McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 8 Aug 1912, p. 3

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mi 'WW? S«#J mmm W - - iC^&f^rZi ffj}* ;. «,* * 'r ILL HOLD MANY INSTITUTE UFFTS THERE WILL BE A LARGER NUM­ BER OF GATHERINGS FOR FARMER8 THAN EVER. » ASSIGN SIXTY-FIVE SPEAKERS Total Number of Addresses to Be De­ livered Throughout the State Will Reach a Total of 1,647 for the Season. 8pringfleld.--According to bulletin No. 19, just Issued by the State Farm­ ers' Institute from the office of the secretary, H. A. McKeene, there will be a larger number of farmers' insti­ tute ineetings in Illinois the coming season than heretofore. There is to be a Central Illinois Farmers' institute In Paris, October 15, 16 and 17; a Southern Illinois Farmers' institute in Cairo, November 19, 20 and 21, and the annuel state institute in Sterling, February 18, 19 and 20, 1913. Besides these important state meetings, there are already planned local and county meetings for 254 towns covering 422 days. There will be 135 one-day, 148 two- day, and 135 meetings of three or more days' duration. The state insti­ tute has assigned sixty-five speakers and instructors who are scheduled to deliver 847 addresses. Besides these, the college of agriculture and experi­ ment station authorities will assign two speakers to each regular county institute, when they are asked for, and which, it is estimated, will bring the total number of addresses to be given by state speakers to 1,647 for the period from September to Febru­ ary ; this does not include the speak­ ers for the state meetings. Hhe attendance at local meetings last season was 176,650; this does not include the record of attendance at the six one-week short courses in ag­ riculture in various parts of the state, nor that 6f the two state meetings which were held; nor does this rec­ ord of interest in agricultural study and discussion take into account the dairymen's meetings, the Live Stock Breeders' convention, the Alfalfa Grow­ ers meetings, the good roads meet­ ings, the seed and soil special trains, all of which would swell the total at­ tendance at agricultural meetings to several hundred thousand people. Such active continued Interest in the problems of seed, soil, harvest and improved live stock in Illinois augurs well for the future prosperity of the state. Famous Minister to Talk at Fair. The Illinois state board of agriculture closed an engagement for the presence of the famous inde­ pendent preacher, Pastor Rnssell, of New York and London. G. C. Driscoll of Dayton, O., the personal represen- tstive of the ubiquitous pastor, called u^on Secretary Dickinson of the board and positively promised the presence of the distinguished divine. Mr. Driscoll did not ask for any re­ muneration on behalf of Mr. Russell. "He will not accept pay for his serv­ ices as a lecturer," remarked Mr. Driscoll, "nor are there any collections taken up. He will not appear in any place where admission is demanded for his presence. He Is endeavoring to carry the Gospel Into the hearts of thousands and tens of thousands who bel/ong to no church denomination. He is not a revivalist, but is seeking to turn the minds of skeptics and Infi­ dels into the way of Christianity by new paths. "I am glad he consented to come to the great Illinois state fair, ft>r I be­ lieve can do an Immense amount of good here. He would not come If admission was charged to hear him. The fact that a gate fee on Sundays always has been charged to the state fair, and that it would be charged if he were not present permits him to accept the Invitation. He will dellver his greatest lecture, 'Beyond the Grave' on this occasion." Pastor Russell is strictly an inde­ pendent preacher. His lecture will quicken the dormant love for the pure and the good in Protestants, Cath­ olics, Jews and Mohammedans, re­ gardless of denominational beliefs. Title and Trust Raises Capital. The Chicago Title and Trust com­ pany certified to the secretary of state an increase of capital stock of from 95,000,000 to $8,600,000, and in the number of directors from 17 to 20, and a consolidation with the Real Estate Tttle and Trust company, un­ der the name of the Title and Trust company. La Salle Fair Incorporated. The La Salle Fair association was incorporated here. The Incorporators are George A. Wilson, Frank E. Leahy and J. E. M&lone, Jr. Militia Must Get Order. participation of organizations of the Illinois National Guard and Naval Re­ serves In public parad^Oel^, la now a thing of the past. "Hereafter no organization of the Illinois National Guard or Naval Re­ serve, or any part thereof, will be paraded for any occasion, other than the authorized drills and other assem­ blies, purely military In character, without first obtaining specific author­ ity from the adjutant general. "By command of the governor. "F. S. DICKSON, 29 Milkmen Under Bond. Making the twenty ninth person apprehended in the crusade against adulterated milk which was recently- started by members of the pure food commission, assisted by United States marshals. E. J. Norton of Brighton Save bond in the sum of $200 in the United States district coprt to appear at the next term on a charge of ship­ ping adulterated milk. According to Information on the ease Norton shipped eight gallons of •cream from Brighton to the St. Louis Dairy cosapany of St. Lor Chester Insane Not Abused. Charges that patients la the Chester State Hospital for Insane Criminals hare been abused, choked, kicked and beaten, fed unclean food, bedded under unclean blankets and without the use of clean towels and soap were declared unfounded and without basis by Judge B. R. Bur­ roughs of the state board of adminis­ tration and A. L. Bowen, executive secretary of the state charities com­ mission. Charles Breitske was released from Chester by habeas corpus in Judge Windes' court in Chicago and May 21. 1912, printed charges against the in­ stitution. The investigation toy the state offi­ cers had been in progress since. In substance, it says that the methods of discipline at Chester are recognized as the safest and best for that class of men, many of whom have commit­ ted murder or other crimes against the person. The "choking" complained of con­ sists in placing the fore arm under the chin of a fighting patient, the attend­ ant being behind him. In this position the patient is unable to use his head and teeth in attack. Not a single patient complained that he had ever been injured or caused serious pain by these methods of con­ trol. Breitske and nearly all his patient witnesses admitted they had never been misused or mistreated. The committee says of the com­ plainant, Mr. Breitske, that he has been in this hospital three times, but has never made any complaint or charges in his two periods of free­ dom prior to his last release. His excuse for not telling the su­ perintendent, members of the board of administration and other state offi­ cers, either by letter or word of mouth, is that he could not get paper and pencil and would have been abused had he done so, yet the rec­ ords show that he frequently wrote letters; that letters making charges against the institution are often writ­ ten by patients and mailed. Few Pharmacists Pass. The state board of pharmacy an­ nounced the names of the successful applicants for .certificates as regis- tered and assistant pharmacists and for local registration. Thirteen of the 95 candidates and 79 candidates for assistant pharmacist and the one ap­ plicant for local registration passed the examination successfully. The test was held In Chicago early in July. The successful applicants are: ' Registered pharmacists--J. W. Bail- lie, Lyell F. Cook, Frank M. Hassett, Arthur M. Kidd, John E. Livingston, Henry Matthews, M. A. Pokorney, Michael E. Rubin, Joseph P. Shure and Morris Zoub, all of Chicago; Rae H. Foltz, Carlinville; Otto Korhonen, Waukegan; Walter H. Puterbaugh, Dixon. Assistant pharmacists -- Sampson Abrahams. Jonesan Aron, Emll Barre, Bern M. Cahlll, William H. Campbell, Harold P. Dereby, Sister Flavia Far- ren, Vernette Gaskins, Henry Green- berg, Simon Gurevitch, Lucas P. Han- neman, Frank Heda, Frank Hust, Giles E. Krollck, Walter Landaker, Joseph E. LeZama, George B. Lucashevsky, Thomas W. Lyman, Jackson D. Mal- comb, M. A. Palumbo, George T. Primm, Albert Rabinovits, Emanuel Ritzlin, Reynolds E. Sandman, Bernard Zak, all of Chicago; Kenneth G. Davis, Carrollton; Harry E. Johnston, Dan­ ville; Guy Mauk, Martinsville; John A. Michels, El Paso; Sophie C. Michels, El Paso, and Ralph E. Traubel, East St. Louis. Local registered pharmacist--Mah- lon Hess, Jr., Melvln. Confer on Country Life. Representatives of all lines of rural activity met here for a three days' conference on country life, which also is the second annual meeting of the Illinois Federation for Country Life Progress. Farmers, teachers, country ministers, grange members, farmers' institute workers and all others connected with farm life were invited, and they responded in large numbers. On the program were speakers of national reputation, 'n- cludlng Dr. Harvey W. Wiley Dr. Warren H. Wilson of New York, Oli­ ver Wilson, master of the National grange; Prof. Edward J. Ward, "so­ cial engineer" of the University of Wisconsin; Logan Waller Page, dl:ec- tor of the national bureau of pu )l'c roads; Prof. William D. Hu-d of the Massachusetts State Coliege of Agri­ culture, and William G Eckhardt, ag­ ricultural adviser of DeKalb county. Militia Must Get Order. He wore the enlisted man's service uniform and carried his own blanket roll and the regulation Springfield rifle, marching on foot with the re­ mainder of the men and wearing no Insignia whatever of his rank. The reason for the general's hike with the common soldiers was partly a Jest and partly his wish to know the exact conditions that the enlisted men in the Illinois National Guard have to face in the field. BUSY AVIATORS OF UNCLE SAM'S ARMY • CAPTCJfARl&S 'E FOREST CKAND. OB" P/ mmm \ iiilO- N E W S O F I L L I N O I S DURING the annual army maneuvers in New England this month the aviation squad will be given a chanea to show what it can do iu the way of reconnoiterlng, and in preparation for the test the young officers have been very busy at the army aviation grounds at College park, near Washington. Every pleasant after­ noon ther make trial flights and execute maneuvers, using the latest models of aeroplanes. MEN OF PROMINENCE ARE HIT IN REPORT OF STANLEY STEEL QUIZ. NEW LAWS RECOMMENDED Big Corporation is Called an Enemy of Organized Labor and is Ac­ cused of Lowering Condition of Its Employes. Arson Charge Is Made. Acting State Fire Marshal F. R. Morgaridge and Deputy Fire Marshal Lovejoy went to Havana to swear out a warrant for the arrest of Jim At­ kins, who resides at Saidora, west o Havana, and who is charged with hav ing burned property of Ed Hamil, his brother-in-law. Bloodhounds, which were secured from the kennels of H. G. Strumpfer of this city, tracked Atkins to his home, and to representatives of the state fire marshal 's office* Atkins, it Is said, admitted everything. No Provision for Filling Vacancy. In an opinion rendered by Attorney General Stead to Secretary of State Doyle, that official holds that the pri­ mary election law makes no provision for the filling of a vacancy in the of flee of state central committeeman The attorney general further states that he knows no means authorized by law for the filling of such a va­ cancy as has arisen under the resig­ nation of Chauncey Dewey, member from the Second district, and the in­ dication* are that the vacancy will not be filled. Washington, Aug. 5.--Directed mare than a year ago to Investigate the United States Steel corporation, the report of the majority of the commit­ tee of the house of representatives was submitted to the house Friday by Representative Stanley of Kentucky, the chairman. J. P. Morgan and his associates are held up as being bene­ ficiaries of enormous profits realized from the overcapitalization of the subsidiary companies of the steel cor­ poration and later of the corporation iitself. Former President Roosevelt is In­ dicted for making the oontrol of the steel trust absolute and is charged with being responsible for the gigan­ tic stature the trust has attained. The steel corporation is called an enemy of organized labor and is ac­ cused of lowering the condition of its employes and of contributing to Amer­ ican Industry workmen and work methods un-American and foreign to the best interests of labor. Legislation recommended by the ma­ jority consists of three bills. One, commonly known as the Brandeis bill. Is designated to give an injured party the right to begin suit to prevent or­ ganisation of a combination in re­ straint of trade. This bill also trans­ fers the burden of proof to the defend­ ant corporation to show that It is a combination within "reasonable re­ straint of trade." Another bill would provide that "no person engaged as an individual or as a member of a part­ nership, or a director or other officer, or an employe of a corporation, In the business, in whole or in part, of manu­ facturing or selling railroad cars or locomotives or railroad rails or struc­ tural steel, or mining and selling coal, shall act as a director or other officer or employe of any railroad company which conducts an interstate com­ merce business." The third bill is in­ tended to hit at the system of inter­ locking directorates and would sepa­ rate industrial from railroad business. In speaking of watered stock, the majority comment is: "In some instances stocks w ere not 'watered' in the ordinary acceptance of that term; they were deluged." U. S. AIDS REFUGEES WAR DEPARTMENT AMERICANS AT EL 8UCCORS PASO. Orozco In Reply to Washington Pleads That He Be Allowed to Purchase Arms In U. S. Washington, Aug. 2.--By ordering that 2,000 tents already en route be hurried on their way as much as possible and telegraphing $3,000 to El Paso for the immediate relief of American refugees from Mexico, the war department showed its apprecia­ tion Wednesday of the magnitude of the rescue work before it. Dispatches from the border indicate that nearly two thousand refugees have already gathered on this side of the Rio Grande, and that as many more will arrive. Mexico City, Aug. 2.--Several hun­ dred Zapatistas who attacked Santiago Tlaguistenco, 40 miles west of this city, were reported Wednesday to have been driven from an intrenched position in the hills by troops from Pachuca and Mexico City, which were rushed to the scene with machine guns. Juarez, Mex., Aug. 2.--General Oroi- co, chief of the rebels, declared here Wednesday that he did not seek to provoke American intervention. He said: "If the United States will throw down the barriers and let us have all the ammunition we can buy, I promise in sixty days to have peaoe restored in Mexico and a stable government in charge. If anybody wants interven­ tion it is Madero and his fan»Hjfr.„who are jrorth millions, which they fear the revolutionists may seize." PROGRESSIVES NAME TICKET UPHOLDS MONROE DOCTRINE Senate Adopts Resolution Warning Powers From the Western Hem­ isphere by a Vote of 51 to 4. Washington, Aug. 5.--After a thrpe- hour debate behind closed doors the senate Friday by a vote of 51 to 4 adopted the Lodge resolution defining the attitude of the United States in disapproval of the acquisition by for­ eign interests of any territory on the western hemisphere which might be used as military or naval bases or menace "the approaches" of this country. The resolutions declared the United States could not see, "without grave concern," the title to any advantage­ ous position on the American con­ tinent pass into the control of afor- eign corporation that might be dom­ inated by a foreign government. Ten Hurt In Train Collision. Baltimore, Md., Aug. 5.--Six passen­ gers and four trainmen were injured in a collision Friday between a west­ bound Blue Mountain' express and an eaBt-bound freight on the Western Maryland railroad at Chewsville, Md. Underwood Cotton Bill Is Pased. Washington, Aug. 5--The Demo­ crats of the house, by a vote of 156 to 72 Friday passed the Underwood cot­ ton bill, making an average reduction of 50 per cent, below the duties pro­ vided in the Payne Aldrich bill. Tenor Succumbs Upon 8tage. Newton, la., Aug. 3.--Just as he was beginning to sing the "Miserere" from "II Trovatore" here Thursday Francis­ co Albiach. the Spanish tenor appear­ ing before a large audience, fell over gn the stage unconscious and died. Americana Were No^ Hapged. Washington, Aug. 3.--Two men re­ ported hanged at Cananea, Sonora, by Mexican rebels wjpre not American citizens, according to report from the American consul at Nogales, received at the state department Thursday. Indiana's Third Party Nominates Bev- erldge for Qovarnor and Landis for 8econd Place. Indianapolis, Ind., Aug. 3.--The Pro­ gressive state convention here Thurs­ day nominated the following ticket: Governor--Albert J. Beveridge of Indianapolis. Lieutenant governor -- Frederick Landis of LOgansport. Secretary of state--L. H. Mace, Scottsburg. Auditor of state--Harvey C. Cush- man, Washington. Attorney general--Clifford F. Jack- man, Huntington. Superintendent of public instruction --Charles E. Spauldlng, Winamac. State statistician -- Thaddeus M. Moore, Madison county. Reporter of supreme court--Frank R. Miller, Clinton. Judge of supreme court, First dis­ trict--J. B. Wilson of Bloomington. Judge of supreme court. Fourth dis­ trict--William A. Bond, Richmond. Judge of appellate^ court, First dis­ trict--Miner F. Pate, Bloomfield. The platform declares for every­ thing that has been preached as "pro- gresive" for years. TEN ALDERMEN ARE HELD Detroit Councilmen Released on $5,000 Bail Each--Cases Adjourned Un­ til Next Tuesday. Detroit, Mich., Aug. 2.--Ten alder- men charged with grafting were held in bail of |5,000 each when arraigned in police court here. The courtroom was crowded with politicians when the officials were led to the bar. The cases were all adjourned until next Tuesday to enable the district attor­ ney to thoroughly examine the mass of evidence procured by the Burns de- tectiives. Cudahy Family Is Reunited. Kansas City, Aug. 6.--The reunion of the family of Mr. and Mrs. John P. Cudahy was completed when the four children arrived from Pasadena. Cal., Sunday, where they had been in the custody of their grandmother. Negro Becomes Jewish Convsrt. N^w York, Aug. 6.--Rufus L. Berry, a colored lawyer of Brooklyn, em­ braced the Jewish faith here Sunday in the home of Rabbi Schelner. Rev. Meiseis, a cantor, assisted In the cere­ mony. On Strike Against Profanity. New Yoik, Aug. 2.-<--Four hundred girls, members of the dressmakers' union, employed at a Brooklyn fac­ tory, struck Wednesday against the use of profanity by foremen and oth­ er male employes of the shop. Olympic Heroes Reach New York. New York, Aug. 2.--America's vic­ torious Olympic athletes landed in New York Wednesday amid the cheers of thousands of admirers, who crowd­ ed tb« docks and massed' themselves In tbi streets to see them. COLLEGE GRADUATE STEALS •150,000 IN TREASURES FROM WEALTHY CHICAQOANS. HAS JEKYLL-HYDE CAREER Social Bandit Beats Efforts of Great­ est Flotlon Writers--"Only Robbed the Rich," Is His Excuse for a Score of Remarkable Robberies. Chicago, Aug. 6.--When an exciting chase in the loop resulted in the cap­ ture of Jacob F. Guthrie of 1613 Prairie avenue Saturday, treasure worth $150,000 was recovered and a career that had surpassed that pic­ tured for any of the "society bandits" of fiction checked. Cultured, a college graduate and a former high school instructor, Guth­ rie Is charged with having surpassed Raffles, Arsene Lupin and the other creations of authdrs. Robberies in a score of homes of Chicago's wealthy residents are charged to him. Art treasures, silverware, rare books, Jew­ elry, objects of historical value and ones appreciated only by a connoiseur were his pelf. Society columns of the newspapers furnished htm with a guide to the do­ ings of the victims he selected. Ev­ ery one of the score of robberies charged to him are believed to have been planned with caution and circum­ spection, and while the police were looking for experienced robbers they blamed for the crimes Guthrie was working as an employe In the city hall--an assistant chemist In the city laboratory. When the police, after the capture of Guthrje, raided the barn and stor­ age warehouse where he had hid his booty they were astonished. It was as If they had entered the cave of the robbers that All Baba found. Paint­ ings whose value was told in four figures, costly Jewels, monogramed silverware, rare books and objects of a similar nature were heaped In pro­ fusion in the barn and were held In | the warehouse. Receipts held by Guth­ rie, and which he tried to destroy in his flight, called for these valuables. Seized by the police, they were , taken as evidence against him. When confronted with the accumulation of evidence against him Guthrie finally J admitted that he was the man sought , for a number of robberies. "I only robbed the rich," was his excuse, given half-boastingly In a way that recalled the vauntings of Robin Hood. Several days ago Guthrie had given the bank four checks which looked suspicious to the bank officials, and upon his arrival to collect the $900 that the paper represented Officer McCaffrey seized him. Chicago.--Two Illinois postoffices were broken into and robbed. Tel­ egrams from the postmasters of Lyndon, Whiteside county, and Bluff Springs, Cass county, to the post of­ fices Inspector here told of the rob- 1 beries. Postmaster A. W. Greeley of Lyn­ don reported a loss of $30 in stamps and money. The post office was dam­ aged by the intruders. At Bluff Springs $32 in stamps and money was taken, according to Post­ master G. F. Carls. Post office inspectors from the CI cago office have started on the trir = of the robbers. The robberies are believed to bave been committed b an organized band that has broken into a number of post offices recently. Chicago.--Complaints against seven estates for alleged failure to pay equitable personal property taxes for the years 1906 to 1911, In­ clusive, were filed with the board of review by Frank W. Jones, president of the Illinois Tax Refotm associa­ tion. The aggregate amouh^-ot prop­ erty of the estates, which, it is al­ leged, has escaped taxation during these years, based on one year's as­ sessment, is $38,685,000. Complaints were filed against 22 companies and corporations, also said to have eluded taxation on property aggregating $8,238,000, based on one year's as­ sessment, but covering the years from 1907 to 1912, Inclusive. Springfield.--The withdrawal of William J. Conzeiman as Republican presidential elector from the Pekin district was received by the secretary of state. A letter and telegram was also reclved from State Senator Frank Funk of Blomington. withdrawing as candidate for the senate In the Twen­ ty-sixth district. The withdrawal was not in the prop er legal form and was returned. The state committee has power to fill the vacancy caused by Conselman's with­ drawal, while the vacancy' in tl w Twenty-sixth district must be filled 1 the senstorial committee of this dt' trlct. Duquoln. -- A. D. MUlhouse, living in Jackson county, has the dis­ tinction of possessing the first $5 bill issued by the United States treasury. It is No. 1, series A, Issued in March. 1862, and after a close examination by bank officials at MurphyBboro has been declared to be the original. Mill- house secured the bill from his father many years ago, the latter coming into possession of it during the Civil war. The present owner has several times been offered large sums for the bill, and it is now reported that he has re­ ceived an offer of $1,000 and will ao- oept this for the old bill. Chicago.--Two two-cent and one one-cent postage stamps were In- i closed in an envelope and mailed to ! a Baltimore hotel by Edward Cohen of this city. The bill for housing the Cook county Democrats who attended the Baltimore convention was paid by Cohen. It amounted to about $200. After returning home Cohen received a notice that a five-cent charge for a telephone call was unpaid and would he "please remit." WHERE DOCTORS IP ED TO HELP Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegete* ble Compound Restored Mrs. Green's Health"-* Her Own Statement. Covington, Mo.--"Your medicine has done me more good than all the <Joc- >r's medicines. At very monthly period had to stay in bed our drfys because of emorrhages, and ly back was so weak could hardly vyalk. have been taking ijdla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com­ pound and now I can QfL -istay up and do my J work. I think it is the best medicine cn earth for women." --Mrs. Jennik Grrkn, Covington, Mo. How Mrs. Cline Abided Operation, Brownsville, Ind. --"I can say that Lydia E. Pinkham's V egetable C«BfWMmf has done me more good than anything else. One doctor said I must be opera­ ted upon, for a serious female trouble and that nothing could help me but an operation. "I had hemorrhages ani at time# could not, get any medicine to stop them..,, I got in such, a weak condition that I woaUi have died if I had not got relief toon. "Several women who had taken your Compound, told me to try it a&d I did a«d found it to be the right medicine to build up the system and OTsrcomc female troubles. " I am now in great deal better fcealtfei than I ever expected to be, so I think £ ought to thank yoa for it. "--Mrs. O. H. CUNE, S. Main St., Brownsville, Ind. Dk.v" 1 i , M'HFt < ' ;aBr«nV % •s . Sm»t, CUM. op* mantel. ooBwtslenlf, Ltiti all ion. Hade of., or eri will tot Nil OS1 ire »nj i n® •old by deslere eeas p*wp»l<i fortt, BASMM »«**!!•> AW , BFWJMJM, *. fOSfl L. gram THOMFSCW SO** M Qulekly ratleTcaere Irritation c»uaaa tir «$««*, or ... A€€»w Troy, If. *. TOO M U C H , I HEART OF SHERMAN'S ALARMS Vice-President, Recently Near Death, Practically Gives Up 8enate Gavel. Washington, Aug. 2.--Vice-President Sherman is not expected to preside over the senate for the balanoe of the session. If he returns to Washing­ ton at all he will preside but a short time, leaving most of that duty to Senator Gallinger, or whoever is chosen president pro tempore. The facts of Mr. Sherman's illness while on an outing recently have been pret­ ty successfully quieted. For 36 hours his life was in danger. His heart near­ ly failed him, and at one time those attending him were in despair. He is better now, and is at Utica attending ball games daily. French Warships Shell Agadir. Gibraltar, Aug. 3--News has been received from Mogador on the south­ western coast of Morocco that the French warships Cosmo and Friant shelled Agadir Thursday and that they had destroyed a fort and a sanctuary. 10,000 Gallon Tank Kills Two. Philadelphia, Aug. 3--Two men were killed and a ten-year-old boy was seriously injured when a 10,000 gallon water tank crashed through the dye- house of the Stead & Miller company, upholstery manufacturers, Thursday. $100,000 for Destitute Americans. Washington", Aug. 5.--The senate Friday agreed to appropriate $100 000 for the transportation of American refugees from Mexico, now in El Paso to such places as the secretary of wai may determine. "Kid" McCoy Out on $15,000 Ball. London. Aug 5.--"Kid" McCoy, the American prize fighter, who was charged with complicity in theft of $8,000 In jewels from the Princess of Thurn and Taxis at Ost«&f, was r« leased Friday. Zlon City.--Wilbur Vollva, bead of the Zion church, has arranged to carry the gospel into practically ev­ ery state in the Union by the agency of motor cars. A few weeks ago Vollva, Id a ser­ mon here, declared that the wrath of God was to fall oq many cities. It is to carry this message to the people that "motor car missionaries" have been decided on. Chicago.- Police Lieut. John Dawn- sy, in accordance with a state­ ment made some time ago, quit the police department. Dawney resigned to engage in the real estate and bank­ ing business. He has been connected with the department for twenty-three years and was said to be the wealth­ iest policeman on the force. He was once a Pennsylvania schoolmaster. Dixon.--John M. Egan, Jr., of Amboy resigned as civil engineer of the Inlet Swamp Drainage commis­ sion. Controversy over the letting of contracts for the work is said to be the cause. The contract waa let to the Northern Indiana Construction com­ pany for $27,000 over Kgan's objec­ tions. He favored McWilliams Bros of Chicago. Dixon.--Merl W. Rees of Dav­ enport, Iowa, won the diamond medal oratorical contest b^ld at Rock River assembly. The contest was held under the auspices of the \V. C T. U Reese is a student at the rnlverslty of Chicago and won over a large tield of contestants. M c I>eansboro. -The annual Institute | of teachers of Hamilton county will convene her Monday, August 6, and ! will be in session five days. | j cicero.--A new school building, j ' to be finished on September 1. ! at Fifty ninth avenue and Eigh­ teenth street, tn the town of Cicero, Id to bear the name of Daniel Hudson j - Burnhatn, the noted Chicago architect who died in Europe recently The | school trustees of state school district j No 98 voted at a meeting held at the GeDeral Custer school to name the new school In honor of the designer of the Chicago plan The new school makes the fourth school building In the district of which the town of Cicero is the center. Springfield--The following Chica­ go corporations were licensed by the secretary <>f state: Auburn Park Masonic Temple association, $25,000; S. H. Manchee, Clyde E. Tall man, W. W. Tern. Lake Shore Hotel com­ pany, $5,200; William W. Wheelock, Rex MacKeniie, F. J. Newev. Tesla Auto IJght company, $6,000; manu­ facturing automobile supplies; Charles B. Stafford, Harry C. LoVinson. Al­ bert Jacobs. Independence Construc- •lon company, $*£00; contracting; Louis Brownstein, Robert T. Brewer, Samuel Plame. I begged Loraine to smfls to ma, For I'with love was daft She smiled! She more thai for she Just held her sides and laughsdl The New 8port. "These here New Yorkers Is bound to have their sports, I see," Bald Uncle Silas. "In what way?" asked the boarder. "Why," said Uncle Silas, "sence they give up hoBS-racln' they've gone, In heavy fer the turkey trot. Dont , seem to me's if thet could be very excltln'."--Harper's Weekly. Different, Daughter--Since it is your wish, dear parents, that I should marry th» rich old brewer, I consent, although he is seventy years old. Mother--But he Is only sixty. Daughter--Sixty! Tell him to ask me again in ten years.--Maggendorfer Blaatter. No Danger. "Do you believe we are in any dan­ ger of losing our birthright?" "Not a bit--that is, those of us who are doomed to alwayg work for what we get are not." Education should give the child more capacity for doing work and helping itself to the good things of life. Too many try to help themselves without performing any useful labor. Culture will do much for a woman, but it will not permit her to sneesa gracefully To The Last Mouthful crisp, enjoys a delightful bowl of '""V Post Toasties with cream or slewed fruit -- or both. Some people make an entire breakfast out of this combination. Try it I The Sold by CtooM. PoaM Oral Cw>iw, Uatot feMkCmk. U.S A. A..:*-'1 VSlB 4

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