-- _ Local Attorney, Who Drafted _ ~ Bin, Smsq Step in Right _ a Direction For Future. / ~ _ VITAL TO COUNTY-- 00000000 000006 00 Euse Fisher home on Saturday oeven-- &thm«nfimm" Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wagner are this week. + a RMvery farmer in this vicinity is at present cutting grain. _ Messrs Matt Rossdeutscher and Earl Mrs. G. A. Vasey and danghter Vera motored to McHenry on Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lenzen moved into the Howard Lusk place Wednesday. Henry Dowell was a McHenry caller &;mo- in the nortbern end of From what he' has learned the project will probably pass at a vote or in that locality. ho 5. Conservation of fish life. &. And the ultimate development last spring. went into --the proposed Amprovement thorougbhly gand saw the ulv::.ug: tomho derived. The result t the projectgained their official approval. must come in time, even if it should be defeated Bept. 7. The plan for'a conservancy in the Fox river valley district, that comes to a vote Sept. 7, is an: issue of enormous importance to Lake county and-- the counties through which the valley extends, according to Attorney . n-m-vnm-dmim-' .3-. are five big reasons <why:' " an improvement is an imme diate necessity, according to him. In the first place it will stop the S»mart New Sfiuinbié Seat BEAUBIEN STATES by two pamaifiahs 8 oo c ie e ooo se nds When closed, the rear compartment is absolutely waterproof, even in rainiest Smsced gray ai Qumble Seat For Sport Roadster «ty & 16 Y c a04 ' © Mabel E. Laseke. At this most important event for | our dear confirmants the church ought to be filled 'with worshippers. On Sunday August 29,.in the morn-- ing service after the Sunday school at 10 a. m., the confirmands will-- take Centre has spent the past week with $ e i o o C oo o. her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. 8. J. |-- mn.cou._-hqa of; the _ Edward Lusk is dressing his store mnficdvflwm ""m up in a new coat of paint. for some time has been Ifi _ Jack Larkin and Mrs, Brown Levitt e:-fi:nmm?'.hw daughter Elinor, of Chicago, spent Commerce, '#ixmnmwmnr-m writing 'GMW on . varioue ' n-unn---notmwug communities in the "Rediecovering hosapital, in Chicago, is spending h Illinois" campaign, visited Waukegan vacation with ber parents, Mr. and|a few days ago and just written: Mrs. 8. J. Russell -- -- > a ve--y complete and imteresting at-- Mrs. Pete Wagner anid sister, of De | ticle. Kalb spent the week end here. His article follows: . Mre, John Kaniffie, of Chicago is vis By LESTER B. COLBY. iting Mr.s 8. J. Russell. x > lilinots 'Chamber of -- Commerce. . ~Mrs. 8. J Russell and daughter, Miss| Waukegan is . a Pottawatomie Fanniey Troyer and Mrs. John Kniffie| word meaning ~ Little Fort _ And svent Saturday afterngo nat the Esse|right there we run abruptly into a Fisher home. lost eng:'u.nnm' romantic his The Ladies Afd of the Volo M. E.|tory. have been found dating church are piauning a river trip from |back approximagely to the Revolu were in Round Lake on Thursday. . . Mrs. Egse Fisher and Mr. nd:x uoyd!'hher.mth'hm f Mrs. Richard Dowell. > Joe Passafield, of Crystal --Lake, was a Volo caller--on Sunday'. » Roy Passfiek spent Sunday after noon at the Dowell Brothers' home. . Miss Frances Nicholas, of Eligin, spent the week end with her parents Mr. and Mrs. William Nicholas.' -- Mr. and Mrs. W. Convcn& were Sat-- urday callers at the home of their osn Earl Converse, at Slocum Lake. Mr. adn Mrs. Leslie Davis and fam-- y were Sunday guests at the William Davis home. They also accompanied Mr. and Mrs. William Davis and dar fitertothohnd'ubuwmu'nere ights.. --. _ Everyone knows of the accident in town one night of last week. Frank Henkle» and Lloyd Fisher were Wauconda caller on Saturday. Miss Mabel Kniggee, of 'Wauconda hils cousin, Waliter Vasey. 18 AMarked 1LlLUG Mr. and Mrs. 'Leslie Davis and son | records of man t and daughters spent Sunday with the ._oovc.bo!&m latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William mm':'t" here G. A. Vasey was h Sunday morning |the deep ravine nnau";mmmt---. . ---- U Waukegan. --Its Jo entertained company |most at the. .top ~-- Woman and Home | "Mome," says the Newcastle (Pa.) Onrier,. "Is a place where a woman, In .hout Afteen secunds cun And some thin'k for which a man hbas searched bp» hour." i Frank Wilson, Jr., called on Arthur thur Nicholas was a caller at the MQMflm e Milter --was a caller in this vicin-- " "".5 s worker~ ~synthetic chemicale; Nation-- [ss vemiei e ie .c e arasxe ue * *+* > ployes; Mitchel Devices Manufactur-- o. «(s<= a~ « -- -- 915,00| ing company, 25 people; Fflled Floral f Thas moved into'larger quarters and 6 4 expects to employ several hundred t _ VUVEL penple by fall. The Chicago Hardwars !' . } payroll $3,000 a week. > + € "Ohe is where Chitago now stanls and the other, about 40 miles north, is marked Little Fort. . But written records of man tell us nothing what-- soever flolzthh little fort. Yet the mhgot here it stood is known. The _ was on the nort> bank of New York, organized the ~Amateur Cinema league. These "little fAlms" all date back to the baby days of mo-- tion picture Photography--in : Wauke-- gan. Some day, perhaps, Waukegan may build a monument or fx a bronze two infant out] on the rinm. of L'uomn. tery everlasting. f Jesuits, perhaps, harking back to Marquette and La Salle, before 1700. Maybe later men.. All that is known is that here --was a ~spot where a _ Lester B. eotvhnz erly of the LAbertyville Independent and a news-- mmdvmcm-.m for some time has been Ia* ties over the state in the interest he Illinoisp &nhr of --Commerce, writing 'd articles on. varioue communitiee in the "Rediecovering Illinois" campaign, visited Waukegan a YTew days ago and just written a very complete and inmteresting at-- a ye--y complete and ipteresting ar-- m'u industries 4 Hise article follows: company, * Affiliated By LESTER B. COLBY. plant of the Cyclone llinots Olfl;"'o" Commerce. ,.'g. en 1b Waukegan h Pottawatomie Gre PA the Pottawstomies -- knew the loca-- tion : as Waukegan--Little Fort. given was held in Waukegan. Not so long ago, either. That. was in October, -- 1885, if the memory: of 'statisticse before me.;s These record that Waukegan, in 1925, had 22,023 inhabitante.The value of Waukegan's products, my figures snow, is a little more thz $24,000,000 .a year. & tercu i copigivy Shour Wadkrgan and gicg is centered about n and orth . Chicago. . Though politically two cities they are in reality bu, one, an imaginary line between them. . -- was told, have been placed in mewly built homes 'within the year. 'These are -- the Am «Laboratories, 600 worker~ --synthetic chemi¢ale} Nation-- cal inventor, came in one m'.:?idm; to: batiery: manufacturerg. _ . said to Spoor, a bit excitedly, "I WA# told that thié is the on'y plaat can make pictures move," And he in'the Unitéd States making this type: could, and proved it. ~The motion Of battery container. T picture show was advertised.. Pmu' 'All along the North Shove are ritch flocked in _ The-- motion m'men'l homes. This stretch of wooded were littleo more: than -- shadowy |thore, much of i ravined, is tza aboidsa forms but the people cheered. ~ | of people whq live, pridein'ly. ~They ; Many men . plunged: into motion{build --well with taste in the building. pictures about that time. Litigation | The Dow Manufécturing compdny of came. Ame; tired 'of i#t. sold out. | Waukegan, founded in 1870, bas built Spoor, at heart a showman, perse--|up a remarkable business in particu-- vered. He built up the Resandy com--|lar millwork. . * . 8 pany and is held to be the first man | This company caters especially to to make $1,000,000 out Of flms. those who demand the unueual. It'*s Some time ago it occurred o-- me | handiwork is everywhere . between that here in Whukecan, probably, | Chicago and Waukegan, lending ar-- lived the first girl who everappeared | tistry to home building. in a motion picture Fln. I begaen to | -- Much ~of~ Waukegan's industrial hunt her. 1 betieve I have found her | streagth i# in its number of industrial --two of her, in fact.: Wor the e@tliest MW sample of such is: the recorded film, showingligiris in actioa. | F. R. » t company,.m@ker of imag-- was of" two ~gigls. _ :: ,---- : .. nesite étucco. Such things, with but-- The girls were Miss Bess Bower |ter tubs; paper bags, conveyors and and Mice leabel Snoor" Both are liv. |envelopes make up Waukegan. . given birth to the "home movie" film ; warrow, on!. 16 millimeters wide. A tablet inseribed §Here Motion Pic tures were )'on."::d' thus festablish another national shrine. 4 dukegan today is a city of 70 di-- w y is a versified industries. I have certain what new developments in industries, no longer: "fat." The actore walk out f the > films. . Recall the old "stereopticon" pictures tha,; we 'used to know? It is like that. \ * The girls were Miss Bess Bower and Mies Isabel Spoor. Both are liv-- ing: today, both. in . Waukegan. . Mins Bower is Mre. B. T. Dunun'and Miss In all these yeare, until now, the profesisional film, mechapically, has never changed. The-- measurements are the same; perforatione: for-- tim-- ing. the same. Bu;, in this year, 1926, I fAind two great evolutions at hand. George K. Spoor, this same Wauke-- gan ho~. has eepnt $2,000,000, develop-- ing the "third dimeasion" in films. He is=about to launca filme that are of the old 'timérs may: recall the film --#zirle, in dresses that came to their toes, laughing and slamming a, each other with big boxing groves. e Former Waukegan and Liber-- at the top of! the blufft over ftew months have m PP3 _3 esA 9. i us Aon on a .. B. J« Giss, our school treasurer, is the owner of a fine new Paige car. Rev. H. B. Grimme and family at-- tended the 'encampment . services at Naperville Park last Sunday. '¢ «"The °B. L. ~C. E. had its monthly meeting at the home"of Charles Hans, and all present enjoyed the social that "B. A. Schutt and Miss A. E. Schnell of Chicago visited in-- Prairie -- View last week,. --. i The evening service next Sunday #will be under toh auspices of the Miz-- sionary--Aid Society, and the, deléegates to the convention will report. All are ,m= . Sunday School at 10 &. m.: complete, I--am told, calls for an ex--| CAlled the sea sWaA}IOW, NAS insus penditure of $15,500,000. Near it is | its annual fall visit to Waukegan another large new plant, built in the | fully a--<month ahead of : time 'sc Mhumvlthm,mmmmm~mm station of the Public Service corpora 'b.t'am at the Waukegan -- beach. tion. <Its investments here to date, I the arrival of the Tern at this was told, is $6,500,000 and will soon | time ofthe year points to an early be doubled. fall in the sign language of: those Among the old:timers'among Wau--| Who know: the lake.. -- e ,rnmuouocmn Yesterday, August 9, a bird that nts of the American Steel & Wire | looked to the unfamiliar like a small company." Affiliated with it is the | Young sea gull lighted ch the min-- plant of the Cyclone Wire Fence com.| BOW box belonging to Larson and pany. & im -- . | enchored out a. few feet the 'The Greiss Pfleger Tanning com.| #hore. The bird, as he-- £" him-- pany, making upper leather stock for | S8lf to .some of Larson's shoos, is said to the largest plan, or| informed ~the men on . the. beach nutu;:;mmu:am'mm S mt 4 ol gone.* The roo e leather industry has j. generally these parts one great sadness, _It"is this: _ --~ | 2b0ut the middl@ of September. .; Speaking of cwomen's .aiment. 1 bave found another fact. Not so many yeare ago, in the drab days: when women 'really wore clothes, it took mma&&m:;m& dress..~ Today, with the visibility gloriously greater, two and a gquarter nw' ' <i% I learned comething of this from Marcella Long. Two years ago Mar-- cella Long was a dress desigher. The compiny employirg her c¢'ceed down. She decided to go "on bher own." Site traveled to that niwc place,. State street, Obigago, rith, samp'ed of her o 0o 0o 0 0 0o 0o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 series of articles written for the Nli-- nols Chamber of Commerce entitled "Re--discovering © Il}ino®." Their pur-- pose is to benefit, build and. develop Iilinols as a whole. 'The next wil; be published toon.' * In the--ola .daye when "shkoos was shoes." it took tow and a half square feet of leather to make a pair of woman's shoes. Today, heaven help the leather man, it takes only three quarters of a square foot! . : for $1,000 wobth of dressos. . + .. Today®sBe is "crganized as the Al vn.dtihl.m h;.nd Senum#y! eougni Tae t ~a it ~thirty michince mkl:""mh" prand dresses. And more it is impressed upon us that the real --industries of tomor-- row are étarting today "in the cellars and garrets," as our--statistical friend, Doc Babeon says. asbestos : board, : roofing.< 'including fomi he sorerme 4or. inedisiigh rA} cov ) cements, #, brake belits and Mgqmep on 4; s0) 40e Waukegan has some other interest-- ing industries; »The Ahlibe!! Battery Container corporation has developed a one--pigéce rubber battiry container to replace the old fashioned wooden came here from -- Vermont <~in bOom-- espun, still lives in Myckla'g west of the lake. Sometimes he 6 me rugged yarns of primitive ploneer-- 0 0o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 0 This jsite was-- made very largely by 'fAlling in an ©'@> "cattail mareh" on the sand flate north of the harbor. When everything is going well, as. it usually: > is, _ the --company ;employes 1,800 to 3,000.people. The' Johnk Man-- ville organization makes in Waukegan ing. So in putting down this story I am writing, you eée, or a part of IIli-- nois that somehow I feel is mine. battety box with its three containers. It does an enormous >usiness whole-- I can see my TfALDer, more tH&an UV year ago, coming here a--courting driv-- ing hbhorse and buggy. She aleeps, the sleep of forever, in a hinterland hill in Lake county wit" wreen grass upon it Father, who Wheat was the early day cash crop: trains 'of grain--laden wagons poufed in from the western.--farms. © Belvidere street, leading west across the Des Plaines and Fox rivers, was planked with solid oak boards eawed from native forest, Old timers still call it "the plank road." But that is ob viously wrong for now it is a,concrete road. Motors whirr where onte the wheat wagonse crawled. No longer the sailing grain schooners come to Wau-- kegan for +their loads. -- Railroada changed that. Instead great, steam freighters bring cargoes of coal to And, may I add an intimate word or two# When I :6 back: to Wauke gan, to dig up for this story, I vision my mother playing here, a lit-- tle girl, more than 70 yeare ago. And kegan began, Here thousands of set-- {l.ers in the stirring <1830's 'disem-- rked. Land eold for $1,25 an acre. Farm land back of Waukegan today, coveted 'by wealthy city men, is eeli-- ing for $1000 an acre! > & The Johns Manville plant, when Waukegan is a lake port of impor-- . BRG stos beves aao t | Small Gulls of the Tern F . _ HKer Amt order was 4 -----'.-------:--'--,-'a' ¢ P O'O-OOOOO'OOO'OOOOOI » 'poorly, so His life depends on his ability to skim --over the water and extract the small~fish nesr the sur-- face.:> He follows the lkke and sea shore lines 'with the weather, al-- 000000000000 000 #2 14%, °n Fiegfried and daughter, Helen Frances, of Ringling Montana, attended :the funeral of her "*mother; Mie main oike Revern, T. «Mrs. erts, John W-«cmn.wfium ammmmaatu Fomosa Beach, Cal., and relatives, in Lake Forest and Chicago, attended the funeral of Mrs. Jamieson. The pall Mré. John Meldrum and Omar Me+-- drum of Missouri attended the funeral of his sister, Mrs. Jamieson. . Mr. and Mrs. Ray Eusdon, of New:-- ton Mass., motored to Millburn on Fri-- day, to visit the former's relativts. ways keeping 'in & moderate tem-- perature. He often goes far to the morth, but is 'on the return before Cold weather sets in. . A Mids F. J. Bidwell returned to her home on Sunday, after having spent a week with Mrs. C. E. Denman. _ ._Mrs. Sarah Dodge, if River Forest, is sbending: a few'weeks with Mr. and Mre. J. 8. Denman and D. ¥M. White. Mrs. Smith, a sister of Mrs. Fuller called the sesa swallow, has .made its annual fall visit to Waukegan fully a--month ahead of: time 'se cording. to (Nick <Larson, boathouse 'h.o'ou at the Waukegan -- beach. the arrival of the Tern at --this nit::.umouurmuw. time y year points to an early fall in the sign language of: those who know the lake. > * Yesterday, August 9, a bird that looked to the unfamiliar like a small young sea gull lighted oh the min-- now box belonging to Larson and anchored out a> few tumm shore,.: The bird, as he-- him-- that takes his food 'from "the surface of the water, and he does it on the Arrive at Waukegan a M The Tern, a small gull sometimes +TonTrak $378, of ALLUWSAlL --|+~ ...# C o #. . a% . :/ ol weaareas| Sm WaterCured _ wad All grices f, o. & Pling, Mishs . 2 V A LLT--YX s o ':-'""7"%': m e ~evamliie. o _ . «> Hoidh _ #soke. A s ; s y eSe % ' ."i»'i:';} k m i ie "7' es o [ es ® . 4 is oam ® a » 4 BX -- 4 5. # ~ i on ts fi"«!: J ;r' n Gbe | \ *L FAS & . L3 & F. p f ; / p A . MA " > & & C '-,'_' 3 id x | 0 } * --% * v \ ; m es :?_ iC _ M .',L, "* s | 3 y _--< . S 'I : walks poorly and, g( y :. s \ & '-,' w<*: 5. 5 / k & Aocd th* field of the of the motor, Y "'-_'w-,fl_ l:&'. Iwi fl lqwm_ !ill"fi bf"i th C) let! ou can PME < '&"m'fi&ff * Pwesn 20 wed SQ mmiles en hake and the Néal brothers, retugned to her home in Fedora, Kansas, on Monday. flr'l. hllerweonpgued her to Chica x Mts. _ W. B. Stewart, of Waukegan, attended the bazaar on Frigay evening Mrs. Samway and daughter, a Mrs. .lx. bf Evanston: called on gw uaintances on Friday. They ea fpingcNorwood Park on Monasy: . -- 1M 1s0ol The womage: ~O * 0 -- Mre. Herrick, of Florida, spent l4st| -- 'The sheriff took action upon being Wednesday with Mrs. Rubie Gillifgs.| informed that the appellate court had _ The--roof of the Lambert: cottage| upheld the verdict of the jury in coun-- caught fire on Saturday morning, but| ty court bfi:re Judge P. L.: Persons by;hmo'::ddflcimtddotbo' some months ago. This jury found neighbort, / it soon extinguished, | the woman guilty of violating the pro-- the extent of the damage being a hole; hibitory law on testimony offered by burned in the roof. . | _ --*_'~ ----~. the sponge squad. * Miss Ruble Gillings returned home from Norwood Park on Monday. Mre. Herrick, of Florida, spent last Wednesday with Mrs. Rubie Gillings. wanago, Wisc.; spent Sunday with J. ~ ~Ss of superior quality. It is the celebrated U. S Sprayed Rubber free from acid, smoke i United States Tubes age well. If punc-- For Sale by turning to cakily H T on oo im tharmooth Chemwoled of Sprayed Rubber by the Water-- The Water--Cured Process delivers its pressure even entivesuthite * * x i of the rubber. _ And the rubber used in C « fifi United States Tubes --_----_-- _ in hour before your =like of which--you never dicks ten tiinks--with _ dréamed postible in a cat that Jos hill in a an--fith'm-wtie,mom so eakily that you are for LZconomical Treneports tion Lake must serve 60 «days in the coun ; jail, it was learned last w~>k WOMAN BOOTLEGGER MUST SERVE JAIL TERM: COVRT SAYS Apeliate Court Rules That Mrs. Barney Petlick, Diamond Lake, Must go to Jail. Mrs. Barney Pe.lick --. Diamond at!ouralindumd.fi can in the smooth Chevrolet! senke ofexeeod:?:§m unconscious of éven t *b est roughness in the road. Y ou for hour upon s¥ of the finest materials under ideal conditions ~ =-- _ in the largest and best equipped tubefactory °_ in the world. > us d# . 13 Tt will add miles to the life of yourcasing. _ " _ United States Royal Tubes, Grey Tubes= .. _ and Usco. Tubes will give the same 1 #u5e satisfactory service you get from U f"fif ~ Deputy Neely went first to Mun lein to get the assistance of C Police Clayton Tiffany who x location of the woman's home. At the time Petlick and bis: were due to go before Jadp.m ent® be sentenced the wile was Milwaukee, Wis., Aug. 11.--James Jensen, 34, of Lawrence, Ia., WBR 'killed, and Roy Parks, also * fi rence, and S.. W. Evans of P irgh, narrowly escaped a like mi day when the top of the 1%--foot MtACOk and 400 pounds of mortar crashed the ground at the plant of the Froe dert Grain and Malt comipany, * > . With her as a defendant had. her husband, who was tdlnlfi Through Attorney James G, the defendant had shown that ber property through ber son brought it to her for medicinal KILLED--BY FALLING STACK. _ +4 €4.--% i# A% <%