Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 31 Aug 1922, p. 9

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ug » first C daintiness with purity. I . Sincerity Shown In Deportment. ^ An inward sincerity will, of com***, Influence the outward deportment; but •Where the one Is wanting there is great reason to suspect the absence of the Other.--Stern, r^-1 ' • 1 tAJrWMMM-- r •utraioiM ffSICRCSSSriSfiS: te Mt fMn hss» •wwCi Aftajmi gfl»PfR Sf Wn--M>» QUALITY QUANTITY 2 > n 1 SHUE POL1IH AMERICAS FAVTFtT SELLING POLISH $*»" 'r I0» TkvanG OODI MAN'S BEST AGE JA man is as old as hi® organ* be can be as vigorous and healthy at f5fl» at 35 if he aid* Wa organa in performing their functions. Keep -tjpour vital organs healthy with m Prompt. "Yon are strong in your praise of *flie Brokers and Stokers Magazine." -I am." ' "Yet they have never printed any wf your poetry." "No, but it doesn't take them two months to decide that my staff won't do. They get It back to me In the Mxt mall."--Louisville Coirrier-Jour- Great Britain About to Send a Msk* Mission to Thaf Littlf; , COLD MODAL ^Thewsrtdlistandard leujedy for kidney, ' mt, blodder and uric add troubles sine* IM; cwiiett dteorders; sdmaWtss vital i organs. All dsuggista» dm sises. - . far Am mmm. CmU IfcW ai mqr onighl Shave With Cuttcura Soap The New Way Without Mug si*^ Your Hair tr rnlw U Ml krtBV Wi •OUkM. MaHiNiA " " ' ••ed not be tut or Mruka* with tnj-QBi* uii count •' 'T* > mmm0m ... v,-; . * 11 Exclusive ard first picture of President Hnrdiue'a new yacht, bearihg him froiu the Mayflower to the Naval academy where he attended the events of the .first day of June week. The President's seal and Tour stars may be Men on the bow. Naval ald^p and secret service men are on deck while the president and Mrs. Harding are In the cabin. 5^ '• 1 i-rv v v'A ."»,w mmm on >'W %0 m* PERHAPS there are a few mothers who do not know the viftoteTiffletdirt Gastorias Perhaps there are a few who know that there are inrifatijnnfr on. tho market, and knowing this demand Fletcher's. It is to AT.T. motherhood, then, that .we call attention to the numerous set before l^em. It is to aft ^theffiood^ every^iere thaf"we ring out the warning to of the Jnst-as-good". For over thirty years* Fletcher's Castoria has been ay fffi hi the upbuilding of our population; an aid in the saving of babies. ^ | ^ And yet there are those who wtmld ask you to try something new. Try, this. Try that. Even try the same remedy for the tiny, scarcely breathing, babo that you In all your robust womanhood would use for yourself. Shama on them* w? M i ;,1*V ~ ~ % T,. Known Land. CAREFUL STUDY TO BE MADE Explorers and Scientists Will examine Rare Books and Manuacripts and Thoroughly Investigate Customs , i |M the "Roof of the World," ftohdon.--Great Britain Intend* to make a thorough study of the little known land of Tibet, where devilworship and belief in ghosts still ex- ^ e A mission composed of some of Great Britain's ablest explorers, scientists, missionaries and * ethnologists soon will leave London for the city of Lhasa, which is buried behind the world's greatest rampart of mountains, the Himalayas, between India and China. The mission will proceed under &e auspices of the International Buddhist - union, representing all schools of Buddhism, including the Buddhist society of the United States. ' Rare Books to Be Studied. The mission will make a closer Investigation of the Tibetan people, their customs, religion and language than has yet been possible, together with a study of rare books and manuscripts known to exist In the monastic libraries. These are expected to prove of the greatest value, not only to Buddhist scholarship and to the study of comparative religion, but In Oiling many gaps that at present exist In the world's knowledge of the early history of a country which to the present da** Is veiled in mystery. The Tibetans l|ve In - mountain strongholds 15,000 feet above the level of the sea, 500 feet higher than Mount Whitney, the highest peak in the United States. They have always proved inhospitable to foreigners and to the introduction of modern Ideas. Little is known of the origin of the people. Local tradition has it that the progenitors of the race were "a shedevil of the Himalayas'* and an ape from the plains of Hindustan. The last foreigner In Tibet was an American missionary, Dr. A. L. Shelton of San Francisco, who spent 17 years at Batang; - nea^' the C^tao-Hbetan border. - 1 ^ " Last of Theocracies. In Its form of government Tibet Is one of the few remaining theocracies in the world. The people lead a nomadic life. Monogamy, polygamy and polyandry flourish. Under the polyandrous system the eldest son of a family marries a woman and she becomes the common wife of himself and his brothers. Doctor Sheltan fonnd that the Tibetan woman usually marries three or four brothers, and Jn one case that came under his observation a woman had six brothers for husbands. The oldest brother Is considered the fatUter and the other brothers the uncles of the family. Woman occupies a superior position. She is master of the home and term. *f young deer, ground to powder, are -Considered by the Tibetans infallible medicinal remedies for all ills and are even held in high favor as table delicacies. Thousands of years of isolation have paralyzed the progress of the people. There is no public instruction. Pagan forms of worship prevail. Only the most elemental form of government exists. Offenders against the law, which is derived largely from the Kanjur, the Buddhist bible, a work of 108 volume* are punished by having their hands and fret amputated. When a Tibetan dies his body la die* membered and fori to vultures. The people are extremely poor. They dress in sheepskins and the BSOal rule la one garment to a person. Trades Son for Horse. Quebec.--A Quebec farmer, t%lnlng that his nineteen-year-old eon was his property, exchanged the boy for an old horse with some gypsies. The boy was rescued by his uncle. . The University of Prague had IOjOOO students in the Fifteenth century. "No More War" Demonstration Is General Thirty-three states had "No More War" demonstrations July 20 and N as a part of the international demonstration on the anniversary of the start of the great war. Mrs. Bradley Snyder, accompanied by Mrs. Joseph Phillips, president of the District of Columbia branch of the National War Mothers, is shown in the picture placing one of the placards at the foot ef the mimiilsl troe in honor of her son, who was killed in France. ; foptewH tSThrid Bract Children Cry Foi ffci ••• 31: ALCOHOL-3 FBR osm- . A>fe^«bleftepai«lwwM IsinS^thelbodl^U- | tinftlheSioir-*- IhCTlyftoaiOltatWfcg Che«ftatoMsaad^«* IfiaoaL '•'jifh' J Your Friend, the Physician. history of sU medicines carries with it the story «f bstflMt OQktfB.MarpttBeatfl tffidiist popular beliefs: fights against prejudice: even differences of LNOTNAHOOTW opinion among scientists and men devoting their lives to research work? laboring always for the betterment of mankind. This inionnatios is at the hand of all physicians. He is with yon at a moment's call bo the trouble trifling or great. He is your friend, your household counselor. He Is the one to whom you can always look for advfc# even though It might not be a case of sickness. He.is not just a doctor. He is a student to his last and final call. His patients am his family aad to loae cm is little less than losing one of his owft icjaasBsgjai and FfeverM^* o :.'v y*£ l«ct Copy of Wrappsfc V Believe him when he tells you--as he wfll--that Fletcher* Castoria has never harmed the littlest babe, and that it Is a gooA thing to keep in the houss. He knows. MOTHERS SHOULD READ THE BOOKLET THAT 18 AROUNOT EVEST MTTlCOf fWtNErt IMflNt GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS "i:t •% Bean the Signature of 2_,. TM* OCNTAUN OOMMHV, NKW YORK OITV. ~f3C'> 10 Cents Gives Charming New Shade to Old Lingerie PUTNAM FADELESS DYES--dye* or tints as you wish The Busy Wife. Krlss--Why don t you get your wife to sew that button on your coatf Kross--She Is too busy. She Is working on four picture puzzles, reading two continued stories, and following up five serial pictures in the movies.-- Judge. Cutlcura Soap for the Complexion. Nothing better than Cutlcura Soap dally and Ointment now and then as needed to make the complexion clear, scalp clean and hands soft and white. Add to this the fascinating, fragrant Cutlcura Talcum, and you have the Cutlcara Toilet Trio.--Advertisement Mollified. "Thin kind?" echoed the stenog. "Are you alluding to me?" "No, girlie, to your shoes." "Oh."--Louisville OourterJournal. Bells Made of Porcelain. In a few weeks the cathedral of Metx will possess the famous chimes of 00 porcelain bells of which so much has been said. It Is said that the tone of these'bells leaves nothing to be desired. As to their solidity, they seem to be of the first order. Until now no such use has been made of porcelain, a fact which will make of the chimes of Metz an unequaled curiosity. It is recalled, however, that at Mlssen, where the manufacture of the so-called "Dresden" china was carried on from 1710 to 1863, there is a house cepaiFiKted of that material. 8ome Town. "Is your burgh a sporty town?" "Sure Is. Why, when the wind whistles, It whistles Jan."--Judge. The Mysterious 8tranger. "Well, sir," said the gaunt Mtswwiil' an, "a powerful funny thing hsppinodl to me while I was In town yesterday. I was sorter standing around, as if were, when a tollable well-dressed feller came up. stuck out his hand and called me out of my name. When B told him who I was he congratulated me on rc3embling a mighty fine naa^ told me his own name, and then walked away, without mentioning anything about being a candidate office."--Kansas City Star. • • t v^t'Sr Usefulness First ReqofsMei = sS Whatever has nothing to do, whaf> ever could go without being missed, !• not ornament; it is deformity aaS. encumbrance.--Ruskln. He that returns good tains the victory. for evB UTILE LAD SHOWS HE IS A HERO Only Six Years Old but Proves •; rile Is Made of Real Stuff. v Billy Corsa ef (Pennsylvania Standa In •f Two Plunging Per* and Saves tile ' :y • ef His 3rother. %r ; • - Philadelphia.--"Billy" Corsa Is only six years old, and lives on a farm in Bucks county,, not far from Perkasle. But he Is made of the stuff from which real heroes are made. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard P. Corsa. Billy rose to the heights when the life of his three-year-old brother. Dick, was endangered by a pair of plunging Percheron horses. Undismayed, the six-year-old stood In the path of the horses protecting his brother with one hand--and turned the steel-shod horses from their path. With Billy Corsa It was entirely a problem like thl»---"111 do what I can --but If Dick la hurt, Fll very likely be hurt--maybe, killed--to#," Perhaps young Corsa didn't think in Just that form, but the fact remains that he measured up to the highest standard of boyish bravery, aad got sway with it Dick was playing in the yard of the Corsa home. Boylike, he wandered Into the roadway. In a nearby field the Percherons were unhitched, preliminary to being housed in the barn after the day's work. Frisky and active, the two big mountains of horse flesh, knowing the evening meal awaited in their stalls, started on a run for the barn--over the roadway where Dick Corsa was playing. The youngster sav them coming, turned to run into the yard, and fell directly in their path. Billy Corsa saw his baby brother's danger. Like a flash he ran into the road and pulled Dick to his feet There wasn't time to dash to safety in the yard, so Billy Corsa practically threw his brother behind him, raised his arm high In the air, palm out toward the pair of horses, and shrilled, tenae and piercing: "Back, Daal Back, Cap I Back; back, I say!" At that Instant the pair of Per. cherons were but five yards away aad coming fast. There wasn't really time for either Cap or Dan to halt the maddened dash, and to "back I"--there wasn't time for either horse to obey literally--to turn and run back. But they -- the Percherons -- understood. They recognized that "ommand In that boyish voice; that upraised arm. Cap swung to the right, Dan to the left, and the horses passed both boys by Inches. Then Billy Corsa took his whitefaced, frightened brother Into the house. He was unconscious of the fact that he had pretty thoroughly exemplified the real spirit of love for his brother, and had measured in every way to a heroic standard. Money Must Not Be Photographed. A federal law forbids the photography of the money of America. CROSSING PACIFIC IN A JUNK Ornish Captain on His Wa/ Faem Shanghai in Little Vessel ef •• Chinees B. C.--Out on the tossfhg Pacific somewhere between Asia and North America, sails a cockleshell, 08- foot Chinese Junk, bearing Capt George Waard of Shanghai, a native of Denmark, who is on IAb way to this port, according to advices^>rought here on liner* arriving recently from the Orient. With a crew of three Chinese, Caj>- tain Waard is making this daring trip from China to Victoria simply to amuse himself in his old age and to prove his life-long contention that a Chinese Junk, despite Its appearance, to the most seaworthy craft afloat The Junk which he -is using for his trip, however, was specially built for him in China, and is fitted with comfortable living quarters and a modern compass. Otherwise she Is one of the typical affairs that teem In /HilnaaA ht« l-nns ~ Boy, Five, Saved In Toy ' Wagon as Boat Sinks Garrison, N. T.--Leonard Staff's 28-foot .motorboat waa capsized by the swell of a river steamer off this village. Mr. Staff pnt his five-year-old son in a toy express wagon, which floated away from the sinking launch, and managed to keep his wife above water, also, until help came. They were moving their furniture from Fort Edward to South Nyack, where their home is to be. The motorboat sank with all the furniture. * « Hardly Flattering. ' ^ ICrrfiange--At the conclusion fit the doctor's speech the real enjoyment of the evening began.--Boston Transcript The world's coal fields cover at least 1 QRIUm uioBM mllM \ FLATIR0N IS DEA0LY WEAPON Judge In Atlanta Gives Mqp-'Plvs Yearo for Hitting Wife With One. Atlsnta, 0aFlatlrons at* deadly weapons, capable of producing death. Judge E. T. Shurley so held when he told Lon Kinneybrew, a negro, that he would have to serve five years In the penitentiary for hitting his wife on the head with one. "I guess you want this man to be let off, don't you?" Judge Shurley asked Mrs. Kinneybrew. "I don't know, Judge; Jte said he was going to kill me if he got out," she replied. " "Then 111 separate you for a while. You can go to the penitentiary for a minimum of five yean," the court told Kinneybrew. The man had expected to get off with a year and refused aid of counsel. Today's Wise Word. "The soul shall have society ot Its ova rank."--Lafcadio Hearn. The Baking Powder that Gives Ithe Best Service in Your Kitchen The Economy BAKINti PO WOE ft •! '.n '4' •<>". GUARANTEES Pure and Wholesome Foods • <w*;- • ~ . V - - ^ can of baking powder is <tffered you---LOOK OUT. t .. Every can of Calumet is 3 the same--keeping Quality Perfect -- last spoonful good as the first. S - The moderate cost Calumet combined with the highest merit establishes the greatest of baking powder economy^ *»£ Ton save wnen yon You save when you ftr. i The World's Greatest Baking Powder ^ •O-'si:. M . TlJ - . ; ... .. ,,' v '*• J . u. • •'

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