v / Tigers Lose To Beloit fi-2, Bounce Back To Beat Genoa Nine 8-1 1957 MCHS Class Holds Reunwn AUGUST 3, 1967 - PLAIN DEALER - SEC. I, PG. 5 In action this past week the Johnsburg Tigers split a pair of ball games. On Saturday the Tigers lost to Beloit by a score of 8-2, The following day they bounced back to pin an 8-1 defeat on Genoa. The score against Beloit was no true indication of the closeness of jthe game. In feet, after seven innings of play the Tigers were leading 2-1. Then in the eighth the roof fell in for Johnsburg as Beloit exploded for eight h£ts and seven runs. Lloyd Smith pitched excellent ball for the Tigers until that fatal eighth inning when he ran out of gas. Dan Jamie son and Wayne Hiller Wirehaired Pointer Club To Sponsor Annual Water Trial August 13th Through the courtesy of the Conservation Department of Illinois and the Department of Parks, the German Wirehaired Pointer Club of America is again sponsoring its annual WATER TRIAL to be held MI Sunday, August 13, 1967, 9:00 a.m., DST, SHARP, at the Chain 0'- Lakes State Park. Only this time it is Sanctioned by the American Kennel Club and will be open to all AKC registered Pointing' Breeds! LOCATION: 1% miles North of Fox Lake on Route 12. Follow sign to State Park entrance. Then follow road bearing to left to the East side of lovely, treeshaded Turner Lake. There is everything for your convenience-- picnic benches and charcoal grills. Bring your family, your picnic basket, and of course, your POINTING DOG. The Stakes (in running order) are as follows: PUPPY STAKE Age 6 to 15 months. Single retrieve. DERBY STAKE-- Age 6 months to 24 months. Two single retrieves through decoys. ALL AGE STAKE--Age from 6 months. Single and double retrieves through decoys. Blind retrieve if Judges deem necessary. led the Johnsburg attack with two hits apiece. On Sunday the Tigers combined good pitching with timely hitting to defeat Genoa. Dan Sompel, back from a two week tour of duty with Uncle Sam, pitched great ball in picking up the victory. Lloyd Smith led the Johnsburg offense with three hits. He was followed closely by Dave Himpelmann and Wayne Hiller with two hits apiece. This Sunday, August 6, Johnsburg will entertain DeKalb, one of the top teams in the league. Hie Tigers have been improving steadily over the lasttwoweeks and should be ready to give DeKalb a good battle. Game tiipe is slated for 1:30. Feature McHenry Area Talent On Sunday Fair Show Eleven talent contest acts, ranging from a bold young woman who "twirls" meat cleavers, to vocalists have been chosen for Sunday night' s finale at the 1967 McHenry County Fair. The acts were chosen in competition at an audition last weekend when eighteen acts appeared before the judges. The eleven finalists include Chris Schoen and her brother, Richard, Spring Grove, in separate vocal numbers; Carl Johnson, McHenry, baritone; Terry Huck and Sally Guettler, McHenry, sopranos; Suzanne Joosten, Woodstock, batantwirler, who will perform with a r of meat cleavers; Laurie ilumgren, McHenry, classical pianist; Rita Brickley, Harvard, vocal soloist; The Murphy Trio, Spring Grove folk singers; The Ahrens trio, Woodstock folk Singers; and Melody Zimmerman, Harvard, vocalist. • Bill Tamm^us, grand stand /chairman, organized the audition and originated this talent Contest three years ago. It has {>roven a popular showcase for ocal amateur talent. There is no charge for this Sunday night grandstand feature, set to start 8 p.m. The program will 90 minutes long and winners 11 be chosen by experienced adio-television-stage personifies. Four winners will be hosen tad all participants will hare in the prize money offered by the Fair association. James DeVos McHenry colege student, was chosen master f ceremonies. Beef Freund and his Fireball Five, McHenry, will open the show with modern jazz and selections from Broadway musicals. The Sad Sam Trio, Crystal Lake, winner of this contest the past two years, will close the show with their "Homer and Jethro" style act. Johnsburg AB R H May 2 1 0 Jamieson 0 2 Hiller W. 5 0 2 Meyers 2 0 0 Smith L. 4 0 1 Hiller J. 4 0 0 De Wolfe 4 1 1 Himpelmann 3 0 0 Sompel 4 0 0 Totals 33 2 6 Beloit AB R H Olen 5 2 1 Landis 4 0 1 Chamberlin 4 1 2 Michael 4 1 1 Han 0 0 0 Pohlman 4 1 2 Johnson 5 1 1 Harris 5 1 1 Strotthoff 4 0 2 Nelson 4 1 1 Totals 39 8 12 Johnsburg (Genoa Game) AB R H Jamiesqn 5 1 1 Hiller W. 3 2 2 Smith L. 4 1 3 Meyers 4 1 1 De Wolfe 4 0 1 Hiller J. 4 0 1 Himpelmann 2 1 2 Sompel 4 1 0 Smith D. 0 0 0 Doherty 2 1 1 Totals 32 8 12 Viscounts Win Junior Contest For the third time in three years the Viscount Color Guard was declared the winner in the American Legion Junior Color Guard competition, held last Saturday at Lane Tech high school, Chicago. The guard, sponsored by the American Legion Auxiliary Unit No. 491, won with a score of 90.25, followed by the White Tornadoes of Momence rath 88.40. The Chicago Mounties had a score of 87.35 for third place and the "McHenry Knownames placed fourth out of nine guards in competition with a score of 85.10. Prior to the evening final drum corps competition at Main West high school, DesPlaines, the Viscount Color Guard put on an exhibition before a crowd of 7,500 people. The Cavaliers, winner of McHenry' s Drum Corp Magic Show for many years, took the title of junior champion Drum and Bugle corps. During the day's competition held at Lane, the Viscount Drum and Bugle corps place ninth out of ninteen corps. All of the contests were held in conjunction with the fortyninth annual American Legion convention. HURT IN CRASH Two motorists were ticketed >y sheriffs authorities as the [result of a one-car crash on Howe road, west of Barnard Mill road, Monday evening. The ^foreign compact bus James Fisher of Cedar drive, Wonder ;Lake, was driving was demolished and Fisher was given a [ticket for driving without a permit. Dan Campbell of Cleveland, McHenry owner of the vehicle was blamed by deputies for allowing an unlicensed person to drive. Fisher was treated at Memorial hospital, Woodstock, where he was taken by the Highland Shore Rescue A crowd of 140 attended the 1957 class reunion held last Saturday evening at the Legion home. A year book made for the occasion was dedicated to five deceased members of the class, Sue Stinespring, Robert Novak, Frank Wenzig Marilyn Anderson and Sandra Nell. The class iis also setting up a memorial fund for them, which will be given to the new high schools library. • LEONARD STUDIO PHOTO Cathy Anderson Feyk of Spokane, Wash., came the greatest distance to attend. The class expressed the intention of holding another reunion in 1977. Members of the planning committee were John Hogan, class president; Thortias McMahon, Fran Freund, Ruth Ann Granger, Gloria Comstock and Jo Anne Kelley. •• wsm "1ft maps placed on the board at Johnsburg public school in connection with the summer reading program are Sue Becker, Everett Klapperich, Bruce Bauer, Victor Vercouter and Darrell Seliga. County Accident Death Toll Rises To Three In County Two young people lost their lives in county highway accidents this past week. They were Donna C. Daly, 15, of Lake Zurich, who died in a Saturday evening crash, and William L. Shisler, 19, of Dunham township, Harvard, who died two hours after being injured on Friday morning. Miss Daly was a passenger in a car which collided with a semi-trailer truck on Rt. 31, at Three Oaks road, south of Crystal Lake. Her death brought the year's total in the county to twenty-one. Sheriffs police were unable to obtain details of the accident which killed Shisler. He was east-bound on Rt. 173, rounding a curve, when it is believed the vehicle went off the shoulder on the south side, eventually striking a telephone pole and rolling over. The driver was thrown from the vehicle. The Johnsburg Public School District 12, has just completed its second year of summer corrective reading under the guidance of Dr. Grant and Dr. Burnett, of Northern Illinois university, the supervision of James C. Bush, superintendent of Johnsburg public school, and the direction of Mrs. Ferol Tomlinson, director of reading for District 12. This program is sponsored by the school in connection with the federal government under Public Law 89-10, for any child in District 12, who has been referred for continued study in the field of reading who will promise creditable attendance during the seven week period of study and who can be motivated with the equipment and knowledge available. The corrective reading program began June 12. Twentyone children from Johnsburg Public School, and fifteen children from St. John's parochial school were enrolled. The children were grouped by ability level in reading accuracy and comprehension through a testing program set up by the director and assistant director of the reading clinic at the University school at DeKalb. From the results of written and oral testing these children were divided into two ability groupings. Each group of children attended class for two hours each day for thirty-four sessions or sixty-eight hours of concentrated study time. Each group participated in a motivational hour of study each , day that pertained to their special unit for study. One groiq> studied camping. This involved learning camp sites and their limitations in all fifty states, knowing equipment needed for numerous types of camping, reading road maps and studying geographical markings in the atlas, various types of travel and comparative costs, historical reference study, as well as spelling the names of the fifty states. The second group studied the American Indian. Historical and geographical locations and limitations played a great part in bringing the children in closer contact with the names of the great chiefs, their tribes, customs^ and their regions. With these units as background, the children had a purpose for reading and a guide for future reading. The concentration of instruction was then placed on the individual need of the child. A great deal of stress was placed on individual library work according to interest and ability level of the student. All Children enrolled read at least one extra book per week during the period. Awards were presented at the close of the reading session to the children completing the most outside reading. Children receiving awards were Debbie Benkert, Mark Davis, Susan Diedrick, Gregg Gomoll, Vicki Hudson, A1 Jourdan, Bobby Pradelski, Bill Stahlman and Sara Weingart. Mrs. Mabel Weber, Mrs. Carol Bolger, William Snow and. Mrs. Ferol Tomlinson incorporated a team teaching system for the motivational periods of study and then separated the group according to special area of concentration. Each instructor then worked approximately an hour each day with four or five children on a tutoring basis. At the end of the sevenweek study tests were again given under the specifications provided and remarkable gains were noted in nearly all instances. The teachers were pleased to record these findings and will now follow a study to check the percent of carryover as the child returns to his regular classroom in the fall of the year. Mr. Bush and the members of the board of education for District 12 have felt pride in being able to supply their community with this form of growth for their youth. They feel their efforts are well repaid by the interest and enthusiasm shown by the children participating in this program and they feel they are putting the facilities of the community to good continued use. They are looking forward to serving this district with other up-to-date services for the entire family. Dedicate Log Cabin On First Day Of'67 Fair Opening day of the County Fair Aug. 3, at 3:30 p.m., the Gannon log cabin win be dedicated as a symbol efihe early days of the pioneers who settled this county. Pre^rvation and restoration of the cabin was the first project undertaken by the McHenry County Historical society. It has taken almost two years to bring it to a point where it can be dedicated. Many delays and frustrations have been encountered in saving the cabin for future generations. The school children of McHenry County saved their pennies to help defray the cost of moving the cabin. The program for the dedication service will begin with Rev. Clarence F. Kerr, Woodstock, giving the invocation, followed by an address of welcome by Sanford Walkup, Crystal Lake, president of the McHenry County Historical society. Tributes to Mr. Gannon and Ernest (Jim) Bates and his sister, Marinda, will be given by Everett Thomas, Woodstock, vice-president of the society. A response on behalf of Eld Gannon will be given by his sister Miss Stasia Gannon, Woodstock, and a response by Jim Bates. A brief history of the society by Mrs. Dorothy W. McEachren, secretary of the society; then the dedication by Rev. Kerr, followed by a reading from the poem, "The Pioneers," by Miss Rhoda Bates, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bates, Woodstock. This poem was written by Dr. Sanford F. Bennett, Richmond, who also composed the famous "In the Sweet Bye and Bye", and John Burton of Richmond paid him $1,000 for the original manuscript. Mr. Burton was later principal'of the school at Richmond. " The poem is quite lengthy and would take about fortyfive minutes to read in its entirety, so Miss Lqra Wandrack, librarian for the society, has edited it and condensed it to the passages relating to McHenry county references and life in a 1% cabin. The public is invited to be on hand at 3:30 for this dedication. Dairy Council Active In Plans For Future Events Successful presentation of an open house to show visitors a dairy farm during June Dairy Month encouraged members of the McHenry County Dairy Promotion council at their windup meeting in late July. Members are planning the dairy product demonstration to be given at the McHenry County Fair. On the committee are Gordon Jones, Joe Kayser, Bob Church and Ward Plane. The Dairy Promotion council learned of plans for a permanent exhibit. The Dairy Promotion Council decided on a Christmas season promotion with grocery stores. Clara Nor, pew County Dairy Princess, will participate in the projects. « Miss Nor will pe sponsored, in the American Dairy Association of Illinois Dairy Princess contest Aug. 29 at Quincy by the McHenry County Dairy Promotion council. The local contest was sponsored by the Dairy Promotion council. > Dairy Council members decided to plan a dairy farm open house in 1968, perhaps earlier in the summor than the one held on July 3. USE THE CLASSIFIED THKILLINii STOCK CAR RACIN<i KVKRV THI'Ks AM) SAT. NI(iHT Lake Geneva Speed Center COMI\<; SAT. MiiHT, Al (•> •>0 Mid'Seaiiiin Cliiini|iliinshi|i. Plus Ladies IViwdt-r Puff Kaees. See Miulilied Stocks in 30 lap features SKK LATK models in raw, all out racing- See spectator stocUs in winner take all action. PI,AY TOTAL and vtfln $$$ at the TOTAL FI'N and action Truck- DANCK in the Pit Stop after the Races. Time Trial 7:00 p.m. Races 8:15 Adults $2.00 -- Children 50c CORRECTION In the Ben Franklin Ad in the Dollar Day Section of this issue, one item was in error. It should read: F0 PILLOWS $2.69 each • Solid Latex Foam Core! Non-allergenic, mothproof, mildewproof, odorless too. Buy a set now and save! Name Township Historians For '68 County Book The second meeting of township historians in connection with the History of McHenry County, will be held next Monday, Aug. 7, at 8 p.m. in the Court House Annex, Woodstock. The list of seventeen historians, working under the supervision of Lowell Nye, editor of the 900-plus page book, was released this week and includes H. Walter Anderson, McHenry, and Eugene M*y, Spring Grove; Persons interested in having pictures considered for the history should contact the historian for their township so that the material can be brought to next Monday's meeting. Handicapped May Enroll In Free Swim Program, A second invitation for parents of handicapped children to enroll them in the free swimming "fun and learn" program at the Woodstock municipal pool comos from Robert Steffi.. Steffi, executive director of the McHenry County Easter Seal Therapy center, said any handicapped youngster 5 to 12 years of age is welcome to attend this four-week program which starts Tuesday, Aug. 8. It will, be held at 10:30 a.m. to noon Tuesday through Saturday for the four weeks with a trained swimming instructor in charge. Miss Sue Ayers is a qualified instructor and tfas taken advance training^o work with handicapped childrt>h« The Woodstock Kiwanis club is paying for the use of the swimming pool and the therapy center provides the instructor and her skilled services, Steffi explained. The fun aspects of swimming are stressed, for the program gives children who don't have the opportunity a chance to splash in the water as Steffi expressed it. "If they want to learn to swim or float, Miss Ayers is on hand to help them," Steffi continued. Steffi said inquires are invited from parents. He stressed that those taking part do not need to be a patient or former patient of the Easter Seal Therapy center, and the program is aimed at serviife all McHenry county residents. Steffi may be reachcd at 338-1707. ATTEND DAIRY MEETING Loren Massey, Woodstock, attended a meeting of the executive committee of the American Dairy association at Bloomington July 25. During the meeting the committee decided to offer to provide signs to farm pick-up bulk milk trucks. The purpose of the sign is to identify the contents of the truck as "Milk" and to include an advertising slogan to help promote the sale of milk. Reports from the committee members indicate that there will be at least fifteen contestants in the State Dairy Princess contest to be held at Quincy on Aug. 28 and 29. SUMMER YMCA PROGRAM The Lake Region YMCA begins its final two-week period of summer activities on Monday, Aug. 7. The bus trip to Zion State Park that day and the Aug. 14 trip to Brookfield Zoo both are planned to be able to Accommodate an additional number of registrations. Hie only swim instruction class open for registrations on Aug. 8 is the Junior and Senior Lifesaving class conducted at the Thunderbird Farm pool in Cary. Anyone over 12 year s of age who can swim 220 yards may qualify for this class, conducted from 8:45 to 11:45 a.m., Tuesday through Friday, for two weeks. Other youth and tiny tot swim instruction classes are filled to capacity for this Aug. 8 period. Information and registration may be made by telephoning or writing the Lake Region YMCA, 65 N. Williams street, Crystal Lake, or 226 W. Judd street, Woodstock, week days from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. in Crystal Lake, and from 9 a.m. to noon in Woodstock. VETERANS MEET The next meeting of the McHenry barracks of the Veterans of World War I will be held at the legion home Thursday, Aug. 3, at $ p.m. Fishermen A total of 10,666 vessels were engaged in commercial Ashing when the Bureau of the Census conducted the 1963 Census of Commercial Fisheries. Of the total, 8,095 were 30 to 59 feet long, and only 196 exceeded 120 feet. FOREMOST sirR?s« AMERICA'S LARGEST CHAIN OF INDEPENOENT LIQUOR DEALERS On Sale at This Store Only - Fri., Sato, Sun 4512 W. Route 120 McHenry 385-3200' SCHLITZ BEER 24 - 12 oz. bottles plus dep. NOT IC KI> Kentucky Gentleman A Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whisk(\\ aged to perfection in time foi parly drinking 3 79 Full ({uart Miehelob Beer B - 12 oz. Cans Mountain Dew A refreshing Thirst-Aid 6 - 10 oz. bottles 49* plus dep An exceptionally fin# brandy distilled from California's choicest fully ripened grapes. Use straight or in your favorite mixed drinks. QUO ! . < cOPTED D 1 '1 ISLANDS FIESTA RUM Gipps Beer 24 - 12 oz. bottles iMPonuijfi Light or Dark i Try Pepsi plus dep NOT ICKH