Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 30 Sep 1920, p. 3

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WesternCanada ft Country Qt 51 Marvelous Pertfflty.1 •SH*. • able to do »y work. I thank ywt aooQgfc and 1 reeoopnend rov jBMdfete to my friends «kt» are •fck. --Mm. 8ora fUroTMBKi; 26 15t Wto 8t, BayooMt K, J. It rart be ndmMtod bj «vwy ftrfrlaiudad, fatdliflnnt person, that amedijwwid notnw nl|nnr In nrnke fry for over forty years, and today hold • rseord tar na wondsrftd uuimss E. Ptnkham's Vegetable .Jthost fin----tn« gnat ~ actual worth. Sodi med- Ictnee mast be looked upon nd tanned both standard dependable by every - He Knew Mother. William Wallace ia generally raffiafl Mtt by his mother and father. The other day he was playing: In the ywd with a neighbor boyN It was near lunchtime. Mother called: "William." (No answer.) "William Wallace!" Then she heard him regretfully part With his playmate In this fashion: *Well, Jim, 1 gotta go now. When my mother calls me by my regular W|pae she means business." I Important to Moth** * ie carefully every bottle 6f *Hr' psi > CASTORIA, that famous old remedy tor infants and children, and see that It Beara the ftgnatwe Si gj» tor Over 80 YeanT UBfldren Cry for Fletcher^ Castoria Folly of 8elflshnesa. To be selfish is to be Ignoble--to repose on a lower platform for lower gain, when you might choose a high* er. To be selfish is to sacrifice the nobler for the meaner ends, and to bo fOfdldly content--BL R. Haweia, I- • {^GatanJi Cai* Be Cored 0*t*rrh to a local aiieui gmtly lnflumead by consfltutfcmal conditions, it th^refow ^ roauiroa constitutional treatment HAT.L'S CATARRH MKDICIKB » taken Internally And acts through the Blood on A* Mucoua Surfaces of - j * A L L , 'S CATARRH MJCDICIN* destroys the fouod&tloa at the dlsoaaa,.glvae the petlent strength by *nd AU Drunlsts. Circular* free ~< lM, i. <3fcenay A Co., Toledo, '"J"*"0* King • Rn|oed Weygand Prom an Obsowe ioy V to High Position In French Military Circlea. Brnasels.--<3en. Uaxime Weygand. the military genius who directed the Poles in their spectacular victory over U»e Russians, and who is now generally credited with a large share of Mar* ahal Foch's achievements in the World war, la a son of the late King Leopold, of Befgium, according to perw ^!! « ars ,ntirnately acquainted with Belgian court circles and the secrets thereof. Rumors in Paris and Brusaela re*, garding the paternity ot the tamourff soldier were run down today with the following result: . It was former King Leopold's Inw »nce that raised Weygand from an ooacure boy of unknown parentage to •nth a high position in French mill, tary circles that he was chosen chief of staff to Marshal Foch, commander/ in chief of the greateat army the world has ever seen. General Weygand waa born in. Brussels iu 1866. The names of his father and mother are not contained in the birth record* nor is the place of hia birth given. He was first heard offtl under the care of a rich Brussels manufacturer who was a close friend of the former Belgian king. ' Regarded as Orphan. Young Weygand waa then said to be an orphan. When he was eight years old he was • adopted by a French family of the name of Weygand. The be®d of the family was employed by the Belgian manufacturer. The family was poor, but money was supplied to give the boy an excellent education. ^ Ww*g the wia cate nae to too query "Who la tahtahing the la*» a&Tto •end ;m orphan to a high-priced 51* adopted boy received the name Of his foster parents. Young Weygand, who was brilliant In his studies, showed a preference *or military affairs. The friends and neigbbore of the Weygand family were astonished when the youth entered the famous French military academy at St. Cyr. He was admitted as a foreigner, although he had been adopted by a French family. Lieutenant Colonel at Twenty-dHx. Weygand displayed too aame bril- "'-3 0m' 4- -$C Ls* a, Bayonne,N. J.--"lhndpainslnb*ek idlanao thatlcoaldnotafaM^aoj^S marked Ma irse. He passed army after his graduation. Bo roae to a lieutenant colonelcy, receiving his post In' 1912, when ho was only/ twenty-elxyears old. \ ^ At the outbreak of the World war Lieutenant Colonel. Weygand was made chief of staff to Foch. He planned Foch's brilliant stroke when that gjifaerai was commanding an array rorpe it the fifat toattli CoNtel ^ - -;e of the Marne. Lletttfenant Ooloftel Weygand was pfcMnofod to a major general In August, 1916, and became France's representative on the supreme war council. Later he was preatdent of the inter allied military committee at Versailles. General Weygand was the constant companion of Marshal Foch, who described him as "a man with a bead and soul---the kind you can rely on." All biographies of General Weygand and also his mqet intimate friends are ettremely reticent en tfcf subject of his origin. Literally Hundreds of Miles of Won derful Grain Fields Delight the Eye ~~Vleld« W1I> Run Well Over* ; Billion Dollar* </$ Improves Ellis United States Government Makes Sweeping Changes at the ' Gateway to America*. > HARSH AnEffflAHTS LET OUT Freedom and Sunshine Being Planned for New Arrival*--Kind and De> cent Treatment Are Now Demanded for Immigrants New York.--Sweeping changea are being made at America's gateway-- Ellis island--by Immigration Commit sioner Frederick A. Wallis, who proposes to make the big Immigration station more comfortable for the newcomers to the United States. Freedom and sunshine are being planned for the new .arrivals by the commissioner, who has just announced Span for Washington Bridge Hatee Carving. Uto. Green--My husband hates carving. Mr. Brassie--I noticed that it makes Wn mad to slice hla ball. v ljtecessity known no law la usually too poor to hire a lawyer. SS* !?' t 5. if * •. -t Find the Cause! It isn't right to drag along feeling, mi--1 able lull siok. Find oat what la making you fsd so badly and try to correct it. Perhaps your kidneys are ceasing that throbbing or those sharp, stabbing paiaa. Yoa may have morning laawneas, tod, haaiianliaa, dioy spells and iiragnlar kidney action. Uae Don't KUUtep Mia, They have helped thousands at SiHng Mta, Ask yew neighbor! iCm9 Mrs. Bert 8tambuigfa, Virginia. HI., aays: "My back wee so bad I could hardly get around. ^ S o m e t i m e s I I ooaldnt y«t out of 'ted. I was troubled | wtth my kidneys | acting too freely. I* «ot a box of Doan's Kidney Mils' _ . . . and used them. The pains left my back, my kldneve acted regularly and X was eared S kidney trouble." CBr"a 01 Qst Dsasni at Asr StaMk toe e B« doan's v/ixy nm*.iauum oa. buvalo, n. r. 80 Years Old -Was Sick Now Feels Yountf After Taklnrf Eatonlc for Sour Stomach 1 had sour stomach ever sinee I has | the grip and it bothered me badly Have taken Eatonic <»ly a week and am much .better. Am 80 years old," says Mrs. John Hill. Eatonic quickly relieves sour atom- : ach, lndigestkm, heartburn, bloating : and distress after eating because it takes up and-carries out the asceaa acidity and gases which cause tneet stomach ailmenta. If you have "tried ; everything" and atQl suffer, do not give ! up hope. Eatonlc has brought relief to tens of thouaanda like you. A big box costa hot a trifle with your drugglatH guarantee. Phu for Improving conditions In gen* •ml on the islands Larger buildings are to bo asked fop, he says, sanitary conditions are to be Improved, additional cots provided for those unable to get beds and many other conveniences for the immigrant •re to be installed. Hareh Attendants Dlecfearged.' ®*»d and decent treatment for all new arrivals has been demanded by Commissioner Wallis, who has already announced the discharge of some of toe veteran attendants for alleged harshness or inefficiency in receiving Immigrants. Their places have been filled by more courteous, attentive and younger men. "I propose to make this receiving station representative of all America promises." he said. One of the latest improvements by Commissioner Wallis haa been the supplying of warm milk to mothers with bablea. Want* ftadleala Removed. •Commissioner Wallis has appealed to Washington to remove the alleged radicals and anarchists detained at the island Cor deportation, because of crowded conditions at the immigration station. "They are a defiant lot and should be deported." he explained. "Tbey occupy a room that could accommodate a couple of hundred immigrants." Railroads have also been asked by the commissioner to provide better transportation facilities for the Immlgrants and stop employees from "grafting* from the newcomers. He also wants them to be properly fed while being detained for entrainment. While funds are not Immediately available for Improvements at the ialand. Commissioner Wallis statee he will ask congress to raise funds by public subscription, if the necessary money cannot be provided by the^gOVernmoht •* - An interesting engineering operation In connection with the construction of the Key bridge, at Georgetown on the Potomac, which connecta the state of Virginia with Washington, was the placing of this huge 200-ton apan. It waa built over a timber frame erected over three scows lashed together and anchored near the Virginia shore. When the tide waa at flood, the scows and their high-soaring cargo were towed between the central piers of the bridge. Small Bey fteeeuee Baby ttni - Coal City. Ind.--a small boy who waa let down into a well on a rope at the home of J. W. Free, rescued the one-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Morris of Hymera from drowning. The child fell Into the well when she stepped on a movable cover in the platform. A bruise on one arm, caused by striking a bucket which waa hanging in the well, was the only injury suffered by the baby. Mr. and Mrs. Monti were visiting at the Free farm. Austrian Troops Get Flag of New Republic '5$^* A - 'A. *1^ throagh the wheat fleWftf ot Western Canada may lack the Inspire tlon, such as one may find working in* sidlously through his being as heti traverses the mountain, areas oft Canada, rich in the variety of color and depth of shades that they cast wonderful in their magnitude, their grandeur, restful, even although uie' streams that flow from their sides' come down with a swish and a swash creating a noise that makes one's eardrums beat their last beat. Then as we rest beside the lakes In the clouds and see the calm and peace which .they enjoy In the midst of nestling hills, we wonder if there's another world. Care has vanished; all we want is to dwell upon the scene. But it was not the Intention to speak of mountain scenery, roaring torrents, placid lakes, and restful haunts. Rather, we were about to speak of the other kind of inspiration that is aroused as one traverses Western Canada's Immense plains, grldironed with railroads and splendid highways, along whose borders and away back are to be seen the most wonderful grafn fields. The crops of wheat, oats, barley, flax, and corn--yes, corn--have Just been harvested, the threshing machines are busy, the elevators are ready--the thirty and forty thousandbushel elevators, with three, four, and five and more at nearly every station along the thousand miles of railway that serve this Immense new area of agricultural land. There Is not a njore inspirlhg sight than these grain fields. They lead one to pause and refect, get one into a mental arithmetic strain, and the mind wanders as it gathers the great length of figures that represents the Western Canada grain crop of 1920. A pencil and paper are needed, for the value will run Into and over a billion dollars. At least, that Is what those who profess to keep themselves poeted aa to values believe. The wheat crop alone will run over 2r>0.(XX),000 bushels, and If you figure this at $2.80 per bushel, the price It is •elling at as we write, there you have $700,000,000 alone. Then there Is the oat crop, with a yield of one hesitates to say the quantities In bushels, for the threshers are reporting yields of 110 and 120 bushels per acre, where but 80 and 90 bushels were expected, but their value, apart from that of barley and rye and flax, will carry us over the billion dollar mark. Of course all this means--but wa had almost forgotten to speak at the cattle and horses, the sheep and the pigs, the dairy and many other farm products, the Increase and production of which this year will bring in many more million dollars--all this means that there will be a rush of buyers to Western Canada this fall, during too winter, and next spring. A certain amount of satisfaction la derived by those "back home here," whose friends are writing them Indorsing the statements that are appearing in the press of wheat yields of thirty, forty, and fifty bushels to the acre; of oats yielding anywhere from sixty to 120 bushels per acre. "Dietricts have not been specially favored. Travel anywhere, eight hundred miles east and west, four hundred miles north and south, and it is the same story, splendid yields, good acreage, j excellent prices, easy marketing, but I labor a little scarce.--Advertisement Unconsciously True., "HolUe met a skin doctor who Bays be can take away wrinkles and make old faces as good aa new." 'I guess he does It with one of them, new-fangled thing* thto call wrinkle prevaricators." looks, soond teeth, eager appetite and digestion are only 5C a package SEALED TIGHT-- KEPT •g^JPtaVOI ^FIASts Movies to Trace Lost Dog. The movies in southwest London have been asked to exhibit a slide of "Tyke," described as an "old yellow curly Irish terrier, with a wavy tall," belonging to a lady In Chelsea. The slide also bears the appeal.- "Please help to find me." Left with a veterinary surgeon while his mistress was In France. "Tyke" escaped to try to find her, and has not been seen since. --From the Continental Bdlttop of the London Dally Mail. More Work, Less Talk. Some foolish person says that we need in this country is more a* tlve brains. A little more activity to the muscles would be infinitely hto» ter.--Toledo Blade. Men are horn to aoctoed, not to Mfc' --Xboreao; \j A eouple may catch a har* . ^ Confidence cannot be eron W a 4aft :«%; A bill poster knows his place and toere a ticks. A crooked tog makea a food fire.-- French Proverb. Women who *ear tight ahoea have •arrow, aolea. KillJTkat Cold JYith CASCARA fc> QUININE AND SlMt. Csub . *fhu\V La Grippt' Neglected Colds are Dangerous hb no shaneae. Keep this standard mnody handy for to» flMt < Breaks up a cold in 24 hours -- RtHma Glippo in 3 days--£zc«llsct for Hwdackt In thia form do«s not aflact th* baad--•Caacaaa la tost --No Opiate in Hill's. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT Approximately one-half of all the people in the world live in China and India. One cfti bear grief, but it takes two to be glad. Crosses, though wholesome. not pleasant, are To succeed one must be patiaat. The penitentiaries ace full who were impatlenL The building is a typical epeo-toeet A scene iu the Burghplatx, Vienna, on the occasion of the presentlng of the'flag of the ne^Subli^^Austna to her army. The ceremony was performed in the presence of the allied commission, and was presided over by Ph*. ldent Seitx of Austria, who la standing with his hat lifted. I* **NI poor Mother ' KEMP'S BALSAM K Slop that cough. Kd. ICy toar gives it to ma when I get oogh and yon dual mnghiag all the Baa" BESEIGED BY . TURKS AiMffean Girl Tells About Terror in; Armenia, Orphanage Woriosre Wars to Swaggertng Nationalists for - Ten Weeka. Oilcago.--Hew American mm re- Hef worker* played "haetesa* to swag, gerlng Turks |a ttfe conquered Armenian city of lladjln for ten weeks was told by Miss Alice M. CSark of Evanston, who has just returned to her home after nearly two yean of service In the near east. Miss CSark was under siege of the Turkish Nationalists from March 8 to June IS and for four days during a terrific engagement between the Turks and Armenians she and five other American women hid In a store room and subsisted oc ratoins and bread While the orphanage they were ducting was under constant fire. "After a day of constant firing," Miss Clark said, in telling of the captore of the orphanage, "two burly Turks entered the building. Then we women began a little game of ill pi i-- acy that lasted ten weeka. - They were about to search the orphanage, hut we assured thou we had no fire arms and they went away, saying that as long as we kept our promise of nan* trality we would not be banned. "The pledge was kept on both sides, but it was a terrible ten weeks we women spent as 'hostesses' to these swaggering Turks, who varied their protestations of friendship with such diversions as leveling their guns as we crossed the compound or twirling daggers suggestively as they followed us about the buildings. After more than nine weeks of this, the Armenians made a sudden charge and drove off the Turks. On June 13 the Turks recaptured the compound and wo war* given three days in which to leave. We reached Talas after a three daysf march and finally arrived at Constan* ttoople." - ' IfciMMli Dreams She Is Drowning; 8 Feet of Water in Boom Hew York.--Mrs. Agnes Beynotds. who resides in a trastr ment flat, believes then really is something In dreamt In a dream, as she remembered it, she was at sea. The waves were unusually unhappy and she thought she was dinging to a life raft. Suddenly she awakened, hear* ing a voice screaming to her to stand on the bed or else drown. The voice was that of the Jnt«- treas. Water . had entered the cellar from a clogged sewer "M had flooded it to a of about five feet i-y> J ;« z';. : v'" J& "fc:: fa.** <yy 3: •s'-fcf-.j. •W. T-'f 'Bayer'Cross*' on tablets is the thumbprint which positively identifies genuine Aspirin prescribed hy phyoirian^ ^ over 20 years, and proved safe by millions. JE w. Safety first I Insist upon an unbroken "Bayer package * containing propel Affections for Headache, Earache, Toothache. Neuralgia, Colds, Rheumatism, Neuritis, Lumbago and for Pain generally* Made and owned strictly by Americans. # gaady Oa heaaa eg 1$ tahlsts east ha> a tsw t; Would yourself. jh*"rT ^ yrU fa*'-'*

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