\ Fair Livestock Judges Focus In Four Areas Livestock judges at McHenry County Fair this- year will center in 4-J3,J*lnior Open class and senior Open class. One of the highlights is the FFA and 4- H auction scheduled for 1 p.m., SaturdSyr^ug. 2, at the Don Hansen Pavilion. The fair book explains that junior and senior competition is open to all ages and from all localities. To compete in the Junior open class "fair, exhibitors must be at least 8 years and not 19 years as of Jan. 1, 1975. The following people are serving as superintendents in the - various open class departments this year. Many also,, work with the 4-H departments, and ^hfejKjyill be listed in a subsequent roundup. Open Class Dairy Cattle-Bill Davidson, Virgil Stanley, Russell Rudolph, Henry Seibel, George Ainger, Phil Brown and Donald Hemmingson. Open Class Beef Cattle-Andrew Anderson and Basil Periman, superintendent^ and Leonard Sievers and Gene Meyer, clerks. Open Class Sheep--Dick Walrath, superintendent. Open Class Swine-Lester Finder and Tom Weber, superintendents and Jim Schultz and Bob Shoenbeck, clerks. Open Class Goats-Roy Lang, superin tendent and Mrs. Bochniak, clerk. Open Class Poultry-Charles Cairns and James Muse. Open Class Rabbits-Frank Rudolph, superintendent and Mrs. Frajric Rudolph, clerk. « Grain and Vegetables- Norman Sass, superintendent and Russell Gieseke, clerk. Open Class Home Economics finds Mrs. Kathy Ainger as superintendent. Working with her are various department heads: ' Flowers- Edith Walrath, Selma Davidson, Phyllis Rasmussen and Gladys Ainger. Arts and Crafts-Kathy Ainger, Jan Walton and Sue Anderson. Foods: Marie Payne and Jan Sherwin. Sewing-Judy TownsendandJuanita Whiting. Antiquef^WrS'Henry Szlachta. Open/ class judging is con ducted throughout the fair, with the various departments first concentrating on 4-H judging. The, Dairy open judging, for example, begins Friday, Aug. 1, third day of the fair. Gar dening in both 4-H and open class will be judged at 10 a.m., July 31. Final open class judging on the official schedule of events is Saturday, Aug. 2 at 9 a.m. with the rabbit com petition. The 4-H and junior rabbit judging will take place two days earlier. One of the satisfactions for fair visitors--as well as exhibitors- is to see the animals, compare them and then view them in their stalls and pens with various ribbons denoting results of this keen five days of competition. One purpose of the County fair is for the exhibitors to find out how their effort and training ranks in comparison with others. This year's broadened fair is further op portunity for comparison. American Freedom Train <» t Visit County August 5-6 To PAGE 19 - PLAINDEALER-WEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 1975 Present "Thurber Carnival" In July At Wauconda High The Wauconda high school D^ama class and Wauconda Community Theatre company are collaborating on a play, "A Thurber Carnival". The play, resembling "Monty Python" in many ways -- extreme characterization, absurd situations. July 24 and 25 are the dates at 8 p.m. at the Wauconda high school. PRESENT "FIDDLER" "Fiddler on the Roof," the colorful musical hit of both Broadway and Hollywood, will open at the PM&L theater, 877 Main street in Antioch, Saturday, July 26. Subsequent performances are scheduled for Fridays and Saturdays, Aug. 1, 2, 8, and 9. Curtain time for all shows is 8:30 p.m. Bruce Berger of McHenry is a cast member. The American Freedom Train, complete with in novative multi-media presentations and unique' moving walkways, will visit Crystal Lake for two days, Aug. 5 and 6, as part of its twenty- first month, 17,000 mile nation wide tour. The American Freedom Train will be open 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily at Main street and U.S. 14 next to the Crystal Point Mall. Children under age 3 will be admitted free. The twenty-five car, steam- powered train - the first of ficial national Bicentennial program - will visit more than eighty cities in forty-eight states. - An estimated ten million people throughout the nation £pe expected to board the Train to see the multi-media presentation of 200 years of U.S. art, entertainment, ex ploration, government, in ventions, literature, science, sports and transportation. A moving walkway will take visitors through the ten exhibit cars displaying documents, artifacts, films, and memorabilia of our American heritage. An audio sound system will provide each visitor with a melange of historic voices, music and sounds. The Train will bring the nation's historic treasures, including a facsimile of the Declaration of Independence, Benjamin Franklin's draft of the Articles of Confederation and George Washington's copy of the Constitution. It is bringing the Bicentennial to the people who would otherwise have had to travel to more than 200 museums, libraries, universities and private collections in thirty-six states and Puerto Rico. • Included in the exhibits will ! be artifacts from nearly every phase of American life, ranging from Revolutionary War weapons to a moon rock and a lunar rover; from Thomas Paine's "Common Sense" to Dr. Martin Luther King's vestment robe and bible; from President Kennedy's rocking chair and early hand-written draft of his inaugural address to a Navajo sand painting; from Henry Aaron's baseball bat that hit his 714th home run to Judy Garland's dress from the ' 'Wizard of Oz." Other artifacts include Emma Lazarus' handwritten manuscript of the famous poem, "The New Colossus," that appears on the Statue of Liberty; Abraham Lincoln's fartious stovepipe hat; Will Rogers' rope; paintings and sculpture by Peale, Sully, Homer, Benton, Sloan, Remington and Saint-Gaudens; Franklin D. Roosevelt's mother-of-pearl cigarette holder; a fingerless baseball glove; original U.S. patent models; a panorama of movies, including the silent screen, the first talkies and Academy Award winners. Two showcase cars display historically significant ar tifacts that include the 1904 Oldsmobile that won the first transcontinental auto race in the U.S. and the Freedom Bell, a twice-sized adaptation of the Liberty Bell. The giant 74 ft. bell is a gift to the nation on by the and behalf of her children American Legion auxiliaries. The American Freedom Train Foundation, Inc. is a non profit, tax exempt, and non- political project financed completely without govern ment or state funds. ON DEAN S LIST Elmer (Bud) F. Pflug, III of 1412 W. Bayview lane, McHenry, a freshman at Rensselaer Polytechnic in stitute, has made dean's list for the spring 1975 semester. Approximately 1,600 of RPI's 3,500 undergraduate students earned at least a 3.0 grade average out of a possible 4.0 entitling them to Dean's list recognition. Great automotive buys. [wtgfnSALE ENDS SATURDAY i SAVE 99C-L32 NEW CLASSICS, OUR EASY-CARE SCHOOL FROCKS *9 FOR REG. 3.99 EACH FOR 11 REG. 4.99 EACH School-time pretties in machine-washable polyester-cotton. Lots of great styles in plaids, prints, solids. No iron. Girls' 3-6X. SAVE 2.11 FASHION-RIGHT FLARED SLACKS q 2 8 B REQULARLY 4.99 Waist treatments in clude embroidery and button tabs. In knit or woven polyester and polyester-cotton. Fall colors. Machine-wash, no iron. Girls' 3-6X. SAVE 1.16 SNAPPY PATCH POCKETJEANS 3" REGULARLY 4.49 You'd expect to pay more for these easy- care jeans. Flare-legs, flap-pockets, yoke- back, more! Polyes ter-cotton. Washable, no iron. Boys' 3-7. SAVE '2 GIRLS' 2-6X KNIT TOPS Turtlenecks or EACH crews. Polves- 1 99 t e r - c o t t o n . J _ Bright solids. REG. 3.99 SAVE 2.11 BOYS' NYLON BOAT JACKET 1 88 REGULARLY 3.99 Tough rain-shedder! Zip-front style has hood that zips into col lar. Wear collar 3- ways, too. Machine- wash, hit colors. In S-M-L-XL. Hurry! Price cut. BOYS' PLAID FLAREJEANS REGULARLY 6.99 Sizzling plaid array in extra-wear polyester- cotton. No iron need ed. Slim, reg. 8-18. 7.99 Huskys' 5.88 BOYS' EXCITING TANK TOP HITS % FOR 5 Flamboyant coolers he wants for hot^ Summer days. Soft, fort-fit polyester- on in zingy colors. Machine-wash, too. S-M-L-XL. Stock up! X 1 owe SAVE 2.11 BOYS' POCKETED FLARE JEANS REGULARLY 6.99 Even the pockets have p o c k e t s o n o u r n e w flares. Great look for school, tough-wearing f o r p l a y . M a c h i n e - wash navy blue cotton in slim or reg. 8-18. 7.99 Huskys'.. 5.88 I Back to School Specials STOKE HOURS Mon. thru Fri. 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Saturday 9 30 a.in.-5 p.m. Sunday 12 Noon-5 p.m. % Crystal Lake 2 fiber glass belts 2-ply polyester cord 32*off. Glass-track belted Twin Guard. TUBEI.ESS BLACKWALL SIZE REGULAR PRICE EACH" SAl.K PRICE EACH' PI.CS K.E.r. EACH A78-13 $30 * 20.40 1.77 A78-15 $34 23.10 1.93 E78-14 $37 25.90 2.32 F78-14 $40 28.00 2.47 G78-14 $43 31if° 2.62 G78-15 $44 CO & o 2.69 H78-14 $45 33.30 2.84 H78-15 $46 34.00 2.92 'With trade-in. WHITEWALLS ONLY $2 MORE EACH. TUBEI.ESS WHITEWALL SIZE REGULAR PRICE EACH" SALE PRICE PAIR" PLUS F.E.T. EACH BR78-13+ $42 $58 2.07 ER78-14 $51 $72 2.51 FR78-14 $54 $76 2.68 GR78-14 $58 $82 2.88 HR78-14 $62 $88 3.04 BR78-15+ $46 $64 2.19 GR78-15 $60 $86 2.95 HR78-15 $64 $90 3.17 JR78-15 $67 $94 3.30 LR78-15 $70 $98 3.48 "With trade-in tires ^Sinyle radial plv $26 -$42 off pairs. Runabout Radial whitewalls. • 4 rayon belts • 2 radial pliest I Smash price. Save 10 tO*40 12 MONTH OR 12,000 MILES GUARANTEE Montgomery Word guarantees this auto ' air conditioner to be free from defects in materials or workmanship as follows For 12 months or 12.000 miles of ownership, whichever occurs first Montgomery Ward will repair or. at its option, replace any defective part free of charge, including labor For service under this guarantee return the air conditioner to any Montgom ery Ward branch Evidence of purchase date and mileage required Drive cool and comfortably this summer. We have air conditioners for almost every car and budget. nomy model auto air conditioner. % 2 adjustable vents and a pre-set ther mostat. Just rigjit for compact cars. REGULARLY $199 Custom installed units, reg. $309 $269 LOW-COST INSTALLATION AVAILABLE FITS MOST USCARS mm aer] lawoy INSTALLED FREE WARDS BATTERY PROTECTION PLAN Montgomery Word will r*ploce ttm battery at no cost to the original owner if it foil* to occept and hold o charge in noncommericol passen per cor u>e during the free Replocement Period shown TOTAL GUARANTEE PERIOD FREE REPLACEMENT PERIOP After this period, to the end of the guarantee period Montgomery Word will repioce the battery, charging only o pro-roted omouni for the time since purchase, based on the current regular selling price less trode-m Batteries in commercial use are guoranteed on a similoi basis for holf of the specified periods Commercial use is defined a use in any vehicle for other thon fomily or personal use For service under this gvarontee, return battery with evidence of da»« of purchase to any Montgomery Word branch 60 48 42 36 24 18 Mos 24 16 12 9 6 3 Mo SAVE 6.07 42-MONTH BATTERY, REG. 33.95 SAVE 20 NON-RESISTOR AC s SPARK PLUG G r e a t s t a r t s ! REG. 89c I m p r o v e s c a r ' s / " . g a s m i l e a g e . $1.09 resistor type 89c Our responsive all-weath- ^ er power cell delivers on J 1 dejnand. Prenty of reserve, fld £ $24.95 24-month battery, now 19.88" 88 EXCH. SAVE *2 WARDSDC TIMING LIGHT B r i g h t x e n o n _ _ _ Q 0 s t r o b e l i g h t . 1 D u r a b l e p l a s t i c ® c a s e 1 2 V . REG. 19.98 FOR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE, JUST SAY "CHARGE IT!" /\A0!VTC;0/V\ERY We care about your car. RmETEJO 105 Northwi's l Hi^hvsa) For vour convenience the •s. -V 105 Northwest Highway Koute 14 AUTO SERVICE IS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK I t t i Tr» • rt 1 I r i IT*/\ Route 14 Phone 459-3120 • Mon. thru Fri 8 30 a m -9 p.m. Sat 8 30-5, Sun 12 Noon-5 ^rysiai L3KG Phone 459 3120 K K E E P A R K l M i - FREE PARKING