CMPLD Local History Collection

Libertyville Independent, 5 Jun 1924, p. 3

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,| es . ; \ * "'" |" .. NC OB 7 us Tj' M w & ' T e ,' ' &A 4 ke * ML 1 T 'I "1 '\ 7 4 A < : L ' ) # C & * | # 3 '% OY CAANUNING Cw * , e M~m' % 4 HW.AAT ETiE t wsn's JURY -- MEETS TODAY IN ~--_THE FRANKS CASE !;Chie;."o;aqu ¢--Wheels " of ot tice through which id out death . 1 Ires' . sone m':»: tb: coron the . mar rar Robert : "th"'..m a--of cevidence -- murder indie , E. : Leopold -_\ .h' col J ra "Tor a | themesely Y n. . They ; and sla m_'mm P oo iuring reany by ho . While the coroner's jury met to de-- bemine . the . manser _ in . vxh .1: cath, -- the | state nnnt!l" the ar ::.-ot evidence>> on which <it ~wilt -- murder indictments against Nea-- Jan, E. Leopold Jr.,and --Richard . _ Loeb, -- his <confessed slayers. _--_ »Killersa <for a thrill," the youtkhs odhory themseelvo*" In thclr..ml h1 on. . They confessed that the lanaping and slaying of the Franks 9 fln'.eoaeflnd "Iin a spirit of Machinery . for the defense also wet motion 'with the 'For a writ of habeas eozt tos > and -- Loob : and / am» a¥vorly :::c "n rag mp& -: 4 & hea .. PB x o sininc'h <dn EitRIAPE to ' piéad imilty, . Statt's .__ Attorney... !'& 1"" w 2 & ,v:' P3 .'). '."';j';; Mikonatres' sons started whirring "Only Jerry's in no condition to set-- tie the matter, He's broken down trom worry and overwork and you're paxtiy responsible. That puts it up to rma. . This is a Anal warning. If you see Clare again I'll act. 'That's all Good night." He picked up his if your neighbors get sick of having a resort of--this kind in their midst, and drive you out, that's your busi-- ness, too. But my son's wife--" "But that's nothing. I pay halt that for these houses and I've gone in debt fitting them up." "With baths and tennis courts!" visitor. "You want $22,000 to go on making a fool of yourself.. Weill, you won't get it." $.., is if from a reveriea "How about the money." + *"You've had what's coming to tather--* * -- *"Your father understood you well enough to leave you only an income. $20,000. You could bave bad a big ITY CAN BE PROVED c c tw :.l'n-'--. m"f.'h. George Goodkind NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY : *That's what I wanted to ask you. is o o e ons | ns tJp _ _ AW.SBAWERTHAD lim.: 4 ¢ **-- BEGIN HERE *ODAYX . I"lou.humhu."fl _ Clare Jaewett,. in love with the| Daniol, rather at m logs. "Not even as an advance?" pleaded "Not a penny." . "Don't drive me to--* Intter of that it was the sole duty of the doroner o determinc the cause of the Franks© boy's desah.© =. ~ % --*Phat it wascla¢cb, himselt a soc ond cousin : of t:h:hh boy, wheo witided the cold 1 wrapped * ml tape ~by which .Robert F¥ m'tnek" m-.hmm .go, an am-- Tormation he holds against the pris mn at thou«mnfl inquest by a and Loeb to conter v&: their 'coun-- 'mel prior to the: ingutst. -- He insisted -- On the wther side of the legal sealea <--which will weigh two'hnv:: against © a -- 1 )um-q. will,. be Mttorney's office can muster, togeth 'n.wi;: what ald thoh"u.nuved mil o dtale's ~Altormey . Crows suari¢d of Chicago, where both the accused youths are students. The legal sanity of the pair can easily be proved, was the statement of Dr. Krohn after questioning DANCE," BSHE SAID. work she save whole lots of lives and ] e + -- money. She work all right." He the door, Gropped the bills on the table and , _ "You don't mean that," said| prought forth an English Daniel, rather helplessly. "You don't| from under his coat. ..no"'l""'""" rmthtmr-umunm-.':'amr s help---- ' "Bure," lichrist. "Go right _ "Help--whom?t" M.Mwu-ymmmum kind, wheeling. "Strikers and 'streoet{ after the meeting." Umanski left women and general riff--raff. And| Margaret Mary bending over him you don't even help them--because| eagerly. . did, how in the name of God would| Giichrist had caught sight of her [ummm. If I fnd| feet, strangely adorned. you're still ranting down here in half | "What's this we're wearing, golden an bhour, I'l say you're crazy and I'HU|alippers?" he aueried. lonking@ mm a> reached for the door. M ape Brrapas £ mt _ _ UWOo to my room and I'll be along women and general rilt--raff, And] Margaret Mary bending over him don't even help them--because| eagerly. . did, how in the name of God would Giichrist had caught sight of her that help the community.-- If I Snd feet, strangely adorned. the door was swung open from the| that ; DANCE," SHE SAID. work she save wh '"That's your wistake," said Danicl, still tranguil, & .# "Is it1? A year ago you gave me 124 hours to sign a paper, and I did it, and it cost. me $2,000,000, Tonight I give you 30 minutes to shut 1 and quit seeing my daugh-- ter, and if you don't do it--" "As I won't," said the unperturbed "I'l be heré inside hbalf an hbour with a doctor." "And thent" Gillchrist didn't under-- stand. . *"Then we'll file a petition to have you declared incompetent." -- Goodkind banged his stick on the SHSoor for emphasis and started for Goodkind reached for the knob as| them out of the barrei of Te > o ase "What's be doing down heret" Umangki with certain anxiety. e "He says I'm crazy and he's going mh up this place." Dunicl rum as be dropped into a chair rous ,.Lmdmm"a won't.* ' ':"w. * be--too aure," said the Pole 6 thoughtfully. sied, "ll.::.."m-rudomhrm."x made angry. And somebody °___| told him a lot of les." "I brought you some money," be said. "My boss he give me another saise.. He gonna mikes me boss after a while. So I like to begin to pay back what you lend me." Glichrist waved him aside. ""Wait 'till you've sent for your family," he said, making no move to accept the proffered bills, *"I'm gonna send now," said Uman-- pump I make goes fine.-- I show my boss like you say, because he know alippers?" he queried, looking up sat "I suppose you ain't had any sup-- per," she said with a motherly air, Grubby had followed her in with a tray and the girl, leaning on her cruiches, transferred its carge to the tuble in front of Daniel **"Who said that?" Daniel looked up wwriously. "A wop named Malduca." "Ob, yes," Daniel relaxed again. "I took his daughter in here once, for a week, unti} he got sober." '"There's a good many lHke that," came the answer and the door closed. «ki has an questioning, that : prose¢cutor's> assist-- antas and detectives by careful sug-- gestion, "conjored up the; fignre. ot the murdered . boy . and : led Loob to confess, it was revealed. today. Loo pold's susave assurance deserted him A tour of the territory covered in g: ml::lou from. the <time the was picked up en route bhome trom the Harvard® achool May m In--. a. water.--filled: _ cualvert, t to Hght the boy's hbelt; Leo pold -- took , Actactives to -- the --plase m#-mmmh.m near -- Hesasvilie,= Ind., a fow .miles wag' Loeb who struck him on the head the next instant Why, weap ons which might injure a person are so repugnant 'to me that I loathe the sight; of them." "._.* .. Paleanans 'Never Pays. _ .. | Accldent If every nht on a_ car was e ea t g¥ en n n -- .1s . Foreky -- _ d4tk im a than..-- dincleneti Snqiires *"Not so many," MHis face contracted in a spasnm his pips at the mantlopiece, Es _'!m'ij-z: INDEPENDENT, THURSDAY,-- ~JUNE 5, 1924. and he say if she | Kew york.--A hemotrhage brought jon by blowing his nose caused the "doath of Michae! Relliy, Afty--sight, a 'clerk in the city hall post oBite. that if warmth cauges early matority 3 Gdevelopment should be as rapid ':z" m~~hu as among any "Our women, used to disappearing creams, do not see'the absurdity of this: but if you remember that the only oll available to the Eskimos is of the nature of lard or fish oil, neither z(' which evaporates, you will see the bsurdity at once. It is well known that in order to be warm you must be dressed in clothes that are poor cou-- ductors of heat. Now, poor héat con-- :2::-(0: good non--conduction) de-- on air chambers in the clothes, whether they are wool or fur. If thege air chambers were fAlled with grease as they ipevitably would be if the body were gfeased (for the clothes are in contact flfi';"th;.body:. '.0: .?.!; men! let th t of the, .uf.mpc..mmmu, uwmvn-smq.h_ob ktimos would have to spend all winter the inhabj of the colder region otthonramu golsa';ewgatmuflbd by f§shigqn. --In the summer it is cor-- rect form, in' Eskimg land, to dresg in the most worn--out and shabbickt rem-- nants of the winter garments, 'These naturally offer little protection from the rain, and it is not unusual for the Eskimo to get thoroughly wet--or ¥e-- come thoroughly cold when sitting still as, for instance, in a boat. The fog and raw winds of the warmer season haye an opportunity to penetrate to their bodies as a result. As to Qreagsing the Body. As concerns fthe greaging of the body among the Eskimos, Mr. Stefans-- son--has the following to say ; No Need to Drink OHl. "In such overheated houses what need is there to drink olfl or to con-- syme a large pmoynt of heat--produc ing fat to _ ce radiation from the bosn m proponentés of the oil--drinking .__My will M thet the people do Sot live indoork an the time® and that ip winter it may be extremely cold qut of doors. It is true that, Although the lowest winter temperatures O¢f the inhabited parts of lontl'b:koc Russia are lower than any in h the Eskimos live, stil! the average winter temperature of the Arctic climate is low. There are dis-- tricts where for a month or two in midwinter you may have an average of 205 or 80 degrees beiow zero, and oecasionally even a little lower, But when the W outdoors they arodadlnlultlofg'ruutlro prac-- tically cold proof. You might about as well be dressed in a thermos bot-- ever baving geem an Eskimo shiver in winter, but--he has seen them chiver in summer. 'The reason for this is that As an actual fact, the noted ex-- plorer hoide, the Eskimo consumes less "food for power" than the aver-- age Bcotsman or Norwegian, for the obvious reason that the Eskimos are really exposed to cold less. "Some Eskimo winter houses aro eold," he writes, "but the typical Es kimo house resembles more an in-- eubator or a Turkish bath than it does an average European or American dwelling. Captain Bartlétt has said that the temperature of the Eskimo houses in northeastern Siberia was at night around 100 degrees Fahrenheit ; Rasmussen describes the Cape York Eskimos, the most northerly human bohatnthowofld..udttm.ln?@ winter naked in their overheated _ *IThat sgeme to be the fact, for their women eccasionally bear their Arst houses with streams of perspiration running down their bodies, which they mop continyally with towels. which obviousty~ must be the more dificulit the colder the weather,. Be-- eause the Eskimo lives in a country econsidered to be colder thar the lands Inhabited by other branches of the human race, through deduction and in-- duction, persons--without inquiring Into the actual facts--have simply made: up their minds on the subject of fats and tis as concerns this inter-- esting people. quired not ouly to--repair waste and enable the doing of physical work, but also to keep up the body temperature, points out that the error basically rests upon a truth, that food is re-- Eekimos .eithes eat foat, drink olls or Stefansson, Noted Explorer, London. -- Vilhjaimur _ Stefansson, writing in the London Spectator, dis DECLARES ESKIMOS DO NOT.LIKE FATS Riinka--~"It wadld purevent many a8s Mr. Stefansson cannot regember Tells How They Live. Nose Costa Man's Life 'Brooklyn, N. X.--When Heary George France was vighteen, in November, 1921, he married a likable young wom-- --an ten-- years his Senior. .Miv.futher went to the -.uh:lulno bureay and gave consent; was a widow In about a year, when the household was running harmoniounsly, she sudden-- | golfers or to tesch beginners, a set of six + charts, printed with directions and illus-- The river was low and a long way off when Mrs. Ormsbee pot her two-- year--old son, Roland, in a bed and her four--months.old daughter, Darrow, in a crib at night. * In the morning when Mrs. Ormasbee awakened, she bheard rain on the roof and unusual sounds indeors. Leaving her bed, she stepped nearly knee detp in water. She vnlned:m ml:' «nd they bundled up: the ch/ % waded for the.-- main road. When they reached a bridge> one>end -- gave . way: and plunged Mrs. Ormabee into water over her head... But she is a good switamer and regained the bridge. She then sent her mother and the chiidren back to the bungalow while sbe swam several. hundred feet--to. a eance tied to a'tree.. In this boat she reseued the family, * * 'that there--is no such thing as "ether" as commonly referred to. He mys that what are usually spoken of as radio waves are undoubtedly particles smaller than an New York.--A heary warm rain fall-- Ing on melting snow caused fioods in many parts of New Jersey recently. Rirers, -- rising with --unprecedented suddenness, became half a mile wide. Streets were turned into camnals in Newark, Elizabeth and many towns. A stirring incident of the storm was the rescue of Mrs. Roland C. Ormsbe¢, her mother, and her two> children. Mrs. Ormubee, who is the wife of the rector of St. Bartholomew's church at White Plains, had just taken a bun galow on ground above Pequannock river, near Pompton Plains. : Daring Mother Rescues Moporpredinn d eno h riie ) four and the other six Bhe {old l.:"! ' MenFy was :mmc. be t:: Tuatice . F M vort. had . wilifaily. 'and eaoduiyans | ctn. an apmulment forthwith He got the _ Menry's wife told Justice L4wis that ummhaw'hmmm& the was oft ' her children, she Chicago radio engineer, the wave theory of mdio will soon : be exploded. com-- plddy,;ulthn&n&m_theoq take its place in explaining radio phe-- nomena. : Mr. Pilanstiehl is of the opinion New Theory of Radio Is Advanced _ In the opinion of Carl Pfanstichl, a placed on the foor. Btanding over them with club in hand, the player is able to get the proper grip and position and cex-- ecute the stroke in correct form. 'The diagrams afford a constant check and tions, grips and strokes, and other fine points, has been devised. With them, one may read a lesson in golf technique and follow it at the same time. Printed trations showing correct standing posi-- What the World Is Doing . To Golf Charts Teach Strokes and Standing Positions thea gourt, and in for As Seen by Popular Mechanics Magazine) 4 Apprepriate, Ail Right. . * & nupouuwr" -.xa" t.lo eolored 'parson who was Offbciating at .the christening of: Man-- dy'd Intest offepring. "Her name am The mu'«x--h In't passon © O no At name for a gal!" "Wull, it Ats Sptup comte Fray wid vopp; an0 is cBille's 'z'fi:i '.-"%.u-fin «_1 .« «. Fairly Warned., «. ; . <--~ Members of the facoity of one of our unfversities --tell a story of the dazs when a certain distingutsied edpcator was'a tutdr in charge of student disc} pline at 'a New England college--a sort of protector," apparently. .:. On ome o¢-- casjon he was called out of his room by some midnight escapade..He was wbiiged as a matter .of duty. to pursue the disturbers, and with his long legs he soon found hl-.ennl:.l:-m upon them. . 'Then his 'woleinn ' volce rang out" suddéply --Into + the night: "Gentlemen, | gentlewmen," it, you* don't run a Httle faster, I shall be obliged to overtake you !" > the points is.cut to form a puliling hook, the throat ef which is, of course; dull. A tool of this kind is very handy, as it can be used to cut the dandélions at their stems or pull them out entirely, _ covered with a shell of its own. No yolk was 'disclosed Th the large shell. The three eggs are now on display at One third of the silk used in the United States is aaid to be artificial, ' Puppy Saved From Flames Kansas® City.--A wailfrom the interlor of & burning bullding in the downtown district here recently caused the cry to go up that a woman was trapped in the fiames. -- L R. BraG-- ford, freman, volunteered to attempt a rescue and dashed into the blazing building. After boiding hundreds of spectators in suspense for a short time he einerged with a, diminutive puppy.' Paragould, Ark.--Mrs. Sam Thom-- ason, 440 East Garlard street, while preparing a freal broke an egg to be uséed in the cooking and to her sur-- prise found inside the large shell _London.--After_ hurling her, two young children from the top of a 800-- foot tower here, Mrs. Margaret Davey leaped to death after them. . The mother and children were instently killed. Occasionally the breaking off of a lobe of a hoe renders it unfit for further use and it is then usually thrown away. How-- ever, a serviceable tool for the purpose Seattle, Wash.--Piloting an airplane carrying .. United . States . mail, | Cart Eilnson of.the mail service mande'a trip into: the interior of Alasks as s sest. The trip> was made: in ning ~_ Patching Auto Tops When pétchingsuto tops it is a good plan to place a board across the top bows under the covering to provide a firm sur face on which to work. After the patch is applied a weight should be placed on it and left until the cement is dry, so that the patch will not cur! up at the edges. Oklahoma . asking the agent to look up the charges on a package dI:uvorod to the Okilahoman at Wilis Point in 1875. The letter explained that the writer obtajned the package udgr the im-- pression that it was prepald, but later learned that it was eent collect. waves in the receiving set. The development of this theary, says Mr. Planstiehl, has been very rapid and startling, and further investigation of the nature of these particles may explain the mechanism of direct communication and telepathy between minds. Also, through thtmmindgk,wink-mbionol vision may become an accomplished fact. Mr. Gosgett was unable to find any record of the package in question and believes the transaction must have been made with the old Pacific Ex-- press company. 'The unique letter has been forwarded to company headquar-- ters, where it will probably be kept &s sumed, bump into each other, thus trans-- mitting energy which is picked up as sound in the receiver. When a stream of radiant energy or particles strikes the antenna, it sets up a very weak current, which is transformed into sound or air electron that are sent fying by an eleo Serviceable Dandelion Hook Kills Children and Self Eggs Within an Egg each of which was eut and filed to the shape shown, a V-- shaped notch being broken hoe is straightened in line cut in the end and filed to a sharp cut-- be made from it fare,, At Vasmmar college she chose Scomomics and sociology because she wanted to specialise in. child welfare work. . That led her to the study of Rtate laws affecting the protection of chilidren and young gins. A . worker must have the | ability : to mont : or outside: stimulus." .Mewraver, there in a tremendops Aeld for usetul-- ness. > Many of thea rural problewms are Can the Skin See, Is Query, That human skin has powers of vision which to a great extent have been lqst through years of ueglect, is the theory of a French scientist. -- A--eerics of experi-- ments conducted by him are said to sup-- port this belief. The sensitivity of the skin and underlying tissue with its in-- tricate net of nerves is well known, but m-mhaetolmhqmdfi-'w be capable of picking up '-_.h.} manner comparable with the procem of' judge must be the fArst consideration. The battle was bot. The chosen eandidate of many of the socially-- winded was Ruth Taylor of White Plains. 'The Republicans nominated her. The Democrats, forced by pub-- Mc sentiment, nominated a man whe took the job, rather than the salary, seriously. > It was a Democratic year, but the friends of the children won, neverthecless. : Miss Taylor, whe calmiy went on supervising expenditures of $450,000 anhually, with a staff of 43, is directo® of the county department of child wel-- fare,, At Vasmmar college she chose Barely . discovered <and entirely um» soived, and much of the futore welfare of .the country depends on abliitp. to understand and selre them." t . Her Arst job happened, she says, to send her into a rural Aeld, when many social worke?s still thought largely of the problem of the citi¢es, . -- . . "If a person sterting in social work today has a good deal of courage and something of the spirit of pleneering," advises Ruth Taylor, "I should strong-- ly recommend, her to try rural work. them as agents? Up in Westchester county, New York, last fall, there was ndoefipntoromeontyofl«mt people were ntehiuhndwot the state with keenest interest. West-- phester was one of the fArst three coun-- ties in New York to plan a children's eourt. It decided on $10,000 for the judge's salary. a EBnter the war.' On one side the old-- timers who could not conceive that such a salary should be anything but & reward for the politically faithful, On the other the folks who had dreamed and fought to get the. state law through and the court established for the sake of the children, and whe teachers, it is in reality s or; for wo must wd ence of others.--Charles R. the top of the ladder are used to hold i on the two vertical guide rods, which are permanently attached to the wall; this arrangement allows the ladder to be raised and lowered to the positions indi> cated. A couple of casters provided om the feet of the ladder facilitate the work of pulling it out from the wall and push-- ing it back again. _ Ben ottars are generally killed wwie . ofloop._c;uh«olth_el«orth"y the water. 'The animals sleep on their . . backs, with their young otters in thair ..« Have you ever noticed that péople who are yery sure of what they want travel so directly that there seems to be little of drama in their lives, while In bungalows where limited space does not permit built--in garret steps, a "fold-- ing". stepladder of the kind shown in the drawing has been found very convenient. It is made of 1 by 5--in. lumber, the rigets being set betweem the sides at such an angle that they are perfectly horizontal when the--ladder is pulled away from the wall, -- Two large screweyes fastened to PmA Learning From Experlence. Portable Garret Step PAGQG a¢

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