarded to 56 of the participants. This total included twelve certificates signifying completion of ~ the extensive and arduous Juri- ' for and Senior Livesaving Program. The Lake Region YMCA will begin its Fall program of swim instruction for youth, ages 7 to 15, on October 5. The locations for swim classes are the Elgin Academy pool and the Woodstock Community high school pool. Inquiries on the upcoming schedule of YMCA Fall programs should be directed to the Lake Region YMCA, 65 N. Williams street, Crystal Lake, telephone 459-4455. Recipients of Lake Region YMCA swim awards during the fourth quarter of the Associations swim instruction classes from McHenry were Minnow badge - Jim McMahon and Philip Lottchea; Senior lifesaving- Richanne Glash. against the Crystal Lake Bombers at the McHenry Legion grounds on Ringwood Road which is home field for the Mustangs. This should be one of the most exciting games of the Fall season. On Sept. 15, the Mustangs will again play at home field when they play against the Rockford Harmony B Team. Both games promise an afternoon of exciting sportsmanship. On Thursday, August 29, the Mustang Manager Leo Hartog started his youth soccer training program for the 13 to 17 year old group. Anyone interested in learning soccer is to report to him at the Mustang home field on Thursday evening. SPACE PIECE . . . An Atomic Energy Commission employee is holding a full scale model of the f i r s t i\uclear power generator in space developed under the SNAP (Systems for Nuclear Auxiliary Power) program. The five pound nuclear generator has traveled 868,000 miles (30,000 times around the earth) and has operated one year behind its five-year design life providing power aboard a Navy navigational satellite signaling to tracking stations around the world. spomnoRMR When people have 'lived it up' too well, they sometimes have trouble living it down. EVENING WATCH . „ . From their high perch soldiers keep a sharp look out for the enemy along the DMZ in South Vietnam. The watch tower allows the men to pinpoint enemy artillery fire from miles away and relay the position to allied forces for retaliation. Now Ends Thurs P5SA£3Ufn RCT1MS traeas Lemmoo H^and iilR ftMmsm'TEOMour • MRMMUNtncnM Shows at 7 & 9 P.M HOTPOINT MODEL CSF618J Only 32" wide, this elegant Hotpoint No-Frost Food Center "18" on wheels fits the same space as your old refrigerator -- and fits it beautifully! In the No-Frost 229-pound-capacity freezer, 4 door shelves put frozen foods at your fingertips, and a glide-out basket, juiceand- soup-can rack and 4 full-width shelves aid orderliness. In the No-Frost 11,8 cu. ft. refrigerator section of this 18.4 cu. ft. Hotpoint Food. Center, porcelain enamel meat pan and vegetable basket glide out. Other deluxe features; two slide-out refrigerator shelves, butter spread control, convenient dairy and egg storage, deep door shelf and deluxe 60-cube ice saver. See it today! and RAY El road before the; permit pheasant season. After that season, cock pheasant, Hungarian partridge, quail and rabbits may be hunted without a permit. Deer hunting with bow and arrow is legal on these areas before and after the permit pheasant season. Hunters may obtain one permit for a pheasant area, one for a duck area and one for a goose area. Applications must contain the hunter's name and address, a partner's name, the area desired, the date desired, and an alternate date. Applications should be mailed to: Illinois Department of Conservation, Permit Office, Room 106, State Office Building, Springfield, 111., 62706. EDDIE the EDUCATOR says... Teachers need more time to plan and prepare with new media and methods, such as instructional TV and team teaching. ILLINOIS EDUCATION ASSOCIATION Illinois may well claim the title of nuclear capitol of the world. The newly initiated Western laboratory, combined with the Dresden Nuclear Power station near Morris and the great number of electric power plants throughout the state, pushes Illinois toward the top as a V su-: per charged" area. The benefits generated from these "power • houses" are felt throughout the state and in a multitude of ways. "One of the major reasons that Illinois was chosen as the location for the Accelerator laboratory was the availability of water resources," explains Gene Graves, chairman of the Natural Resources Development board, and Director of the Illinois Department of Business •and Economic Development. "Tjie natural supply of water found" in Illinois is an especially important factor to the growth of industry in the state," Graves pointed out. "Yet, at the same time that we use water resources to build up the economy and general progress of the state, we must be aware of our responsibilities to preserve this mighty natural resource which we have around us." Taking a look at what such facilities as the Accelerator laboratory means to Illinois, Graves reported that the impact will be felt on various levels of economy and education. Some 2,000 top scientists will staff the laboratory, with supporting personnel of at least a thousand more persons such as engineers, chemists and technicians. These 3,000 plus persons, along with their families will enhance the overall economy of Illinois. In addition to the economy, Illinois industry will benefit from the presence of the labor- Tips from a Pro Wray Mundy NATIONAL TRUCK DRIVER OF THE YEAR L0A/6r£-J? CAST AS G£?t/MVSXF TOEFX BAGXSK AMtS KOMAN GABRIEL tASje> . OA/AO/W£ CMOAAACJH FOX CA*£ltWGA JS r WRAHMILSE TZ>UCt/OOWN Hmiiimi Hotpoint PECIAL with acceptable trade Ztji. niques and products. It is also anticipated that new scientifically- oriented industries will locate in the general vicinity of the accelerator,, which will be the .world's largest and most costly scientific instrument. THe new laboratory will be a pioneering facility in the area of high energy physics. When the laboratory is complete, it will house the world's largest atom smasher which will enable the researchers to delve into such questions as the expansion of the universe, gravity and the origin of matter. Their answers may create new sciences, revoluntionize old ones, and perhaps even revolutionize the lives of everyone, Graves reported. Graves emphasized that the purpose of the Accelerator Laboratory will be to search for peaceful uses of nuclear energy. "It will not be an arsenal, but a research center designed to advance mechanical and biological research, diagnosis and therapy, space travel studies and discovery of new economic tools," he said. . " While we are looking forward to reaping many benefits from the Laboratory, we are not overlooking the problems which could easily be caused by such a plant," he explained. Throughout all of the planning for the Laboratory, extreme caution has been observed to meet safe standards and avoid depletion or contamination of the natural water resources of the area. This means that hot water will not be dumped into area waterways which might kill off the fish; nor will contaminated refuge be allowed to pollute nearby streams. By using wells on the site, enough water will be available for the domestic use of the personnel and their families. The Fox River, the<>major source of water for operator of the Laboratory, will be tapped only when it is high and will not be bothered during the drier summer season when top priority will be given>to the recreational value of the river. At the laboratory site, there will be ponds built to store the raw water from the Fox river, to catch rain and to serve as water cooler depositories. This water will be used and reused until it becomes undesirable. Then, it will be treated to meet pure-water standards and released back into adjoining streams. "The Weston project is a good example of how we can utilize our water resources in Illinois without destroying them," Graves said. "With more and more demands being placed upon our water supply, we must make an even greater effortto protect the resources." BACK SHELF CLEAN %pr Am mm Be Wise Shop In McHenry Fly <28 Flag in the Wi ow for Your Boy in the Service Popular Demand Revives Custom of World War I, Showing a Red Bordered White Centered Service Flag with a Blue Star on the White Field to Tell the World a Member of the Family Is In Our Armed Services. 1005 N. FRONT ST. DIAL McHENRY, ILL. Free Parking 385-0882 Service flags are in growing demand. . .and because flags of this type, high in quality and at a fair price are so hard to find.. .McHenry Plaindealer has made arrangements to make these service flags available at cost as a patriotic public service. The flag is a heavy quality .rayon printed with red border and blue star . . .with gilded bar and gilded spear tips and golden cord and tassles. The flag hangs in the window displaying its message of patriotic service. These flags are on sale at oeeeeecococeeeee««««««aoeocee I SERVICE FLAG ! McHenry Plaindealer • 3812 West Elm Street • McHenry, Illinois The McHenry Plaindealer, 3812 W. Elm street for only $1.50 each. . .or you may mail the coupon below enclosing cash, check or money order for $1.50 and your service flag will be sent by mail. Every close relative with a member of the family in service should display a service flag. People should know just how many of our men are serving in the armod forces andthere*s no better way to show our participation than by displayingthese service flags. The McHenry Plaindealer is to be commended for making the flags available at such a low price. Editor's Note: For a man lost in service a flag with ,a gold star should be displayed. To the parents and wives of such heroes of our country The McHenry Plaindealer will furnish a gold-starred service flag without cost upon request. If you wish to use the coupon below to order a gold starred service flag, simply fill out the information blanks and write on the coupon GOLD. There will be no charge for the flag. . .and if you prefer you may come into our service desk for your flag. » • • • • • • < Enclosed is $ I want -- -service flags at $1.50 each. (Mail: $.50 extra) Make checks and money orders payable to The McHenry Plaindealer. NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP » • • • • • • • • • • « cut coupon on dotted lines