Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 26 Oct 1933, p. 7

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THE M'HBNUY PLAINDEALER, THURSDAY, OCT. 26, 1933 HirasL UUnoJ Peace and quiet now reigns In the Springfield mine district. The few remaining miners who made the march on the city have returned to their homes. Officials of the .Progressive Miners' union and members of the rank and file are awaiting a reply from Donald Richberg, general counsel for the NRA, to the objections to Richberg's intrepretation "of the coal cpde which President Claude I^Muncy has sent to Washington. Impossible for Chicago to help herself until 1936." E. C. Seubert, president of the Standard Oil Co. (Indiana), was recently elected chairman of the Annual Meeting committee of the Illinois Manufacturers' association. The annual meeting will be held on Tuesday evening, December 12, in Chicago James P. Ward, president of the Shipman-Ward Manufacturing Co., is vice-chairman of the committee and Stuyvesant Peabody, president of the Pfeabody Coal company, is chairman of the entertainment committee. . U Urgent demands for jobs were made at a meeting of approximately two ?• hundred persons, including thirty com mitteemen, held in Springfield recently at the St. Nicholas hotel. A new county democratic cIud was launched to work with existing officials of the organization along patronage lines. A resolution was submitted for presentation at the next meeting urging the maximum salary of $5,000 for any patronage appointee and the minimum as $1,200, and that resignations be asked from all state employes of mere than ten years standing; The September increase/of 2.8 per cent in employment ana tenths of one per cent in payrolls, shown by reports from 1,752 manufacturing and non-manufacturing establishments in Illinois, were rather generally distributed throughout the state, according to an announcement of the labor department. Outside the Chicago metropolitan area increases in both employment and payrolls were reported in September for' Belleville, Bloomington, Decatur, Eai&t St. Louis, Elgin, Freeport the Kankakee-Bradley area, Moline, Peoria, Quincy, Rock Island, Springfield and all other cities for which data is not separately compiled. PULLETS REQUIRE fROTEIN IN FEED New officers of the Illinois Detective association were elected at the annual business meeting of the organization held in Springfield last week. State's Attorney Alfred H. Greening, Sheriff Allen Cole and R. B. Irwin, manager of the; Springfield Chamber of Commerce, were the principal speakers at the program in the Centennial building auditorium. A play and musical selections made up the program of entertainment, which j was enjoyed by more than five hund-; red peraonsfrom all pwcts Of tkia state. , '• 'V';;.. •":•' *"'4 < Appointment of eight deputy collectors has been recommended by V. Y. Dallman, collector of internal revenue at Springfield. Approval of the appointments at Washington is necessary before they become effective, Mr. Dallman explained. 'This process usually requires from TWO to three weeks. Mr. Dallman haB recommended that because of the heavy population in the East St Louis-Belleville zone and the new taxes to be collected, that the zone be divided with two deputies at East St. Lours and two at Befieville. . Many subjects were passed upon Saturday by the' Illinois Supreme Court as it adjourned the October term, handing down about eighty decisions. Finding the gas tax act and the public utilities law are not. in conflict the court held that railroads must • continue to pay part of the cost of grade separations. Because his ar-' rest was illegal, the supreme court I reversed outright the conviction of Murray Humphreys, No. 1 enemy; among Chicago's public enemies. The court wound up the business of thej I fall term by admitting to the Illinois | I Bar H. A. Bishop, Secretary to Sena-! , tor William H. Deitrich and graduate : j of Bradley Tech in Peoria and George Washington University in Washington, D. C. Illinois agata stands to take the short end of federal easy money in the distribution of the billion dollar fund created by the Roosevelt administration for the swift liquidation of state and national banks closed since last January !L Bank liquidators have estimated that only one- per cent *of the billion dollar fund will go to Illinois state banks, viewing the situation from the most optimistic aspect. With only 136,000,000 of state bank deposits qualified for the loans and with the prospects likely for loans of only 30 per iwjkI of {haft amoufit, the amount of onh that may be actually paid to deporttors ^will be less tfeah f10,000,- 000. The equivalent of 2,606 years of time which otherwise would be spent in growing corn, hogs and wheat, will be released to 'Illinois farmers and their families during tne coming year as a result of the government's agriculture adjustment program, according to one statistician. Farmers have already contracted to reduce their wheat plantings by 150,- 000 acres, and under the corn and hog program they will be asked to ! slash their corn acreage by 1,752,466 1 acres, a total of 1,902,466 acres. It | takes twelve hours to grow and harvest an acre of corn or wheat, which means that the reduction will free a total of 2,606 years total time for 1933 alone. Hbftiml Development Should Be Chief Aim. Poultrymen cannot make up for a deficiency in breeding by cutting down the protein In the feed to delay early laying, says Prof. L. C. Norris of the New York state college of agriculture. Tests at Cornell show that pullets need from 14 to 15 per cent of protein in their feed during the period from twelve to twenty-four weeks of age. When less protein was fed, laying was delayed for about ten days and the growth of the pullets was retarded. Poultrymen need an early-maturing type of pullet of proper size and vl. tality which lays as large an egg as that , laid by .a pullet whicfi starts to. lay at a later age. Such a pullet is cheapest to grow, because she uses relatively less food for • maintenance and more tor growing in the non-productive period than does the slower grbwirig bird. A pullet which reaches a weight of three- and three-fourths pound at five months of age and begins to lay. Is cheaper to grow than the puliet that.takes six months. Moreover, he says, the early-maturing pullets lay more eggs in a year than the slow-growing birds. Siae of bird, size of egg, and vigor must be considered in breeding the flock, along with early maturity. Poultrymen should feed and manage the pullets to keep them developing normally, he advises. Do not lower the protein content by feeding more than 50 per cent of scratch grain or by cutting the protein content on the mash. Induce the flock to take exercise, and cull* out the small-sized, rapidly- maturing pullet that develops a red comb early. Hie auuiual 'oenvention -of the Illinois "Republican Veterans association will meet in Springfield "Wednesday, Nov. l,at the Abraham Lmcbln hotel. The convention will open -at2:00 j. m., .-at wfcktti time the election of officers will be held. The meeting <ias been cabled by Howard Savage- df Chicago. The Illinois Agricultural association luw launched an attack onlhe^amended lttonroe (ILantz) mis, WhiiSi were recently passed by the state senate. 'WiCk the emergency clauses «trick- «n out, the former Laetz' bills, now bearing Senator James O. 'Monroe's flame, would not go lnt« effect ouitil July 1, IS34, <3eorge A. Meteger, I. A• A. secretary, pointed out *Bjr thai date," he said, "the 'Chicago tax levy will have been maie md a poor relief levy cannot -fee made until WIS. Instead of enabling Chicago to support her poor and unemployed, the amended bills otake <it "The Negro Under the National Recovery Act" will be the subject of an all-day state-wide conference to be held at the Springfield Urban league. Eighteen cities in the state will send delegates to the conference. The ec onomic aspect of negroes in Illinois will be discussed by -delegates fiwu e«di city. One of the decisions of the Supreme Court handed down last week was an order for the Cook county board of tax appeals to expunge Its order for a 15 per cent horizontal reductkm in the 1931 assessed valuations on all homes and two and three Hat biiiW-, inga in the county. About 490JM0 parcels of property werj, affected by the order and Cook comity officials hailed its overthrow with relief. The ruling is expected to accelerate Immediately the second installment ef the 1931 real estate taxes.. DUcoviry «f Flarlla On Starch 27, 1513, Florida was 4kb covered fey Juan Ponce de Lieoa, a Spanish eoldier and adventurer, wlie landing <m . Easter Sunday (Paecaa Florida er Feast «f Flowers) -called the ptaee Florida. Muclv Valuable Feed Is Blown Away by the Wind Saving poultry feed would seem to he a penny-wise and pound-foolish policy, as usually understated. When one speaks of "saving feed" he usually re- 'fers t^ cutting down on the grain and mash fed the growing chicks or hens, with the hope that the birds will be able to pick up additional feed around the yards or in the fields to make up what the owner does not give. Thefe is another method of "saving feed" that is commonly overlooked, the saving of which Is much more real. That is, to feed the grain and mash so that little is wasted and unused. Probably none achieves the ideal whereby none Is wasted, unless one feeds only whole grain and scatters it on bare ground In such timited quantities that It is cleaned op In a minute or two. Feeding dry mash calls for adequate feeders. ' In feeding cracked corn, many farmers have a considerable portion of finely ground corn in the grain -as it comes from the mill. Scattered «on the ground, this finely ground portion is largely lost. Dumping the cracked corn and wheat la the mash feeders works nicely and saves this frnefy ground corn, since It blends with the mash after the coarwr portions are eatefc. Another sen roc «f wastage in naSh is having It Mew away. Whether the feeders are Inside with the windows open, or outside, they iieed protection from wind. A surprising aaraust of ondi can blow out <ef aa epen Seeder Storing a wtady 4ay. For Sale at I _ Any Quantity Green Feed for Hera^) WSedlng th«» laying hens green "feed tends to keep them la good health and %o promote egg production, says the United States Department of Agriculture. Green feeds are one of the best eources of vitamins for poultry. Mangels and turnips provide eome succulence, but very little green feed. When -cabbages are available at reasonable cost some may %e fed. tout good quality alfalfa also should be supplied^ Alfalfa Is valuable, not so much because «f its 'protein .content, as formerly 'believed, but 'because alfalfa leaves are rich In minerals and vitamins, which are lacking In the rmash ration. Alfalfa leaf meal Is a pood substitute ter fresh ffimu feed. : POULTRY FACTS Month "Carolina farm families con- -sunied 8^30,000 chickens 'la 1932 and •sold 5,010X10®. 'Yeast a<idf*to the cost «f a poultry ration, but .does not improve the nutritive value <st a good ratten. * * • The fact tfcnt a hen's egg to eetnposed of two-thirds water indicates the importance of having a supply of cle*a water 'before the biddies at all times. • * • Furnish the hens with nests about a i+rt wide and tw« *> three feet deep, filled with shavings. "The nests should he darkened. * « • e. It U estimated that the poultry Industry uses alaiost eight times as much grain yearly as the brewing industry used in the year 1917. * * • Feeding milk to hens l« eery easy, as it is given simply as a beverage. No water should be g!v«W, fcut the milk supply should be tvaii^Wf lt lU times. . Cigarettes Undoing of Alien Visitor Kitchener, Ont.--Two Kitchener business men visited Buffalo. One bought a quantity of United States cigarettes. They started home. • "Anything to declare?" asked the customs officer. - - • • ^Nothing," said the owner of the smokes. _ "Any cigarettes?* :'r "Xope." ' X ' V , "Oil. .Johnnie." butted tr the sec ond imhh, "give the man e cigarette when he asks for one. You got lots in HulT.ilo," The car was searched. The clg arettes were found. The two men are not on speaking terms. BLIND BOY TILLS i HIS GARDEN PATCH Negro Lad Uses Pair of Uttshod F^et to "See" Witli, . Chariestou, SL ' C--IB, I ifttle one «Som cabin1 o'ri i roadsliffe near Adams Run, not far from Charleston, the Blind Boy lives, tills his tiny patch of ground, anil uses,a pair of unshod feet to ','see" with. The Blind Boy, who is, seldom known by any other nanve in liis neighborhood, is a ijegro in liis early twenties. Stone blin l, presumably from birth, he has no family to care for him, but manages through his' own cheerful efforts and the good will of his neighbors to maintain himself in a fairly decent fashion, patching his own clothes. The boy was brought to attention through his application to the Bed Cross chapter here for garments. Mrs. Astile i5rown Tyler, chapter executive secretary, visited him In her rounds of inspection in the county. -"His little shack probably is no larger than this room," Mrs. Tyler said in her office, ."but he keeps it de cently. He was hoeing his Held when I called on him." Mrs. Tyler said that the boy's dothes represented an amazing array of patches, not daintily sewn, but Incredibly well done considering his infirmity. She arranged immediately with a complete outfit, hut was surprised at his refusal of tH? offer of shoes. i "I uses my feet to isee with," he told the resident of the area, who made the clothing application for him. Apparently he has so familiarised himself with the feel of the ground in his general neighborhood that he is able to find his way about with comparative ease and this he believes would be Interfered with by the wearing of shoes, lie goes unshod the year round. The boy ts on the chapter's free flour list, and must travel some two miles to the distribution point for the Adams Ran section, a trip which he has been accomplishing without difficulty. To plant his little plot of ground, he worked the Stipulated time on the road to earn the seed from the Reconstruction Finance corporation. \ : w JOHHSBURG ftMPi* •w.\ Mr. and Mrs. William Sattem and daughters, -Lorraine and Dolores, of Woodstock&were visitors at "the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Althoff last week Wednesday evening Eugene King celebrated his birthday anniversary Monday evening after school and" invited a few of his little friends to spend the evening with him. Eugene was six years old. Mr. arid Mrs. William Krift of near Wheatland, Wis., visited relatives here Sunday afternoon. Miss Irene Smith, daughter of Mrand Mrs. .Joe Smith was taken ;to Waukegan hospital one day last week and was operated on for appendicitis. John A. Miller and Hubert Smith attended the football game in Chi-' cago Saturday. Mrs. William Althoff and daughter1 Mary, and son, Bernard, motored to "Elgin Sunday to visit with their sifter, Katherine. \\ Arthur Adams wis a Chicago caller Tuesday. . . ° Mrs. Jacob Schmidt is spending two weeks with relatives and friends in Nebraska. Mrs. George King and son, Junior, j are spending the we£k with her sister,! Mrs. Earl Hoffien, at Geneva, Wis. ! M rs. Delbert Smith of Fox Lake | visited with Mrs. Earl Turner Wed- ; nesday afternoon. Joe Schmitt of Beloit, Wus,tv«Wk8 a visitor here Wednesday. Miss1Isabelle Schmitt is" spending a few days in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Wirfs at Richmond were callers here Wednesday evening. Mr. and' Mrs. Jacob Thiel and faiipw ily spent Sunday with Mr. and Mis. Earl Hoffien at Geneva. Miss Evelyn Meyers was a Chicag*# caller Thursday and also visited tfcif Century of Progress. < , Mrs. Ben Freund and daughter^ Marion, and Mabel King were Elgfef shoppers Thursday afternoon. 1 Mrs. Stephen Srpith is spending (f week with Mr. and Mrs, Ray Horiefcr at Woodstock. Mrs. William J. Meyers, daughter,, Laura, and son, Leroy, were lligfe visitors Thursday evening. Say you read it -in THE FLAflU DEALER.. ^4 British Steamer Burning Off Yarmouth Retii:i!'U:tl>i<- ;u-ri:il view of the British steamer Porthoowl showing it a mass of flames from stem to stern af||f It caught fire off Yarmouth recently. The ship was laden with a cargo of sparta grass. All members of the crew were' taken oft In safety hut the vessel was destroyed. • - Officer in World War Meets Man He "Buried" Salt 'Lake City, Utah.--^"Life. «k»r a fact, is stranger than fiction,"1 said Harold S. Jennings, when he cnet a man he helped to "bury" In France 15 years ago, on an uptown stre«ft here. Oennlngs, a war-time lieutenant, was summoned to Bordeaux. France, October 3, 1918, to attend the funeral of his friend, Grant H. WIrlck. He saw the flag-draped< coffin, and listened to "Taps." * ^ • Then, 1A years later, he net Wlrick 'face to face. 'Wlrick explained the mystery. 'He was desperately III with Influenza. The man In the hospital bed next to him died. Confusion resulted because both of the influenza patients had been students at the terme artillery school. Later the mistake was discovered and corrected. But Jennings continued .with his duties and never heard ®f the •correction. Wants to Stay in Jail; Sheriff Locks Him Out Woodbury, N. J.--Holgsr Hansen, forty-two, of Almonesson, who weighs 315 pounds and is five feet two Inches In height, was locked, out of the Gloucester county Jail one night recently after refusing for more than two weeks to leave. Hansen was Jailed oo April 2S when he objected to furnishing a $30») bond 'to keep the peace after It was charged that he made "detrimental retmarks" at a meeting of the -Oeptford Township Taxpayers' association. When friends offered to furnish the bond 'Hansen would not let theth. Wlien the warden offered him his liberty conditionally he refused it. Sheriff William Downer ushered •Hansen out and presented hitn with $25, which members of the Taxpayers" association had raised to proVMe hljn self and hte family with food. Citizen Corrects Error, Pays Ten Times Tax Bill ghawnee, OMa.--An incident that happened here onght to bolster up any one's faith in husxin nature. "You've got my property valuation wrong," a taxpayer told the collector, producing a levy notice. "It's recorded $40, but it should be $400." And with that he paid ten times as much as he was down for. pocketed the receipt, and walked whirling -oui »f the f-fflce. . The Passion Flower | The name "passion flower" (nos passion is) arose from the supposed resemblance of its corona to the crown of thorus and of the other parts of the flower to the nails and wounds of Jesus Christ at his crucifixion, while the fiva sepals and five petals were taken to symbolize the ten apostles; Peter, who denied, and Judas, who betrayed, be Ing omitted. Passion is the term given fb the sufferings of Christ during the last days of his life. The Fourth Lovely Lady BY THERESE BENSON tor Tt* Bobbt-Merrill Company WNV CarvtM SYNOPSIS fufl'virr the weiliiirg oi \er niece, Cin- W which ahe baa 1 ' •ajxed, Matilda Smith Lnvtly ("Sm»f')t younfnt and phyaically weightiest of the four Lovely siitert, tfiHds hervetf in dfcidijy itraJtwd clrcumttutM. St» bu R*de her m plana tor the future, hawnw. The Lovely estate, LiOVetyW. in VlrflnU, U owned by SmiTa brother. Bill-Lee. fcut, financially unable to •aintain his paa«»ion there, he is livinf la Chile, while the «*tate Is rented to a Mr. N«aM. SmlPs Nearest wish la to LaoilyW Under the nana "Madame "Little SUtar «f the fckk," a consul tut. There Is Maatomntimi aaaaag the ether Lanrtly sistors, that • --hsr «l the (aaslty shauM, It. OWAPTER Ill^-Centinaed --7-- . *1 am not making a show of my- •elt,'"'She said. "I am mosey. And that Is what I set oat to do. 1 hare a use for money." , •'Most people have." Laura brushed this aside. "You're only quibbling, Suif. Tou must know this can't ge •o. We can't have our sister practicing as a sort of charlatan. Imposing ton the gullible--** "I am not a charlatan," 8mlf re-' turned without heat "For the flrst time in my life I am a ueefal «en>- bar of society. I am ashamed when 'I think of the years I wasted am •CiBtra." " "You're talking like aa awful •prig." I^aura was eager to make the argument commonplace and to drive home her contentions. "The troth Is, what you want Is money, as you owned at first; and not for charity or any high fulutin object but Just for self indulgence. You want to buy back Lorelyiea. All rbrht, say you could buy it back, what would you do with it?** "I can make it self-supporting, which is what Bill-Lee ought to have done--" • Laura swept on. not. however, Ignoring the interruption: "--And that would only be postponing the evil day. It is bound to go out of the family. I ask you, . what do you think would become of the plantation after you died? You'll never have any children, and If you left it to any of us, we'd be only too anxious to sell it and get it off our hands. Oh, Smif, don't bfe an idiot! Be satisfied with something suitable. I'll get Jim to buy you a dear little place In the country. In Virginia, If that's what you want; and, if you really need It, we'll manage an allowance--" Laura meant to be kind and one or two of her arguments had struck home. Smif had long been sure she would never marry and asked herself why the bald brutality of the statement that she would never have any children had given her such a pang? But It was the suggestion that she should live out her life dependent on Jim Hammersley's bounty that roused her to rebellion. "You're very generous for Jim, Laura," ahe said angrily. "Please forget that plan, as I shall. I am entirely able to support myself. Pin sorry if you don't approve of my business. I find it both remunerative and enjoyable, and I propose to continue it It Is useless to argue further." Seeing at l«st that her first efforts had been wrongly directed, Laura tried entreaties, in time evc-i working herself up to the point of tears. "We love you, Smif," she averred. "How can we bear to have you run such risks? Open to visits from the most awful people in a public building like this. Why, I met tiie ssost terrible creature a gunman tm sore, coming oat of the elevator with a huge emerald horseshoe in his necktie. Smif burst out laughing. "To think what I missed!" she cried. "Unfortunately your gunman was not one of my clients, Laura. . . . You may as well break it to ihe others that there's nothing to be done with Smif. As usual, she's as obstinate as a mule. Keep them from bothering me and I'll bless you forever. And now run along like a good girl. My time's worth money." As Smif retraced her steps to the middle of the lounge, thoughtfully tapping her lips with Laura's folded check, Buttons entered from the passage. "They's a gentleman, ma'am. No appointment, an' he didn't give no name. An' he's got the tonlect tiepin I ever saw! Looks like all the green lights up an' down the avenoe made Into a horseshoe." SnK started. Plainly Lam's gwMnaa bad arrived. CHAPTER IV SMU"3S only advertisement had been the cards which Charles had mailed to a list he had mysteriously procured. Much to her disapiHtintment and contrary to her expectations the business that had oome te her so far had proven commoiiplaoe. "Not an adventure in the whole hatch 1" ahe had sighed to herself regretfully, and indeed so it had proved until the advent of the man with the emerald horseshoe. An emerald horseshoe did not suggest a friend of Charles. In fact Smif was sure his reaction to such an adornment would have been 4uite as violent as her sister's. How then had the man heard of her? Not that it mattered. The opportunity to Interview a possible gunman was unique. 0 It waa, however, a fixed policy with her to make those without appointments await her pleasure "Shotf the gentleman Into the second waiting room," she taid. "Then and before an engagement wMfe a ' client she always tried to empty her mind of speculations and par* sonal anxieties as well as of her previous cases. But she was accustomed to docile clients wha stayed where they were put Consequently she was unable to control a start when a voice at her elbow, In anything but a tone of apology, said: "Excuse me, you're Madame Sal* tou. aren't you?" The gunman* of course. And Buttons, her valiant protector, was absent "Yes," she replied, turning and teeing him Icily, her eyebrows raised, her whole air a resentment of intrusion. "I am Madame Saitou. At the moment I am engaged. When I aa ready to see you, you will he nstt* fled." And she turned her back upon him, expecting him to accept his dismissal. Instead he came swiftly into the lounge and seated htaMfflt on a chair facing her, hanging Ids hat and coat on Its back. 1 only wanted te Ml yea I ditel want to see you at all," he remonstrated mildly. In spite of herself Smif chadded. It had struck her that this waa a very gentle gunman. And &«re waa something charming in Saifti chuckles. "That's too bad," she said, still twinkling, "because yon are seeing me,' aren't you? What do you sappose can be done about it?" "Nothing." Her visitor looked at her without cracking a smile. His face, melancholy in its lean brownness, was lit by gray eyes under straight black brows. Eyes that were looking at her with a fixity that threatened to degenerate Mo a stare. It was not a face that fitted the emeralds. It occurred to her that it was not a modern face, its like had looked out upon her from canvasses by Moroni. "I'm not so sure now that I don't want to see you," he remarked with an effect of casualness, plunging his hands in' his pockets, and continuing to study her under contracted brows. "You're good. All this,yoa know---" He withdrew a hand, waved it around the roon^ vaguely and again plunged it back up to the wrist" Then Smif recalled that Charles Jiad warned her to be on her guard against such an occasion. This man was a reporter, a subtle and insin-* r In an Instant She Waa on Her Feet "The Doorls Just Behind You." go round the sandwich shop. corner to the I uating Interviewer who had I'll have olive wind of her unusual occupa and cream-cheese sandwiches today, Toasied, don't forget You've still got money V' "Yes'm," said Buttons, and vanished on his errand. This order for sandwiches was usual. Smif f »ok her lunch there daily to avoid dressing for the street. . To wait for Buttons' coming, she seated herself in a comfortable chair in the lounge and lighted a cigarette. It had a well-nigh hypnotic effect in calming her nerves. 1 and she was not inclined to t terviewed. In an instant she was on her "The door is Just behind she told him. He cast a deliberate guiace it. "Well, it isn't going to n he rejoined. "I fancy [ can make my getaway. And there some things that I w«nt to that I'm going to ask you. I here for that, then I lost iny Uow Ttc got it hack again." (TO M COSTUUSO)

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