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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 12 Jan 1933, p. 6

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w%m Calbin Cooltbgr 1,933 | SIMPLE WESST GOOLIDGE'S BIER ;V C •» , -d&j* : ( THE M'HXNRY PLAINDEALE*, TlOTliBDAY, JAN. 12,1933 t-Y>¥r '.-i'.'V.'•^rr. it«afc< s sM^i" KgSS? ; .... " W;' <,y £• Remains Laid to Rest in the - family Plot as Nation . Mourns Ex-President. . Plymouth, Vt.--Without a. display of pcnap or ostentatious ceremony, but with simple dignity such as charac1 terized his life former L'xesident Cal Tin Coolidjre was on Satnrdny, Jan nary 7, laid to rest in the little ceine:_ tefy in this \>rmont village beside the graves of his parents, his son and his ancestors of several fenerations. The body of the former President was brought from his home at' North ampton, Mass., following funerai^Eerv ices that were marked by the same Simplicity that attended his burial. In keeping with the unpretentiousness of Mr. Cooli<l-o's nature and his life, Mrs. Coolidge decided that he would have preferred, if he had been a We to express his opinion, funeral services of the utmost simplicity, and such was their nature. Instead of having the body taken Washington or to Boston, to lie to state In the places where he ex ercised the power of poverninent as President of the United States and previously as governor of the commonwealth of Massachusetts, Mrs. Coolidge ordered that her husband's body remain in his hoiue in this city, where he lived before and after his presidential career. Funeral services were held at 10:30 o'clock on Saturday morning in the Edwards Congregational church on Main street in this city, a historic edifice named after Jonathan- Edwards, the great divine, who lived feere. This is the church which the Cool- - idge family attends, and where the . former President worshiped only the previous Sunday. The services were attended by Pres Ident and Mrs. Hoover, representatives jaf^the senate and house, and a Very larg&- number of distinguished people from many sections of the United States. The funeral sermon was preached fcf the Rev. Albert J. i'enner, pastor Of tlie church, and there was an organist and a choir. - Died on Thursday, January 5. , , The death of Calvin Cool idge, thirtieth President of tjie United States, occurred about noon on January 5, of a sudden heart attack in his dressing room in his modest estate, The . Beeches. He was sixty years old. His wife, Mrs. Grace Goodhue Coolidge, who had just returned from .Slopping, found the body when she ' went upstairs to call Mr. Coolidge for luncheon. He was lying on his back with a calm expression on his face as if he had died without pain or suffering. His coat and vest were -'.off-.' ' ' - Mr. Coolidge had been coniplalnfor several days of what he retarded as slight attacks of indigestion, but it was not known that he was suffering from heart disease. He underwent a periodic physical examination recently and no organic troii- We was found at that time. Circumstances of Death. vV„ The circumstances of Mr. Coolidge's death were related by his secretary, J#r. Ross, who was the last person . to see the former President alive. "Mr. Coolidge got up about the us- Oal time. 7 o'clock," said M-r Ross. V "After he had breakfast his)chauf- /S * ieur, Joseph Rnkosky, droVe him down here to the office. He arrived «s usual about 8?30 o'clock, and I met . fcim here. . ^ v., , "He seemed to he all right during flie morning and did not complain of anything at all today, although for |<»uie days past he had been couiplHin EVENTS IN CAREER 0 ' OF COOLIDGE : Born July 4,187'J, at Plymouth, Vt Received preliminary education in ungraded school at Plymouth and at Black River academy at Ludlow and St. Johnsburg academy. Was graduated at Amherst col lege in 185)3. In senior year won gold medal in national competition for best essay on causes of the Revolutionary war. Studied lpw at Northampton. Mass., and began practice there. Entered politics as member of >Northampton common council, 1900 1901. » City clerk df Northampton, KKM. Married Grace A. Goodhue of Burlington, Vt., October 4. 1905. Member Massachusetts house of representatives, 1907-'08. Mayflr of Northampton, 1910-11. Member of Massachusetts state senate, 1912-'15; president of the senate in 1914 and 1915. Lieutenant governor of Massachusetts, 1916-'17-'18. Elected governor of Massachu stetts, twd terms, 1919 and 1920. Elected Vice President of the United States in November, 1920. Became President of^the United States August 3, 1923, upon the death^of Warren G. Harding. SfrffX'alvin, Jr.. died July 7. 1924. Elected President of the United States in November. 1924. While on vacation August 2, 1927 issued famous statement "I do. not choose to run for President in 1928." Retired from Presidency March 4, 1929, and resumed residence at Northampton, Mass. Died Janttkry 5, 1933, at Northampton. J ing of slight .attacks of ingestion. "About 10 o'clock he said to me: •Well, I guess we'll go up to the house.' "We drove put to The Beeches and went into liis study on the ground floor. Mrs. Coolidge was getting ready to go downtown for her regular morning shopping. She came into the study and chatted with us a while. As she got up to go out the door with out calling the car, Mr. Coolidge said: 'Don't you want to take the car?' "'No,' she replied, 'it's such a nice day, I'd rather walk than ride.' "These were their last words' gether. "After Mrs. Coolidge left, Sir. Coolidge and I continued to chat. We did not talk about anything in particular, nothing at all about public qqestions. Left for Upstairs. "About 11:30 o'clock he got up and went upstairs. I did not see or hear him again. Between 11:30 and 12 o'clock, however, he went down into the cellar, and the chauffeur and the gardener, Robert S. Smith, saw hjm there. "He stopped and talked for a mo ment with Smith, who was stoking the furnace, and Smith Uxes the time at ' 10 minutes to 12. w "Mrs. Coolidge returned home from her shopping at about 12:25 o'clock She went right upstairs without tak ing off her hat or coat. She wac going to call Mr. Coolidge for lunch eon. First, she looked In his bed room and then across a little corri dor, in his combination dressing roon and bathroom. There she saw him lying on the floor. She Immediately ran downstairs and called me frorii the study and I ran upstairs with her "Mr. Coolidge was lying on his back on the floor, with his arms out stretched, and with a calm look upon his Ace. "I sensed at pnee that l\p was dead: there was no sign that he had suf fered any "pain. His death must have come immediately and painlessly, judg Ing by his appearance." ALLOTMENT BILL v^Bflf»_T0 HOUSE Main ^Features of Measurer to Aid Farmers. Wasliington.--The Democratic atlotnient plan of farm relief was foTmaiJ^ ^ly Introduced in the house of representatives. Emerging from the house con* mittoe on agriculture, it was revealed as a ineasure proposing to help the farmer and thereby--so it was claimed --the nation by thesq four provisions: 1. To U'\y on the four basic farm commodities of wheat,! Imgs, cotton, and tobacco, and on silk and rayon a manufacturers' sales tax which, in the. case of wheat, will amount to 200 per -cent of the present farm price and which, in the case of hogs, will amount to nearly 50 per cent of the -current price of pork.' 2. To give power to the secretary of agriculture to fix the prices of the fo|)r commodities by dptonnining their "fair exchange value" and t& determine .the "fair exchange allowance^ necessary to restore,, the purchasing power of the commodities to their 1909 1914 level. - 3. To bring about inflation by handing to the farmer in the shape of "adjustment certificates" a negoti-. able, certificate of government indebt edness secured by the tax revenues and redeemable by the government. • " 4. To give to the secretary of ag-" rlculture power to control the production of wheat, hogs, cotton, and tobacco by granting him authority to de^ termine the percentage of production required for domestic consumption; to disburse adjustment certificates only to those farmers wiio cut production 20 per cent; to decide how this curtailment of production shall be determined, and to decide what use the farmer shall make of lands so taken out of production. In the case of wheat It is estimated that the fair exchange allowance would amount to about 60 cents, In order to raise the present farm price to 90 cents and over. For hogs the initial allowance would be based on the difference between the current price and 3%' cents, gradually rising until a full allowance based on prewar purchasing power is reached. The tax would be levietL^in the processingpx^f the commodities, with honle processing exempted. The bill provides for the taxing of tloui^stocks. and additional tariffs equal to the allowance rates are to be Imposed to protect against foreign invasion of goods. Though a strenuous fight was waged in committee, dairy products were not included fb the measure. It Is provided that the measure be in effect for one year, with the President given authority to continue it for an additional year. PATRICK J. FARRELL Patrick J. Farrell, Democrat, is the Bew chairman of the Interstate Commerce Commission, succeeding Claude R. Porter. Mr. Farrell has been with the commission for thirty-two yearg,_ ILLINOIS MINE WAR ' BREAKS OUT AGAIN Two Persons Killed and State Troops Are Called. Taylorville, 111.--Lead splattered the streets of nearby Kincaid as the central Illfhois coal mine wage war broke out anew. Two deaths--one victim a woman--were added to the counting casualty list. The dead were Vincent Rodems, Springfield, a workman miner, and Mrs. Emma Comulato, fifty-one, Taylorville. - Working miners emerged from the No, 7 mine of the Peabody Coal coin- \ pany at Kincaid to find picket lin^s confronting them. Some one tired a shot. Others followed. When the melee was over, Rodems and Mrs. Comulato were dead and a dozen working miners were wounded. Npxt day the fighting was resumed, 'and two"men were shot. Officials of the county, being unable to preserve order, called on the governor for help, and five companies of the Illinois National Guard were sent here. Deputy sheriffs, who* patrolled • the Taylorville-Kincaid highway all night, reported they were targets for sniping from houses, thickets and other places of concealment. They arrested a score of persons and conflscatedWany bombs and guns. New York Bank Cashei^ ; First Braille Written Check New York.--The first check ever written in "braille," the raised dotand- dash writing of the blind, has been cashed by Bank of Manhattan company. This acceptance marks a step of the first importance for the blind and their financial problems, according to Augustine J. Smith, philanthropist, who made the experiment. Officials for the bank studied the question and decided that the check was "in writing signed by the maker," and that braille is "writing" or "printing" within the legal meaning of those terms. First U. S. Cavalry Quits Horses at Call of Motor Marfa, Texas.--One last sunrise gun fired at Fort D. A. Russell marked the end of the First cavalry as a regiment mounted on horses. Under government orders, the unit will become the first cavalry mechanized with headquarters at Camp Knox, Ky., 20 miles south of Louisville. A motor convoy of 65 trucks and automobiles and 104 men under command of Col. Daniel van Voorhis arrived to take charge, of the cross-country trip. Gas Kills Two Children as They Sleep in Auto Las Aniiua.s, Colo.--Sarah Olivas, nine, and her seven-year-old. sister, Serilina, daughters, of Manuel and Guadalupe Olivas of El Paso, Texas, died here of carbon monoxide poisoning, from fumes of the motor car in which they were sleeping. The children, en route with their mother to Big Bend to visit relatives, were sleep-, ing under a blanket in the car. $18^000,000 French Liner Atlantique Burns at Sea Cherbourg, France.--The $18,000,000 French liner Atlantique burned at sea with the probable loss of 30 or 35 members of the crew, according to Capt. Rene Schoof who was among 195 survivors brought ashore by rescue ships. The ship carried no passengers but was on a reconditioning run. * 1* Sworn In Manila.--Governor General .Roosevelt swore in the cabinet In conformity with the reorganization act of the last legislative session. There was only one change, the members given interim reappointments Poland to Pay Part o£ > American Private'Loan Warsaw, Poh-nd.--The Polish government agreed to repay $1,490,000 due January 1 In six monthly installments against the private loan of $45,000,000 made In the UniUM States in 1924. The arrangement Was made with Dillon, Read & Co. The announcement was followed by reports abroad that the Polish government was preparing to pay the war debt Installment due the United States on December 15, but the government denied this. Official spokesmen said -that negotiations to settle that debt will continue when the new Polish minister reaches Washington, D. O. Poland defaulted its war debt InstallmentL^ J53,302,980' ofr December 15. - "• - Two Men Found Slain in Auto Near Monroe, Mich. Monroe, Mich.--Two men found shot to death and strangled with rope and wifce in the rear seat of an automobile near the city Umits were identified by Mrs. Grace Lampert as her husband Rolland "Speedy" Lampert, and Clayton Kress, both of Toledo. Sheriff's deputies and Toledo detectives said the men were connected with the Toledo liquor business and that both were known associates of gangsters. They said they apparently had been slain in revenge for a hijacking qr slaying In Toledo. Three Soviet Leaders Are Sentenced to Die Moscow.--Th/ee of the highest Communist party and Soviet officials in the Brekhovsky district of the Ukraine were sentenced to death and eight Others to imprisonment for treason in an alleged campaign of sabotage against the government's grain collection plan. Jack Pickford Dies in Pwi< Paris,--Jack Pickford, brother of Mary Pickford and noted motion ture actor, died in the American ital. He was thirty-six. Dr, L. Gros, who attended him, stilted that deat& resulted from "multiple neuritis, which finally affected the brain center." ST. LAWRENCE TAKES ON NEW IMPORTANCE Treaty Directs Attention to . Great River System. Washington.--The St. I^awrenci' river, Canada's natural highroad to. the West, takes on new importance since the recent signing of the waterway treaty between the United States and Canada. "With its five fresh-water inland seas the St. Lawrence for ins one of the .great river systems of the world," says a bulletin from the National Geographical society. "While its basin is third in size among North American rivers, being exceeded by those of the Mississippi and the MacKenzie, the St. Lawrence drains in all some 'ftfO.OOO square miles, an area nearly jequal to that of the Republic of Peru: "The name 'St. Lawrence,' however, applies only to the lower1 third of the 2,100 mile river system. Actually the stream rises at the Source of the St. Louis river, near the headwaters of the Mississippi; in Minnesota, flows into Lake Superior, through the other Great 'Lakes, and empties into the Guif of St. Lawnwe at Cape Gaspe, Quebec. , But technically the St. Lawrence' Is that part of the,main stream which flows from Kingston, at the mouth of Lake Ontario, to Cape Uiisiie, ,t?6 miles in length. : I Unique Among Rivers.\V . "In several ways the St: Lawl-fiinfta is unique among large rivers of the world. Easy-going, it does not dig up much silt, and therefore has no alluvial delta at its mouth. Its banks are clear and sharp to the ocean's rim, and the channel at? its mouth is deep enough to clear the largest ships afloat . "The St. LaVrence, in fact, may be said to lead a very well-balanced life. Five months during the year it frorks diligently as Canada's chief artery of commerce. Then for seven months it rests, all but the lower 400 miles being closed by ice. Floods are almost unknown along the St. Lawrence. The Great I^akes act as impounding, regulating reservoirs, and its own occasional lakelike expanses take up the excesses of its lower tributaries. The dikes at Montreal and needed only during the spring and fall when infrequent ice jams cause the river to overflow Its normal banks. "The St„ Lawrence, In Its lower reaches, is a tidal river, like the Hudson, but oddly enough its highest tides are at Orleans Island, ({50 miles from the open ocean at Cabot strait. At Its mouth the range is only six feet, but at Orleans Island, below Quebec, the spread Is 19 feet. Quebec has 18% feet of tide, although the water there Is almost fresh. • "One of the widest of rivers, the St. Lawrence below Quebec is moVe like a broad bay or long lake. The stran ger approaching from Europe must sail some distance up the St, Lawrence before he realizes that he is In a river at ail. At Point des Mont,? both hanks become visible for the first time, yet the river here is 40 miles across and very deep. At Its mouth the St. Lawrence Is more than twice as wide. Even at Saguenay, halfway between the gulf and Quebec, it is still 20 miles across. Legends 6f French Canada. "Historically, sentimentally and scenicaily the St. Lawrence Is one of America's most famous and beloved streams. Long before English settlers had crossed the Alleghanies, French missionaries and fur traders pushed down the St. Lawrence and over the portages to the heart of North America. Today the tiny villages, white parish churches, and the green patchwork fields of the descendants of these French pioneers make the St. Lawrence valley seem more like a part of Europe than America. Here Is a land of legends--'the Dripping Indian,' 'the Phantom Priest,' and 'the Ghost ship' --far removed from busy Montreal, Canada's largest city, which also shares the banks of the St. Lawrence. "While vessels of any draft may ascend the St. Lawrence to Quebec, the next 1G0 miles to Montreal are open only to ocean steamers .which do not" draw more than 30 feet. Smaller ships may ascend the river today to I>ake Ontario by using a combination of short canals and open channels, but the locks are narrow and the current too swift for heavy commercial traffic In many places. This channel is 14 feet. ^ "With a 30-foot channel throughout, ocean liners could ascend the St Lawrence to Lake Ontario, where the new Welland canal of the same depth could carry them to Lake Erie and the other Great Lakes. Sfhipping direct by this route an exporter in Buffalo, for Instance, would save more than 300 •to Liverpool, In addition to the of barge or rail shipitient to Atcoast ports." 1 = Nitrate Tract DIISOIVMT Santiago, Chile.--President "Arturo Alessandrl signed a decree ordering the liquidation of the Cosach nitrate combine, which controlled the world's largest nitrate plant. . Women Washington.--A group of Prohibitionist leaders, headed by Mrs. Jesse W. Nicholson of the woman's national committee for law enforcement, have formed here "The Forgotten Woman's Club." Mrel. Nicholson wasf elected president _ ' - ' ( QUEER NAMES BORNE BY AMERICAN TOWNS Homely Nouns and Adjectives Found on Map. . Washlngton.-Ht\Vhat's in a name?" "First famillfes have left their famous surnames' to designate post offices and railrAgd stations In the United States," says^ a bulletin from the National geographic society, "and in addition many humble folk have contributed their more familiar appellations such as Dad, Bill, Nick, Tim, Floe, Vick and Maggie. Aside from family names the homely nouns and adjectives of the work-a-day world have found their way by the score to maps and signposts. "Greasy Creek, Tub, Biscuit, Cheap, Busy and Dimple are Kentucky towns. There is Horse Heaven, Humptulips, Gooseprairie and Steptoe In Washington state. ^ "Pie Town, Dusty, Gallup and High Rolls are in New Mexico; Jelly, Needles and Likely in California; and Sopchoppy, Perky and Frostproof tn Florida. "Illinois has Sandwich, Joy and Muddy, while across the state line In Indiana there is Speed, Economy and Harmony. Trump, Vim, Flues and Joes are in Colorado; Bumble Bee, Sunglow, Wikienp aud Cactus in Arizona ; Asbestos, I^adiesburg, Fearer and Appeal in Maryland; and Deadwater, Grindstone, Thorofare • and Merepolnt In Maine. $ Ballclub and 8hivers. "In Minnesota there is Ballclub, Happyland, Otter Tall, Money Creek, Knife River and Embarrass; and in Mississippi, Arm, Lemon, Whynot, Chunky, Shivers and Soso. "Montana's Bay Horse, Big Arm, Giltedge and Pray are equally as odd as North Carolina's Nags Head, Bearwallow, Pee Dee, Shoe, Toast, Topnot and Worry; and Missouri's Rat, Gang, Damsite, Clever'and Enough. "There Is Accord, Teaticket and Feeding Hills in Masachusetts; Anvil Location, Inkster, Ahineek and Honor in Michigan; Echo, Happy Jack aisd Water Proof in Louisiana ; Leaky In North Dakota; and Novelty, Overpeck, Ldng Bottotn and Charm in Ohio. "Oklahoma's contribution to odd place names is Antlers, Hominy, Slick, Slim and Scraper; while Oregon has Wagontire, Sixes, T.vee, Izee and Fossil. New York state gives Horseheads, Sag Harbor, Silvernails, Yaphank and Whiteface; and New Jersey, Colt's Neck, Peapack, Tranquility. Changewater and Chews. "Goodnight, Razor, Fort Spunky, Happy and Gunsight are towns In Texas; while Pennsylvania has Shickshinny, Showers, Mooslc and Bird in Hand. Cowpens, Sllverstreet, Nine Times and Ninety Six are in South Carolina; Faith, Tea and Twilight In South Dakota; Devils Slide in Utah; and Idol, Inskip, Littlecrab and Shop Spring in Tennessee. Modest Town and Cutlips. "Ferry passengers calling 'hey' to 'Si,' a ferryman, are said to have named Haysi, Virginia. Other odd names In the Old Dominion are Mod- .est Town, Cap, Crabbottom, Dandy, Smoky Ordinary, Traffic, Fancy Gap, Duty~and Success; while its neighbor, West Virginia, has Joker, Cutlips, Siftoke Hole, Dingy, Hazy, Odd, Pink and Quick. In Wisconsin there is Luck, New Diggings and Rib Lake ; Jn Wyoming a Doggie, Bad water, Four Horse and Ten. Sleep. "What Cheer, Promise City, Coin, Nodaway, Stout a^d Wick are Iowa towni?; Cad, Deepstep, Dewyrose and Ty Ty are in Georgia; Cocolalla, Cuprum, Inkom and Notus In Idaho; Coats, Peck and Potwin in Kansas; and Doughboy, Flats, * Hire, Rescue and Wynot In Nebraska. ' "Half a dozen of Arkansas* place names In a row sketch for the Imaginative a thumb-nail story:« Lost Corner, Reform, Health, Prosperity*. Romance and Love." .Think It Over la III the nature of things thaii. the beauty of aatamn should diffles*i V " from the' beauty of spring. l| I* '*- Free-Wheeling Cuts Coat London.--Fuel consunmption is reduced 50 per cent in a British locomotive equipped with devices for coasting, or free wheeling. Total fuel and lubricating costs are said to be about 3 cents per mile; f - ' V:"'~ Santa Fe, N. M.--Warren R. Gra ham, seventy, New Mexico state treasurer. at hnmfi •\'r* High Tides s average tidal rise at Eastport, Halne, is 18 feet 2 Inches; In the ispring it is 21 feet At the head of the Bay of Fundy, New Brunswick, the ^tide rises 45 feet; in the.Bristol chan* toel, England. 42 feet; on the coast of -*Wa\eH. 36 feet >|rat Unpopular Artistry ther Time may be a great artist omen do not fancy his line work. . Finely Drawn Wire Tungsten filament wire used Ed the Six-\?att Incandescent lamp of a familiar make is so fine it is practically Invisible. Only four ten-thousandths- of an inch in diameter, It is a fifth as thick as the hair of a woman's head and a tenth the size of that on a man's h6a& After it la foiled, tucans P» linear Inch, t«- form the s;>rtnglike lamp filament, the outside diameter of the coB. U s|t|| leas.ihato that of human hair.--^Scf'eriaflc American. end, was a robber of Attica who made It a practice to place everybody he captured on an Iron bed. tf the victim was too long for the bed he cut off the superfluous part; if shorter he stretched the body to make It the required let«m,-• Theseus finally slew ttife fi'eniT. ^n attempt to reduce people to one standard, ucjiy of thinking or acting is known as placing them on the bed of Procrustes. fcrocrostes, according to Or««k lfl» i The avocado is a native of the West Indies and Central America. It Is the only species of this order cultivated for the fruit. The fruit is unusual In that the flesh has a high fat content, 10 per cent on an average. The water content Is 81 per cent, and the es 7 cent The fuel hrgb*M2 Lost University Bell Is Found in Junk Pile Itelfceley, Calif.--"Old Bill--d--tt htm,*' ear splitting, booming bell In north hall, University of California's oldest building, has been "found" again. "Old Bill," which received the additional cognomen, "D--n htm,M because for generations he thundered out the time In fifteen minute intervals night and day. has been discovered this time in a junk pile In the old zoology building of the university. The old hell, brought around the Horn in 1859 and first used In the old College of California, predecessor of the University of California, has beee "lost" repeatedly in recent years on student and faculty insistance. In 1810 it was taken from storage to be used in connection with the fiftieth anniversary of the university. Since then It has appeared and disappeared. In 1925 It was "retired" hecause Its great weight was endangering the old building. Claims to Broadcast Heat, Light and Power Kitchener, Ont.--A young Canadian radio enthusiast claims invention of an apparatus which would apply the theory of radio to the transmission of light and heat electrical energy units without the aid of wires. The in.ventor, Frank Fedy, twentytwo, a former insurance agent, claimed he had successfully demonstrated his theory before a group of Toronto scientists. He said he had bqen of fered financial backing to the extent of $30,0<>0. but refused to divulge the name of the sponsor At the demonstration. Fedy said", he picked? up a power broadcast from his transmitting station two blocks away. Fedy claims that his apparatus could be operated as a central transmitting station to broadcast power, heat and light to houses within a 100-mlle radius. The houses would be equipped with an aerial to extract the "Juice rays" from the air, and, with a receding set which, he claimed, could be manufactured to retail at a cost of $5 each. - - *• • •,fn J- - ii'hiiV"" Boras' Manuscript Valued The autographed manuscript of Rolfr, ert Burns' song, Ballot myle," was UodW i receoUj for b - n - , ! • • < • ; , ; A noble purpose In life not only redeems the life from the wearisomeness of the commonplace, but raises the Individual Into the brotherhood Of the world's best herpes. It Is a mighty uplifting force which compels attention by its sincerity, and Is successful In proportion to the perseverance with which It la followed.-- George W. Flood. Wide Influence of Cold jTh* inteiisa cold of northeastern Stberia ln winter causes abnormal cdld far ao&UMa Cblba ataAldfreri'lhe1 tern Pfrature of Japan. l s > v • CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES „ ££"?:-• "Sacrament" was the subject of • the I-esson Sermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, Jan- -S uary 8. • ' L The Golden Text was "To do good and to communicate forget not: for with such sacrifices God is wjell pleased" (Hebrews 13 :16). Among the citations which comprised the I^esson-Kernion was. the following from the Bible: "Wherefore do ye npt-nd money for that I. • which te not bread? and your labour h for that which satisfieth notiheurken diligently unto me, and eat ye that which is good, and let your soul kt§ delight itself in fatness, incline your I" ' ear, and come unto me: hear, and ^ ^ 4 your soul shall live; and I will make . • an everlasting covenant wi£h you, even the sure mercies of David" AC'V. (Isaiah 55:2, 3). ^ f" The Lesson-Sermon also in- '% eluded 'the .following passages from '?• ' the Christian Science textbook. ^ "Science and Health with Key to the # Scriptures," by Mary Baker Eddy: "^1 "Jesus established in the Christian >J ' era 1.1-e precedent for all Christianity, f" Av J. theology, and healing. Christians are II' r;" under as direct orders now, as they were then, to be Christlike, to possess the Christ-spirit, to follow the Christ- "/f1 ^ example, and to heal the sick as well '•. " V as the sinning" (p. 138). " ' 1 " • * - •% 4 V'.< & Dr. Leo Gerlach DENTIST . : Johnsburg, miSSs1 Hours: 10 a. m. to 8 p. nL on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. -Sunday by appointment^ vV.v.-/ N.J. NYE, M. D. Office Hours, daily, i>-10 a. m., ; 1-3 p. m. Evenings, 7-9, on Monday?/ Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays,' Phone 62-R ' McHenry X-Ray, Laboratory and Physio Therapy W. A. NYE, M. D. • Office Hours, daily, 11-12 a. m- > 3-5 p. m. Evenings 7-9, on Tuesdays^ Thursdays, Saturdays* and Sundays; Phone 62-R McHenryr C0NNEL M. McDERMOTT ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Hearst C-J* to 11 a.Hi.; 1:30 to 5 p, W. Evenings, 7 to 8 , Stilling BMg. Riverside Drive TeL McHenry 258 McHenry, I1L Phone Richmond 16 Or. JOHN DVC1V: VETERINARIAN TB and Blood Testing IUCHMOND. ILLINOIS KENT & COMPANY ^ AH Kinds of. i i s U R A N Placed with the most relialjli Companies / Come in and talk it over "hone McHenry 8 Telephone No. 108-R . ^ 8toffei & Reihansperg« Insurance agents for all classes of property in the best companies. VEST McHENRY - ILLINOIS A. P. Freund Kxcavating Contractor - Trucking, Hydraulic and Crane Service ^ Road Building TeLHS04-M McHenry, IS. Ed V€>gel GENERAL AUCTIONEER _ FASM sales a specialty y P. o. Solon Mills, 111. Reference Past Sales SATISFACTION GUARANTEED S. H. Freund & Son CONTRACTORS ^ AND B1 Phone 127-R McHenry Our experience it at Yonr ,Service in building iii Your Want* nU_ HiM •odO ' xV. • ' V . " ... . . ^ '• v'., : ' : 'i'" " • -

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