' . *'*',* "*' "'* *"*"" " -,'•* «-•»'" T »'r" < *'• *• ** ^ V ^ - nnnuDAT, JAITOAETH, U» LIGHTS > TKUJMtaL of NEW YORK |v"' fe Ji--;-; fr Dr. Frederick W. Hodge was talking about the (remarkable eyesight of Zuni V' 'Indians. He said that when he was " ' . ^digging at Hawikuh, he had some In- .. dian workman. They were Impressed " with the idea that nothing In the dirt removed, no matter how small or how " useless looking, was to be thrown away. One member of the party had indigestion and carried some soda mints in his pocket. One of these little tablets became so soiled that he tossed it aside. A Z\inl, with horses and a scraper, was removing loose top ' soil. When he dumped the scraper at the refuse heap, he saw the soda mint, picked It up and brought It back. Again it was thrown away, and again the Indian retrieved it. , When this ~X\' - * third time, the owner of .-~y \ ->th» mint bored a hole three feet deep, ff *.'r,J^dropped the pellet in, and sifted earth. A ^"ln on top of It- This*appeared to.be r? V'» *• the- only manner in %hich he could g*t. f '* *V,» i "4 rid Of it' :rv.'V . . "v . . . : , - 'V »' .' • • / If you should lie ob.your back aoC . 'V.^>'\!lool» up a tall chimney, you might very see a Mat in the daytime. Some »"„>4Indians can do this merely by lying in : W rithe shade and looking up. And they .^..L^are pretty good practical astronomers.' .They can tell time fey the stars, probably by the position of the constella- 1 tions or the moon. At any rate, Doctor Hodge says that one night he asked an Indian what time it was. The Indian looked up at the night sky and said it was five minute# of midnight. Doctor Hodge looked at his watch; it was five minutes of twelve. When the - sun is up, Indians have another method of telling time. They make a little sundial by balancing §ne stoiie on v. another, end orient it without a compass. .'--'4^ I know a man who spends much of his leisure studying the dictionary. He claims that more than a moiety of ' the New Yorkers he meets have such xyloid heads that they cannot define such siutpie words as . giuuxiial and " e r u m . ' ; v v " ' ; ; • r z ~ J ' : ' ; ; ' " An illustrator I know has a servitor from the South. This man has been with him for sever&l years, knows all his business, cooks all his meals, occasionally wears some of his neckties, and is generally invaluable. Not long ago the illustrator told him times were becoming so hard and orders so scarce that it was probable hi wouldn't be able soon to afford a servant and might have to go out and dig 'ditches, if any. The man made no " comment but later, when his employer had forgotten his remarks on the depression, asked for the afternoon oft. He made straight for the office of a prominent art editor. The editor's secretary, supposing he had come with some message or letter when he ln- •. sisted he had to see the editor personally, admitted him. "Mister," he Is reported to have said, "if you don't give us some work to do right quick, I is certainly going to lose my position." He Wt the job. Now the illustrator is Thinking of putting him out as a salesman. r HOW SUN'S HEAT IS RADIATED BY OLD MOTHER EARTH.-- The earth's atmosphere is mainly heated by the heat emitted from the earth itself. The heat from the sun passes through the <• atmosphere and heats the earth. The earth radiates out the heat $ again, but in a rather different form. The waves which constitute the heat radiated from the earth are of much greater length, on account of the lower temperature, than those received from the sun. The longer waves have much greater effect Id heating the atmosphere than the shorter waves received from the sun. Hence the atmosphere Is heated mainly from below. Heated air, rising, expands and cools in consequence of the expansion, and therefore the higher levels are, much cooler than the lower. The sun and earth may be compared with a telephone, in which you have a voice at one end, a sound'heard at the other, but no sound at & any point between. We have X similarly a supply of heat at the sun, but this travels through space as radiation like" light without affecting space, and heats us because it Is changed again from the form of radiant energy to ordinary heat when it meets a material body. It trav-' els through sp&ce with the same velocity as light, 186,000 miles a second. - ... BHT0WOOD How Treatment of Milk Affects Cow's 'Product Pasteurization is the name given to a process devised bv the French scientist Louis Pasteur for preveating bp checking fermentation in milk and certain other fluids by exposing them to temperatures of 131 to ir>8 degrees Fahrenheit, The treatinervj does not destroy the spores, but it avoids'the injurious; effects usually accompanying complete sterilization. Hence pasteurized milk is simply milk which has been partially sterilize by .the pasteur process. Evaporated milk is pure sterilized milk with GO per cent of the water removed. Nothing is added to it, nqthing is taken from it, andLit-Js more than twice as rich In butterfat as ordinary market milk. ^The heating is the only preservative. Condensed milk is a combination of milk and cane sugar. Sugar serves as the preservative and the milk is dot sterilized.-- Pathfinder Magazine. ¥*'• Sr. f^ ' . • it® W': William F. Carey of Madison Square garden and two or three old and close friends are always putting up jobs on each other. Once, when they were to-» . gether at a hot springs resort, they saw a very large man and. got Into a _ discussion as to how^much he weighed. Finally, they made a pool, the whole amount to be taken by the man who ' guessed closest to the weight. Then the question arose as to how the weight was to be ascertained. Mr. Carey declared that the only way to - find out was to ask, but when the time came to put the question hei hung far in the background. One of his friends was bolder. "I fceg your pardon," be said, "but i the truth is we have made a bet on your weight. Do you mind telling us what it is?" "Why," said the man, pointing to _ where Mr. Carey was tcying to make himself unobtrusive, "I told that gentleman yesterday." / (©. B«ll Syndicate.)--WNU Service. Carrot Pierce* Brick :^,,J|rte.--Mrs. Hprley Bomboy nrandered why she had to strain so to pull up a carrot. She gave an extra hard yank, the carrot came up, and she fell backward. The carrot, she found,- had grown through a brick burjed in the garden. The carrot was five inches long; . ' " ' • 1 .. • ' | Quarter Stolen 25 * | Years Ago Is Paid ' J Muskogee, Okla.--A quarter ! that was stolen 25 years ago ' from a bookstore here by a four- ! year-old newsboy was returned ' with interest recently. Mrs. Mary E. Thatcher, book- Store manager, received a letter + from Argyle, Texas, along with a $2 bill. The letter recounted how, as' a newsboy 25 years ago, the writer had seen a 25 cent piece on top of a counter. The" boy took it. The writer of the letter said Jve justified his action by saying some customer had left it. "But I felt like a criminal, or worse, as I walked from th# store, for I knew better," the letter said. How to DistinguUh Star A planet mjiy be distinguished from a sttir in three ways--first, the stiirstwinkle and the planets usually do not However, this rule is far from Infallible. Second, when magnified by a telescope, the planets show disks of perceptible area, white the- stars appear as glittering points. This distinction holds for all the principal planets, but fails foj most of the many minor planets, or asteroids. Third, the stars maintain practically the same relative positions for years, while a planet changes its position among them perceptibly from night to night, or seen in a telescope, in the course of a few hours or( even minutes. PURE BRED RAMS * SWELL RETURNS Good Market Lambs Produced by Crossbreeding. Sheep returns may be substantially Increased by using a ram of good breeding and of the right type, says L. A. Kauffman, extension specialist in animal husbandry at the Ohio £tate university. To sire lambs of a desirable market type a ram should be muttony in his make-up and yet. carry a fleece that is uniform-' and possesses' length and density. Fortunately for those who will purchase rams for the coming season, pure bred prices, have been deflated, in most cases, more than commercial sheep prices. Many Ohio sheepmert who possess fine-wool ewes and who are interested in increasing their volume of business when wool prices are low will find U profitable to practice cross breeding, according to Kauffman. Where a good mutton ram is mated with merino ewes a desirable market lamb results. This practice does not cause any .sacrifice in the wool clip, but helps irf°lncreasln^ returns from the lambs. Some provision should be made for the replacement of the fine-wool breeding flock. In flocks using two rams, he suggests that one-half of the ewes be bred to a good "C" type ram and the best ewe lambs retained for flock replacement. The other half of the flock may -then be br&l to a mutton ram for the production of market lambs. • ' „ ;' When ewes have sufficient capacity arid are gftiTd milkers it js best to flush them at breeding time. If they are gaining rapidly in weight at the time they are bred, the lambing per cent will be increased, Kauffman. points out. When the season of slack pastures arrives a grain mixture should be fed the lambs if forage crops are not available. Lambs fed a grain allowance while on old bluegrass pasture usually produce good returns. At the Ohio experiment station this past year grain fed weaned lambs on pasture greatly stimulated galn^. For each ^Unvested In feed $2'was returned. r How Hail Differ* the weather bureau says that summer hail, or true hail, is caused by the rapid uprush of air In a violent thunderstorm, which carries raindrops "so high that they freeze. On freezing they fall back to a lower level, where they pick up more water and again are caught in an upward current and carried up to the freezing levels. This is repeated several times until the hallstones get so heavy -that they fall through the rising air down to the earth. Winter hail, properly called sleet, consists of frozen raindrops, the rain having fallen through a surface layer of cold air. '• '/• How to Brighten Orfaa Kpei" When the pipes have been installed for some time, they should be removed and washed with gasoline. They should then be sized and allowed to become tacky, after which gold powder may be applied with a piece of felt. It should be dusted on and the pipes well covered, then set aside at least 48 hours to allow the sizing to harden. The final process Is the application of lacquer. Both sizing and lacquer shpuld be applied with a camel-hair brush and the work done away from any dirt or dust Pasture Important for Pigs During Hot Season Rapid economical gains can be put on pigs^ which have alfalfa or red clover pasture, according to J. W. Wulchet, Ohio Stale university. Alfalfa Is the best legume pasture as it comes earliest and stays latest in the year. Considering the farm. rotation, possibl. the red clover crop is best. Close pasturing alfalfa Is sure to cause injury which will shorten its life, Wulchet states. If there is much alsike In the clover, pigs shtyild be grazed on it only when it is dr^ as It will blister as does rape. Sweet clover is not1 relished by pigs If other legumes can be had. In case there is no legume pasture rape makes a good forage. Rape can be sown any time in the spring and summer and will provide pasture In about elgh weeks. Among those from m distance-to attend the funeral of C. W. Harrison Wednesday were Mr. and Mrs. AJierns, MJrs. M.. Marsh and John Ocock of Huntley; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harrison and Donald Harrison of Chicago; Lora and Earl Harrison of Wauconda; Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. John Vollman and Mrs. Mabel Cruickshank of Elgin; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Tuttle of Dundee; Mrs. George Harrison and daughters, Mrs. Frank White and Mrs. Emma Buell of Woodstock; Mr. and Mrs. Milford Smith and Mr. and Mrs. William Harrison of Round Lake}' Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Bell of Solon Mills; Mrs. Mayme Harrison and son, La- Verne, of McHenry; Mr- and Mrs. James Conway of Libertyville. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bucklaitd, Miss Maype Taylor and Miss Flora Taylor spent Saturday at Rockford. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Frey and family of Deerfield spent Sunday in the home of Mrs. Frey's parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Beatty. Mr. end Mrs. J. F. McLaughlin were callers in the George Herbert home in Woodstock Sunday. Mrs. E. E. Whiting entertained the Scotch Bridge club at her home Thursday afternoon. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. H. C. Hughes and Mrs. B. T. Butler. At the close hinch was served. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Harrison and son, Earl, visited relatives at Grayslake Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Shepard entertained the Five Hundred club at their home Thursday evening. Prizes were awarded to Mrs; Ray Peters and F. A- Hitchens and Mrs. E. E. Whiting and George Young. At the conclusion of the games luneheon was served. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Hopper of Chicago spent Thursday and Friday herp with relatives and friends. """" Mrs. S. H. Beatty and Mrs. Viola Low visited Mrs. Herbert at Woodstock Thursday. Mrs. Herbert is quite ill. Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Shepard were callers at Woodstock Wednesday evening. J. F. Claxton and Mrs. John Dreymiller and Mrs. Letah Davis of McHenry were callers in the George Shepard home Wednesday afternoon- Mrs. Lester Nelson and daughter, Jane, and Mrs. George Bacon of Antioch spent Friday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Dodge. Mirs. Georgia Harrison and Mrs. Luedtke of Woodstock were callers at Sirs. Ella Harrison's Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young spent from Wednesday until Saturday evening with relatives in Chicago. They attended Mrs. Y<mag*» tawther'a neral on FViday. Quite a number from this community have attended the revival services at Ridgefield this week. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr and son, Elmer, were visitors at Woodetock Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs- Charles Frey, Mrs. Elmer Olsen and Mrs. S. H. Beatty were callers in the George Herbert home at Woodstock Sunday afternoon. Lester Carr spent Saturday afternoon in Woodstock. Mrs. Frankie Stephenson spent from Thursday until Saturday wich her sister, Mrs. Robert McLean, at Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey Harrison and family were callers in Woodstock Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard and family spent Sunday with the latter's parents at McHenry. Mrs. Louis Schroeder and daughter, Jessi*, and Mrs. Thomas Kane were visitors at Woodstock Saturday afternoon. Mir. and Mrs. Willard Thomas and family of Woodstock were visitors in the Edgar Thomas home Sunday afternoon • Mr. and Mrs. Walter Harrison and son, Earl, were Woodstock callers Saturday; Mrs. S. H. Beatty, Mrs. Viola Low .and Mrs. Ray Peters were Woodstock visitors Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Letah Davis and son, Eugene, of McHenry were callers in the Geo- Shepard home Sunday morning. Fred Wiedrich was a' Chicago visitor Monday. Max Beth and Mr. Lipman of Chicago .spent Sunday here with relatives. \ Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Bacon of Crystal Lake were callers on relatives here Saturday. Fred Wiedrich and son, Roy, were callers at Richmond Thursday morning. Mr- and Mrs. Harold Wiedrich and family spent Wednesday in the W. O. Fisher home. Mrs. James Conway of Libertyville spent the weelc-end here with friends. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Hitchens spent Saturday evening at Woodstock. Mrs- Ed. Thompson and daughter, Grace Mary, visited her father, John Pint, at McHenry, Wednesday, who is ill. Mesdames H. M. Stephenson, F. A., Hitchens and Lewis Hawley attended the Social Wheel at McHenry Thursday afternoon. "x Edward Harrison of Elgin spent the week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Harrison. Mr. and Mrs. Roland . McCannon drove to Evanston Saturday and visited Mildred Jepson. Miss Lora Harrison of Evanston •pent Wednesday hex« with ents, Mr. aadlfa. Geone Mr. and Mrs. Belaud McCannon and aon spent Sunday afternoon in the B. B. Marbl* home at Greenwood. Mrs- S. W. Smith and. daughter, Bernice, were visitors at Harvard Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Butler and children a pent Sunday in the Andrew Butler home in Chicago. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Thomas Were McHenry visitors Monday afternoon. Mrs. Ellen Whiting entertained the bridge club at her home on Tuesday afternoon. Luncheon was served. Mesdames Ada Mann and Homer Mann of Woodstock were callers in the Edgar Thomas home Monday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. George Young andfamily spent Sunday with McHenry relatives. John Smith, in comjpany with the McHenry Rifle club, spent Tuesday evening at Elgin. Mr. and Mrs. George Young spent Sunday evening in the Matt Blake home near McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Dodge and family spent Saturday evening at Woodstocky The Ringwoo^i Home Bureau held a card and bunco party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Harrison Wednesday evening, the proceeds going towards the Ringwood 't orchestra. Prizes in five hundred were awarded to Mrs. Thomas Kane, Mr. Fisher and Mr. and Mrs. Nick Adams- In bunco to Norma and Clarence Larson, Vernon Howe and Miss Howe. At the close lunch was served. Card of Thanldi ; * / We desire in this manner, to express our appreciation and thanks to friends and neighbors for their expressions of sympathy and acts of assistance during our recent bereavement. Mrs. Ella Harrison. Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey HarrifMb- ; Mr- and Mrs. Lonnie Smith. " ^ ' Method hi Hia Wish My nephew, age five, who goes to kindergarten and whose teacher makes him stand in the corner every time he talks or does something he should not do, came home from school the other day iand said to his mother, "Mother, I wish they would make schools round, because then there wouldn't be any corners."--Chicago Tribune. Iniportant Quettiea An important point remains to be settled about the mule whose kick Is reported to have been removed by evolutionary processes of breeding! Does the mule understand about this new quality of meekness that has been thrust upon him?--St. Louis Globe- D e m o c r a t . v , . : • R. W CHURCHILL, Atty. Administrator's Notice Estate of Gerhardt Wegener, ceased. The undersigned, having been appointed Administratrix of the Estate of Gerhardt Wegener, deceased, late of the County of McHenry and State of niinois, hereby gives notice that she will appear before the County Court of McHenry County, at the Court House in Woodstock, at the April Term, on the first Monday In April next, at which time all persona having claims against said estate are notified and requested to attend for the purpose of having the same adjusted. AH persons indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment to the undersigned. Dated this 25th day of Tmmilh£. A. D. 1832. , .LUCY WEGENER, VV 85-8 • .Administratrix*'?. & O "Yi K v •V-;' -v WM M, CARROLL, Atty. ,%%• Administraltor's Notice / iSstate of Elizabeth Smith, Deceast&t The undersigned, having b-sen, aj*- pointed Administrator of the Estate of Elizabeth Smith, deceased, late of the County of McHenry and State of Illinois, hereby gives notice that he will appear before the County Court of McHenry County, at the Court House in Woodstock, at the March term, on the first Monday in March next, at which time alj, persons having claims against said estate are notified and requested to attend for the purpdise of having the same adjusted. All persons indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment to the undersigned. Dated this 25th. day of January A- a 1032. Tt^iGEORGE SMITH, 35-3 • Administrator, Courthouse Sold ' to Pay Back Taxes Oroville, Calif.---Butte, county's courthouse, placed erroneously on the assessment rolls, has been sold for delinquent taxes by the city of Oroville, bought in by the city and given back to the county. Now the county turned the tables and presented a tax bill to the city for £ county owned land How to fell m fied ad. : - / Try •. » daH I V5 If they Anemia Is Curable if Given Right Attention Thumps and lack of endurance In baby pigs are the first symptoms of anemia in pigs, three to six weeks old. This disease is caused by a lack of blood-forming elements In the sow's milk. It is Induced by continued confinement of the pigs to the bouse, keeping them off the ground where they can pick up the essentials for good health. v The missing elements In the sow's milk are salts of Iron which can be supplied In ferric sulfate. This may be fed In a sticky substance such as molasses which may be applied to the sows udder to insure that the pigs get the elements needed, according to Dr. H. B. Eddington, Ohio experiment station." How Flies Escape Rtis Cflats and small flies often Continue to dance up and down when rafn Is falling. How do they manage to avoid the falling drops? ^ Probably no gnat has ever been caught by a falling raindrop, and for a good reason.. As the drop tumbles down It pushes before It a cushiqn of compressed air. This reaches the fly first so that the insect, without any effort on its part, i^ thrust out of the way of the water. How to Make Cream Whip To a bottle of Ifme water add as much sugar as it will take, leaving always a little sugar in the bottom. Add one teaspoonful of this to one cupful of cream. The mixture will make the whipped cream hold Its shape. Now Buy Dressed Lamb U Graded for Quality Meat consumers In some cities can now buy dressed lamb graded for quality according to standards of the United States Department of Agriculture. This new service has been started, by the buream of agricultural economics in four cities--St. Louis, Detroit, Buffalo,, and Erie. The guaranty of quality which the bureau's stamp on beef carries has created a demand by the trade for a similar service for lamb. The lamb-grading service will, gradually be ext«aded to other cities. : ' 7A ' How to Preserve Lemons To preserve lemons'for any length of time bury them in a box of sawdust. They will keep fresh for several months. Honey's Great Value From the health standpoint we ahould eat honey, say doctors and dietitians, since It is nondiabetlc. In a child's diet It Is lndispensible, they explain, for it so completely satisfies lila craving for sugars that he la not continually hankering for sweets. Chromium Widely Used Mere than 2,000 different kinds of •rtldea mn glatgfl with chro- G&k 2%. Sn»s. "\l Purely American Idea The high school is distinctly aa American institution. The English high school of Boston, founded in 1821, was the first of Its kind and gradually, as fr^e elementary schools were established throughout the" euantry, the high schools followed. Reference Made Easy Bopltrases on rollers la reference libraries.'! -«&£<• Value of Skimmilk One hundred pounds of skimmilk Is worth one-half the price of a bushel of corn for hogs, says the Nebraska College of Agriculture. Milk, however, should not be fed to sows until three weeks after they farrow because it may increase the milk flow and produce scours in the pigs. The college recommends the feeding of proteins su<;h as shorts, tankage and alfalfa hay until the sows have been put, on a full feed, after which milk may be Included in the ration. Feathered Robbers Bold robbers are the sheath-bllls, pirate birds found in the cold Antarctic regions. Traveling in two's they visit the nests of the penguins and while one engages the attention, of a nesting bird the other enjoys a meal of penguin eggs. „ One Point of Vie* The greatest of all faults, I «ey, ia te be conscious of "none. They Read The Because they, these sports enthusiasts, know that the Plaindealer carries first-hand information, first. Because they know that the sports writers on our staff can give them graphic word pictures that hold as much excitement as do the actual events themselves. Because they know that the editorial policy of this paper covers sports in th^ fame exacting fashion as it covers every other news event. Phone 170 McHenry, 111. '4^ • >< \ :L.,y: % Hi