Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 19 Apr 1923, p. 2

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!'* mam 1-^ * »\*% |T HE McHENRY PLAINDBALER, McHENRY , v, ' - ^ ^ • *»-' *' ? T. •• - V .:•. ERTEDHUM SHIP IS FOUND AH Sails Set, Anchor Dragging, |r tfert No Crew on ^ ( Board. - LAURENCE V. COLEMAN 15?®; * WILLIAM TERRIFIC BATTLE t\ v Picked Up Two Miles Southeast of Whittling Buoy Off Now York W. 8. Cutter--No Uwff*.,- tV/* on Board. £ New York, April 16.--Without a soul on board, with all sail* set and her anchor dragging, a fine two-masted schooner, the name of which is still In doubt, was boarded two miles southeast of Whistling buoy, off Point Outlet, at the entrance of Great South : bay, by Capt. M. J. Ryan of the United States coast guard cutler Manhattan. Strewn about the deck aud In the •; cabin were evidences of a terrific strug- • gle. Other clews found on the abandoned vessel indicated that the entire , crew were slain or kidnaped in a bat- 1 tie with one of the numerous rum pirate ships which prowl the Atlantic seaboard. Scattered about the deck were scores of empty cartridge shells, and on the table in the captain's cabin was foundf . a box containing about 1,000 cartridges and Indications that some persons had I helped themselves hurriedly to them. There also was a gun rack in the master's quarters, and it showed signs of having been emptied hurriedly. No weapon* were found on board. In the crew's quarters in the. forecastle were found clothes which appear to Indicate that the schooner's complement of men was between, ten and fifteen, all of whom, including the master, have disappeared without leaving a trace. Indications were plentiful that the boat had been engaged In the rumrunning Industry between Nova Scotia, Nassau, and Cuba and New York and the New Jersey coast, but no liquor was found on board. On the deck was found lashed an exceptionally seaworthy motor boat, well equipped, upon the stern of which was painted the name "Maid of Canada, La Havre, Nova Scotia." On the stern of the schooner was the original name, Edith Helen Bush, with no port of hail discernible. Over this was painted "Patricia Behan," part of which seemed purposely to have been obliterated. Lloyd's register foils to list this name. The nearest approach to it is the Patrician Dehan, which left Halifax on Nov. 17 for Nassau and has not officially been reported since. INCREASE WAGES Teit Per bent Boost Is Given to About 85,000 of the Workers. ASSEMBLY USED Laurence Vail Coleman, director of the American Museum of Safety, has been elected secretary of the American Association of Museums. GERMANS USE REFERENDUM Jfir Vote en Distribution of Big Ea- . tajtae Issue Placed ^ * y Before Peopld. IBtefttn, Xprll 10.--Under the tfoffnn, "More land Tor settlers," the German "National ¥nlon for Settlers" won Its first battle when the minister of the Interior opened a list for a petition preparatory to a national referendum on the distribution of land. This Is the first time the referendum clause of the republican constitution, has tan applied. RECTOR IS SHOT DEAD Rev. Father O'Neill of Kalamazoo, Midi, Slain by Assistant \ Father Charles Dillon Kills Superior at Dinner Tabl»--Infuriated When Ordered to Leave. Kalamasoo, Mich., April 13.--While at his dinner table the Rev. Father Charles Dillon, assistant rector of St. Augustine's Roman Catholic church, shot and killed the Rev. Father Henry O'Neill, rector of the church. Four shots were fired, all of which took effect 1 if5the body of the priest. After exclaiming: "He has root me," the Rev. O'Neill fell dead. Turning to the duinfounded Father McCullough, the only witness to the tragedy, the infuriated priest tossed onto the table a phial containing some holy oils, with the request that the other administer the Bacrament of extreme unction at once. The slayer then went to the telephone and calmly summoned the police and coroner. According to the confession Dillon made to the police authorities, he had been driven to fury by alleged 111 treatment at the hands of Father O'Neill. "He treated me with disrespect almost ever since I came here from St. Phillip's at Battle Creek thirteen months ago," the prisoner told the officers. "He assumed towards foe the attitude of the ccar. HUGE SUM PAID TO ALLIES Germany Claims It Has Delivered Cash, 8hlps and Lands Worth $25,000,000,000. Washington, April IS.--Germany has paid the allies In cash, ships, lands and materials of various kinds one hundred billion marks, equivalent to about twenty-flve billion American dollars, according to figures prepared by the German treasury department and transmitted to Washington. Included is an allowance for relinquishment of Alsace-Lorraine. SIXTY TURF HORSES BUM jt^wcocaa Stables, Near Trenton, N. J, V" Are Destroyed by Flre^jf;^/' , h Mysterious Origin. Trenton, N. J., April 16.--The brood eaare stables of the Rancocas stables, containing 75 of the finest stallions and mares In* the country, was destroyed by fire of mysterious origin, and 60 horses out of the total stock; valued at $2,000,000, were burned to death. HIGH TAX RATES TO REMAIN General Revision of Revenue Laws Not Feasible Now, 8ays Senator Smoot. Washington, April 12.--General revision of revenfle laws will not be feasible In the next session of con gress, according to opinions expressed to President Harding by Senator Smoot (Rep., Utah), who is slated for the chalrmansji*p of the senate finance committee. Pay Ratted by Armour, Swift, Wilson and Cudahy Companies--Agree- «,||entfollow^S«*«1oo*-La*^ - ^ ; ' o . Aig Two Day* * -s ttifcago, April 14.--Wage averaging more than 10 per cent have been granted plant employees of Armour & Co., Swift & Co., Wilson h Co., and Cudahy & Co., it was announced William Nelson Cromwell, American here after the Increases had been de- j corporation lawyer, who, according to elded on by representatives of each word from Paris, has contributed the company and of its employees. Eighty thousand five hundred employees are affected--35,000 in the employ of Armour, 25,000 Swift employees, 18,000 on the Wilson pay roll and 7,500 in the Cudahy plants. The Increases take effect at once. In each case the Increase was decided on by an organization composed of representatives of the company and of the employees. In the Swift plants, this organization is known as the plant assembly; Wilson 8c Co. calls It a Joint representative committee, and the Armour organisation as well, as the Cudahy committee, is known as the general conference board. In the case of Armour, W'lson and Cudahy, the Increases were announced for all plants.^ Qnly the 6,000 employees of the Chicago plant are formally granted the Increase In the case of Swift -A Co., but plant assemblies at other points have requested Increases and their request will be granted. It 4s understood that they will receive raises proportioned on the Chicago agreement. Representatives of 16 Armour and Morris plants in 16 dtles gathered at the meeting of the Armour general conference board. There were 24 employees' representatives and 24 representatives of the management. The unit system of voting was employed, a majority of one side being required to agree with a majority of the other before a decision could be reached. For two days sessions were held during which the employees' representatives made motions for increases which were extensively discussed. At length it was realized that decisions on questions of detail could not be reached expeditiously in so large' an assemblage. Accordingly a committee of 10 was appointed, consisting of five from each side. After four hours the committee reached an agreement which was pre» sented to the parent body and approved unanimously; JMUSSOLINI MAY FACE CRISIS Vatfean Backs Foee as Faeelsti Leads* JUJUea His ~ollow»«s, #ef New FiQht, ^ Rome, April 16.--Threatened with a cabinet crisis that may destroy his authority over Italy Premier Benito Mussolini has called on all FasclstI to be ready for another and greater revolution. The desertion of his governmentJ>y the Cathpllc or Populist party and the failure of the Vatican to come to his support must reawaken the dormant fighting spirit of the FasclstI, he declared to an assembly o< In Milan. Rum of 400,000 francs to the projected Legion of Honor iiuseum in Paris. Mr. Cromwell, an officer of the Legion of Honor, is an enthusiastic admirer of France. U. $. MARKET REPORT Weekly Marketgram by Bureau of Agricultural Economics. Washington.---For the week ending April O-HAT-No. 1 tlAothy, $20.00 Cincinnati, 123.00 Chicago, 116.60 Minneapolis, $8.50 St Louis; No. 1 prairie, 919.50 St. Louie. (15.60 Minneapolis. FEED--Bran, $27.00; middlings. $27.00; Dour middlings, $29.50 Minneapolis; gluten feed, $40.66 Chicago; 34 per cent linseed meal, $41.00 Minneapolis; white hominy. feed, $29.00 St. Louis. DAIRY PRODUCTS-Butter, 92 score, 18c Chicago. Cheese prices at Wisconsin primary markets; Flats and daisies, 21<4o; ionghorns, 20V4c; square prints, 21 Vic; double daisies, 21c; young Americas, 21%c. GRAIN--Chicago ,ca«h market: No. S red winter wheat, ll.M; No. 2 hard winter wheat, $1.26; No. t mixed corn, 79c; No. 2 yellow corn, TOc; No. 8 white oats, 46c. Average farm prices; No. 2 mixed, corn In. central Iowa, 06c; No. 2 hard winter wheat in central Kansas, $1.06; No. 1 dark northern wheat In central North Dakota, H.06. LIVE STOCK--Chicago prices: Hogs, top, $8.6p; bulk of sales, $8.16#8.60; medium »nd good beef steers, $8.15@9.80; butcher :ows and heifers, $4.40@9.76; feeder steers, ty>.25@8.40; light atid medium weight veal calves, $8.00<®10.25; fat lambs, $12.76@14.7B; feeding lambs, $ 13.00® 14.75; yearlings, I9.76@13.60; fat ewes. $7.oo@9.25. FRUITS AND VEGETABLES--Florida Spauldlng Rose potatoes, $15.00 per bbl; •astern sacked round whites, $1.96@2.10 per 100-lbs.; northern round whites, $1.06 In Chicago carlot market, $1.25@1.90 In other cities: northern sacked Rtock, 90c© 11.00. Baldwin apples, $6.25(3*5.00 per bbl; greenings, $5.00@6.60: northwestern extra fancy winesaps, $2.25<g!2.76 per box. Texas, Louisiana and Alabama flat dutch cabbage, $4.60®5.75. Louisiana klondlke strawberries, $4.00@6.00 per 24 pint crate in city markets, $3.80@4.15 t. o. b. Florida berries, 50c@66c per qt. Texas Bermuda onlona, $2.75 at shipping points. FARMS LOSE IN POPULATION Movement to Cities of 460,000 ^arsons In 1922 Is Told by U. 8. Figures. Washington, April 14.--A decrease flaring 1022 of approximately 400,000 persons in the agricultural population was reported by the Department of Agriculture, which said its figures were based on a survey of 10.000 representative farms and groups of farms. The estimate, which included not merely workers, but men, women and children living on farms, showed a decrease of about 1.5 per cent from the 1920 census, which placed the agricultural population In rural districts at 81,85&,000 persons. , 5:-if ACT IS UPHELD Law Placing Exchanges Under Government Control Is Co#*? stitutional. FIRST ACT WAS HP INVALID Attack on Co-operative Association Membership on Boards of Trade - f&ils Justices Sutherland anda -. McRsynolds Dissent Washington, April 17.--The Suffer court upheld the constitutionality of the grain futures trading act, Justices Sutherland and McReynolds dissenting. "It Is clear from the citations in the statement of the, case,? the decision said, "of evidence before committees of investigation as to manipulations of the futures market and their effects, that we would be unwarranted in rejecting the findings of congress as unreasonable, and that in our -nquiry as to the validity of the legislation, we must accept as the view that such manipulation does work to the detriment of producers, consumers, shippers and legitimate (feelers in interstate commerce in grain and that it la a real abuse. "But it Is contended that it Is too remote in its effect on interstate commerce, and that it is not like the direct additions to the cost to the producer of marketing cattle by exorbitant charges and discrimination of commission men and dealers. This is hardly consistent with the affidavits the plaintiffs present from the leading economists, who say that dealing In futures stabilizes cush prices. "More than this, prices of grain futures are those upon which an owner and intending seller of cash grain is influenced to sell or not to sell as they offer a good opportunity to him to hedge comfortably against future fluctuations. "Manipulations of grain futures for speculative profits,"' the court held "though not carried to the extent of a corner or complete monopoly, exert a vicious influence and produce abnormal and disturbing temporary fluctuations of prices that are not responsible to actual supply and demand and discourage not only this Justifiable hedging but . disturb the normal flow of actual consignments. A future market lends Itself to such manipulation much more readily than a cash market." It was the second " time that the court had ruled on the constitutionality of an act regulating trading in grain futures. The psevious act, passed after years of agitation by farmers, based federal control on the government's' taxing power. The Sor preuie court ruled that the act was invalid because it constituted an attempt by congress to regulate something over which it lacked Jurisdiction. RAIL MEN TO ASK PAY RAISE EXPORTS SHOW BIG GAIN C0REA SWEPT BY BIG STORM One 'thousand Persons Killed er Injured by a Great Tidal. Wave. I Honotalp, April 16.--A dispatch to the Mppu Jljl, a well-informed Japanese newspaper published here, states that 1,000 persons were killed and injured ip the tidal wave which swept Corea. TO HALT RED WAR ON CHURCH Is Considering Appeal to All Civilized Nations--Will Ask Aid of Jews. r w;. .".'.Home, April 16.--Pope Plt»s XI is i v - considering an appeal .to ail civilised 'v nations to compel the Russian soviet government to desisf in its >var on Mj, the Christians. JAP MARINES LAH0 IN CHINA Fighters From the Warship Togo 6o Ashore at Chungking to Protect Nationals. k Honolulu, April 14.--A dispatch to the Nlppu Jljl states that Japanese marines have been landed from the warship Togo at Chungking. Paechwan province, Chlnn, to protect the lives of Japanese nationals, which ^u*ve heene endangered by the clvU war along the Yangtze river, r Demands Death for Patriarah. . ' Moscow. .April 16.--A workers' demonstration at Veshneudlnsky passed a resolution to be forwarded to the central executive committer, demanding death sentence for Patriarch Tikhon of the Greek Catholic church. V Three Berlin Aldermen Killed. •• fcerlln, April 16.--Three Berlin «la Mermen and the pilot were killed when an airplane In which thev were Inspecting the new Tempelhoferfeld Sanding place for commercial planes .crashed. All Industhes ftpeed Up; Washington,, April 13.--Expansion of nearly all Industries in March, with Increased demands for nil kinds of labor, was reported by the Department of Labor. Ulu certain districts," the department reports, "huildlhg trades men available are fully employed and shortages of these trndesinen already exist ha^sotue communities.'* 110,663,502 on July l. Washington, April 16.--'The pdjttilfltlon of th6 United Stntes will he 110,- 663,502 on July 1. 102... according t<> census bureau statisticians. The country's population is increasing at the rate of 1.415.109 annually. * United 8tates Unofficial Represent*, tlves Will Attend Jext Parley ip Switzerland. Washington, April 14.--The tfnlted States will he represented as usual at the next Lausanne conference, scheduled to convene April 23/ it was asserted at the White House. President Harding did not indicate who will represent the American government. It Is presumed that the Americans will act solely as "observers" and will have no official status. •*r W' y Flies 78 Miles in 20 Minutes. •"*" '^Albuquerque. N. M., April 13.--Fred ilarek, acting managing director of the War Finance corporation, made the flight from Columbus, N. M., to SB Paso. Tex., 78 miles. In 2" minutes, : averaging nearly four miles a minute. v | ;-- Dry Chief's "Auto 8tofen. • Washington. April 13.--Bootleggers accused by Prohibition Commlflioner Haynes >f stealing his automo- Wle. It bor« an Ohio license, which tie said made It easily distinguishable his ruiri-funning enemU^ ^ 8ix Burn tt> Death. Syrfmento. Cal.. April 16.--Five Japanese children un1 a teacher were burned to death In a fire which destroyed' a three-story boarding school for Japanese children here. Mb)* pupils are reported missing. Mathllde Weds Max. London, April 14.--Mathllde McCor mlck, daughter of Harold P. and Edlrh Rockefeller McOormlck of Chicago, was married to Max Oser nt the Lewisham registry ofilce at 11:30 Thursday morning. duatiI'M. u. p. to Spend $40^000,000.- Omaha, Neb., April 14.--The Union Pacific railroad will spend $40,000,000 in Improvements this year, according to an aniouncement made here by Judge Robert S. Lovett of New York chairman of the board of tJQe system. Salea to Foreigners During Month «f March Were Valued at $350,000,ooa • Washington, A^fl! 14.--Exports from the United States In /March were rained at $850,000,000, compared with $329,979,817 for the same month of last year, the Commerce department announced. For the nine months' period ending April 1 exports totaled $3,003,- 819,728, as compared with $2,810,001«> 333 for the corresponding period of a year ago. OBSERVERS FOR LAUSANNE FRANCE PROTESTS TO TURKEY General Pelle Claims Concessions Granted to Americans Belonged to the French. Pllrts, April 18.--General Pelle, the French high commissioner at Constantinople, has sent a vigorous protest to Turkey against the granting of large concessions to American Interests represented by Rear Admiral Chester, according to Constantinople dispatches. These concessions Include privileges which are said to have been granted to the French in 1014 in return tor a large loan. Goethals Urges Coat Dictator. Washington, April 16.--Gen. Geofge W .G«fethals. New York fuel administrator. has asked the Federal Coal commission tc recommend that congress empower the President to appoint a fuel dictator In emergencies. U. 8. Controller Defies Denby. Washington, April 16.--Acting Attorney General Seymour has been called upon by Secretary Denby for a ruling as to whether Controller J. R. McCarl bas authority to overrule cabinet members on expenditure questions. Mother of Galli-Curcl Dies. New York, April 14.--Slgnora Earlchetta Gfilli. mother of Mme. Galll- Curci, prima donna, died «t her home in Milan at the age of 'eighty-two, a cable message received by the slnger'i managers stated. Kills Woman and Himself/ Jackson, Mich., April 14.--Refusal of Mrs. Carol Butts, twenty-three, a pretty blonde, to promise tc mnrry him, led Chris Zlegler, thirty-eight, president of a motor sales company, to murder Mrs. Bvtts and kUl hlmswlf 20 DROWN IN STORM AT SEA Bishop, Two Nuns and Seventeen Others Die When Motorbeat Sinks Off Mexico. Mexico City, April 18.--The bishop of Belize (British Honduras), two nuns and seventeen other passengers were drowned when a motorboat carrying them to Payo, Oblspe, Territory of Qulntana Roo, Mexico, sank on Wednesday djjrlng a sudden storm, according to delayed advices reaching here. Fifty other persons are reported to have been saved. Further details are lacking. Daughter of Tarkington Dies. Indianapolis, Ind., April 14.--Laurel Tarkington. seventeen years old, daughter of Booth Tarkington, prominent author, died at the home of the latter here. Miss Tarkington was contracted pneumonia some days a; Three Die In Alabama Tornado. Birmingham, Ala., April 14.--Three persons were killed and twenty-three hurt when violent thunderstorms, accompanied by torrential rains, swept across northern Alabama. Wire communication Is crippled. Gen. H. T. Allen Retires. Washington, April 13.--MaJ. Gen Henry T. Allen, former commander of the American army of occupation In Germany, held his last "review." He concluded forty-five years of active service at the age" of sixty-four. Turks Kill Italian Garrison. Athens, April 13,--According to reports frdm the Island of Rhodes, Turkish Irregulars raided the small Island of Castelorizo, off the coast of Asia Minor, and assassinated the Italian garrison fuod a namhfr Greeks.: . Brotherhoods of 1,200,000 ship to Petition the U. S« 4 i , Labor Board. Chicago, April 17.--Five of the largest "railroad labor brotherhoods outside the roster of the four trainservice organizations, with an aggregate membership of close to 1,200,000 workers, are shortly to appear before tjie United States railroad labor board with petitions for substantial increases in their wage rates. These are the railway and steamship clerks, freight handlers and express and station employees, the maintenance of way employees and railway shop laborers, the telegraphers, telephoners and agents, railroad signalmen and the train dispatchers. MORE JOBS IN U. S. INDUSTRIES Department of Labor Shows March Total to Be 2,135,564-- Wages Higher. Washington, April 17.--The Department oif Labor issued a report showing ^an increase In March over February of 2.1 per cent in the number of employees in manufacturing Industries, a 5 f>er cent increase In total wages paid and an increase of 2,8 per cent in the aAerage weekly wage. SAYS GERMANS PUN NEW WAji Legion's Americanism Dirsctor 8ays Reservists by Hundreds Are lapwing the United States. Bloomington. 111., April 17.--Garland W. Powell, national director of Americanism of the American Legion, lu an address here charged that hundreds of (German reservists are returning to Germany from the United States in preparation for war against France.- Seize More Coal Mines. > Duesseldorf. April 17.--Nine additional coal mines Jn the Uuhr have been seized by ule French and the Belgians, making a total of 31 mines and coke plants now ^n the hands nt the forces of occupation. Cx-Crown Prince Is Insanfe ~ London, April 17.--Prince Frederick, former crowu prince of Germany, is suffering from progressive insanity, accordhffe to a Wieringen dispatch, which quotes as authority two noted alienists of Berlin. Alice Robertson Is Given Job. Washington, April 17.--An executive order permitting the api*ointnient of Miss Alice Robertson, former representative from Oklahoma, as a welfare worker in the veterans' bureau, was signed by President Harding. v n ' * * Jt ? • » • f- jt ' , 'WJ v» cV -- V:i" '-1:.;, •' ;."v "•* i • .y;' V' if ' ' " mt Dixie State Has White Majority. Colombia, S. C., April 17.--Emigration of negroes to the North has for the first time In a century given South Carolina a prtp<|nder<<nce of white population, the Co|uu4^La Hshed here, safr. '»• -"i • / . ;-*> .• - •£, | STATE "HEWS Urbana.--How many kinds of birds in Illinois? Identification of 25.728 birds belonging to 125 different species Is one of the achievements of the natural history survey at the university of Illinois. The work wkS carried on under the direction of Prof. Stephen A. Forbes, and !s described la a bulletin entitled "The Numbers and Local Distribution in Summer of Illinois Land Birds of the Open Country." The entire area on which birds were identified during the summer mon'hs comprised 19,318 acres. Ooe thousand and eighty-two miles was traveled on foot. Springfield.--Frank Sheets, superintendent of highways In the department of public works, Is now engaged in patting the finishing touches on the map of roads to be constructed under the governor's proposed $100,000,600 bond issue and estimates that the bill will be ready for introduction In the legislature during the next two weeks. Practically all routes have been tentatively agreed upon and Sheets is getting them on the* map so that attorneys can draw the bill preparatory to Its introduction. Aurora.--Leaving behind him a trail of worthless checks, on which he is said to have realized about $500 within three days, a swindler, who appeared with grimy fa^e and the garb of a railroad worker and was known as Dan Smith, is sought by the police of Aurora, DeKalb, Elgin and other cities. He issued checks which he presented at stores, making a small purchase and taking In change sums ranging from $20 to $35. Monticello.--Parents of Opal Arthur, former United States marine, sdhtenced to hang May 4, have sent a plea to friends, asking contributions for a fund to enable them to appeal their son's case to the state Supreme court. The parents have sent a letter to a number of Individuals stating $2,000. is needed to have the; '•<' of exceptions made otit, the ord printed and the appeal perfected. Chicago.--directors of the Chicago Automobile Trade association, speak* Ing for Chicago's .automobile industry, have protested to the legislature against the proposed state bond Issue of $100,000,000 for road building. The basis of the protest was (hat sufficient funds are la sight to maintain a road building program lasting till 1927; and that additional taxation Is not necessary. Chicago.--Dr. B;obert Horace Baker, professor of astronomy at the University of Missouri where he has been for 11 years, was named professor and head of the department of astronomy in the University of P.linois, by the trustees of that institution in session at Chicago. He succeeds Prof. Joel Stebbins who resigned last year. Rock Island.--Rock Island youngs sters will demonstrate their skill at handling kites at - a kite carnival to be held here May 25i The eVent 1s being arranged by the Rotary club. It will be held in Watch Tower park and prizes will be given for the best kite flying. The competition and prizes will be arranged by school grades. Springfield.--Earl Chandler's twisted trail of romance catpe to an end here when Circuit Court Judge Frank Burton sentenced hl/n to from three to 20 years in the suite prison for the robbery of the Pleasant Plains State bank. .The youth robbed the bank single-handed, obtaining $600 with which to take a honeymoon. Jollet.--All work done at the Illinois woman's prison Is done by inmates, even to the gardening. Last year the women canned more than 3.200 quarts of fruits and vegetable^., Recently the cells were, thoroughly "leaned, the walls scraped and calclmlned, each woman doing the work in her own cell. Urbana.--The Illinois section of the American Chemical society is to meet at the University of Illinois May 4 and 5, and representatives of the society from all sections of the middle west will attend. Urbana. -- Master plumbers and steamfitters of Illinois will h^ld Another short course at the University of Illinois next year, It has been decided by a committee which met recently to decide the matter. • v Lake Forest.--Henry Rumsey was re-elected mayor of Lake Forest fbr the fourth time In the village election. All the aldermen were re-electe I_ save for the victory of Charles B. Fitzgerald over Arthur Nichol. Chicago.--The Cliicrgo Chanted of the American Association of Engineers, of which K. B. Ward is president, Joined the list of organizations opposing the $100.000000 state bdnd Issue for rortd building. * • Marengo.--Rev. Ezra J. Egly of Phoenix, Arizona, has accepted a on 11 to the pastorate of First Presbyterian church of Marengo. » Danville.--Edward Ttnlmer. manufacturing chemist and former lender In Danville society, died suddenly In a hospital of pneumonia. Chicago.--Deaths In Chicago In 1022 were 31,646, as compared with 30.870 In 1921, and 56,724 births, as compared with 56,548 in 1921. The 1914 death rate was 11.17 a thousand: the 1921 rate was 11.10. The aliment resulting In the greatest mortality lust vpar was organic heart disease, which caused 5,005 deaths. Chlcagft.--Four armed bandits held up a dozen railroad employees while four confederates.loaded a nyck with whisky taken from a carload of lettuce on the Pennsylvania rnNroad fa the down town freight yards. Chicago.--Announcement of President Harding's decision to •reuppolnt Arthur C. Lueder as postmaster at Chicago was made In Washington after the President had conferred with Postmaster General New. Mr. Lueder tendered his resignation the day lie decided to become a candidate for the Republican maypralty nomination. Springfield.--The average marriage in Cook county lasts four years and one out of every four couples ma.Tied In Chicago obtain divorces. Judge Timothy D. Hurley Judiciary committee^ . 25# AND ELL-ANS 10 79i MCKAGES EVERYWHERE Are your horses coua ing or running at the noeef If so, give them "SPOHN'S." A valuable remedy for Coughs, Colds, Distemper, Influenza, Pink Eye and Worms among horses and mules. An occasional dose "tones" thera up. Sold st sill drug stores. SD0HN MEDICAL CO. G O S h C N . ' Sn: s . a Girls! Girls!! Save Y our Hair With Cuticura Sear 2Sci 2S ae4 51c, Talcs* Sc. y-:.n * ** ^ 1 > u i -fy S';-, '.frVl ? "i" V' * * r f f i i To know how good a cigarette really can be mad< you must try a- ITSTOASTED Masterpiece Oddly Written. 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