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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Dec 1922, p. 3

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Have an In- •nd to Tdua in 1121 1 1,390 (STIES . >&, ' v4Hgi*rss Ww* Obtained m PretlmlAary %• *• Cowp'ote OjMNuilal Cenetm ^•Taahingtou.--The Cwiaaam annouocaa that, (• rttuai ncelnd toy the Mwm Of she otam, the ni»ber of prisoners confined in fsderal penitentiaries, state prisons, county •*«*• *°d county chain or road sang* city police stations, and othar penal Institutions on July 1, 1922, was 2S8£8fc Ot thta aaphtr'tjMI'i«« n|wtt«d for ffcMo feSerei pteitctiti*rte% 78,873 far KM stat* prisons, *428S t» %4Si county- penal institutions (principally Jails), 12,H7 tor 908 ohals or road gangs la certain southern states, and 21,81# for 1,819 city institutions, while the remaining 1,041 were women committed by the courts to the care of other Institutions (24 In number), mainly under the control of religious or charitable organisations. Similar data were collected for July 1, 1917, bat tho total for that data does not iaefude all prlaooars In chain or road gangs, nor women committed by tho courts to the car# of Institutions under the control of religions or charitable organisations, Atcludlnr t$ese from the Sguraa for 1932, tho comparable totals for the two years are: 1922; 161,172; 1917, 150,188. These figures include prisoners awaiting trial and a few persons held as irltaaasm, aa well as prisoners serving sentence. Report Part of Big Census. The returns-were obtained in response to a circular of inquiry which the bureau of the census mailed to the various institutions, as a preliminary to the complete decennial census of prisoners, which will be taken In 1923. The number of prisoners In (federal penitentiaries Increased from 8,018 on July 1, 1917, to JMMO on July 1, 1922. During the same ported the number of Inmates of 1 state priaens Increased from 71,442 to 78,673, and of county federal such In mi to Hr 2$£ In SH^'the rate of Increase hotng flittaincrease la federal prlacwtf »*waaSS.6 per ceui;ta statapvtalfilpSr cent. H^nratte«f fad- P«r KROOO population Increased from 8 In 1S1T to 5.1 in 1*82. and tike corresponding ratio for P>l--naiu increased during the psgfod trim T2.4 to TCBL for 1917. far tho two thatnmds with «ho total aumber of seporting no era). ^ For county Institutions tho twin Illn ilWOft wflN of irmtiir m prtsooan lurrssmil jUltT*** whWh will eonsti- I^l5tolC7lJii3?Sttr35 Institutions it feU from l&l In tha J^^^^Wtermea^ of 1 la done, the transportal earlier year to 8 In the later. The Dumber at empty county Jalla and other county Institutions decrease*} froa» VS, or 24J2 per cent of the total for which reports were r^ reived, in M17, to 670, or 184) per •Mat of the total. In 1922. On tho other hand, the number of city lnstltutiona raftprttag no prisoasra increaaed from 1,168, or 48.7 per cent of the total,' in JStT to 14190. or 6U per cent of the t o t a l . I n I S t t . . . . . . VmipiiiY 'V*"*1 in Farm Crop Only 10 Per Cent of the Entire froduct is cantoned i Human Beings. •WRTJWT 8FT Tt WORLD Consumed Either Direetly or In Form of Moat It Is the Principal 'If*" Soaroo of the Nathmfe .->£*•• ,* - tit Washington. Corn, the red man's gift to the white man, has come to be the nation's most important farm crop. Consumed either directly or in the form of meat snd other animal products. It is the principal aourco of tho nation's food supply. The 1921 year book of the Department of Agriculture shows just to what extent the 800,000,000,000-bushel crop forms the basis of the live-stock Industry. Forty per cent of the crop is fed to swine on farms, 80 per cent to horses and mules on farms and IS per cent to eattle on farms. Only 10 iVfS' Steamers Burned at Cincinnati fM v '*& Great crowds witnessed «fce "destruction by Ore of the Ohio river steamers f.',;, Utand Queen, Chris Qreene and Tacoma at Cincinnati recently. of the country will far of any-other latfton, past or the OdrKL V^Stklghwayii of the ancient Romans? whoee fame haa come down through tho centuries, will pale by comparison. Details of this vast road-building program were placed before the Highway Bdueatlon board at its recent conference In Washington by state highway engineers and officials of the bureau of public roads, United States Department of Agriculture, to Whom has been entrusted the work of planning and supervising the -construction Constructed A'i of tlltnoir ED STATES '.szsasass l-build- «fl COTV roa 'had been t spedal regard to a na- Hlghways had been •i needed without considering whether they would link up IS Ibe most eUhctfva manner with the of MMs to be spread m. Engineers had sought Hum to meet immediate and local demands than the broader requirements of the states and nation. Roada Fit National System. The 'present fed«liU-aid road-buildlng program, officials of the bureau state, will copfiftnplate the construe tion of only inch roads as fit into the national program and contribute to the national system. At the same time the roads will be so selected as to serve the moat important local requirements. With marked modifications, the system adopted in building the railways of the country will be borne In mind in the construction of the country's new highways, There will be per cant la uaed direct for human food. Corn was one of the moot important gifts America made to the peat of the world.-The United 8tatee now produces about three-foortha of tho world's corn crop. That corn also la an important crop in Argentina, Bm- *11. Mexico and aome of tho aouthern Eoropean countries, is ahown in the report. Oiaaaae Regulatee Crop. Weather. Insects and plant dtaeasse haw a great deal to do with rugalab lag the size of the crop In the United States. The estimated loss caused by coasmon smut alone during tha period 1917-1920 was placed at about eighty millions of bushels annually. Of Insect pests the corn-ear worm, where abundant, causes a loss of at least 7 per cent of the grain on the c rs attadrod. The European corn borer also threatens to take a heavy tolL It Is stated the production of the corn crop is financed with leas borrowed capital than la the case with other staple farm crops. The reason for this is that the farmer's income is distributed throughout the year more evenly than is the case in many other sections, and because the direct Investment in the crop consists more of the farmer's own labor and leas of puftfcated material and qulpmant than la the case in many other crops. Qot Book Prom Congressmen. The year book, which la obtainable through coagreaalonal representatives • the department, contains much of Interest and value to producera. Including chapters on production costs and figures, financing and advice on production according t« maenai aupply and demand. HUBBY'S VALUE >1, SAYS WILL Now York Woman Calle Heipmata "Worthless". and Leavee ;%» ,t_; 8mai1 Bequeat. Nejr York.---"I giro and bequeath to John Klaua ot the said town of Mount Pleasant, my worthleas husband, the sum of $1." Thus read the will of Mm Caroline Klaus, just filed for probate In White Plains. Surrogate Slater stated the testatrix left an estate valued at $5,000, which will be divided among her children, grandchildren and distant relatives, Mrs. Klaus wab an old resident of Hawthorn^, in Mount Pleasant township. She referred to her bushand In this one clause only. CAVE MAN OF THE ORIGINAL TYPE » Wife Charges Him With Series %,m ef Forgotten Crimea* Human Enigma In Jail In New Jersey to New .llwpsrf far Shooting for Whiah Half-Bfwthor giiffi y; SOntenoe, i:'^'^^|(i(iBi|dda.--Like a both In appearance and ilk his rebellion against aodety, like a Boblaon Crusoe U) his self-aoAdency, with aomethtng of a cave man's characterstlcs la hla dlaregard of clothes and comforts, William Ware, dragged from his cave near 8tratfcrd, N. J., la an enigma In Camdan county jail. Qe is a veritable human riddle, the aotution of which may mean the unraveiiQf -oc a numbor of long-forgotten crime myatwies ln N4w Jersey ranging from potty thievery to heinous outragea. . Moat of tha aUegaOqna mt crime against Ware of the wood* are made by his wife. > For aome time the county authori- Itiea had been receiving complaints from farmers of a "wild man" who terrorised them and their women folk, although no specific acts were alleged againat him. When they saw Mra. Ware she ahowed them a latter ahe had begun, setting forth the complaints her husband. Amongs the things she alleges is that about eight years ego Ware shot a man, but eluded detectives. Bis half-brother, a man named Hlnkle, was blamed and served a sentence for the shooting. She also avers her husband had some connection with a Jewel robbery, 18 years ago, in which the jewala were afterward recovered from an Underground cache. She is, however, weak on details. Her husband, she said, was the brother of John Ware, the first man haagad M JalL William Ware is Intelligent and taika *elL He aaya ha la no criminal and re» »nta being taken to jail, although ha did not eOter phyalcal resistance. He wore only trouaers and shoes when they found Mm. In his cave. The hair on his chest la two Inches long and few chimpanzees can boast more furry fin at i ma His torso and upper arms bulged with great muscles. He ia one of the moat akltlfu! wieidera of an ax among tho woodamen of aouth Jer- . • ft. An Improved Highway in Muskingum County, Ohio. ;ra of- the of federal-aid highways. The plan was preaeated to enable the board to proceed authoritatively with Its work of devising aids for schools and colleges to which road-bulldera country are turning far highway engineers. Aggregate Coat UtOOOiOOOyOOO. Official* of the bureau place the aggregate cost of the federal-aid program alone at about $8,000,000,000, spread over the twenty-year period. They base this estimate on an average cost of $17,000 per mile. The a verage cost, In turn, takes into consideration all classes of Improved roadways from the cheapest to the most expensive types. Approximately one-third of the proposed system, or 09^000 railea of improved highways, already are either built or building. The program la a new one. Up to main lines of highway communication between centers and thousands of miles of feeder roads, rsaohing back into the more sparsely settled regions and Into the rich agricultural socHooa, to tap areas whose population and products will flow over the aew system. New roads will^he planned and built --thousands of miles of them--where they will fit in most advantageously with the entire program. The bureau is continuing its reaearch work Into most efficient methods Of road lng, including the character and lng power of materials, raalatlng qualities of varying sub-soils, ate,, and has amassed a considerable store of valuable information all of which will be available for the highway engineer of tomorrow, whom the board Is seeking to ^iave educated In practical and modern methods. FEEDING PUMPKINS TO COWS JHuMng Fluid Foor Fall Blaar, Maasir-Waleots Nowackl knew that something was wiong with him when "his stomach began to burn,'* according to the atery ha told tha South end police. He bought what ha thought was ft bottle of vinegar from a neighboring grocery store and later used some of the contents to season hla supper, investigation showed that the fluid he> had swallowed was a washing fluid aad a operation. Truth In Statement That Wortt an Animate^ Kidney*--; Proved by Tests. For feeding cows, 2.5 tons of pump- Una, with seeds In, are the equal of one ton of corn silage. Some folks aay that pumpkin seeds will cause cows to gp dry, or that they will work on animals' kidneys, and hence the pumpkin seeds should not be fed. There is no truth in such statements, aa has been proved by feeding tests. On the other hand, pumpkin seeds are beneficial. When fed to pigs they free the pigs of worms and put the digestive apparatus in tip-top shape. An excess of seeds causae an upset of the digestive organs for a day or ao, because the seeds are very rich. There Is no danger, though, if fed In the amounts In which they occur naturally. For feeding pigs pumpkins are sometimes cooked, but this extra work is not warranted. Squashes can be fed to cows, pigs and horaes the same aa pumpkina. Some Colorado stockmen make a practice of fattening pigs exclusively on squashes, and get good return per acre from the crop, but the pofk baa an objectionable yellow color. Horaes will somettmee refuse. to oat pumpkins or squaahee. PUN TO STORE VEGETABLES SEEK MISER'S HIDDEN G0U) Search era. Encouraged by Finding Small Sums Hoarded, Upeet Farm in Missouri. scouring the farm of William Schohe, seventy-nlne-year old ratfaaa. who recently committed suicide, fbr hidden wealth. Schone was reported to be wfcalthy and distrustful of bank* The aeawhera were encourq^ped by several recent findings. Wiltiam Meers purchased a cupboard from the administrator lor $1 and after taking It home found $560 bidden in It. He turned the monay over to the administrator. The other duy three asr found two cana in Schone's shed. One contained US Md tho utter $S2 and $700 in ehocka. In a wooden beat $270 was vS-': Die-Sinking an Ancient Alt •'2r.Uloqf dje-ate*mg w*a Vartteed^ n Greece by Pyrgoteiaa In *35 He Buries $1,350 in Jar; fVofms Dine; Cash Gone Toledo, O.--Two years ago, Pete Pullos, railroad section foreman, became worried over national financial conditions and withdrew his life's savings, $1,- 350, from a local bank and burled It in an earthen jar. The other day Pullos decided the banks were all right again, and dug up the jar. In the bottom of the partly disintegrated receptacle was a mass of bill fragments, chewed by worms. Pullos hurried to a downtown fenitft with the remnants of his fortune, where expert handlers tried to patch up the pieces, but to no avail. GIVE PRIZE DOG NEW GLANDS /Clock Wound hy iik a chu*ch <**k \ ?xt~. by the atmospheric by the heat ef the if 3s.';,, ' Induced f "Alibi Billy," Winner at 81 Haa Operation te Qlve Him New Life Leaaa, Tfcytorville. BL--Attbi;Bllly,* beagle hound and winner Id fifty-eight dog shows in the central west, has another lease on youth and another claim to fame as the result of an operation for the transplantation of glands. In the opinion of local dog fauclers he is one of the first prize dogs to share with man this new mode of rejuvenation. "Alibi BlUr" Is owned by W. A. Pow* ell of Taylorville. He is twelve year* old and that in the realm of dogdom la more than middle-aged. Because his twelve years have given *h!m a rank in bench and field track shows that la said to be second to none In his class, his owner secured s surgeon and had the operation performed. It Is believed 1* will be successful* Pre per Arrangement Meana Saving of Money for Faim»r-r illneee la Fltakf:^' l*roper* storage of vegetables lueana saving In expense for farmers and for town people, but vegetables will not keep through the winter nn less some attention Is given to the way and place In which they are stored. The common storage Is the house cellar. The first consideration should be cleanliness when storing perishable fdods," and all left-overs from the year before, rubbish and old sawdust should be removed and the cellar aired and scrubbed before putting in new vegetables. Roots or tubers are better when kept on slats placed a few Inches above the basement floor as this allows the air to circulate freely and psfcvents early rot MARKET HOME-SHOWN FEEDS Department of Agriculture Says One " T Beet Methods la Through yJi % G*»d °»«nr Cows, • f; One of the beat methods of marketing home-grown feeds la through good dairy cows, aays the United States Department of Agriculture. It dlfplays in a convincing manner the results that come from giving JMl foad fo different herds. ' * The results show that: If you sell feeds to dairy cows' you have a constant market. If you sell feeds to high-producing dairy cows you hare at «»od and constant market. If you sell feeds to purebred, highproducing dairy cows you have a double market--a market for caivee and a market for milk. That it pays to know whether a cow is a good, poor, or high producer la showp by records of cow-testing associatmift. In one association the poorest cow produced in a year only enough income over coat of feed to buy a 2-cent stamp. To pay for labor and overhead expenses her owner had only the manure, skim milk, and calf. To get rid of such cows is one of the principal objects of cow-testing clatlons. \ Springfield.--Reports WOOL PRODUCED III INDIANA One Is Justified in getting tired of mHh excuses for himself to himself. • jf? USEFUL GIFT FOR CHRISTMAS Agriculturist Suggests Slsd ef Purebred Plga, Calves and Chickena. v A Kansas agriculturist has suggested a new kind of Christmas present far farm boys and girls. He thinks ft would be a good stunt for Santa Claua to bring a sled load of purebred plga, calves and chickens and leave them for children along with the dolls, red trains, skatea, drums and other toys. Purebred poultry farms are often started from a trio ef chickens, and valuable hards of cattle from a calf. * 1 ' Demonstration Work In Montgomery County Credited for Big Increase |n Yield. Demonstration work In sheep breeding has had a marked effect on wool production In Montgomery county, Ind., as is shown by the fact that In 1918, 10,000 pounds of wool were produced in the county, while in 1921 the sheep breeders' association alone pooled and marketed more than six carloads. On a tour of farms on which sheep breeding and feeding demonstrations were being conducted in 1921, under direction of the county agent, 38 automobiles were required to accommodate the people interested, while In 1918, on a similar tour, only 6 were needed. DUCKS FOR EGG PRODUCTION Qlve Them Dry Mash of Wheat Bran, Middlings or & round Oats, Corn. - meal and Scraps. Ducks for egg production, are fed a dry mash of two parts of wheat bran, one part of middlings or ground oats, one part of 'cornmeal and one part of beef scraps. Give them sll the green feed they will clean up. Keep water deep eoough to cover the haak feature them all the time; also grit. . Save Steps on Farm. OsrefUl arrangement of bulldtnga on the farm means the saving s nMfty stepa during the year. If you have to walk 100 yards extra distance In doing chorea night and 'morning, it makes a tetal at mere than 40 • year. 0<B#aal advancement of farm work l _ Klirtfme of the yetr are most ogtlnll> ***• according to the semi-monthly crop notea for Illinois, Issued by the Illinois Co-Operative Crop Reporting service. Conditions have been favorable for the gathering up of the corn crop, and the quality of the crop now in Illinois com cribs will rate with the best on record. The movement of new corn to market is light, as farmers are Inclined to hold for higher prices or for feeding purposes. November rains have noticeably improved and evened the winter wheat crop which started unevenly. The crop will go Into the winter in a much better condition than wa8 at first expected. Live stock reports from over the state continue to be favorable, and feeding ifratl""* are gaining, particularly in the northern half of the state. Chicago.--The Illinois bonus for exservice men went over with 365,142 votes to spare. This definite and final announcement was made possible by the completion of the ofllclal ennvass to Cook county and the certification of tho vote to Secretary of State Emmereon by County Clerk Sweitxer. Under the law providing for the bonus it was required to receive a majority of the •OtO cast for legislative candidates In tho state. The total vote for candl- Sates for the legislature was 1,711345. 09"this basis the bonus had to go over by at least 855,673. The total vote in favor of the bonus was 1,220,815 and ttis "no" vote totaled only 500,781. This gave a clear majority of 719,934 of all the votes cast on the question and 865,142 mora than the required majority of the total vote cast for legislative candidates. Springfield.--The first offldal meeting of the Illinois soldier bonus board was held in Governor Small's office, with the governor, State Treasurer Miller and Adjutant General Black, the members in attendance. The commission, Which is to distribute the $55,000,- 000 bond Issue among Illinois war veterans. began by receiving the formal report of the state canvassing board, officially establishing the enactment of the bonus measure. Governor Small was elected chairman; Adjutant Gen oral Black, secretary, and Palmer Ed Brands, assistant past commander of Blackhawk (Chicago) post of the AflMricun Legion, chief clerk and executive officer of the board, which Chen took up some of the preparatory do-4 tills of its task. Champaign.--The Illinois State Horticultural society will hold Its sixty seventh annual convention here December 19-21. An exhibit of fruits is to be held In connection with the meet lng. Tho program Includes C. I. Lewis of tho American Fruit Grower Magazine, J. H. Gourley of Ohio, A. L. Quaintance of the United States Department of Agriculture and several other national authorities on horticultural subjects. Taylorville.--Henry Bodendeck and Kdward Zimmerman, prtiprletors of garage here, have appealed to the Su preme court from a ruling of the III! nois Industrial commission and Circuit court, which gave Mrs. Mary Morris $5,000 damages for the death of her son, Basil. It Is alleged that the youth was fatally burned by a gasoUne explosion while In their employ. The owners say the boy waa playing with a lighted match. Carbondale-- According to Superintendent W. Atwlll of the St Louis division of the Illinois Central railroad, the road will double-track its line from East St. Louis to Carbondale. Mr. At will said tracks were being extended along the line at various places, and that these would be connected up for a double-track system next spring. Chicago.--The International State bank, here, with $100,000 capital and $59,000 deposits, according to the latest statement, was closed "temporarily, pending the examination of books," by H. S. Savage, chief bank auditor of Cook county. Springfield.--State mine union officials have aligned themselves with the state federation of labor In opposing the adoption of the proposed new state constitution which is to be voted on the 12th of this month. Rock Island.--An estimate submitted to congress asks an appropriation of $1,100,000 for Improvement work on the Missisippl river in the Bock Island district from the Missouri river to Minneapolis for 1924. Pittsfleld.--Work win soon start on a new waterworks system here, for which bonds to the smount of $55,000 were voted recently. The measure carried by a vote of 1,057 to 71. Chicago.--Strawoerrtes from Florida were ottered Chicago buyers Thursday at $2.50 to $8 a quart, a price said not to be unusual for the first of the season. Aurora.--I'htns have been drawn for a proposed home for iuvenllea, to he erected soopt at « cost of about fSOt 000. Decatur.--A library that has been growing for more than 100 years Is being sold by its owner, Mrs. M. A. De Forrest of Decatur. One thousand volumes, some dating hack to the Sevententh century, and many others to the first decade of the Eighteenth, are being disposed of by Mrs. DeForrest. It represents the selections of four generations. The founder was Mra, M. A, Ltah, mother of Mra. DeForrest. Durand.--Erection of a large plant' here for the drying of whole milk is to be started soon. A new process will be employed. Sterling.--A quilt that Is to servo as a memorial to the men of Whiteside county who were In the military service during the World war has been made by the Lincoln Community Sewing club of Sterling. It bears the names of all of Whiteside county's service men, 1,765 of them. McLean.--Hie McLean County R»"vers* federation, which is to be affiliated with the Illinois bankers' association,"| has been organised at McLean. Tho chairman Is Frank Aldricfa of the Mo- Lean State bank, and Joseph Keonnn ef Leroy la It is a phyaWaa's pramiplMU. Swamp-Bso* is a slrHHg «m. It halpa the k*hrt9*n der do ths •houM do. Swamp-Root has stood tha last of mm It Is sold bjr all droggista on its nwnt iuM it should help yon. No Site ftidaay --dl cm* haa so many frienda. Be mra to gst SwaoqtiRssk aad •: tweiuwut at once. Howvvsr, if you wiak in* te test this peat preparartion wad tan mats to 9r. KiW 4 Co., Bhghsmhm, N. a •aispls bottle. Whan wtftia£ho j WMsitton this paper.---Ad That Theory Wont Da. A humorist remarks that In view ot the tarn a woman makes over a mouse, he Is inclined to believe the "serpent** Eve said she saw nothing but an apple thing wrong with this an apple worm certainly one. to eat the apple.- scrtpt. The Cutleura Toilet TfUa Having cleared your ski by making Cutleura your aswpMtay toilet preparations. The 8oapto dpfcme and purify, the Ointment In •li«l|Mf unit heal, the Talcum to powdsr fume. No toilet table Is without them.--Advertlsemsnt. ^ Setter. " % "He stm has the first dollar ho ov# made." "Well, that's better than having n collector sitting on your doo <tep wmtt^ lng for the next one you're gnfig make." ' " bottle ot Important te Examine carefully CASTORIA, that famous old for Infants and children, aad aae that It Bears the Signature of In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Cxtoiis When They're Read in Court. Willis--What do divorce suits provoT# Glllis--That we all foolishly wo are original, and yet every fellow writes the same kind of love DYED HER BABY'S COAT, A SKIRT AMD CURTAINS' 1 , WITH "DIAMOND 0VES? Each psafage of "Diamond DfmT eontaint diraetkas so simple aay -- dye or tint her old, won, ft aew. Evea if she has aster 4. ahe eaa pat a new, rich eofor late i skirt*, « sweaters, everything. Bur Pi>nwa3 P>m no' aaftesd. Just teB year dt^gfit the material yoa wwh to dye is dk, or whether, it is Ham, ea Blind goods. Diamei ' ~ nde or run.--A Elephant Brand. > "He speaks of my aiabastar hWW I don't understand him." "He your Ivory dome, girlie."--Judge. Only those who are poets soup of sausage skewers. A cat has nine livea, and a ent voice for each on^ dUferi ay*# <£.-.3c *5*6*7**8 Ii. Poaglaa ahoea are PKAPSE Iw MtpeMlasIr O^d^fhMB wafts Ms MMSkt to iw warn ma Add ifcMB INIBMF IW fastest atosvalamflw tLP0Pcuspgi» Uses "Cutt«rs Scrums aad Vscctoeeteis dufas ka bat to IF TOUR VHERMARIAHS^ The Cutter Laboratory Th» laUrtttrj tk*t C (U.S.Lc*a*c> CtlU*nU» NO DYE laal tMiki a 0*H0 9-Saa Watt CWw S»1or»c--t«f* M a ma* m* Nnte. M aU cmS Wa,m

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