§ / at * * .. --_--_ 8 Low ash and and high mel point of ash little l fiw&:fim:flnhr.mm -- If you have used Pocahontas and fired it properiy e are on the track, but until T > f Ef"'f-!&yumflh&'lrm:,ug Ise Mrs. Vern L. Gerred and daughter, spent: Monday in Milwaukee. 1 PCV DCE ODC ADCOOC O OCC w ar / FiP AF / Fif®> ® a _ It Stands --~-- To Reason COUNTY NATIONAL Future Needs. Are You Getting By Or Are You Getting On? Easter Cards been selected with an eye to beau-- ty and exclusiveness. EMEMBER your friends at Eastertide with appropriate "The Bank of Service" That People Should Make Provisions For Intelligence The Imperial M e cce .l Thim an * wfly .zd to h'm?fih in the middle west. This com-- sert is under the auspices of the Libertyville Womans Club. brought before Judge Morris whon-zihnln'odm and costs. Not having the required amount the fighting Mick was taken to the county jail to--board it dut. -- ville and whose present address is County Jail, Waukegin, indulged in over at Area Saturday night and as a result his address was changed as noted above. Dnhgqfiu-mh" chap when sober but the brand of moonshine he imbibes makes him wild and he got so wild Saturday night that he tried to clean up the Dietz took him in tow and because tion is due largely to the constant attendance of 'her brothers and sis-- ters during.her iliness. Miss Gertrude. Morris, who is a student at Notre Dame, is spending her Easter vacation with hber aunt, never irritate or burn. One of 200 Puretest their beneficial action begins in 15 > setonds. < Hichest nurite, are a mighty big help in throw-- ing off colds and the grippe . DEC KER & NEVILLE tails se and interlace until the whole mass is solidified. During icy weath with multitudes of needle--like ame Rexall, Drag Store LIBERTYYILLE® at. the. home of Mr.:and Mrs. Wil-- liam Kunke, Sunday, to help them ASPIRIN TABLETS P act S famg te ~-- w41 THE LAKE COUNTY REGISTER, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8, 1925 and conscience can late of 'Liberty-- purity, and box candy Adv. it. Mrs. E. W. Butterficid 'entertain-- ed the Jolly Bunch at her home on Saturday evening. Mrs. Fred Suy-- dam was the winner of the first prize, Mrs. Allie Nicholas of the se-- sond and Mrs Jay--Fruds the son-- Feast;" gvfl large chorus of Masonic ball given by the enter-- tdnn.t_,ddcottheh:ny, ville Masonic bodies at the Liberty» ville Township High School Auditou! Cantata: . "Hiawatha's urdsy A 11 Dance by the Radio Four at Buy early and have them when the ground LITTLE GEM OR WONDER PEAS, Per pound ..____ _ _ _ L _ _ _ ONION SETS, White or Yellow, Per pound aa..,.. .______ _ _ _ We have the best assortment as well as the best seeds "Web sters." WEBSTERS LAWN GRASS SEED, Per 1--2 lb.&, o .7 Per 1 Ib. BKF"____________ 40¢ EARLY OHIO SEED POTATOES, Per Bushel ___..___________ .ES' Per Peck L. s Plant Seeds FLOWER SEEDS, TRIGGS & JOHNSON Monday April 20. Monday April 13 Phones 24 and 25 -- ng show by the at the Hig | Society 10. SEEDS, SEEDS, Next Saturday the Armour Colg- pany will stage a demonstration at the--cash and carry market and will display their numerous pro-- ducts. The demonstration will be-- in charge of H. J. Swan of Area. Decker and Neville have arranged a very attractive Easter window display with eight live bunnies in an artistic setting. The window is a great attraction for our youthful citizens and many of the grownups pause for a peek. Clyde Wright and daughter mo-- tored to Round Lake Saturday. Mrs. J. R. Mack is entertaining her niece, Miss Marguerite Morris, of Sharon, Wisconsin, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jelley re-- turned to their home in Chicago, Sunday, after a week's stay with Mrs, Jelley's parents, Mr and Mrs. Herman Helfer. Lenore Wilcox is spending a few days with her grandmother, Mrs. John McKay, at Diamond Lake. ' the Libertyville Township m'hi School Board of Education will take place on Saturday April 11, 1925 .t' the High School. The polis will be opened at two o'clock P. M. and will be closed at five. George A. Ross of Area is the only candidate to file a petition with the secretary. ' Mrs John McKay spent the week, end with her daughter Mrs. Veronica a few days this week with relatives in Waukegan. 1 Wilcox. arranged Tuesday morning by John has a beautiful display of lmr' flowers in the window of the Farm Mayer's twentieth wedding anniver-- home of Mr. and Mrs. W. orthfield Sunday. The occasion was the celebration of Mr. and Mrs.| Mr. and Mrs. Al Hapke of Chica-- go called on Libertyville relatives Freddie Eberwein Jr., is spending The Libertyville Floral Company P AIGE J EW ETT Mr. and Mrs Sam Schar and son LIBERTYVILLE and ABEA To R. J. LYONS __ 10¢ 15¢ } URBANA, IIL., March 31.--Hasty conclusions that all farmers are now prosperous are not borne out by the facts, according to H. C. M. Sase, in charge of the farm organization and management of the College of Agri-- culture, University of Illinois. In fact, records which the department has collected from farmers through-- out the state show that varieties be-- tween the earnings of farms in dn' same community and between the Facts Indicate That This Condi-- tion is Not General With PROSPERITY ISs _ NOT WIDESPREAD "CELOTEX" CREO--DIPPED ~ * * _ WOOD SHINGLES, Any Color. _ . . _ YOUR LAWN WILL LOO . » _ BETTER WHEN YOU mui% > 62 OUR LA WN MIXTURE 8 a. m. W. W. Carroll & Sons Co. Get Busy -- Fall In GET THE Building HABIT For Children labertyville Lumber Co. Open a savings account for him. Let him have his own bank book. He will take great pride in it. One dollar will op-- en a savings account at this bank. Come in to--day. + THERE is nothing that will help more tn make vour child financially inda_ 4 to make your child financially inde-- pendent in later years than a bank book right now. If he gets the saving habit now it will stay with him. Teach him thrift and it will start him on the path to success. > Dainty Things For Easter BLOOMERS SILK SWEATERS All the Latest Styles of Trim and Finishes--Both Interior and Ex-- terior. Down By The Old Depet Twenty Y cars First National Bank Phone 47 Resources More Thaon A Half Million Dollars Lteertyviucs® ._--.. Icumois though many farmers have sold most of their surplus of grain and out. This decline in the buying power of the farmer's dollar is the result of higher costs of doing busi~ ness and higher freight rates, he explained. thing to frgmare "The encouraging to is that the price of farm products as a group continues to increase rela-- tive to other prices. There has been an improvement of about four per cent since the first of the year, al-- earnings of farms in different coun fiunl:::-mgflonng l\o.tnetz&o"\d-&"* of farm products had returned to a level with other prices on January lh'hsldb&onwl" the farmers' prosperity, according to Case. However, 't,h fu'-'h er was m miine onl o hier mss power during the period from to 1914, a normal} period, he pointed ings of farms in different coun~ ® nl(:;.m-«nvflom"'-."'Y ng year just past, he said. ~_ _ nlmtmm'hd&'h arm products had returned to a~~ with other prices on January s led to the misconception about farmers' prosperity, according 8 p. m. *