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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 19 Feb 1925, p. 2

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v®. y'W'm mm W..%,\.i.'»"'."IPP'.nrntiririn THE KemmT Fi.AnrnsAT.itR iMnnntY. TT.T.. cfva:^!1 *> * MM" h -Jk?3 *-:»j> XiI r r; MarceU* Cold Cream urf MarceV* Vaniahlng Cream the dry. parched condition ef til* skin wliich ccoonm a with exposure to the Veather. The cold cream is • cleansing and healing cream and leaves ths •kin aoft. To do the must good it ahould be applied at night. On dry ekins it mav be uaed as a foundation for powder. Marcelle Vanisnir*; Cream is the bettercream fordiiytime use and (oundalum for faca' powder, cs it is greaselesa andcartruit reappear throusjh the powdw ' in a shine. The creams art > on sale in both tubes and J an, U' f t - ' Bonanza "Bonanza" is a Spanish word meaning "fair weather" or a "favoring wind." The miners of Comstock lode, a . gold and silver mine in Nevada, whicfc, •yielded 340 millions worth of ore in 3Q !years. first used the word to signify an Htuuxinnce of precious metal or arich ore. Tfie word Is now also used to .signify any good fortune or successful enterprise. Boschee't Syrttp £ ~J Allays irritation, soothes and heals % i;<hroat and lung Inflammation. The 'Constant Irritation of a cough keeps tey' |the delicate mucus membrane of the ithroat and lungs hi a congested con- ^ , dltion. which BOSCHEE'S SYRUP . gently and quickly heals. For this ' - reason It has beqn a favorite household remedy for colds, coughs, bronchitis and especially for Jung troubles yln millions of homes all over the S|K;: %' fey. m world for the last fifty-eight years, •enabling the patient to obtain a good ;.:night's rest, free from coughing with ^eas-y expectoration in the morning. ;Too can buy BOSCHEE'S SYRUP wherever medicines are sold.--Adv. -H &• * ^ ' •( }.i~- '. i > - ^ •" '*'*>; ymKi' FHndlng fault is no way to make- a fortune, unless- the fault is found in :;'v'£: yoor own business. Back Bad Since the Grip? Has a cold or grip sapped yoor strength? Do you suffer constant backache, feel nervous and depressed? Then look to your kidneys! Many cases of kidney trouble are the result of infectious disease. The kidneys often break down under the strain of filterin diseane created poisons from the blood. That's why a cold or grip often leaves __elp your with Doan'8 Pills. irregular kidney action. weakened kidney Doan't have helped thousands and thonld help you. Ask your neighbor! An, Illinois Case ' Mrs. James Rasm u s s e n , 9 1 6 Eighth St., Roehelle. 111., says "The dull, bearing^ down pain a across my back had me In m tired condition. 1 was often dlpay and spots danced before my 'r 'J9?Sw» used box of •yes. blurring my Sight. My kidneys' were disordered. Doan'B Fills and they soon rid me of -the lame back and made me feel like my old self." DOAN'S STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS Tmlm MHbnm Co.. Mis. Oxan^Bugalo. N. Y. For Frost Bites *;'V; PAIN SINNERS in By CLIVE ARDEN THI CANNIBAL rvynpsiS --T.tvlna In the small English village of Darbury, oldfashioned and sedate place, Barbara Stockier, daughter of a widowed mother, la soon to celebrate her marriage to Hugh Rochdale, rich and wall connected. Barbara Is adventurous, and has planned, with an aunt, an airplane trip to Australia. Major Alan Croft, famous as an aviator. Is to be the pilot. At her first meeting with Croft Barbara Is attracted by his manner and conversation, different from the out-and-dried conventions of her small town. They set out. Barhara. her aunt, Croft, and a mechanician. Word In a few days comes to Darbury that the plahe is missing and Its occupants believed lost. Croft and Barhara, after the wreck of the atrplane in a furious storm, reach an apparently uninhabited Island in the Pacific ocean. The other two members of the party had perished. The two castaways build a shelter. For Rbeum&tbnfc Insect Slings, :„i Son Throat, I Float Bites, | Piles and BuRgl I A Pain-Relieving 5 Healing Oil t. | j^Drt*Sto«»9rbT Pared Post, 35/ : M. R. ZAEGEL & CO. 190 Eighth S«. Sheboygan, Wis BABIES LOVE MR1WMSI0MS SYRUP TW UiauU* aai ChiMrta'i Regulator Pleasant to Rive--pleasant to take Guaranteed purely veg •table and absolutely harmless. It quickly overcome, colip diarrhoea, flatulency and like disorders. The open published Cormul ears on •very label. AIA11 DruggitU Copyright tar The Bobba-MerrlU Co. DR. HUMPHREYS* COLDS G R I P INmUFNZA FART TWO--Continued. Gradually* worn out. she grew calmer ; gradually she lost consciousness, of her surroundings, fulling into a t r o u b l e d , r e s t l e s s s l e e p . . . . The prtin had moved round behind the hill nnd the hut seemed dark and oppressive when, suddenly, her eyes opened. She started up in some alarm. Surely it was not night, and Croft still absent? However' autocratic and distasteful any companionship might become, the awfulness of solitude--as for a moment that contingency swept across her mind-- made it desirable beyond all riches. She ran to the door. To her surprise, it was no longer barricaded. She pusrhed It open, and drew a breath of relief; for outside It was still broad daylight. The sunshine gleamed in bright patches upon the shore, alternating with long stretches of shadow cast by palms which, singly or In small clumps, dotted the bay. The time, she judged, must be early evening. If Croft had returned and opened the door, where could he be now? Unsteadily she walked to the water's edge, searching with straining eyes the shore and the distant reef, without result. Nameless dread at her heart, she turned to ascend the slope toward the palm grove, thinking to get from there a clearer view of the wrecked machine. A moyement behind, among the trees, presently caused her to look round quickly. It was, unmistakably, a footfall: evidently Croft had returned and come to the river. With a sigh of relief, she left the tree and turned inland to greet him. • . . Then, for a moment, all power seemed to leave her body. She stood rooted to the ground, her lips moving without uttering a sound, her eyes dilated. * About ten feet away, a pa'r of fierce, restless eyes gazed upon her, fascinated, from a sooty-black face repulsive by its breadth of nose and thickness of lips. The dark, naked form, of medium height *and sinewy build, glistened as If fresh from the water: the frizzy black hair clung damply about the ears and forehead. As he stood watching her, like an animal watching its prey, the coarse lips parted in a slow devilish grin. . . . With a quick stream of unintelligible words, he sprang forward. The spell broke. With one shriek of terror, she turned and fled madly down the slope. The unintelligible muttering ceased. A blood-curdling yell like some wild war-cry pierced the still air, echo'ng around the bay . . . quick agile steps sounded close in her wake. The unearthly strength born of emergency came to Barbara. Everything save the distant hut faded from her sight; time ceased; coherent thought fled from her. Only one instinct reigned--that of the hunted beast to reach its lair. That, once there, defense might prove equally Impossible,, she never paused to consider. The bare feet drew nearer in their hot pursuit; the weird cry again and again resounded over the bay. . . . Closer he came; she heard his short snorting breathing . . . closer: the warmth of It fanned her neck . . . closer yet, and a hand caught roughly at the sleeve of her blouse, tearing the soft silk to ribbons as she wrenched her arm free . . . closer, and this time the sinewy black Angers grabbed the hare arm Itself. . A swift whirling noise smote across her reeling brain; something hurtled past her shoulder . . . with a savage snarling groan, her aptor fell sprawling upon the ground. Dazedly she looked around. Springing over crags, scrambling through brushwood, Croft came down the hill behind the hut at break-neck speed. The native, quickly regaining his feet, cast one glance toward the tall white figure with blazing eyes, dropping, to his muddled senses direct from the heavens; then, without a word, he turned swiftly and leapt, with extraordinary rapidity, back toward the palm grove. Her transient strength oozing aw&y, Barbara staggered forward. Croft caught her by the arms. J'What the devil made you leave tlia hut?" he demanded angrily. All tendency to faint left her No lash of a whip could so have quickened her bewildered brain. She recoiled in his grasp, gazing up into his face dumfounded. Amid the confusion of her mind his extreme pallor struck her forcibly. His eyes pierced her like flaming steel. "Hadn't you enough sense to realise this possibility?" Now was the time to assert herself. : he hesitated; searched vainly for a etort; opened her mouth; closed It gain. In her weak state circumstances proved too overwhelming. Feeling utterly Insignificant, she mere^ ly turned her miserable eyes seaward. "I--was only looking--for you," she murmured unsteadily. Opposition tuay wear down § as n fortress, with time; but helplessness silences all guns. He stood, breathing hard, still grasping her arm, gazing into her face with eyes no longer flashing with anger, h«t smoldering with something she could not define--something composed of horror and feSr. "G--d!" he muttered at last. In a different tone. "If I had been too late!" For a moment he stood silent, scanning the vicinity of the palm grove; perceiving no signs of the native, he turned with her toward the hut. "I rescued most of the wireless nnd luggage,"'he said, turning the subject of her thoughts abruplly. "I brought some of our things across, and left the rest on the reef. You were asleep. So I took the wireless up the hill, and fixed up the aerial." Sinking once more upon the coats, she watched hlin carry in their suitcases and--something else. It was the old tin box of Aunt Dolly's provisions. ... Tears rose to Barbara's eyes, and her throat contracted; hut her companion's presence caused her to wrestle valiantly with the grief stirred up afresh by * the sight of this familiar old box. The little homely things are ever those which bring out the full force of loss or tragedy. Hiding weakness from Croft's eyes, however, was becoming, unconsciously, Barbara's purpose In life Just now. Any display of It was, she felt intuitively, abhorrent to him. In silence she watched him unfasten the box, take out the spirit-lamp, reach among the other contents, and abstract a tin of milk. Presently he brought some sterming milk in a small tin mug. She had oftenytised that mug upon picnics with' Aunt Dolly; the sight of it caused another wave of homesickness and loss. "I can't drink It," She muttered. turning away. . ' _ "You must," he replied quietly, seating himself on the ground beside her, his countenance inexorable. She took no notice. 1 "Come along! Don't be silly. Biff, bara!" -- Quickly she turned and faced him. Then rather too hastily she tortc the mug; but her hands trembled, and the milk splashed over the edge. He placed his fingers over hers and guided them; and the cool firm touch brought a peculiar sense of calm and security. "It tasted--queer!" she remarked,. Rising, he returned to the work "of unfastening their luggage. "Your case Is unstrapped." he said presently. "Will you unpack It now?" "Oh!--I can't! Not yet," she said wearily. ~. "Shall I?" / "No! Oh, iear toe, noT Bhe started up in alarm. "Well, but--don't ypu want things for the night?" "No." x"' ' He looked at her In mute Ip^qiry. "You don't suppose," she asked with asperltyr "I shall ever--undress in this place?" As he turned away, she saw the same flash of white teeth in the dim light that she had seen the first time they met. "I advise yon to change, after such a soaking," was his only remafk. He stood near the door, as If uncertain, for a few moments, then pushed it open. "I shall have my supper outside. . . . Good-night!" he added. There was much sense In his advice: her clothes felt stiff nnd heavy. Wearily she opened her suitcase, surprised to find most of the contents dry. She hastily undressed and slipped into cool, fresh garments. Throwing on a loose Japanese dressing gown, she lay down again, exhausted. All fears sank Into oblivion. . . . She fell Into a deep, heavy sleep. 0 III The flare of many torches illuminated the midnight darkness in the south of the island. Chlmabahol, the old chief, sat In the leafy council chamber near the entrance of the sacred palm grove, surrounded by his trusted warriors. In the center of the large circle of squatting figures stood Baboo^ ma--next in rank to the chief--recounting, In his muttering, sing-song dialect, the strange story which, arousing tragic memories, caused consternation and foreboding in every heart. When he ceased. Chlmabahol sat silent, pulling his beard with wrinkled dark hands that trembled." An agitated babei broke out all around, fierce native oaths blending with walls Of distress. j The chief at last commanded silence and spoke. "Whence came they, Babooms? Was there no strange canoe lloating, like a vast island, upon the lagoon?" "There was not, O Chief. The white woman appeared in my path as If sprung from the waving palm! The white man"--he looked furtively round 'did fall from the skies, sending Ills bolt before him !" ' He shivered, stroking his sore shoulder. "The great white man is a giant, O my Chief!. He will not easily be killed." "How great is the tribe* Didst thou not see others, Babooma?" 'None other did I stay to see. O Chief! Perchance they are evil spirits come to haunt the huts where live the ghosts of our slain ones. Or perchance they slay with hall-devils like onto those other evil ones." The chief sat In deep thought for some moments; then rose and waved his spear. "The Vow !" he cried. "Let preparations he made, my warriors. When means of warfare adopted by white men caused them to follow their chief In still half-fearful excitement to the sscred palm grove. Presently the sound of native voices rose once more, singing their Song of Hate; * * • • • The man sitting outside the little hut raised his face, Inhaling the soft scents, grateful for the refreshing, wind. AH night he had Sat motionless, head hidden in his hands. There was nobody to gee, in his haggard features, what Barbara had seen that morning. Although his eyes had not closed, this solitary vigil, with its forced Inaction, had revived and Intensified the morning's sufferings. The sense of powerlessness which had attacked Barbara with such violence in the afternoon now attacked him. Again and again he strove to turn his thoughts from the wrecked mass out there upon the reef; from the dark waters and the monsters which infested them, where those friends, strong ittfd^ull of life not many Irours rfgo, now lay hidden. What awful fate, worse than piere drowning, had been theirs? . . . He strove to restrain his mental agony, dragging his mind away, for down that road madness lay. . . . There were natives, possibly cannibals, upon this island, to be faced sooner or later. Therein, to Ills mind, lay hope. For surely they were in touch with civilization? During his travels he had picked up a good number of dialects employed among Polynesian and Melanesian natives. With luck he might find means of rescue through their enterprise. If they Imd any. But this was doubtful. He knew well the characteristics of the Pacific: knew the trade routes, the ports of call, the features of Islands in touch with civilization, the featurfi of many pnx ticaHy an-* • , Discovering t,he Dark Forms of Tftrea Natives. known. . . . Intercourse with strange natives, too. hieant considerable risk, with a woman in his care. ... At that thought, the same strange thrill sh3t through his frame which he had experienced in the morning; the awful loneliness of spiirt semed to fall from him, Scattering his reflections, a strangled. terrified cry came from the hut. He sat up. alerl In a moment. All had teeen quiet hitherto. The draught dropped Into the milk had done its work. He had been fortunate in rescuing the case of medicines and firstaid necessities from the machine. Again, louder, another cry smote upon his ears. He sprung to^ his feet. . . . Reaction had come upon Barbara, awakening from the heavy effects of the drug, so vividly that she was almost delirious. The little hut seemed to swing round and round, now darting suddenly up toward the sky, now dropping, as a stone, into limitless space. . And ever, from the four quarters of the globe, roared whut seemed l i k e t e n t h o u s a n d t r a i n s . . . . To escape was Impossible, for somebody had barricaded the door . . . the hut rushed down niw toward the dark fathomless waters . . . they closed above her head, and everywhere black hands surrounded her--black leering faces came close. . . . With a shriek of terror she cowered against the wall, when the door opened; then perceiving freedom, she ran blindly toward the starlight without. A pair of arms caught her upon the threshold. Half-demented she struggled^ In their hold, gasping hard sobs. But they closed more tigtuly; and their fcfotecttre Wkrhith shut diftt the Wttttog dangers. Gradually she grew calmer; the nightmare sensations of returning consciousness abated. Ceasing to struggle, she leaned exhausted against h!m. her arms clinging to one of his, fhe waves of her long hair falling across his breast So for several minutes they remained --two derelict beings hurled, helpless pawns, over the boundary line of civilised life Into a world yet in Its infancy-- each conscious of a sense of comfort in each other's nearness. Presently he straightened himself. With two fingers he felt her brow and cheek; they were of little more than normal heat. He stroked back the hair clustering over her forehead; and she stirred, raising lier head. "You must lie down again and sleep," he said, drawing her toward the bed of coats. But her grasp tightened upon his arm. "You are not going--^ar away? It*-- it's like a vault m here--full of death--" Her voice rose unnaturally. "I won't leave you at all," he said huriedly, but with a decision which obviously relieved her. "It's not safe --for either of us--alone--tonight." Her eyes wandered over his face, in the dim starlight. In a dazed manner, while she sank back upon the coats with a long sighing breath. One hand still clasped In hers, the other arm passed under her head for a pillow, he remained upon the ground by her side. The turmoil of his own spirit seemed unaccountably soothed. Though never sleeping, a comforting drowsy numbness replaced the sharp suffering of his mind. . . . But when the early light of dawn pierced through the aperture, it brought with It the remembrance of a man's hand-clasp, the trust In one honest brown eye, the shade in place of the other. . . . The wonderful peace which seemed to have descended upon the little hut, lulling his mind, filling It, during those hours' of close protection and companionship, with something exquisitely beautiful, albeit incomprehensible, w;as shattered at one blow. He half-withdrew his arm; then, pausing, bent over the sleeping girl and looked long upon the delicate features, the sensitive Hps and dark lasheB. As he looked, an unbidden thought flitted across- his mind, bringing a slow flush Into his face. Had another taken indisputable possession? Had he readied to the very depths of her soul; fired all t,he deepest libers of her womanhood? . . . He drew himself up, gently freeing Ms hand and arm. The question opened vistas down which he refused to look. A part of his nature that night had been illuminated as If by many-hued candles; and he felt dazxled, strange to himself, almost, for' once, afraid. He rose with difficulty, his limbs cramped after long sitting; stretched his arms; looked down once more upon -the sleeping form confident of his protection. Croft waa a lover of cleanliness, fair play, victory always--but victory with honor. Throwing back his head In a characteristic way, his eyes still resting upon the sleeping face, he smiled. It was the little smile which many men knew well, which enemies feared, but which those he led had ever loved to see: that smile with him meant a challenge, and a challenge presaging achievement. Noiselessly, he opened the door and went out. Seizing two old basins discovered among the rubbish in the hut, he strode toward the river. Save for the distant surf, no sound whs audible. From the palm grove he keenly surveyed the bay: It was deserted ; the world might have been dead. Plunging through the tall bamboo he came out upon the deepened stretch of water glimmering faintly, like moving darkness, below ' him. Then, throwing off his garments, /he dived into the shadowy ripples, feeling a primitive delight in the cold sting to his tired limbs. Afterward, slipping Into his shirt and breechesi he filled bis basins and returned to the grove. When he emerged from the bamboo, the sound of voices fell upon his ears. Hastily stepping back, he waited, listening intently. The voices came nearer, then receded toward the <?eaward outskirts of the palin grove. Croft took a few noiseless strides in their direction, soon discovering the dark forms of three natives among the trees. Soundlessly creeping in their wake, he hid again, close enough to hear their speech, while they paused at the top of the slope. PmMMenger* Go Mad Adrift in Open Boat* Mexico City.--Several passengers of the lost Mexican steamer Isidoro, which was recently sunk durtng a furious gale In the gulf when enroute from Frontera to Vera Cruz, were picked up In the Caribbean sea, physically exhausted and mentally unbalanced as a result of their sufferings, according to meager private reports received here. The Isidoro was listed as missing December 23, and it was later given up for lost The passengers are said to Iiave taken to the boats and passed several days on the open sea attempting to reach land. The man sets about doing things. The girl becomes hysterical. Will she be able to face real perils? (TO BE CONTINUED.) «X<frX*X4>X*X<*X*X*X<6»X*X«X*X«X«X*X*X«X*X«X*X4>X*X+X*X*X«X<» Pygmy Victim of Act of Mistaken Kindness In 1004. after the St. Louis exposition, one of the African pygmies exhibited there was stranded In New York on his way home. He finally got a job in a Coney Island restaurant, hut soon lost it, and was near srarvation when a person Interested in his plight asked Dr. W. T. Hornaday. curator of the zoo, to give him work, says the Boston Transcript. The pjj;niy was set to work cleaning and tending the monkey cage, and later was promoted to the bear cage. He .was happy and cheerful, but so slow that It took ldm half a day to clean the cage. It was not long before he became an object of greater Interest than either the bears or monkeys, and an Innext darkness hides the earth, we will 1 genlous person conceived the Idea of fall upon this white tribe, true to the placing a sign on the front of the Vow!" A confusion of voices resounded, accompanied by many furtive glances inte the darkness of the forest; the suvagtt joy of revenge was yet temcage during the hours he spent there, unnouncing that he was a specimen at homo sapiens. The fellow wss not left untroubled long, however, for the New York lbs mtftiwi and .otT? started righteous agitation against such indignity to a poor pygmy--and thus to the human race--and quickly interested the negro welfare societies. At their protest he was discharged and, after wandering southward from one ill treatment to another, be committed suicide^" m Human Instep Telia St Man only of the larger primates nas retained the long primitive instep bone in spite of his large body development. As the bulk of the body developed science might suppose that the Instep would shorten. This human deve'opnient is accounted unusual in view of the development of apes and similar bipeds, but is partially explained lu that man used his heel and foot as be now does, even before his body be^ah to assume large proportions, and this indicates that originally humans wen short of statnret but accustomed ta [ ivyi' BUmMD IN STONE . • ' „ ; 7 HOURS; LIVES Qwnorry Foreman, Smrvioma Novel Experience. WhenYoti Feel a Cold Com incOrik Laxativ* Brom tablets G4»sonburg, Ohio,--Embedded |» • mass of crushed stone for more, than seven hours recently while more than thirty workmen labored to save his life was the experience of John Felilhaber, thirty-six, quarry foreman at, the National Motor end Supply company's plant here. The bin in which Feblhaber was held prisoner is 30 feet high, 16 feet square and conical in shspe. The stone had become frozen and wedged together and Fehlhaber descended on the inside. In trying to start the stone, without warning the pile let loose, wedging Fehlhaber in the mass. He waa caught in the stone and sand up to the waist, one of his legs being doubled up against his body. In this cramped position he was held prisoner seven hours. Rescuers da|ed not stand on the stone, fearing it would slide and bury the man. After every other effort at rescue had failed, a hole was drilled through the 18-tnch wall of concrete, reinforced with steel, and he was removed. While the rescue work was in progress, a physician was in constant attendance, administering stimulants. It was said that he Is suffering from shock, but will recover. Orphan* Separated 21 Years Reunited by Ely rip, Ohio.--Twenty years ago a gypsy fortune teller in Signet, S. D., told Pearl and Earl Culp how to find a brother and sister In northeastern Ohio, from whom they had been separated for 21 years. The brother and sister wrote a letter and got a reply from one Herman Culp of Berea, Ohio, explaining that he had been placed In a Cleveland orphanage in 1884, with two sisters. Pearl and Mary, and a brother, Earl. He had never heard of them since his adoption by a Berea family. An attempt was made to locate the other sister. Records could not be found, and the search was abandoned. Last August Culp was stopped on the street in Berea by a man from Lagrange, Ohio, 20 miles south of Berea. "Aren't you related to Mrs. Mary Ryan of Lagrange?" the man asked. "You resemble her closely enough to be her twin brother." Culp drove to Lagrange, located Mrs. Ryan, and, upon comparing dates and places, found her to be his sister. The four brothers and sisters were placed in the orphanage 41 years ago, following the estrangement of their parents. Pearl and Earl, twins, were then eight, Mary was nine and Heis man eleven. They were all adopted n short time later, the twins going to South Dakota, while Mary went to Lagrange, Ohio, and Herman to, Berea. Ohio. The four plan a reunion soon. Lad of 4 Shoot* Girl Who Gave Him Ifnpleaeant Do*e Jackson, Miss.--After he had been persuaded to tak« medicine commonly prescribed for children, the fouryear- old son of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley of Morton, Miss., shot Miss Martha Mitchell with a small gun given to him by his father as a reward for taking the unpleasant dose. When Miss Mitchell administered the medicine she handed the lad the gun, believed to have been unloaded. He turned it upon the woman and pulled the trigger, the bullet striking her in the right leg and inflicting a severe wound. She was brought to a local hospital for Trace Air Miahapa London.--Most aviation accidents are due to slight error s of judgment, according to a recert anaylsis made of more than 800 mis)taps in the royal air force. It was found that of 60 per cent of the accidents, due to errors in judgment, only a small number befell pupils at flying schools, while a large number were caused by carelessness among recently graduated pilota. r %: i j. ' # StopaHtccougha* Atfransas City, Kan.--Louis f^oeMs of this city suffered from hiccoughs. Medical aid failed and he was growing very weak. Mrs. Harry Davis of this city prescribed swallowing a pearl and furnished one from a string, valued at $2,000. It worked. Within two minutes the hiccoughs stopped. 40 Yewra fer $2.16 Theft Detroit.--Three men who stole $2.16 three weeks ago were sentenced to a total of 40 years la prison in maximum SCBTCNC^S. ' Charles Goodchlld. twenty-two. and Robert Andrews, twenty-three, were sentenced ffom 7% to 15 years and from 5 to 15 years, respectively. In the state prison at Jackson for robbing Kurt Helllg of 16 cents. 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