""V mfth . E%V i" pel, i, - PLAIN DEALER - WED.. OCT.. 23, 1968 BRONCOS BOMB WARRIORS 53-7 The Warriors gave an effort of sorts last Friday night offensively, but the total collapse of theodefense allowed the Big Red of Barrington to inflict the worst defeat a Warrior team has had in years, 53-7. The Big Broncs offensive statistics are awesome as they gained 558 yards total; 319 on the ground, and 239 through the airways on the rifle arm of Brian Hembrey who completed 12 of 16 attempts. Jon Peters, the diminutive, Explosive halfback, rushed for 5 scores and 150 yards in 16 attempts. The Bronco scoring went like this. Peters, 2 runs of 1 yard, a 32 yard run, a 72 yard run and a pass for 9 By Bert Hagemann yards. Sinala had a 44 yard T.D. run, Robertson a 66 yard run and Miller a pass for 59 yards. The lone Warrior tally came on a 87 yard end around play which fooled jilmost everyone in the stands. Mike Janik took the pigskin and lugged it almost the length of the field with no one with ten yards ofthim. Once again the Varrior passing game was spotty as Don Reinboldt managed, 11 completions in 26 attempts, but it was the defense which spelled our undoing. The Barrington line opened gaping holes iinthe Warrior front wall, and once sprung from the line of scrimmage, and Bronco backs had a field day in the secondary. No less effective was the pinpoint accuracy of the Barrington field generals, Hembrey and Holcomb. Add up all these plus factors and you have a disastrous defeat for'a game, but sadly outmanned ball club. It is very evident that the orange and black need help in the line, as we simply are too small to cope with most clubs. The Warrior lightweights cannot be faulted for gameness and courage, but when outweighed sometimes 40 and 50 pounds per man it's tough to push the opponent around. This week we journey to Dundee and must cope with their fine senior quarterback, Pedley. We can certainly use some support down there. Hope you can make the journey with • us. Conference standings: 1. Crystal Lake 5 0 ,2. Barrington 4 1 3. Dundee 3 2 4. North Chicago 2 2 1 5. Zion Benton .2 2 1 6. Libertyville 2 3 7. McHenry 1 4 8. Woodstock 0 5 Walsh SO I HEAR Sports Editors _1 Warrior Gary Fairchild, No. 11 gains first down yardage during second quarter of Friday night's loss to Barrington. ^ PLAINDEALER PHOTO "5? ' Harriers End Duel Season •::i: Competition Without Loss 10 by Bert Hagemann October is a great month to take a ride through the country. Trees are beautiful in their fall splendor. There is evidence of good crops and all's right with the world, They have a good, lively group in Lakeland Park promoting the Boys' Baseball club. On Saturday night of this week they will sponsor their ninth annual dance to raise funds for this worthwhile promotion. So - dance with your dolly at the American Legion home. You will have a jolly time and be helping those kids. They are a nice bunch of boys. ^ The Chicago Bears won a football game -- and that must rate as news. You can't win 'em all. It seems a quarterback in pro. football is all important. He can't do it all, but has to be able to pitch that ball with certain accuracy. Sometimes we think coaches retire at just the right time. That may have been the case at Green Bay where the Packers were sure to get worse before they could get better. The writers who dared to say the Packers were wearing out brought down the wrath of, loyal fans. No matter how good the coach may behehastohavethematerial to bring through a consistent winner. Right at home we have seen our Warrior footballers give it all they have, but it isn't enough. ~^The amazing thinclads from SircHenry concluded an unbeaten season in dual meets last Tuesday as the Warriors rolled over Woodstock by a 25-32 m&rgin, and Antioch by a score ofn20-38. Although the weather Was hot and muggy, and the Woodstock course tough, the speed merchants from McHenry showed their usual team strength in bringing home the victory. Glein Hampton finished second, fblloived by Mark Smith in 3rd. B^ati Pictor garnered an unusual sixth place finish as he is usually in the top two or three, and co-captain Pictor was followed by Mike Freund in 9th and Dennis Roby in 10th. This victory margin was closer than usual, but the harriers had the when they needed it, and dual season has certainly included on a happy note. The little Warriors did likefise in winning both their rac- }, beating the Streaks by a 21- margin and walloping Antioch by an 18-43 victory. Keith Hutchinson finished No. 1, follow-- 6d by Eric Weiss in 2nd, Oeffling in 4th, McGibbon in 7th, and Cook in 10th place. Certainly both squads have a great deal to be proud of, as their hard work, desire and hustle has made them "the Squad" in this part of the state. The varsity will be tested severly this Saturday at the state district meet. Let's hope the thinclads bring their wings with them,along with the grit and guts they have displayed all season long. An unidentified Warrior brings down the Barrington ball carrier as No. 75, Chris Borchardt and No. 12, Don Reinboldt are ready to help. PLAINDEALER PHOTO .^1 SPORTS Freshmen Football 4 - H H E L P S Today we are a fr§e and prosperous nation with greater possibilities for the future than any people ever had before. 4-H club members are helping to make these possibilities come true by receiving training in skills, leadership and citizenship. Well once again our freshmen faced the horrors of losing, this time to a large inside line of subs of Barrington. The first half our Freshmen were not able to do anything and their blocking was poor. At the end of the half time1 the score was Barrington 19, McHenry 0. There was no score for the third quarter and in the fourth McHenry came up with a touchdown and a touchback. The score then was Barrington 19, McHenry 8. With two seconds to go, Barrington threw a long bomb and scoredthe final score. Barrington 25 - McHenry 8. The Freshmen played heads up ball in the second half. Freshmen are still with a good record of 2 wins, 3 losses, and 1 tie. Our poor undermaned Bteam is still looking for its first win, next week, Saturday, Oct. 26th, 9 a.m., Marengo at McHenry. McHenry Sportsman9s Club ennis C * Jack Thomas, center, gives pointers on a particular grip as Patti Brooke, Peggy Lawrence, Frank Johnson and Ed Doyle look on. All are members of the newly formed McHenry Tennis club who are planning for a clinic to be held next weekend. PLAINDEALER PHOTO A free clinic will be held in . connection with the opening of • tiie new tennis courts on the £iyest campus in McHenry Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 26 and 27. On Saturday, interested high i school and junior high boys and I girls are invited to attend the •clinic between the hours of 9 f and 11 a.m. The Sunday after- I noon clinic to be held from 1:30 I to 3:30 will be for adults. In case of inclement weather, the clinic will be postponed until the following weekend. The courts were opened for the first time last week and play has been increasing since that time. The last evening to register for indoor tennis instruction for adults will be Wednesday of this week in the main office of the west campus from 7 to 9 p.m. However, anyone who finds this impossible may also register at the courts on the days the clinic is held. A meeting to make arrangements for the clinic will be held Wednesday evening of this week at 8 o'clock in the east campus. 1 Frank Johnson was elected president of the newly formed McHenry Tennis club at a meeting held Wednesday evening of last week. Serving with him will be Peggy Lawrence, vice-president;. Barbara Gilpin, first secretary; Diane Fuhler, second secretary; Robert Snyder, treasurer; Adele Froehlich, public relations; and Harvey Ahitow, community school and club director. The new steering committee includes James Doran, James Leightner, Bruce Klontz and William Pictor. THURSDAY NITE LADIES TNT LEAGUE - TOMASELLO'S B. Breenwood 175-487; C. May 470; A. Oeffling 172; D. {filler 177-484; J. Filip 174; J. Kennebeck 191-475; J. Fischer 211-544; M. Waldtsch482; M. Rudolph 175; M. Smith 170- 177-487; Mi Hettermann 171- 188-524; I. Stilling 179-484; H. Thelen 182; RAILS - E. Mangold 6-7-10; P. Schmitt 5-7-9. In basketball we have had teams that lacked the one big man to cope with the size that other teams seem to find. Our school is large enough to have some of those big fellows around. Where are they? Cross-country success has saved the day for McHenry high this fall. Our sincere congratulations to Coach Don Seatonand his boys. Wrestling is another sport that has more than held its own in tough competition. Trust another good season is around the corner. Perhaps wrestling gives an athlete the fairest test. He is always in his own weight class. In football, it makes our bones ache to see a 220 pound bruiser crash into a 150 pound speedster. Hunting Licenses jPossession of a' Firearm Owners Identification Card is necessary while hunting with firearms. However, display of the registration card is not necessary to purchase a hunting license, according to the Department of Conservation. Conservation officials said apparently many sportsmen have not purchased their hunting licenses because they assumed that they would have to display the identification card. Sportsmen need not have their identification card before purchasing a hunting license, deer permit or migratory waterfowl stamps. The firearm registration card is necessary for persons who own, possess or purchase firearms and ammunitions. Hunting licenses and regulations are administered by the Illinois Department of Conservation. Firearms registration is administered by the Department of Safety and all inquiries concerning registration should be addressed to Firearm Owners Identification Division, 1035 Outer Park Drive, Springfield, 111., 62704. A red meat shoot for redblooded he-men is the next McHenry Sportsmen's Club attraction, set for Sunday October 27th at 11 a.m. at their trap range on the west side of Pistakee Bay. Steak Shoot is the name of the game, and tender-aged Jopat steaks the prize of contention. Top notch shooters will try to win them in Winner-take-all contests, in which the high scoring gun wins a steak in best out of ten shots, from either the sixteen or twenty-five yard line. Not-so-hot shots will compete in the Hi-lo Shoots. In these, the high scoring shooter takes the steak while the lowest tallying nimrod gets a chicken. Shotgunners who feel lucky can enter the Hi-Lo White bird shoots. Prizes are won exactly the same as in the Hi-Lo shoots, but with the addition of a white target thrown at random. The lucky shooter who bags it gets a chicken. If it is missed another is thrown at random until it is shot down. Regular targets are black and yellow. Gun slingers who are fond of fowl shoot it out for chickens in the Double, Triple and Quintuple White Bird shoots, where a young frying chicken is won for every white target shot down, plus one chicken for the high scoring contestant. The trap range will be open Saturday the 26th for practice shooting. Hunters who are planning a foray into field or marsh in the upcoming hunting season should attendthis season to sharpen up their shooting eye. These twenty-five bird practice rounds run from 1 to 4 p.m. and the public is welcome. The McHenry S.C. can be reached from the east via Route 134 Big Hollow Road to its western terminus, then a right turn for one - half mile. From the west the /oute is through Johnsburg, across the Fox River to Adams Repair shop, then a left turn to the 'V and another left for one-half mile. From McHenry it is south on Chapel Hill road to Adams shop and a right to the 'Y*. • MCHENRY RECREATION WEDNESDAY NIGHT MIXED LEAGUE 10-16-68 Chuck Kopp 191; Len Thennes 213; Bob O'Brien 248-575; Don Humann 201-504; WaltSzyplebaum 186-174-497; George Kleinhans 188; Gus Arquette 164; Jim Thennes 158-188; John Zimny 186-172-493; Cliff Kiehl 155; Roy Morrison 150; Chuck Violett 149; Sis Wallwin 171; Tee Bujak 158; Dorothy Cusack 149-162; Dorothy Beckenbaugh 151; Dot Zimny 152; Mary Erbaugh 141-139-401; Wilma Aylward 148; Lee Bujak 167; Teenie Morrison 141; Lucy Kleinhans 144-153-418; Rose Klemm 144; Audrey Ellmer 139; Mary Ann Wegner 130; Mary Jane Watts 128; Marge Kiehl 136; Rita Thennes 121; Sharon Richards 116. In basketball a 5'8" player looks mighty helpless jumping against a 6'7" giant. In golf a small man may not have the power of a big fellow, but he can make it up in other ways. And the same fot baseball. McHenry may have to beat the bushes to find .the big men for football and basektball. They must be around. McHenry High Thinclads Are Conference CI By Bert Hagemann Seaton's speedsters have done it again! Last Friday, on the Barrington course, the sensational Warrior TEAM won the North Suburban Cross Country meet with a low total of 40 points. The final standing looked like this. 1. Warriors 40 2. Crystal Lake 62 3. Woodstock 90 4. Barrington 93 5. Libertyville 112 6. Dundee 168 7. North Chicago 172 8. Zion Benton 188 Terry Wilkens of Woodstock was first, followed by Hanrath of Libertyville in second, and then the finishers took on an orange and black hue. Glen Hamptom raced to a thirdplace finish, followed by Brad Pictor in sixth, Mark Smith in eighth, Wayne Smith in eleventh, and Dennis Roby in twelfth. Pushers included sophomore Keith Hutchinson in fourteenth, and Mike Freund in thirty-third. In bringing West campus its first conference championship Snug Harbor Boat Club Will Be CLOSED FOR ALTERATIONS We Will Re-Open Monday, October 28 807 River Rd. McHenry * 1 REMEMBER « TEAM WORK 4-H Club work is part of the national educational system of cooperative extension work. The U.S. Department of Agriculture, the University of Illinois, and the counties in Illinois share in this team approach. BY THE OLD TIMER From Mrs. Lillie Neal, Cleves, Ohio: Does anyone remember the little Shaker village near New Haven, Ohio? I am 77 years old. When I was quite small, maybe 70 years ago, my parents rented a large tract of land from the Shakers, on s h a r e s . Our house, a big 11-room brick, was what was left of the "South Shaker" village. There was the remains of a frame church and another building, both ready to fall down. But the big barn, hay sheds, hog and chicken houses were in excellent shape. About half a mile up the road was a little white oneroom schoolhouse and, across the road, a cemetery. There were about 20 children in the school. We girls didn't dare to play on the same grounds with the boys. The Shaker girls had to go home around the road, while the boys walked home through the fields. I still remember many of the children's names--Sadie Richarson, Sadie Williamson, Albertus McMullin, Otto Head, Stella and Krvin Klegg. About three-fourths of a mile from our home was the main v i l l a g e , the "Center Shaker Village." Here were big houses on both sides of the road, immense barns and sheds of all kinds, all painted and neat as a pin. They had a barber shop, a laundry, bees by the million, a big dairy, a broom factory, big orchard, and acres of "garden truck." 1 don't have any idea how many acres my dad farmed. One field across from the house contained 90 acres, as level as a floor. (S+nd contributions to #»i» coiwmnlolhiOM Tim«r, IOH 639, FronUoH, K«nntudty 4060.) MAIN AIMS The main aims of 4-H club work are mental,physical, social and spiritual growth. The learn-by-doing training young people get in 4-H adds to the training they get at home, at school and in the church. trophy, the Warriors stuck to their winning formula of all season which has seen them run up an undefeated record in dual meets. The Warrior team won this trophy, not just a few individuals. Even the athletes who didn't place in the first five did a job, for they took low points away from the other squads with their high finishes. Credit for a job well done must go to coach Don Seaton, the whole squad, and fine young ladies who help at all meets, and the few Warrior fans who brave the elements to watch "their" Warriors roll up victory after victory. We McHenry sports fans can be justly proud of a fine group of athletes who have brought honor through victory to our community by terrific efforts in a sport which is grueling, demanding, and just plain tough. I salute you, the cross-country men. Well done! This Saturday is the state district meet. A tough, competitive field will face the scrappy Warriors; do your best fellas, we're behind you all the way! 1 COLT! This competition - proven machine has it all! Extra speed and power (up to 634cc's in high performance engines), exclusive new Powertrain all rubber track, improved steering and braking. First choice of those who know snowmobiles! TERMS AVAILABLE 372 ee Electric Start Celt Only ,1»WW Other Models From $749.95 Fes Lake Harbor Grand Avenue (Rt 132) Fox Lake JU7-Q2QQ