PG. 4, SEC. I - PLAINDEALE& - JULY 27, 1967 Wonder Lake Soccer Team VS Crystal Lake fLW1 . . . . - £*r».5»**: •- •••:^- -^'- JTOs^-'-•*»••. • "'-^- '•*^rV^ •wir'Stf--•• i^T- *• The Wonder Lake Mustangs, Wonder Lake's new soccer team, have invited the Crystal Lake Bombers to play a second game at Wonder Lake on the grounds of Harrison School. Two weeks ago the Bombers defeated the Wonder Lake team with a score of 2-1. iNow it's the Mustangs turn to even up the score. The game will be held next Sunday, July 30 at 1:00 p.m. The team has invited Mr. Nels Dahlquist of Crystal Lake to act as referee for the game. Mr. Dahlquist is a professional referee in the Chicago area and referees games for the Chicago Mustangs, Chicago's professional soccer team. After next Sunday's game, the two teams plan to play exhibition games in other towns in McHenry County with the idea in mind of stirring up public interest in the game and to help other towns get started forming their own teams and in time forming a McHenry County Soccer Association. Leo Hartog, president and coach of the Wonder Lake team, plans to contact civic organizations in surrounding towns to try to build up interest in the newest sport. The boys are going to need a good cheering section next Sunday, so don't let them down. All you good soccer fans bring a few doubting Thomases along with you. We can promise, they'll be fans when they leave. Don't forg6t the date and the time, Sunday, July 30 at 1:00 p.m. at Harrison School grounds. On August 6th the Mustangs will go in a group to Genoa City, Wisconsin, to watch the soccer tournament which is played by Chicago teams and is an annual charity event for the benefit of the retirement home in that city. The location is just north of the city on old route 12. It is one thing to be a Sax fan, but another to be a column writer and tell all who will read your chatter about it. - , Jjg ' In these days when hysteria feigns on Chicago's north side, we can't dodge those long suffering Cub fans. SO I HEAR By Earl Walsh at this writing). We may still get that World Series in Chicago. Right in our own neighborhood, it is cannons to right of us ---- cannons to left of «ts. Bill Kruetzer is on one •side, Ford Hanford and Ed. Doyle on the other. How did we ever get mixed up with such a bunch -- LITTLE LEAGUE DANCE If you want to dance with that dolly, take her to the Little League dance at the VFW on Saturday night of this week. That now. famous "Big Band" -- the "Beer* Freund Orchestra will furnish the music. The crowds love 'em. You may be sure of a good, jolly crowd and a gay old time. What's more, Doyle has his wife and children trained to taunt us. We have used press releases from the Lake County Rifles and wonder how many local fans follow this football team. Will you give us a call? We want to give you what you want on your sport page. Attending Ted and Lorraine Pitzen's silver wedding anniversary, we couldn't meet anybody who dicbi't remind us about the mighty Cubs. Roland Herrmann is another who must arrange his path to meet us too often these days. As we sat on the "Pa" Thennes lawn taking part in a Mass of Thanksgiving, two birds flew over. One turned to the other and said, "Did you see Fred Meyer down there?" The other bird replied, "Ya - I spotted that blue shirt the first thing." Just a marked man!!!! And, of course, we had to listen to Junior Freund this week. He was all smiles. It is all great fun and the kind of fun that goes with knowing people in a small community. We wouldn't want to live any placeelse. Talk about June in January! Joe Kuna has a Christman tree in his store window in this 90 degree heat. Wonder if Lucille Harrison did that? Somebody is a mixed up kid. Lest our dear Cub boosters forget, our White Sox still lead the American League (at least "V HOMEOWNERS. *£K?Eg§8$ Conway D^aae ^ 3S15 W. Elm St. policy Phome SS5-7111 State F*m Fin & Casualty Company J Visit (LPs M The MeHenry County Fair August 3-4-5-6 EXHIBIT HALL BOOTH 40 Tickets & Reservaiious Airlines, - Railroads Tours Steamship Cruises U-Drive Resort Motels Your Authorized Travel A GIRL . . . Mark Thaye r of S a r a s o t a , F l o r i d a wanted friends and neighbors to know that it was a "girl." The morning after his wife gave birth to a young lady, he cut the word "GIRL" i n t h e g r a s s of h i s f r o n t yard. Just to be doubly sure, he also painted the rock at t h e c o r n e r of h i s y a r d a bright pink. ON PARADE . . . Two Chinese girls parade during a festival in Hong Kong. Parades, featuring elaborate paper decorations, mark many special occasions in the British Crown Colony. Old Time Firearms May Be Used To Take Deer In Slate Springfield, 111., July 21-- Pop, crack, pow! The muzzle loading rifle fraternity will be glad to know that for the first time in 62 years, ole time firearms may be used to take deer in Illinois. William T. Lodge, director of the Illinois Department of Conservation, said that the last session of the General Assembly passed legislation permitting the use of muzzle loading rifles for hunting white tails. Lodge stressed that the law pertains to rifles only. Muzzle loading muskets, smoothbores or shotguns are not legal for deer hunting. From Nov. 10 through Nov. 15, inclusive, holders of shotgun deer permits have the option of using a shotgun with rifled slugs or a muzzle loading rifle in the counties open for deer hunting with shotguns. The rifle must be shoulder fired and shoot a ball of 38 caliber or larger. The rifle barrel must be at least 30 inches long. The ball must be propelled by a black powder charge ignited by a percussion cap co* fling. Deer hunters must wear a coat or vest and a cap of a vivid solid red, orange or yellow color. Hunting hours are from 6:30 a.m. until 4 p.m., Central Standard Time. Only one deer may be taken during the season. Side arms may not be carried in the field while deer hunting in Illinois. Golden Eagle Is Buying Outdoor Recreation Lands ^ Springfield, ni„ July 19-- The Golden Eagle is buying outdoor recreation lands and facilities for the people of Illinois, William T. Lodge, director of the Illinois Department of Conservation, said today. The Golden Eagle is the $7 family passport to national parks and recreation areas which helps finance the Land and Water Conservation Fund. For Payment of $7 a family receives an automobile sticker admitting the car and occupants to all national recreation areas for a year. The Department of Conservation is responsible for liaison between the state and the U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Outdoor Recreation, which administers the fund. Plans for the development of county and municipal lands include the construction of golf courses, swimming beaches, boating facilities, camping and picnicking areas, and hunting and fishing areas. "The $7 investment in a Golden Eagle Passport does far more than gain entrance into a national recreation area," Lodge said. "The Golden Eagle Passport is an investment in everyone's outdoor recreation future." by Verona Kent By Verona J. Kent Tuesday's Guest Day would have to number among the most successful and well attended events in the history of our women's organization. Fifty eight i of our members played with 47 • guests. A buffet lunch was served between 1:30 and 3 o'clock at which time prizes were awarded for the best golf scores, alternating guest and member. The 36 hole Best Ball Aggregate Tournament will start Aug. 1st. Also play for the Club Championship will soon begin. Class A will start play on August 10th and continue on the 15th, 17th and 22nd for a 72 hole event. Classes B & C will have a 54 hole tournament to be played on the 8th, 15th and 22nd. Please sign up for these events. The Traveling Team took 12% points out of a possible 18 at Glencoe on the 14th and will meet Deerpath this Friday at home. •. • - CHILD INJURED Three-year-old Dawn Niesen, daughter of the Nicholas Niesens of McHenry, suffered head lacerations last week Wednesday when a vise fell on her as she and a brother were playing in the basement of their grandparents. ; MILLER IHEATRE • phone 558-0032 WOODSTOCK. ILLINOIS Opens Friday Absolutely FLUBBERGAS1ING! Agent CHAIN-O-LAKE 8 TRAVEL SERVICE H05 W. Elm McHenry, 111. Ph. 885-7500 (Area Code 815) No Charge For Our Services a*vi Walt DM THRILLING STOCK CAK RACING KVKKY TUCKS AND SAT. NI(iHT Lake Geneva Speed Center |in 30 lit |> features -- SEK all out raring- See ftpertator i winner take all action. FLAY TOTAL at the TOTAL FI N and action Track in the Pit Stop after the Races. See Modified Stocks LATK models in raw stocks i and Mill DANCK Time Trial 7:00 p.m. Adults $2.00 Races 8:15 Children 50c JULY 27 St. Clara's Court Picnic-- City Park--Noon. JULY 29 Rummage Sale--9 ajn. to 4 p.m.~Lakowski Home, 4312 N. Dennis Blvd.--Sponsored by Woodshed Whirlers Square Dance Club. AUGUST 1 St. Clara's Court Luncheon Tour of Marina City--Starts 9 a.m., St. Mary's School. AUGUST 1 Fox River Valley Camp, No. 3251, R.N.A., Annual Outing, 7 p.m., Meet at Methodist Church, 6:30 p.m., Reservations with Mrs. Ray M. Murphy, McCullom Lake. AUGUST 2 Girl Junior Foresters' Picnic-- City Park-- Noon to 3p.m. AUGUST 16 McHenry Garden Club Meeting and Luncheon--Noon--Mrs. Charles Wagner, 1205S. Breadway, McHenry Shores--Garden Walk Follows Business Meeting. Heads Rotary AUGUST 22 O.EJS. Stated Meetingcia Hall--8 p.m. . -Aca- Potter And Bohn Are Big Winners At Speed Center The Saturday night race at the Lake Geneva Speed Center was the third night in a row for modified and stock cars in a busy week of racing that included the Jim Lawrance Memorial Race on Friday that was added to the regular Thursday and Saturday night schedule. For Claude Potter of Genoa City, it wound up a great week which saw him get not only the Saturday night win but the Thursday night feature as well. The win on Friday night went to Bill Bohn of Kenosha. Potter was third this night. Heats were won by Chuck Henne, Lauren Lawrance, Horch and Harris. Rodger Isles of Waukegan won the 15 lap semi feature. Gene Sisk and Peter Seitz won late model heats with Dick Hoffman winning the feature. Ron Cooper and Martin Panwon the spectator stock car events. AMONG THE SICK Joseph J. Miller of Waukegan street is a patient in Room 489, Victory Memorial hospital, Waukegan, where he has been confined for the past few weeks. Reflective materials are widely used for making objects more readily visible at night. Besides being used by 17 states to produce "Safety" license plates that glow brilliantly in headlight beams, reflective material is used to coat dog vests and the inside of hub caps that can be propped up beside disabled cars. SHOP IN MCHENRY McHENRY, ILL 385-0144 ENDS THURS, JULY 27 "WAR WAGON" Shows at 7 and 9 o.tn. FRI - SAT., JULY 28-29 PIN.., .HUWMU3. SHCOUf I PSSii§SIL®f .uiwiiAir™ JaJRLS! .. GIRLS! This show only! open 7 pin. "ACAPULCO" at 7:30 "GIRLS GIRLS" at 9:10 SUN. - THURS., JULY 30 - AUG. 3 HOMBRE AUGUST 26 Rummage Sale, Mt. Hope Methodist church, Pistakee Highlands-- 10 a.m. to 2 pun. AUGUST 27 Summer Social--St. Peter's Catholic Church, Spring Grove. Up And Down Sap decends as well as ascends in trees. Descending sap takes nutrition from the leaves to the roots. E OUTDOOR McHenry Girl Takes Part In Intern Program Currently participating inthe summer intern program of the Department of Children and Family Services, Susan Pawlikowski, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Leonard F. Pawtikowski, 1514 N. Freund avenue, McHenry, was one of six Aurora region program participants attending a recent three-day session for forty-three interns representing the state's eight regions at the State House ton, Springfield. Selected for the Aurora region program offered university students who have completed their junior year at college and are interested in the field of social w-jrk, Susan and five other girls from Aurora, Yorkville, Cicero, Joliet and Eldora, la., are employed in the regional office at 411 W. Galena blvd., Aurora. Miss Pawlikowski will return to St. Louis university in September, where she is a sociology major. The two-month program started June 16 and continues through Aug. 16. Besides visitations at many of the state institutions, consultations with agencies, children and individuals seeking help, the interns also receive social work experience. The Aurora region serves seven counties, with district offices in Joliet, Waukegan and Aurora. As part of their duties, the girls accompany staff social workers in the performance of their case responsibilities, in some instances helping transport children to clinics, foster homes or institutions. They perform some follow-tq> services, such as contacts with references or child care facilities. TRAINED TO KILL DON VIRGENS Don Virgens assumed his duties a,i president of the McHenry Rotary club earlier this month, succeeding Earl R. Walsh in that post. Other newly elected officers are DOT Weingart, vice-president; DOT Arvidson, secretary; and Hiomas F. Bolger, treasurer. The board consists of Mr. Walsh, as immediate past president; Roger Collins and Harry Dean. SCOUT SCHOOL NIGHT School Night for Scouting, a recruiting program for Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts, will be headed by six district chairmen appointed by Joe Baisch of Channel 13 in Rockford. Mr. Baisch is chairman for the Blackhawk Area council, Boy Scouts of America in Rockford. The Kishwaukee District chairman is Stan Jozwiak of Woodstock. The neighborhood chairmen are enlisting the help of local Scout leaders and schools now, in preparation for Sept. 27. The effort of these men is for one purpose, that is, to inform boys of the opportunity ttujrt awaits them, and the parents of their responsibility and the responsibility of the leaders. J.W. Pfingstens '67 Outstanding Dairy Couple Mr. and Mrs. John W. Pfingsten, 9105 Ridgefield road, Crystal Lake, have been selected as the 1967 outstanding young dairy couple of District 6, Pure Milk association, it was announced by Avery A. Vose, Rt. 2, Antioch, President of PMA and the district's representative on the PMA board of directors. PMA District 6 is made up of well over 600 dairy farmer members, mainly in Lake and McHenry counties, but with others in Boone, Cook and Kane counties, 111., and Kenosha and Walworth counties, Wis. It is one of eighteen PMA districts in Illinois, Wisconsin and Indiana. All of these districts are selecting a couple to compete for the title of outstanding young dairy couple of Pure Milk association. Competition for the association title will be held Aug. 28 to 29 at the Pick-Congress Hotel, Chicago. Clint Walker lunges at life Instructor with a knife during his training as one of 12 condemned GI's who are given a chance for a pardon by* executing " dangerous mission behind (Herman lines in MGM's "The Dirty Dozen." The "nevi- Kenneth Hyman production has an ail-star cast headed by Academy A ward-winners Lee Marvin and Ernest Borgnine, and also starring Charles Bronson, Jim Brown, John Cassa* etes, Richard Jaeckel, George Kennedy. Trini Lopez, Ralph Meeker, Robert Ryan, Telly Savalas, and Robert Webber and will start it's limited engagement Friday, July 28th at the Family Outdoor theatre, Grayslake. Robert Coots Named Manager Of Land Bank Robert E. Coots, Ottawa, has been named manager of the Federal Land Bank association of Woodstock, Charles Weingart of McHenry, president of the farmer credit cooperative, has announced. Coots will suo ceed Tom Frey, who has resigned to accept a fellowship award at the University of Illinois to work on his doctor's degree. Weingart said the board of directors of the Woodstockbased FLBA is delighted to attract Coots to Woodstock from a similar position in Ottawa. "Coots is an agressive, personable young man, fully capable of carrying on the service to farmers and community service work which Frey did in an outstanding manner," appraised Weingart. Coots starts his new position on Aug. 1. Frey will continue at his position until Sept. 9, helping Coots become acquainted in the three counties the FLBA of Woodstock serves, McHenry, Lake and Boone counties. Bob and his wife, Joan, and their three daughters plan to move to Woodstock when housing is obtained. Frey and his family move to Champaign shortly after Sept. 1. USE THE CLASSIFIED SHOP jN MCHENRY S Show Slaiii a! Dufk kHdsagy on H@ut© 120 ;N FRKfc KIDDYLAND ENDS THUR., JULY 27 "Divorce, American" Style" & "Gambit" FRI. - THUR., THE NAZIS NEVER BARGAINEDEOR mEmmrmimi M6M presorts A KENNETH HYMAN PRODUCTION etmnifii 111! IflrtZ FOR ONE WEEK! STARTS FRI., JULY 28 A GREAT SMASH SHOW! It's like you're running a big city... a unique empire... a private world with a do-notdisturb sign on every door Shows at 7 asi. 9 p.m. Enjoy Cool Comfort jm nietmao HI 1H mm laotoi ma cun asmt WEI 10 WW Ml 111(1 METROCOIOR Due to it's length -- Frl. • Sat. • Sun. "Dirty Dozen" at 8:30 & 11 p.m. weekdays at 8:45 p.m. only 'Dozen' adm. Adults $1.50 Starring j [RINfiraflH liflHl MALUtN MtlV*N OlHiGlAS-RICHARDCONIt- plus" Broadway s bouncln^est hurdle of Joy . . . <.n the nereen! i i s n j v e - r t o o soon w i to start laughing at «v . RMJLFORDCONNiE MMffl O'SUUIVAN EXTRA BONUS HIT! FRI. - SAT. NITES Rob't. Culp - Brian Keith "THE RAIDERS" k