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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 19 Aug 1915, p. 3

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ivW'^ ;>v. " - ' ::•/>:'"t - / ; * , ; „ • » , * " / ' » / * , . > « ' „ * - V , wmt £*" «- ' ) ' f/ f^i»; -y •- /(";V ' 5'r:'.^%;-'tvi-'-A" .- •-: ^ jl -*Vi ' r > -, ^ * w5«-v DELEGATES TO ATTEND TUBER-V"v - CUL08IS CONFERENCE CHOSEN f ' --T. T"f'- !•, ' :f®Y GOVERNOR. M'HENRY PLAINDEALER, Bf'HENRY, ILI* TWENTY-FIVE ARE SELECTED "I**" >n«l ^omen Prominent In Anti- $ Tuberculosis Crusade in This State _ to Attend Meeting In City of Indianapolis. Springfield.--At the request of the governor of Indiana, Governor Dunne has appointed 25 delegates to repre­ sent lUinoiJ at the Mississippi Valley Tuberculosis conference which will be held at Indianapolis, Ind., from Septem- oer 29 to October 1. This conference, made up of offi­ cially appointed delegates from tfie en­ tire central section of the United - States devotes itself to the discussion of the practical problems of the war­ fare against tuberculosis and has much to do with outlining the methods to be employed in the various states. The delegates appointed by Gov­ ernor Dunne are Dr. George T. "Pal­ mer, Springfield, president of the Illi­ nois State Association for the Preven­ tion of Tuberculosis; Dr. Theodore B. Sachs, Chicago, president of the Chi­ cago Tuberculosis Institute; Dr. Charles W. Lillie, East St. Louis, presr ident of the Illinois State Medical so­ ciety; Dr. Charles J. Whalen, Chicago, president of the Chicago Medical so­ ciety; Dr. O. W. McMichael, Chicago, director of Chicago open air schools; Dr. E. A. Gray, Chicago, director of the Chicago Fresh Air hospital; Dr. John Ritter, director Rush Tubercu­ losis dispensary, Chicago;; Dr. George W. Perkins, Chicago, director of the Chicago Tuberculosis institute; Dr. T. B. Knox, Quincy, president of the Adams County Tuberculosis league; Dr. Jeanette Wallace, Peoria, secre­ tary of the Peoria Tuberculosis associ­ ation; Dr. Josephine Milligan, Jack­ sonville, director Morgan County Tu­ berculosis league; Dr. F. D. Rich, Joliet, president of the Joliet Antitu­ berculosis society; Dr. E. M. Sala, Rock Island, president of the Rock Island Tuberculosis association; Dr. C. B. Johnson, Champaign, president of the Champaign County Tuberculosis Health league; Dr. A. L. Mann, Elgin, vice-president of the Kane County Tuberculosis league; Jesse Lowe, Beardstown, president of the Beards- town Tuberculosis league; Mrs. Edgar Foster, Mount Carmel, president of the Mount Carmel Woman's club; Dr. Samuel Dodds, Cairo, vice-president of the State Association for the Preven­ tion of Tuberculosis; Dr. P. A. Pyper, president of the Livingston County Tuberculosis society; Mrs. E. R. Curry. Mount Sterling, chairman of the de­ partment of public health, State Fed­ eration of Woman's Clubs; Dr. H. A. Pattison, Rockford, president of the Winnebago County Tuberculosis as­ sociation; Herbert S. Matthews, Pe­ kin, president of the Pekin Union De­ partment of Tuberculosis; Dr. E. W. Fiegenbaum, Edwardsville, secretary of the Madison County Tuberculosis association; Mrs. A. L. Adams, direc­ tor of the Morgan County Tuberculo­ sis league, and James Minnick, Chica­ go, superintendent of the Chicago Tu­ berculosis institute. State to Inspect Sewerage Building. Illinois, although the third state in the Union in point of population, has been the twenty-second state to estab­ lish an engineering department of the state board of health. However, such a department has now been organized •on a substantial basis and great good to the public health of the state may be looked for through its activities. Hitherto municipalities and private corporations have without hindrance built unsanitary sewerage systems and furnished polluted water supplies. Such offenses not only affect local public health, but constitute foci of infection throughout wide areas in this day and age of rapid transit. The state board of health is the only state department that can adequately deal with these matters, and it is proposed through the new sanitary engineering bureau to scrutinize all projects for water works and sewerage, with special reference to their relation to the public health. Not only will the public health be benefited, but in many instances large sums of money will be saved by pre-, venting unwise selections of sources of water supply and many exrils of real estate speculation will be eliminated through early attention to drainage conditions. Close attention will be given to sum­ mer resorts. Chautauqua grounds, fair grounds and construction camps, all of which are known to be responsible for the spread of communicable and pre­ ventable diseases when -not properly jsupervlsed. Articles of Incorporation. The following corporations were licensed by Secretary of State Lewis G. Stevenson: Day-Lite Gas company, Chicago; capital. $5,000. To manufacture and sell gas appliances. Incorporators-- Jay Chamberlin, Joseph D. Guinea and Harvey F. Banta. Fisher Bottling company. Chicago; capital, $2 500. To manufacture and deal in carbolated bevarages and malt liquors. Incorporators--Joseph W. •Sob ul man, Mary $. Connor and John * _ B. Calo. Jungk Bros. Dry Goods company, Al­ ton; capital, $20,000. To retail dry , . goods, clothing, notions and general |i ̂merchandise. Incorporators--Charles JO. Jungk, Herman J. Jungk and '* \jAdolph H. Jungk. The Storm company. Chicago; capi- . Ital, $2,500. To manufacture and sell ^ •! .• "Hgoods, wares and merchandise of every ^description. Incorporators--(). Helmer jjohnson. Sophia Biel and V?"u*>&3i fj. *3Donohue. •- Oakland Square Theater company. 'Chicago; capital stock, $49 000. Incor- iporators--Nathan Ascher, Max Ascher land L. F. Jacobson. * t i • '-v: May Light 8tatehouse Fair Tim*. , The capitol building like the court* use may be illuminated under the me system that is being UBed at th® Panama-Pacific exposition during car* nival week for the state fair this ar. The scheme for lighting the court­ house will be to t"hrow powerful beams of light upon the building from huge reflectors which will be placed on top of business houses surrounding the public square. Members of the commercial club's carnival committee hope that the same plan may be used on the statehouse, and a conference with state officials may be held within a short time to see If the matter can be arranged. To light the capitol building in this way would require about thirty-two of the reflectors, which cast a 200,000 candle power light. One of the reflectors which will be bought for illuminating the court house arrived In Springfield yesterday from the Western Electric company of Chicago and was given a trial last night to test the light's power. Mem­ bers of the commercial club's carnival committee yesterday conferred with Mayor Baumann preparatory to asking the council next Monday to take steps so as to change the lighting effect on the courthouse square archer with the rest of the system to be used dur­ ing the week of the fair. On all four corners of the court­ house building pipes will be installed to throw up festoons of steam to be supplied by an engine to be furnished by the C. & A. Railroad company. The powerful lights from the reflectors on the buildings will be thrown In differ­ ent colors into the volumes of steam, producing a lighting effect similar to that which is being used at the Pana­ ma-Pacific fair. Springfield will be one of the first cities in the country to use the huge reflectors for the purpose for which they are to be installed here and the Western Electric company promises to give considerable publicity to the fact in a circular book which that concern publishes. r v ' ' f f r " t : Changes Made in State Office*. State utilities commissioners and employees in the commission's office prepared to remove their headquar­ ters from the first t«i the second floor of the capitol. The utilities commission will, as soon as it can become established, or cupy the present office of the state board of administration on the second floor of the south wing of the state­ house, west side; and, in addition, the room, formerly the old supreme court room, which has been oocupied by the automobile department of the secr<> tary of state's office. The automobile , department has moved to the office rooms formerly oc­ cupied by the state highway commis­ sion which, in turn, has moved from the second floor, west wing, to assem­ bly committee rooms on the third floor. The state board of .admfcistration will occupy the old railroad *nd ware­ house and the utilities commission of­ fices on the first floor! east wing. Six Counties Are in Quarantine. Six counties in Illinois were placed in close quarantine by the federal and state governments following new out­ breaks of foot-and-mouth disease. The quarantined areas include Cook, Bu­ reau, Ford, Henry. McDonough and Warren counties. The Union stock yards in Chicago are again placed in restricted area. Dr. Orrin Dyson, state veterinarian, declared that the new outbreaks had been traced positively to infected anti- hog cholera serum. "The quarantining was done at Washington," said Doctor Dyson! "That .acted automatically for the state for we are working in conjunc­ tion with the federal bureau of ani­ mal husbandry. "Every single outbreak has been placed beyond the shadow of a doubt to the use of antihog cholera serum manufactured by a Chicago concern. The public should be warned that where bog cholera serum has been used within the past thirty days hog raisfrs should be on the lookout for trouble." The Union stock yards in Chicago, according to Doctor Dyson, will be permitted to ship and receive cattlt for immediate slaughter. STATE NEWS BRIEFS Pinckneyville.--Henry Schaub, can­ didate for the Republican nomination for county commissioner, withdrew, leaving both parties without a contest for nomination. Springfield.--The first permit al lowing a "jitney bus" line to operate under a certificate of convenience and necessity was issued by the state pub­ lic utilities commission In the case of the Been Street Bus company of Ot­ tawa. Meredosia.--The body of Harry Mosler of Peoria, who was drowned in Coal creek, near Beardstown, was recovered by a farmer. " Ni Rockford.--Following the notoriety which she received since her Greek affinity, James Kaplanis. a shoeshine stand proprietor, attempted to mur­ der her husband, wounding him in the hand. Mrs. George Horton of South Beloit banged herself in an attic room at her home. Her body was found by her eleven-year-old son, Roscoe. who telephoned his discovery to his father, an employee of an iron works in Beloit, Wis. The woman gave her two sons a dollar each; to her thirteen-year-old son, Randall, she gave her wedding ring. Clinton.--A. A. Reed, wealthy land owner who has beea missing for sev­ eral days, returned to his home after a business trip to Springfield and St. Louis. It was feared he had been murdered. Peoria.--The boilermakers followeJ the printers in revolt and withdrew from the Peoria Trades and Labor assembly. Factional troubles begaii when Emmet T. Flood, A. F. L. or ganizer of Chicago, forced Walter 8 Bush to resign as secretary of the assembly. iipit ; /'• RIGA AJiD K0VN0 THREATENED BY GERMANS Below is a street scene in Kovno, the northern extremity of the new line of Russian defense which the Ger­ mans are striving to capture. Above, the Dunaburger railway station at Riga, Russia's most important port after Petrograd, which also is in danger of capture by the Teutonic armies and which was attacked a few days ago by a German fleet. The chapel in front of the station was erected in meniory of the escapfe of Emperor Alexander III and his family from death at Barki. ERIE, PA., DEVASTATED BY CLOUDBURST Scene in French street, in Erie, Pa., just after the cloudburst and flood that caused the death of more than a seore of persons and the destruction of a vast amount of property in that city. It Was along street that many of the victims were eangfct and drowned by the rapidly rising waters. FIRST AERO SQUADRON OF THE U. S. ARMY The iirst photograph of the First Aero squadron, U. S. A. it is the first organized corps in the United States for service in the field. The squadron consists of 15 junior military aviators, 90 mechanicians and e'ght 100-horse- power military aeroplanes, or speed scouts, capable of flying 83 miles an hour with pilot and observer* and six- hour fuel supply. PRISONERS FROM RIVAL ARMIES INDIAN BOY NAMED F0K T. R. Above are seen Russian prisoners taken in Poland rear-guard actions and being marched back to German concentration camps. Below is a scene during an inspection of German prisoners in a French camp in Alsace. Gen­ eral Joffre was there, and as they passed him the Germ&ns, by command of their officers, respectfully saluted him by "eyes left." MANUAL STUDY ADVANTAGE That It Must Promote the Mind to In­ vention 8eems to Be Self- Evident. The principal of a technical high school says that invention does not frequently manifest itself in the stu­ dents of manual training. Probably this is true also of other students and it may be a fact cr it may simply be a report of a failure to observe the manifestation. Other things being equal the student engaged in a man­ ual study should develop the almost divine instinct and gift of invention more readily than one not so engaged and the greater the intelligence the greater the exercise of Invention. This is demonstrated particularly in den­ tists, a body of men of superior intel­ ligence, whose profession tends to in­ crease their growth along mechanical lines. Many inventions are made by dentists, not only along dental lines, but in other directions. But invention is unconfined to employments or voca- During Col. Theodore Roosevelt's visit to the San Diego exposition he was much impressed when an Indian boy, born two hours before the former president arrived at the "Painted Desert" on the exposition grounds, was christened Theodore Roosevelt. The colonel took part in the ceremony and seemed to enjoy it immensely. With his customary emphasis he de­ clared "This is the finest Indian boy I ever looked at." The photograph shows the mother, Haria Trujile, an Acoma Indian, holding the infant iA a blanket while the former president admires it. • Matting. ftub every two or three months with salt water, lukewarm, and dry quickly with a clean cloth. tions and crops out wherever tlx 8park glows in the production of some advance in the arts or contribution to the world's sum of novel ideas.--Scien­ tific American. An Effort to Define. "Father," said the small boy, "what's the difference between a patriot and a jingo?" "A patriot, my son. is willing to fight on principle; a jingo wants some­ body else to fight on general prirci pies." -v NEWS OF ILLINOIS Bloomington.--William Kutz, aged six, of Delavan, was killed and his sis­ ter, Martha, aged nine, perhaps fatal­ ly injured in a runaway accident, the children being thrown through a barbed wire fence. Champaign.--Miss Zella Winslow, a music teacher, was drowned - ia four feet of water at the high school swim- ming pool. It is thought she was over­ come by heart trouble. Miss Winslow was a native of Paoli, Ind. Duquoin.--Henry Wingert* a tailor, fired five shots in an attack on his son- in-law, T, McAllister, jn the streets. One shot slightly wounded -a pedes­ trian a block away. Several persons narrowly escaped being hit by bullets. Both men were well-known politicians. Decatur.--J. R. Be&n, a wealthy land owner of Sullivan, arrested in St. Louis on the charge of a $60,889 swindle, is in a state of nervous col­ lapse and is being guarded to prevent him taking his own life. It is stated that he had planned to commit suicide on a steamer leaving St. Louis. Duquoin.--Five brothers attended a family reunion In Jefferson county, northeast of here. The combined weight of the men is 1,360 pounds, an average of 272 pounds. The youngest of the brothers is forty years old and the oldest sixty-eight, and all enjoy good health. Aurora.--Advifces have been received here of the arrest of Frank Peterson of Elburn at Port Arthur, Tex., on charges made by Charles Anderson, an Elburn farmer, who trailed Peter­ son to Texas. Anderson alleges that his sixteen-year-old daughter accused Peterson of having attacked her. Duquoin.--Rev. Fred Comber has tendered his resignation as pastor of the Ava and Campbell Hill Baptist churches after a pastorate of four years. Mr. Comber expects to engage in the missionary field in southern Illinois. His successor in the pastor­ ate has not been named. North Venice.--Deputy Sheriff Ed­ ward Hagnauer announced that Wes­ ley Allen, tWenty-three years old, a laborer, had confessed to him that he and three other men had killed two men in a Granite City saloon holdup last February. Allen, according to Hagnauer. cleared Frank Bauer and Herbert Rauth, who are serving in­ determinate sentences in the peniten­ tiary at Chester, of all complicity in the holdup or murder. Chicago.--Clay, Robinson & Co., live stock commission dealers, admit­ ted they had received a request from a London broker several weeks ago for an estimate on furnishing 1,000,000 American beef cattle, delivered, at Liverpool. The firm said they were led to believe that the broker represented either the English or French govern­ ment and that the live cattle were wanted for the army. East St. Louis.--Pekin was selected for the 1916 convention of the Circuit Clerks' and Recorders' association of Illinois at the close of their conven­ tion in East St. Louis. The new offi­ cers are: Recorder, C. A. Summers. East St. Louis, president; E. S. Rose- cranz, Dixon, vice-president; C. O. Meyer, Pekin, secretary; L. O. Brock- way, Waukegan, treasurer. The dele­ gates passed the day on stpamers Al­ ton and Piasa Chautauqua, where they were the guests of the St. Clair coun­ ty board of supervisors. Benton.--Stockholders of the Frank­ lin County Fair association have elect­ ed the following officers: Robert R. Ward, president; CharleB E. Seeber, first vice-president; Harry Stotlar, second vice-president; E. B. Nolen, secretary; A. L. Eskew, treasurer. A resolution was adopted authorizing the issuance of $5,000 more stock if it is found necessary to spend more than the $15,000 already subscribed. The track, which is being surveyed, will be a standard half-mile track. The grand stand will be of steel. The first fair will be held October 5, 6, 7 and 8. Congress Park.--The elopement ol! Miss Dorothy Bell, daughter of Jameii Bell, a wealthy publisher residing at Congress Park, with Paul Sheehan, her father's former chauffeur, becanui known when Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Mont­ gomery of Joliet received a telegram announcing Miss Bell and Sheehan had been married. Mr. Bell owns sev­ eral motor cars and Sheehan was an expert driver and mechanician. Re­ cently. it is said, when Mr. Bell found an attachment existed between his daughter and the chauffeur,, he dis­ charged the chauffeur and ,.sent his daughter to visit the Montgomerys, her cousins. Wednesday Sheehan pre­ sented himself at the Montgomery residency After seeing Miss Bell he said he would like to present Mrs. Montgomery with a box of candy. Miss Bell volunteered to go with him. They went away together and were not heard from again until Mrs. Mont­ gomery received a telegram reading: "We are married and happiest people in the world." Urbana.--Miss Margaret Wenzlaff, twenty-fnuj", a school teacher near Tolono, was drowned when she suf­ fered an attack of heart failure and sank in four feet of water while bath­ ing in the new swimming pool at the Champaign high school. Kankakee.--In a military wedding attended by more than !00 members of the Odd Fellows" lodge and friends of the aged couple, Mr. and Mrs. John Lowe, who have lived in Kankakee since 1883, were united in golden wed­ lock here. Mr. and Mrs. l«we were married at Lawrenceburg, Ind., in _Au- gUBt, 1865. Springfield.--"I think we have the foot-and-mouth disease situation well under control and I do not apprehend any further outbreak," said Dr. O. F. Dyson, state veterinarian. "Every* thing is quiet and in good shape. I think we have every point covered that is Infected and do not look for any spread from infected premises. We have two fa|ps quarantined where the serum which has caused the out­ break. in my opinion, has been used. One of these is in Warren and the other in Ford county. In case any oi the live stock "becomes diseased the herds will be killed." SOCIETY PEOPLE ? HEAR CALF MUSIC) Sad-Eyed Heifer Rips Off Seleo-j tion After Months of Practice. Winston. Conn.--A calf with a sovV is today the subject of ground and lofty conversation in Winstsd. The> calf is the property of Mrs. Minnie Snell of Warren. The story of how the caldf'came into the musical life 0>f{ Winstei could hardly be stranger. About four months ago Mis. Snell was seated at the piano playing Mei> achrinc No. 2, when the calf, whosv given name in Elizabeth, came tn tbei window near t he old trellis snd looked! Jfll '-y\ ' - *V,T , k% . f- . .. -m SI • S3 .svsrr'-ssw r tJS '->'^3 : % The Calf Was Tapping the Notes With Her Nose. in. As the melody flowed on, Eliza­ beth swayed on her hoofs, sighed deeply and said as if from the depths of a troubled soul, the following, to- wit: "Moo!" t Mrs. Snell turned to fee window, and the expression she saw on the animal's face fascinated her. It was as though the mild-eyed calf had seen some cruel farmer placing a gal­ lon of water into a pint ot milk for the New York trade. Two days later Mrs. Snell heard someone picking out notes on the . piano. Startled, she ran into the par­ lor, and there, far -from the madden­ ing cowlick, was BHaabeth^ The calf was tapping the notes with her nose. Since then the calf has been allowed to come into the house over a patch of linoleum every day to practice. The other day Mrs... Small gave the . first recital for * f»w friends. was awful. V : STOLE OFTEN FROM JUSTICE J . Officer of Law a Good-Natured but Repeated Thefts Rile Him. v Riverhead, L. I.--Justice of tfc* ... Peace George F. Stackpole has the reputation of being a good-natured man, but the judge's patience is ex- \ hausted, and in yesterday's issue of a local newspaper he offered rewards for the capture of the persons who had been despoiling him of various articles. , The advertisement rc>cites that on Thursday morning the judge found two units from the coil of his auto­ mobile missing. He offers $10 reward for the arrest of that thief. He will pay $5 more for the capture of the person who stole a coil from his mo­ tor launch. Another $5 may be, earned by the sleuth who finds the man who stole the wheels from two bicycles owned by the justice. To cap the climax, someone stole two pairs of oars that Mr. Stackpole had left at the clubhouse on the y>wn dock. In his advertisement he Im­ plores the thief to be satisfied with one pair and return the other. PULLS* BOY FROM THE TRACK Brakeman Climbs on Cowcatcher and) Makes Rescue at Risk Of Life. Altoona, Pa.--Harry E. Duey, thirty- five, of Tyrone, a brakeman on tb» Tyrone division of the Pennsylvania railroad, is to be recommended to the Carnegie commission for a hero medaL Duey was the front brakeman on a heavy freight train which was coming - iown the mountain from Snow Shofc When the train shot around a curve at Clarence, a mining village. Engineer A H. Rowe saw a boy playing on th» track. He knew it would be impossi­ ble to stop the train in time to sava :lie child. His cry was heard by Duey, who waa n the engine cab. Duey scrambled sut on the running board along tha boiler and in a flash was at the pilot. Springing lightly to the cowcatcher ha was just in time to snatch the lad from death. The rescued lad is a son of Jack Yancy, a miner at Clarence.- - : j m m KILLED SNAKE BY STRATEfft fk Copperhead Enlivens Harvesting byt Wriggling Out of Sheaf. Rehrersburg, Pa.--While unloading wheat in the barn of Edward Bickel. in Tulpehocken township, George B. Gerhard and William E. Oxenreidor saw a copperhead snake three feet flva inches in length squirm from the last sheaf tossed from the wagon. Tha snake landed on the back of a horse, fell on the theshing floor and «a» caped under a grain barrel. Then the problem arose as to ho1r tfe get the snake killed. Finally Oxen- relder lifted the barrel just the least oit and the snake came forward ready to bite him. Bickel Jumped to tfca floor until Oxesrelds? could W the wood pile, got an ax and cM£' the head of the reptile oft. * -M* ' '

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