2« KNIFE COULD BF LOST UNDER NAML One From Stem of Moth-- woenesley Village... * s Formed from the stem of his moth-- erv ~carring, the knife is only one eighth of an inch long, and bas seven parts, . consisting of two handles, a back spring, three rivets and a blade. Mr. Baxter has fashloned It exactly Boston.--A knife so small that it can be lost under the nail of the Uttle easily and its blade is sharp enough Hike Mr. Bazster, ever since he was a child, has had for his hobby the mak-- ing of minute objects. His culminst-- Ing achievement has been this micro-- scople knife which he hbas to carty around in a glaes tube. The knife can Nmmbfl.'fl'dfl battle or 'on 'the cork. In addition to this knife, Mr. Baxter has three others which he calls large knives, but which are only a quarter of an inch larger than the microscoplc one. He carries them about in a small gold chain, one knife made of bard rubber with a shining blade of gold, with silver blades. 'The hobby that culminated with the fashioning' of the swmallest knife in the world, started with the construction of a minute knife made out of a coln for his mother. -- He followed this one with a knife shaped lke a man's leg, the blade fitting into the part correspond-- Ing to the thigh. In his early days bis only tools were a peg. ah awl and a #Ale, and with these he once made a padlock containing 22 rivets, out of six gllver quarters of his mother's. Many people have ,to take a plcture of his> knives, ;fiu"&q are all Mr. Baxter, who is almost seventy-- one, has had a varied and interesting life. . He was born in Burnham, Me., and early in his life.went out West, where he says cowboys were "wild fasxcinating tales to tell of those days. About the only thing that he brought back East with him was a gambler's Jucky ring.----It --was a plain gold--ring, and the gambler traded it to Baxter for a watch, but the luck did not last and Mr. Bazter finally got rid of it, ahy. little birds broadcast from the depths of a Surrey wood late one night. : These birds were tempted to sing 'at the right moment by notes soundéed on a cello by a musiclan seat-- #d in the wood, it having been found M"mn-"-mmn 6 {jf w ~ habtt-- watches and knives have been shown to travelets from all over the world. Among his> treasures are antione to tranaemit the London.--Thousands of persons who had never listened to the notes of a nightingale heard the songs of these years old, mounted with silver and gold, and an old--fashloned filntlock gun with a pepper boxr; a gun with a knife attached, and a nameplate in a pleces, made by a famous firm, has en-- graved on it a man, a dog, a fountain and roosters, and is very old and valn able. Another of his possessions is a dueling pistol, with the former owner's name on the back. > A cork pistol, used in frontier fight Ing against the Indians, was given by Its owner and user, Doctor Newball, to Mr. Bazxter, a personal friend, An Indian gun, shaped much like a mid Iron used in golf, was given him by his wife's uncle, and it is xery old and rare,----Boston . Gilobe. + New . Orleansa.----After -- residing in New Orieans virtually all his life, be lHeving himself to be an American and exerciaing acitizen's suffrage, William D. Seymour has learned in Federal court that be is a British subject. Beymour was born in. Mexico of British parentage and his father was naturalized by the Conféderacy during the Civil war. . The discovery that he was a British subject was made when Seymour at-- tempted to obtain a passport to visit Rurope. It was denied by the State Mepartment on the ground that he eould not prove his American citizen-- ahip. . At the same time it was held that rights granted by the Confederacy were not legal, _ U. $. Annuls Citizenship > _ Granted by Confederacy Songs of Nightingales Heard on English Radios Among hbis Arearms is a pistol 250 1,800 BOSTON STREETS TO BE GIVEN NEW NAMES tah thae L000R C o }'&" the name of "Adams place." P other -- streets bear the name tangled street situation, ever the bane of the visitors and travelers, may be unraveled by next year, in so far as m in names is concerned. ' John H. L. Noyes ot the street commissioners has laid plans for one of the greatest municipal christening parties ever carried out. AImpressed more and more by the complications arising from the repeti-- tion of identical 'street names in vari-- ous ~districts of the city, and some times even in the same district, Chair-- man Noyes has amassed Agures and Washington streets and fAive Washing-- ton places within the city limits, not Including Washington Street North., He has found that there are #ix streets© named after the well--known Adams family and that in additidn gour "blind 'ulleys" in various streets Altogether, the number of duplica tions reaches the enormous total of B,100--this -- out. of an aggregate of 56484 avenues, courts, parks, places, roads, squares, streets and terraces. On the list of 3,100 street names where duplication occurs approxt-- mately 1,800 distinctly different names appear, Basing their calculation on these figures, the officials have est!--, mated that the difference represents the number of streets which must be renamed, approximately 1,800 in all, Further perusal of the city's street Usts reveals five Auburn streets, five Austin streets, five Eim streets, five Everett streets, five High streets, Ave Puark streets, five School streets and Bive Water streets. -- There are |five separate Lincoin places. Theére are four Brtook streets and three Brooks places. Four streets bear the name of Alien and four more are named Allston... Similar instances occur al-- most indefinitely, _ : ~---- Chairman Noyes hbas admitted the magnitude of his task in finding 1,800 new names for thoroughfares Be sides soliciting suggestions from Bos-- toultans, his board will study the street lists of other cities and towne in the United States, hoping here and there to find.a--mame as yet unused in Boston. . . P es se Scarlet Fever Serum Is ' Pronounced Successful ---- Baltimore--A new serum which is said to give promise of revolutionizing the method. of treating scarliet. fever nas Deen tried out with "very favor able" results in 18 cases at the Syden-- ham hospital here, " _ The new curative is being developed by Dr. Aiphons Raymond Dochez, an associate professor of medicine at Co-- lumbila university, and its successful use has also-- been reported by hospitals in New York, New Haven, Conn., and Peking. 1e . o. Injection of the new potion . into muscles of the patient is said generally to have the effect of reducing the tem-- perature --to normal in about twelve hours, and in practically every case is dispelied. --Dr. Byreckhead Macgowan, superin-- tendent of the Sydenham hospital, ex-- plained that the serum is almost alone In the field of seatriet fever treatments. It is produced through immunization of horses and |s the result of experi-- ments conducted by Doctor Lochez «ince about 1917. Berkeley, Cal.~--Nutritional special-- ists at the University of California have estimated the amount of vege tables required by a gingle person dur-- Ing a year, and to assist home garden-- According to the table, the vege tables needed by each person are 85 pounds 'of greens, 60 pounds of car-- rots, 20 pounds of cabbage, 30 pounds of turnips, 50 pounds of beets or parg-- mips, 15 pounds of string beans, 15 pounds of squach, 180 pounds of pota-- toes, 50 ears of corn, 40 pounds of onions and 55 pounds of tomatoes. Washington.--The government's rub-- ber invertigation expedition in Routh America, some members of w have returned, coverédd a Inarge !my in the basins of the Amazon _ and tWibutaries almost to the ".:b ders in its search for sources for the dAevelopment of crude rubber 40 mest the growing demands of American ton-- Wamers. Although an enormous srea In that --region is adapted to . e production as fat as tom , rainfoll are concerned, «ol! condith «re sald to be a lHimiting MB . =.. : ** The apace for growing these vege-- tables, allowing for &# normal failure or partial loss, is dm as follows : Spinach, 250 feet of a; chard, 75 feet ; enrrots, 50 feet; cabbage, 20 feet; turnips, 40 feet; beets or pars nips, 50 feet; string beans, 40 foet ; peat or lima beans, 50 feet; potatoes, 400 feet; corn, 50 feet;--onions, 65 w.: tomatoes, 00 feet; squash, one ers further, have fixed the space need-- ed to grow enough vegetables for a family, p Each Person Should Eat 520 Lbs. of Vegetables Rubber Expedition on 3y oughfares Reaches 3,000, Com-- miesioner Learns. Amazon Reaches Bolivia a in pneucng'm case accompanying fever also With a movement under BUFFALO BILL IN BRONZE ON GUARD Statue of Famous Scout Will Be Unveiled at Cody in July. Cody, Wyo.--Within a few months those who travel the old Wyoming trail to Yellowstone Park through the Uittle town of Cody will come upon a bronze statue of the famous cowboy equestrian statue, mounted on a gran-- ite terrace and silhouetted against the aky, the rider gazing westward to the A remarkable fAgure was Col. Wil-- MHam F. Cody, better known as Buffalo B1 ; a man whose life was Alled with adventure. He was, at various times, a rider of the Pony Express when that was the only connection < mmmmu_m"' stage driver, a cowboy, a hunter, a guide, and an army scout. He engaged in fAghts with the Indians, in buffulo stampedes, and in thrilling old --fash-- loned -- round--ups.. He always wore "shootin' frons" and seldom missed a target, even when it was in swift mo-- tios. He was thoroughly famHllar with every nook and cranny of the Western plains, and mountains, and had bunted | r and Mrs. William Pfingston,; ""*"" over almost every mile. 'a d daughter of Half Day spent&',. + Qreat Bison Hunter. !| Sumda ywith Mr. and Mrs. John *4E ~-- They called him Buffalo Bill because | gr ; Th of Bis record in shooting those great | Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mordhorst mdh" beasts, the American bison. He killed .drfin Grace of Libertyville, Mr.|!" more than 4,000 in a year and a hulf. | and Mrs. Paul Murphy of. Chican',;mm In fact, the slaughter was so great that | were visitors at Mr. and Mrs. Charles -- I¥ it caused a protest. 'The meat was not | Goodluck's Sunday. .. {"' wasted, bowever, for at that time the | Remember all the good baked!t'"': Kansas Pacific railroad was in the *things the Ladies Aid Society of the " Ser course of construction and the buffaio | Baptist Church will have on sale} in meat was distributed to the workmen | July 8. . ... offe Aor food. & | Mr, and Mrs. A. L. Payton. were O*2 Wild riding and big--game shooting pall a bit as one grows older, #so Col-- onel>Cody capitalized his experiences by organizing a Wild West show, . In his later days he did his cowboying more or less by proxy. But, ah, the thrill when the great Buffalo Bill biimn-- self rode out into the arena'! How asmall boys adored his splendid riding and his handsome figure! The gay trappings of ~the show, the buckinz bronchos, the gallant cowboys, the yell-- Ing Indians--well, even grown--ups en-- Joyed his dramatization of 'the West _was the traveling show that made Buffalo Bill popular in eastern Amer-- lea and in Europe.. That show was an education in the thrills and hardships of frontler life; it gave vivid pictures of the difficulties of the early path-- Anders of the nation, and illustrated the courage of pioneers and scouts. The Fourth of July this year is the day chosen for the unveiling of # new Oof 'the 'program "of the Cody Stam-- pede, 'an exhibition of 'horsemanship and the prowess of the cowboys given yearly by the people of the neighbor-- Iing ranches. For three days Main street is a mass of life and color, cow-- girls in broad--brimmed bats and pic-- turesque riding clothes,-- Indians in gay blankets. For three days visitors can almost believe that the spirit of the old West has taken-- possession of Wyoming again, because all the fea-- tures of the '70s are present Mrs. Whitney's Statue. * Colonel Cody's granddaughter, Miss Jane Cody Garlow, will©® unveil-- the bronze horseman, which is the work of Mre. Harry Pume}uuey. Btand Ing 15 feet hbhigh a mounted at a commanding altitude above the sor-- rounding country, Buffdle Bil} guoards the trail. The statue is considered ane of Mrs, Whitney's best pleces of work, -- No pains were spared to achieve perfection in every detail; a horse was sent from the old Cody ranch in order that the proper type of model should be available--Jjust such a horse as the cowboy used to ride. Smoky, the model for the statue, was shipped East, and Mrs. Whitney chose the type of rider she wanted and then had the two go through their paces in Central park, while she studied each gesture and pose, selecting and reject-- Ing time and again before she found what she believed would convey best the spirit of Colonel Cody's. person-- ality. At last visualizing him'as rein-- Ing in his horse to listen for any sound that might be brought on the wind, sahe caught the desired pose. Because of the size of the statue Mrs. Whitney had" to have scaffolds and a revolving platform constructed so that she could move around her subject with case as ahe worked. When the question of placing the statue,-- with --a sultable background urose, it was deemed necessary to build a special granite platform, which was no small plece of engineering. Mrs, Whitney made a trip to Cody so that she could see the exact setting of the work when it should be completed. The magnificent granite terraces with their horse and rider form the center of a scene which has on one side Rat-- tlesnake mountain, on the other Cedar runma. both -- peaks snow--capped through most of the year. A stream of water has been directed into a cha nt the base of the terrance as a r& of Colonel Cody's Interest in ~The Bullalos Bill American associa-- tion, which has Gen. John J. Pershing tor Its chairman, is Anancing the plan. This association "sponsors outdoor sport and Individualiam, and aims to Infuse the-- present generation' with the poneer apirit." * ' Mrs. Whitney's model for the atatue Lasn Iataly heen an arhlhitian in Paris 'E N CO j WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1924 : Henry Voge! and neignbor of of skill, a bowling alley will be on ago visited with Mr. and Mrs.|the grounds and other kinds of en-- PflYm Sunday. | tertainment will be provided. "Hon. irs. Herman Helfer and daughters R. B. Swift, of Lake Forest, HL, t#. Walter Jolly and son and Mrs-- Senator, will be the speaker '(' «C Wehrenberg and children og,gfi. afternoon at three o'clock. The ; Libertyville visited Sunday with Boy Scouts of Palatine wil} furnish 'M t, Arthur Kirchbaum. 'the music. Everybody welcome. % Lfi- Listarkle ~visited Sunday _ Church News *k Wt Moge, oh Chicgnervie 1 Next , Sunday, _ July 6. Sunday ited several days with Mrs. W. Laun.ei"""""" Gemnm |_ Mr. and Mrs. Ray Grimm of Wau--, 4t "? iA m. Y ® c Choir | kegan visited Sunddy with Mr. and|__At 8:00 D. m. Y. . League, Mrs.]| at the parsonage. | Mts. Elmer Reese and Mr. and *' The Kia y Sn ; Fred Grimm, of Ela Township. On at 2 ."Lnili: July 185"'. attthe "'"t' | Menday Mr. and Mrs. Grimm leave. 5* *' A'l'l." heFs And mm to drive to California. t"' in members friends i r and Mrs. w":,'-nm D}:flnm:'mly invited. Visitors welcome. and daughter of H y spent', masunitentmininttinta--nattes 13" vwith Mr. and Mrs. John f'nE SILENT PARTNER, COMING _ Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Loomis and| The annual picnie of the Ev. ildren visited Mrs. Loomis' parents church will be held on this day in Mr mm J. Catlow at Barring-- Mry, Butt's grove. All kinds of re-- on . evening. lm will be sold, the Sunday _ Mrs. Donald Smith and daughters gehool will open a country store, the of Milwaukee are visiting at the Ed--| Ladies Aid Society will have a lunch ard Young and Frank Schult: stand and bakery sale and the Y. ho |P. League a new, interesting game Mrs, Henry Voge! and neignbor of of skill, a bowling alley will be on Chieago visited with Mr. and Mrs.|the grounds and other kinds of en-- ailip Young Sunday. | will be provided. "Hon. -- Mrs. Herman Helfer and daughters R. B. Swift, of Lake Forest, HL, -- Miss Ruth Dixon visited Sunday 'Mrs. Elizabeth Gainor has been eriously ill the past week but>is reported a little better at this writ-- Chicago v Wg. and Mrs. A. L. Payton-- were n visitors Friday. ~Miss Crystal Simonsg was a week ad visitor at home. Mrs, W. Busching, Sr.,. and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Busching and chi}-- dren visited relatives at Lutheon on W':m ZURICH i4 'fi'--"w wedding party which was P > i f omm & , mostly . from ; ts *# | m by 19 guests 1 'und Mrs. Herman Kubhlman splendidly enjoyed them-- A Hazel Kohl has returned { attending ~Normal school in W ater, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Herb Senna of Chi-- cage spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Hartmann. _ . "A. Fiche and Wm. Schultz were busin visitors in Waukegan Sat-- Emil Géest the well known Ium-- ber merchant Of Aptakisic met with Bill Egert visited the home folks t Du Sunday P. M. es3 a e traffic on Rand Road was un -- --heavy Sunday, due to the auto route publisned in Sunday's an accident in his elevator June 25. He brokao:vgnl ribs and received gseveral r minor injuries. At this writiny he is already fast improving. Fred Stelling, from near Diamond i o Barrington visited Mrs, C. Wewetzer Thursa-- 'vreat deal of pain but let us hope he also will ret soon. On Saturd@y, June 28, we had an-- other, church wedding.~ Mr. John Heider and Migs Alma Grote, botn of Chicago, wére united in holy wed-- lock. -- it was'n beautiful ceremony, Rev. C t'; dler officiating. As witnes: m. brides maid, etc., Lake, had the misfortune on June 28 to be kicked by a horse and one rib was fractured. He suffers a witnes: 6 I n, brides m, te. acted 'r;: iltghire, Mr. &eo Wiltshi a, Mi Cordes, and Mr Segebr----KE, Little Miss May Corde: filled v«ith: _and dignity her of fice a fOwég girl. On Mrs. Hy Cordes and e' the ta} weddin LONG GROVE old homestead. a bountiful borate© supper was served, ~-- ded with a gorgeous ake, favors in the form of kets. : --Till nearly midnight eck!-- The climax of "Jealous Husbands" |@ First National Picture produced yr. ; by Maurite Tourneur, playing at the hi]--| Auditorium . Theater . on Saturday _ on| hight is a sensational automobile | Sunday School Picnic at Long Grove ' 'July Fourth § \--:The annual picnie of the Ev. . church will be held on this day in ' . The Paramount picture, "Theé Si-- \lent Partner," a Charles Maigne pro-- 'duction featuring Leatrice Joy Owen "Moore, and Robert Edeson, comes to |the: Auditorium Theater Sunday 'f.uz The story is an adaptation of 'a serial of the same name which ran 'in the Saturday Evening Post. It gis a domestic melodrama carrying a moral. hlgl'.tbhdie-Aidwmw M&m 'M;c at 2:00 p. m. at ewest re on our md in 'India :'S be given, so let us come all. Visitors . Next -- Sunday, July 6, Sunday school at 9:00 a. m. German service at 10:00 a. m. : . ~At 8:00 p. m. Y. P. League, Choir at the parsonage. -- h.'l?ui- Aid Society will meet at 2:00 p. m. July 10, at the parson-- age. All members and friends are N Wcare in the market for buying fresh fruit and vegetables -- also poultry and eggs at Chicago prices \ -- GREEN FRONT FRUIT & YVEGETABLE STORE WELCOME! General Admission 50¢ "Down in OV Louisiana" Tickets on reserve at Lovell's, Decker's and The Soda Shop on or after Saturday, July 5th e % CIVES THE ROMANTIC . TUNEFUL -- SCENIC MUSICAL COMEDY --_---- _ _ Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Iuly 10, 11, 12 5 8:15 p. m. Standard Time HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM . JOSEPH'S DRAMATIC CLUB Libertyville, 1!}1. to the ROBBERS TAKE JEWELRY STOCK Police of Libertyville were search-- ing Monday for thieves who late Sat-- urday night broke into the jewelry Libertyville _ Store _ Entered Late Saturday Night and Window Broken store of Andrew Huss, Milwaukee avenue, and escaped --with--loot --valu-- ed at several thourands of dollars. According to the report made Mon.-- day the burglars entered the store throiigh a .rear window probably some time late Saturday night after the place was closed. Carry Aaway Pearls. _ Working silently and quickly the robbers carried away a stock of watehes and vearls valued at a ;%;bthenportmadc. is believed that the robbers may have had a knowledge of the place. The police <of the village were without a clew on the burglary Monday and were seeking to locate trace of the men. It _ is believed that an autd was used to cart away the goods. accident in which a motor is smashed to smithereens by a railroad loco-- motive. ~It is declared to be one of the most thrilling "shots" ever re-- corded by the motion picture camera. were cleaned out, accord-- Children $5¢ i Will Erect You iT j DAY AND NIGHT TAXI SERVIC --because, according to myth, & piece of the forbidden fruit stuck in Adam's throat. There, in all of Adam's sons, the lump re-- mains to this day! Yet humans, young and old, find : a frequent help in keeping free from many illspthat nm heir One of 200 Puretest prepara-- tions for health and hygiene. Every item the best that skill and care can produce. ts Puretest Castor Oil is a clear, ::x;'cm laxative that acts gently thoroughly. Extra refining am it a sweet nutty taste. ren take it easily. 4 Plastering and DECKER & NEVILLE | LIBERTYYVILLE ------ -- [' CONTRACTOR & ~BUILDER-- "Phone Winnetka 425. of _ -- Libertyville 120--R _ Dr. C. H. Arnold fitted when needed.. . _-- > with the : latest scientific instruments. _ Eye 'glasses or any <kind of Mlfi"g: furnishing all labor i material by contract, se you may know just what entire cost will be before starting. & R. L Gonsalves Anywhere on the North Shore Phone Libertyville, 306 NORMAN L. MADOLE "_OPTOMETRIST Libertyville, I!linois Waukegan, !11. Lathing Telephone 420 PAGE FTIVE of ~the eyes Castor Oil w P