CMPLD Local History Collection

Lake County Register (1922), 27 Oct 1926, p. 2

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in R2 : ' Don't forget the Basket Social at ¢ the Murray School on Friday eve-- _ «. ming of this week which is to be hk : g-- Miss Jessie Koudsen and J{:'{' mg Molland of the Ames School M and Mrs. Barney Amann of Frement and Miss Abbie Carr mot-- E.> W These dances are al-- # ways attended, and a large > crowd is always expected. Mrs. J. W. Gray .is recovering ~ Charles Hawkins is breaking ground for his new home in Mc-- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Herschber-- and daughter Dorothy, Mrs. gry'l'onmandWm. Mentzer of Long Grove and Mrs. Heinsolm and a'" nin (u:'ta tghome eve &A dlr?and l'n.Edvhlodc. Mr. and Mrs. Sprague of Ver-- moniville, Michigan -rot several days with the latter's brother, Tho-- mas W. 1 ger at the Osborn Farm. Mrz. E.' J. Kelroy and children Jinamic anc George spent last week Fon Miss Hulda Meyer and Henry Mey-- er took little S-vid Rouse who spent last week with his grandpar-- end ents, to his home in De kaib on Sat-- unlay and remained for the week ored to Scales Mound-- Friday eve-- 'E:ow.dflnmknd. E. V. Smith and daughters of Rockford spent several days last fl'fllmdobinnhfimlm fivnkwithh': ts, O: r r. an Saturday evening, October 80th is the date of the Mundelein P. T. A. MHallowe'en Social at the School fal ol Sh ifeor "hikke and neighbors for this one jolly eve-- mlc.hy%huunb.s. Doiph entertained following on Funday: Mr. Mrs. George Col-- ::::..&tl. Cdl-:' -- Mrs. James Robinson and son of Elimhurst spent several days last week at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. C. Shaddle. C Miss FYorence Prais and Beatrice KHogan were Chicago visitors Satur-- Mrs. Fred Monroe and Miss Jes-- d.smmd "tl:w.lclflz on mmrm-m,umm Mrs. Monroe's mother, Mrs. Schun-- ing of Plano, Ill., returned with them for a visit of geveral weeks. 'Muywmwa St. Anthony's Hospital in Chicago on Mr. and Mrs. H. C. spent Toh and family of Lake Zur-- y on iew sys Thek wouk mt a few the home of their son Floyd Rittler ho«" Ross spent Frida mmfim«a&.'- Emily Bates of Wauconda. J. Williams called on Mrs. Fred Voel-- ker at the Victory Memorial Hospi-- tal in Waukegan on.. Friday and found Mrs. Voelker to be improving "- g Mrs. Ed Glenn of Michigan City is visiting at the home of her sis-- h*nln.l.l.s'm\. O. Oscar Bell entertained friends from Highland Park on Fri-- .'r.ndln.}hnz':lonu and sons Junior and Me returned tor m;fierwaund':ym.: lutl.akoh. CC at the Wm. Buesthing and Clarence Knigge homes on Monday. _ __ is Wigiing, at ahe hom m ter, Mrs. H. J. Swan. fin.QOnar Bell friends from Highland "r.ndlrs. Ha sons Junior and lm Frank Baumgartner who is at-- hdhtnhoolandvorki:sinChi- eago spent the week e at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Baumgartner. several days. Mr. ?n.l-'fibydmtthrcnm- M.& ollovin&atd!nner on Sunday: Mr. and Mrs. Llioyd Ray and sons of Libertyville, Mrs. Cob-- m'."m'-uupl'. and Joe Smith and Mr. Case of Chicago and Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Engelbrecht and daughter Bau-' mary. | Mr. and Mrs. '(Morris© Chandler were Chicago visitors Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Rouse motored to Rockford Sunday to take Miss Ni-- na and Miss Helen Smith home. Miss Lillian Russell of A-a spent the week end at the home her brother Thomas, Russell and fi fi".---mv n, Bernice Croonberg of on Sunday. Miss Bess McBride visited her sister, Miss Eliza McBride at Gur-- MUNDELEIN _ The condition of William Daiziel who has been confined to his home with illness the last two weeks, re-- mains the same. :yehfion.tflnwm l'l;l-ni Mh'-'&hm.tenwdcfiu seen at the annual affair. Over 500 mdfiet:.eumnld. A dance umumr Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Muhlenbeck PAGE TWVO mniv anc George W"iécflt'lut week with her sister, Mrs. Twohig of are the parents of a 7% pound son, born Sunday at the Victory Memor-- ~Mr. and Mrs. Roy Frazier of Chi-- cago spent the week--end with Mrs. Fratier's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. inl Hospital. GU a Gurnee visitor Thursday. _ Miss Gladys Eakins Chicago -- Stevhen Richardson is unable to work because oftillness. _ _ _ _ The Wadsworth Gun Club will rive another dance at the Woodman Hall Hans Johnson, who underwent an oc meticeie! Adoapital " somer Cann's Raymond Bottgert of Chicago was Knigge of Wauconda' called George Noel has been ill for PHONE 548--J Wis. "f;y"nafi\vm'": hfi brains and no money is a money and.nobniuhlfcnl"--hh your Now that most farmers have the threcshinge all done. the filling of silos is begun, Several members of the Half Da church utundodthsm?'doo{ convention at Highland Park . on Thursday, October, 21st and report a good meeting. _ _ _ __ _ _ _ A reminder to Royal Neighbors-- don't forget to attend the conven-- tion at Deerfleld tomorrow, Thurs-- day, October 28--there is to be an afternoon and evening program in the lodge room. Try to come. Amloz'dmmmmm ed business in our town. All our re-- fmmmmd business and the looks a little lonesome--like these days. lr.mdlu.nohrtcnnfim entertained Sunday at the Paul Al-- lanson home. Jennie Celba wishes to thank the Community Club for the flowers sent A steadily increasing interest in r.di:n:d.c-t:fiunfllf'r- mand for high radio o ment is revealed by the U. S. de-- partment of commerce in a state-- ment just issued. The only decline reported is in the number of crystal sets and headphones, indicating that the demand is for radio equipment of -- standard -- manufacture. . The mounting ratio of increase in sales dxhnp:delm tho-d:z } dndlobythodmeunw- manent investment. s * Mr. Cloyce Parks was entertained Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Park Allanson. Mr. and Mrs. Mills and Irene Rockenback visited in Deerfleld Sun-- day. Miss Rockenback is visiting at the home of her father, Geo. Rockenback. She is here from Lan-- .ixa. )l;o)u'lll. r. and Mrs. Ray entertained Miss Domthg Wehr of Chicago at their home Sunday. Donald Poulton visited with his parents and friends over the week-- Club meets with Mr. and Mrs. Kane Friday evening. _ Mrs. Edward Gavin spent Frida vhit.i_ngvithhuoollh.ln.(bl! RADIO INTEREST MOUNTS HIGH More than ten times the number of --tube--type radio receiving sets mmn!ndmdlnl'll:\llh 1924 (the last preceding census), ac-- cording to the government figures. which give the production for 1925 as 2.180,622 sets--a 1,045 per cent increase over the 1923 output. . The production of radio speakers. 2.606,366, was more than four times that of 1923, when 623,146 radio quhnmg:u.tthomml fAigures show. times the num-- ber of radio tubes were made in o aeonangs . s at _ This stupendous increase in pro-- duction of radio apparatus brought the 1925 figure un to $170,390.572. more than three times that of 1928 when the total output was valued at $54,000,470. _ _ esn The official figures made public by the department of commerce shows an increase of 215 per cent in the value of radio equipment pro-- duced in the country in the past two years, the number of tube type re-- ceiving sets having increased 1045 per cent, and the number of ers 318 per cent. "Here, boy," said the weaithy mo-- torist, "I want some gasoline, and t mithan i theaoold es I was young I pushed and that got m";:l'lt'g!w'-'::"nzu the boy "% reckon you'll have p-hmh: 'cause we ain't got a drop of gas in the place." not cause pain. LiSICN! . JOuUT DSL®" mumzmm or a strain, and %ic_trelidh soothing, penetrating "St. Jacobs Oil." Rub it right on your painful back, and instantly the soreness, stifiness and instantly the soreness, stiliness and lameness disappears. Don't stay erinpledt Get a small trial bottle of plied you'll Rub old, honest "St. Jacobs Oil" whenever you have sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism or sprains, as it is abso-- lutely harmless and doesn't burn the Quch! Lumbago Pain! Rub Backache Away i. Robert R. Dawson Instant -- Rellet-- with a trial bottle of old "8t. Jacobs Oll." DIAMOND LAKE * _ Harry Pfannenstill, Prop. PhinandOn_nmentd Plastering Mundeletn, I!L PFhone 368--R HALEFDAY THE STAR of Auto Repair Work ment after it is what became of AMERIGANS CA THANK FOUNDERS By JULIUS H. BARNES Former president of the Chamber of Commerce in a recent speech. Today America's pre--eminence in indutr' and business is attractiog here de .&um from all the coun-- tries of world to nt:d'y the or-- ganization and direction industry which is peculiarly: American. Brit-- ish, Australian and German, lz come to learn what it is in Am ca's industrial, social and political philosophy that has in so short a space. put shoes on the children of the poor, robbed unemployment of half its terrors, furnished the Am-- erican home with bathrooms, steam heat, telephone, the automobile and the radio, built six hundred thou-- sand miles of hard surfaced roads on which twenty million automo-- biles run, with the most effective service to business and the great-- est individual enjoyment of any fac-- ulty ever known-- and they do well to come. Education Grows. -- America is realizing on its earl educational aspiration that .u! the public school the common herit-- mdmild..nhmlidn on the receptivity to --in-- vention and ncmu which a rew race in a new" without habits or customs or prejudices. But it is realizing more sgurely than any one yet can appreciate the fruition of a political :l'flmphy' which confined government to its primary obliga-- tion of preserving fair play and equal opportunity, and excluded that government from competition in the field of business. -- The founders of this republic ear-- l-y'lmdu the -- precious of effort was the in-- dividual impulse, and that a man must be assured a fair field and an equal chance to put forth his best the nwl?l ';-udn' in -- 1 were n es-- tablish P:'w- which made se-- u::'l wfl i n.d" wb 'o' & Ov= ernmental injury. n ofitics l:eer .it 1 people, t t::i * fi:inmh cia accep r thall Suceessful commerce is the ?:i't of all the security of life and of the social graces. Its uminr found the great philanthropies which have conquered --the ancient scourges of yellow fever, typhus and their kin-- dred is. dred ills. . 'feetwutostflhbnthe back. Develops Frankness. |If that :"ifix{ouibh, you should It is remarkable also that Ameri-- gather y as nearly as possi-- ca W not only a genius |ble into a btll.ybut hold your mus-- {:: gant .fmt;{ « advancedic:b'lootdy. "':fi can l;:rt;l'x , your ouk strength of business and not grounding pro * commercial organization, but has{ W'lfi Screen Comedian. _ developed with it a frankness in the l Bobby Vernon, a chubby athletic exchange of information and ex--!chap who plays for Educational, con-- perience which is startMng to the tinues: business leaders of the Old World |. '"If you can run full speed into a The president of the Association of heavy parlor chair, fall over it and British Industries, rting on a keep on going and come off with recent study in Ano:lu, comment-- 'mu;ing worse than a barked knee, ed on the mt service in the ad-- |you may qualify as a screen come-- vance of industrial methods and pro-- dian. You have no idea how many ficiency because in America busi-- ' corners and edges there are on a ness leaders would give of time and chair until you drive into one going effort in the guidance of trade and as fast as you can run,. > + commercial o:,nd-tion. in which! "While taking falls is only the the exchange of information was an |least of a comedian's requirements, integral principle. {it is one of the most tryving things who make good in fast--moving pic-- mrunotonlymthoathletu'fi they also must have the stamina COMEDY SPILLS _ _ DEMANDS SKILL "It isn't what a man-- stands for that counts--it's what he falls for," wise--cracked Walter Catlett. -- ° and courage to withstand hard knocks and falls. knocks him oput, but the way he fdk.'mwh:nudcmuoh NEW YORK, Oct, 23.--Comedians "And it's .not the fall which THE LAKE COUNTY RRGISTER, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1926 of three or four feet," added Bobby '"aThe fall not ly properly broken is the one that b?o the comedian laid up. in bed for several days," eo Al St. John. and Winninger of circus days are now.clowning for Fox films but they ate serious when it comes to falling. "Falling into a net should al::dyi be done with the feet downward," Winninger says, "but at the moment of striking, you should elevate the . "If you can run full speed into a heavy parlor chair, fall over it and keep on going and come off with nothing worse than a barked knee, you may qualify as a screen come-- Al St. John, whose stunts on a trick bicycle are well known, in a new picture rides down the street with a growling lion perched on the rear seat of his bike, the : beast jumping up behind the comedian be-- fore his um::' beauty friend can get on the bicycle to escape from the , If congress wants to hel agricul-- tnuitui(bthdptwoin&stfluat once by buying up all the used cars buyin ail the used cars rth?mrhf::d giving them to the farmer. fWe may be able to ay able to pick our bntb:lunlfrlamrhmop- ked what good is he any-- you can run, rould | $ _ _ _ _ __ _ __ ces i ITCRIN ,vwrl DRIED _ |f BY THI letic birthday the village centenarian re-- ceived a visit from the vicar. Being anxious to hear from her own l:fl: what she considered had' been mhoiul;er wfl susten-- ance, : "My dear . Adams bray tell me, in order that I may tell to others, what has been the secret of your longevity?" The vic-- ar waited with unusual eaiemess for the old largg's reply, but he was hardly prepared for & when it came. "Victuals!" she wered. oc iaP 4 Mirncepntre, ~TWinesmrcartizs Arar »AP rict e mid overcome by applying a little lZentho- Sulphur, :ays a noted skin specialist. Because of its germ destroying proper-- ties, this sulpbur 'fir:p'nm instantly brings case fronr irritation, soothes and heals the eczema ';}ht up -- and leaves the skin clear smooth. "It seldom fails to relieve the torment and dicfi'g:unmt. Sufferers from skin trouble Id get a little jar of Rowles Mentho--Sulphur from any good drug-- On the occasion of her hundredth Any breaking out of the skin, even CITIZENS BANK BUILOING WEDNESDAY SATV 2DAY ITCRING ECZEMA DRIED RIGHT UP BY THIS SULPHEUR GEORGE A. JONES Phone 287--W Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufecture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years. SAY "BAYER ASPIRIN'" and INSIST! windows and doors dust proof, moisture proof, and easy §i;q. ing. The interior of the house, and especially the curtains, v;j] stay clean twice as long. And the children can play on the floor without being endangered from chilly drafts. Others are having them installed now. YOU are paying the price any way, so why not have them. WHEN YOU BUY WEATHER STRIPS GET THE BEST Itcosuy'oumrewbzwithoutwadxastfippingt},anitdou to buy them. _ > O c Andjustthi_nk_ofw:hatitm_am.to | DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART | Mundelein, IIL., Phone 70 YARDS AT MUNDELEIN, PRAIRIE VIEW j Safe Deposit Rentals As Low as $2.00 Yearly. Burglars probably know what fam-- ilfies on your street rent safe depos-- it b(Btes. They know, because it is part of their business to know. saving in fuel alone will pay their > ASpinin {L temporary fences to provide temporary past\ Maybe you have been singled out as the next victim for robbery. Better rent a safe deposit box here now and . be safe. State Bank of Mundelein mfimflm here have found it pays :.-?: with "RED TOP®" Steel Posts WILLIAM WICK Maybe "Your" House Tonight! ¥ Mundelein, Hlinois Mundelein, M PHONE 653--W--2 Quickly Erected Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proven directions. Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Allozotfluofflnndlw '"-vu-lmwcuc" c+urace and provide porary pasturage to hog ing. Rustling for himself does a hog a lot wife m.«a* ApaiMRBR about three $a $

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