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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 6 Sep 1923, p. 9

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'* ' V* * 4 '* " '° "* * V ' " ' ' 1 *" TUB' ItcSMfiRT 'y|rAfy$|ff|ti'felt ' M J "ftx *' * 1 •"" '" "'** **•--*-. » $f.yjjf*X. \* <2^ws GK[uggcts From lUinois Pekln--Although her inaiden name WU Cook, < 'hnrles I. Pontius of Pekln In a suit for divorce avers that his wife refused to prepare his meals, while she was also disinclined ta do other housework. She was expert as a dish sllnger, however, he declares in his bill. When peev#d she would hurl the crockery at him with deadly accuracy, and also occasionally polished his face with her flat. Springfield.--John H. Walker, president of the Illinois Federation of Labor, issued a Labor Day Statement declaring that popular election of federal judges is the only remedy for "the Injunction evil," which, he asserted, "overshadows everything else affecting the lives of the plain people, and Involves even the existence of our form of government itself." Monmouth.--Housewives, doing their usually heavy Tuesday ironing, used so much "juice" that interurban service on the Galesburg and Western railway, between Galesburg and Monmouth, was halted. An Interurban ear stopped at the post office here for lack 6f power. The car was delayed several minutes until extra power could be transmitted over the line. Joliet.--Is a man responsiole for the actions of his dog? This delicate point in law will be determined when the case of Florlan Juris vs. Michael Baler is heard In the Will County Circuit court next month. There is $1,000 at stake. According to the declartion. Juris was bitten by a dog owned by Baler. Urbana.--Students attending the University of Illinois during' the last academic year earned approximately fil0,000 through positions secured through the employment bureau of the Young Men's Christian association. Nearly 2,500 students did odd jobs and 550 men had permanent jobs waiting on tables and washing dishes. Rock island.--What It Is said will be the longest and heaviest steel bridge girder ever laid across a stceam In America has been lowered interposition- over- Sylvan slough, connecting the Illinois mainland with Rock Island arsenal. The girder Is 114 feet long and weighs 07 tons. Monmouth.--President T. H. Mc- Mlchael, Monmouth Mlege, turned the first spadeful of earth in the excavation for the $200,000 gymnasium for that institution. An effort will be made to have the structure ready for the basketball season the first of the coming year. Aurora.--Gasoline, oU and air stations along sidewalks and curbings have been declared a nuisance by the city council. Under the terms of a resolution adopted they must be removed before April 1, 1924. More than a hundred such stations are now In use. $ Aurora.--Turning their front yards into parking space netted a "gold" harvest for farmers and residents living In the vicinity of the Exposition park during the Central States fair. The usual parking "rate" was 50 cents per car. More than 2,100 cars parked along the road in one day. Mollne.^-Millions of fish the sloughs along the Mississippi are Danville.--County Clerk John R. Moore has received a bank draft from the state for $78,067.88, which was due the county for work on the paved road system. The roads became a part of the state bond Issue roads. About a year ago, when the settlement was made the department claimed that the shoulder work done by the county was not part of the road system. Several weeks ago the attorney general held that the state should pay. tie county this sum. Harvey.--When Harris Ley Dante entered Thornton township high school at the opening of the school year at the age of eleven years he probably was the youngest high school student in Illinois. At the age of Limelight mi there In exclusive Bttle shop*, In smart restaurants, shaded by the hood of a handsome limousine, one sees suggestions of new styles. They are a relief, writes a fashion correspondent In the New York Times, because we have had so much of the sameness of summer. We have grown tired, before It is really jr." .a™ ^ test In the Indiana State Normal at Terre Haute and raised the highest record ten points. Over 5,000 boys and girls had been given the test up to that time. Springfield.--Two experiments calculated to have a far-reaching effect on the oiling of dirt roads in Illinois have just been begun by H. F. Clemmer, chief of engineering material for the state highway division. The purpose of the tests is to find out what oils are best fitted for the various soils of Illinois, preventing dust and wash-' lng out of roads by rain. ' Decatur.--Birds from every corner of the world are represented In a great collection of living specimens gathered by Mrs. James E. Pierce. Among the most valuable are the Brazilian gray cardinal, love birds, cockateels, parakeets, Java rice birds and gold finch. Canaries from America and Europe make up a good portion of the collection. Galesburg.--The work of completing the hard road between Galesburg and Chicago is rapidly progressing, although there are still several gai>s left In the highway. Construction work on these gaps has been started. This road Is certain to be extremely popular, as traffic between Galesburg and Chicago is unusually heavy. Batavla.--An ordinance passed by the city council requires all milk dealers to take out a license at the rate of $5 per year for each delivery wagon. In addition, samples of milk must be sent to the -laboratory In Aurora for analysis, and all milk, whether raw or pasteurized, will be required to be sold under a label. Decatur.--Dr. J. C. Hessler dean of men at Knox college, Galesburg, Is being discussed by alumni for the presidency of James Millkin university, as successor to Dr. L. E. Holden, who recently resigned. Before Doctor Hessler went to Knox he was dean of men at Miliken. Sullivan.--Wllford Gaddis has filed sujit against his father-in-law, Fred Baker, demanding $20,000 damages, alleging alienation of the complainant's wife. Recently Gaddis* wife left him and returned to the home of her parents. and Gaddis asserts that they influenced her to leave him. Belleville.--Two Chinese pheasants, received by Mrfl. O. Herr from her niece, Mrs. Fred Diener, Easton, Wash., are attracting considerable attention.' The birds are similar to Japanese pheasants and are noted for their Instinctive ability to give forewarning of earthquakes. Chicago.--Mrs. Ross Zimlx shot and seriously wounded her son Demso, nineteen years old, because, she told the police, she would rather kill him than have him pursue a career of threatened by midsummer droughts. (crjme jje WOuld not work and that have made the past fashion season a success. Let's take a glance at those newer styles which are making their appearance now. To begin with, the coat dress Is surely going to be popular. Then there are some coat (rocks which have straight and quite tightly fitting skirts. 8ome of these are tucaed in rows of tiny tucks horizontally and others of them use the same arrangement of pin tucks to extend perpendicularly. The colli..-a on these dresses are usually of the shawl variety, folding In surplice fashion over a lace underhodice or showing undar their rolling collars frills of coffeecolored lace that folds in Interestingly with the line of the bodice section. The sleeves are fitted into armholes that follow the lines of the figure closely or else the armholes are squared off In that manner wnlch has distinguished some of the best looking of the street frocks. Then the sleeves extend In a fitted line to the wrists, at which point they are apt to flare slightly either by means of applied flounces matching those upon the skirt In many cases, or with shaped lower sections that merge into large pocket effects and extend again over the hands In quite tight cuff arrangements. But often the only divergence of the extreme stralghtness of the silhouette comes in the manner of shaping the cuffs to give that slight flare and Interruption of the straight* ness of the line. • most successful coat dress for the late summer Is made of striped flannel, the wide striplngs being cut to run crosswise of the garment. The dress Is perfectly plain, closing at the side in a straight line to the neck, where a white flannel turn-over collar does everything there Is in the way of trimming with the exception of a repetition of the same idea. Flannel, indeed, is an extremely smart late summer material. mux moffli ikice, but etEEBSWEfflUGMOTie Double Fracture of Spine, Caused by Diving in Shallow Water, Dooms Youttv ffew York.--Benjamin ftarecM, fifteen, who for nine days, in spite of a double fracture of the spine, has been In St. Vincent's hospital. West New Brighton, S. L, wonders why the doctors don't fix him up so he can make his mother stop weeping. Boys with fractured spines can't live, the doctors say. But Benjamin doesn't know that. He only knows that if he dies It will kill his mother. He Is jaow an only child. Another boy was killed several years ago In an automobile accident Benjamin broke his back July £ In a dive into four feet of water at South Beach. "He doesn't think he die," moaned his mother. She is Polish and speaks In broken English: "He my only boy and so good. Always, everywhere he go, he tli ink of me and bring me presents. He know If he die he kill me. tonday he say, 'Mamma, I'm here nine days, but don't worry. I get welL* But after, he told a friend. 'Don't tell my mamma, but I think maybe I die.". He's so strong, such a good boy. My only boy." "They always have died," said Dr. Daniel F. MacGuIre. "Persons should be warned against diving In shallow water. I can remember sixty cases of the same kind, .all preventable, and all in poor families. They all died." BRITISH TO HALT ' miwrMtf tint ( The Rock Island Rod and Reel club has appealed to the United States bureau of fisheries for aid In rescue work and seining to preserve the small fry. Aurora.--When the chamber of commerce approved a campaign for the erection of an art museum, the local Young Men's Christian association protested, declaring the immediate need for Aurora is to take care of its boys by enlarging the association buildings. Monmouth.--Complete redecoratlou of the courthouse is provided In a resolution to be taken up by the counscorned her, she asserts. Litchfield.--Justice is dispensed In Litchfield by five men. Justices of thr peace, all of whom have passed the allotted three score and ten years. The Eldest of the Judges Is William Orpin, elghty-slx, and the youngest is James Bui lough, seventy-four. St. Charles.--E. J. Paker has presented the city with an auto street sweeper as a gift, he said, due to pride in his home town. The sweeper Is now being used on the city streets. It cost $6,500. Belleville.--Contract has been let ty board of supervisors' at its meeting for a new Turner's hall to cost $100,- next month. Estimates will be obtained on the work. Freeport--The Stephenson County Old Settlers' association held its fiftyfourth afttnial reunion. E. R. Reynolds, Rockford attorney and candidate for Circuit judge, was the speaker. Springfield.--An allotment of the new Harding 2-cent stamps has been requested by the post office. The stamps, which will be sold from the stamp agency in Washington first, will be distributed In Illinois in September. Oregon.--A tablet in memory bf Capt. Joseph Ogle, after whom Ogle county was named, will be placed at the entrance to the court house In the near future by the Daughters of the American Revolution. Rock Island.--A group of ten nien will be appointed by Mayor Walter A. Rosenfield to draw a zoning ordinance for the city and an ordinance ' for beautifying the levee Bloomington. -- Bloomlngton high school expects an enrollment of 1.150 students this year, according t» W. A. Goodier, principal. Charleston.--Bruce Weeman, th'rtyfour years old. shot and killed his -wife and is said to have declared that "The sooner I am hang*i, the better I will be pleased." ; Chicago.--The annual conclave of the Knights Templar of Illinois will be held In Chicago from September 10 to 12 inclusive. Twenty-five thousand visitors are expected to attend. Moline.--Freight traffic between SW Louis and St. Paul was resumed after a suspension of five years when a motor barge left St. Louis for the upper Mississippi. KevvBiiee.--The Henry Crpnty board of supervisors has thddt%e<f tne "'action of the assessor of Edford township in increasing the assessed valuation of lands abutting ropds recently Improved. Edford is the only township in the county where such actton was taken. Freeport--Joe Stewart, negro. Is bein « detained charged with the murder of Paul Modica, aged seven, a >cur ago, The boy was slain in bis her's grocery store by ana of two . ^ro desperadoes who held up the r-hi.ee 000. The building will contain kitchens, dining rooms and a swimming pool. Coat Dreaa in the New Design, Witn Skirt and 8leeves Illustrating the Latest 8ilhouettai and some of them are appearing In lightweight serges which have a certainty of style about them that is lovely to behold. They are simple wraparound affairs, with every line of grace about them and with the very last degree of efficiency reached in their design. They hook with one large clasp over one hip. That Is all the trouble they go to. Building the Coat Dress. A coat dress, when It Is of the handsomest variety. Is lined throughout with satin or soft crepe. Its skirt folds over, one side above the other, leaving the under portion with so much stuff and so ^much fullness that It covers the figure completely. As for skirts, they are built wholly to suit the lines of the individual figure, though the tiered variety can be said to hold sway for those who are tall and* slender enbugh ^either by nature or good corseting to allow them to the crosswise trimming. Alpaca Has Gained Fever; Alpaca Is another of these new summer materials that has grown fn favor through the hot months. It was launched In Paris in the spring, and (he early reports from fall showings of Parisian dressmakers seem to show that the stuff has, If anything, gained in favor. The dresses of heavy, flat crepe are the ones that hold the attention of the shopper just now. They come in so well for just this between-season wear und they are bound to last through a whole winter and Into the following spring. If they are happily and wisely chosen. The crepe is so soft and becoming In line that It will never cease to be a favorite with women who know how to dress really smartly and who know how to get the best effect out of the clothes they choose as their own. One crepe dress goes such a long way that It cannot be disregarded In the planning of a wardrobe, and usually there Is no better time to Invest in one than between summer and fall, when the designers' attention Is just naturally given to this sort of thing. Printed crepes, so say the cables from Paris, are to continue in favor with the couturiers over there. That Is a signal, then, for us to go ahead and wear them with utter abandon, for they will be bound to last for several seasons more if they are well done and conform to the demands of the individual figure. One of these in a new design is in tones of tan and green, with spots of black scattered through the patterning. Then the plaited cape reaching over the shoulders is made of tan chiffon, with an edging of black ribbon to tl it In color to the gown's foundation print. Hats, after all, are about the most Important considerations of the moment You can buy a new hat and make a whole costume which had oeen launched on the down-and-out patb look >4Jtke something fresh and now. Winsome Little Hats Are Becoming The tam o' shanter has suddenly burst upon us as something quite Imfeet. Joliet.--A special election will be held the latter part of September to vote a bond issue of $3H0,000 to provide funds for an increased water supply. Three drive wells will be sunk and additional mains laid. Bellevilla--Joseph Tucker, eightyeight years old, retired farmer and Civil war' veteran, and Mrs. Margaretha .Tansens, fifty-eight a widow, were married by Justice Slwk. Mrs. Jansens is Tucker's fourth wife. Chicago.--An unidentified man who had been skulking around a lumber yard was chased by a watchdog until he leaped Into the Chicago river and was drowned. Murphysboro.--Mrs. Sam Jarrett was stamped to death by a cow. Mrs. Jarrett was taking a young calf to the cow when attacked. Bement.--Roy Moon, an engineer of a threshing machine, was killed Instantly by being caught in a belt while oiling the engine. Rock Island.--The expense of aiding the poor of Rock Island county dropped 50 per cent in the last two years, according to County Treasurer Chester Thompson. Approximately $35,000 has been expended this year, but $70,000 was required in 1021. Better business conditions throughout the country have caused the decrease, it was said. Bfttavf*.--The city council has adopted an ordinance prohibiting the retailing of milk In any containers except capped bottles. Licensing of dealers also is required. Rock Island.--During the seven months of Sheriff Ctarence Edwards' reign he has arrested 250 liquor law violators, seized 3,500 gallons of moonshine, has been instrumental in adding $50,000 In fines to the county treasury and has helped 60 bootleggers Into Jail. And still he declares that the county is not dry and that seme drastic ster must be taken soon. Elgin.--More than twenty miles of hard road will be built in Kane county next year, providing the county receives its expected allotment of $393,- QPP from the state. besides a gymnasium floor 190 by 70 j port ant In the new styles. And any woman who knows anything at all about fashion realizes that a hat of this informal shaping can be becoming under circumstances when anything else would be distinctly trying. Plain velvet tams are all the rage, and the beauty of them is that they look well with light summer dresses, again with sport clothes, and for the early fall suit there can be nothing more becoming. Some of them have no trimming at all. Others have beaded or embroidered ornaments set high on me side of the front, while the opposite backward portion of the hat 's pulled far down over the head and hair. Another good model has a stiff taffeta or satin or moire bow jutting out from the right side back and falling down over the shoulders In a graceful line. This Is an Interesting trimming to use when you, ere not wearing a fur, for the plain spaces of the neck are in that way given a background and an artful setting. Even the plain and untrimmed tan has a way of surrounding the face and head with a halo which is more the desired frame for the face than can be suppUed by any other sort of headgear. t Velvet for Coatees. Velvet coatees and sleeveless Jacquettes are worn by many of the smartly gowned women at fashionable resorts. White, gray and fallow shades are popular velvet Jacquette colors used with plaited skirts of crepe de chine of matching shade. Many Jacquettes use a ribbon binding $# finish. Veils Trim Hats. *' The small hat really requires a fancy veil and this season these accessories come In endless variety. A most delightful one Is In fine black mesh embroidered In beige. The embroidery forms a square over the crown of the hat and the border of beige falls In graceful folds over the face and shoulder, v . . " ---------- l iving Room Should Not Be (Overcrowded One of the most significant changes In American family life Is the passing of the old-fashioned parlor and the place given to the living room In the scheme of the home, says the Milwaukee Sentinel. With the change comes the need of a plian of the living room to make the most of it It Is here that I the family gathers, that guests are received, that impressions of the family Ufa are given out and taken in. In considering the arrangement of the living room, one danger of Its success should be guarded against--that of overcrowding. It Is rarely necessary in the present vogue of overstuffed furniture to place in the rotom more than the usual overstuffed pieces and a- table, preferably the long davenport style--two small lamps for the table and one floor lamp--though there Ic little probability of having too many lamps. In most of homes overstuffe<| furniture easily leads In favor. Its luxurious comfort, compared" wl'u cane and mahogany. Is beyond question Coloring and harmony may be carried out to fit any scheme of decoration The subdued tones of tapestry fabrics which often are used In over stuffed pieces are far superior to thla respect to the velours sometimes used, while the wearing qualitlea of tapeairy are far better. Two-tone effects are favored. They lend themselves admirably to m«nj deeotatlve schemes. Color Adds 8martn<ia/.. . Even one's luggag.- must have a bit of color and suit cases of patent leather have corners and handles of red or blue. These are matched b> small vanity cases lined with coioi and with a fine lire of color on th« ontslde. „ " u Affection for Rubber Tree Lands Him Ten Days New York.--It required the sinewy determination of two robust policemen in Brooklyn to tear a rubber plant from the affectionate embrace of George Martin. Having formed a more or less unconventional love for the little tree, Martin shed hot tears when his adored plant and himself came to the parting of the ways. A narrow-minded world could not onderstand such emotions. Martin cried himself into court, where Magistrate Short, In Bridge Plaza's Hall of Justice, fined him $10 and sentenced him to ten days In Jail. The rubber plant was returned to Its rightful owner, Mrs. Emma McSaveny, of Brooklyn. Mrs. McSaveny, possibly touched by the taking of the plant from her home, refused to prosecute Martin for petit larceny. Whether touched by the spectacle of love or not, certainly she was touched for the plant. The Judge, hearing Martin's endearing phrases of "Nice lil (hlc) rubber tree! I love 111 (hlc) rubber trees," said Martin was Intoxicated. Martin admitted he was Intoxicated with love. He also didn't mean by enunciating haltingly the formerly well-known word "hie" that in any sense his rubber tree was a hick rub* ber tree. He also denied that his penchant for rubber trees was stimulated by his being a participant In playing rubbers of bridge or that he might have been a rubber In a Turkish bath. His love for rubber trees is strong. Time will prove his affections are possible for rubber, because his heart Is so elastic. He Is twenty-nine and re- Bldes in Brooklyn. It Is he wili not be home for ten day# Couple In Automobile Miss Death Four Times New York.--Death-defying escapes are not always in the movies, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Wallace found when they drove their coupe along a Grand concourse bridge In the Bronx. A motorbus struck them from the rear. The car hurtled through an Iron fence to a 25-foot drop. Plunging downward. It became entangled In live electric trolley wires, amid bursts of flame and showers of crackling sparki that threatened death for the occupants. Turning sommersault. It landed with all four wheels on the ground--bul square on the tracks of a rapidly approaching trolley car. The motorman Jammed on brakes as Mr. and Mra Wallace stepped uninjured from theii machine, having escaped death foul times In a few seconds. - Warships Enter Merftterranfah Sea--Balkans to Mobilize V Italy Do%1 r MUSSOLINI SPURNS LEAGUE Italy Closes the Corfu Canal to Greek Navigation--Italiana Hold Up Greek Steamer' at Brindisi, Fire Upon Another. Athens, Sept. 4.--It Is announced hers that the British Atlantic fleet Is entering the Mediterranean sea and that Great Britain is determined that Italy shall not succeed in her attempt to defy the authority of the League of Nations and in her violation of the neutrality of the Greek Island of Corfu, whose neutrality was guaranteed hy Great Britain, France aud other powers in 1863 and 1864. . The news of the British action followed close upon the announcement by Colonel Stephen E. Lowe of St. Louis, Red Cross official, who Is attached to the Near East relief at Corfu, that the Italian bombardment of the island caused the 'death of twenty persous, including sixteen children. Most of the children were killed when Italian shrapnel hit a crowd of refugee children who w«»re bathing in the sea. If Italy should mobilize, all the Balkan states will mobilize, it was declared here by M. Doussltch, the Jugoslavian charge d'affaires. Italy's seizure of the Greek Island of Corfu directly affects Jugo-Slavfii, said M. Doussitch. He said the island Is the key of the Adriatic sea us far as Jugo-Slavla Is concerned. The Greek feeling against Italy was shown during the day when a violent demonstration took place after solemn funeral services for the victims of the Italian bombardment of Corfu had been held In the Catholic cathedral. An Italian Iftig was burned by the crowd which also attacked the Italian legation. Signor Montagna, Italian minister, notified the foreign office that Italy would refuse to recognize any action taken by the League of Nations in the dispute with Greece. Italy has closed the Corfu canal to Greek navigation. The Italian^ have held up a Greek steamer at Brindisi and fired upon another. Meal, *»m»' y soothes Ike AvmL WRKLEYS & good thing to remember Sulriii its Purity ftakaft Two Japanese Princes and a Viscount Die in Quake Nagasaki. Sept. 4.--Prince Masayoshl Matsukata, former premier and lord keeper, has died from Injuries suffered in the earthquake, according to a report received by the Nagoya Railway bureau. It is reported that Viscount Takahashi, former premier, and twenty other leading members of the govern ment party were killed while holding a conference. Prince Yainasliina and Princess Kaya, who were injured at Kamakura, now are reported dead. tHE^5 tS v FLAVOR LASTS J % Write for 32- Page Booklet, Mothers of ^ the World" Pat. Pwwm m Loom Products B*by Carriages GFkrnittcre Mf| Dept B v* This Coupon The Lloyd U^, Company atj.. Coolidge Sons Pay First Visit to Home at Capital Washington, Sept. 4.--The two sons of President and Mrs. Coolidge, John and Calvin, Jr., arrived in Washington Sunday night for the first visit with their parents in the White House. Neither had seen his father since he became President, John having been in attendance at the citizens' training camp at Camp Devens, Mass., and Calvin, Jr., at work on a New England farm. Free State Has 63 Seats to 44 for De Valera Dublin, Sept. 4.--All returns are in from the Free State elections. The government now has 63 seats, the Republicans 44, Labor 15, Farmers 15 and Independents 16. Out of 40 constituencies, only North Cork and Waterford refused the government any representatives. Klldare and WieU#w returned no Republicans. v. The "White Ways" of Canada. Two great highways In the province of Quebec--from Montreal to Quebec, ind from Montreal to the United Statea joundary--are to be brilliantly lighted, rhese roads bear an enormoua burdM ti traffic. Freahen a Heavy 8kin With the antiseptic, fascinating OaO« cura Talcum Powder, an exquisitely scented, economical face, skin, baby and dusting powder and perfume. Renders other perfumes superfluous. One of the Cuticura Toilet Trio (Soap, Ointment, Talcum).--Advertisement. COTTON CROP IN AUSTRALIA Bhowe Fine Staple In Pod, Thoo^h * Growing Almost Wild in the Northern Territory. Cotton In Australia has been found showing a very fine staple In the pod, though growing almost wild In the northern .territory. Queensland Is leading the way thoroughly and well In this matter. Expert and official opinion holds that a large portion of Western Australia is as suitable for cotton production as Queensland. Queensland is setting the pace. Last year 7,000 acres were under crop; thla rear the area Is estimated between 90,000 and 100,000 acres. In two of Its subtropical districts 3,000,000 teres are being opened up under the cottop prospects and 200,000 acres In another. The government is guaranteeing a minimum price of 5ftd (11 cents) per pound for seed cotton. If cultivation responds the guarantee holds good for three years. The British Australian cotton association is helping with the erection of 48 ginneries. America demands more cotton; Great Britain Is hungering for It The world Is loo lng for it. If Germany restores her prewar industry, then clearly tho world's demand for some considerable time will be far ahead of the suppl Here Is another golden opportunity for Australia.--A. S. Ledger, la CuMft History Magazine. ' * v ' ' ; to Remove Graaa Stales. Cover the stain with common cooking molasses and let stand for two oi three hours. Wash in lukewarm water. Repeat the process if necessary. fa:"..* Terrorizes Neighborht&tf Then Leaps to His Death Cincinnati.--After terrorizing tha neighborhood In Falrvlew Heights, a dog, supposed to heve had rabies, ended his life by Jumping into an open catch basin. He drowned in six feet of water. Police reported his death as the first suicide of a dog to go down on their books. According to neighbors, pedestrians and children narrowly escaped being bitten by the animal. Lieutenant Ringer sought to kill the dog, and, when he arrived on the scene, he was told the dog had leaped ln.% the catch basin. He removed the lid .and peered do#n. All he could see was a few air bubbles coming to the top. Killed on Errand of Mercy. Mobile, Ala.--En route to the railroad station to get Ice for his dying wife, Wilkes D. DeShaza, a farmer living near here, was run down and killed by a passenger train. Dog's Chase After Cat Cost $60,000. Glasgow, Scotland.--It cost $00,<X>0 for a dog to chase a cat In a garage. The dog upset a lamp and started a fire which destroyed 12 motor cars and most of the garage. ^Bricklayer Falls Five Stories Unhurt New York.--After falling five stories without suffering any serious Injuries, Joseph Caprano, a bricklayer, ordered that a 167-pound candle be built and burned In the church he attends as • thank offering for his good luck. Itfalke to Death to Make New Record. Omaha.--While trying to lower the walking record from New York city to San Francisco. Cal., for persous more than seventy-five years old, F. EL Rogers, eighty-two yean old. Ml 4esd here. Mob Batters Brooklyn Rectory; Seeks Image of Patron Saint New l'ork, Sept 4.--A big mob Brooklyn stormed the rectory of tht parish church, broke down the doo and wrecked the building because tl church had refused to let them can a statue oi thplr P»tr°n saint in parade, i German Proverb. Love unreciprocated la Ilk* S Hon without an answer. Salvation Army to Raise $5,000,003 Fund for Victim New York, Sept. 4.--The Salvatlc Army will raise $5,000,000 for the r Uef of suffering resulting from tl earthquake disaster In Japan, accor lng to an announcement by Comma! der Evangeline Booth, leader of tl Salvation Army in the United State Decrease in Revenue. Washington, Sept. 4.--Federal lnte nal revenue taxes collected In the yet ending June 30, 1923, were $575,705,8.' less than in the fiscal year of 1022, Ii ternal Revenue Commissioner Bla reported. Britain to Back League. Geneva, Sept. 4. Great Britah backed by the Scandinavian state: will insist on drastic action to fore Italy to submit its quarrel with Greec< to the League of Nations, It is asserte In best informed quarters. Angler B. Duke Drowns*; ; Jfey York, Sept. 4.--Angler son of the late Benjamin N. Duke, to bacco king, was drowned Sunday night in Long Island sound just off the fiotit of the Indian Harbor Yacht dub at Greenwich. Conn. Congressman Cantrilt Dies. Louisville, Ky., Sept. 4.--J. Campbell Cantrlll of eGor^etown, representative from the Seventh Kentucky district and Democratic nominee for governor, died at a hospital ten after an abdominal operation. cMade only of wheat and barley scientifically baked 20 hours Supplies Vitamin-B and mineral elements. How can Grape=Nuts be other than a wonderfully appetizing, healthful food ? "Jfteret « ji * ••• * j'kLL:*... ' .* Li

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