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About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1913)
(W1rccUJ.LUlljRS!UJ'U'"BB- I . - i i . , :!, i J. u liV .' . ,A f FORCIBLY FEEDING MILITANT SUFFRAGETTES TOOLS FOR A GARDEN Jw rFCf-nO iJ 'KZenanElavNaVHwhlBaamaBanVBaBB t 2 " aPa&xNvBHBaskVfllaBaK'lHaa' -BWMMWP C?tPiCT"?ttiWBIJOlMBWaBw ianfffiaffgBaeaaaafcalfEalBaaanaann rt Implements Are Demanded Proper Cultivation for This illustrates how the militant suffragettes of England descrlbo tho method used In forcibly feeding tho "hunger strikers." Shrieking, struggling and fighting women aro hold down by -wardresses, whilo a physician pours liquid food into a tubo stuffed Into tho mouth. Old-Fashloned Hoe and Rake Will Not ftunnly All the Needs of tho Up.to Dato Gardener Some Good , Ones Are Illustrated. (Dy C. S. MILLER.) Tho growing of vogotablos and fruit has bocomo so important that im proved tools aro now demanded for proper cultivation. In order to got the very best results cultivation must bo carried to tho limit and tho old fashioned hop and rnko will not sup ply all tho noods of tho up-to-dato gardener. Thoso shown In tho accompanying ploturo aro all extremely useful, and as they cost but a trlflo nobody who expects to do tho best work in a gar den can afford to bo without them. No. 1 la tho hoe, and Is rumarkablo for tho great numbor of ubob to which It can bo put In both field and garden. No. 2 Is especially" flBOful for cover ing seeds and for heavy -wooding. No. 8 is a combined hoo and rako and enables tho operator to do olther hoeing or raking -without laying aside obo tool and taking up tho other. No. 4 Is a hand weodor to scratch woods out of flower bods and pots. No. 5 is ono of tho most useful tools that can be used. It is extromoly EVOLUTION OF LIFE Artist Depicts It in a Striking New Group. Officials of American Museum of Natural History Highly Commend Roy W. Miner's Exhibition as One of the Best There. New York. A new group at the American Museum of Natural History recently arranged by Hoy W. Miner Is highly commended by the museum officials, -who regard it as ono of the nest there. It shows animal life on the wharf piles and is Intended to lvo a striking Illustration of the pro ea of evolution from animal to al most plant lite. Mr. Minor himself thus describes the exhibit. "Tho group illustrates a balanced association In which the struggle for existence between animals is not ap parent, the majority of the species 3elng plant-like and either Incapable of locomotion In the adult stage, or in possession of It to a very limited degree. "On tho broken pllo In tho, center of tho foreground, for example, grow ing over the mussels which have com pletely covered its stump, are hun dreds of delicate pink bydroids clus tered In feathery colonics. Hero and there among thorn peep forth the transparent solitary polyps of tho -white armed sea anemono, while the diet of micro-organisms that the aver age observer, unacqualntPd with their affinities, wuuld fall to recognize-them as being Included In tho samo great phylum. "Finally; everything on tho piles nrn various species of tho sea squirts or ascldlans, singly and in colonies. These small sac-like creatures, each with a projecting pair of tubes, or "siphons," though apparently insignifi cant, aro in reality highly interesting from an evolutionary standpoint One species is represented as growing In large yellow masses on tho upper part of one of the piles. Somo of the In dividuals of this species aro marked with dark star-like colonies of another ascldian which grow upon their surfaces. Hero and there stand out tho conspicuous masses of tho pink "sea-pork." MISS BOOTH QUELLS BURGLAR Daughter of Salvation Army Head Finds Thief In Room and Converts Him. London. Captain Mary Booth, daughter of General Bramwell Booth, head of the Salvation Army, discov ered a burglar in her bedroom at two o'clock In tho morning. Instead of calling the police, she confronted her visitor and talked seriously to him about his wickedness. Learning that ho was driven to crime by hunger, ho WIFE 'TOO OLD' FOR HUSBAND Woman Expressed Hope That "Spoiled Spouse" Will Find a More Beau tiful Girl. Chicago. Called "too old" and "not pretty enough" by her husband, Paul H. McCain Mrs. Jessie L. McCain voiced tho sentiment that he may find solace in the charms of a young er and more beautiful woman. As IcCaln was branded "spoiled by his mother," by Judge Petit, Mrs, McCain .VvSaaaaaBaDaBnBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBnaabam. liaaaaHr '. Vs nB K WsaMaaaBaW B, ' '"ifflBaawSfcaaan i';;'-'wiiBI ib9 (V )t - 4r tf& 6 $- SUPPLEMENT TO A PASTURE Feeding Corn Silage Is Most Economi cal Method of Supplying Feed to Help Out Pasture. (By It O. WEATHERSTONE.) Green crops fed as a supplement to pasturo mar bo fed In Ihw pasture or In tho barn lot but na a rule aro fed most economically In tho barn. Tho cows remain Inside long enough at milking tlmo to oat tholr portions. Aa n rule tho most economical method of supplying feed to help out tho short pastures of midsummer and fall fs to feed corn sllngo. Sllago will keep In good condition for summer foodlng with no loss except on th'j surface. If It Is not noeded during the summer, It may bo covered with tho new sllago and.kopt until wanted. Corn furnishes a larger jrlolrt of dry matter per ncro than any crop that can bo ordinarily grown for summer fcodlng, and has tho further advan tage of bolng on hand o enrir ai wanted. It Is handlod more economically also than soiling crops since It is cut all nt onco and not overy day as Is neceK sary with soiling crpps. it should bo remembered that It is only posslblo to feed a bunch of cows economically when they aro fod as Individuals and not as a herd. A too common practice, even In tho otherwlso woll conducted herds, is for nil animals to bo fed tho same amount of grain, regardless of tho tlmo they havo been In milk or tho quantity of milk tho individual cows aro produc ing. Such feeding always lacks econ omy, as tho high producing cow uoos not got enough, and while she may milk very well for a time, sho soon comes down to a lower level, whilo the lighter producing cow usually gets too much feed and accumulates fat SD0KIE$ New York's Second Hand Queen Moves Up Town mm man saMV w . H.upjw; Do wJL Y2Z7r N NOW MUCH YOtfl WANT FOf jt ? y Improved Garden Tools. useful, not only in spading, but in cutting out weeds closo to largo plants and trimming walks and beds. No. 6 is .a handy lltttlo tool about tho flower bed. You can transplant, pulverize and mix earth preparatory to planting, loosen tho earth about plants aiid do numerous other things With It. LESS WORK FOR HOUSEWIFE expressed some doubt of any worn- larger brown sea anemone extends its I an being able to come up to the stand- fringe-crowned disks on this and tho neighboring piles, interspersed with coral red masses of tho red-beard sponge. ' "Although these flower-like forms aro relatively stationary and Inactive, underneath their apparent peaceful ness and beauty the struggle for ex istence goes on a3 relentlessly as among fierce free-swimming" species, tut with this difference, lhat their prey Is invisible to our eyes. The waters In which they are Immersed are swarming with myriads of micro scopic creatures, while every polyp, with opon rapacious mouth and ex tended stinging tentacles, is but a trap to entangle and engulf them, and every sponge-colony, with its million pores, sucks in tho nutritious draft of organisms which aro the ultimate 1asls of. food for all sea life. "In a word, sponges and polyps, In eplto of their size and wide diversity of form, are but little abovo ihe simplest of all animals, the one called protozoa, and have developed as typically digestive organisms. "Sine their good is everywhere present, organs of locomotion are not needed to obtain It. Special senses and directive Intelligence, or Instincts, Shave not been definitely evolved, since the evolution of these powers nlways goes hand in hand with that of loco motor organs. ' "It is true that certain polyps pos sess somewhat aimless and imperfect methods of locomotion, such as the alow-creeping movement of tho sea anemones and the umbrella mode of propulsion peculiar to hydromedusae and tho true Jellyflshes a beautiful example of which is shown lazily wlmmlng near tho broken pile in tho group. Dut tho polyps as a whole may be considered as mere sac-llko stomachs, this specialization In diges tion being their most striking ad Tance, aBlde from their multicellular atructure, over their protozoan pro genitors. Yet there 1b a good reason to bellovo that a polyp-like condition uch as this Is ancestral to tho struc ture of all tho higher and more com plex groups of tho animal kingdom. "Associated with sponges and polyps upon tho wharf piles aro many other sedentary animals which, like them, feed upon tho micro-organisms of tho sea. At first glanco these seem to be of hardly hlghor organization than tho polyps, but an examination of their structure nt onco shows them to bo members of much higher groups In tho scalo of life. "Theso animals aro so closely adapt ed to an attached modo of life and DOG ACTS AS A MAIL CARRIER Mrs. McCain blamed Lottie James, a rescue mission worker, for her trouble. Detectives, at tho hearing of Mrs. McCain's suit for separate main tenance, testified that they had dis covered Mrs. James and McCain in a secluded spot of Douglap park, late at night. The McCains were married 13 years ago, and have ono daugh- Captain Mary Booth, promptly took him to her kitchen and gave him a good, square meal. Whilo he ate she continued to tall: to hta, and when tho meal was finished she knelt down and prayed with him. Sho Insisted on tho man praying for him self. Then he promised to turn over a a new leaf, and, with tho countcr- promlso to bo his friend If he would live a better life, she saw her gueBt off the premises. RISK LIVES TO SAVE MEN Boston Bulldog Calls Regularly Every Morning for His Master's Newspapers. Nw York. Ab a rule dogs are kbout as wolcomo as stray cats in and ground the corridors of tho Waldorf Astoria, but Relgo, a handsome Boston bulldog hailing from Omaha, is an ex ception and a sort of a privileged char acter around the hotel. ' Mrs. Jeosle L. McCain. ter, Irono, aged nine. Mrs. McCain Is thirty-llvo years old, but looks younger. It vas for tho Bako of the nine-year-old daughter of the McCains that Judge Petit stopped tho hearing nt Intervals with a suggestion that they become reconciled. Each tlmo Mc Cain refused to do bo, and Mrs. Mc Cain broke down and wept. The Judge, after hearing McCain's testimony, said ho did not care to havo the attorneys for Mrs. McCain cross-examine tho man, and gave judg men at onco. In so doing ho criti cised McCain as a man "spoiled by his mother," laying stresB on the fact that tho man had rushed from a fam ily quarrel at 2:30 o'clock in tho morn ing to tell his mother. Itolgo Is owned by Philip J. Arns ley, an electrical engineer. Business calls him here overy few months, and ho remains at the Waldorf-Astoria from six to ten days on theso trips. As a rosult, his dog, wherovor he goes, knows tho way around the hotel as well as his master. It la the animal's knack of making himself useful that has mado him popular. Every morning at eight o'clock a porter goes to the basement where Relgo' Is quartered, and leads him up to the main lobby. The dog la then Priests Go Into a Conduit Where La borers Have Been Overcome by Gas. Buffalo, N. Y. Three priests risked their lives to rescue workmen who had been overcome by gas in a conduit on Alabama street hero. Armstrong, foreman; with two of his men.'went into a mauhole opposite the Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Help In search of a leak In one of tho mains. The break proved to be a bad one, and all threo were overcome. A pasBorby, hearing faint cries from tho men, callod for help. The priest, who were Just leaving the church, responded. Father Hunt and Father Clancy dropped Into the manhole and hoisted two of the work men to tho surface. Armstrong had penetrated tho con duit a long distance, and was lying face downward unconscious. Before the priests could get him back to tho manhole both were partly overcome by the gas fumes. Father Lynch saw their predica ment, and, Jumping into the manhole, succeeded In dragging all of them to, comparatively fresh air. The four were lifted to the street by tho crowd that quickly gathered. Introduction of Modern Engine Thresher Takes Many Burdens From Shoulders' of Women. The work of tiro farm housewife has been greatly lessened by tho use of engine threshors. Formerly when farmora wont about from one farm to another, helping each othor to thresh tho grain, the farm-wife was com pelled to cook for gangs of men, of ton for days at a time, and with seldom sufficient help, her lot was indeed, a hard one. Now, the owner of an en gine thresher rides about tho country during the summer days making his threshing contracts. In tho fall he or ganizes his force and starts on his rounds he provides all the men nec essary, takes along a tent, employs a cook and relieves the farmer and his family of all work In connection with threshing. A counting machlno regis ters the number ot bushels turned out and when his work Is ended ho receives tho farmer's check for his services, hookB up his teams to tho traction engines and goes on to the next field. MAKE-.UP OF JERSEY CATTLE Breed Attracts Notice by "Dairy" Type of Their Bodily Conforma tion Some of Characteristics. (By R. M. GOW.) The characteristics which mark the presont race of Jersey cattle aro known to have been notable and prom inent In tho breed at least one hun dred and fifty years ago, bo that now they havo bocomo thoroughly "fixed," sure to be Inherited by their progeny, thus affording tho breeder a Bure foun dation for further development The main external characteristics of the Jerseys are the beautiful softness of tho various tints of fawn and gray In their coatB of hair; their grao'ully formed deer-llko limbs; their neat, in curving horns, large limped eyes, small heads and delicate noses; their bright, attractive and Intelligent faces; their soft yellow skin, long tails am Clover Bloat. Bloat In cattle generally comes as the result of pasturing clover, though It Is a fact that In somo caBcs ordl-. nary grass pasturo will produce tho Bame results If It is rank when cattle that have not been UBed to It are turn ed in. The Importance of getting cat tle used to clover while It Is dry can not be overemphasized. It may bo necessary In some In stances to turn them In for an hour or two only during tho middle of tho day. and continue this for two or three days, so that the ravenous edge for tho new clover la taken off their appetitcB. Under no circumstances should they be turned from a dry lot when they are hungry Into a clover field. BW xOHK.A new woman mer chant has Just moved from down town Into tho theatrical district of West Forty-second stroot Sho Is Mary J. McShano, who lived next door to "Paddy" DIvver's whore, at No. 6 Madison Btrcot, sho did a thriving business for thirty-seven years, bought tho land occuplod by her storo and reared a family of ten chlldron. "I'll tell you how 1 did It nil," sho said tho other day. "I was n child In Cork, Ireland, when my father waB buying gold lace and tho discarded trappings of tho English officers who woro suddenly ordered to India and othor parts of the empire Ho was such a flno, squaro man that he bad friends everywhere. Ab tho officers changod their barracks, my father not only bought all the roglmentals and supplies, but got the gowns and dra peries of the Indies, so that I Instinct ively absorbed a knowlcdgo of values. "When I came to New York In 1872 as a girl, I was ready to buy any thing, knowing wfH that I -could sell at a good profit. First I bought little Job lots of ornaments; then household goods, until I took the contentB of entlro tenement houses. But my real start began when I met Andrew Dam and obtained tho annual discard of carpets and furnishings in his Union Squaro Hotel. Ho was a flno man and i Introduced mo to the big hotel mon of New York. "Presently I had tho monopoly-' o J tho best yearly hotel sales of tho cjty and was making monoy rapidly whea I expanded Into a still higher branch of tho business. Tho hotel men intro duced mo to representatives Of rich Now York families until I began ta havo tho patronage of tho 'four hun d,red.' "It may surprise lots of pcoplo""T know that thousands of beautiful gar ments are Bold overy year In New York because families go Into mourn lng or suddenly go to Europe. Mourn ing means selling their colored clothing. In Europe thoy want th Paris styles, and bo sell most of thelp wardrobes boforo leaving hero. Then' thousands of families tako apartments and give up housekeeping In their, homos. I buy everything they haye to sell, from sllkB and satins to diamond and Jewelry that no longer meet their laslo. Others sell because they wah monoy. Few know how many peopl meet with reverses in tho course ot a year. Every day I am rocolvlng note to call at fine mansions to look over tho wardrobes and eat a prtoo. "Another line 1b furs. As Boon a hot weather comes, and people hayp to move, or reverses come, tho flrat thing they want to sell Is their fura. I buy them and sell In winter' at a big profit " "Why did I leave Madison street to move up Broadway? Because; everything has changed down town, especially In my business. I had a bit; trade in Brooklyn and Coney Jjaland, aa woll aa New York, below" Four teenth street. When they killed racing I they killed part of my business. -V T fn. VWywvywyWWW' Ever Hear of P Fish Scales on an -AltoHom?- Eurotas, 2454. Record for One Year, 778 Pounds of Butter. Wull-developcd switches; their full, rounded-out udders, straight backs, and tho flno proportions of their gen eral conformation. The Jersey cow looks tho high-bred lady of the cattle race. Well-developed malo animals should weight from 1400 pounds to 1800 pounds, and females, from 750 to 1200 pounds. Abovo all elso, Jerseys at tract notlco by tho "dairy" typo of their bodily conformation, by tholr largo and well-formed udders, and prominent mllk-velns, In color they aro of various shades of soft fawn, from red to silvery, with more or lesu whlto, broken color being unobjection able except from the standpoint ot In dividual taste. Changes Name inherits $2,000,000. Seattle, Wash. Judge French's do clBlon In tho suit brought by Henry Wharton Shoemaker, millionaire poet, against his former wife, Mrs. Beatrlco Shoemaker Perry, to annul tho adop tion of his five-year-old son, Henry, enables tho hoy to change his last name from Perry to Shoemaker and thereby Inherit $2,000,000 of tho rstato of his grandfather, Henry F. Shoo maker, who lived In Now York. Wanted No "Sky Pilot" at Death. Now York. "I want no pageantry or dlscourso from paid 'sky pilots.' " So reads tho will of Philip 8. StaatB, an actor and eong writer, for probata here. The will ended with an itoratlon of a cureo upon anyone attempting to break tho document freed, and bo Immediately runs over to the key and mall counter and be gins to Jump into the air and bark un til ho receives recognition. Then the clerks glvo him Mr. Arnsley'e mall and two morning newspapers. With the mall and papers held tight ly In bis mouth Relgo runs to the elevator and shifts about nsrvously un til tho thirteenth floor la reached. Once bo is turned out in the hall he seoka put Mr. Arnsley's room and barks and scratches outside the door until it Is opened. Good Bedding for Horses. A good way to keep n horse clean In the stable is to clean out all dirt etc., and then cover tjio floor about three or four Inches thick with dry sawdust, ns far back In stall as tho horse usually stands, then cover the Sawdust with straw, or bedding that you may uso. The sawdust will ab sorb tho moisture, and therefore make tho other bedding last longer in case it Is scarce. Tho sawdust should bo replaced by fresh occasionally. Looking to the Pedigree. Look at the pedigree of tho stallion you patronize, and If it Is not Issued by one of the recognized registry as sociations don't use that horse. Many farmers will contend that a grade horso that is a good looker Is Just as good for a sire as a pure-bred, and oxponsa Is much lighter. Some of tho handsomest, soundest and most perfect horses are grades, J and, whilo they are splendid animals for use, they are unsuitable to breed to, Every grade has a yellow streak in him, and this is Junt as likely to show as his good qualities. ITTSBURGH, PA. Who put the Bismarck herring in Harry Bak er's horn? City Hall threatens to bo rocked by the controversy that has arisen over this simple and almost pareonal question. At least that's what tho gosBlpors Ray. To toll the truth Harry, refuses to bo Interviewed when the reporters attempt to got him to tell tho details. Now Mr. Baker may bo the innocent victim of Irresponsible and unrelent ing scandal mongern. And again Mr. Baker may uuvu Incriminated himself by simply refusing to bo interviewed on the subject. At any rate the tale remains undented, and in that event It Is too good to lot slip by without making soma mention ot it Harry Baker is ono of the crow that guides Um 08tlnlas ot tho mayor's office. In this capacity it Is one of Harry's provinces to soo that tho gang that congregates about that sanotum every afternoon bohayes itself with proper decorum whilo waiting for the summons to enter the holy ot holies whoro tho mayor sits with his feet on the mahogany desk. , As a further detail of this tale, Har ry is credited with being an artist on tho'valto horn, which ho playB with great technique and fooling in ono of tho Northsidq German singing socie ties. Ilavlnri neither 'seen nor heard the gentleman In question on a toot, his frfends hesltato to endorse his mu sical ability. But it Is rumored that .Gabriel will havo to dig somo to hold MWVMWMMMMAMAMMMM -MiEUl -J V IV A " his Job when Mr. Baker gets a little moro practice. However, it happened that Harry was blowing-nirhseU prodi giously the other night in the German club and someone playfully Inserted) a flock of .Bismark herring in the end of his horn. Tho possibilities of such a situation will naturallv Huseeat themselves at once to the "reader withanbrlglnatf turn of mind. Picture to yourself a Choplnl nocturne embellished wlthi cadenzas and thrills of ripplfngrher- ring flying all over the place. Imagine' a Liszt rhapsody with chromatic flshj scalcB flying about In a rlpt ot lnt verted sevenths. Of course ho one ever heard of eith er Chopin or Liszt being played on aa alto horn, but that mere detail' shouldn't spoil tho story. Tho thing: to bo conveyed is the faot that some Jokoster with no eonso of propriety tried to corner the flBh mnrketn-ar-mere Instrument of brass Instead of; dragging in tho whole mess In a clarl-onet- - T . wans?; -fanga u 0MiVVM Daiey Noras Police "Regulars" .Mourn Their Vanished Whiskers: CLEVELAND, O. Long and strag gly whiskers, the chief source ot profit of thontouBled mendicant, are doomed by Cleveland police. No more can a hard-working flood sufferer, who has tho mlsfortuno to possess tho normal amount of arms and lcgB, com- A silo will pay for Itself In ono yoar. ' peto witn tne maimed and tho blind. Fertilizing Properly. Farmors aro paying out millions of dollars each year for fertilizers. Probably tho greater part of this money It well spout, but It Is posslblo that it might bo hotter spont by a more caroful selection of tho goods used, by adapting tho fertilizer to tho crop and soil, and by buying on tho basis ot plant food thoy contain rath er than by seeking goods that soil nt a low price. Hand and Power Spraying. Hand spraying Is more expenslvo than power spraying, the cost varies much In different cases, depending on tho offlcleucy ot labor, convenience and other essentials and much do ponds on tho apparatus used. Tho pump should havo capacity to main tain high pressure and the nozzlo must ttfrow a flno spray. The require ments are tho samo for overy kind ot praying. Good Disinfectant The most convenient and cheapest of all disinfectant to use In the cel lar Is quicklime. It may be placed In dlahea or cupboards, or scattered looae In dark, damp cornera. Be Bure that the calves aro started right. A farmer owning six cows should havo a silo. Bo sure that tho tomperaturo of tho milk Is right. It Is not posslblo to grow too much forago on a dairy farm. A comfortable stablo reduces tho cost of malntcuanco and Increases the How of milk. Feed regulaily, not too much at a time, and young calves at leaBt four times a day. Nothing can bo marketed on tho farm bo successfully or so economi cally as butter. Tho dairyman who does not koop an individual record of his cowb is not un up-to-dato dairyman. If tho mow 1b nearly empty and tuo feed low in tho bin, don't cut down tho rations ot tho cowb. Tho dairy farm that la atocked to lta full capacity without being overstock ed is a pretty safo Investment. When an animal forms a habit, either good or bad, that habit Is a part of Its Ufa as long as It Uvea. Draining tho butter woll before salt ing 1b ono ot tho little things that makes for a bettor quality of product Experiments have proven the aver ago milk cow requires about an ounce of salt per day. Heavy milkers should have moro. Success does not lie In the number For whiskers, long gray wniBitera filled with dead leaves and cigar stumps, will Boon cease to excite pity In tho heart ot tho passerby. The victims of circumfitanco who slink through tho shadows of On tario stroot after nightfall aro rapidly parting with tholr whiskers, Thoy aro confronted with tho horrlblo pro nunclamonto of Desk Offlcor Ell Potts of Central police station: ' "Stay sober or loae your busht" .. In spite of the appalling tendencypf the times, the unfortunate has beeas found who finds a crumb of comfort- " In the change. Jacob Bush, who lost-." his two weeks ago aa the result of ar -too hasty expenditure of a lavish gratuity and the consequent nlht;,ln a oell, declares that business has lm- . proved woadorfully-nlncQ " ba-waa-defr: proved' of hla whIsl:orat - - .. "W'y, I can go right over the same boats they chased mo oft of last month," he boasts, 'and they never know me. That's what Mr. PottB funny stuff did for mo. I can make, a, touch right now oft ot men who run, mo away a month ago. This smootk facn work ain't so bad, after all. "All it takes. 1b a little, sense. Next month I'm golnc to tell 'emjtm. ji jstyv-- x tlm of a wreck. Those cuta on my """ face look good enough for that" But Jacob Bush, known as the In curable optimist of the Eagle lodg ing house, is alone in his Joy. Those who are not bo .resourceful as he bMU. mourn their vanished whiskers. Motorcycle Runs Amuck In a Crowded Street of oows the tho kind -he keepsthem. dairyman ' keeps, but In keepa and the way be CHICAGO. A rjderless motorcycle dashed up LaShllo street the other afternoon. When tho police had finished clear ing up the street tho motorcycle and its owner woro in tuo uonirai ponce station and two victims were in tho Iroquois Memorial hospital. Tho por son who started tho machine on Us lonesome "Joy ride" could not bo found. B. C. Gago, a negro, rode Into tho loop In Jackson boulovard. The en gine of bis motorcyclo "heated" and stopped at Jackson boulovard and La Balle stroot. Gago was tinkering with tho ma chlno. A whlto man ho did not know volunteered to Btart tho machine for him. Ho did. The negro said tho stranger started the machlno north at about forty miles an hour. He rode about fifty feet and Jumped off. The motoroycle, apeed Increasing l i, to get tho signals ot Traffic Patrol man F. J. Arena at Adams atreet and first struck William Goodrow ot 4 Ellxr abeth court, Oak Park, a manufac turer. He waa knocked down -and fc six-Inch scalp wound resulted, Passing over Goodrow the motor cycle reached Joseph Barton, lSSt South Hamlin avenue. He waa throw' down and a finger waa broken. Tka the motorcycle went over on lU aU1 and gave a reaUatlo ljaltatioa af plnwheel. Jatce waa takes to aaataal ar H continued up LaBalU street It tailed trolmaa Area a4 to that . " t-i t , : Ti i" ! 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