McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 5 Sep 1912, p. 6

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

The McHenry Plaindealer Published by F. G. SCHREINER. McHENRY, ILLINOIS. IS iSO'LiJ EXPECTING A VANDERBILT HEIR WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA, EA2"*" ERN OHIO AND WEST VIR­ GINIA DEVASTATED. PROPERTY LOSS IS $5,000,000 Torrential Kaln Falls for Five Hours, Fills Valleys With Raging Tor­ rents Which Sweep Every- , thing Before Them. Pittsburg, Pa., Sept 4 vivid lightning display that continued for more than an hour, and that seemed to rend the heavens, was lolloped by the worst storm of rain that ever devastated western Pennsj 1\ania. eastern Ohio and parts of the Pan­ handle district of West Virginia Mon­ day. For nearly five hours the rain fell In torrents. Cloudbursts filled fer­ tile valleys with raging rivers that an­ nihilated crops and carried away bridges and railroad tracks Light­ ning struck in scores of places Quiet streams rose in an hour to become grim agents of destruction Railroad traffic practically stepped :i ;-<l wire traffic is paralyzed throughout most of the region. When reports from all points wer® compared, 24 are known to be dead. This list of fatalities u ill probably be much larger, for in many remote ham­ lets in the wide area scourged by the flood there will be no communication for days. Colliers, W. Ya.. is practical­ ly wiped out Cherry Valley. W. Ya.. is in ruins. The towns of Ave 11a. C an- onsburg, Washington, Hurgettstown and a dozen smaller places in the ex­ treme western end of Pennsylvania are inundated. At New' Philadelphia, Steubenville and other Ohio towns, near the Ohio river, the damage •wrought was heavy The Panhandle division of the Pennsylvania railroad ceased train op­ erations. Fourteen miles of t~ack were washed away near Colliers. Three bridges were carried down stream. For miles along Racoon creek the roadbed is submerged It will be a fortnight before traffic can be re­ sumed here A freight train on the Wabash jumped the track five miles north of Wellsburg. W. Ya., and the entire train rolled into Cross Creek. There are no authentic reports as to what became of the train crew Washington county alone reports property damage that will exceed $5,- 000 ,000. Thousands of sheep and cat­ tle were drowned in the fields Wash­ ington is the greatest woo! growing community east of the Mississippi river. The'streams throughout this county and in Greene county are clogged with the bodies of dead sheep. Hundreds of the animals, not yet sheared, were soaked with rain, and, being too heavy for their own legs, were swept into the raging streams. The Monongahela and Allegheny rivers are near the flood stage, and consequently the Ohio is overflowing its banks at many points west of Pittsburg. Millions of bushels of coal went out of the Pittsburg harbor, headed for the lower Mississippi Reports from points in the flooded d i s t r i c t g i v e t h e d e a t h s a s f o l l o w s : C h e r r y V a l l e y , P a . s i x d r o w n e d C o l ­ liers, W. Va., nine drowned. Hurgetts­ town, Pa., one drowned: Avella Pa., three drowned; Canonsburg. Pa., four •drowned; Pittsburg, one killed by lightning. 4 DIE; 26 HURT IN WRECK Passenger Train Plunges Into River When Bridge Near Camp Douglas, Wis., Is Washed Away. Camp Douglas, Wis., Sept. 4 --Four persons were killed in the wreck of passenger train No. 10 on the Chicago St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha rail road, which plunged into the Lemon- welter river near Camp Douglas at five o'clock Monday morning Every car. including the sleepers, with passengers Btil lin their berths, was hurled into the stream, whose wa­ ters, augmented by the cloudburst of the previous night, had made it a tor­ rent. The accident was due to the Wash­ ing away of a bridge over which the train had passed safely a short time before. The train was flagged at Tunnel because a washout farther on had made the track impassible, and was ordered back to (amp Douglas so that the passengers might breakfast. M e a n w h i l e , t h e f l o o d e d L e m o n w e l t e r h a d t o r i a w a y t h e b r i d g e a n d . u n ­ w a r n e d t h e e n g i n e e r c o u l d n o t ^ t o p h i s t r a i n i n t i e m t o s a v e i t f r o m p l u n g i n g M a n y o f t i n i n j u r e d • l r . l d r t - n o n h o l i d a y over t l u 1 b r i n k a r e w o : n » n a n d trips H a m i l t o n W a s h i n g . t i n K i n g o f O l i v . - t . n i i , minister to Siam Bangkok, Siani. the state departing, cable by Vic»*-('onsi MILL HEAD ACCUSED OF DYNA­ MITE CONSPIRACY IN LAW- RENCE STRIKE. FAMOUS AS TEXTILE MAN la Head of Company Employing 35r 000 Hands--Gives $5,000 Cash Bond for His Appearance--Under­ taker Arrested. Boston, Sept. 3.--Charging him In an indictment warrant with conspir­ ing to distribute dynamite in Law­ rence during the general strike there last winter, President William M. Wood of the American Woolen com­ pany was arrested here Friday. The American Woolen company, which bore the brunt of the great Lawrence strike from January 12 until March 14, controls thirty-three manufacturing plants in New England and New York state. It has a capital­ ization of $75,000,000 and employs 35,- 000 operatives when all the machinery is in motion. About 15,000 persona are on the payrolls of the company's miils in Lawrence. President Wood is one of the beat- known textile men in the country. He furnished cash bail of $5,000. It Is understood that he will be formally arraigned in the superior court. Dennis Collins of Cambridge, who was indicted and arrested on a charge of unlawfully having placed dyna­ mite in a railroad passenger train for transportation, is in jail in default of $l,50d bail The discovery of dynamite in a Syrian lodging house, a cobbler's shop and a cemetery in Lawrence last January, while the textile strike was at its height, caused a sensation. Soon afterward John J. Breen, a Lawrence undertaker, was arrested on a charge of having unlawfully placed the dynamite in the places where it was found. Breen was found guilty and fined $500. MUSSELMAN IS NOMINATED Victory Considered Prohibitionist Sue- cess--Nine Aldermen Arrested for Grafting Renominated. Detroit, Mich., Aug. 30--The re­ turns were not complete Wednesday, but unless Fred C. Martindale of De­ troit, Republican candidate for gov­ ernor, gets a much bigger majority in the upper peninsula than the present returns indicate for him, his Grand Rapids rival, Amos Musselman, has landed the Republican nomination. Mr. Martindale beat Musselman in Detroit by about three to one, but the lower peninsula rolled up a margin of nearly ten thousand. Musselman's victory is a Prohibitionist victory, he having appealed to the "dry" ele­ ment and the saloon interests backing Martindale. Nine of the aldermen arrested for grafting were renominated through the strength of their political ma­ chines, among them Tom Glinnan, the chief boodler. Prosecutor Shepard was renominated by an overwhelming majority. MERZ IN STUTZ WINS RACE Captures the Illinois Trophy, While the Aurora Cup Goes to Hughes in Mercer. Elgin, 111., Sept 3.--First day's win­ ners at Elgin's third annual race meet Friday were: Jencks Trophy contest for small cars, won by Harry Endicott, driving a Mason. Distance, 101 3-4 miles. Time, 100 minutes, 42 seconds. Av­ erage, 60.57 miles an hour. Aurora Cup, won by Hugh Hughes, driving a M. rcer. Distance, 152 miles. Time, 140 minutes, 40 seconds. Aver­ age, 65.04 miles an hour. Second, Pullen, driving a Mercer. Time, 146 minutes, 32 seconds. Third, Trussel, driving a Falcar. Time, 169 minutes, 19 seconds. I l l i n o i s Trophy race--Won by Charles Merz, driving a Stutz. Dls- tfnee 20?, miles. Time, 184 minutes, 3 serofids Average, 66.11 miles an hour Second. Gil Anderson, driving ; a Stutz Time, 186 minutes, 14 sec­ onds MRS. H. H. ROGERS IS DEAD End Comes Abruptly in Her Private Car "Sunset" En Route to New York City. New York, Sept 3.--Kn route Fri­ day to her home in this city from Bretton Wood9, N. H., Mrs. Henry H Rogers, widow of the late Standard Oil magnate, died in her private car Sunset of heart disease, four hours before the speeding White Mountain express pulled Into th" city Mrs Rogers, who was sixty fi. 'e years old, left Bretton Woods In an effort to reach her hotrie in this city before her death She realized that she had but a short time to live. She was carried from the hotel to the waiting train on a stretcher. K ing Sent N! ich I s D e a d . 1 H a m i l t o n ' < 1 S t a t e s i ': e n1y at i raetnia, ' fined by ;'i Hansen. T o r I •ts Jail. Mlt in Breaks Out of New York, Sept o f a s t e e l c e l l i n t h e i , , , , ) and scaling the outer v. all ; Ing the old part of t h e b u i l d n old Frosbrey gained his la .e -u Mon­ d a y . H e w a s a w a i t i n g t r i a l f o r m u r d e r . Millionaire Dies In Vat. Albuquerque, N M., Sept " . --Solo­ mon Luna, ml'lionaire banker and sheep owner, for sixteen years Re­ publican national committeeman for New Mfxii-o, was found dead Friday I n a d i p p i n g v a t a t h i s r a n c h und- Kev- Oe Palma Wins Big Races. Chicago. Sept 4 -Ralph De P a l m a . driving a Mercedes, overcame a long run of hard luck at the Flgin auto road raceB Saturday, winning both the Elgin national trophy for 2,".4 miles and the free-for-all trophy for 3<»6 miles. Three Men Killed in Wreck. Pittsburg, Pa., Sept 3 - Three men were killed, one was fatally injured and a number were slightly hurt Fri­ day. when the Pennsylvania railroad train which left Pittsburg for Cleve­ land ran into a work train. i A IS DOOMED BY VOLCANO THIS is a new photograph of Mrs. Hollls McKim Vanderbilt of New York (before her present marriage the beautiful Mrs. McKim of Baltimore), who expects the advent within a short time of an heir to the house of Alfred G. Vanderbilt. Mr. Vanderbilt and his bride are awaiting the happy event at their houseboat at Wargrave-on-Thames, England. WILL QUELL REVOLT ARMY HELD READY BY TAFT TO INVADE NICARAGUA AND AID AMERICANS. RUSH MARINES TO MANAGUA Fighting Force of 2,000 United States Men Will Be in Republic by Tues­ day Next--Tenth Regiment Pre­ pared for Service. Rochester, N. Y., Aug. 30.--From his private car in the Rochester yards on Wednesday, President Taft telegraph­ ed to the acting secretary of war at Washington, rescinding his order of twelve hours previous for the imme­ diate dispatch of the Tenth infantry from Panama to Nicaragua. The president took this action fol­ lowing advices from the state, war and navy departments concerning the present situation in Nicaragua He said there would be 2,000 United States troops on Nicaraguan soil by next Tuesday and he expresed the opinion that this number would be sufficient to Insure the safety of Amer­ ican lives and property without the aid of the Tenth infantry. The president was advised that the rebel leaders have given assurances that they will open the lines of com­ munication from Corinto to Managua. The Nicaraguan government itself asked for assistance from the United States and stands ready to aid in opening the railway line to the coast from the capital The president has been greatly dis­ turbed over the situation in Man­ agua, Corinto and other towns. Amer­ icans are not In any special peril, but In other parts of the country the revolution is not in hand and pillag­ ing has been going on. The people of Nicaragua, the presi­ dent was informed, are suffering un­ told horrors and Americans are suf­ fering in many instances with them. To friends Mr. Taft declared that if the senate had agreed to the proposed treaty with Nicaragua which he advo­ cated on his long trip last fall the misery existing today would never have arisen. BOY FALLS TO DEATH DROPS 2,000 FEET FROM BAL- LOON AT FLINT, MICH. Lad Caught by Foot When Craft Is Released Dangles From Rope as Thousands Scream. Flint, Mich., Aug. 31 --His foot caught in the guy rope of a balloon, Chester Betts, aged fourteen years, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Betts, living in this city, was carried 2,000 feet in the air and then dropped through the roof of a barn. He died while being rushed to a hospital. The tragedy oc­ curred at the fair grounds and 6,000 horrified 'spectators saw the boy plunge to death. Among the shuddering thousands who watched the tragic accident were the lad's father and mother, rrom whom he had wandered in boy­ ish desire to be near the center of the attraction offered by the balloon­ ist. They did not know the swinging fc rm was that of their son until, with others of the crowd, they rushed to the spot where the crumpled little aody lay. Then the mother fainted and the father, with tears streaming down his heeks, turned from his dead to care for hiB living. The youth was standing near the oag when the word to cast off was given. One of the ropes caught his foot and, evidently too frightened to bcream, he was drawn rapidly toward the sky. The balloonist, Abner Amsbill, of Lansing, made frantic efforts to pull the lad to the trapeze upon which he nat. Closer and closer the little form was brought to the bar which meant comparative safety when there was a shriek from the watchers as, turning over two or three times, it snot toward earth. Assassins Secure $8,000. Muscatine, la., Aug. 30.--Hala Mc Dermld and J. F. Briney of the Sum- mitt Lumber company, a Muscatine concern, owned by H. W. Huttlg, at Randolph, La., were shot Wednesday in an attempt to rob a pay roll of $8,000. Editor Garretson Dies. New York. Sept. 4.--Carlton T Gar- re*«*>n, editor of Judge died her© Monday at the home of his Bl6ter, Mrs. J. O. Finch, as the result of in­ juries received when he wts thrown from Ms horse on May 10. 13th Holdup on John D. 's Estate T a r r y t o w n , N . Y „ S e p t . 3 - T h e t h l r - teenth holdup to occur on the Rocke­ feller estate at Pocantico hills within a month took place Friday, when a teamster was robbed at the point of a revolver by two Italians. Cuban Attacks U. S. Diplomat. Havana, Cuba., Aug. 30.--Hugh S Gibson, the charge d'affaires of the American legation at Havana, while entering a hotei here Wednesday, was atta- ked by a Cuban newspaper re­ porter. Kaiser Better; Takes a Walk. Cassel, Germany1 , Aug 30.--Emper or William felt, so well that he arose early Wednesday morning and before breakfast enjoyed a long walk In the park surrounding Wilhelmshoehe castle. GUADA.LAJARA, MEXICO, 18 ABOVE SLUMBERING CRATER. Government Issues Warning to City of 150,000 Innabitants Telling People to Flee. Guadalajara, Mexico, Aug. 31.--This city, the Becond largest in the repub­ lic, having a population of 150,000 people, has received warning that it will be destroyed by the eruption of a volcano over which the city rests. The warning is given in all serious- Tiess by the government through the seismograph branch of the national observatory at Mexico City. Seven scientists, who spent the lat­ ter part of July and the first week in August here, have issued a report following the 340 earthquakes which have shaken Guadalajara in the past three months that the town Is built on the crater of a slumbering vol­ cano. Increasing temperatures, sulphurous fumes escaping from fissures torn In the city streets by the quakes and the bursting out of several hot springs led to the investigation which showed that 300 feet beneath the surface of the earth there is a seething crater, whose last eruption was about 1,000 years ago". The men from the observatory can­ not state when the eruption will take place, but they believe it will be with­ in a year. Their report urges that the city be vacated, and they suggest a move to Juanacatlan, a town about forty miles from here on the banks of the Santiago river. The center of the crater beneath this city is located approximately un­ der the state palace, which is in the heart of Guadalajara. Government papers have been re­ moved trom the palace to Mexico City for safety, and a mass meeting will be held here the first Sunday In Sep­ tember to decide whether the city shall heed the warning and move or wait and see what happens. mL f s c ikut A N D N E A R Newcastle, Del., Aug. 29.--T h e su­ burb of Dobbinsville, near here, was terror-stricken Tuesday following the "shooting up" of the town by mem­ bers of the Eighty-first coast artil­ lery. None pf the inhabitants were hurt. Topeka, Kan., Aug. 30.--The state Republican council overruled the new state Republican committee in its de mand that the Roosevelt presidential electors be removed from the Repub­ lican column on the Kansas ballot and that standpat electors be placed there Instead. Douai, France, Aug. 30. -- Lieut. Louis Felix M. Chandenier of the viation corps was burned to death Wednesday while flying in his aero­ plane. He was en route to the city of Chalons when the tragedy occurred. WILL TRY DARR0W OCT. 21 Judge Willis Sets Date for Second Trial of Labor Lawyer for Alleged Bribery. BAR^ MEETING IS CLOSED Frank B. Kellogg Is Elected President of American Association--Court Recall l« Flayed. Milwaukee, Sept. 1. -- "One-eyed leaders of the blind" was the term used before the American Bar asso­ ciation at its closing session to de scribe those who seek Judicial reform through the recall of judges. The association, after going on record as oppesed both to the recall of Judges and to judicial decisions, declared that oth«>r methods must be employed to prevent delays In lawsuits. Various committees were appointed to report on plans for expediting court proce­ dure. Charles A. Boston, New York, as­ serted that one means of lessening criticism of the bench would be to provide for judges a written code of ethics such as has been put into ef­ fect by various state bar associations for lawyers. The election of Frank B. Kellogg, St. Paul, Minn., as president brought the convention to a close on Thurs day. New directors elected were William H. Burges, Texas; William H. Staak, Pennsylvania; John H. Voorhees, South Dakota, and S. S Gregory, Illinois. Los Angeles, Cal., Aug. 29.--Presid­ ing Judge Willis on Tuesday set the second trial of Clarence S. Darrow, the labor attorney of Chicago, under Indictment for the alleged bribing of luror Robert Bain in the McNamara case, for October 21. This will be the second attempt to convict Darrow for alleged Jury bribing in the famous dynamite case, hfc having been ac­ quitted, after a hearing lasting three months, of bribing Talesman Lock wood. Record $200,000,000 Mortgage. Cairo, 111., Aug. 31.--The largest mortgage ever filed for record here was handed to County Recorder Al­ fred Brown Thurpday. It was for $200,000,000, and is by the St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern railway. GEN. BOOTH LAID TO REST Thousands of Mourners Pay Last Trib­ ute to Leader--Thrones and Re­ publics Represented. London, England. Aug. 31.--The body of Gen. William Booth was laid beside that of Catherine Booth, his wife, In Abney Park cemetery, Thurs­ day, amid signs of deep respect from men and women of all classes. At the grave representatives of reigning houses and of presidents of republics, Including the United States, joined many thousands from the masses' whom the founder of the Salvation Army had tried to uplift. Turks Attack Greeks. Athens, Sept. 3 . -- Semi-official tele­ grams received here last Friday stat« that a large force of Turks attacked four Greek block houses on the north ern border of Thessatjr, killing sis Greeks 700 Killed In Chinese Mutiny. Peking, China. Aug. 29.--In an upris­ ing at Changsha. Hunan province, Tuesday, soldiers killed 700 persons and looted the government offices and treasury. The governor. Tan Yeng Kai, escaped. U. 8. Transport Li scorn Sinks. Shanghai, China, Aug. ^29. The I'nlted States transport Usoom sank here Tuesday bealde the whi.rf, where she was lying, in forty feet of water. Tii- mnsn or the accident waa not ascertained. U. S. Makes Demands of Panama. Washington, Aug 31.--Demands upon the Panama government to con­ trol its police and stop the gross brutality with which Americans have been treated was issued Thursday by the American state department. • Stephenson Has Slight Cold. Hscanabii, Mich.. Sept. 3 -- Reports received Friday from Inlted States Senator Isaac Stephenson'? fishing camp in the woods say that the sen­ ator Is sutTeiing trom a blight co.d and that his condition is not serious Orozco's Force Defeated. Cananea, Sonora, Mex., Aug. 31.-- Bringing in fifty horses, twenty-five mules loaded with provisions and mu­ nitions, and $500, a band of forty volunteers returned here Thursday after beating Orosco lnsurrectors. Civil War Regiment in Reunion. Bloomlngton, 111., Aug., 31. -- Two hundred survivors of the famous Nine­ ty-fourth regiment of Illinois Volun­ teer Infantry assembled h'ire Thura day in annual reunion. The late Joha ilcNulLa of Chicago was colonel. S c o t t i to Marry American. London. Aug 31.--Charlotte Ives, an American actress living at the Sa­ voy. announced her engagement to Antonio Scotti. the Italian baritone. The wedding will take place as soon as arrangements can be made. Aviator Seriously Hurt. Wayneburg. Pa., Aug. 31.---Aviator Joseph Stevenson of Pittsburg fell Thursday in a biplane at fair grounds and was badly injured. Six thousand saw StevciiBon s plunge of over 100 feet when hiB engine went dead. Flames Trapped 13 Men. Los Angeles, Cal, Aug. 31.--Thir­ teen fire fighters wtre rescued In a pitiable condition Thursday from Devil s canyon, where they had been hemmed In since prvvious Sunday, without food or water, b.v flr»" I L L I N O I S Bloomington. -- Raymond Miller, aged sixteen, and Eddie Mc- Ewan, aged seventeen, both of Che- noa, were instantly killed when their automobile was struck by a T. P. & W. train at Weston. 4 Rock Island.--Frank E. Larson, late clerk of Prospect camp, Modern Woodmen of America, at Minneapolis. has been arrested there on a chafg£ of grand larceny preferred by the National Surety com­ pany of New York, which is on his bond for $5,000. Vandalla.--Officers are searching for Henry McCart, a rural mall carrier residing at Brownstown. It is charged that McCart mortgaged property not his own and forged notes amounting to several hundred dollars. Mount Sterling.--The large barn of Wade Irving near the Illinois river was struck by lightning and completely destroyed. The loss es­ timated Is at about $4,000. It was filled with hay and all kinds of grain and farming implements. Streator.--Thomas Murphy, former­ ly of Kentucky, leaving his team in a field, eloped to Ottawa with Frieda Winters, the daughter of his former employer, and was married. He was arrested and put hi /he coun­ ty Jail on the charge that he swore falsely that the girl was of ag£, when she is only fifteen. Elgin.--A man named Ballinger was the first victim of the au­ tomobile races here. He was killed in a motor accident while on the way from Chicago In an auto He was drlvtng the big Lozier in which Ralph Mulford won the Vanderbilt cup. Ballinger was employed by the Strom- berg Motor Device company. Bloomlngton. -- Improvements in the postal service will be dis­ cussed at the ninth annual conven­ tion of the Illinois branch of the Na­ tional League of Postmasters, which will be held in this city next Thurs­ day and Friday, September 5 and 0 There will be addresses by many of the leading postmasters of the state. Aurora.--Joseph King of Wheat­ land will appear before a mag­ istrate In Joliet to answer a charge of assault preferred by Eugene Tut- tle, who has been paying attention to Miss Helen King and pleading with her to marry him. King Is said to have run the young farmer from his home with a shotgun. His defense, he says, will be that "Tuttle was a pest." Danville.--William Henry Har- baugh celebrated his one hundred and seventh birthday anniver­ sary and is still hale and hearty. He came to Illinois and to Danville In 1833 and conducted the first black­ smith shop in town at the age of sev­ enty-five years. On his one hundred and seventh birthday anniversary he smoked his first cigar and appeared to like it. Bloomington.--Labor troubles are believed to be impending in the shops of the Chicago & Alton here. The company declines to dis­ charge nine boilermakers who retired from the union because of heavy dues as a result of the strike on the Har- riman lines. Evanston.--Any one who can charm rats as dfrd the Pied Piper of Hamelin would be a welcome vis­ itor to this town Just now The rodents have so crverrun the place that the authorities have gi^en UP trying to poison them and are seek­ ing in Chicago to find a professional rat exterminator. F6od sprinkled with phosphorus has been carefully avoided by the rodents for several weeks and the townspeople are con­ vinced that a more effective scheme must be tried at once. Carllnville.--The last quarterly conference of the Methodist church was held by District Superln tendent Chris Oaleener. Reports were made by the pastor and the various organizations. The election of officers for the ensuing year was an important feature. The result of the election was as follows: Trustees, J. I. Rinaker, E. R. Turnbull. Mrs M. J. Anderson, Mrs. Julia Hulse, .1. F. Messlck, W H. Steward and J. H. Perlne; stewards. L. E Ross, C. F Fanning, George Arnett, Jesse Peebles, T P. Ross, Ayres Kepllnger, Mrs. George Braley, Mrs. E. A. Ab- betson and Alex Rouland. Mulberry Grove--Leonard Snow, sixty years old, a farmer liv­ ing nine miles northwest of here, committed suicide by shooting him­ self through the heart Macomb.--A motorcycle ridden by Charles Wehinan collided with a horse, driven by three small boys. The horse got one foot entangled In th£ motorcycle but remained quiet until it was cut loose with a pair of pinchers. Galena.--Charles Edress, sixty-two, shot and killed himself after he had been cornered by a posse led by of fleers who feared he was insane be^ cause he had been prowling around at night armed with a shotgun. Farmington--A vicious bull dog. used as a night watch for a general store, broke loose from Its keeper as it was being led into the building, at­ tacked Anton Spudwllas, badly lacer­ ating him In addition to breaking both bones In his right forearm. Joliet.--W. F. Muhlig, one of Will county's oldest settlers and believed to be the oldest Odd Fellow In Illinois, is dead at Elwood. near here. Muhlig joined the Odd Fellows at Mount Carroll in 1858 THE DAIRY INDUSTRY EPITOMISED. The National Dairy Show, having arranged for a permanent home to which to forward the Dairy Industry in all of its branches, and recognizing the cow as the foundation of ail things Dairy, is undertaking to tuild an an­ nual Exposition that will not alone prove to be a school for the farmer, but an advocate of the highest type for the more general and varied use of the products of the Dairy. To do this successfully we must first have the attention and Interest of the far­ mer and dairyman; next the support of the many Interests allied with and collateral branches of the Industry. With this thought in mind, the man­ agement of the National Dairy Show desires to report progress made for the 1912 show to be held in Chicago, October 24 to November 2. We have assurances from the best breeders of the different breeds of cattle that they will be with us, and for purposes of competition we have arranged a very complete classification, and by obtain­ ing the very strongest talent for Judges, who will be selected with the sole purpose In view of making a rib­ bon at this great National Show an ar­ ticle of supreme value, settling the question of show yard supremacy each year after the herds have done battle in the fairs and shows in their respec­ tive territories. We will make this show yard the mart for highest type of selection and the place from where all matters of breeding and feeding will be demonstrated as a guide to the old-timer and new beginner. Here is what we will have fdr you: Judges of National and International repute to pass upon the battle; a Govern­ ment exhibit in charge of experts that will display breeds with record of test performance, the kind to own and the kind not to own; the test of feeds for results; the proper and Improper methods of handling the products and marketing of same; civic sanitary and hygienic requirements will be illus­ trated and explained by experts of National prominence. We have pre­ pared a splendid premium -list for Dairy Products which will bring out a strong lot of contestants with milk and cream exhibits for honors; butter and cheese makers will enter their products for supremacy and every­ thing that can be developed for the benefit of the visitors In direct con­ nection with the cow will be shown. The Borden Milk people, at an enor­ mous expense, will give dally demon­ strations of the pasteurizing, cooling, bottling and distributing of milk. They will erect in the show a plant equal In size to that used in a city branch. This must be helpful in allaying all agitation of the pure milk question for the city consumption. The Blue Val­ ley Creamery will erect a plant in the show capable of making a ton of but­ ter each day, showing the pasteurizing process and the cleanly, sanitary methods of a creamery. The Consum­ ers Company will manufacture lc^ cream in a glass machine in full view of the visitors, showing the thorough­ ly healthful and sanitary manufacture of this now extensively used condiment. Demonstrators from domestic science schools and colleges will give exhibi­ tions and distribute recipes covering the more general use of milk as a food. The Universal Cement Com­ pany will erect an educational silo ex­ hibit of large proportions, BO that methods of preparation and care of ensilage, as well as the construction of silos, may be thoroughly discussed and understood. There will be ex­ hibits from the many machinery houses, who will actively display and explain every new and modern device to their better understanding, and, in fact, the ten-day period of the show will have crowded Into it more of real value for the dairy industry than any other show ever before held for such a purpose. The man engaged in pro­ ducing dairy products and the con­ sumer will get Immeasurable benefit by an attendance upon this entire de­ tail working of all that pertains to dairying under one roof. Unusual Occurrence. Richard Harding Davis, during his Atlantic Sity honeymon, said at a fish luncheon: "I confess that I am not pleased with the modern trend of fiction. The newest fiction leaves a bad taste in the mouth. It 1b full of doable en­ tendre--like the parlor maid s remark. "A gentleman oame down to break­ fast one morning with bloodshot eyes. He drank eight glasses of ice water hurriedly, then he muttered hoarsely to the pretty parlor maid: " 'Tell me, Adele. did I reach home last night very much under the weath­ er?" " 'Indeed you did, sir, ' the maid re­ plied. 'Why, sir, you kissed the mio­ sis!'"--Washington Star. To Reproduce Riot Scenes. The recent riot at the Federal build­ ing, Los Angeleo, will be reproduced at the trial of tl ose arrested by mo­ tion picture films, and shown to the Jury on a screen. It will be the first time In the history of Jurisprudence that such evidence will have been In­ troduced. While the riot was at its height a moving-picture company, with the newest model machine, had an operator on the scene, and his films show the entire actions of those per­ sons who are charged with having caused disturbance. A Booklet for Investors. The Harris Trust and Savings Bank, Harris Trust IiuildinK. Oik-ago, has Is­ sued a booklet enti t led "Wliy INnds Are Pafe Investments." intended for the us* (* persons planning to invent in bonds for the IIrat t ime. I ts aim is to explain In simple terms the purposes and uses of various classes of bonds, and to Indicate the value of bonds as safe investments for individuals us well as insti tutions. Copies may be had free on application. Cautious. Hobson--I understand that you pat­ ronize Snips the tailor. Does he suit you? Harduppe--Not unless J pay him something in advance. Mr*. Wlnsiova Sootum* ay trip for Cfaildree terihtutf , mo fleas tlie i iums, retlueea luflnininft- Uoa, t l lkj* pain, cures wind colic, tba » bottle. Better a pavement made of good in­ tentions than no pavement at all. CURBS BURNS AND CUTS. Cole's Carboitsalve stops the pain Instantly. Cures quick. No scar. All druggists, tf and 80s. It 's a shame to spill milk, but it Isn't a crying shame.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy