:'f • THE M'HENRY PLA1ND£ALER ("?;' • at MoBmit, BL, If C&arlas *. '£*• M ww* ehw ip tti acta* MV •» 1W> at tki Month* wmmw safittM Want An v id£&j FOB SALS BOB milt Wwirt «a:.Qaa nil* «tit tf bride*. T®t H441-1 Pjte A. FTMDML FORRENT •A'-'V ftf ^ IK • i it\. • sP^ .>"3?v; •< ;•:*,*'Si»fc t ^ ;*p (f* •' (• - I > i 1185 Broadway Boulder, Colorado August S, 1982 * Boy Scoots of America " Troop 62, McHenry, Illinol* Dear Brother Scouts, £ How would you like to get Up, ®®t •, breakfast, and start at 1:45 A. M. or; 'q a hike twenty-two miles long that would take you to a place over two | and a half miles above sea level? £ Just that is what eleven of us did, and • not one of the party had ever been y over the trail before. Believe me it t was a thrill to be climbing to the top £' of tong's Peak over the ©b« aiad only :| trail, which many, nany tN»«« we <couli not see. ;; When we grot above the timber line, : we were able to distinguish three \ cities through the dark. The first was Estes Park, twenty miles sway; the second, Longmont, forty miles : away; and third, Denver, whose lights were brightest of all, was seventy 4 miles. Objects in higb altitudes seem much nearer than they really are, be- ! cause of certain qualities of the air. Because of this fact, one man attemp. ' ted to throw a rock across a crevice. This happened before day break, but J upon his return at noon he found, '? much to. his sirfprise, this same crevice to be only a mile and a half wide. At 7:20 A. M. three of us had ascended one of the most difficult * mountains that are to be climbed in the Rockies. We came onto a nearly 4 level boulder and rock field that has V an area of four acres. (Because of i this flat surface at its summit, Long'* Peak can be distinguished from other ~ mountains as far as 125 to 175 miles away, depending, of course, upon the clearness of the air.) We could view ; the Continental Divide as it stretched to the south and north-west. Pike's Peak could be easily seen at its distance of 140 miles to the south of us. On the east side of Long's is Cha*m Lake- One man dropped a stone (not ' threw) and we saw it fall into this lake some 2700 feet below, over half »• a mile! Well, you can bet that we i moved back a little when we saw the stone strike the surface of the water. ..." -~3iAIIH , .Aa-we Wfre resting before making our descent, we learned that part of the trail we had traveled over was a living, sliding mass of ke, rocks, aad moraine; and that the cabin, in which we had got a drink of coffee, might cave in most anytime. Later, when we got back to this boulderfield, we leaned against some rocks and could hear water running, as it seemed to us, about fifty feet below. One of the real thrilling features of climbing this mountain is that about two miles of the trail is on a ledge, which is so narrow that a step to one side or the other might cause one to fall from 2,|P0 to 3,000 feet. On some of the lakes seen from this narrow ledge were sheets of ice and snow and on two were live glaciers pushing out into the *fatar.. * *• How are the Scout Oath and Law holding out? Well--I hope. - V ^ M. L. Schoenhoits 1$: W« Nrrw Know It "Time remedies all Ills," said HI Ho, the sage of Chinatown, "although many of us are unfortunately forbidden to live long enough to know that a cure baca affected."--Washington Star. | Set Ferarala About every lesson that experience teaches begins with "Don't"--Boston Transcript - ! Best Adoraaj Fairest and best adorned Is she Whose clothing Is humility.--Montgomery. 0p;:: • • •fJ Woodstock's Beautiful Play House FRIDAY - SATURDAY ON THE STAGE FRANK STANLEY Movie Cowboy, in Person The World's Champion Trick Roper ' ON THE SCREEN "While Paris Seeps" SUNDAY -- MONDAY Continuous Sunday, 2:30 to 11 "Washingtoa Masquerade" with LIONEL BARRYMORE TUESDAY ' WEDNESDAY Shamed" with 8BLEN TWELVETREM ^JlOBERT YOUNG LEWIS STONE THURSDAY FRIDAY JOB E. BROWN in "The Tenderfoot** LIGHTS • nninu •/ NEW YORK The New Yorker does not have to go to Long Island, Westchester of Xew Jersey to swing a golf club or a teanle racket. He usually can get all the exercise he needs near his office. Not only are there any number of gymnasium# and health institutes where he can box, toss the caediciae ball or use apparatus under supervision, but most of the downtown skyscrapers hqva Indoor golf courses, swimming pools, and handball and squash courts. There is one downtown club which has squash courts presented by John D. Rockefeller, Jr. In other parts of town ar® elaborate indoor tennis court* One of the roost palatial places of this sort has only a few members, I am told that fir the ground, building and furnishings, they chipped In about $209,000 each. But that was previous to 1990L 'k'- • V The snootier New fork dotes have grown vastly more democratic. There are dubs where the waiting list used to be as long as a bread line. If a man were proposed in his youth, he stood a good chance of being elected about the time he was ready to be pushed inside the sacred portals in a wheel-chair. Progress was slower than promotion in a peace-time army. One of these. clubs has taken In twentyfive new members In the past year. Nobody with enough money to pay the dues Is safe passing' the door. • • • I am told the expression "stage-door Johnnies" originated st the old John street theater. This playhouse was torn down before most of ns were born, but was famous in its day. • • • If you want to see girls from musical shows, which have failed, look In the cheap restaurants. Some of them eat there, and some of them work there. • • • I aft told that visitors to the curio room at police headquarters,' where charming mementoes of murders and murderers are kept, must obtain passes. When no such restriction obtained, it wag necessary to watch the guests too constantly to see that, they didn't swipe any of the stuft _ • • • Madison Square Garden, wfeidi' TiBed to boast of its 600 millionaires, is said to have taken a 90 per cent cut. • • • Hotel porters depend largely upon their tips. There was a highly dissatisfied porter in one hotel recently. A woman arrived with more than a dosen pieces of baggage, including four extra heavy trunks. After the porter had finally wrestled everything to her suite she rewarded him with cents. • • i • , ' They tell me taste in food changes with the years. A man I know used to dislike fish heartily, but now shad and sole are among his favorite dishes. Still, I doubt whether T live long enough to get really fond of parsnips. (Cl 1*1*. Bell SyndicftUJ-mitU atrrice. FOR W5WT--6-raow Jmofalaw on RkftaMaki «Ni AB tsotet convenience*. Phoae 1244. William Bon alatt. f-tf FOB RENT--Heated apartment with garage. Kent very reasonable. Inqaire at Naples State Bank of Xe Henry. S-tf MISCELLANEOUS BEFORB tdtr Birr--oar Bargain Shoe Counter. Expert slxw and sewing machine repairing. Popp's Shoe Store, Wast McHeiify. Ptione 142. TWIN LOCALS mu& Insurance Companies Lift Ban on Air Travel Chicago.--The old bugaboo of "How does flying affect my life insurance?" has been removed by insurance companies as a result of the operating record made by companies flying licensed planes with licensed pilots in regularly scheduled operations, shows a survey just completed by the Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce. Several years ago, most life insurance companies would not pay the face value of a policy if death occurred In an airplane accident. Today, th^ majority of companies make no prohibition against air travel, either in policies already in effect or which are now being written. Twenty-four out of twenty-five companies questioned stated their policies covered passengers traveling on a regular transport air line. In addition to paying the full face of the premium In the event of an airplane accident, approximately half of the companies answering the questionnaire said they would, in addition, pay the double Indemnity provision. Plan Underground Air Fields for British Army London.--The British air force has decided henceforth to build all Its airports underground. The atr ministry's decision was taken after long and careful reconnaissance from the air, which revealed that no landing field, with its hangars, would escape by camouflage the powerful lenses now used In military cameraa. The new airdromes will be at a minimum depth of 30 feet There will be inclines for planes to coma to the surface and take off. It is probable that the gentler slopes of the downs between London and the south coast will be used, since they could ^ developed mor$„e^^ Ske t>ucM at M •. •" Rttsfleid, Mass.--At nlfiety-elght, Mrs. Catherine Haligan finds fun dancing to "Turkey in the Straw." Her sister, Mrs. phllip Mugler. likes to watch her. She is one hundred and two. -- . , 1 Ou Year Wti Too Lang Seattle, Wash--F. E. Smiley was charged with one-arm driving. "How absurd," said his wife. "We've been married a JW--tO# lofif lor that sort of. thing?'-.. TAKES AIR MOVIES OF EXHUMED Explorer Reveals Secrets of :. Ancient Near' East..v. :f 43b|c«fo.r*-How be has ridden • maitc carpet with three motors" over .the exhumed cities of the antlent Near East, looking down through many centuries and many strata of old civilizations, recording on 12,000 feet of film the most extraordinary motion picture ever attempted, was told by Chules Breasted of the University of Chicago. As executive secretary of the university's Oriental institute; Mr. Breasted has Just completed a 3.500 mile flight over Egypt, Palestine, Syria, Turkey, Iraq and Persia, where twelve archeological expeditions under the direction of his famous father, Dr. James H. Breasted, are digging ruins of forgotten cities: Reveals "New Past." new past"--"new" because tha human race now living has never known the facts before, and "past" because It dates from King Solomon --will be the title of the picture when it is produced, with the voice of Doctor Breasted himself giving meaning to what appears on the screen. But it was the younger Breasted, who described how one old city after another has yielded its secrets to the spades and picks of the expeditions. "What it means," he said, "is not merely the digging up of burled cities, but actually the reconstruction of life as it was lived in successive periods. We can tell how xkings ruled, how, armies fought, how common peoples tilled their fields, traded, married, reared families, died .and were buried. These cities are silent mounds now, representing stratum after stratum-- layer cakes' of different civilizations and periods." The most Important work under way, he said, is that of the expedition which is restoring Persepolis, capital of the Persian empire bu|lt by Darius the Great about 500 O. and destroyed by Alexander the Great in 331 B. C. It rests at the base of a blkck mountain on a terrace constructed of huge blocks of stone. The tombs of Darius and Xerxes are there, carved out of rock In the mountainside and faced by mighty sculptured columns. The expedition has its headquarters in tha ifeconstracte& harem of Darius. Baffle Modern Bulldersi Mr. Breasted told of the unearthing of engineering achievements so extraordinary that modern builders cantoot gueas the methods used--the Ctesiphon arch, for example, 140 feet high, with an unsupported span of eightyfour feet. "It seems to defy the law of gravity," he said. "Modern engineers are unable to explain how it was built and itfhy It has not collapsed." Another expedition, he said, is excavating the mound of Moglddo, which guards the pass leading through the Carmel range near the lake of Galilee All the ancient armies that marched between Egypt and Palestine hail to use that pass. "Digging through layer after layer there," said Mr. Breasted, "our expedition has reached the period of Solomon, 950 B. O., and one may now walk through the stables once occupied by the monarch's horses." At Khorsabad near Mosul, one expedition Is digging out the palace and the city of King Sargon II, who ruled Assyria. 'That is where the Institute obtained the great winged bull of stone, now at the museum at the university. Deepest of all, in terms of time, is the work of the Iraq expedition, uncovering twin cities northeast of Bagdad, dating back to 2600 B. C.-- centuries ago. Fr**ck Paul CoJa France does not send all persons who commit Crimea to the French penal colony on the Isle de Salut, off the coast of French Guiana. The type of prisoners sent Is that, generally •peaking, of the undesirable habitual criminal whom the French government does not want to return to France. In sentencing Hie criminal to the colonies the type of criminal rather than the type of crime committed Is •tressed, such as undesirable political prisoner?, as wall as vicious habitual CTipiinalCL, OMmI Priatht Estaf The oldest example of printing still III existence is believed to he the Kompon- Darani, a Buddhist prayer, printed from wooden type, in 756 A. D„ in an edition of 1,000,000 copies, by order of the Japanese Empress Kokes. It is awned by the Art Institute of Chicago. Diversity la Universal There never was in the world two opinions alike, no more than two . hairs, or tWo grains; the most universal quality is diversity.--Montaigne. Tfcs Athletes m both ends of thajr double haadinr Sunday, whipping stubborn Johnsburg offensive by pounding out thirUan hits good for ten runs in the opener and then com* ing back ip the late innings to erasa an Algonqtin lead ans win 5-4 in tha last of tbt ninth. There %as some excellent baseball displayed in the lstter* contest, bat It was rather marred by. tha several storms that blew up but none of them lasted long enough to do much harm- Charlie Bick worked the1 first fame for the A'a and toy»d aropnd with his job too much to be comfortable at times, fie yielded fcwo runs on three solid smacks in ther first, bat his mates soon erased them and piled up a four-run lead of their own off Schaef«r*S talk! twisters, only to have Charlie ease up again and Hand, thsrti five runs in the fifth on five hits and some questionable fielding. The Athlatica hopped hack in their h*K aVd regained the lead and then kddad runs in the seventh and eighth to mafce their position more seenrt; Ir lfltftitfr vtfsa ba&r in uniform for I flikt ttffis in a month and* collected a double SS his offering toward victofcr. f The teoond game started out like a freal bstl|e and it ended up in the salts'fashfen. With Art Dieball on the mound and working in great style there shouldn't have been any trouble in gaining a victory at all, but several errors in tha infield threw away a two-run lead established early in the game and the Athletics had to stage a comeback in the eighth and ninth to win the battle. Dieball allowed but six hits and struck out fourteen and surely didnt deserve to lo&e. The A'S pounded Fodzemeki for ten safeties including a double and triple by the new long distance hitter, Eddie Frett, which were very Instrumental in the victory. The Athletics started the scoring in the second with three hits after tha first two men ha4; been retired. M Whiting lined a to left center and Fay duplicated with a one-ba3e drive that cleared the second baseman's outstretched hands by six inches. Eddie. Frett then came through with the first of his devastating Wows, a doable to left center that, scored the two runners. Algonquin didn't threaten until the fifth 'and then they received a bargain ran that cut tha home team's lead in half.- Ebel reached second on Whitirfg'a etror and came in and.scored when Podzemeki hit a waste ball for single to right. field. Only occasional hits greeted the deposing hurlers from the fifth until the visitors became encouraged with successive errors on the first two batsmen up in the seventh, H. Freund and Fay being the culprits. E. Filip then lined a single to right that scored the tying run and left men on second and third. Two men were then cut down at tha plate, but V. Filip came through with a duplication of his brother's act and two more runs scampered across the plate to give the Algonquin boys the lead for the first tttae. The A's cams near creating a little trouble in the seventh when M. Whiting walked with two out and advanced on the Second of Fay's three hits. Frett drove a liner right into Siminini's hSnds for the third out. Again in the eighth the A's stirred things up after two were out and this time they succeeded in getting one run across the plate- Bacon lined a single to center and stole second. Good old Charlie Bick then duplicated his hit and the score was 4-3. And then the big ninth that almost, but not quite, terminated in more of a storm than the clouds above Jiad threatened. Joe Freund got on when Urban fumbled his grounder for the first of two helping errors, the only two made by Algonquin during the game. Gus Freund was put on to run for Joe, the latter being not so fast without his shinguards. Whiting sac. rificed Gus to second with a perfect bunt. Fay then scratched a hit off E. Filip's glove and when Filip's belated toss to the pitcher covering the bag went awry, Gus scored the tying run and Fay went to second. Fay pulled the mistake of testing his speed against the agility of White and lost, Fay attempting to go to third Wften Podzemeki muffed a return from the catcher, but he was out by six feet when White speedily recovered. To have the potential run erased from base made it look bad, but a bright cloud Tapidly rose over the hofizon with Eddie Frett tripling to right. ..PjafeaB was hit by a pitched ball and FlWfc, not knowing the ball had hit Du&all, tried to score When the ball rolled to tTTe backstop. He Was lagged out but, as the ball is dead when it hits a batter until it can be returned to the pitcher on the mound, no play could be made and Fre*.t therefore had to return to . third. Harold Freund put an end to further argument by singling to left field for his second hit of the game and his fifth of the afternoon. Locals Next Sunday Next Sunday there will be another home town celebration with the Locals and the Athletics hooking up in another battle to settle the championship of the city. To date the Locals have won two and lost one, their two victories both being shutouts. Since that time the Athletics have started hiting the ball again and have piled up three straight victories to bring their season's total to ten won and seven lost. Dieball, whose debut at McHenry was almost ruined when the Locals assaulted him^in the ninth for six runs and he had to call on Charlie Bick to settle things, will be on the mound for the A's and will attempt to show that that was all foolishness. Thurwell and SchoewSJP ' '*111 T|»S ©n hand for the Locals. ,, ^ . fsaw day to a wdfcbntanwi ,temp. day. The gtan wpi wsB jilayed and *X<g6kntiy ftitchsd by both s&as *event)i feniagr osmmencad right jfchsra. A. whq had heap. inrtalWd for BsMteafct, threw out Lajaisfcy. Stoffel muffed Hansen's grounder and A, Anderson still thinking he had a chance of catching the mail at first, threw wild' Mentcb struck out, then Narnowety tripled, Till tripled, Diaois singled, which' removed Schoewer from the box. Murphy hit *a sharp hopper to Goier and lived when it was fumbled. Tha Locals recovered one run in the eighth, but the game ended- 6-2, Cary's favor. Kvidera of Cary struck out 8 and allowed 5 hita, one a douWe'by G^ier. Schoewer struck out 7, allowed 7 hita' of which twp extra .bass vari ety. Spots TTmrlwell finished the game, allowing one 4ouble and strik ing out two. Evcfyona knows that tha * Locals are So. play the MAAC Sunday with either Schoewer or TSwaiweli on the mound for McHenry irlfih Schroeder receiving. w Smnday'a box score follows: LOCALS-- Benoetty sa A . Anderson, , as- "ft Smith, 2b Schroeder, c 4 Thutlwell, cf-p 4 Phairaenstill, If ............ 8 Stoffel,: 3b. "W " * Thowell, Tf ..-- T. Andoson, rf-cf"...... J Thames, rf 1 Schoewsr, p 8 0 0 :ifc. * 0 0 0 I 6 r 0 0, 2 0 2 110 '•1 0 13 o 8 t 2 0 CARY-- A. Narniowty, If R. Till, e ..... : Dianis, ss Murphy, rf Kvidera, p ... Ocenaaek, <f Lajansky, lb ...a.. Hansen, 2b Mentch, 8b 88 2 $^41 7 5TT 8 34 Aadent "BJ»« Law*" Virginia's Sunday laws of Oolonlal days were at one period so 9trlct,:tliSt anyone who absented himself from church three times had to serve as a slave for-a year and. a: da# t ••• ^4 Old 'Aiitericaa "',T ^ The oldest settlement In Canada to Tadoussac, a little French village on a bay where the Saguanay river flows Into the St Lawrence. It Is said that the first church In America was founded here, and still stands. First Game ATHLETICS-- ' H. Freund, ss .*-- 5 2 Jk Qy 2 .1 Fay, c # 11 g. 1 0 Bick, p 0 -2 0-1 .0 Brodman, tf 3 1 0 0 0 Bacon, 3b 4 1 2 6 6 1 M. Whiting, 2b 4 1 2 0 2 1 Frett, cf 4 112 0 1 A. Freund, lb 8 0 0 10 1 1 S. Whiting, rf ........ 8 1 f 1 0 0 87 10 18 27 12 JOHNSBURG-- E. Smith, 2b 5 2 2 G- Schmitt, 3b 6 0 1 L. King, lb 6 f 2 C. Smith, ss 4 1 1 A. Oeffling, c 6 1 2 V. Adams, rf 5 0 1 E. He^termann, cf 4 0 0 N. Miller, If ........... 4 0 0 M. Schaefsr, p 4 11 e 2 2 1 2 1 1 ' 2 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 2 42 7 10 24 18 SCORE BY INNINGS-- Johnsbufg 200 050 000-- 7 10 6 Athletics 101 420 11*--10 18 « Two base hits--L. King, C. Smith, Brodman, S. Whiting. Three ' base hits--E- Smith, V. Ad^ms, Frett. Stolen bases--McHenry 9., « , Second Game ATHLETICS-- > H. Freund, ss ........ 6 H. Bacon, 8b ......... 8 Bick, rf ......... ........p. 4 Brodman, lf"l........Vi 4 J. Freund, c 4 A. Freurid J.. 0 M. Whiting, 2b 2 Fay, lb 4 Frett, cf .M--tiimMM,*. 4 DiebaU,^^ 8 1. 0 0 1 0 3 1 0 ALGONQUIN-- White, 2b V. Filip, c .. Ritt, 3b Urban, ss Siminini, cf , Kublank,rf Ebel, lf U;. E. Filip, lb . Podzemeki^ P 83 6 10 27 10 6 ...... 4 4 4 4 4. 4 4 4 2 » 1 0 1 0 2 16 1 87 4 6 26 17 2 A. Freund ran for J. Freund In 0th. SCORE BY INNINGS-- Algonqdin 000 010 800--4 6 2 Athletics ........ 020 000 01*-& 10 0 Two base hits---H. Freund. Three base hits--E. Frett. Struck out by Podzemeki 2, by Dieball 14. Bases on balls--Off Podzemeki 2. . Stolen bases--Bacon. Hit by pitcher--Dieball. Double play--Urban to White to E. Filip. .• > i BATTING AVMLAGH6 Ofs : WTx* 80 20 93, 99 68 15 21 84 25 61 27 86 61 10 44 7 H. Freand H Bacon Fay S. WMtiag Brodman, . Bick -- Frett ......... Britjt M. Whiting Krohn ...v.. J. Freund Dieball 8 8 » 6 10 6 « ' 4 I ;»• • 21 7 11 7 17 •...7 8 13 2 .8 1 27 T 14 10 19 13 14 15 2 11 1 Team Average ..«»««•»»«•«*• • TPct. >808 .333 .333 ^23 .280 .273 .259 .222 .213 .200 .182 .143 .262 ft' " 'V '.P.** up the Fox Etrer and •Bfiwaif Ohain-O-Laket SO BXnSS WAT TO SFKKD THS ik&X ' Fdmoifs Lotus Beds are- ' now Blooming *v'v ^Oalyftiree Bedsin th« •H'-m i Palatial Motor . - - 2 p. BL, D*ylight Saving Time EOUJMIj TRIP--ADULTS $1.00 Qim n^wr ^ Boat RMe« V'SM® AND FAST BOATS--30 to 50 Mile, « Koiu by Licenned Pilota : ; XATKS-SOo, *1.00 AND Up 8p«ckl Any 8i?e Any Hoor 7 £«r Rates on Picnic if: ^v; ncBzmT, njjHoia August Clearance GIBRALTAR OVERALLS-- 220 weight, fnllent, roomf s Vack©t« to matdi - iBoyi' Overalla •4^ "MS1" 69^ -4W BOBN'S SHIRTS AMD SHOE»- V ^ out in the best liked iol(M!«^ % reduced to 29^ BdEK'S KSrt ATHLETIC WlOK SUITS, ^ rednced to . j . .••v - 39^ WASH FABRICS-- * ^ , Printed and plalii cc^or Voller, Cleoranor price, per yard.. SILK MESH HOSE, regular 79c valnei, Clearance 39^ TENNIS SHOES FOE MEN AND BOYS, one special lot, not all ai--a .:v - 49^ MEN'SDRESS OXFORDS 1.98 . 1 . . « .... ... , „iin . . i-1- • •) - -L - "H* JOHN STOFFEL I AUGUST FOOD? SAlM HOUSE EVAPORATH> CANS Edalwaiss Br«w6 •<"<- 29c .. • PALE DRY 4 24-OZ. 2CC Hydrox Ginger Ale rkoular 3 sots. ' (Plus Bottl* D«pO«lt) AAP Grape Juice • V ^ P,NT Encore Queen Olivet * Pink Salmon stream • Sawyer's Fig Bars < ; Campbell's Tomato SOOP CHIPS CUANQUICK 'M ES LUCKY ITWRI. OU eRCiimwnii 2 BOT8. 25c 27« 3 CANS 25c 3 tn- 25c 4^* 25c SIC w«r oQr It SEEDLESS RAISINS, pkg. 33# laULfT, HELLMANN OR BEST F06D ^ MAYONNAISE, pint jar r PRODUCE SPECIALS FEW YELLOW ONIONS ORANGES, small sue, dosen 15^ FRESH PEACHES 3 lbs. 17 4 FANCY WHITE COBBLER POTATOES, per peck --_.j;.-- 23^ BANANAS, per fe. 5$ Friday and Saturday Specials! COFFEE oK 3 lb& 49c THE GREAT ATLANTIC |i PACIFIC TEA CO, MMdU «Um Dhblm -- ' ' -• U. ,-'v'