McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 30 Aug 1972, p. 8

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um* SAVINGS LOAN CO. iROCCt* -t»*ST CAWSltt 7«EV fJAPPV FOZ. YEAR6. -RUE* THEV WER ON? AfiJOTHe*. LOANS ^J/W10>PjSi HARVESTORE KOENEMANN Country Made Sausages, Hams and Bacon |GERMAN IMPORTS AND CHEESES i A FuH Line Of Delicatessen 1fefae stock in America. Nn* Bonds p^abonus at mahnty Just east ot Rt. 12 = VOLO I IlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllr i 815-385-6260 ORNAMENTAL IRON Railings-Columns- Custom Fabricating Welding & Structural Frozen Pipe ^Thawing STEEL SALES ADAMS BROS. (Next to Gem Cleaners) i006 W. Rte. 120 McHenry Phone: 385-0783 LAWN BOY LAWN MOWER SALT'S & SERVICE BROOKWOOD GARDEN CENTER 4505 W. Rte 120 McHenry (just across from Foremost: PHONE 385-4949 [ Tfltoaigliift Ifoir tF®@<«] Ham is a happy choice for the outdoor grill. I'repare a whole boneless ham on the rotisserie, slices on the grill or cubes for kabobs. For varied flavor appeal, baste with a favorite sauce. Bonds are for building. lARVJESTORE' worltft Wading manufacturer of automated feeding systems. Please rush mv free copy to Add rum Telephone Suu I farm Check Livestock Knterpri Dairy Heef Hu^s Number of Animals Check il .1111-ri'l i tic. Mail to '"Curt Weaver HARVESTORE, INC. 504 North Ma:n Streeit Sycamore, Illinois 60178 PH. COLLECT 815-895-4537 . Soft Corn Special lutiun II shows • v< Milk Product ii u wavs io mcri PAGE 8-PLAINDEALER-WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30. 1922 Tonyan, Worm 500 Milers Co-capt., Tim Tonyan, senior co-leader of the 1972 Cross Country team, made the 500 mile club by running his final 16 miles last Friday. Tim, a straight A student, is the son of enthusiastic and loyal fans, who came to watch every meet last year, Mr. and Mrs, Hank Tonyan of 312 W. Bay road, McHenry. Tim, well liked by his fellow students, teammates and coaches, came out for Cross Country last year, but was elected co-capt., with George Haines, by his team­ mates. Sophomore Greg Worm, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Worm of 1700 N. Beach road, McHenry also made the 500 mile club last week by running his final 20 miles. Greg, who a I ways gives 1,000 per cent, is being counted on to help carry the Frosh-Soph team to another successful season. Last year's team had a record of 14 wfhs and 2 losses. This year's sophomore team, according to Coach Hutchinson, is one of the finest group of runners plus fine young men ever. Greg is the brother of Kevin, who is on the varsity. McHenry County Farm Bureau's team won the All County Softball title during Illinois Farm Spots Festival finals in Springfield, Aug. 22. Presenting the first place trophy is Carleton Apple, standing at left, chairman of the Sports Festival Administrative Committee. Front row, from left: Charles Osborne; Jack Haldeman; Doug Rudsinski; Quinn Keefe (batboy); Richard Winn; and LeRoy Kuecker. Standing, from left: Chuck Lockinger; Larry Spaulding;' Brad Schmelzer; Chuck Sowers; Gary Rudsinski; Wayne Timpe; and Dan (Boone) Drake. MINOR LEAGUE (BLUEBIRDS) • Manager - Marv George • Coach • Ron Meurer. 1st row left to right, Joe Johnson, Ken George, Mike Schmaling, Scott Fish. 2nd row left to right, John Johnson, Dave Schaan, Pat Sweeney, Greg Brooks. 3rd row left to right, Dave White, Hans Larson, Ken Clark, Rick Wirtz, Len Kohl. 4th row left to right, Ron Meurer, Marv George. MINOR LEAGUE (CARDINALS) - Manager - Dean Paul - Coach - Jerry Brodin. 1st row left to right, Doug Robson, Scott Freund, Ai Thennes, Rick Bierman. 2nd row left to right, Don Wright, Dave Aldenbrook, Eric Staveteig, Kerry Witz. 3rd row left to right, Mike Norlock, Scott Paul, Tom Smith, Lee Lexow, Al Garrelts. 4th row, Dean Paul. Absent, Jerry Brodin - coach. Calories in beef cuts such as round steak, sirloin tip roast and T-bone steak, and in pork cuts such as loin roast, chops, tender­ loin and baked ham, total under 250 calories per 3 -ounce serv­ ing of cooked lean meat. Although less than 10 percent of the people live on farms today, it's estimated that about 40 per­ cent of all jobs in the United States are related somehow to agriculture. Related fields include marketing, processing and trans­ portation of food products, plus the manufacturing and distribu­ tion of equipment and services needed by the modern farmer. Last year Americans ate 100,- 000 tons of yogurt, about one third more than they ate in 1969, and six times the amount con­ sumed twenty years ago. Greatest Advance Since the Typewriter was Invented! Ho More Smeary [rasing-- Covers Mistakes Instantly, Permanently! SELF-CORRECTING TYPEWRITER RIBBON! Most exciting, needed advance since the typewriter was invented! As of this moment, every messy, smudgy, smeary typewriter eraser in the world hits the scrap heap for good. No more erasing--ever! Bottom half of miracle ribbon is like a magic wand that makes errors disappear before your eyes. To make corrections, just back space, shift ribbon selector and retype error. Presto! White ink makes error completely invisible. Order extra ribbons for friends. This is one gift they'll love you for! No COOs. MAIL ORDER MART, D*pt. 14 2701 Starlington Road, Suit* 132 Monro*, Louisiana 71201 Please send me the quantity of ribbons checked below. If not satisfied. I will return ribbons within 10 days for full refund. • 1 ribbon *3 50 • 2 ribbons $6.00 Brand Nam* of Typ*wriUr-Cn*ck Modal B.low • Standard . C Cl*ctric O ^ortabla Haley Runs 1000 Miles EARL WALSH So I Hear * ;SP0RTS EDITOR And still the champ - Art said, "I am going home with Jackson! " the guy what brung me". The big day came Sunday for the Club Championship finals at McHenry Country Club. Tee time-12:30 p.m. Vale Adams, Club Pro, rolled out golf cart No. 13 with green upholstering. Along comes our driver, Mrs. Warren (Barb) Weber for a repeat per­ formance from last year. • Just to keep her on her toes, we told Barb there were other applicants for the job - all girls. But, we stuck with the gal we knew would get us around without hitting all the bumps like that fellow we used to have. We were like the girl who 'Twas all in fun and we sincerely appreciate Barb taking us around the course. Her daughter Kim hopped on the back from time to time and told Mom how to drive. Our buggy wasn't speedy enough for young Kim. John Busscher will turn in a report on the match so read that for scores. The foursome was made up of two old pros, Art Jackson and Eddie Buss, and two younger golfers who may win it all one of these years, Gary Adams and Don Hojnacki. None of the four were hot Sunday, Art had fives on No's. 1,2 and 6 instead of par fours on the first nine. That was a tip- off. Buss was 6-7-6 on No's. 2, 3 and 4 instead of par fours. That was another tip-off. Gary started sharp enough, but before the afternoon was over missed some putts by a whisker. At times Gary looked like he was on the way. We told Barb that it looked like Don was snake-bit on some of his shots, then his class would show up in spots. Ed Datz and his wife were the first ones we saw at tee-time and they walked all the way around. Rickie Justen was there with a big smile. A baby boy came to their house. We saw Mazie Buss, the Hesters, the Phelans, the Nischans, the Johnsons, the Evans and Bob Newkirk. Along about No. 3 came Herb Reihansperger to distract us with his baseball chatter. It was better after Marilyn joined the crowd. The crowd wasn't as large as in years when the battle went down to the last hole, but many old faithfuls like Ted Spengel, Frank Rourke (think we saw Mrs. Rourke in a cart), Dick Weber, Tom Bolger, Dick Carey, and "Schmaltz" Miller were there. "Schmaltz" worried all the time that we didn't start writing. But, the air was fresh, the sun was pleasant and the company enjoyable. Why write? We were relaxed. Bill and Carol Bolger came along in a cart at about the 9th hole. Jerry "Curly" Rogers and Ted Pitzen hiked around with their wives. You may be sure the loyal Jackson family turned out. Never saw the course so green in August. All that rain may have slowed up the turf. Balls splashed in the ponds in a couple of sand traps. Ethel Conway zipped around. So did Jake Wegener and Junior Tonyan. Sjenior Kevin Haley, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Haley of 3915 W. Maple, McHenry put in the final 10 miles last Saturday to make him the first boy on the 1972 McHenry high school Cross Country team to make the 1,000 mile club this season. Kevin's father coaches football and track at Wa<iconda high school. Haley is being counted to give this year's varsity At the No. 12 tee we saw Tom ream a big boost in quality. The Senior Saylers came along somewhere along the line. So did the Rollie Herr­ manns. The Charlie Diedrichs walked all the way. (We like to ride). Davis and Frank Johnson cut across from their homes to watch the action. Seems the Waytula cart breezed past us. Lou Consago and Gene Schaefer were there at the finish. Gene brought bad news of the White Sox- Milwaukee game. ent^iiito Jackson went ihto the final day with a 7-stroke lead. That took away the tenseness of other years. It could have been turned around if Buss had come up with some of his old tricks. But, Art's superb-rounds of 69 in each of the last two Sundays were too much. J ~ Wish we had kept more notes, "Schmaltz". The likes of the Pete Bakers and the Dick Wilhelms slipped our mind. There must be more. came in the mail: GREEN BAY--I have a friend who's told me all year long how great the White Sox are. Well, Saturday I got to see how good they really are on national television. I saw 6 2-3 innings of hiUess ball by the Sox; I saw the first opposing batter up hit a home run; I saw the Sox hit three flyballs for the game; I saw two errors by the Sox; I saw a Sox player lose a ball in the sun because he forgot to take his sunglasses on the field with him; I saw a Sox player get hit in the face with a ground ball; I saw a superstar (Dick Allen) strike out, and I saw an op­ posing runner advance from first to third base on a wild pitch. Yep. If the game hadn't been on television, I would never know how great the White Sox are. Riding arounchthe beautiful golf course, meeting good friends and watching top golfers makes Club Cham­ pionship Day something special for us. We love it! Could that have been our White Sox? Would never believe it. In fact, we looked at the morning paper and who should be in first place but those same Sox. 17 year old Danny Umbarger from McHenry, won 1st place In his class, plus the American Legion outstanding driver achievement award of $100 recently at the Chicago riverfront festival. This cheerv contribution T ©pa Our congratulations to Art M Mk MM Jackson, a fine athlete and a heluva fine fellow. To give you VW • •• • some idea of Art's popularity, ^M M wheu Busse (the closest competitor) couldn't win, he J" gave Art a pat on the back. Good sportsmanship. kiin VVxxlsv Owft tight against polluUotL'lodai A message tells us that President Nixon sent Henry M. Smith a birthday card last week. It was Henry's 92nd birthday. He is mighty proud of the card. Alex and Elvera Justen brought former McHenryite Anna Popp and her husband in to say hello. Anna, our Alvina, Alex and Charles Vycital were classmates in old McHenry high. We always enjoy such visits. Who cares about smoggy skies About empty and polluted lakes cans and trash littering our country side. About plants and trees dying in our forests. And animals too. Who cares? Woodsy Owl, the Nation's new battler for a clean environment cares. And so should you. Join Woodsy in the fight against pollution.

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