Thursday, August 17, 1944 THE McHINRY PLAINDKALWI rage nn HEAR by EARL R. WALSH PEAKING &<flr TTl^&f/uLonJL- .:. uuun HUNTERS JS£ |WILL ENJOY A '* HOLLYWOOD LONGER SEASON :y\: • . " • • " • - - ' :' i> ;, • •i -o •' ;•• V, • • 4SHeaned From Here and TVre „... ; Life is just one banned thing after another. Even a woodpecker owes his suceess to the fact that he uses his head. There are two kin4s of people-- good and bad. The classifying is «>ne by the good. ' " Another fellow who ha*. his ups Mid downs is the one who always fits in an aisle seat at the movies. , Everyone should own a comfortable bed and comfortable shoes because Ik's in one or the other all his life. Released by Western Newspaper Union. P T -..-.,,, ^ 'IF ANY Hollywood movie lays anj h IGURES from the nation's racej *egg this year it will surely be a ; tracks are sufficient evidence thai i golden one, 'cause our movie moguls i horse racing has lost none of its j have cooked up the most elaborate,! ambitious, and expensive program in the history of this industry. Limit on All Bucks Is 15 * The Battle of Beer Collar. (Editorial in St. Louis Globe- Demo «rat) /•rtlift sultry Dallas, where the. beer •tason blooms eari^ the regional ] office of the OPA has opened a six-j •fcate Battle of Beer Collar. Panting j «pd indignant at the frustration of | sputtering through & or 6 cents1 worth of foam to get at maybe 4 : cents worth of beer at the bottom; of a 10-cent glass, the agency ordered all districts in its region, including St. Louis, to slap a ceiling on foam. Or, put conversely, it decreed foam isn't beer and you can't popularity With the season about half gone for many of the major tracks, betting totals are high enough to indicate that just about every record will be broken in 1944. The present betting spree is unprecedented in American thoroughbred history. Just seven years ago the parimutuel tracks totaled a fancy $266,000,000. That amount was even greater than many an enthusiast had predicted, but the follow-up has been little short of phenomenal. Each year, sinoe 1938, the betting handle hat increased. la 1939 it mounted to and in 1940 climbed to 94M,Mt,tM. Racing officials thought that the IMS mark of wonld stand for quite some time, bst with the 1944 season slightly more than six months old, it is ibvint that ail records. *re to be shattered thoroughly* Heavy Gains Reported. The country's biggest trackf are operating on a colossal basis. New York, Chicago, New England, Cali-j fornia and Detroit all report heavy I gains. More than a billion dollars New hunting regulation* will be of interest to which ALEMITES HOLD PICNIC AND BEAT SHAMROCKS 5 4 AT WALKUP WOODS DEADLOCK FOE FIRST PLACE STILL EXISTS LIN COUNTY LEAGUE , After leading for six innings, the Woodstock and Algonquin continues Shamrocks were finally defeated 5-4 j to dominate the county baseball by Woodstock last Sunday. j league, each haviqg three wins and The Shamrocks scored two runs I no losses in the third round of play, in the first and two in the eighth, i The McHenry Shamrocks gave The Shamrocks tied it up in the Woodstock quite a scare last Sunday, eighth and then Woodstock produced but eventually lost, 5 to 4 the winning run in the ninth. Algonquin had rather easy piek- Aftev one out in the ninth, Funk ] ing-against Hebron, winning 14 to 2 and Snyder both singled, bringing | as Simonini struck out 20 batters. The period 1943-'44 is knnu-n «i«"" T "a V spor*smen UP Reed, who already had three hits ! H. Hopp. Algonquin slugging centhe Yelr oMhe Big Take^n mov!e! T"""; T ^ iat W«"!ter *» » circles. Box office retumf'hit S^ew £ [ j , ' ha%* Uen released ner threw home to get Funk sliding two doubles and a single. high, ucMdinf^ ** <***• Woods then The »!»• P« <m their wildest nightmares. Following ib the information which , to center, scoring Pellegrin from batting clothes and slugged out a 13 If there ever was a time when -- ,88U#d: j third with the winning run. to 7 victory c*er Richmond; movie men could get away with a slap-dash product, now is that time. But, true to the counter-clockwise method of working, for which they take so much ribbing, the boys are planning films t j, will have been wagered by bettors It seems too many bartenders have I before Charge for it. "~~sfore the season's end. been laying too he^vy a hand on the j .. ?* should be remembered, too, that j air valve, reaping excessive profits; J™ total is the legalized betting atj by serving up much luscious lather j ' }*• ^as ^eep estimated: in lieu of liquid. Effective July 31, i ™ •* leas* an.,f^u®1 «mo"nt t is however, that sort of inflation must, th ^ ? Jtu t ®3 h®n< «..! throughout the nation. *booka | j When New York's season passed 1 Roaa Stradner Hunters may shoot more water-; WagBer did the pitching for the fowl andr over a longer period this Shamrocks and also got three of! McHenrv County League fall and winter under liberalized their hits. Judson was in his usual I Third Round Standing* hunting reguUtions announced last form, striking out thirteen men. Al- i week. The open season will be though Woodstock collected twelve Algonquiiv eighty days, ten longer than last "hits toff Wagner, costly ' errors were Woodstock^ ye**- ' • 1 a ^i«in factor in the. Shamrocks j McHenry ' Hie, general daily bag limit for defeat. , ' Richmond ducks remains at ten, «n> additional j The fcame Vas played'ltt Walkup Johnsbar* "»--»»»?• '*• bag of five mallards, widgeons, and : Woods at Clystal Lake before a large Hebron pintails, singly or in the aggregate! crowd as the AJemite was having j °* -- is allowed. Thus, if a hunter kills j their annual picnic. five or more of these species in a | Next Sunday the Shamrocks play ' day, his bag limit on all ducks is jjohnsburg at McHenry. I fifteen. • . ., {SHAMROCKS--4 - I The fish and wildlife service which i drew up the regulations, refused to j Conway sg w L Pet. 3. ' 0 1.000 3 0- 1.000 ..... 1 ' '2'- •&33 ....i 1 , '^33 1 '^33 . 00 - .ooo b u d g e t s a n d j m e a n s o f b a i t o r w i t h t h e h e l p , o f j J . W a g n e r enough a t a r iive decoys, as urged by some hunt-jH. Stilling names in the cast ers. [Murphy cf rn ! Dr. \lra N. G^brielson, fish and wild-1 Miller lb . Well, that s Holly-, jjfe director, said the more liberal Crouch Sb wood for you. _ regulations were due to the steady Bolger c Gregory Peek Darryl Zanaek, jncrease jn the continental migra- L. anything by B pic">ry bird P-P"1*'""- ». ««id tures off the slate and came up ', the increase in mallards, widgeons, Stilling if Totals .... with two super-films-- ..udvu _..u . .. ... 'The Keys of the Kingdom"-which "nce ,ar® the species which do Stop. There can be a collar on the glass of beer of course, but the customer must also receive full measure of real fluid for the money he pays. For example, OPA specified, the dealer can't sell a 10-ounce glass the halfway mark as the Saratoga 30-day meet opened, indication^ were that by mid-November at least $400,000,000 will have been . .. waUered, and the state treasury enbearing a three-ounce collar for ltf riched by some $27 000 000 cents. It wasn't revealed how big a | The New York estimate is based glass would be required to hold three on the assumption that the second ounces of foam. i half bf the season will be compara- • j hie to the first. When the Empire Take the case of Henry miler vW seas°n *ndfd' marking the halfway "Bevo" Freund. Henry put a new ' the.total betting for 96 days roof on the house and generously distributed the old shingles tp those who top anything before attempted in size, outlay, and big-name casts. "The Keys of the Kingdom" is the logical Academy award rival to the most damage to crops, hunters j Reed lf-rf will be allowed to shoot more of!Woods ss them. , Zimmerman This is purely a temporary expedi-' Judson p .. the Oscar. "The Keys" also has an makes it necessary. i Schmitt 3b .... all-star cast, although Gregory Peek! Open season on wild ducks, geese, j Funk 3b-lf .. and Rosa Stradner, who play the,brant an<* coot be as follows: | Pellegrin lb Snyder lb Wanted them. ^^ __ "Sure", says "Bevo". "'Bring me over a load." v Well, the load looked so igood he ordered another load. The trouble came in when Henry dumped the second load • in a conspicious spot near the building. 'Twas on a Saturday morning and a busy weekend coming up. "Bevo" had no time or inclination to move those shingles. So - - - - -Do you think he; tkras stopped? No, sir! Not "Bevo". He burned 'em on the spot! (All we know is what we hear.)4 The ShamrocRs are being termed . "the herd luck team" around the bounty. That's generous of the opposition, but we subscribe to the idea races were cancelled on D-Day) came to $208,038,623. If the second half of the campaign equals the first, the total would reach $416,077,246. Arid there is every reason to believe that betting won't fall off at any of the major tracks. During 1942 the average Detroit racing fan bet $26.96 every time he went to the Fair Grounds to aid in the improvement of the breed. In 1943 this average went up to $33.50. But in 1944 the average jumped to $39.04 and is still mounting. R H 0 1 1 S «4 a 1 ..............^......4 1 ^ » 1 ...--...r.....s 0 0 0 0 ........%....it,..,.4 '•. 0 0 J4 4 8 --s . AM R H 0 3 0 2 f .4 0 0 . ......*.;..,....4 0 0, 0 2 0 0 .2 0 - -0 ..i 1 -*:il 1 1 1 •" 1 -- *2 2 *2 Woodstock 5, McHenry 4. Johns burg 13, Richmond % Gaates Next Sunday Woodstock at Algonquin!! ; Richmond at Hebron. » • k Johnsburg at McHenry. • most important roles, have each had i (both dates inclusive): " but one "previous Hollywood film ex-' Sept. .20, Dec. 8--Includes Iowa, perience. But they've both had fine i Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan. theatrical training. , Oct. 14, Jan. 1--Includes Kentucky, (97 were originally scheduled but | In Lighter Vein [Indiana, Illinois, Missouri. With these two films as a sample.' ^ "mit ™ ^ and the B's thrown into the discard, bran* two. m Pacific Twentieth's staff of producers has co states an additional bag of four. hits--Murphy and Wagner. Threehad some reorganizing to do, but sno^ aJld white faced geese, singly ! base hits--Wagner. Double plays-- quick. The upshot is a program lean- or aggregate will be allowed, | Conway to M.cCracken to Miller. Totals .5^ Score by Inidnfs: Shamrocks 200 000 Woodstock 001 000 B 12 020--4 301--5 Stolen hfese--)S<|hmitt. Two-base ing heavily on musicals -- extrava- a mo®^ other states an addi- j Struck out by--Judson, 13 Bases on gant musicals that will rival the big- ^on®' hag - of four snow and blue.balls off--Judson, 0; Wagner, 2. Win- 8®e«e. ning pitcher--Judson There is no open season in any 1 -- '• state on swans or Koss's goose. 'wbct pnnm) * t t With respect to ducks: Hunters FIKST FOOTBALL gest attractions on Broadway Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer has much the same idea. It's going to be a; struggle in this era of super-productions to see whether William Perl- he allowed to include redhead ; PRACTICE AT MCHS berg's musical can outdo Jack Cum- and bufflehead ducks in their bag MONDAY, AUGUST 28 ' mings' "Little Bit of Heaven." Or limit of ten, instead of shooting only1 Wl!etueI Siegf,el? Fol,lies." int0 thre€ » d»y 88 last year- !n addi-! Coach McCracken.has set the date New York Average which Arthur Freed has thrown the tion to other shooting, a hunter is for the first football practice at our stay ahead in matters of horse rac-: da^--Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly-- American and red-brested mergans- 28 at 6 P M lrT£i5ri'?^iiaRMi ®ur?nte. ers which Dr. Gabrielson said have I All olayers from last year's sqQad During the racing at Jamaica, it £ ^ Garland, John Hodiak, Lena become so numerous they are *a are asked to be present for the first was figured that the fans averaged! ^®r"e' Aames f0n' ®**rion Bell, menace to fish progapation. Only one j practice. Boys who did not particim . d.,. Wb<„ the N>w Vork R€d skeSn^ai mak^'bigg^lZ. ^ ^ "" P"e W turn that a few hard hits will wipe out i 'I®® * person. races were shifted to Belmont, the average jumped between $92 and the hard luck. The Shamrocks haVe never been known as a slugging aggregation, but have provided some interesting entertainment in the way of tight defense and ability to take advantage of breaks. This year they are losing the cloee ones. A little survey in the county league shows that the teams who have outstanding pitchers are the teams on _ top. Woodntoek has Howard JudsonU United States today is $96,900,000 Algonquin has "Tubby" Simonini. Tike- either teasns in the league have capable (lingers, but none can be classed with the above mentioned. Joe "Mooee" Wagner, popular with players and fans alike, is doing a good job on the mound for the Shamrocks and could have won a couple of recent gamefe if his support had been up to par. But, Joe is a hitter by tirade and filling the pitching gap willingly because there isn't anybody else for the job. Was a time when the Shamrocks bad both Larkin and Harry Dowell for mound duty. Both were -plenty good. But, that's just dreaming of days "gone by. Jim is in military service and Harry has a job that wont permit time for Sunday baseball. Race track operators are quick to realize that such huge figures may in time work against them in -the form of increased taxes. They have attempted to solve this problem by making huge contributions to war relief agencies. Daring 1943 these war relief contributions totaled $8,618,489.86. According to John N. Sabo, Detroit turf editor, more than $160,000,000 is invested in race tracks, horses and big breeding farms. The estimated value of the horses racing in the noise than Perlber«?'s "Stat«« F^ir " idai^-.ba?' , , . I out and show what ability or potentor which "Ichard Rodger, and o-: 'VrTtulr \ °"y ^ ^ Oklahoma ~okW»mir •*?' I ? ,*?"?' i; c I is/* La#* mourning or turtle doves and white- 5oy it ITon Music ; winged dove, ten in the aggregate of Ira Gershwin and Kurt Weil are! both kinds; and hand-tailed pigeon, responsible for*the tunes in "Where i ten. - 2° Go fro"? Here-" Morrie Piwifllslon Uaut Ryskind s story of a 4-F. Agnes De Mille, C. B.'s talented niece, will do the dance routines A hunter must not have in his possescion at any one time more than Metro has an answer to this in !twenty ducks in the a**re*ate of "Music for Millions," in which Jose a11 kinds <excePl American and red- • That's baseball today--from the majors on down the line. But, baseball is doing a creditable job. Teams are hanging together with determination to carry on until our boys can yet back home. Johnsburg nine, a team that was almost entirely broken up by the call to arms, will come to McHenry next Sunday for one of the big games of the season. In the last few games, those Johnsburg boys have been lay in* the wood on the old apple. And don't think they wont be swinging for keeps next Sunday. The Shamrocks are due for a win. Well, ltt's go down and see for ourselves. A let of other people will be. there. T Announcement of the first football practice for a week from next "Actually," Sabo writes, "under present-day high prices of thorough- ' breds, the total is greater. Horses which cost $1,500 two or three years ago now are unobtainable at twice that figure. "A good indication is the racer Pericles which William A. Hellis of New Orleans purchased IMT |66,000 as an untried yearling. The * Racing Sky* It wasn't so long ago that racing officials were having more, than their share of trouble. The sport was being condemned quite widely as a wartime luxury--something that could be eliminated from the national scene without loss to morale. The tracks were making big money. And they were a bit slow about contributing their share to war relief, organizations. The contributions made by the tracks have been impressive, but not out <5f proportion. Racing is big business--and extremely profitable. The sport not only can afford to be generous, it must be generous. It is too dependent upon the public's good will to be anything else. SPORTS SHORTS Cleveland sport fans have donated $15,000 to a fiuid to provide playing equipment and free medical care to sandlot ballplayers in the city. The president of the newly formed Pacific Coast professional football league, J. Rufus Klawans, got his start playing under A. A. Stagg at the University of Chicago in 1909. The ftrst no-hit, no-run game in the American Association this season was hurled by Walter Brown of Toledo, to defeat Milwaukee, 1-4). Brown walked four men. of i^eat what else would he bo doing with it? Itwbi and Margaraet O'Brien are drawing cards. With Larry Adlet's harmonica, Jimmy Durante Hugh Herbert for laughs, how can it lose? Warners have "Hollywood Canteen," also "Rhapsody in Blue," the story of George Gershwin's life. Georgie Jesse! is music-minded, too. His "Kitten on the Keys" calls brested mergansers, of which he may possess twenty-five, aiid in addition ten mallards, widgeoiis and pintails, singly or in the aggregate. Possession limit for white-winged doves was reduced from twenty to ten birds. Open season other waterfowl: Mourning or turtle doves: Illinois, for a hunk of stars. Includes Dick {Sept. 1, Sept. 30; Wisconsin, Oct. Haymes, Perry Como, and both l, Oct. 15; Indiana, Oct. 16, Oct. SO; Benny Goodman and Jimmy Dorsey.; Missouri, Nov. 10, Nov. 24. That Lubittch Touch Ernst Lubitsch's main centers about "Czarina," the satiric comedy which will be Tallulah Bankhead's next. Charles Coburn has been signed to play the chancellor; also Vincent Price has a big part. "Dragonwyck," the story of Rails and gallinules (except coots): _ . j The season is Sept. 1, Nov. 80, excepc0ncern I tions include Wisconsin, Sept. 20, Dec. 8. No open season in Iowa. (Coots have the same open season as ducks.) Oil Locks Periodic oiling lengthens the Jife of any good lock. One way is to dip the key in oil before inserting. Powdered graphite also is a good lubricant, especially desirable for exposed to freezing weather. * ; Smelt Thrives in Lake The Lake Michigan smelt was introduced from Atlantic coastal wa- ; ters in 1918. It took especially to ; the Green Bay waters of Wisconsin and Upper Michigan, becoming so important that lakeside towns estab- j lished annual smelt festivals with j fishing contest®, ferns wheels and smelt queens. ' ; * until noon instead of from sunrise to noon as last year. Regulations- covering shooting hours and the number of shells permitted in guns are unchanged from last year. These permit shooting from one-half hour before sunrise until sunset (there are certain time exceptions in parts of Texas and IlliIn Alexander county, Illinois, one nois) and provide that guns must be of the mid-west's main, hunting areas, j plupged to hold no more than three the Dutch patroons, is another'Lu-' See5e may be hunt«d this season ' shells, including the one in the bitsch epic for Gene Tierney and {flx>m orie-half hour before sunrise chamber. Gregory Peck. Bette Davis ripens! "The Corn Is Green." And the set-1 up for "Roughly Speaking" includes Ros Russell and Jack Carson. The Ingrid Bergman-Gary Cooper special, "Saratoga Trunk," will soon be seen, and "The Conspirators." with Hedy Lamarr and Paul Henreid, can't fail to please the eye. Yes, producers would seem to be fighting hard for those long, long lines of patrons that bulge the walls ot everjr movie house in the land. Step in Right Direction Al Peasee belwves talented amateurs who're entertaining our troops in the camp shows will be stars of tomorrow. So Pearce has made arrangements with his boss, Herb Yates of Republic, to give six of them an opportunity in "Strictly for Laughs," which gets under way in September. . . . "This Is the Army" is doing such a morale building job for men at the front that, the government's thinking of sending it to South Pacific bases. Itond^ «e„iy m.k« realise ^ that summer is corner. going around that ;We saw it with our own eyes. Joe Regner's dog came in the back door, picked up an onion and scooted away with it. II may be only circumstantial evidence, but if that dog wasn't going to slice th« onion ever a chunk cooking that he had to head Itack to New York while his clothes still fit him. WeVe paid tt see ISm fun than we had watching the McHenry firemen in a water fight Monday night. Jftsaii tiw Waiit Ada Straight Skiaay lb* "straight skinny" ln't an elongated person, but is the "correct dope," in marine jargon. The expression cropped up for the first time-during the heat of battle on Bougainville. Some unidentified marine (gyrene in "slanguage") asked a mate in a foxhole, "Is that the straight skinny?" and it sounded so natural that it took on. It is now' part of the marine vocabulary which includes words dating back to the Revolutionary, war. BUY YOUR CASE BEER PA'S TAVERN CORNER RIVERSIDE AND ELM STREET PHONE 393 Home Comfort. . . COOLER BEDROOMS IN SUMMER SAVE FUEL NEXT WINTER -REDUCE DRAFTS Johns-Manville Rock Wool "BLOWN IN" WALLS AND ATTIC iS* a ran tied Not To Settle During Life of Building Installed by Wall-Fill Co.- 15 Years Experience For Information--Write or Call Leo J. Stilling District Manager Ml E. Pearl 8t McHenry 18 OR TOUR LUMBER AND BUILDING MATERIALS DEALER De If Taaneff-af tkm ratMANEKT WAVE KIT Couplet*withewlcn, ~---l impopandwavcMt •ate tea •» to ud Mb lor every type of & Mir. For uuulnc reaulW--be eure tu tar Cluro-Kurt. Over • -- eold. THOMAS P. BOLGER, DRUGS Paint? If so, you will be very much interested in the quality of paint to be used. A cheap paint will not result in a lasting job and that is what eom.its.. The painter may be a arood workman, but lie cannot do a fi^e job $it!i poor materials. This store handles <m* of the top-noteh brands of paint, made by an old re liable firm--; . We do not hesitate to n>conmiend this brand under any circumstances. Come in and talk over your plans for that job you are contemplating, v , And, also, while you in the store, look around--you may find the very article you need. ; ; s E. H. 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