McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 11 Oct 1923, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

the Mchenry plaindealer, Mchenry, ill sf ILLINOIS BREVITIES mt Salem.--James Conley, the small son of Grover Conley, living south of this city, Is suffering from tlie amputation of one leg, which was cut off by a scythe in the hands of his grandfather. The boy was playing in a cornfield where his grandfather was working with the scythe. The corpx was so thick tliat the grandfather did not see the youngster until he had mowed him down. The sharp scythe severed the leg completely. Chicago.--Permits for construction of $27,874,700 worth of buildingsresidences, apartment buildings, office buildings, factories and other structures-- were issued during September, according to the report of Chief Plan Examiner Edward H. Nordlie to Building Commissioner^ Frank L. Doherty. A total of 1,269 new building projects were authorized. Woodstock.--If one thing Isnt the matter with a town it's another. In Woodstock it's trees. The trees along Woodstock streets have grown so large and rapidly that they are crippling the electric service in the city, City Electrician Sea grist has reported to the city council. Elgin.--Practically every farm In Kane county now carries a warning sign prohibiting hunting upon the premises. The Kane County Farmers' Protective association now claims the membership of every fanner of the community and will prosecute any violations. / Decatur.--Three masked bandits tied their soaked handkerchiefs over the faces of James C. Gunning and his two daughters, after tying them to chairs and beating them until they revealed the place of concealment of Jewels valued at $1,500. The robbers escaped. West Frankfort.--O. L. Masters, who graduated from the University of Illinois last June, is the only student from the university to secure a fellowship offered by the Society for American Field Service In French universities. He Is now studying law at the University of Bordeaux. Springfield.--In an effort to make the next attempted sale of $15,000,000 to $20,000,000 worth of Illinois soldier bonus bonds more attractive, Gov. Len Small has suggested the Interest rate of 4% per cent bonds be raised to 4% per cent. Geneva.--Mrs. Marie Swartz of Bfelvldere has filed a suit against the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad company for $30,000 damages for the death of her husband, George Swartz, who was knocked from the top of a 'moving train. Woodstock.--Rev. R. M. Guthrie, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, has received a call to West minster Presbyterian church of Rockford to succeed Rev. G. T. Liddell, who resigned. Galva. -- Residents of Galva and neighboring cities have' organized to form a summer resort company for tile purpose of opening a tract of 50 acres for amusement purposed • lake will be a feature. Pekln.--Missing for seven years, William Burton Oswald was declared legally dead In the Tazewell .county court He left home In 1916. The court made his wife administratrix of the estate. Springfield.--Executive board members of the Illinois Partner Grain Dealers' association, in a meeting here, selected February 6, 6 and 7 as the dates for the twenty-first annual convention, to be held at Peoria. Mount Vernon.--This city has been selected as the convention city for the Southern Illinois Older Boys' annual conference. The conference will open November 81, continuing until Decern- 2, Aurora.--Nearly $175,000 of the estate of the late Mrs. Clara A. Bowron will be available far the building and , equipping of an old folks' home, for which Mrs. Bowron provided in her will. Paris.--Fire which started In the haymow destroyed a large barn belonging to Joseph Dunlap in east Edgar county. Two mules, two horses and a Shetland poney were burned to death. Chicago>--Statistics compiled by the . Illinois Bell Telephone company indicated that at least 15,000 Chicagoans • changed their addresses Monday, annual fall moving day. Canton.--Alleging libel, Mrs. Nelfie Walters has filed suit against Mrs. Bertha Hunt, also of Canton, demanding damages in the sum of $15,000. The two are neighbors. jTreeport.--Northern Illinois Dental association will hold Its annual convention and clinic here October 17 and 18. Decatur.--TI1I3 city will entertain National Council of Women from Chicago.--While Chicago's new traffic tower signal system, which is now !n operation on Mlchigun boulevard, his been praised unstlntingly by numerous civic societies and city officials, the motorists, as a whole, are delivering broadsides of criticism against the system. The motoring public declares the tower light system has slowed OP traffic at least 25 per cent. Dixon.--The northwest division of the Illinois Tochers' association will hold its annual convention here October 19. About 1,500 teachers are expected to attend. The speakers will be Dr. G. M. Whipple, University of Michigan; Dr. Emmanuel Sternhelm, Albany, N. X„ and Dr. Jesse H. White of the University of Pennsylvania. Oregon.--A dead dog Is the cause of damage suits totaling $10,500 filed here. Charles CX Vogeler, former owner of the dog, Is defendant, and M. P. Kane, Katherine Kane rand Mrs. Bert Bailey are the plaintiffs. It Is charged Kane's car struck the dog and over turned, injuring Kane and the two women. Pecatonlca.---Suit for $10,000 damages has been filed against Milbura Bros., general contractors of Rockford, in behalf of the four children of Chris Arduser, who met death on a highway here In 1922. It Is alleged the contractors barricaded the road upon which they were working without placing signal lights to warn of danger. Bfoomington.--Central Illinois, has been favored with a tyjfnper crop of fruit. It was a familiar sight to sec the limbs of apple, peach and pear trees supported by long wooden props, the weight of the fruit threatening to break the branches. It has been many years since there was such a large yield of all varieties of fruit. La Villa.--La Villa has a high school today and high school teachers but no high school pupils. Just before the time for the opening of the school a bus line was started. SIGNORA CALDERARA LLOYD GEQR6E : IS E6G TARGET Irish Republican Outbreak Mats Welcome at r^ ;i'1. ;t$ New York. i'"i CROWN PRINCE GUSTAVUS K* HAS HB MISSION, HE SAYS Signorn CalUerara, wife of the new* ly appointed air attache of the Italian embassy in Washington, is the only daughter of the widowed Counts ess Gamba Ghlselli. She Is an enthusiastic flyer, having been the tint woman to fly In Italy. U. S. MARKET REPORT Weekly Warketgram by Bureau of Agricultural Economics. Washington.--For the week ending operating I Oct. e.--LIVE STOCK--Chicago prices: tthhwroiunvgihi TLoa Vvtillllpe aanndd ttoo Gurraayjs smlak e. I Hogs, top, $8.55; bulk of sales, $7.30^ medlum an<, g0od beef steers, *8.50 All of the high school students tooK bu I 12.00; butcher cows and heifers, $3.50 vantage of the bus line and went tol^jj^S; feeler steer., 14.404/8.65; llg-ht fhp firavslake school 1 medium weight veal calves. $6.50® Scp rinigfi enld .--iPLo.uitlAtrmytinMeni aan d hatch_ - "la-m75b;a . fa$t1 1l.a60m@b1s,3 .1*0U; .6y0e@ar1l3i.n6g0s;, fJe8e.d5l0n©* ery owners of Illinois will hold a siaif i u 00; fat ^wes |3.75@6.75. meeting here before the end of Octo- FRUITS AND VEGETABLES--Long hhepr., iitt wwaass adeecciiudoeda nat aa sga therin*g of gI s6lQa n8da cGkreeds na nMd obuunltka ipne rp o1t0a0t o,beBs , .$ 2M.2a5i@ne 10 hatchery men which took place at Green Mountalns $i.io@i.25 f. o. b.; the state fair. Standardization or Ualne cobblers, »l.Ao@2.oo, mostly $l.oo baby chicks will be the subject for | f. o. b.; northern round whites, 11.009 I 1.S0 In Chicago, few $1.00 f. o. b.; North discussion. i an<j Minnesota Red River Ohios, Danville.--One Of the most unusual I JBC@$1.15 carlot sales, midwestern marmonuments in Illinois is In a rural kets, 70-86c f. o. b. Cabbage, domestic ceme*te ry near here. TItf *wansc eerreecctteeda |I rou^n d type, $14.00@15.00 f. o. b.; Danish m^tl'y ,25.oo@35.oo; midwestern by H. W. Clark to the memory Of nis Btock domestic and Danish, $23.00® wife and fifteen-year-old daughter. On 110.00 in St. Louis, $i4.oo@i5.oo f. o. b. the stone is carved a picture of the olrt New York peaches. Elbertas. $i.&0<3> . . . ot,ri ninnv I 2.50 per bu. basket; Utah and Idaho farmstead, animal pets and man] Elberta8i 51.75 @2.00. Virginia sweet childish sayings of the daughter. I potatoes, yellow varieties, $2.25©3.60 Urbana.--The department of trans- per bbi. leading markets p o r t a , i o n of t h e U n t t e r s J , , , « f D U n o U , N*. Is the only separate department of this wlnter wheat ,109. No j mlxed corn> kind In the world. It has been built I 91.02; No. 2 yellow corn, $1.02; No. t up in three years from one to eight white oats, 43c.. Average farm price: Structlon staff and an enrollm I 47c Chicago. Cheese prices at Wisconnearly 600 students. I Bin primary markets: Single daisies, Chicago--The average factory work- I I6%c; double daisies, 25\c; longhorns, er in Illinois, as well as in the fac- 2«%c; square prints, 27\c , ... . . tT10. I HAT--No. 1 timothy, $23.00 Clncintories of the Middle West, is receiving Batl ,27.00 Chicago. $26.50 St. Louis. 11 per cent more wages than at this FEED--Market quiet. Interior detime last year according to the Sep- I mand very light, as result of excellent tember business conditions report of 4n mo8t feedlntf and «*» «•*»«»« the Federal Reserve bank of Chicago. Rockford.--A deer which is roaming the country near here has been reported seen by Miss Clara Frisble, living one mile from the city. The ani- Monarchists in Fight to Control the German Army Berlin.--Monarchist agitators In the mal browsed leisurely through pas- I midst of Germany's tense civil strife tures, leaping fences nimbly when oc- I have Invaded Berlin Itself. For the caslon, required, she stated. Ilast twenty-four hours they have been Lewlstown.--J. M. Foutch filed a trying to stir up Insurrection In the bill in Circuit court asking for the I ranks of the regular army, swinging annulment of the marriage of his son, I the republican military force In the Audas, who was married at the age of I capital to the monarchist side, and sixteen to Florlne McKlnley. several thus securing victory through a sud years his senior. The father asserts couP at the republic's very heart the girl persuaded his son to marry. I Thus far their efforts appear to have Qano |f. Disturbers Carry Banner* Biamfng the Former Prime Minister •f England for "Ireland's WoWP --Clash With Police. New York.--David Lloyd George, former prime minister of Great Britain, veteran of seventeen years of strenuous activity In the labyrinth of Old World politics, came to America and found In a whole heartedly enthusiastic welcome tendered him by New York a series oi humanly potent thrills. So delighted was the little Welshman who had guided the British ship of state through the tumultuous years from 1916 to 1922 that his demeanor wns more often that of an Interested schoolboy and iOf a deeply touched human being than that of a blase statesman. The former premier first saw American soil from the deck of the Mauretania early Friday morning. His passage from the great ocean liner in the police boat Macom to the Battery and thence by motor to the city hall and through the streets of the metropolic was almost a triumphal procession, marred by street disturbances precipitated by Irish Republican sympathizers. He came, he safo, with no political status, and, no official credentials, but as a private subject of the crown to express to Canada bis personal thanks for the volunteer aid she unstlntingly had offered the British empire in bar time of need. To the United States, he explained, he brought thanks for the army that had come like the sword of Excallbur in the Arthurian legend from out the waters of the Atlantic when the horizon of the allied powers was blackened with despair. Coming as a climax to a day of extraordinary welcome to Lloyd George on his first visit to this country, a gang of disturbers who had marred the receptions by carrying banners blaming the former prime minister for "Ireland's woes," threw eggs at the visitor and his party as they left a theater after attending a musical revue. Police had clashed several times during the day with representatives of the Association for Recognition of the Irish Republic,, arresting several women and dispersing the turbulent groups along the line of march. At night the same band of men and women was waitlpg outside the theater, and bystanders were spattered by the eggs before the police routed the group and escorted the British statespiah and his wife and daughter to their automobile. ARE FOUND DEAD Ammonia Gas Used on Three . €©nviot Murderers in Prison Fortress. Recent portrait of Crown Prince Gust a v us Adoiphus of Sweden, who. It Is rumored, will marry Lady Mountbatten of England. " HODGES HITS SOVIETS British Mine Chief Warns American Workmen Against Reds. Englishman Tells Delegates Western Civilization Must Be on Guard Against Communism Born, U| '4 Asiatic Mind of Ruaeia. • , Danville.--H. Albrecht & Co. of East St. Louis, a corporation, pleaded guilty In the United States court here to six counts of an indictment charging t|em with violation of the national been unavailing. Miners Buried Nine Days Rescued Alive and Well a j »r nnn i London.--Eight men entombed by prohibition act and was fined $o,000, the lnrngh of water jn the Falkirk pit tli#;, maximum penalty Decatur.--An old folks' home for members of the Illinois Past Pocahontas club has been opened here. The first annual convention of the Pust Pocahontas club was held here October 1 and 2. Sprmgfield.--A Joint meeting of farm leaders of the Twentieth and Twenty-first congressional districts will be held here October 18. The object of the meetings will be to discuss questions on farm hureau policies. Chicago.--Due to the Influx of workers Into Illinois from other industen days before were rescued alive Thursday. The men were In good condition, although the only food they had was one slice of bread. Sixtythree men were in the pit when the disaster occurred on September 25. Twenty-one were rescued the same day, and about thirty were still to be accounted for. It la now hoped that more men will be found alive. Spahish Dictator to Give Provinces Self-Government Madrid.--President Priino de Rivera has decided to adopt the American system of self-governing states In Spain. He will allow the ancient provinces of Castile, Arragon, Catalonia. Andalusia, Valencia, Basque, Asturlas, Gallcla and perhaps others to have local self-government fofr the first time in history, thus putting an end to separatist movements. > Portland, Ore.--Bringing a wa of special significance to the American labor movement, Frank Hodges, secretary of the British Miners' federation, gave the forty-third annual convention of the American Federation of Labor the most dramatic denunciation of Communism and Bolshevism ever beard In a labor assembly In the country. Mr. Hodges, who la a guest In the United States of the United Mine Workers of America, declared that western civilization must be on guard against the Insidious oriental doctrine of autocracy and slavery or rot and crumble by the "boring from within" poison of a doctrine born in "the Asiatic mind of Russia." 'In Europe, as here," Bald Mr. Hodges, "the old idea of parliamentary democracy, and democracy generally, Is being challenged; It is being challenged by an entirely new theory of government; it is being challenged by the castlron theories developed In Moscow.' These theories are established with the purpose of showing to the world that democracy as popularly understood is played out; that liberty and fraternity are figments of the Imagination. If you believe that you are on the wrong track. What is required for the emancipation of the working man is something like the British in thii regard. He hates, despises and rejects dictatorship of any character or description." Coolidge to Insist War Debts Be Paid to U. S. Washington. -- President Coolidge ia trial centers, there are at present only | unalterably opposed to the cancella- 85 positions for every 100 applicants, tlon of the debts owed America by according to the announcement of the the European countries, it was said at Illinois free emplopment offices. I the White House. The President feels Jerseyville.--Joseph M. Page, for 48 I that the United States should be libyears editor of the Jersey County I eral In the settlements it makes, as Democrat, published here, has been I In the handling of the loan to Great reappointed to the ofllce of master In I Britain. chancery of Jersey county. I 4 Rockford.--Chief Fish and Game Sixty Killed at Kiev * Warden W. J. Stratton will soon In- | jn Synagogue Panfc Hiflher Wheat Duty Opposed by President Coolidge Washington. -- President Coolidge will not recommend an increase in the duty on wheat In an effort to boost the price of that farm product Aftejcareful consideration of the proposition and conference with Thomas O. Marvin, head of the U. S. tariff commission, he doubts that he has a legal right to raise the duty if he thought It wise to do so. • i , When Storming Party of State MTIttla Entered Apartment They Discover -||en Slain--Two of Them Evltfmtly Killed Mm * tfwsLern Kentucky, State Ptenfociv tlary, via Paducah, Ky.--A storming party entered the mess hall fortress here, held by three convict murderers for three days, after they had killed three prison guards in a desperate bid for freedom--and found them dead. Indications are that the gunmen had been dead for at least 36 hours, two of them possibly for two days and nights. Entrance to the bullet-torn twostory building was effected by a detali of seven picked men after the desperadoes' stronghold had been flooded for an hour with ammonia fumes. Bodies of the convict gunmen were found on the floor of the second story of the building. Monte Walters' body was fonnd near the. northwest wall, with a bullet wound through the head and horribly burned from a bursting rifle grenade. Bodies of Lawrence Griffith and Harry Ferland, Walters' companions in the spectacular "last stand." stripped to the waist, were partly sheltered under a table against tl»< wall on the northwest side. Powder burned bullet wounds oyer the heart indicated the manner in which Griffith and Ferland died. Ferland's gun hand, stiff in death, still gripped a heavy caliber automatic pistol. Ferland and Griffith's arms we-' folded as though the bodies had bern arranged after death. These two oi the desperate trio lost heart as hope of escape dlrdinished and committed suicide to avoid capture or were slain by Walters, who then fell under the heavy fire from the besieging forces. Physicians said Walters apparently was the last man to die. Unaware, of course, that all members of the gunman trio were dead, authorities in charge of the siege of the mess hall obtained a supply of high-proof ammonia from an ice company in Paducah. Under cover of metal shields three pipe lines were laid to the building and for an hour the fumes were forced into the desperadoes' bullet-torn covert. - 200-ACRE FARM#> Winnebago Co., Wisconsin Ode of the best dairy districts in tht> «MsWL Good house. Immense basement; barn, cement floor, modern stanchions. Wonderful solf, cleared; two pastures with springs running year round. Three cheese factories nearby; also three city markets. Near two concrete highways. Good roads, schools. Near best Ashing and duck hunting In U. 8 Phone and mail service. Complete with tools, liv« stock and crop. Fine chance to farm In bis way and not spend your life di||lil( itumps. Price and terms reasonable. S. C. RADFORD. Oshkosh. Wis. Dept. A. Ambassadors Harvey and Child to Quit Posts Washington.--Ambassadors Harvey and Child will soon resign, the State department announced. Mr. Harvey will quit his post at London about the first of the year. Mr. Child, after arriving in the United States within the next few weeks, will not return to Rome. State department officials said that the ambassadors had not been asked to resign and that they were quitting for wholly personal* reasons. Germany Is Credited With $2,050,000,000 Payments Paris.--The reparation^ commission Issued a set of revised figures, as of June 30, showing Germany to be credited with reparation payments totaling 8,213,670,000 gold marks ($2,050t- 000,000, of which 1,900,000,000 were In cash. 3,250,000,000 In merchandise and the remainder In shippings cables and credits for the Sarre Valley mines and ceded territories. speot a^te here offered for the proflKttober 28 to November 3 for its bien- posed new state fish hatchery. mal meeting. Carbondale.--Burglars robbed the Leader Mercantile store of approximately $3,000 worth of merchandise. Springfield.--The Patriarchs Militant, the grand lodge of the Grand encampment and the Rebekah state assembly. four branches of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, will assemble In Springfield October 15 to 18? each branch having various meeting dates between these days. Springfield.--Governor Small announced the appointment of Arthur ; Xewls of Chicago as superintendent of lodging institutions of Illinois. Lewis ' Succeeds W. W. McCullough of Chiea- - jo. who was a holdover from the Low- , fen administration. Danville.--Peter F. Oliver, business Chicago.--Itlce Miller of Hlllsboro was re-elected president of the Illinois Coal Operators' association at the annual -meeting of the association Springfield.--Antitoxin given In sufficient dosage on the first day of ill ness always results in the cure of diphtheria, says the state commission er of health. Since this remedy Is Moscow,--Sixty persons were killed and 100 Injured in a stampede In a Kiev synagogue Thursday night The panic started when the lights suddenly were extinguished and ertaa at fire raised. More Men fer Postal 8ervtce. Washington.--A deficiency appropriation bill to provide for 3,200 additional clerks, 3,000 carriers and 500 distributed free by the state, there I laborers for the Post Ofllce department seems to be little ground for excuses | will be presented at the coming sea- Europe Is Gaining, Says ^ Ogden Armour, the Packer tJew York.--Europe has passed the economic crisis and Is on thie way back to economic stability, J. Ogden Armour declared upon arriving from the continent aboard the Mauretanla. Mr. Armour has been abroad on a pleasure trip of four months in France and England. f Many Persons Die in Gale Along the French Coast Paris.--North to northwesterly gales, at times developing Into a hurricane, have been raging during the past thirty- six hours, causing the loss of many lives and strewing the French shores t»n the English channel and Atlantic teaboard with wreckage. Will relieve Coughs and Colds among hor*c» and mules with moit satisfactory result*. For thirty years "Spohn's" has been the standard remedy for Distemper, Influenza, Pink Eye, Catarrhal Fever, Heaves and Worms. Excellent for Distemper and Worms among dogs. Sold in two sizes at all drug stores. SP0HN MEDICAL CO. GOSHEN. IND. U . S .A. Chicago Pastor of Greek Church Slain at Altar Chicago.--While the ltev. Basil Stetsuk sat with bowed head In the sacristy of the little church of St. Michael the Archangel at 2410 North Campbell avenue Sunday Mrs. Emma Strutynsky, in the guise of penitent, drew a pistol from the folds of her deep mourning dress and shot him dead. "Father Stetsuk cheated my people. He was a cheat and a hypocrite. I had to kill him," said Mrs. Strutynsky. Bavarian Women Urged - Sell Hair to Aid Germany Munich.--Patriotic wartime measures, such as women and girls cutting off their hair for the market and the sale of wedding rings and family treasures, are proposed by the Bavarian leaders, who assert that they and thousands of others are eager to aid Germany to regain a permanent place In world affairs. about diphtheria dea<hs. Eureka.--Dan Miles post No. 270. Grand Army of the Republic, has dls handed and the post's records an»l I equipment were turned over to the Illl- ] nols department, G. A. R. Only a handful of members of the once large { post are alive. Mt. Vernon.--The medical profession of congress. Wotold Cut Allied Debt Paris.--Cancellation or an Important reduction in inter-allied ' deb's is the only means of reducing the claims on Germanyv Premier Mussolini stated In an interview published In the Echo de Paris Friday. ^ man of this city, has filed suit against gion is pointing with pride to the re- Abraham Kligham, also in business i covery of the seven-months-old child I Airplane Motor Invehtei, • St. Louis, Mo.--An airplane with the motor installed upside down was flown from Dayton, O., here by Lieut."Frank Carroll in a test flight. The Inverted motor is said to permit a better degree «f visibility. Five Die When Street Car t Hurls Auto Twenty Mount ' Clemens, Mich.--Five men were lnstantlj» killed when their automobile was struck by a Detroit United railway car four miles south of here. Their automobile was knocked twenty feet Three of the dead are A. Shiftman. 8. Levlne and jA. Baker.' Turkish Republic to Be j / Proclaimed Soon, Report .^Constantinople.--The culmination of a movement begun In 1876 Is near, and with the promulgation of the new constitution Turkey will be proclaimed a republic. It was learned here. There will be but one house in the legislative branch of the government, the national assembly. •; Fire Kills Fifteen in Rus«t|fe£> Lemberg.--Fifteen Jews were killed and twenty injured in a fire which broke out in the Jewish quarter of Zhitomir, Russia, as a result of the explosion of • large quantity of ammunition. McCray Holdings Aocepted. Indianapolis.--Holdings of Governor Warren T. McCray, valued at $3,323,- 417, have been accepted byv a creditors' committee «nder a trust agreement to satisfy obligations said to total $2,052,082. Theater and Five Hotels Burn at Asbury Park, N. L Asbury Park, N. J.--Fire destroyed an entire block of buildings, Including a theater and five hotels, along the water front here. The Bristol, Victoria, Keswick, Clifton and Edgemere hotels were destroyed. TIM damage was $400,000. Wisconsin Forest Fires Sweep Out of Control Blrchwood, Wis.--Forest fires have attained such advancement In this vicinity and throughout this part of the state as a result of long dry periods, that they are practically beyond control. Only heavy rainfall, tire Hitters say, will check them. . i >' Bergdoll Will Return to U. S., His Mother Says New York.--Grover Cleveland Bergdoll, fugitive from justice in Germany, intends to return to this country and to serve his sentence for draft evasion, his mother, Mrs*. Emma Bergdoll, declared "on "her arrival here from Germany, where she visited her son. * His Estimate. "Dad," said the young hopeful, who was thinking of branching out in the world, "whadda you think of the chicken business for me?" "Well," said the wise one, "I dunno, son. It costs a lot to feed 'em. And If you ever start using taxlcabs you'll go broke." M0THER1 GIVE SICK BABY ^CALIFORNIA FI6 SYRUP" Harmless Laxative to Clean Uvar and Bowels of Baby or Child Even constipated, bilious, feverish, or sick, colic Babies and Children love to take genuine "California Fig Syrup." No other laxative regulates the tender little bowels ao nicely. It#*; s w e e t e n s the stomach and starts the liver and bowels acting without griping. Contains no narcotics or soothing drugs. Say "California" to your druggist and avoid counterfeits! Insist upon genuine "California Fig Syrup" which contains directions.--Advertisement Jump at Conclusions. jumping at conclusions is always hazardous; a fish finds it so. In Jumping at the conclusion of a flshllne. WOMEN CAN DYE ANY GARMENT, DRAPERY Dye OP Tint Worn, Faded Thing* New for 15 Cent«, Diamond Dy es Don't wonder whether you can dye or tint successfully, because perfect» home dyeing Is guaranteed with "Diamond Dyes" even If you have never dyed before. Druggists have all colors. Directions in each package.--Advertisement. It Doeent Last Long, Though. Radio--Do you know what a m»k» up box Is? Fan--Yes. a box of chocolate!. Claaslfled. "There are three classes of families nowadays. They're either one, two or three car garage families." Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION National Forest Funds. Washington.--A total of $1.821,4S£ liere, demanding $10,000 damages and of R^y CHne, who recently underwent has been remitted by the Department alleging alienation of the affections of ^ his wife. Oliver also filed suit against his wife tot divorce, on the grounds of :• desertion. . ' • Urbana--Registration for 1923 at " "\'f-the University of Illinois shows an in- ; /I*' jet-ease of 47 over last year. The total. , ,'jL'feot counting Chicago branches; Is 8,- ••'-1 272. There are substantial Increases ' in all colleges except agriculture and engineering. an operation in a local hospital for telescoped bowels. The operation was remarkable, It was said. In that the child was the youngest in the state, so far'as known, to have undergone successfully such a serious operation. Belvldere.--Rev. W. E. ^Mundell, pastor of the First Baptist church, haa been offered the post of state mission ary for his denomination In Nersd' and northern California. , of Agriculture to 28 states as their one-quarter share In the receipts for the fiscal year 192S from national forest resources. Many Tourists In Colorado. Denver. Colo.--Four and one-half million tourists visited Colorado this season and spent an average cf $10 each, or a total of $45,000,000, according to estimates announced fjf> the Denver Tourist bureau.' Bad Elephant Is Executed. Los Angeles, Cal.--"Charlie,"* ffct"! prize elephant of the Universal studios here, faced a "firing squad" of one at dawn Friday, and paid with Ids life for his vicious temper.^JB» was said to be 188 years old. Twenty.Pound Mushroom Found. Prairie du Chien, Wis.--What is believed to be the largest mushroom in the history of this section was discovered by John Martin In dense timber. Its weight rsMhad twwtf *a*4 spa half Infant Dlee of Rat'a Bite. Evansvllle, Ind.--The nine-monthsold daughter of Hcott Thomas died from a rut's bite and the mother, who also was bitten by the rodent, is In a serious condition and may die, It la said. Division Dry Chief Named. Washington. -- Announcement wai made that Henry A. Dyketnan of Ely rla, (Xi will he chief of the prohibition enforcement division which comprise! the states of Ohio, Indiana and southern Michigan. * Billion Harding 8tampa. Washington.--One billion additional Harding memorial stamps were or dered printed by Postmaster General New. Two lots of 300,000,000 already have been printed. The ataipa «m OI Forty Lashes for Robber. ; Wilmington.--James Dudley Major, escaped Kansas bank robber, waa given forty lashes at Delaware's whipping post as part punishment for holding up and robbing a citizen here last month. Rail Beard Abolition Urged. Washington.--Repeal of the ratemaking section of the transportation act and abolition of the railroad labor board have been urged to President Coolidge by Representative Dickinson (Rep.) of Iowa. Hearee Has Phonograph. New York.--A $20,000 hearse, decorated with thirty-five wooden angels and equipped with chimes, a talking machine and amplifier to carry the music to the graveside, appeared on the lower Blast side. Oklahoma 8olona to Meet Oklahoma City, Okla.--The Oklahoma legislature will meet again on October 17. A call was Issued by William D. McBee, member from Stevens county, after he had been petitioned by a majority of members to do sa :vvv INMGESTX* 6 BELL-ANS Hot water Sure Relief ELL-ANS 25$ AND 75* PACKAGES EVERYWHERE FOLEY'S HONEY TAR ESTABLISHED 1875 REFUSE SUBSTITUTES w. N. u* CHICAGO. NO. 41-192&

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy