Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Sep 1985, p. 13

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NORTH WE ST HE R ALD Section A Saturday. September U, 1H5 Pepe '3 n's Amateur DINNER SPECIALS M Sf#gh»MiorMo«»«cctoiii 14* C Haddock, all row «*«••< 4 It O*«fto<fnl Alfrado i 4ft * P F Wvlmp 7 44 VMlParmaMn > S 4ft R Fa«ot.hl Alfrado »4ft N >BQ H>t» * 44 | jr flMMI«nor> ft f* SHARP PAINTING CO. Thanks to all of our cus­ tomers this year, and past years, you've helped make Sharp Painting Co. one of the best. As always, our scheduling is done in advance. We would like to remind you that this is a good time to schedule for interior jobs to be completed before the Thanksgiving and Christmas holiday. • Remember we're out to be the best, and this shows in the high qualilty you'll receive. Elcellenft References Reasonable Rates r' Insured Call Collect 815/941-7032 7am*12 or after 8pm New Hearing Aid Lets You Hear In Noisy Situations CUSTOM CANAL ITE CUSTOM ITE HEARING AID REPAIR A SALES CENTER FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAY 10 TO 5 McHENRY HEARING AID CENTER 3917 W. MAM McHENRV S1S-3SS-7661 MASI'S CATERING nW.MAINST. WEST DUNDEE 426-3406 ONLY 3.2S per person ANY SIZE PARTY 20-500 INCLUDES CHICKEN • ITALIAN BEEF • POTATOE SALAD • , MACARONI SALAD • COLE SLAW • RELISH TRAY • PLATES, NAPKINS AND PLASTIC SILVERWARE • ROLLS • BAKED BEANS MAY BE SUBSTITUTED FOR 1 SALAD • ALSO AVAILABLE, MOSTACCIOLI, HAM, SAUSAGE & SAUERKRAUT. f N V. Strip Staak U KM ft*"* Parmaaan EChlckan Parma»an Lobfttar Tall w fr lad '/> Cfcickafl EJr FilatMlgnon Sutt Staak Stuttad Vinm# Q Saiicbwf i Staak J Butt Staak ..... H p Lobfttar Tall ft«S 141 S 44 10 91 MOVIE RENTALS ii Mamtorihip Im h only '25 for Um first year and tily '1 to rt- m« for Mch aMHtoul yiar. • Mombtrt' rt|«lar rental rati b'MS (inept *-nt«d|. * Moikers rent any tap* far 91* OR Mondays I Wednesdays. MOVIES FOR RENT FROM 9(k A DAY « With 3,000 Tapes To Chooao Froa! Such As: •Killing Fields •Sure Thing •Mischief -Desperately Seeking Susan TEAM. ELECTRONIC! HOURS: Moo.-Fri. 10-9 Sot 10-4, Sao. 115 Algonquin, 658-8600 Back to School SO's Dance for the 21 and over set who remember the good or 50ys&60}s Dl - DICK BIONDI September 21,1985 8 pm-Midnight Tickets-SlO couple 50's Dress - Optional 50's Cars • Welcome at Marian Central High School Rt. 120, Woodstock sponsored by Marian Parents Association 815/338-4220 lt»Hsn Buffgt, *11 you csn --1 S * Hat Italian Ipacialtiat * 44 A Vaai ftca«to»«rti 0 W C Ovtt Staak Stirftad W»rimp 11% T CMckan ala Cacciatara S 40 Herald photo by Amy K Brown Cuy-Grove quarterback Doug Hugbp scrambles for yardage Friday night against Crystal Lake Central. Hughes and his Tro)an teammates didn't find much running room, however, as the Tigers rolled to a 35-7 victory. /- . a There is no place like home... HEALTHTRENDS, LTD COMESHOME TO YOU... Our health care team includes: • Registered Nurses • Physical Therapists • Speech Therapists • Occuplioaal Therapists • Home Health Aides. Home Health Care la Reimburaed Directly By MEDICARE • INSURANCE • PRIVATE PAY Call for information Julie Mas*, BSN, Director 815/338*5050 Monday-Friday 8:30-4:30 / RE/MAX® Tri County Realtors 101S. Main (Rt. 31) Algonquin 658-3100 (Mill $a tMe* Mm) toss I trtir As of August 1st... McHenry Animal Hospital AnnouwcesNew Hours: Monday and Thursday 9 am -5 pm, 7 pm • 9pm Tuesday and Friday 9 am • 6 pm Wednesday 9 am-12, Saturday 9 am-2 pm . JAMES E. HOOPER, DVM \ 306 Front, Rt. 31 North, McHenry 385-0031 Above The Crowd By Randy Minkoff • w~ : CHICAGO - Rick Sutcliffe, who went 16-1 with Chicago last year and won the Cy Young award, is still expected to pitch for the Chicago Cubs this season, Cubs' manager Jim Frey said. Sutcliffe, 8-7, went on the 21-day disabled list on July 29 after aggra­ vating a strained left adductor muscle. Frey had thought 10 days ago that the 1984 Cy Young award winner might be ready to return to the dotation by now. "To be totally honest with you, I'm not sure but if I had to predict I would say Rick will pitch again for us this season," Frey said Friday. . Even though the Cubs are out of the National League Eastern Divi­ sion race, Frey said it was very important for Sutcliffe to get a cou- Jile of starts before the end of the 985 campaign. ; "It's important for him and it's important for us." Frey said, "We want to know that Rick is healthy and can pitch again." Sutcliffe has had an, injury- plagued season. He suffered a par­ tially torn hamstring in Atlanta at the end of May but returned three weeks later. He hurt his shoulder in July, again going on the DL. After he strained the left adductor muscle, Sutcliffe went on the DL for a third time. Sutcliffe began throwing batting practice Sept. 8 and is throwing ev­ ery other day. "We would like to see him come back and throw six or seven innings if he is healthy. There's no point to do it otherwise," Frey said. Because the Cubs have six games remaining with St. Louis and four with the division-leading New York Mets, Chicago will have a signifi­ cant say as to who replaces them as NL East champs. Frey said he would be inclined not to use Sutcliffe against contenders if he isn't 100 percent ready. "If It's a matter of him throwing SO pitches, I don't think it would be fair to throw him against a contend­ er," Frey said. "But if he could go six or seven strong innings, I wouldn't hesitate to start him against the contenders." Sutcliffe has been a part of the injury-plagued starting staff which has seen all five regulars on the DL at one time or another. At present, Sutcliffe, Dick Ruthven and Scott Sanderson are on the disabled list with Ruthven and Sanderson through for the year. Frey said he couldn't give an edge to either the Cards or the Mets in the final three weeks of the season. "I'm not in the business of predic­ tions," Frey said. "The Mets have the power and the Cardinals have the speed. I do know the Mets got a tremendous boost when Jack Clark of St. Louis went down. They need him to come back." St. Louis and Chicago have a three-game series this weekend at Wrigley Field and the two rivals conclude the regular season with a weekend series at Busch Stadium. Rockets Streaks. . fContinued from page 14/ < No matter. Birdsell, after getting the handoff from Whiting, ran the second kick 5z yards to the Schurz 23. Birdsell then scored the first of his three touch­ downs on a 23-yard dash and it was 7-0. ; Woodstock's next score came after the defense held Schurz on fourth down. ! A 36-yard pass from Fields to Ron Lenzi was the big play in the 61-yard drive. That brought the ball to the Schurz 24. Birdsell picked up 11 and then plunged home from the one for a 14-0 lead. Schurz' Hector Rodriguez then answered for the Bulldogs withn an 85- yard touchdown run on the kickoff to trim the deficit to 14-6 with 10:27 left in the first quarter. But that's when the home team's offense really got going. The Streaks marehed 52 yards in six plays for a two-touchdown margin. Birdsell carried three times to bring the ball to the 34. Passes from Fields to Matt Colangelo and Birdsell advanced the ball to the 13. Birdsell then scored on a run up the middle for a 21-6 lead with 7:25 left. ; A blocked punt set up the fourth Woodstock touchdown of the half. Dick Pope blocked the Schurz kick and Bruce Eddy recovered, giving the Streaks the ball at the Schurz five. deGelder then immediately scored for a 28-6 lead and the route was on. • The final score of the half came on Field's longest pass completion. Fields found Ken Kohley wide open over the middle for an 80-yard TD pass and a 35-6 lead. . I Woodstock started the second half the same as the first. Colangelo's 31 yard kickoff return gave the Streaks the ball at the Schurz 43. • Birdsell then gained 20 yards on second down, bringing the ball to the 21. That's where Whiting burst into the open field and it was 42-6 hosts with 52 seconds gone in the second half. earlier when Ron Kramer-recovered a fumble at the Harvard sefcen. Two plays later, Komar, whcr had 83 tough yards on 20 carries, knifed over from the three. Miller's PAT was wide at the 9:56 mark and Rich­ mond led, 6-3. "They played us tough, real tough," Hofman added. "Those kids showed a helluva lot of character. Hm Haak's done a great job with that team. They deserve to be in the playoffs -- no question." Even though the playoffs are still far away, Haak said the effects of this loss can't be allowed to affect his players. "We'll find out what kind of foot­ ball team we are next Friday. We have to bounce back and prepare for Huntley," he said. "It was a great game, the one you like to win. I still feel we're in the thick of things. We won't really know how good we are until we come back from this loss." Harvard scored the very first time it had the ball, aided by a pair of Richmond penalties. A 15-yard facemask penalty on a second-down run by Hartwig moved the ball to the Rocket 34. Four plays later, the Rockets were called for pass interference, which took the ball to the 11. beMay carried the ball three straight times and took the ball to the three. Haak called timeout and brought in senior placekicker Bill Gallagly, who booted a 21-yard field goal with 6:10 left in the first period for a 3-0 Hornet lead. Hie defenses dominated the con- _________ (Continued from page 141 test with the Rockets netting 76 on the ground and 107 in the air (includ­ ing 84 on the touchback) for 183 total yards, while the Hornets had 75 yards passing and 93 on the ground for 168 total yards. DeMay rushed for 45 yards on 18 carries while Hartwig totalled 64 yards on 17 totes. The Hornets, 2-1, face Huntley next week while the Rockets (3-0) host Genoa-Kingston. Tigers (Continued from page I4f lighted by a 14-yard scamper by Friese, it was Friese himself who charged 30 yards through the Trojan defense for the score. Quarterback Rob Prosniewskl scored plowed through his line for the two-point conversion and a 14-7 lead. It was Aldridge's 75-yard touch­ down, at the 1:24 mark of the third quarter that put an end to the eve­ ning. Prosniewskl hit end Gil Swain with a strike in the right corner of the end zone for the two-pointer and a 28-7 lead. Eight plays later, the Tigers again hit paydirt on a Friese 15-yarder up the middle. The Trojan sophomores defeated Central, 12-7. Crystal Lake Central will travel to McHenry to meet the Warriors Fri­ day, while the Trojans will stay home to host Riverside Brookfield, Friday. Thank You to the of the McHenry County Golf Tournament Due to your participation the tournament was very successful! EBRA Products Peet Frate Jessup Manufacturing Turner Packaging Concepts First State Bank of Harvard Schneider, Leucht, Merwin It Cooney Funeral Home P.O. Knuth's First National Bank of Woodstock Cotter Trucking, Inc. McHenry State Bank Buss Ford Sales Taylor Made Golf Equipment Co. State Bank of Woodstock State Bai Conlon-Collins Ford PinecrestGolf* Country Club Nelson's Jewelry Joseph FrettA Son, Inc. Don Adams Steel Service First National Bank of Crystal Lake J. Patrick Lawler Dental Lab Harvard State Bank McHenry Savings It Loan Althoff Industries Beard ft Stovall Men's Store Titelist Old Courthouse Inn Cynthia Caba, Realtor with Re/Max Trlcounty Realtors in Algonquin has closed more than 2 million dollars in sales thru Au gust. She will receive the Silver Award from the Illinois Associa­ tion of Realtors. Caba has been in real estate for 14 years and closed more than $2 million in sales In 1984. She is a GRI, CRS, and is a member of the McHenry County Board of Realtors MLS Committee and the reciprocity committee. Cynthia Caba Whether you're interested in buying or selling your home, no matter where you live in McHenry or Kane counties, Cindy will work "hard for you. Give hera call today. Frey says Sutcliffe still may pitch in '85

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