Rockford Speedway Sets April Practice Dates Stay-at-Home Vacations In Backyard Extend Outdoors great outdoors as your personal park, you can indulge in your favorite form of outdoor recreation any time the spirit moves you. WED. APRIL 16, 1969 - PLAI NDEALER - PG. 7 Rockford, 111. The Rockford Speedway will hold two Sunday afternoon practice sessions on April 20 and 27. In practice action and impromptu races will be the late model stocks, Road runners and super-modi fieds that will take part in the regular season of competition at the Rockford Speedway. Midgets, sprint cars and an ex-Indianapolis car will also CROWN HIGH WINS TRIANGULAR TRACK MEET SATURDAY • _ Crown High won the triangular track meet last Saturday with 79 points. Antioch took second place with 43 iVhile McHenry finished third With 37. Antioch's sophomores finished first with 61 points, McHenry second with 54, and Grown third with 44. Coach Chuck Rutkowsld will send in result sheets showing only the McHenry boys unless the meet involves nearby schools. VARSITY Two Mile - 1. Brad Pictor, 10:28 High Hurdles - 3. Rick Wiegman, 17.0 880 yd. dash - 2. Don Schubert, 2:07.2, 4. Terry Burton 2:16.7 Low Hurdles - 3. Rick Wiegman 23.0 - 4. Pete Benoy, 23.1 Mile Run - 1. Glenn Hampton 4:53, 2. Keith Hutchinson 4:57.6, 3. Wayne Smith 5:02.3 220 yd. dash - 4. Tom Mrowka 24.6 Shot Put 2. Mike Antonicellie 44'10" Discus - 2. Paul Nitz 134' High Jump - 2. Paul Nitz 5'4" Long Jump - 3. Tom Mrowka 18' 5 3/4" Pole Vault - 4. Frank Rudolf 10'6" SOPHOMORES Two Mile - 1. Terry Mc- Gibben 11:35.6, 2. John Seaton 11:44.3 High Hurdles - 1. Rand Wagner :18.8, 2. Mike Stark :19.1 100 yard dash - 3. Rick Cooper 11.9 440 yd. dash - 4. Mark Tomm "•61.1 Low Hurdles - 4. Mike Stark :25.1 Mile Run - 2. John Jung 5:11.2, 3. Mike Diedrich 5:31.7, 4. Bill Weyland 5:41.9 220 yd dash - 3. Rick Cooper 26.1, 3. Dennis Houseth 26.1 Shot Put - 2. Brad Shelton 36'9", 3. Dennis Houseth 36'2" Discus -1. Brad Shelton 113'- 10", 2. Dennis Houseth 112*2" High Jump - 4. Keith Luttrell 4'8" Long Jump - 2. Gary A^ina 16'11", 3. Rick Cooper 16»7" Pole Vault - 3. Dave Carlson 9*0", 4. Pat Eurich 8'0" be on hand for the practice session on April 20. Both of these two practice dates are free and open to the public. They will mark the first opportunity for fans to see the newly constructed Sky Lounge and officials booth. Public and pit gates will open at noon and practice will continue to nearly dark. During each of these practice days, fans may enjoy a series of movie films that will be shown in another new Rockford Speedway facility designed to accommodate fan club groiqps. The week following the second practice, the Rockford Speedway will officially open its 22nd consecutive season on Saturday night May 3. The super-modified action will get under way on Friday night June 13. Road runner stocks will be in action on both Saturday and Friday nights. A special plan makes it possible for 18 year old drivers to compete in the stock car races. SUNDAY'S I SERMON PARADISE There is no paradise o n earth. No matter how poor or rich an individual may be, happiness must be measured in the light of the individual attitude. Money cannot guarantee that one will never be sick, will not contact a fatal disease, will not suffer the loss of a loved one. None of us have the right to expect a life free from all sorrow and unhappiness. What we must do is have faith, faith in God, faith in tomorrow. If we have faith, we generally realize that trouble and discomfort are always temporary -- and somewhere ahead, no matter how far, lies a bright and cheerful day. Live, therefore, a life of hope. Consider that tomorrow will be better, if we want it to be, if we turn out efforts to that purpose. Live a life of love. Love turns aside deceit and selfishness. Love provides the incentive to do right, to be right. Love, l i k e f a i t h , p r o v i d e s strength and gives a sense of purpose to all things. ^ Barber Shop ^ • Hair Coloring ^0 • Hair Styling ^0 • Hair Pieces jdI • Razor Cuts "jAHE'S by appointment S86-7771 An annual two-week vacation is as American as hot dogs and baseball. Today, however, modern families are realizing they don't have to dream about the outdoors between vacations. In fact, each year millions of Americans discover the great outdoors begins right in their own backyards ... an instant vacationland waiting right beyond the back door. Stay-at-home vacationlands can be found everywhere and offer something for every member of the family. There's no time lost reaching them, and best of all they can be enjoyed on a year 'round basis. Although the annual vacation remains the undisputed leader in family "happenings," the backyard is now being looked to as a means of keeping in contact with the great outdoors until vacationtime rolls around. There are many reasons for the booming trend toward athome outdoor living. More leisure time and discretionary income are but a few. However, a walk out of your backdoor will show you the most important ones. Backyards in New Light You're likely to find some of the very things you and your family treasure on that longplanned, long "awaited, and long remembered annual trip. The lush greenness of grass and trees . .'. flowers blooming here ana there. Perhaps a stately tree you once climbed as a child. And, although not all backyards have park-size dimensions, each can offer the thrill and enjoyment of being outdoors. Still not convinced? Then look at your backyard in a different light and think of the ways it can help you spend more time relaxing in the. great outdoors. More Family Fun That expanse of lawn, so formidable when it's times to get the lawnmower going, doesn't look quite as big when it's viewed as a practice putting green. Those trees whose annual deluge of leaves keep you busy throughout the fall season might be the perfect spot to string a hammock or a swing for the children. And how about the patio? Sure, it may look like an outdoor warehouse right now, but think of the stay-at-home cookouts and parties you could stage there if you had the right equipment. A permanently in- Stalled outdoor grill, some" lights, and heaters would do the trick. There are. countless ways of lending nature a hand in the backyard and each of them promises more family fun than ever before. Some of the most common additions made to the vestpocket vacationlands are volleyball and badminton courts. Horseshoe pits are still a big favorite, while some backyards are even sporting tennis courts or swimming pools. Although there are many ways to enjoy the great outdoors at home, cookouts remain the favorite. According to statistics gathered by the American Gas Association, Inc. (A.G.A.), more than forty million people own outdoor cooking equipment and their ranks are swelling every day. Outdoor Season Grows Developments in outdoor cooking equipment, such as gas grills, make it possible to cook out more often, faster, and increase the length of the outdoor season. Use of residential patio heaters is rearranging the outdoor calendar. Strategically placed infrared heaters make it possible to begin outdoor fun earlier in the spring and continue far into the fall months. Actually, in some parts of the country, a heated, enclosed or semi-enclosed patio can be used eight to twelve months of the year. The same holds true for swimming pools, A.G.A. notes. Whether it's cookouts, swimming, or just honing a sharp edge on fly casting techniques, your backyard is a perfect place to do it. And with the M t REMEMBER BY THE OLD TIMER 1% From Mrs. Edwin V. Altemus, Souderton, Pa.: 1 remember when Mom made us wear long .underwear and we were almost late for school because we spent too much time trying to fold it at the ankle so it would show the least. I remember when Mom worked over a hot stove Sundays because she chose to prepare dinner for a large number of guests. It just wasn't Sunday without company . . . when Mom made me hold the rooster to the chopping block while she chopped his head off. We knew this meant special guests to Sunday dinner . . . when Mom wet the broom to keep the dust down while she swejpt the living room rug . . . when Mom put the,coloring in the oleomargarine, arid when she cleaned the remairiingrheg* gravy from the frying pan with a piece of bread, and this was the cat's dinner. I remember when Mom scolded us because we broke her favorite record. She always reminded us not to wind the Victrola too tight and damge the needle . . . and when Mom stayed up late Saturday night to see that our best c l o t h e s were ready for Sunday School and Church the next morning. Those were the good old days and I think I had the best mother in the world. SPORTScCORNER rAfJKS£S AMP ALL BASEBAU yu/u. MOT BE THE -5W/TJiOur MICKEY ZMttiffllg WHO MfJ SatV£i> our or the AFTEX Y£/}/?S TDP mjui m f>!H ipes. ^,.F. Wf rWRP 3£ST HOME KM H/UEA. £>? Ai-l TIME, PlArED A40Jf£ a.AMES F&e the MH/CS r»AN AMY oTHE*fZAYEF. HIS BATVMb f=EA73 MCLUOE HUMEKDUS HCJT/J) SEFIE1 i i The High Efficiency Corn hybrids for modern management. See me for your hybrids now! is i^Stamp NATIONAL FAMOUS FOR FINE MEAT Your family will love every tender bite of Nafionol'i |uicy chock roast cut from the finest quolity beef. Save now. at National's budget-right price. 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