Illinois News Index

Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 24 Aug 1923, p. 3

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! RED RULE IISMAL FAILURE tutauqua Lecturer Pic- ires Bolsheviks as More [Despotic Than the Czar â-  THE LAKE SHORE NEWS, raiDAY.^UGt^ •LATES EXPERIENCES land and indn$ttfy and transportation is almost at a standstill. In the days of the Czar 30,000 tons of foodstuffs were moved daily on the railroads. Now there is scarcely 2,000 tons a day in transpor- tation. Concluding his statements on the Rus- sian situation with a short comment on the religious side of Bolshevism, Mr. Schwartz said, "The Communists do not believe m God. Anyone who expresses a belief in the Almighty cannot become a member of the Communist party. That is one reason why the Communist party is so small." stis ftTOfra^ Ma]. Reed Landis Buys Large Deerneld Tract Robert L. Johnson of the- Deerfield Must Be Near Autumns v Orner Has Hunt Permits You may have discerned a touch of h?eCe °M<Sberl? .Johnson and Brother, autumn in the air# We thought we had has sold 40 acres in the northeast part . . « , r\ j • j *«. * of the Village of Deerneld for Otto D. ,and when Earl Orner advised us that Von Linde of Perry Ulrich's office to hunting license blanks were now avail- * *> * ^, t_..j;- . . a^je at ^.g 0f^jCt jn ^ Northwestern station, we knew we had not erred. Autumn is not ushered in officially until September 21, but the fall hunt- ing season begins about September 1, and all the prospective nimrods are re- quested td protect themselves against the law as exercised by the game warden by procuring their licenses without delay. Major Reed G. Landis and several of his friends. It is Major Landis' intention to put in a roadway from the new Deerfield- Highland Park concrete road to this piece and to improve the 40 acres with several fine homes, one of which will be for his own use. He intends to 'make Deerfield his permanent home. gi ys Good Works Overbal- I anced by Bad Features ! olshevism is a failure and the Com- lm list government is bad. That is the ops lion of Alexander Schwartz, well kr;. vvn Redpath chautauqua and Coit- al! er lyceum speaker, who has been re- HlJ jrating' from a two weeks' illness at |£e home of Raphael Lee,.118 Maple ave- nut as expressed to a representative of f h i Lake Shore News. Mr. Schwartz ($£ te down while speaking from the Hi form at Mt. Pleasant* Iowa. Prior bis collapse his condition was such his lectures had been given from a !§t ng position. emetrey Alexandrovitch Karpensky Mr. Schwartz's real name. For a ; time he served as an officer in the 's army and was a personal body- d of Nickolai II. He was one of six best rifle shots in the world and best marksman in the Russian army. BanUher to Siberia hwartz has seen both sides of the sian situation. In 1905 he refused bey a command of one of the Czar's ers. He, together with Trotsky and ine, were sentenced to Siberia. They ped and scattered, and each began to k for the rise of the socialist party. ter the Russian revolution and the rise the Bolsheviki regime Mr. Schwartz his wife, an American worn- land a graduate of the University of sconsin, went back to Russia to align selves with the revolutionary gov-a t. They went into the country? a song on their lips. The/maii out with unrelenting determination fight the spread of communism. The n, his wife, never came out. She on a hunger strike after suffering >ld torture at the hands of the Reds was buried by her husband in a ly grave on the Siberian plains. it as&£ that Mr^ Schwarfau-onc& sl -_ §§»1 ftl H m (;|| iber of the Czar's forces and later adherent of communism, turned linst the Red party and grimly made his mind to devote himself to the es- fclishment of a free Russian republic. Russia it World Problem Mr. Schwartz's opinion the Rus- situation is paramount in the world iy. Conflicting reports come out of ssiaâ€"some encuoraging, the others heartening. Americans are in doubt :o which to believe, but Mr. Schwartz no doubt. He has seen both sides of curtain. In his opinion the revo- has merely substituted a new and lore rigid despotism for an old des* that was rotten, but which al- ired the people a decent chance to live " prosper. Three good things have been accom- shed by the Communists, said Mr. iwartz. The Red party has abolished labor, established and acutally en- ced absolute prohibtion and has given al rights to women. These things Red group like to parade in public They do not, however, say any- ig about the thousands of bad things the government does. Bolsheviki Kill 2,000,000 Jday everything in Russia is owned government. Labor is government >perty. Men are shipped like serfs >m one part of the country to another; py have nothing to say about their jjngs or comings. Laborers are not >d in money. They are told to eat at [vemment expense, but they are also d where to eat. They are given gov- iment clothes, but they have no choice to color, cut or texture. As a re- It sabotage is rife. The penalty for dotage is death. The Bolsheviki have % killed 2,000,000 Russian-people, Mr. Schwartz. [According to the speaker's story, the ^mmumst party numbers but 500,000 P . â„¢he total Russian population ft!Lthe Red flag is upwards of 130,- WW. This great mass is kept in a C °i seJvitude by a half million, be- Jtr I u f million are organized and rn j armv- The whole country .^veredI with a vast spy system that It }° shame anything that the Czar r nad. in fact, says Mr. Schwartz, ^ommunists have gone the old regime oetter m everything. The new gov- inient is more despotic, more relent- s. more ruinous than any that the »«• ever had. IT The Princely Lenine In* ,Commun«sts advocate the abolish- â- wu ot capital, of wages androf luxury. Sfsay.to the laborer that something cat and somewhere to sleep, no mat- r where ,s all that is needed. One 'llr °1- oes is ^oTJgh for any man. i3nl must ** Plailk Yet the com- ets themselves live *>n the fat of dace W Lenine lives in ^e Czar's T?e travels »« a special automo- iunr k S°vernnient officials have ndI tho II is denied to the masses. arvafS a'e do,ng "**** ^in«s while wrvation is, rampant throughout the Local Minister Attencb f State Pastoral Sessions! ReV Herman W. Meyer, pastor off St. John's Lutheran church, will at- tend the pastoral conferences of thef district of Northern Illinois to be held^S â- ;$ :at Bethany Lutheran church, â- Evan$-^^^.| ton, August 28-30. . -r^****--â- â€¢â- Â» The conference will be attended by hundreds of Lutheran ministers and will be devoted largely to the dis- cussion of questions relating to church discipline, it is said. - lift w$$Â¥ Salesmen Attention! â- mm We Want North^Shore Men to Sell* CHEVROLET CARS and TRUCKS to We are selling and servicing cars on the North Shore and desire to build our organization with North Shore men. Salesmen Residing in EVANST0N KENILW0RTH GLENC0E WILMETTE WINNETKA HIGHLAND PARK are invited to get in touch with this progressive organization with a view to becoming permanent factors in our growth and expansion.' . A personal interview will be granted to each serious-minded married man who realizes the advantage of neat appear- ance, good address and dependable willingness in sales work. AUTO EXPERIENCE NOT ESSENTlA^g Men who will work and follow our instructions will be thoroughly trained and enjoy a large measure of success. The men selected will be given every co- operation possible and an income far above the average. *>". â-  Apply *n person *tf^^»flMP4*1*'*.aSf^^lr'-;1 fiptll m 5 sal mi 't-Wi m m MM?Mmft*>m?A \

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