Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 2 Oct 1930, p. 5

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BACON'S STRIP % 'fEKE" BACON Ereryoae who saw the last MAAC MAACS LOSE LAST GAME OF SEASON SU«c*ek Brothers Here Again iw Sunday and Take Game By Score of 16 to 8 ^Players and loyal fans shivered through a regulation nine-inning base «a!l game last Sunday and saw the If" ' '« t0 8 trimming fro™ M •f-r^ time for the football season to open ill this vicinity has arrived. , Back on the job again this week after spending the past seven days it the State where the tall corn used to grow. Illinois for mine eve© if the 1**.,«* > ----__ . ' - • Wonder who was the happfer person, Bobby Jones when he sank the put that gave him his fouth major golf championship of the season, or his caddy when the golf premier handed him the $210 bonus and a new tet of clubs? :?;• October 4th i* Boy SeoW*4 dlqr Wisconsin and the University of Wisconsin is putting on a big football game at Madison that day to which all Boy Scouts are invited as guests of the school. McHenry Scouts sr© planning to attend in a body with Scoutmaster Mike leading the parade. The youths will leave McHenry Saturday morning via auto and make the trip in time for the game. Dkk Wegener suffered a painful injury in last week's football game with Woodstock high when several of his front teeth were knocked out from a blow on the mouth. It is expected that he will be out of the lineup for sometime and this will mean that the defense will probably suffer unless Coach McCracken will unearth someone to fill the huge linesman's gap Which Dick usually occupied. V Sid Frye last Sunday captured the Ifefeend leg of the West McHenry State Bank cup match held by the local rifle club on their range east of town. One more leg will give Frye permanent possession. Where hell get another leg is the big question. Frye was. also high man in Illinois Civilian's team at Camp Perry during the recent National Rifle matches. The last outdoor match of the season will be held Oct. 12th and will be the 30.08 cup match. Election of officers will also take place on that date. the Stanczek Brothers team. Schoewer started the game for McHenry and was the victim of an early attack by the brothers. Hoopy had trouble in attempting to cut the corners and his curve ball was breaking too soon to be effective. It just was not Hoopy's day and it seems that the big brothers have taught all the little brothers not to bite on the bad ones. Hawley pitched to the last man »n the third and finished the game. Andy was not the pitcher we saw the previous week, but we will blame ^verything onto the frigid season and let It go at that. Brother Bill served 'em up in neat fashion for five inning;, allowing five hits and no runs. Martin got by for two innings, but the MA ACS started a bombardment of their own and scored four runs in each of the last two innings. The locals outhit the visitors 16 to 14, but the edge must be given to the visitors in most of the other departments. ' This game marked the end of the 1930 season for the locals. The management and players are deserving of much credit for the fine showing of their newly organized team. We wish them good luck and loyal support in the future. MAACS-- ' Dahn, ss ...nii«im.fi& Whiting, M. 2k ..,^..8 >• ^ • * • • S • The recent changes brought about in the personnel of the Chicago Cubs during the waning moments of the National Leagues pennant chase seems to have brought the White Sox to the front as the popular favorites £n the impending City Series. Whether or not the Sox win or lose they will have the fans pulling for them in McHenry if the gossip of the streets means anything. It's a long time since the Sox rooters in Mo- Henry have had their say, but it looks like the time has come. 4 Mortality, Woodstock nathrt, who fusses his time away calling balls and strikes in the American league during the baseball season, has been picked to umpire the world's series. In this manner will McHenry county be represented in the yearly classic and no better representative could be wished for than Moviarity, the man who Buhrow, If .... Meyers, lb .... Johnson, 3b .. Bacon, cf .... Schroeder, rf Kobel, c : Schoewer, p ., Hawley, p 4 ............5 .... 5 ..4 0 4 I s i ' l 2 1 8 2 2 3 2 3 1 0 1 1 11 4 1 6 1 0 40 8 16 27 18 STANCZEK BROTHERS-- Mike, 2b Joe, 3b „..., Frank, ss -..., Ed, lb Louis, c ........ Martin, rf, p Bruno, cf ...... Julius, If 6 ......5 4 ......4 _4 4 *4 4 2 1 2 1 0 2 15 2 5 2 2 0 1 0 0 Bm, tt. >Ma...v.r.5 2 0 41 16 14 27 19 2 Two base hits--Mike, Frank, Ed, Martin (2), Bill, Buhrow (2), Meyers, Bacon, Schroeder. Three base hit--Hawley. " Double plays--Bruno to Joe to Louis to Joe. Ed to Mike to Ed. Struck out--Hawley 4, Bill 4. Bases on balls--Schoewer 5. Bill 2 Martin 3, Stolen base--Bruntf. " WEST M'HENRY BANK CUP HATCH SUNDAY Sidney Frye, Capron m^n. who is a member of the local rifle club, stepped out last Sunday and tackled the job of collecting the second leg of the West McHenry State Bank cup. Frye won his first leg last year when he talks baseball and thinks baseball l en->°yin* hif first yoar of compe every moment. If he enjoys the um piring as much as he does thinking and talking the game then he's in for a mighty pleasant time this faQ. Many of the smaller school teams throughout the country are playing their football games at night under the glare of the spotlights. In Iowa even the smallest of the schools have found this method practical as it gives everyone a chance to attend and thus puts the game on a paying banir, something that was seldom found to be true amongst small school circles. McHenry is slated to play two games after dark this season though neither of them will be at home. One of them will be with the deaf and dumb pupils at Delavan and the other wfll be at Harvard. Crystal Lake will journey here Saturday to engage the local Orange and Black eleven in the first home football game of the season. Coach McCracken's squad is anxious that a good turnout will attend the game as football never has drawn the crowds in McHenry of which it is deserving and until the crowds do come, McHenry will not find football holding the place in the high school that basketball has during the past five or six years. Let's all go out and pull for our own Orange and Black to down the Orange a>nd Black eleven from Crystal Lake. An old timers'. baseball game is being arranged for the Johnsburg diamond to take place next Sunday. This will rival the recent ex-major leaguers' game that was pulled off in Boston this summer -only the Ty Cobbs and Trig Speakers will be picked from amongst the local Who's Who. It should be a great game to watch and a greater game to umpire. All applications for the latter job should be turned in to Frett Brothers before Saturday noon. This will be a great opportunity to watch those people perform who usually sit back and relate how this and that should be dona.' * ~ ""' ::r Johnsbarp ^ost a the Waukegan Majors germ? tO last Sunday tition with the local club. One more victory in this match will give him permanent possession, but there will be plenty of keen competition to prevent him from walking away with the third leg. Frye was also high point man on the Illinois State Civilian team at the National Rifle Matches at Camp Perry, Ohio, held last menth. Bill Klapperich pulled the unexpected whei\ he shot a "possible" score on the 200-yard rapid fire range by piling up a neat fifty points. This feat corresponds favorable with the hole in one in golf or the 300 game in bowling. Besides Bill the only members of the local club that have performed the feat are Frye, Smith and Nickels, and no one of them has ever -done it more than once. The last outdoor meet of the seaion will be the 30.06 shoot on October 12th and on this day also the election of officers will take place. Every member that can possibly be there should turn out. Lester Bacon, who has been away for several weeks on his honeymoon, is expected back and will take part in the meet. A summary of l«st weeks match scores: Frye 46 43 44 46 47--225 Freund 42 38 46 45 48--219 Smith, J. W. .. .41 86 45 47 46--216 Klapperich .37 33 42 45 50--207 Smith, Ralph .. .37 34 43 47 46--207 Thompson 36 84 42 44 48--204 Nickels 1 39 4 0 36 44 43--202 Caspers, Wm 44 39 35 40 43--201 Weber 35 36 40 43 41--195 Caspers, Fred ....34 34 35 43 40--186 Pfannenstill 29 37 27 40 37--170 The first column represents firing at 200 slow; second at 300 slow; tfiird at 500 slow; fourth 300 rapid; fifth 200 rapid and the last colum the total. .jswl • JOHNSBURG LOSES TO WAUKEGAN MAJORS The strong Waukegan Majors won an 8 to 4 baseball game from the McHenry county champions at Johnsburg last Sunday. The Majors are considered to be the class in this neck of the woods and they proved to be a big attraction. The Johnsburg field will , be the seene of a big.fall classic next Sunday when an Old-Timers game will ba when they dropped their second game I pwlTayn™ed between J°hnsburg and Mc- of the season to t4h.1i.;s- *te am of e. x Henry. Fans will recall that a few leaguers. Two bad breaks went against the upriver lads, one of them when Joe Britz dropped a fly after having apparently captured it and years ago these same players were representing their respective towns, battling hard for honors and supremacy of the diamond. A large crowd this resulted in the bases becoming) ^n actiliii"1* 10 *** their loaded and then emptied by a home- **W»tes in action. run. Another came when Harold Freund dropped a toes from H. Smith on an attempted double play with the result that two men scored. Take these two plays out of the game and the result might have been different, but baseball is made up of just such V . i » All Worth ~ Cash value bt a boy baby at birth fs 19,333 to a family whose Income Is $2,500 a year. It will cost $7,238 to rear him to the age of eighteen, when he will be worth $28,654.--Toledo " -• r s, ' V, " » *- &>'. " .. " '/"< . " Clf r A#® James J. Marshall, Domestic Chemist, at his work bench. "Bread by the Car-Load" Fermentation, that incredible multiplication of germ lite as yon »ee it in the action of the spores of yeast; the affinity of these spores for certain qualities in wheat flour--this, in short, is the chemistry of bread making. It used to be a household task in those old davfl when labor and human life were the cheapest of all materials. Whe* man worked from sunrise to sunset; when woman stumbled about the house in the early hours of the morning by the light of a flickering candle to prepare the day's first meal; then, in those days, bread making was almost exclusively a household task. When girl learned to sew and brew and bake her education was complete she was ready for marriage. Some of them never learned. All of you, have had some experience with soggy bread; bread that waft' baked too much; bread baked too little; bread too dry and bread that was doughy, and heavy; unfit to eat. James J. Marshall does all his owir work. As the owner of his business; the owner of his property; as the man having . the most at stake, he puts not only the best of his materials into his product but he puts the best of himself. You cwi be ABSOLUTELY SURE of the most interested service when you bay his good bread from the McHenry Bakery. Bors in Jasper county, Illinois, he has pursued his trade in Texas, Colorado, New Mexico, Kansas, St. Louis, Shreveport, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Washington, D. C., Illinois and in Chicago. He opened his first business for himself at Champaign, Illinois, in 1923* sold out and came to McHenry in 1927. For almost four years he has successfully catered to discerning housewives and to homes which demand good bread, not alone in tfat town but in the country round about. ~ He married Varina Wentworth, the daughter of a McHenry business man and * it was because of these family ties that he removed to McHenry and went into hia present business . ^ In May, 1930, « disastrous fine Vw«pt through his building, at the very beginning of the profitable Spring and Summifc season. Promptly he set about re-modeling and re-tooling his plant, and now has the most modern bakery, tooled wit|l the most modern equipment in all of McHenry county. He owns his building and its equipment and bakes regularly 1200 "sweet rolls,1*' each day; a grand total of almost a half million Of these rolls each year. He bakes more than a hundred thousand loaves of bread annually; together with pies and cakes, cookies and a complete line, such as one would expect to procurf at the very largest bakeries in any city, large or small. -- Each year he uses.inore than a ear-load of flour; more than a car-load of sugar; butter by the ton^ lard and other shorten- Breads are made and sold* by THE M'HENBY BAKERY POPPY SEED BREAD VIENNA BREAD (Very White uul Crusty) PAN ROLLS (Delicious) BAKER BOY BREAD (Large White Loal) - BLUE RIBBON LOAF (Small and White) MARSHALL'S RYE (Small and Large Weight Loaves) MARSHALL'S RYE (Large Dark Loaf> , DANISH BUTTER ROLLS (Good to the Last Oran^l DANISH COFFEE CAKES (Old Country Receipe) Try every one of these excellent Breads; so nutritious; so healthful, and so very economical. They are appetising. These Breads are fresh e%ch for sale by these Merchantir SMITH BROS. - v BARBIAN BROU _ ROYAL BLUE STORE ERICKSON'S DEPARTMENT STORE SCHAEFER'S GROCERY & MARKET ART SMITH'S I. G. A. STORf LUSK'S GROCERY, Volo WELTER'S GROCERY, Ringwood These merchants will be so glad to have you buy Marshall's home made bread. Homemade by home men and women; homemade of home materials, and well made so that our neighbors will eat, enjoy, and pass on to others the pleasure of eating Bread, Pies, and Cakes from the McHenry Bakery. Ask for these Breads by name. WW? e truck load. As many as 500 families depend upon his bakery for his good products, and his investment in his plant tops $25,000. All through the Summer Chicago resiin cottages along the Fox river, depend upon Ms daily truck Service and his daily cap for orders. His business from this discriminating portion of his customers; people, for the most part, used to the best their money can buy, is more than satisfactory. Many of them take his bread back to the city with them; others declare they can get no such bread in the city. Mr. Marshall uses flour ground in McHenry, almost exclusively. The McHenry Flour Mills of which William Spencer is owner and manager, furnishes him with his flour and meal. The flour is ground from local wheat brought to the mill by Urmers from their own wheat fields. His eggs, of which he uses thousands of dozens annually, come directly and indirectly from McHenry county farmers, luid everything he can buy at home goes into the making of his good, good, bread. For Mr. Marshall thinks these materials fresher, of better quality, and that they contribute to the making of a better loaf. THis business was learned, not in the huge consolidations of bread making organizations where a man learns to do one thing and that thing only. Mr. Marshall's experience has been almost universal. From office boy to proprietor he has climbed the ladder, pausing a while on each one of its many rungs. The result is that from the flour in the sack to the loaf in its sanitary and neatly wrapped waxed paper package, he is familiar with each and every step. That is the reason that nowhere at any time can you expect to procure a better loaf of bread than you get at'McHenry*a Baker}'. Your grocer has it qr he can get it. A«lr for it by name. * m-- The McHENRY BAKERY JAMES J. MARSHALL - *£ ,V.. McHENRY s. •; , K- 1 < * < ^ . Now-a-days the baker has taken this task away from the housewife. He does it better. He does it with scientific accuracy. He does it amid surroundings of almost surgical cleanliness. He does it by scale, and graduate, and thermometer. His bread is always uniform. Vienna Rolls, Danish Butter Rolls, Poppy Seed Bread, Coffee Cake, or plain bread--they all come from his oven every day all day long through the weeks and the months uniform, even and of high and nutritious, quality. He does it cheaper if time and gas and labor and materials were counted in the average kitchen as they do count, inevitably, out of the average salary; as they do diminish, inevitably, the average income. No home and no housewife in all the country round about can put so much quality, so much goodness, so much appetizing beauty, at such little cost into loaves of Ipead as does James J. at hia Bakery." • if':. gs by the ton, andvflavoring extracts by <> trunk Iniid. . >J' it* w

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