Illinois News Index

Lake County Register (1922), 31 Dec 1924, p. 5

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e ar Drugs -- Prescription Specialists * _ Libertyville, IIL. p sulphur and high melting point of ash means little trouble removing ashes and no clinker. If you have used Pocahontas and fired it properly, iou are onthemtnck,hntuntil you try our ine Ridge Smo you are like Columbus be-- fore he saw land. Mr. Cartoll Cole and Miss Mildred Anslem of Waukegan were Christ-- mas guests at the home of the form-- «€ers parents, Mr., and Mrs, Fred Cole. Skating caps, sweaters and woo! garments. Langworthys,. _ -- _ _ Mr. Harley Carson of Burlington lowa is spending the holiday vaca-- tion with Mrs, John Hasty. CP 00000 n e emmzemman in s m mmmarmenten en ie --_~ .. -- -- Lodith.. ies NSAAA S Ais MnA I Ads. We BMAAA S ANLALP KA a *( & 41 4 / m P : dh T P / m U : h */ 'o <ur Customers: A Bright and Joyous NEW YEAR May Yours Be . LOVELL CO. Mrs. B, J. Simens and daughter Edith left Monday for Lincoln, IIli-- nois where they will make a short his little army of workers he Bowling Green, Ker b'tflukohoolnmmbz,mullv'e. M:H:: Nmmd&m rloyed at Bowing o h * . mwe:bnmth. gave Q'll' l eaving Libertyville. visit with Mrs. Simens' parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. Stoll. great credit for his work in kfl the skating rink in condition.~ Wi George Sturm and family Clu'lltl::l with Mr. Stur's ; at Aptakisic, 8. Low ash and Melting point of ach > + sa00 B. T. U« -- « -- 15,100 Fixed Carbon 78.62 Volatile mmr- ---- -- 16.80 Sulphur -- -- 0.68 High Carbon meanis most ef. ficiency. L ow --volatile m eans less smoke. AFTER DECEMBER 10th MRS. HARRIET MATTHEWs OF THE HARRIET BEAUTY sSHOPPE AT IIBERTYYILLE WLL BE LOCA-- TED IN CHICAGO IN THE AVES BEAUTY SHOPPE, sUITE 1109 VENETIAN BLDG., is E. WASH-- INGTON ST. AND ON MONDAY TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY AFTER JANUARY ist WILL BE LOCATED IN THE GAS OFFICE 406 N. MILWAUKEE AVE LIB-- EmVlle' AND THURSDAY, FRIDAY D SATURDAY AT SUITE 1109 VENETIAN BLDG. CAGO, ILL. PHONES: LIB-- | LE 438, DEARBORN 1 J m I:l aleeping garments hildrens--Lang-- worthvs. ¢ What Mae Tines said in Sunday's Tribune about the photoplay "THE CLEAN HEART" which played at r local thearte Dec. 14th and the and Lake Chicago only last should make local movie fans f as to what the management of own home show is doing for They have a splendid bill ad-- sed in another column of this paper for this week; and incidentally mmto bring back "CAP-- B on Jan 12th for the. who were provented from gee-- 1 t it on account of the weather. .._ The/ North Shore Club of Notre Dame, which as its name indicates, is composed of local students of that college, will give a dance at the Ma-- sonic Temple at Waukegan on Fri-- day evening January 2. An orches-- tra from South Bend will be there and plans have been made for a big time, 1 mloa' thear's F and Lake should mak as to what t own home . They have 'nllrs. J. A.c:hron and Miss Mary ason were Christmas x ~at the :1'. H. Dévison hgme at Waukegan. . | . Mr. ard Mrs. Irving Meirhoff and | Mayor and Mrs.-- Donaldson of Glen-- Mrs, C. A. Hapke and daughters, Mayme and Hildegarde, are planning to leave shortly after the first of the year for California. Mrs. Weston Waldo of Walsworth, Wis. who has been visiting@ at the A. W. Waldo home left Tuesday for Batavia, N, Y. for an extended visit Wwith her parents. *~Mr. and Mrs. I:. W. Backman m' FOR SALE--Pure bred holstein spending the winter with Mrs. Back--! -- PQ!! 18 mo. old whose dam has 23.-- man's mother Mrs. Mike Wolf. 76 butter in 7 days and . whose sire Pabst Champion Creator. His Mrs. Weston Waldo of Walsworth, dam making 21.93 butter in 7 days Wis. who has been visiting@ at the A.' and nearly 17000 milk for year as W. Waldo home left Tuesday for & 2% year old. Also pure bred Batavia, N. Y. for an extended visit! Holstein calves. Earl H. Kane, with her parents. | . Phone 621M2 Area, III, 99 6e pd. Mr, and Mrs. Carl Herner of Wau-- kegan took Sgday dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Philip Strand. . view spent Sunday with Mrs. Mike Wolf. C Miss Evelyn Mordtnouse of Wau-- kegan visited with Gladys and Erma Lyons llat,vqek end. *¥ * Henry Meyer, Miss Baldwin and Miss Bock spent Sunday evening with Mr. ind Mrs. Oscar Firnbach. _Bam Scharr and son Bernie visited with grandma Scharr at Northfield on Wednesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Brown Sr. en--| tertained their children and grand-- | rhildren on Christmas day. t ing the steps leading to the bueJ ment when he fell to the bottom of he flight. W..E. Decker, who was| passing was called in and assisted in l removing the injured man to his bed and a doctor summoned. It is Te--| ported this morning that a very ser-- | jous spinal injury resulted from the fall and that little hope is held out,f for the recovery of the patient. Mr.| Maxham is of quite advanced age and has had numerous attacks of this nature. M% $ 2l o ._ H. N. Maxham suffered a serious fall at is home on Cook Ave. on Monday. Mr. Maxham was descend-- Mrs. Jane Wilson attended a par-- f.mnda happy. ty Christmas eve at the home of | W. B. Carr at Deerfield and spent | _ Mr. and Mt the following day with her dauch-- | Boston, Mass., ter 'Mrs, Chester A. Wo'lf. the holidays v ; ents, Mr. and A Mrs. William -- Wheeler and son:, and with Mrs. Lee were Waukegan -- visitors on ! and Mrs, C. M Wednesday of last week. war . * Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bockelman and ~daughter of Chicago were Christmas visitors with Mr. and Mrs. --Peter Bockelman. George B. Follett will leave in a few days for California to see his mother who has lived there for a mber of years and who is in poor th. i Mr. and Mrs. John Mitchell and | rence Duncan spent Christmas mh Mrs, Mitchell's brother at Sa-l vanna, I!1, Mr. and Mrs. F..A. Commons and t daughter Alrena of Oak Park and Mr, N. P. Brewer of Waukegan were the Christmas day guests of E. A. Jenkins and,familv.~ The day was the birth anniversary of both. Mrs. | Commons --and Mrs. Jenkins. A huge and -- beautifully decorated ' birthday cake was presented to them by Mr. Commons. 1 m of the -uth:::l Albert Ha wn, former linotype operator on the Register staff, and Miss Dorothy Stephenson of Sheridan, Ind. 'The wedding was solemnized at the Cumberland Presbyterian church at Bowling Green, Kentucky on Christ-- mas Eve. Mr. Hawn has been em-- ployed at Bowing Green since THE LAKE COUNTY REGISTER, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 31. 1924 | FOR SALF pletely furnished $25.00 per month FOR SALE--Small --sottage im-- provements and only $1500.00 terms. FOR RENT--9 room house north side, reasonable. 99 tf. s ' SUNNY PARK TRACT OFFICE FOR RENT~--Z FOR SALE--Sunnyside Park Tract Office.. 9 room house modern only .' $6000.00 terms. Complete line of »winter under-- wear. : Langworthys, -- Jessie Drury and Harold Brown assisted in a mugical procram given at the auditorium of th» American Steel and Wire Co. at North Chica-- go on Christmas eve. The program was given for the erippled children of Waukegan and North Chicago and -- was smol:ihbv the large manufacturies of cities. Edwin Austin ig eonfined to his home this week. ~-- -- Mrs. Archie Barnett was a Wau-- kegan visitor Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Bérnic Seiler of Kenosha, Mr. and Mrs. Ashley Gratz and Mr. and Mrs. Archie Barnett spent Christmas at the hom@ of Mr. and Mrs., Sam Ccha» SUNNY PARK TRACT OFFICE ©, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Madser and amily were Qfllt guests at the the home of Mr. Isen's brother at Grayslake, _ Mrs. Mary Diett entcrtained her | a modern family and the Messrs Paul a:d ;,:-'td;m Peter Ullrich and &r Davis . on | frents a Christmas day. At €ight o'clock im-- | ment of "'Odi'"'y .fw w the pnsents monumen were distributed -- 1 every one was grass ma made happy. 4 cine, esn Mr. and Mts, War.i Ames of | disease p Boston, Mass., are visiting duringi fifty year the holidays with Mr. Ames' par-- , PAYrtment ents, Mr. and Mrs. Delo= Ames here | N°"* Of t and with Mrs. Ames parents, Mr.| the healt and Mrs. C. M. Gorham of Wauke. | PUb!¢ _} Francis Dietz of Round Lake is staying with his grandmother, Mrs. Mary Dietz, W"flte holiday va-- cation. R :}?."i'm of ll&l delivery service by addition Hupmobile truck,. Mr. Mowrove th@e new ear home from Stoughton, Wis, on Sunday with the temperature at 30 below* and the roads drifted full of snow. Now that. Stafford has made this imwi t he says that we Libertyvillians can make a great-- er one by bunching our orders and saving him numerous trips. | January 20--380--31 Farmers' Institute at the Liberty-- ville High School. Wednesday December 31 _ Card and danee social at the Wright School govgth by the pupils. Too Late to Classify Frank Stafford has increased the COMING EVENTsS 4* > ¥* &# | head in the field of public health service. .Life insurance companies have recognized the opportunity and are equipping health departments of their own. _ Private citizens--keep business men--have endowed insti-- tuyions -- heavily» so that research work and . practical application . of fit knowledge might go for-- Industry is following the 'same'course, establishing health de-- partments as permanent units of their -- organizations. The _ state should certainly provide adequate «<quarters--for--its --official --health | agency." + Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kaiser of Chi-- cago are visiting at the Charles Kaiser home. can Legion at the Gridley Hall on Tuesday evening January 6 and it is hoped that as many of them as possible wil be there. The Boy Scouts are all invited to attend the installation of the Ameri-- "But with all of the achievements of the past, greater things lie a "The memorial idea is well taken. Fifty years ago a new--born infant had a life expectancy of 35 years-- now it has one of 55. As in 1893 Chicago reported more than a thousand deaths in one year from typhoid fever whereas the annual rmeprtality from that disease is now well under 400 for the entire state. Fifty years ago yellow fever was a deadly peril that hung like a pall over the lower -- Mississippi Valley striking fear and trembling into the people .of Illinois when it raged to the south. Today that disease is practically unknown in the United States. One by one a long list of other diseases, including tuberculos-- is, diptheria, malaria, fabies, scarlet fever, cholera, diar:hh:a and small-- pox have to advancement of udla{hkxledge with the result that many have already been great-- ly reduced while the way is open for the ultimate elimination of some of partment need more office space but none of them are more pressed than the health department. Furthemore, public health service, with its diagnostic and research laborato-- ries, its vital statistiecs compilation, system, its sanitary engineering ser-- vice and its educational work, re-- quires quarters of a particular de-- :'ingn'in order to produce the best re-- u. s part to meet the peculiar require-- ments-- of a modern state depart ment of health and erected as a monument to the phenomenal pro-- grass made in the science of medi-- cine, esnecially along the line of disease prevention, during the past fifty years. -- Many of the state de-- "Tv?'&uu henee," said Dr. Raw-- lings, e department of public health will celebrate its jubilie an-- niversary. In connection with that event an elaborate program is con-- templated... A part of that pro-- gram ought'to be the dedication of a modern office building, designed in ed .with commodious quarters de-- signed--especially for the peculiar needs ~of a modern state depart-- ment of health and spacious enough to relieve the over--crowding of of-- fcee room that is now common among most of the departments in the State House. gaedicated as a mon to pro-- gress in scientific n% and the improvement in public th which has taken . place during the past half: century. He suggests that a modern office building be construct-- Springfield, Dec. 24;--In announc-- ing plans for an elaborate jubilee program in 1927, the fiftieth anni-- versary of the establishment of the state department of public health, Dr. Isaac D. Rawlings, state health director, proposes a new state building to be ereeted and PROPAGANDA STARTED FOoR HEALTH MEMORIAL In the preliminary clash, the sec-- ond team-- of Libertyville nipped the Cardinals, 17 to 16. The game -- was Mb , and fm?:d"' and was featured by more foo than basketball A basket by Har-- ris won for Libertyville, Girls Win The second Clash saw the Liberty-- ville girls downing the Christ g'i;'i;d C'hn'if-n, oht:,:. wd'zi" ger, Kyind starred for the winriers. "Ike" Kirchner, also was in the thick of the battle. The: feature game of the night went to Liberyville, 28 to 24, after BASKET BALL _ Manager Holman's aggregations won a hfiifll from strong Chi-- cago "_" t M', night. the Old Depot DKsun PALL W. W. Carroll & Sons Co. HOME SEWING Storm Sash Should Be Ordered Early. Bring in the Sizes Let us Quote You Don't Let Your Roof Go Too Lang When You Can Protect It Now Cheaper and Wood Now While The Price is Low. WE ARE SURE YOU WILL LIKE OUR HARD COAL THE KIND WE ARE now distributing is more free from im-- purities than it has been for years. OUR POCOHANTAS LUMP AND EGG Low in Ash, High in Heat _ "GLENDORA" Lump, Furnace and Nut h()un%cnhg Libertyville Lumber Co. Are putting in their supply of Coal, Coke WISE CONSUMERS First National Bank EVERY DAY OF THE. YEAR-- Resources More Than a Half --Million Dollars SHEETING TUBING MUSLIN LONG CLOTH things to help yourself get ahead--that's Ambition. more things to help you get ahead--that's Banking Use that Service freely. We can do a great many Lreseryvtuir You can do a great many econtest. _ The is done ri t, Cichy's Tailoring PRESSING and CL EANING The next games scheduled are for January 18th at which time Holman figures on having the Lake Forest Team here as well as the Utown Brownies' Staley a big long and rangy center was the star for the visitors, drop-- Plng several sensational shots thru theh cop,. De Zur, left forward, was another fleet and shifty man when-- ever he got within ~range of fi" hoop. 3 Holman gang with baskets, respectively. theadoet rdinte""bil Releona en than .".'".""::: led the scoring for the Iriuxors J. CICHY, Proprietor North Milwaukee Avenue with five PAGE FIVE «/

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