Illinois News Index

Libertyville Independent, 21 Jul 1927, p. 11

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3+ _,. SMALL BOY SHOT -- _ * THRV HEAD WITH > BULLET: WILLLIVE . ~A woman asking a divorce charges .. ner husband threw the supper at her. < JWo wonller i ahe caught the can.-- Lendon reports stated the man gave bis name as Albert Maytield. His story was that at the age of 14 years, while Wving in Minnesota, he bad. been struck over the Rhead with 4 stome by another boy. Now he is about 55 years olt. * The s.ory then ecarried up to the present day with Mayfield crossing the ocean from Siam to London. He fell on the boat and struck his head. Im-- mediately he lost his memory of being Albert Maylield, a Siam engineer, anmd became Albert Gurney, a boy who bad played in Waukegan and Lake county dreing childbood. He bad no memory of being Maytield and be <thought The story book report from London last Saturday tellin.; about e man be-- ing 'held there in an almshoyuse after suffering a lapse of memory for 20 yearse or more today was verified as partially correet by E. W. Parkhurst, Libertyville storekeeper, who is dis-- tantly ;related to the man who claims he lived as two different individuale with a loss of memory twice. E. W. Parkhurst, Distant Rela-- tive of Harry Gurney, Thinks Queen Victoria reigned ~and was frightened when he saw a plane. Parkhurst Takes Up Story "That," said Mr. Parkburst, "sounds lke Harry." LOCATE HIS TWO Mr. Pankburst stated that the man was correct as to his parentage;,; that bis father was Henry Gurney, born in Bryantville, Mass., and that bis mother was Nellie Fervham. His mather was a blood cousin of Mr. mother was & Dicod cousin oL . MLZ Parkhurst. Skhe and Gurney's fathe are dead. uk & There were two sons of Gurney, bhe zaid. ~Both live in Higbland -- Park. One is employed in a bank there and the other with the North Shore line. . -- "That's him alright. It sounds like him.. His story, as usual, is not cor-- rect. His name "l never Albert but Harry. His fatner"didn't teach in any sechool in Waukegan but he was in instructor in music at Lake Forest and Libertyville," Mr. Pankhurst stat-- "He treated his mother something secandalous. : 'Why hbe put bher on the train at Chicago years ago with two babies. and sent them to Minneapolis. He was to follow. He never ashowed up and bhis mother bad just $2.50 to her name. He just ran off and left Whether he is an imposter or not is a question she cannot answer$® She _would not be surprised if this proves 10 be the right man. his poor mother with those two babies," he stated. / * "He's the man alright but we don't want anything to do with him. Maybe he's trying to get back in the good graces of the family but we don't want him," he declared. _ . 4@ Mr. Pankhurst stated that bhe did not know of Gurney getting hit over the head with a etone and he further declared that he was in his twyaties béfore he disappeared. Another regident, an --aunt, located earlier in Highland Pxk, stated that the wife was dead. "I bheard from bim three or four years ago and his memory was in gooid condition then," this relative stated, "He was married twite. When bhe went east he married a girl in Bos-- ton. He had two chitdren. Fdon't know whether his --second wile is liv-- "But," she said, "he kuows how to get in touch with bis family without going to the means be bhas already." Two--year--old Lake County Boy Has Almost Miraculous Billy Finley, 2 year old son of George Finley, living on the Carl Buehler farm in Fla Towaship, four miles from Barrington, LAke County, was shot through the head a few days azo. and lives. The bullét, Sred by Roscoe Fin-- ley, 13 year old uncle of Billy, en-- tered the cranium immediately in front of the left ear and-- came out behind the right ear. The bullet presumably passed between the pal-- ate and the base of the brain, avoid-- ing a vital spot with the accuracy skilled surgeon directed by an X--ray plate. A ariance of a hair's breadth in the course of the bullet wou!d have caused instant death. Aszs it is, Billy is playing around the yard and a physician who examined him again reports that he appedrs none the worse for the accident. LIVES NEAR BARRINGTON Roscoe Finléy was fring hbis 22 ealibre rifle at a tin can Aarget. Billy was an interested spectator. Me sudden}y ran between the target andi the--ritle, just then -- Rosees pulled the trigger and the fullet -trutmuy.wlouuhthgufl The child was unconscious sey-- eral bhours but upon his recovery the physician <~who examined him was amazed to And <the practically normal© condition that has existed. The child's> escape from instant death is regarded as most remarka-- ble 'by physicians. MA N WAS ONCE COUNTY RESIDENT Escape From Death. 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To t . un "-- i 3 . ie > =r C ltieit 7 0 % SLIYIT :C > > > > .. 4¥ " : s y s * ennp mr' C sRA 4 BAAAE A. JA "¥ A AKYS ~ AIN A * e ) a J w, P . CAL: : t insy it en 4. 28 : ids -- f 4 M . P M eignde t P ons hn PE ie B CR MY §E 1c c 07 Oe lt B 44 ) -- MAP d %.: ©> > wl eees. toul 368 190900 0 ho' -- * & s £ se > * # Es _' 'The Chicago "tough guy" who went into the country district near Antioch and when Constable Thompson told him to desist mk_ingarnmpmcvidenflybefiequhcmbdq!uedhya"fick' from the rural districts, found out that a quiet, unassuming, well behaved man, can shoot straight as an arrow, Little did he know that Thompson was one of the best marksmen in the U. S. army and that he hasn't slipped since becoming a constable. He should have made inquiry before getting too fresh. You can't always tell what a "hick" can do behind the trigger. ¢ f BEES! BEES! BEES! THE POOR LITTLE BEES! ~ _ If a man who has a hive of bees is responsible for the stinging they may give men in neighboring fields, who's to be responsible for the UNOWNED stingers. .. ---- Again, it strikes us the complainants in the Wads-- worth case will have a mighty hard time proving that it was the particular bees of the man they've »had arrested, which did the stingines. s f Are bees so casily identified? Are bee--stings of a particular hive different from those of another? Supposing those farmers DO go into; court, show the bumps on their arms and legs and insist they were the result of being stung! Where's the expert to prove that it was a bee--sting and not that of a spider, a bed-- bug, or, what not? s ' 23 io 2 Just because a man in the neighborhood has a hive of bees and somebody else nearby gets stung in these days of honey--sucking by all bees, bumble and otherwise, it's going to be migity hard 'to prove who the guilty stingers are. _' 3 | ' Mr. Heydecker, owner of the bees, may insist that HIS bees are not STINGERS and he 'mageve'n bring a handful of them into justice Coulson's court on the 23rd, and possibly because they know him, they wont sting HIM--but, if he lets them loose, what about the justice and others in the court room? Who's to know they wont be stung?t > pAe e tss 2s _ Were you ever able to chase a bee that had stung you _M _find the fmily .hm.:'e, % '1. P ol i 2e % a"_ s there? The further big question arises, can a man prove the CHARACTER of his sting--as to whether it's a WILD bee that did it or whether it might be a TAME bee, one from such a place as Heydecker's hive? f It may require experts in court to determine what sort of a stinging the neighbors went through and :fl the time the 23rd has arrived the bumps may have all rgne_' away and they wont feel so touchy about what i p%ndmany days back.-- > ; o ' the meantime the bees may continue hunting !hmy--suckles and no manner of men c@an ctlg them either by injunction or other %ms of the law. . _ & Supposin%aan injunction issued and the bees ignored it, what thent Could= they be brought into court and who would bring them in?~ Would a process server be justified in esnt oo serl oo ronpoheible far c c n mnul stung doing it,/who would--be responsible for * And, will the presence 'of several bluecoats make protection for spectators such that it will be safe to go Libertyville Independent Late County Independent --~ Waukegan Weekly Sun Furthermore; how -Ion%sinc&a bee-ptx:fi has become a heinous offense>TIME WAS wfipe . h.e','x'{oe'ced to be stung by bees in sunmmertime and the. became so general that we've all been W in winter as well as summer by bigger th san the mere tiny honeyv--maker. -- > : c3 % -- It Tooks to us as if the complainants in this case have 'a big task on their--bands--to prove the identity of the bees that stung them and a harder task to prove ~~.. WThey admit they've been stung by the bees--we think they're stung now for eonrt-oont;.y- w n n ' HEN "Simpson 'mmmmmmw a with her thoughts, She could understand Steve's j but a forceful, dominant character --such as: "Simpson," acting as a sort of servant to such obvious social climbers as the Bytheways, didn't seem to click. In the pocket of "Simpson's" dinner coat, which she and Mrs. Bytheway had playfully removed in their "newlywed" byplay, she found the evidence she had hoped for--A"British Passport," issued to "Sir Michael Faislie," with a small photograph of that person attached. The portrait was that of "Simpsox." She replaced© the evidence and awaited her victim's return. He came at last with the nightic over his arm. Rose took it. "Very pretty gown--Sir Michael," "The photograph on your passport doesn't fatter you a bit," she the Popular Novel by "AMD SPo MY FIRST GOOD CMANCET" CHAPTER FIVE "THE CHEEREUL FRAUD" ~~After having emerged from the vale Of death for the second time since she shot her two small children and then sent a bullet into her own ifead in her home at Long Lake on the night Of July 3%, Mrs. Ruth Schoenenberger, aged 28 years, is again on the road to recovery and indications are that sbe will suryvie her injuries. . Mrs. Schoenenberger is slowly but urely regaining hber--strength and it is beli¢ved. that she . will recover ;ltudfly from her injuries. She +is now conscious at times and able to converse with the nurses as to her comdition. :: ::© > ; feq: 3 # wWOMAN WHO SHOT _ SELF AND BABES -- AGAIN IMPROVING The fact that one child died of her wounds awd that the other is still a patient in the hospital is still being She has shown no signs of the re turn of the mental derangement wihch led her to write a meaningless note and then attempt to kill her two chil-- dren. What action will be taken by authorities in her case in the event of her recovery is still problematical. Suffered Severe Relapse But is -- Again Regaining H er RECOVERY JS EXPECTED OCEAN HOP PLANES wOULD NOT GET 0. L. English Aviators Say _Lind-- periments -- ordered -- by unqualified' amateure, and by methods of secrecy, belitting succesees and only.nubush-| ing causualties of Rmaking flying nn-,l popular with the general public. f _ On top of this, there is an intense public feeling against the ministry on account of their trea;ment of Flight Liecutenants Carr and Gilman. Fly-- Ing towards India, this pair accom-- plished a* non--stop._ flight 'of---- 3,425 miles, being forced .down by 'a 'tech-- 31 mishap. .But on their return to tain,.their arriva) . was kept secret by the air ministry and less than 12 people were at the sraiion to receive them. As newsbpapers bilterly remark "Lindbergh bad 2090,000 Englishmen to welcome him wher . ne came i0 Croydon. ~Oir own men have to steal back in the depth of n:ght without a sou!l to give a cheer." _ .*"When the war ended," says the Westminster Gazette, "Britain had est KICK -- AT abligked® an overwhelm:mg superiorty in _}I'n"dr'-ht al} that has .::».lw' who now Tak the werld . "in firing. And it is all because the ~official stranzgi¢hold in 'aeronautical develop ment is stifling the industry. $ "It is certain that neither the ma-- " WANT--THAT--~KLELEYY ' ~ ON THE WINDOW SEKAT. a --chair and acreamed--loudly. --"Simpsonw" fiew down the hall to a window opening on a narrow balcony. . Through the pouring rain he felt his way in the darkness to a lighted window which he opered ard entered--Ann's room. explain--that woman--I--I--*' 2t There came a loud pounding at the door, and the voice of Mrs. Bytheway crying over and over "My jewels! My jewels!". ~'"Simpson" leaped to the window. Ann reluctantly opened the dootr. continued. -- "To think of an important person like you compromising a poor Kittle girl like me!" # * "I don't intend to. I'm getting out right now!" "Apd the first good chance Y ever had? Not on your life!" ;uwmmufiomm-mmma uutil the key dropped to the foor. He gave her a push,. She fell into IN BRITISH TEST He put his aam around ber. "For bheaven's sake, Ann, listen. o ts (% Would be Haited. MINISTRY Nt e palnhe ie n o o. / ds O o se en o ge t on o. +eRd Mev S 3. en o3 P Pheec * elte n e C3 ol s ce -- 200 both of the trane--Atlantie craft would have been refused airworthines certi ficates, and they would not have been Colonel M. O. Darty, head of one of the largest firms of aircraft and aero engine manufacturers in the country, interprets the successes of the two American airmen as a chalienge to aviation in Britain.~ .-- -- y Need Official upport "Neither the industry nor the air ministry can afford ro take it lying down," he says. '"We have machines and pilots equal to any in the world. But there is a lack of official support, or even official interest in record-- making attempts. : a * l "It is axiomatic thar orders follow success, and because of that it is cer-- tain that the succeseful -- American flighte will mean a great influxr of orders from all parts of the world. There could be no better tribute to the endurance alike of machine and engine than such long--distance flights as those acommplished by Lindbergh The most caustic comment on the air 'ministry came from one ol Bli-- tain's most famous pilote. "They paid Heron, designer of Lindbergh's and Chamberlin's engines," he said, "three quid ($15) a week and nagged him until 2e was stwply driven to America. Can you wonder we are behind?" CO--ED SEEKS NEW THRILL; GETS 1T _ ~ N A JAIL CELL "I wanted to see how the rest of the world lives," she said, "When & clerk in the store turned her back for a few minutes the idea to take '[thu' dress came to me. I suatched up & frock, much too small for me, and hid it under my coat. l ex-- pected to be caught--and put in jail." Miss Briggs' expectationse were fu} filled. -- However, she called her night in jail a "huge success," and felt that sbe had really witnessed :Ill,'tr of the more unkappy phages | e. fes " 'Denver--Desire for a new thrill is believed by Denver police t6 have been the motive which inspired pret-- ty Alpha Briggs, 20--year--old coed. daughter of a wealthy Wyoming ran-- cher, to attempt to steal a dress from a local department store. Steais Dress Too Small for Her to Find Out "How Other Peseple Lived." _ COMPLIMENTS REPORTERS "I never knew," she reported at ter bher experiment, "just how bard-- boiled some of the women prisoners are. And I found out too that de-- tectives> and newspaper ~men are just as human as anyone else."-- The girk refused to reveal the names of any of her {family a} though she --admiited . that. her father hbhad <a ranch near Casper, Wyoming. ~ She-- declined 'also _ to discuss ber plans for her marriage next January to a young rancher il;"fl.:: ow bher father'g. However, }%'3!' family and {friends will for According to Miss Briggs she has been a student at Northwesters university where she was a mem ber of the Alpha Delta Omega sor ority. 'She left school a few months ago to prepare for her wedding and unt!! ~recently had been at Bome with her parepts. COMMITS-- SUICIDE ftor this adventure and i of Bri-- Huddled there nervously, stood the Bytheways, a maid and two men servants,. all in their night wear. =* ~--~ we > ,"Di.yuhutlmmr "Yes," she Led, "I think it was burglars." L . The party went cautiously down stairs. Outside in the blinding m"m"m.aeepwb-flyuwadtbcomro{tm house on a narrow, slippery He reached a fighted window. Peering in, he saw "Sir Michael" wrap a quantity of jewelry in a ':iutha,phceitilam*m,ad,wi&ahppymle.kan room. Quickly "Simpson" entered, secured the jewels and followed the imposter.. In the hall be trroped over a rug. While he was hastily gathering the scattered jewelry, the whole houscehold, attracted by ihe "There," it Michael," dramatically pointing to the bedraggled "Simpson," "is the thiel." _ (C omumgh e n ons -- akcoea . tor H. Crouch, former Kansas City and 'Louisville, Ky., steeplejack, was regaining his streng:th today whi.e be ' enjoyed 'the title of the world's champion flagpole sitter. Crouch left his lofty perch atop a theatre building flagpole here last night with a record of 17 days, 2 hours behind him. . ; SITS ON POLE -- _ -------- FOR 17 DAYS ang Kaishih bave been due entirely to foreign brains asserted an Ameri-- can military observer here --The for-- eign brains are chiefly those of Gen-- eral Gallens or Blucher as his real name is. German General in Pay o ! Moscow is Leading Mili-- im > ~--tary Mind. --Peking.--The military successes of the nationaliet armies of General Chi-- PURE SOLDIER® OF FORTUNE A pure éoldier of fortune and A very modest one at that, Gallens for two years or more. has been the push behind the Cantonese armies an d yet he is little known and until now bas been thought to be a Russian. Descendant of Blucher Irstead of that, General Gallens is asserted to be a German, probably reélated to the -- Blucher of history. During the war as a lieutenast gen-- eral he commanded a Germar Army Corpe and was either a Russian pris oner or else niade his way into Rusela after the revolution. -- With his German military 'vsmu. Blucher in 1918 was commanding a Red cavalry' detachment at Ekaterin-- berg. Later he won fame for his fight against the White Detachments in Siberia with the position of divi-- sion commander. _ From 1921 until 1923 when hbe ap peared in China, pothing was heard of Blucher, or rather Gallens as he then became. With the Soviet in-- flux into the Cantonese cause, Gal-- lens was eventually made High Mili-- tary Advisor to 2: Headquarters of the Nationalist tionary Army. With that nominal title, be is actual-- ly Chiet of the General Staif. Th t'_:ll_olv.h:'d Staft it e roughress pus the nationalist army is Gcmu') without doubt say the American army men although the staff work more closely resembles the Russian. That is ex-- plainable_by the fact that: General Gallens has a Russian staffl. Although documrents seized in the raided Soviet Militery ~Attache's of-- fice here proved that General Gallens received his salary from the Moscow government, nevertheless American officials think that General Gallens has little 'nterest in politice, whe-- ther they be red or pot, and that he is first and last a soldier, and a vyer; successful one at that. Christian migsionaries in their work among the Hindus find it dificult to explain the killing of the fotted calf-- the only'thing in the four gospels to which pearly all Hindus take excep-- New Bedford, Mass., July 19.--Vic tion.© This is because the cow is re garded by them.»~ ~=ered. AID NATIONALIST -- ARMY 1N CHINA Sorry for "Faited Call" . Scenes From the + _:- '-:-' Ufiml Picture "THERE 18 THE THIEFT* (To be Concluded) «n tss s ce e + letin algo points out that moteri=ls vigiting Washington or Oregon wl tind a pnumber of new Provisione in &he motor yehicle codes of these states --now in effect as the result of 1997 legisliative sessions. Importaut changes in the Calilomia Vehicle act passed by the last jegis-- lature, including the increase e the speed limit to 40 miles amu hour be-- ecame effective July 29th, agccording to the Chicago Motor club. The ba}+ letin alsgo points out that moteri=is CALIFORNIA AND WASHINGTON PUT P SPEED LIMIT Washington has lined up with Cal-- fornia®and a number of other states in raising the speed limit on the opea highwaye under safe conditions to $0 miles an bour. Oregon has beld the maximum legal speed to 25 miles an Forty Miles An Hour is Agprov-- ed in Safe Places. But Keep Thore are, however, a numtber of speed restrictions in both states withi which the visitor should be {familiar. In Washington the limit remains at 15 ._iles per hour over a grade cro= sing of any steam, .electric or street railway when the driver's view is ob structed for 400 feet in either di.ec-- tion-- during the last 100 feet of &p-- proach. The same lim't applies at highway intersections when the driv-- er's view is obstructed for 360 feet in either direction. Washimwton has also raised the maximum rpeeJ witb-- in auy incorporated city or tewn i0 25 miles. The old 20-- mile limit within isntor-- porated cities still stands in Oregon, and there is a lo--mile limit over grade crossings or @crqss intersee tions whefte the driver's view is ob structed and around curves. VISITORS -- TAKE NOTICE Washington now requires every car to bo equipped with a windsnieid wiper, and in Oregon every car m3et be'equipped with a muffler in good working order and the use oi --the "cut--out" is forbidden. Four in a seat and one--armed ériv-- ing have been dealt a death biow in Or.gx. Driving with one arm . is forbidden, as is driving with a --per-- son, baggage or other encumbrance in one's lap. Three persons in ihe driver's seat over 12 years ol age is all the law will eallow; and you can't get around this ty holding anvoiber in your lap. Los Angzgeles, July 19.--Archouke Leopold of Austria will start work as a motion picture actor tomorrow, it was learned today. The areoaduke is taking the small film part, bis secretary explained, to relieve finar clal embarrassment. Meanwhile, --prospects for a-- duei in the near future between--the arch duke and Count Szechenyi. Hongar lhl ambassador to Washingion, were extremely~ remote. _ The Hungaian 'm is suptosed to have inralted the Austrian archduke during :'be latter's negotiations for a prisaie Joan.-- Leopold, thereupon, challenged envoy to a duel, but Szecheny! is now in Europe and the archduko ARCHDUKE IS IN MOVIES NOW travel. --'~"As--a cure <for sleepwalking, iry sprinkling tacks on the {loor.-- Char-- hAwg .:muon has been iormed to try to pessuadle the country to stop kidding Congress. m to quit--if congress is.-- 1 k Sentinel. leston Courier. to be without mopey -- to iés %

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