McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 29 Mar 1923, p. 6

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^ * ,-S>' -Wfsis* £>i-j- * M ? V\' * 'V . •• >ii kf?' Marriage and Divorce Laws Must Be Identical in All States of the Union- ' fcj SENATOR ARTHUR CAPPER, of Kansas. , " *V ; v::For a long time I havs watched with alarm the p6wing marriage and divorce evil. Divorce laws generally need reform, but the first and most vital question is that the laws in all states should be identical. The American Bar association considers this a necessary legal reform aside from any merits of the question of making divorces easier or mora difficult , _ The General Federation of Women's Clubs believes that the laws should be uniform and that at the same time the grounds for divorce and laws for lliarrying should be made more conservative. So I was quite glad to introduce the bill which was prepared at the direction of the federation by Jirs. Edwards Franklin White, deputy attorney general of Indiana. At the outset I am not prepared to state v|hat I favor all of the of the bill, but it is & fair begwning and from it we should get reasonable, sane and safe nation-wide law. , The legislation is designed to prevent hasty and foolish marriages I' jjnfl to make divorce more difficult. The age at which girls and boys may ijtoarry with consent of the ^parents is fixed at sixteen years for girls and •ighteen years for boys. The age at which girls and boys may marry without consent of the parents is fixed at eighteen and twenty-one years, respectively. Marriage is forbidden of the feeble-minded and of those -afflicted $^th epilepsy, insanity or communicable diseases; of blades and whites, of ' ^Mongolians and whites and of those within the first degree of blood yelationship. Application for marriage must be made by one of the parties to the prospective marriage two weeks before issuance of the license. Both parties must present affidavits certilying that they are not afflicted with Communicable disease and are normal mentally. The application must be posted in the office of the clerk and in his ; public record. Two witnesses in addition to the one who performs ths •eremony must be present at every marriage. n Marriages must be reported in the county and In the state in which they take place. Penalties are attached for infraction of this law. Divorce will likewise be safeguarded under the terms of the proposed V law. Enforcement and application of this law ia left to the state courts k and their machinery. No new federal bureau is created by the legislation^ The idea is not to make divorce easier--only to make marriage safer for the young, to insure the children of the future better health and heredity and to prevent hasty and ill-considered marriages. Mel Facte AMjpgjiaM >•» af _Fire ThatvliiirWlSw to Many Reads** • Bm you seen the sun? It Sfctonds a silly question, doesn't It? Yet, la spite of the great heat aad glare of light which we receive from the flaming center of our universe, the fact remains that no living creature has ever'seen the sua. What we do see la the "photosphere," the outer layer of Incandescent clouds which surround the sun's vast orb. Each of these white-hot clouds seems to be some 500 miles in diameter and to float In a medium which is darker compared with them. Outside the photosphere' comes the "reversing layer," about a thousand miles thick, and above that again, the "chromosphere," which -is. perhaps 5,000 miles in thickness. This last Is a sea of leaping, bl axing gas, so hot that we simply cannot imagine a temperature so terrible. The photosphere is visible to our eyes through the chromosphere. It might be supposed that when a "spot" occurs upon the sun's disk-- and of late there have been some very large ones--we might then get a glimpse at the real surface of the sun. But astronomers tell us that we never can see through the series of concentric shells which envelop the central body down to the more solid body which is tlie real sun. Everything connected with the sun is staggeringly big. Those little dark sunspots which you peer at cautiously through the medium of a smoked glass are, most of them, many thousands of miles across. ^One was measured and found to have a diameter of 143,000 miles--which means that our whole planet could have been pitched Into it like a golf ball into a large water. a midsummer day we are apt complain of the heat, yet the amount of the sun's heat -which reaches this planet is siniply infinitesimal. Perhaps the best, way to put It is this: Suppose the sun's heat to be worth $25,000,000, the amount of his fortune he bestows on us is one Cent--Louisville Courier-Journal. 7; * into pail of / On to con TILE OFMCKMtO 'pcppoc?^jasg5a«as»sa5Mg5g5gs2Sgs^s7ffWffq?s?gq?^.g5252Sa Jon Talked Yourself Into Being Arrested. Now You Can Tell It to the Judge - 4 By WILLIAM ULLMAN, in Motor IM± §§ "Ton talked yourself into being arrested! ~ " The offioar, cool, collected and capable, and standing of driver weaknesses and human failings, first wanted to look at your permit to drive and then to remark incidentally upon the speed .you were making. You ignored the demand for the permit, reached for your business card instead, intending to frighten him with your name, meanwhile declaring that you weren't speeding. Hie officer thought otherwise, so you started to argue with him. Then, borrowing from a popular cartoon, • is where you made your big mistake. Ton unloosened your tongue to some considerable extent. The cop -was silent for the time and apparently doubtful--and humble enough • .in bis manner. Tou felt that your superior intelligence had prevailed ; antil the officer suddenly straightened up and said: M0h, well, if this is to be an argument about your speed, let's not try to settle it out here in the street. Suppose yon meet me in the court tomorrow morning at nine o'clock apd well tell our story and kit the judge decide the matter." Resting Weather. Storms are more often i» our minds than In the air. This winter season is rather nature's quiet holiday, a vacation that will bear its fruit In more active seasons to come. Frost to tear at the rocks, Ice to rub gravel down, melting snow and flooding rain to spread the life-containing loam over and through the earth's clay--any student can tell of these. The immortal life of*our world pursues its way in the calm of winter, though more withdrawn from sight, just as in the leaping Joy of spring. •' And, as always, beautiful beyond knowledge or deserving. It is our eyes that are dull ito winter, not the sky or land. Lavender of snow shadows, purple of maple buds, laced designs of tree trips living gray against the clouds, oak trunks coal black above melting Ice. pointed firs like jade carvings over sunlit snow, the holy pearl and. silver of late misted sunrise and the flaring red of sunsets wind-blown along the western hills, the winter days move over our world In beauty as the stars across the sky. --Collier's Weekly. /uat •• Beneficial and Productive ef Reeuita as in Field d Owr dr%Potatoea. 'rile drainage is just as beneficial and pred&tQve of results in the average farm orchard as In the field of corn or potatoes. The orchard soil, we find, needs aerating and ventilating just as any other soli, and tiling renders the rootbed all the more retentive of needed moisture, so necessary to the fruit In the growing season, says a writer in Successful Farming. Wet soils are cold soils and ofter^sour, neither of which produces the best of apples, peaches or pears. Cultivating the wet soil about the roots of- the trees Is just as damaging as plowing the wet soil about ' he roots of corn or potatoes for the time being and certain weeds are difficult of eradication In the orchards where It is too wet to work the ground. None of the orchards set in the past have long remained in good, thrifty ([rowing order wh&n planted on poorly drained soil. So many we have known to select a high clay spot on the farm close to the residence for their orchard and then get such poor results many times because the soil itself was wet and poorly drained. It seems that surface drainagS might be sufficient in one way since no water will stand on the surface about the trees, but It is that wet, dammy, cold clay about the roots that absorbs and holds the water which does the damage. The ideal orchard soil Is that in which the water Is either moving 'ip or down every day in the year. In wet weather the rain or melting snow water seeps readily down to underground drains. In dry weather cap illary action has become well established and the soil water is coming up to feed the trees from vast storage ^basins underground. In the wet, clammy, undrained rootbed the water Ineither moves up or down except In very limited quantities. For some reason the wet, undrained Soil beeomes practically closed to successful capillary action. It absoros just so much water In times of flood and will not admit another drop. There is a mistaken notion abroad that tile drainage removes much plant food from the soil. We find the welldrained soil if anything becomes more fertile and productive with each passing season. The point disputed seems to be that the drainage in removing surplus water from the land fit. Splendid Animtf tldl Worth His .•a When All the Manufacturers Engaged in a Given Industry Combine . v -'fit. By WILLIAM HAYWA&D, U. S. Attorney, New < While some features of the trade association are genuinely bsna* ficial to their respective industries, most of their activities, such as the open-price system, price-fixing and numerous others, have resulted in gouging the public, particularly in the building industries, out of millions of dollars annually. When all the manufacturers engaged in a given industry combine they •n unquestionably in a position arbitrarily to exact whatever price they may demand. The public is helpless, particularly in a situation where the tariff prevents competition from abroad. Judge Knox's decree concerning the Gypsum Industries association is unique in the respect that it practically destroys the trade association and its regular weekly or monthly meetings, at which opportunities were afforded for open or illicit price-fixing by the group, for arrangements for the curtailment and limitation of production, and for devising many other abuses that have resulted from such trade association meetings. "All Their Eggs in One Basket." Of all the multitudes of salmon that run up the rivers of Alaska and the Northwest coafSt, not one ever goes back to the sea. Their business is to reproduce their species and die. They do not spawn in the rivers. Those whlCh escape capture on their way up ascend to the headwaters, where there is usually a lake--perhaps several lakes. They do not spawn In the lakes. For that purpose they seek streams that flow Into the lakes, and there deposit their eggs, scooping out nests In the gravelly bottom with their fins. Andrew Carnegie said that he believed in the policy of putting all of one's eggs in one basket, and then "everlastingly watching that basket." It Is, in effect, what the salmon do, guarding the eggs and the young hatched from them until the latter are big enough to take care of themselves. There are many predatory enemies to be feared. Weliiit Death in CltfttH W OHtaly, but Succeeded In Saving Life : of Hia Owner. In front of a rough cabin In Wyoming there Js a sodded, well-kept little grave with a headboard that carries thia legend: BEAR PAW MIKES THE GAME ST DOG THAT EVEB LIVED What a splendid tribute to poor old Mike, a man's dog with the heart of a lion! It was his master, a guide named Jake, that composed the epitaph, and we uon't doubt that he wrote It with tears in his eyes, for, says Mr. Edward Ferguson in Outing, the dog gave his life to save his master from an infuriated grizzly. Jake and the dog had traveled pec-;, haps half the cut In Boxwood eanytui t one bitterly cold day when a malev .grizsly ambled round in front of them. On one side of the trail the wall of the canyon rose 200 feet, on the other side of the trail was a sheer drop of 500 feet. The bear was less, than SO feet away. Stopping short, be looked at the man and the dog and growled ominously. Jake lifted his gun and pulled the trigger. Nothing happened. He attempted to throw another cartridge into the chamber, but the mechanism refused to work. Then he knew; the action was frozen! The bear hesitated only an instant before he charged, but In that brief time Mike jumped to meet him and tore open his cheek; then In a flash he slipped round him and made a vicious slash at his flanks. The bear turned, but as he did so Mike scrambled between him and the cliff, and again attacked his flanks. Once more the bear turned, and once more Mike dodged him, barely escaping. The bear was now between the man and the dbg. Jake, who had finally freed the' mechanism of his rifle, stepped forward to be sure of his shot, slipped and fell heavily to one knee. The fall knocked the rifle from his hands, and he 'saw it disappear over the edge of the trail. For a moment he could hardly breathe. Then he scrambled to his feet. "Get him, Mike, get him!" he yelled. At the sound of his voice the bear, which now was Infuriated, turned to attack him. But Mike shot by him and took his stand in front of his master. Then the grizzly reared and started for both of them. "Mike!" Jake shouted. The dog hunched himself and sprang; his paws landed on the bear's chest, and his mouth closed over the creature's lower jaw. The Impact threw the grizzly off his balance, and with his paws closed in a crushing grip round the dog's toody he toppled over on his side. Jake closed his eyes. Dog and bear rolled over twice; but with ail his fast-ebbing strength the dying dog tried to tighten his grip. The second lunging roll brought them to the edge of the trail; the snow crumpled under their weight, and dog and bear, still" locked in their death gripe, crashed to the. rocks below. Mike b^d saved his master's life. cam* no im NEW YORK--Miss Mabel Gray-of New York is to be the next American girl to obtain a British title. Announcement is made of her engagement to Viscount Exmouth, who until recently was Prof. Charles Ernest Peilew of Columbia university, plain American citizen. Professor Peilew, who gained the right: to the title upon the recent dettfh of his father In Washington, will go to England shortly to have his rank confirmed and take his seat in the house of lords. He will take his bride with him. When Miss Gray, who Is a daughter of the late Richard Gray, formerly she had ij$$ltle." A* the title held by a y«ap|g^|hpM|man and there was no pro^ifltheAmerican branch of the However, this J$apithraan died, and Henry Edward P^Me# of Washington became VSscettnt Exmouth. He was ninety-four yttoi old and died a short time later. TWh his son became -dacount and Miss Gray learned she waa to become a noblewoman. Professor Pelley, who now joins the small group of other American citizens who are noblemen in the peerages of* England, Scotland or Ireland, was bora in N£w York and was graduated from Columbia in 1884. He was for many years professor of chemistry at Colombia university and married Miss Margaret W. Chandler, daughter of Prof. Charles F. Chandler of Columbia. She died a year ago. In recent years toe has been prominent In the chemical Industry. 7'W Professor Peilew has one daughter# Miss Anna Craig Peilew. Oldest Preacher Has New Lincoln Story •JUTUSKOGEE, OKLA.--Charles W. eihs> on® hundred and five years old, who lives on a farm with his son, Ed Ellis, a few miles north of Ada, Oklahoma, is the oldest preacher in the world, so far as is lutfBp. Etlls Is a preacher In the Nazare&e church and took, part this winter In a series of revival meetings at Seminole. But mostly he whittles and plays with his great grandchildren. And what do you think Is the most precious memory of this one-hundred" and - five - year - old preacher? Why, nothing else than a chance meeting with President Abraham Lincoln. Ellis was a Civil war soldier under Gen. A. J.. Smith, and here's the story as Ellis tells it: "During a lull in the fighting some of us were assigned to cut down trees for firewood. I was busy chopping when a tall, gaunt man wearing whiskers came up, accompanied by several officers, Including General Smith. I rested my ax a moment and saluted, .not knowing the man in civilian clothes was Lincoln. I was amazed when this tall, sad-faced man came smilingly to me and said: *' 'Would you mind letting me have that ax for a minute? I bavent cut a tree down In years.' T handed over the ax, and the tall man got busy at once, sinking the blade deep into a large tree. I could see he was an expert, for he made the chips fly, and was soon half way through. Then he handed the ax back) to me, thanking me quietly and remarked that he hadn't forgotten his old trade after all. When the party) turned to go, General Smith revealed the chopper's identity. 1 decided the beat thing I could do would be to finish Lincoln's job. So I went to the other side of his tree and cut through until it fell. Abraham Lincoln and Charles Ellis cut down that tree. I never saw Lincoln again. "Lincoln must have had muscles at Iron. I was a muscular man and a good woodsman, but I admit he could chop a tree down faster than I could.* gSZSaSZSgSZSZSaSgSZSaSg5g5a5aSB5Z5H5Z5a53SaS25gg2S2SZSgS25ZSgSZSg5gSZ5 Where Is One "Bad Egg" There Are Hundreds and Thousands of Good Ones -: "l|anufacture Have you aver stopped to consider the millions of honest, intelligent, home-loving, God-fearing, hard-working men and women who up the citizenship of this land; men and women who by words and deads are waking this country and the world a better plaoe in which to |hre? And this is the best old world any of us haffe ever lived in. a i Wherever there is one "bad egg" in society or in the business world, whether among capital or labor, there ire hundreds and tlumMmfa of good and wholesome ones. Wherever there are found wasters, murderers, robbers and petty thieves and grafters^ihere are thousands who are the salt of the earth, Bpbuilders of humanity and business. Wherever there is found one who live^ as a leech on hnmenity then as* thousands who ait apbailders of society, and for others as they would be done ^y. Believe It or Not. There is no use our pretending to be, the honest fact is we are not sufficiently acquainted with the . ways of married folk to know whether the following old clipping states a truth or not. Anyway, we are going to print tt: "Women who want their husbands to care for them should never cry. A homely woman looks pretty and attractive when she laughs at a man's faults; a pretty woman looks homely when she cries over them. This Is selfish, no doubt, but look among any Sof your married acquaintances and you 'will find that the woman whose husband thinks the most of her Is the one Who laughs where other women would cry."--Boston Transcript. Wei 1-0rained and Productive Orchard. also removes much potash and phosphorus soluble In this surplus water. A porous, well-drained soil, we find, becomes much like a great carbon or charcoal filter, and any elements removed by cropping are readily reabsorbed fro#) the wafer which may bring any new supply along. Nature unlocks the elements for the roots of our orchard trees but permits very small amounts, if any, to escape through any artificial drain we may construct. This plant food absorbed from surface fertilizers and manures la quickly combined and locked Into the subsoil combinations before it has any chance to escape. By draining our orchard soil we deepen the roottfod and give our trees a bigger, better feeding ground. St Lots* Wffl Soon Be All Dolled Up BEST LOCATION FOR ORCHARD •ite Should Have No Rock Ledges or Hardpan Over Surface and Be Well Drained. The' orchard must be on a good site with no rock ledges or hardpan over the surface, well drained and without unusual danger from frosts; the trees must, have good vitality, without decayed trunks, <^fckei>; that girdle the limbs, or weakness that would make good growth impossible; and, finally, the varieties must be good unless it is practicable to tof-graft the trees. Something Like That. ft was Tommy's turn to read aloud. .He came to the sentence, "Silence reigned in the house." 'Now," said the teacher, **can yon describe silence?" Tommy thought for a minute, and then said, eagerly: "Yes, teacher, I know; It's' what yon don't hear tohsn you listen." Alonzo B. See, New York Manufacturer.--The young women of the waited States do not need to be educated, but the education they do need is to leave off smoking cigarets, stop using slang, stop their swaggering, five up their bold and brazen manner, their paint and their powder, and their lipsticks and their high heeled shoes and to cease to dress indecently Of all fool things in the world I think the college for women is the worst. t > * (Ota. Jefa| 3. Pershing.--The World war demonstrated beyond a doubt that as one of its component parts an army of the future must pos- «sas an up-to-date, adequate, efficient highly trained fir force. The War LIME-SULPHUR KILLS SCALE Tee Many Grower* Are Careleaa Application and Insect Qeta Con. eiderable Start. In India Ink. So-called India ink, an Indelible true black, la a Chinese preparation made from carbon and gums. The cuttlefish's fluid, ejected In the water to form a sort of "smoke screen" and conceal the fish from its enemies. Is the source of sepia, a warm brownish eolor. Certain compounds of copper yield beautiful shades of green. British Wireless In Africa. The British annual colonial report for - Gambia notes the completion of wireless telegraph and telephone stations in that colony at Bathurst and at McCarthy island, distant 176 miles. Ihese stations are intended tot internal communication, as the colony has no .SOpudseJ telegraphic wire system. Concentrated lime-sulphur, one part to eight parts of water, <bas been recommended for the control of scale, but too many growers are careless In the application and the scale gets a start Use either lime-sulphur or a good miseible oil. Bcalecide is a mlsdWe oil that la very effect!ve t* control of scale insects. Profit® in Grape Growing/ The profits in grape growing have been very large the past few years, and almost anvone with a vineyard has made a profit. The number of vineyards is increasing to supply the Increased demand. Airplanes Guided by (tittle." Guidance by radio Is as useful te airplanes as to ships. When Alcock, the Englishman, was about ready to hop off from the banks of Newfoundland, for what proved to be the first successful non-stop transatlantic flight, the question was asked where he expected to land on the other side of the sea. The reply was, "Clifden, Ireland." The aircraft disappeared, and the world awaited news. Throughout the flight no word came back from the ether over the Atlantic, as had been expected. The radio was listening instead of talking, keeping Its radio compass pointed in the direction of the powerful wireless signals sent out from Cllfden, on the Irish coast. So true was the guiding Influence of radio that In 16 hours and 20 minutes after the machine left the Canadian shore it flew directly over the |ofty wireless towers at Cllfden. The Atlantic had been crossed for the first time by a non-stop airplane, guided through clouds, fog and darkness by radio. Confirmed by Wire. Cte a^decidedly hot afternoon I was lounging about the house in comfortable but unpresentable array. The bell rang. I did not answer it, hoping the caller would think I was not at home. * e A few minutes later I went to the telephone and found that a particular friend was calling, one whom I would not antagonise tor worlds. "When did you get home?" stia Unthinkingly I exclaimed: "Why, I haven't been out of the house all afternoon!" "That's strange," she said frigidly. And the next few moments of confused explanation were the most embarrassing I can remember.--Chicago Tribune. In the Hereafter. A* small boy, when told by his Sunday school teacher that he would leave his body behind when he died, said in alarm, don't understand that." 'You see,", explained the teacher, "you will take all that la good with jon to the better land and leave all i that is naughty here on earth. "Oh!" lie exclaimed understanding^, and then, after a moment's thought, added soberly, "I gueBs I'm goin' to be pretty thin op .tfrere. teacher." ' . ^ ST. LOUIS, MO.--This city soon will enter upon an era of physical transformation and beautlflcation as a result of approval at the polls of twenty bond proposals calling for . the expenditure of $87,372,500. The dty will spend $16,000,000 In expanding Its civic center, now consisting of a Municipal courts buildlnff and city hall, occupying four blocks on the fringe of 4ts business district, by tearing down the business buildings upon nine 'other blocks and transforming the area into a memorial plaza for its who fell in the World war. ^ wilt erect In this plaza a memorial building costing $1,000,006, and on the borders of the plasa will construct m municipal auditorium seating 20,000 persons and costing $5,000,000, a new Civil courthouse to cost $4,000,000, a new city morgue, and a municipal power house costing $1,000,001). .It will create in front of Union station another plasa of two city blocks^ now occupied by unsightly business buildings. It will replace the gaa street Mifjbt system with a modern, cltywide electric system to cost $8,000,000. It will expend $14,450,000 to create a city-wide major street plan by the widening "of Its chief traffic arteries. It will expend $3,800,000 to acquire new parks and to expand the already extensive facilities of existent parks to give recreational advantages to a greater proportion of its population; $19,000,000 to extend Its sewer system to ah districts and reconatruct wornout portions; futwojaoo for an additional filtration pi*nt; $4,500,000 for the i iiiuiiStllOli Utefpbltc hospital facilities, an4 ^M®,^0O to lijypwgtritjft four public market bnHdlngsf Mamma, Marine and "Boa-Cons TDOSTON--Evans Spaulding has gone •D t0 London to stay and Mrs. Mary Evans Spaulding, society and club wohiun, is breathing more easily. Her good looking young captain of marines son is. temporarily at least, out of the tolls of "that boa-constrictor," Peggy Hopkins Joyce, thrice divorced star djf the stage, whose sudden visit to Boston nearly brought collapse to* Mrs. Spaulding. "I hope that terrible-tempered, wilful woman doesn't pursue by boy to London," Mrs. Spaulding said at her home in Manchester-by-the-Sea. "Her visit to Boston was entirely of her own volition. She Invited herself to our suite at the Copley-Plaza. I nearly had heart failure when I heard Evana say over the telephone: 'O, hello, PSisy. Tea, sure, come right up.' 'I asked Evans what on earth he meant by inviting her to our suite. He said : 'Well, mother. It's too bad and all that, but you know what Peggy Is. If we don't ask her up she'll wreck the hotel.' 'When She first met Evana ia Mew Prune in Dormant Seaaen. The pruning of fruit trees and small fruits may be done at any time during the dormant season. The fruiting characteristic of any plant should be borne la mind In pruning | the mm "Fossils Pound In •ffefk (Ml a farm at Detortailo, Spain, have found large deposits of animal fossils, reports the Scientific American. One complete, nieuSUrae 76 feet; another is a detached bead measuring about 86 feet Scientists have injected the find and regard it as most Important York she was marMed to Joyce. 1 made a special trip to New York. I asked her what she meant by going around with my son at a time when her divorce was the talk of the town. She told me she wasn't interested In Evans from a matrimonial viewpoint-- he didn't have money enough. I asked her to please show more consideration for both of aS, and Sbe flew into m dreadful temper and frightened me out of my wits." During the war young Spauldtng was a captain In the famous. regiment of marines and won two dta* tions for gallant conduct. "Meanest Man" Gets a J*3 Sentence SICK- /~*HICAGO--Evidently there Is not ^ much In a name. Anyway, alstent refusal of Samuel Fine, merchant living at 1648 Soutk field avenue, to contribute to port of his one-hundred ani old father, Hunya Fine, won appellation of "one of the me on earth*- In addition to a jali sentence from County J _ mund K. Jareckt Several court orders requiring Fine, who is fifty-five years old, to contribute $2 weekly to the maintenance of his aged parent were met with the reply: *1 am stck--I am sick--all the aotne one asks money-^What can I dor* Relatives assert that' ln addition to a'personal fortune estttaated at from $16 000 to $20,000, the man receives «j* income from the wages of two employed sons. Deputy sheriffs were forced to sepanti « various factions of the relatives. Complaint of Mrs. Agnes Kaufman, 3311 Crenshaw street, with whom the centenarian lives, made* to Assistant State's Attorney - Edward Huber, reculted In the Boa's citation for contempt of the support order and sobit sentence. Thirty days In die Oook comity Jail AoqM go a long way toward changing the disposition of almost any man. Normally, the sociologists claim, the change is for the worse. But they say tfeat no man ever comes out after Irty days in that famous Institution •ame as he went in. People in the room at the time of the trial expressed the belief that thirty daj« would necessarily Improve Fine's disposition, inasmuch aa tt cooldnt be worse. '

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