CMPLD Local History Collection

Lake County Register (1922), 1 Jul 1925, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Denies Charge Made by Mun-- «~*~ delein Man:; Judge Upholds »~ --»Btack Aatly denied the charge. Jus-- tite Hervey Coulson after hearing the evidence said there was absolu-- _ tely no grounds for the charge and dismissed the case. ~ ~pay $30 of his doetse «~ SEVENTY--FIFTH YEAR _ Hen: Brooks, 20 years old, Zion "'nuw-uylmdayon of stealing an automobile. 'Patrolman (George Gould arrested Brooks at 1:20 o'clock Monday, morn-- ing. He was at the wheel of the stolen car at the time. y . According to the Brooks mnhg@-!'_'::""f ear was taken from near the car-- 'I in South enesee street around 10:30 o'clock. An immediate erport was made to the police, DEMURRER 18 RULED OUT HOW street, Zin City, Friday night. district without a license on the car. tell, and stopping Brooks, questioned him. The youth is said to have ad-- mitted his guilt. He was locked up. -- While his fingerprints were being Kennedy, Brooks is said to have told r--&o"fimhmy e drove around town all day Sat-- urday and Sunday. Brooks this afterncon was ar-- t a A. Taylor and. was the grand jury in bonds of "He was not able to get a bondsman, Chiet Isaac Lyon said. was dismissed Monday morning bYy Justice Hervey Coulson. The arrest of Stark vwas made Marshal threatened to arrest him for viclation of the pure food law of the Lake County hospital was held before Judge C. C. Edwards in Cireait court Monday morning. after R. C. Carpenter, a concession owner at Mundelein, complained to while driving around 'the business the sheriff's offite that Stark had visited his place and after s--ying A number of the exceptions were sustained and several . overruled. \fiMdlhdehndanum the bill was overraled and an ex-- geption was taken which will go to a higher court after an order is drawn up. In Justice court Monday morning A henring on the bill of excep-- OF EXTORTION T hoe Y 2 F. IN CASE Had No License. Gold 6,, * * y eere j ? & e ~al ; 4 : hy -- Bo . M € d F * C 7 tri »* XUL. ' Ar a 3 f / ':: " r ""7 y -' of | Round Lake land m. of 1mm-'mvfl= caused much i feeling between two involved in the case broke out anew Fisday--when workmen em-- ployed by Brown built a barbed wire fence 20 feet out in the lake in . The E. A, Brown--George Renehan 'n...._'l 1 K._A PVST AMIOFAORY Ask Charter for New Bank Here A "mbuhu- flg.d'nd a petition for a charter for a new bank in this vil-- closely identified with--the Insull in-- terests, which leads to the conclusion it will be an Insull enterprise. .' Rumor in Libertyville has it a new banking institution is to be located on property near the electric depot ' Egan Christansen, 414 North ave« nue, Waunegan, suffered a fractured x shoulder Friday" afternoon wrestling with Ais--brother, Ivan. Eigan explained that he was "thrown" by his brother which in some way twisted his shoulder. The mu"mumm was attended. 4 i ing beach shutting off direct aceoss to the diving pier. Renehan has re-- celved a score of complaints from bathers, who, not knowing tae barb-- ed wire fence was in the water, re-- The controversy grew out of Brown's purchase of 40 acres from J Ogden Armour adjoining Rene-- han's lake front land to the south. Brown whose land lies directly in back of Renchan's on the east and south side of the lake claims that the purchase also included part of the lake. The complainant in the tase is geeking to force a road from his property through Renehan's land to the lake. * The workman under Brown's di-- rection, built a fence 500 feet night and the North Chicago police chief was to question persons who were with him at the time. long directly across the The North Chicago police were mnotified and the body taken to the police station and examined by Dr. Joseph Micczynski, who said the mas had been dead for-- several hours The police do not believe Brownlee was hit by a train, as no marks of any kind could be found on his body. about Brownlee and Chief of Police Frank Tifany is of the belief that his death was caused by poisonous SWIMMERS KICK AT WIRE FENCE then employed two constables to ar-- rest bathers trespaszing past the fence line. . . ceived painful e while swimming. According to reports from the Round Lake resort residents . and wacationists were 'cireulating a petition to present to Brown de-- manding that he construct a not so dangerous to the M: the was dressed by Dr. John L. Tay-- lor, he was well enough to be transferred to the Waukegan jail. Mmuhm'hfi face charges of fighting, disorderly from Waukegan had to be sum-- out of him, _ Another car, owned by Dr. Wells of 'Mundelein, was commandeered and the journey to the town jail resumed. Before the party arriv-- ed, however, Eabachowski had kick-- ed out two more windows. him to try to run away, but was overtaken by Marshal Tiffany who hit him over the head with # "billy" and knocked all the fight of the road, snapped a telephone ton Tiffany, of Mundelein, brother of Les Tiffany of the sheriff's of-- fice, was having his hands full somehow got his foot tangled in the steering wheel, making it im-- possible for the driver to control car, but he kicked all the windows out and raised such a row, that he was -- transferred to a ~coupe. While the party was driving to Mundelein, FEabachowski continued to struggle in the mithine and cleanup ; drive. About 75 young men, who were eithéer disorderly going on in full view of the park. The four men arrested were given hearings© before Justice of the Peace Porteous and fined $25 or somewhat under the influence of _ liquor, were driven off the grounds, four were arrested and many dice games" broken up. It resort. On the way out, he added Motorcycle Officer Frank Velenta The machine swerved to the side And in the meantime, as they At the resort, the sherift's IS SCENE OF Goes to Jail LIBERTYVILLE, life in § 's daughter,. d dollars' worth . mlso confessed r Mymzmen'afruol Mrobborim.l'?flk thefts on the north shote to the arrest of Durand, whoth the three '.dulnderofthm'.'l\. lfiwugh-on(;nnhm , George Burchard, and Pnfilam all of Lake Bluff, hav@e been held *o the grand jury. _ Miller said Durand drove him to the home of F. Edson presi-- dent of Armour and last Sep-- . Miller entered house, he , and robbed Miss White, charge of robbery in t s county were issued by Gov. Sm ..m'. field Saturday. Young 14 it in eusteody at Los Angelc@, 'u»,r who want to question him in comnection with the confession of a band of burgiar4 & Chicago. &1 Captain # Detectives and McCarron, @@gether with Pinkerton Detective Ol%om, reported fifii- he was art Durand Md: "I didn't do nn;E in Chi-- E Somebody ju=t squawked." papers {o# the return of from Califo hiz to face a Cate and McC Pinkerton Dete =;'hn he : %."I didn't Somebod glflfion p Jack Durand, adopted son of Mr, and Mrs. Scott Durand of Crab Tree farm, Lake Bluff, who is wanted in connection with sev-- eral thefts of wealthy homes in Lake Forest was nabbed Thurs lay EH in Venice amuseméent park at Angeles, according to word frm the west. He will face charges in Lake PBorest growingx out of thefts in which three of his alBeged companions, arrested some days ago, have implicated him. black makeup was removed and the r_' was brought $o the tity Jail at Los Angeles 9# locked up on the request of the po-- JACK--DURAND IS TAKEN IN WEST Lake Bluff Youth Nabbed in *Los Angeles for Thefts at Lake Forest. spills when a custo'i'l the "pan" with a ball at amuse-- The Lake Bluff yout® was taken when he was found posing as the dusky figure who doe# the water _------ Admits Identity Young. Durans, th police said aiy P iden homes hl Last Saturday night Johnson felt Thurs lay | he had recovered sufficiently to leave nt park at | the homé and set out on foot from to word | the Milwaukee institution, 'lfis: will face | telling anyone. He walked all ESDAY, JULY 1, 1925. 'MAN REPORTED ' DEAD IS AT COUNTY SEAT 7:10 and which mail has been lying over in Chicago until evening. Chicago too late to catch the morn-- ing mail train which leaves there at This move is a direct result of re-- quests by the business houses and industries and will be of great bene-- fAt in that it will permit of the de-- He was penniless upon hig arrival in Waukegan Wednesday night and went to the Red Cross office nt World War, having served sixteen Edward Rosenthal, field director who is at the station sent him to Wauke-- gan to see Mrs. Tibbals who aided him. The home secretary had him fitted out today with a new suit of clothing as the suit he wore was m"dlhvodtbtmam wear. Johnson then left for cago, where he hopes to get employ-- ANOTHER MAIL IS AUTHORIZED Postmaster, E. E. Ellsworth re-- ceivedsnotice, Tuesday morning,* of zhm.byth'uhlfi partment, of another incoming for Libertyville. The new service will be effective on July 6, and will arrive here at 106 p. m. standard time dn train 151, and under the present author-- ization, will consist of first class of success. He is a veteran of the World War, havinig served sixteen months in the army service. ly. an impossibility to get work in Waukegan, as he tried most of the factories in the city, with m. degree collapse, when found by a reporter. Jm*uyhzh'-mt well by any means, he felt he was far from being a dead man. He said that he was ill at the Na-- tional Soldiers' home in Milwaukee for seven weeks, first being afflicted with pleurisy and then pneumonia. When pneumonia set in, hope was practicaly despaired of, as it was way to Waukegan, trying to wet work in each town but without anc-- the fourth time he had been ill with read an account of yis being "mur-- dered." In fact due to his general Johnson claims that it is practical-- of Mrs. Gridley to Contést Ruling Immediate efforts will be started by Mrs. Helen Gridley, formerly of Libertyville, to contest the decision in the court of Judge Martin C. Decker here by which her husband, J. Seeley Gridley, former Liberty-- ville banker, was adjudged mentally The amount will be divided be-- tween the board of home missions and church extensions, operating in the United States and the board of foreign missions, active in forty countries of the world. g': CHICAGO, TH., June 29.--Mis-- siongry societies of the Methodist Episcopal church have received $82,-- 946 from the executor of the estate of the late Rev,. Robert Stanley Ingraham, D. D., of Green Bay, Wis. During the centenary cam--« paign for--the missionary causes of that chorch, Dr. Ingraham sign-- ed an estate note in that amount whichW now becomes valid So far it has been impossible to determine the cause of the fire but it was probably due to tiefective wiring as the building is an old one and--has been used for a number of years by the Danish club, The loss is estimated at $5 000. scene it was found that one of the two buildings which comprised the property of the club, was beyond hope of saving and the whole at-- tention of the fire fighters was turned to the other building which, by a heroic effort of the déepartment and the villagers, was saved. _ M. E. MISSIONS GET $82,946 club, which is located on the bank of Nippersink Lake. The blaze was discovered ut six o'clock in the morning and when the fire dopart-- ment and citizems arrived at the "mhfl"!'rmz exuse he failed to care fo rhis vie-- tim. He proved to the satisfaction of the police that such was not the ease, no charges being preferred morning by a fire at the Danish The village of. Fox. Lake was roused at an early hour Tuesday The man in question is connected with the carnival and his name was not learned. He said that while he was leaving the carnival grounds early Saturday morning, DANISH CLUB IS SCENE OF FIRE him, stumbled and fell in the path of his car. He said further that he stopped and took Thomas over to his own car and left after being assured by ~the North Chicago youth that he was him ANTIOCH MAN CETS 8 YEARS Hinde and her automobile up against the law. . She was ed twice last December in Lake est charged with running ber over firehose twice while t were fighting a blaze. *\ very rude," she explained, so didn't obey him and ran over the hose again Dr. Spencer Brown. whoss sussmet home is at Antioch, convieted week on charges of altering govern-- Judge Burgess. o.\ Yss Not ha that much, Mrs. King "Anyway, I'm in a hurry to get to Mrs. Edith Reckefelier McGore mick's fAower * have a lot to do." policeman, who collected $15.10, & allowed Mrs. King to go on and b lnte for the Aower show. > -- _ _ It was not the first P that 'Mrs" King. " foomariy mmpae And still later the bland visage of who listened calmly while she , "It's too bad the policemen have--to nrn-tm.-hnlmm Why don't they arrest t boys and delivery wagon boys? They're always speeding. o .aum..fmmmm hour. A bit farther on she the interdictory hand of a motor-- Flower Show Means Nothing to Minion of Law as He Stops LAKE FORESTER _ . TAKENBY COP _ firm of Chicago. 'f u-m W.W".* -- ' and bruises, but the machines were m:.m.mm:-ih clety woman of Forest, t# +3 s#

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy