Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 17 Apr 1930, p. 5

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.p^,, .^(iy j iff, 4pgp »gw^pi^p •pppm KAnDSALBt, TBTDUDAT, AMD. 1930 '••M'v'ivVBACON'S '**"•. STRIP fp ^ IT-- .-!' FT: i l'ZEKE" BACON A. B. Ry&ll copped the high score ** *«* week at the Palace Alleys with * strenuous 256eoont, jibe arm to still MR. Bad my first experience with golf for the season «ad found out one thing, that fibs fWw is as "rough" «GT it ever was. v| Etmle Quuim FHp^ eld'pal and (eUcor «&)$& has departed from our Mtdjl^nnd'nfe going not only causes great sorrow but the loss of one who will be missed time and again. A real sport in the real sense of the word, that WKS Frank. Don again poetpened Ms attempt to break the world's record for speed with an automobile. Seems lfte he is more interested In breaking Cscr Woods' record for postponements, Woods having delayed his attempts the Trater for the last two years. -1* ~-- George Moriarity of Woodstock, a feUow McHenry eoorsty resident, officiated at the opening* game of the season last Monday when the Senators and the Boston Red Sox officially opened the baseball season. The .Bad Sox won the game, but don't Mime that onto Moriarity. And so ends my first ypsr as an amateur columnist. Little did I suspeft when I began a year ago tomorrow, that I would ever see the end of, my first year as a sports reporter. And my one wish is that those who have been bored with the contents of the "Bacon Strip" have enjoyed being bored just half as much as I have enjV "cooking" them. s Stndolph, rolling on the CFarrell alleys in Waukegan, set a new world's record for bowling when he captured thirty-four out of thirty-six possible strikes in three games and totaled 878 pins with games of 279, 299 and 300. With his partner they set up a doubles mark that is 297 pins h&her ; than any ever rolled in the A. B. C. •Will wonders never cease? The Coining edition of a Chicago news "piper published the pictures of most of the players of the Cubs and Sox over a full paere spread and they forgot to include Arthur Shires, the Great. And now Art says that he will only be photographed when urgently requested and when it will not cause any feeling of animosity among associates or the fans. it fkimund "Mickey" Whiting must Iwre read that article about the growing absence of Irish fighters in the ring- game and decided to do something about it, personally and immediately. Last Friday night Mickey went over to Antioch under the wing of none other than Larry Huck and enjraged in his first' fistic encounter. And as the Irish are won't to do, he returned home with a victory by taking the decision from one Knachtovffie in three rounds. Mickey returns tofcaorrow night to seek to annex another victory. He scraps at 105 and has already reached the advanced age of 16. Make a good sparring partner for Fay, who has now gained enough to tig the aeales at 168. El TOVAR THEATRE Crystal Lake Phone 644 FRL-SAT., APRIL 18-19 Ronald Colman in w "CONDEMNED" News Fables SUNDAY, APRIL 20 "^Continuous 2-11 nrrfUNnyp~ wooLo QOAns-yw/ to Comedy News Review MON.-TUES , APRIL 21-22 Laura L&Plante ia ^SftOW BOAT'**1 * iroiii WED.-THURS.-m. v April 23-24-26 tutf' ri>-. , _ of the Mc- Ifllrfalt League, an- *ext meeting of the drcoit moguls will take place at the court hooae in Woodstock this evening and all those wishing to attend are invited. Flans are now being formed that will make the county league the best that has ever been in existence. Meeting starts promptly at 7:30. Will McHenry have a team? After all the ballyhoo turned loose about the prospective elimination of the center jump and other changes in rules for basketball the rules committee failed to do anything startling. The stalling game was discussed freely, but its adherents succeeded in forestalling all srf the numereus ideas offered to eliminate this wnetintt abjectional style of game. It is especially objectional when the opposing side is several points ahead with a minute or two to go. To J. C. Thies the members of the first sqosd bf the MAAC basketball team wish to extend their sincere thanks for a most enjoyable evening. On Thursday night of last week Jack threw a little dinner party for the boys just to show that he appreciated all their efforts of the past season, and every last one of the beys declared that, it was the best time th^y had at a similar occasion. And those thanks include Mrs. Thies as well, for the menu deserved the justice shown it by the MAAC men. Spring is here. Saturday the Mis Henry Golf club opened. Monday the tennis courts at the High School were subjected to their first usage. Tuesday the Chicago teams busted the lid off the major league baseball season. Track has been going on at the institution of learning for some time, and it wont be long now before the playground ball circuit will be organized and then well be sure that the winter has passed on. And there is a surprise announcement to be made soon in regard to the indoor league! Dutcll Bacon will be the announcer. PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY FIRST AID TEAM WINS The first aid team of the Public Service Company of Northern Illinois won first place in the seventh annual Red Cross championship first aid contest held April 2 in the 132nd Regiment armory, Chicago. This marks the second successive year that a team representing the Public Service Company has won the contest. Every member of the team scored 100 per cent in the rating of the fifteen judges. This is the first time in the history of the contest that such a record has been made. The Western Electric Company Hawthorne plant team and the Illinois Bell Telephone Company team were tied for second and third places with a score of 98.2. The 108th Engineers Regimental team placed fourth with 97.6. On the winning Public Service Company team were: Harold D. Hady, Maywood; Clyde Larson, Evanston; Leonard M. Hank, Waukegan; Earl B. Dahl, Crystal Lake, and Jack Vismara, Harvey. J. A. Reilly, of the company's safety division, was their instructor. For their victorious performance, the team was allowed to keep the championship shield for another year. James B. Forgan, Jr., of the Chicago chapter, American Red Cross, presented' the shield to the team. The great value- of the first aid training received By all Public Service Company employees is demonstrated by the fact that during the past two years fourteen employees have been awarded the Britton I. Budd medal for the saving of human life. This medal is awarded to employees of the company who have saved human lives by application of the Schaefer prone pressure method of artificial respiration or other first aid application. It is awarded only when there is positive concrete evidence that the employee has been directly responsible for saving a life. Other cases of life-saving in which the evidence has not been clear enough to warrant the Budd medal have been reported from time to time. There have been munerous case# during the past year in which Public Service first squads have answered emergency calls sent out by police departments or private citizens. Also competing in the championship first aid contest were: Evanston police department; Sherwin-Williams Company, Chicago; Commonwealth Edison Company, Chicago; The Peoples Gas Light and Coke Company, Chicago; Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company; Quaker Oats Company; 132nd Infantry regimental team; Southurban group, Chicago Safety Council; and the Evanston fire department. Dr. Hugh MacKechnie, Chicago Association of Commerce; Dr. Claude H. Ogden, Illinois Steel Company surgeon, and Dr. S. C. Stanton, brigadier general of the United States Army medical corps, refereed the contest. WIm TmU* Ciaii -.<itoc-Aot troubled; for, U trembles abound, and there be tossing and storms and tempests and no peace, nor anything visible left to SUI>I yet lie still and sink benfith, till" hope stir, which In the midst of J0HN8BUBG TO OPEN SEASON 8UNDAY Johnsburg-pops span the baseball season for McHenry county next Sunday afternoon when the strong Silver Lake nine again visita the upriver diamond to display the pick of the southern Wisconsin talent. The county champs of last year are well set for the opener, they having been working out for over two weeks in preparation for a strenuous season. Miller for Harvard will be on the mound for the home team, with Joe Freund on the reciving end of the battery. Gus Freund will occupy first in his attempted comeback in the national pastime. Harold Ffceund will be back at his old shortstato position to show the boys that h0 n all over the effects of his operation1 last fall that kept him out of thi^Wbite Sox game. At third Sonny Smith will again hold sway. Joe Britz will replace the absent Winkel at the keystone sack. Yankovitch of Wilmot is also on the roster and he may be seen at shortstop if Harold Freund fails to show his old-time form. In the outfield we can only offer a guess as to whom the fly chasers will be. Leo Smith is the only regular from last season, but there seems to be a lot of material of about the same calibre on hand so that there won't be much trouble in finding- some trio to operate sufficiently well to get by. This lineup is decidedly different this year from the one that acquired the county championship last season, losing but one game in the entire schedule of sixteen games. However, the absence of Whiting, Tonyan, Bohr, Winkel and Bacon will not be noticed if rumors mean anything, as the early season reports indicate that the team FRANfcj. GfeEEN THANKS VOTERS Woodstock, April 15, 1930 To the Editor: Please, through the columns of your newspaper, express to the voters of your community who supported my candidacy for county treasurer at the recent primary election my heartfelt thanks and appreciation for the confidence they placed in me. Many of my friends and supporters l»ve urged me to contest the nomination of Mr. Peteit in the courts, in view of the fact that the canvass of the vote shows a difference of only 86 out of % total of over 12,000 votes cast. However, contests of this nature are not pleasant affairs and generally cause local strife and a division of community sentiment, which it is not my desire to create. The primaries are over and I believe we should now forget politics and all get together and work in the interest of our communities. Furthermore, I have confidence in the integrity and honesty of purpose of the judges and clerks of the thirtyone precincts in the county, ana notwithstanding the small margin by which Mr. Peteit won, it is not my intention to contest his nomination, but instead I will abide by the result as announced and wiU support Mr. Peteit and ask my friends to do likewise at the election in November. Sincerely yours, FRAME J. GREEN • ' * - V • Al-tzdna Canyon* The Colorado river flows through a canyon for practically its entire length In Arizona. The name Grand Canyon, is better than ever. Sunday's game, however ls restrlcted to a particular -f--i.' Part< which Is almost entirely In < Grand Canyon National park. Above and below the park, many miles of canyon are in the Navajo ftoslpal Indian reservations. t will give the first indication whether or not this is true. HERE'S A CHANCE TO BE INDIAN FIGHTER "Pay-as-You-Enter," First Requirement. San Francisco.--The first pay-asyou- enter Indian fight In the West's history is ticketed to leave Douglas, Ariz., May 7. It's not a private fight, this Fimbres expedition against the Apaches of Old Mexico. According to promotional material, any genuine Injun fighter, amateur or professional, may sign up and go to the war if he is possessed of good moral character and approximately $210 American gold. The announced purpose of the expedition is to reficue from the Apaches the seven-year-old son of Francisco Fimbres, asserted to have been kidnaped at the time his mother was murdered October 26, 1926. Regarded With Amusement. The Apaches are camped at the Canyon of the Oaves in the Sierra Madre mountains, 165 miles south of the international line. The expedition is to make a surprise march against them, confident that no Indian chieftain has read the newspapers and com plicated the situation by going away from there in the interim. The international aspect of 125 Americans marching into Mexico In pursuit of Indians who are strictly the property of the southern republic has been neatly taken care of by enlisting the entire company as a volunteer militia unit of the Mexican army. The expedition is regarded along the border both with amusement and Interest. The amusement is due principally to the Tinkee promotional basis upon which the expedition Is being organised and financed, and the Interest attaches because of the number of prominent Douglas citizens who head the enterprise. A Qeed Vacation. Mayor A. C. Karger of Dojglas is president of the Fimbres Apache expedition, and Chief of Police Leslie Gatllff is in charge of ^personnel. Chief Gatllff, asked for details, said: "We have a rather unususl undertaking, but the way enlistment* are coming we ought to have between 75 and 100 from the outside and there will be about 20 local men in the organization, It now seems certain." With the true camaraderie of the West, the chief added: "Why not Join us and get the best vacation you ever had, a delightful experience, a fine comradeship, and see some of the most wonderful country God ever made?" It is officially estimated that the expedition will be active for 30 days after the start. May 7. Best accommodations are offered visiting Indian fighters for about $7 a day--to be paid by the said Indian fighters, not the expedition nor the Mexican army--and much of the food will be obtained by killing wild game. More than 140 Douglas business men are listed as sponsors of the expedition, of which number at least 20 will go along, according to Chief Gatllff. Historic Awncaa Hem* Ctrtyle house in Alexandria, Va^ was built by John Carlyle In 1762, at a period when Alexandria was the metropolis of the British empire la America. Carlyle house was a center of momentous events In Colonial and early United States history. N*r Do Ther YoJal Pew Swiss spend their time leaplag crag to crag In the Alps. They most of their time on low. wind-protected ground; and they are mighty comfortable in the process.--Woman's Home Companion. Gaard Ymnr Mwaw KvU mannas will, like watered PlantuSr -C-i lt*au !• Permanent Hie permanence of bronze baa bean recognised for centuries. The variety of its decorative finishes and the llmltbD^ lr 'Which it may be dot ible craftsmen, make tmrtlwus ia this metal, possessing rare Imaginative quality, yet In strict sympathy with the spirit of the decorative scheme. Uh for Gonrds grown in the South are by the mountain people and the old negroes for many purposes, from that of fiddle-making to dippers, water Jars, flower pots, darning eggs or kitchen utensils.--Los Angeles Times. Old Grook CdtbradoM To celebrate a victory the ancient Greeks placed laurel wreaths on the brow of the victors and erected small winged figures called Victories to comsaemorateaome great event FUh Clog Rii ffsh running up <the 'Siberian rivers to the Altai mountains each spring swim in sueb dese-peekM ranks that It Is impossible to rov^/amidst them. She'* th* Compleat Angler She can dance and she can fight, die can stay awake all night; she can read and write and spell; she can orate fairly well; she can walk or ride or swim; she's at home In any gym; she can paint and sing and play; she can make a business deal--but--she cannot make a meal.1--Brooklyn Eagle. Mu»t Be Personal Tonch Conversation warms the mind, en* livens the imagination and is. continually starting fresh game that Is Immediately pursued and taken and which would never have occurred In the duller Intercourse of epistolary ^tTT^yondencfe.--Benjamin Frank^ 7: PttmelTs Cood Week "Plimsoll's mark" is a line painted on the side of British ships to prevent overloading, the limit of submergence being indicated by the line. Legislation providing for the mark was secured by Samuel Plimsoli, tailed ths "sailor's friend." ,\,T' -e* **>•}*• 7$ " Original "Sampler*" 5 col Tfc» word "sampler," applied to ^ certain kind of cross-stitch needlework, is derived from an old English word meaning "original" or "model." A sampler was supposed to exhibit various patterns for future copying. Record Hailctone Prsbably the largest hailstone to Ml In this country, or at least of which there Is authentic record, is one that fell in a storm In Nebraska in 192a It waa IT Inches in circumference and weighed ltt pounds. Church Service fee Metes • church for the deaf and dumb, •where all the service, including the sermon, is carried on in sign language, exists In Deptford, England. 1 1 1 I I I I 1 I I I I 11 I I IM I M I 1 1 | :: Boy, 18, Makes $254 ;; . From Acre of Cotton < • Memphis, Tenn.--John Allen Darnell, twelve, of Glen Allen, Miss., 4-H club cotton champion of the lower Mississippi valley, made a net profit of $254.24 on one acre of cotton. The youthful champion produced 4,671 pounds of seed cotton at an average «cost of 68 cents a hundred pounds and sold it for $6.80 per hundred. He was awarded a university scholarship. • I I 1 I I I I » I I I 11 11 1 I I I 1 1 1 I I l » ff River Hatcheries NOTICE Ohxnge tif pricea effective at oooe. Call and reverse charges. 4UI heavy breeds on hand at all times* > We deliver to your door in lots of 300 or more. |>uck hatching every week. Phono 1S37 or 5410 58 S. Spring St. Elgin, lH About Ourselves The dosing years of opr lives sit In Judgment on the past Is youth we make our sge. mm Anarlcu ideas The butterfly table, the backed Windsor chair and the rnrli^ chair originated in America. Easter Flowery WW " * * '•M* If : jkv<l8i§t.' >. •»' Easter Lilies Potted Plants ' ^ i-jwr Cut Flowers Jfothing fits the Easter occasion or beautifies ihe home quite so well as flowers. With this , ,. thought in mind we assembled an unusually ^ --large showing of the most beautiful flowers wo" ^ ' r «ould find. We have potted plants, cut ftowenM-*^ iftd Raster Lilies in full bloom. All orders ds* hvered promptly--according to your roqoesti Moncur Greenhouses On Route SO .pVx Phoos«7» • Wooditttk, BHi Opaf All Day Easter Stntaiy , • -- • V, • BASE BALL First Game of Season Johnsburg vs. Silver Lake JOHNSBURG BALL PAKK . Silver Lake won the Southern Wisconsin Championship two years straight--1928* 1929. Last year Johnsburg beat them 6 to 4. The Johnsburg team will be fully as good, if not better, than last year. x ^ Batteries -- Johnsburg, Freund, Frank Miller. • f Silver Lake,7 Ricter and Bite'j ter. SUNDAY, Admission 35c 20th - y - - ^ SALE From Saturday, April 19 till Wednesday Night, April 23 Again we are offering a host of bargains--hundreds of valuable and useful items, all priced at 9c each. We would urge you to shop early Saturday and be sure you get your share of, these wonderful values. See cppu^Jaige circulars. Below we list only a few of the many 9c offerings. ; v * Thin Blown Tnmblert. x 3'or9< Hone Shoe Tumblers ----Hb 3 for 9^f Colored Glass Vases, each 9£V Glass Ash Trays ..each 94 Lemon Juice Extractors, Opal Glass each 9^ Vinegar CrueU Glass .each 9<£ Screw Drivers ..each 94 Task Pullers i 3": each 94 ^Stamped Guest Towels--Sixe l6x2& Assorted de^ signs--Instruction sheets included .... 94 Gingham -- Dress Gingham -- Fancy checks and plaids. Good quality, for this 9c gjale only, yard 94 Toweling--Bleached, 16 in., linen finish, fast color borders. A bi^ value for--A yard 94 Baby Pants-~-Make your purchase now--Good quality rubber baby pants. Boy mm than one pair aft this low price s* Muslin -- 36 inch unbleached Musliu -- medium weigh! Good count. Special feature of the sals. 10 yards limit--Tell your best friends. „Yard 9# Women's Handkerchiefs--A large selection of remarkable values. Here are some of the bargains offered. Silk Pongee with 2 color decorations, Sheer Lawn--2 and 3 color embroidery--in assorted floral patterns, and many others to ohooee from. Your choice 9* Shelf Oil Cloth--Plain white and fancy a yard 94 Combination Offer 25c sixe Colgate's Tooth 15c good quality Tooth Brush Handy sixe Face Cloth - 94 9* 9« -You can purchase all of this for 27c., Sold only this way--limit 2 combination offers to each customer Dept. -?#• OttiJL kr

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