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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 7, 1922)
' _ THE FRONTIER D. H. CRONIN, PUBLISHER. W. <LT E MPL ETON, fcrfltor and Business Manager. O N El LLi NEBRASK^ Tf you think that football Is < roughs? game now than In the past. i'»(l this paragraph written In 15S2: "As concern ing football playing, It may be called •wther a friendly fight than a play or recreation; n bloody, murdering prac tice than a fellowly sport or pastime. For doth not everyone He In wait for his adversary, seeking to overthrow him and tc pitch him on his nose, though It he t.yon hard stones • • • or what place t sever It be lie enreth not. so ho have him down. And he that can serve the most In this fashion, he Is counted the only fellow, and who but he." A dead donkey held up traffic In Birmingham. Knglarid, for over an hour. The animal fell de.id In a thoroughfare anil caused a motor car to swerve Into the sidewalk. The car knocked down an electric light standard which fell across the roadway and an omlnbus plied up on | the standard end ers/hed. Traffic ha-1 to be diverted. A whistling ht.’i". In Washington, T). C.. dally exhibits his prccoolous taler.at the Children's hospital Roy Bruce, the wee whistling wizard, Is only 15 months oh] and has been entertaining visitors for the last two months by puckering up Ills lips and trilling weird little tunes Roy’s mother works at the hospital and she thinks her boy learned to whistle from the doctors and Internes who tu-e always playing with htm. Several steps abend of the old time tandem Is the Ingenious wheel devised by ft Herman wishing to take his whole family cycling with him He has com bined the wheels of two bicycles, two driving gears, several basket scats and a wooden frame to make a strange apporutus to carry an entire family of all. Moving out of No. 10 Downing street by the Lloyd George government had Its lighter moments when It developed that yhout all Winston Spencer Churchill had to remove was hats. A limousine drove Up to take away his belongings and at taches started piling In hats. Cocked hats, t wo-qunrt ^llds. fedoras, derbies, I'H'umas, jlain straws, war helmets and polo hats filed the entire Interior of the Car and overflowed onto the roof. All fol lowed Mr. Churchlll'a fad of being half a size to small, but their numbers made the car seem unequal to tho Job. Refusal to pay rent for the last four Months led to the eviction of nr. Italian ■woman fro’.u a New York tenement. The woman contended sho had paid enough rent ir the last 10 years to. buy the place. official degrees have been passed In Fiance, designating November 11 as a national holiday, commemorating vic tory. Henceforth It will he celebrated a» the most memorable occasion In French history. Drinking the finest bordrnux and se lected champagnes which only a few months ago filled the late czar's private cellars Is the latest pastime offered to Vhe visiting newly rich by two Laris boulevard eafes. Luciet? Courtols, aged Frenchman con demned to 10 years’ Imprisonment on Charge of bring a spy, refused three days of llbe. ty offered by the court. It wits proved he Imd been In the service of Germany since 1KS8. Georges Carpentler Is on his way to Moscow to tackle the botshevlst business ring. He Is carrying a large assortment of aluminum kitchen ware from tile French factory, hoping to find u favor able market In Russia. English literature ranks first among eight most popular subjects for special lzation among Harvard undergraduates The others In order are economies, Ro m“nce languages, chemistry, history, government, mathematics end a field CopbHIng history and literature. ’ Indians iit Glacier park, Mont., caught tr. Iceberg lake a species of trout Identi fied as the Palvellnum Rossi, which has boon known to exist only in the Arctic oecsn and geologists Iri tills territory tue convinced this strange body of water In Glacier National park Is connected sub Jgrranoously with the Icy water of the north. An Inmate of the Missouri state peni tentiary points landscapes and through •*le of lila works supports his mother a id sister In Prague, Ozecho-Slovalcla. He Is Vac'.az Krejel, an artist of no little promise who was graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts and Prague university. He came to the United btates two years ago, and in St. Louts while Intoxicated he entered a church and took a motion picture machine. He was sentenced to 10 years. Tho largest rug In the world 1s to ho found In Cleveland. It measures 40x65 fret and was made by Czecho-Slovaklan weavers for use In the new B. F. Keith vaudeville theater. A memorial shaft marking the grave of Rev. Jesse Head, a Methodist circuit rider who married tho parents of Abraham Lincoln, has been dedicated at llniTodsburg. Ky. A London research chemist claims to have Invented a method of destroying hostile aircraft In flight at any atti tude up to five miles by projecting a huge flame Into the air. Mystery, a moonshine drinking mule, got. his master In trouble In Chicago, Mystery got ugly after several “drinks’ of moonshine mash, and chased severrz pedestrians down the street. “The Book of Job." a dramatization by fttuart Walker, Is being given at the fort theater, New York, for the benefit of the Near East relief. The whole book Is spoken anild biblical scenes. American firms and persons doing busi ness In China are Increasing.’ In 19J4, there were 13* firms and 4,365 Individuals as compared tc ‘12 firms and 8,230 citi zens last year. r>ritish, Japanese and Russian traders still outnumber Amer icans. To preserve the memory of the Insect, a “Kootle Nlub” has been formed In Racine. WIs.. by former service men of the ,.orld war. The title of the officers er»: “Kernel Kootle,” “Big Bite,” “Big Itcn,” “Little Itch,” "Big Scratch,” and “Little .Scratch ” In case of collision, one of these cups would be drawn Into the hole In the hull and form a water tight cap over the •portu-e, he claims. A house which encroaches two Inches on a strip of ground 29 feet long at Al lentown. l’a.. must lie shaved down to get It off the neighboring lot. according to court order. A Joliet, 111., man has applied to a Chi cago too to take his pet eagle off hja Viands. The bird eats a chicken at otfe sitting and has an appetite like a family of six children. A baby tender was elected by women politicians at I'ark City, Utah. She will look after Infants while mothers delve into timely political matters. A bab; check room Is to be established. Thomas Riley Marshall, formerly vice president of the United States, now hack In gQvernmental harness as a member of the coal fact finding commission, after n vacation since March t, 1821, still is looking for that "good 5-cd t" cigar. A platinum bracket set with dia monds. valued at v<>.600. was lost tn moving by a woman In Kansas C'ty. if was later found ir. j ^session of os a o' t;<e movers, who picked It up, thinking If was only a trinke*, and *»»ve It to hi SSiaU daughter to y.Vr.v f O ! COUNTIES ACCEPT i Prefer Part of Railroad Taxes Now to Paying Interest on Warrants That Would Be Issued. Lincoln, Neb., Dec. 4 (Special.)—A number of county treasurers In the state tire accepting the Burlington's offer of 65 per cent, of the taxes levied against them, In spite of the fact that the law does not permit them to receive part payment of taxes. The treasurers say that the railroad taxes form so large a part of their inedme that the best interests of the counties and school districts demand that they accept the partial payment. They do not think that any taxpayers, vtjio will be saved interest on warrants thut would otherwise have to be lsued, will object. Their principal Justification is that the federal court would probably tell them to do It, anyway, as it did a year ago wljen the Northwestern enjoined colleefion of its tuxes. The indications are that the cases will be pushed through In a hurry, as the roads are paying 10 per cent in terest for being delinquent, while the counties want all the money they can get. Three federal judges are neces sary where an Injunction Is granted, and Judge Munger thinks he can have the needed number here by the middle of the month to heur the tax cases and the Bell telephone Injunc tion. DISABLED VETERAN TRIED TO END OWN EXISTENCE Lincoln, Neb,, Deo. 4 (Special.)— The story Harold Cross, disabled vet eran, told the police about being held up and robbed didn't hang together well, and he finally confessed that he had tried to kill himself. He has a bullet wound In his shoulder. He said that he had been robbed of his savings by some Denver brokers re cently, and concocted the robbery story to cover up his suicidal attempt after it had failed. Ho said a watch and a sweater had been stolen from him, but later said he had burned these in the furnace of the family where he was staying. He said he wrh despondent, not able to work and had no money left. His home Is in Ragan, Neb. PAY $ HIS TAXES’ IN COIN OF THE REALM ■ ■ . —i. Butte, Neb., Dec. 4 (Special.)—Pay ment of tax receipts for $60 In pen nies was made here by R. H. Harris, of Lynch. The pennies came In a yeast box and weighed about 42 pounds. Harris recently made an other paj^nent of $600 In silver dol lars. iiiece™ is out on Bono Truck Farmer Near North Bend, Neb., Released After Being Held In Jail for a Month. Fremont, Neb., Dec. 1 (Special)— Andrew Johnson, chatted with mur dering Ills partner. Will Jurging, at tiie former’s shack on a truck farm near North Bend, was released on bond of $5,000 by Judge Button. Johnson, who hus wealthy, relatives in Dodge county, has been in the county jail since the crltffe a month ago. He is 64 years of age. COUNTY OFFICERS TO MEET IN OMAHA Omaha, Neb., Dec. 1.—Addresses on the subject of taxes road building, Nebraska, how good roads help the live stock industry, the automobile tourist and European conditions will feature the 2Xth annual convention of the Nebraska State Association of County Commissioners, Supervisors and Highway Commissioners here De cember 5 to 7, inclusive. The convention will be held in con junction with the annual meeting of the Nebriftka Association of County Clerks and Registers of Deeds. Sev eral Joint meetings have been ar ranged during the convention, at which matters of mutual Interest will be taken up. TUBERCULAR CATTLE ARE SHIPPED FROM RANDOLPH Randolph, Neb., Dee. 1 (Special).— A car load of 22 cattle which had failed to pass the tuberculosis test were shipped from Randolph and vicinity this week Recently a small child at Belden, nine miles east of Randolph, has been ill with tuber culosis contracted, it is thought, from drinking milk from a tuberculur cow. PHONE WIRES CUT, BELIEVE ROBBERY PLANNED Randolph, Neb, Dee. 1 (Special).— The toll wires of the Bell Telephone company leading out of Randolph were cut here Tuesday and wires were found down Wednesday morn in*. According to J. L. Zelg who re paired the damage, the work was done by experts. It is believed a robbery was planned. NORTON MAY BECOME BRYAN’S ADVISER Lincoln, Neb., Dee. 1.—J. E. Norton, of Polk, veteran legislator, may be the next secretary of the Nebraska department of agriculture if that de partment under the code law con tinues in existence under Governor elect Charles W. Bryan’s administra tion. This is the talk among politi clons who are awurv that Mr. Norton and Mr. Bryan held a conference a few days ago In Lincoln. Even if the department' is abolished and there is a return to the* old law Mr. Norton may take an appointment under the new administration. IM IS INVITED Telegram Prom LaFollette, of Wisconsin, Came to Ne braska Progressive Too Late. York, Neb., Dec. 2.—United State* Senator LaFollette, chairman of "The P< ople’s Legislative Service,'' sent the the following to Judge Arthur G. Wray: "We are arranging confer ences of all progressives now in con gress, those recently elected and those prominent In the movement to meet in Washington to discuss def inite plans of co-operation. We earn estly request your participation in tills great undertaking.” Judge Wray announced that dis tance prevents his attendance at Washington, but that he Is in sym pahty with the movement; that Ne braska progressives are united on the important principles involved; that the people in the middle west urge all piogressive groups to co-operate in a practical way to get results; and that they look forward to the coming Washington conference to announce a program which in due time will draw all progressives to Its support. THE "‘UNLOADED’' GUN AGAIN ON THE JOB Falls City, Neb., Dec., 2.—“I’m go ing lo Rhoot you,’’ Glen Benninger, 17, playfully remarked, aiming a sup posedly unloaded 30-30 rifle at June Tistlel, 14. and pulling the trigger. A cartridge exploded. The ball penetrated June’s writs, shattergin it. The wound probably will neces sitate amputation of the arm, doc tors said. » Construction of Hard Sur faced Highways a Science In That State—To Spend Over $150,000,000. Springfield, 111., (U. F.)—The con struction of hard roads has become a science in Illinois. In the midst of a road building pro gram calling for the expenditure of upwards of $150,000,000, the division of highways has carried on experi ments that within a very short time are expected to revolutionize road building in the United States. On a two-mile stretch of road near this city tho division for the last two years have carried on these experi ments. in this stretch were 65 dif ferent types of hard road. For six weeks—day and night—heavy trucks pounded over these road sections, while engineers noted the effect upon the different types. The first radical change was made early this year in the type ofL con crete roads then being built in the state. The tests on the experimental road proved conclusively that con crete roads seven inches thick were as durable as those eight inches thick. Consequently, the specifications were changed to call for seven inches of concrete instead of eight inches. The state was saved thousands of dollars. Weak On Edges. Further tests disclosed that con crete roads as being constructed in Illinois were weakest on the edges. The problem then arose of strength ening the edge without increasing the cost of the pavement. Experimental stretches were built on the test roadi that were nine inches at the edge and gracing to six inches two feet from the edge. The center of the road was reduced from seven inches to six inches. This experimental stretch withstood every test and the specifications again were changed, it is estimated this changed save the state between $1,500 and $2,000 a mile. Frank T. Sheets, superintendent of highways, says the experimental road near this city has saved the state of Illinois $4,000,000 to date. The division of highway engineers are not satisfied to halt here but are continuing their experiments andi hope to secure tho perfect road be fore they quit. Engineers on Watch. Hundreds of road engineers from practically all states in the union have watched the results of the tests on tho experimental road and undoubtedly will change the specifications In their states. Because of the nature of its soil, the state of Illinois is firmly sold on the concrete road. Experiments have proven it is the only type that will stand on the Illinois loam. So far this year the state has con structed 615 miles of pavement and with seasonable weather the figure will reach 700 before the winter stops the work. Governor Len Small promised the voters 1.000 miles of pavement in 1922. but the rail and coal strikes reduced the figure. OPERA STARS BATTLE. ' Chicago. Dec. 1 (U. P.)—Grand opera stars here objecting to the chilly breezes sweeping their bare knees during rehearsals, "mixed it” in a free for all fight with stage hands. Several were cut up and bruised in the melee. WOMAN RELEASED ON ORDER OF COURT Omaha. Neb., Dec. 2.—Mrs. Viola Jacobson, recently arrested by Oma ha police fcr Council Bluffs Iowa, au thorities, when she declined to testify in the trial of her former husanbd, Harry McAtee, acquitted Thursday on a charge of murdering her second husband. John Jacobson, was re leased Friday by urder of district court, which ruled the Iowa police' were without requisition papers and bed no ground for her detention. MAKE EFFORT TO SAVEJS LIFE Investigators Representing Walter Simmons Claim Juror Allowed to Leave Court Room at Trial. Butte, Neb., Dec. 1 (Special.)—In vestigations are being made here re garding new evidence which will be placed before the supreme court wh< re a rehearing will be asked in the case of Walter Simmons, who is awaiting death in the state peni tentiary for killing Frank Pahl, of Spencer, Neb. It is stated that the supreme court will be told that dur ing deliberations one of the jurors in district court was allowed to leave the Jury room unaccompanied. Simmons’ brother, who lives In Oregon, is em ploying investigators to run down new clews whicli have developed re cently. Simmons declared that bootleggers killed Pahl, and that he has been con victed on circumstantial evidence. The automobile In which Pahl is said to have been killed by Simmons is in the Couch garage at this place. Mrs. Pahl has demanded the car, but feels that she should not be required to pay the storage bill, which is mounting higher each month. This question is to be put up to the court to decide if the county is liable. In the meantime Simmons is await ing his future In the death cell at the penitentiary. He is scheduled to die in February. MUSICAL INSTRUCTION FOR VETS’ TRAINING SCHOOL • Norfolk, Neb,, Dec. 1 (Special.)—* Four state American Legion organ izations have subscribed money with which to employ an Instructor for the orchestra at the Bellevue, Neb., train ing school, according to an announce ment made here by Mrs. E. C. Warner, president of the auxiliary department of Nebraska. NORTHWESTERN ENGINEER HAS HAND SHOT OFF Norfolk, Neb., Dec. 1.—Clarence A. Gray, veteran Chicago and North western locomotive engineer, had his right hand shot off here while clean ing a shotgun. A shell caught in the chamber, and while attempting to ex tract it, it was discharged. ♦*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ l KING HELD CAPTIVE * ♦ BY REVOLUTIONISTS ♦ Here is the latest posed photograph of King George of Greece, who suc ceeded to the throne on the forced %l>dictlon of his father. King Constan tine. Greek revolutionists are now holding him as a prisoner in his pal ace at Athens. . The Cup of Life. Life Is a crystal bowl that brims with wine. Red wine of springtime, youth and love and dawn— And unto you and me, and every man, The wine cup comes but once; then passes on. Shall we quaff slowly, knowing drop by drop Us pungent sweetness? All the swift days pass. Unto the brooding hour that will bring A witheied hand that holds an empty glass. Shall we drink deeply, drain in one swift draft The cut) of all its sparkling ecstasies? Life will be brief, but briefer still will bo Upon our lips the bitter of its lee9. Sip slowly or drink deep of life’s red wine— t' The cup is charged with gladness and regret Sip slow and know that sweetness turns to tears. Drink deeply—and forget. —C. T. Davis, in Arkansas Gazette. A New York motorist who ran over and killed a small boy has been convicted of manslaughter. When ho comes out of prison, some 15 years hence, he’ll probably be a more careful driver. A project to secure better instruction in farming for peasants in 1-Yance by uue of motion pictures has been ap prove-! by the cabinet. An organization J»as been formed in New York to crusade against flirting. The members will wear buttons sig nifying their power to arrest “mash ers.” ^ , j RUSSIA TO BACK : TUBKSIEMABBS Tchitcherin Threat»ns to Break Up Secret Diplom acy at Lausanne Conference. BY ISAAC DON LEVINE, Ureversal Service Correspondent. Special Cable Dispatch, (Copyright, 1922, by Universal Service.) Aboard Georges Tchiteherin’s Spe *ial Train in Germany, Dec. 2 (De layed in transmission).—Standing at the open window of his special par lor car a minute before his train pulled out of Berlin for Lausanne, Georges Tchitcherin, the soviet com missar of foreign affairs, recognized me on the platform and beckoned me to join him. Tchitcherin received me in his Shirt sleeves, American fashion, ap parently preparing to tackle a little bundle of papers, despite his four days of continuous travel on the way from Moscow. Will Back Turk Demand. Tchitcherin, on his way to Lau sanne, reiterated the demand for Turkish military control of the straits. When told of the plan that Venizelos had outlined providing for allied control of the Dardanelles, • to menace Turkey, while ythe Turks would fortify the BosphoVus to pro tect the Black sea and incidentally Russia, Tchitcherin broke out in loud laughter. “We will let the allies demilitarize the Bosphorus if they agree that the Turks control the Dardanelles,’’ he countered the Venizelos proposed mirthfully. Threat Against Secrecy. Regarding the secrecy at the Lausanne conference, Tchitcherin declared that the Russian delegation will not be a party to “such a fool’s bargain.” He said that they do not believe in the practicability of suQh an arrangement, and said that the Russians will disclose the proceed ings of the session in which they participate. In concluding the conversation Tchitcherin said: “What we want most Is to under stand the Russian policy of the American government.” —f— DEMANDS U. S. RIGHTS. Lausanne, Dec. 3 (U. P.)—Amer ican oil, railroad and minnlng inter ests will carry the fight for Turkish concessions before the league of na tions and The Hague court is neces sary, J. Hamilton Lewis, former United States senator Lewis, from Illinois, representing American con cerns, announced. Lewis formally notified the confer ence of the intentions. “American business concerns de mand the same right and chances to concessions as the English,” he told the conference. The conference, deadlocked on the questions of the straits, the Mosul oil concessions and European frontiers, today considered a six weeks recess beginning December 15. The adjournment would permit Ismet Pasha, Turkish leader, to con sult with the Angora government on those controversies and other dis puted points. The conference, under the plan, would be resumed at the close of the Brussels meeting. SUBSIDY BILL ID COMMITTEE TODAY Chairman Jones Expects to Be Able to Place Measure Before Senate by Wednesday. Universal Service. Washington, Dec. 3.—The admin istration ship subsidy will be taken up Monday by the Senate commerce committee, expects to report the bill to er the terms of the measure as pass ed by the House. Senator Jones, chairman of the committee, epects to report the bill to the Senate on Wednesday accom panied by a motion to make it the unfinished business so that it may be considered at once to the exclusion of other measures. No hearings will be held on the bill by the commerce committee. It is understood that practically all re publican members of the senate com mittee are satisfied with the bill as amended by the House and are ready to report It to the Senate without discussion. This does not apply to the democratic members, however, all but one of whom are expected to vote against reporting the bill. The fate of the subsidy bill in the Senate hangs in a balance with five votes likely to prove the determining factor. Doubtful administration republi cans, sent to the Senate from the farm districts of the midwest, can sway the bill to passage or defeat as soon as they make up their minds how they are going to vote. The clock In the tower of the Lex ington, Ky„ postofflce, which has clanged the hours and half hours since 1SS9, hau been silenced. A nearby hotel complained the clock disturbed guests. -- ♦ » — - ■ Considering what the Fordney McCumber tariff did to the republi can party In 1922, what will the Lasker subsidy, if passed, do in 1924? Probably the longest lived fashion In women's headgear is the bonnet worn by the Salvation Army lassies, which has not changed since 1877. Happy Thought. From the Kansas City Star. \\ lien King George opened the new parliament he probably congratulated himself, as he observed tbe large num ber of new faces, that he doesn't have to I run for re-election. LOVING CUP GIVEN TIGER" BY NEGROES Thanked by Indiana Colored Folk for Reception Accorded Negro Troops in France— Speaks at Baltimore Today. BY A. J. LORENZ, Universal Service Correspondent. Enroute with fcletnenceau, Pitts burgh, Pa., Dec. 3.—The "Tiger of France” said farewell to the middle west todiiy and, is on his way to M as'.iington to clinch, the object of his "private mission” in behalf of France. Clemenceau was gi ren a surprise welcome at Dayton, Ohio, today when he was greeted by Orville Wright and a committee of citizens. More Jhan 10,000 people had assem bled at the station to greet his trairti during its five minute stop at noon, today. Expressing gratification at the re ception, he declared that he had. found “America so well disposed to ward his message” that he nearly re gretted having made the trip. "Messenger of Friendship." “I am a messenger of friendship,’*" he said. "France never did attack a. nation and never will. You left the* war too soon, but I am glad to see that you have sent observers to the Lausanne conference, in which Franee ls seeking to defend herself diplo matically against the designs of the Turks, Russians and Germans.” At Indianapolis a delegation of 200 negroes met Clemeneeau’s train at the station and presented the “Tiger” with a silver loving cup on an ebony base. The cup was inscribed “To the Tiger of France from the negroes of Indianapolis.” In a letter addressed to Clemenceau the negroes said: “The black Americans of Indiana, wish to pay tribute to France’s great est citizen, and through him to the great jteople of your country. We are not unmindful of the kind and hospi table manner in which you received our black soldiers. Say to your p^bple that in our hearts there is a respon sive chord which will ever vibrate when danger threatens your borders.” Talks At Richmond, Ind. At Richmond, Ind., he was greeted by a delegation of Quakers, among them Timothy Nicholson, 94 years old. "I want to show you what an old man looks like”, Nicholson said to the 81-year-old “Tiger". Clemenceau smiled and shook hands heartily. Turning to the gathering of Rich mond citizens, Clemenceau said that in lieu of being unable to attend a. Quaker meeting, he felt like he was conducting one himself. “In a certain sense we all ought to be Quakers,” lie continued, stress ing his plea that France be not ad judged a “militaristic nation.” “It is a pity that General Grant’s words ‘Peace is gained only by war’ are true. I am not at all sure that it. can be gained only by peace. You men who love peace, however, must make up your minds that life itself is war and differs little from a fight. It is ail work and struggle. I shall cer tainly carry some of the Quaker spir it back with me.” At Baltimore he will deliver a brief address before the Maryland Historical Society and after a seven hour stay in the city will depart for Washington. He will return to Chicago for an, address before a meeting of farmers” organizations on December 11. Alvin Lockshied, Former Sioux; Cityan, Piloted Plane Which Went Into Tail Spin. Wayne, Neb., Dec. 3 (Special).— Alvin Lockshied, formerly of Sioux City, la., mechanic for the Wayne Motor company, and William McGre gor, mcmbc-r of the company salesu force, suffered serious internal in juries when the airplane in which they were circling the city at dusk Sun day evening went into a tail spim while about 500 feet above the west outskirts. The men ftee unable to regain con trol in the short distance to the* ground. The ship crashed and was demolished. The two men suffered cuts and bruises aVid were internally injured, but were able to crawl from the wreckage. Both were taken to the hospital here. Lockshied, within the last montlm came from Sioux City to his present position. Brooklyn, N. Y„ 40 years ago earned! its enviable name of City of Churches, with one place of worship for every 2,101 Inhabitants; today there is only one for every 4,370 persons residing in the bor-* ough. al j o lson’sTdIvor ce d WIFE MARRIES AGAIN! San Francisco, Dec. 3.—Mrs. Hen rietta Jolson, former wife of Al Jol son, musical comedy star, is a birder again. She has been married to Jack Silvey. manager of the campaign bu reau of the California development association. y The wedding took place November 3 in the presence of a small number of personal friends of the bride antC groom. After a short motor honey moon the couple established them selves in- a home in Westwood park