CMPLD Local History Collection

Lake County Register (1922), 3 Nov 1926, p. 3

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their children take.. the toxin--anti-- toxin for diphtheria immunization, and the Dick test for scarlet fever, are requested to sign a card and mail it to the school. x #, _ The treatment '"fi'flen by -- Dr. Daniel Rogers, officer of Highland Park, without any expense ember and December. Some people confuse toxin--anti-- toxin, the preventive, with antitoxin "h.Not single ofdxfi-hl- &A case eceurred among the 1 ehildren enrelled at Mooseheart since the medical diréctor began: immunizing all children with toxin--antitoxin in 1920. Previous to that year from 16 to 50 cases occurred each year. LE:mw"upE.: * vealnil Saturday presiden Carl Anderson and Mrs.' A. @ Klemp delivered the three hundred been sent to parents of students in the school, th:: thohc:fl}dm have been exposed scar ever, that Mhnhuncamofw and that those who with to have mmmmxm Teacher Association at the ence of the ninteenth district of the Illinois Council of Parent--Teacher Associations held in James Simpson Memorial Hall, Field Museum last Jr.nndln.lufinlmand . Howard Krumm of Columbus, Ohio, are visiting at the C. Ender home on Waukegan Road. Thursda Deming--Wolf of Wilmette, were the The Wilmot Paren Asso-- ciatiun, the "baby" in of time in the organization rece the most fi:n.for the excellent report en Jt two delmm Mrs. Martin Casey and Mrs. Colby. ln.g:nkltmsovillboho" to the rfield,members _ of _the Highland Park Woman's Club Civic Committee, Thursday afternoon, when some important local condi-- tions will be considered. From the office of Mr. K. J. Sand-- withs principal of Deerteid: Shinkds High School, a communication has whthG%\ndMHufl- tal, Dr. Saturday, for an inn-b&ma.uuéa. Miss'Frances Ludlow of Chicago was the guest of Mrs. Eugene En-- der Sunday. a Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Diebert of Chicago were week end guests of lri:-d'n..lohnhthns; to t honovhhnmh The Chevrolet Sales and Service Agency has opened a show room on Deerfield Ave., just east of Wauke-- | DEERFIELD | Actes will 'by heaims at tie requier meeting of La Petite Societio; Wed-- ngml Wmhmmi'; geueinne en hemorne Jmumdhilotycottyhdaur- for a their friends on n es .. Mflwflsflnflx'gm T armey of Paetadais. Donnoonburn Fields gave a costume party from Cz TLE y e e PR 4 tm T 4 9 * iIuncheon and card party. held in Mrs. Carl Lange (Annie Antes)| mighiand Park, Wednesday after-- who underwent an o at the | noon. * 4 Highland Park mywlnxb,!':fimdlx'tt morning past away Sunday evening| Willman were :--fi about 5:30, o'clocL Mrs. Lange Robert Greenslade of Highland Park, was taken ill about two months ago,| Thursday. which was not considered nrions' Sepepemietion until a few days ago. R In Deerfleld a movement has been end with Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Bing-- ham of Irving Park. -- _ Auxiliary held a social zx at the hane 'of Mes. Clarence Huhn of Springfield Ave., last Monday eve-- _\ The suxiliary will have charge of io moieg c un sponsor-- ed by the local post Saturday eve-- _ Miss Luln Plagge of Chicago fl:"' SYunday with her sister, Mrs. yd Mr. and Mrs. Muhie of Centrral Ave., &d twelve of phtim frendan ie alie and tm rioy sell La %:.'.,";."?'&.u..'. Park attend-- until a few days ago. Mrs. Lange leaves to mourn her dmh,ghn&nd'ommm tvobmtfi'enndto:nm i4 hddfromSt.M'!ml church on Thursday afternoon. ning, Nov. 20th in the Masonic Tem-- ning VCLOger sGil ker will--make e hn m ks (one afternoon and will be voted upon. hrd.r-wm_!l-w hetudii c imb 4 Howard sgrgker.sonof Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stryker. The ceremony '..porformedbythokfl.m w!gflpmwm- Mm.:i:{m«m"b:l nm.tmnluu: ning, nln. G'o'oi'nfiflllfiv---"vafiluwr Far-- er were assistant The nes, meeting which will be a busi-- hom.l:("fi" will be held at the home of Mrs. Chas. Steiner of CeD-- tral Ave &i:'al" at Great Lakes for the 1 we'en dinner given on Sunday Mrs. Carl Lange was operated Announcement is MAdC --9% ie Wo{lu'hfllfll'.% _ af t-wl'-'.'h!L"-_; Terrace. George Pfister of Highland! formerlyo{Do:rfidd" Wx'ml"m I'.l a l!O:':".g'h'd the Howard Durham, of Kenil-- Eva at the Jt, sainianinn ar the coimminmant c 'uy,umu. Features will be a football game with the New Trier ::-htb':n-nan, dinner in evening dfihdty.-.- lors and members of team after which there will be dancing. Mrs. Molly PAster and four child-- en will move in the near future to tmrgl:ofl)! booborofmh.n&:ihnoffln amount. The associa thinks that a donation of one dollar each . is much more -- desirable than one hundred dollars from one person. The library association is a per-- mnontorgnniufion---lthdnglto the peopvle of Deerfield and is home with her mather and sisters. Deerfleld, Oct. 1926. An open letter to the of /. fls clpod ao wegent nase Tor a pollk an or library. l-e-ntlythh.d:o!lll the different civic organizations met, "'Amnou. l&.hanoubdm- der the laws of the State of Illinois and the charter is recorded in Wau-- The seventh annual Homecoming celebration of the Deerfield--Shields high school will be celebrated Satur-- Deerfiéld is fortunate in counting moniitlnddlul,lnl'nnklhll- so. rs. Russo is a trained and ex-- perienced librarian and she has de-- voted the last three months# of her time compflin, a list" of books to be purchased for our library. After Mvillion&driveorumm in the village of Deerfleld to funds but to receive donations or i pnfmned, of " whith " Wiitinie W just at the t the school mnotneg'-tht'nfinmfmmu users » school board gave the library asso-- ciation permission to use one of the rooms as their temporary quarters until such time as the school will re-- gi,:-that\m.ndtholihmyu to secure permanent <~quarters. The library» will pay a nominal charge for the use of this room. _ as the years go by. Mrs. Fichet is spending a ,fnmthhmofha nlfimdln. Robert Greenslade: of Hi Park. id ol started for the establishment of a g:.hlk library, and an open letter been sent out by the Deerfield mioy'co&mbfiom with the librar-- library a most complete list has been selected. A foundation has been laid for.ubnr{:.t'fllboamdittn Deerfleld w ithump.hfion of tththound. founda-- tion can built upon or added to, --Mrs. Nolan of Highland Park is wammmm care of Miss Annie ,.-- who is nrz:.dybi}bvh has been quite 0 wmh able to be out Mr. and Mrs. James Ryan visited relatives in Milwaukee last Sunday. Mrs. E. Ender visited friends in Clavey 'The four room addition to theé school should take care of the gflhofthovflha!orthouxt e or six years according to the opinion of the school board, Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Reeds visited relatives in Waukegan Saturday. _ The chief trouble is that every shain gang leader in Chicago has a The flapper is said to be a bet-- ter parent than her grandmother, which may infer that smoking cig-- arets is better than a pipe. The letter follows: Mesdames Harry and Raymond hygienic conditions, is v ally endorsed for its cor Tilk, prepared under the most Y e _ '_.'" . ( 'b &r f P )'/ // J'i' AAMSAFACTION GIVEESE 601 West Park Avenue FLOOR SURCACING THE PRIDE OF MOTHERHOOD of of I Normal--New sewer being in-- stalled in business section of city. Lyons--Bids solicited for paving number of city streets, Morton Grove--Sewer main being linstalled in Manchester avenue. L'I':thoa--flndhon avenue to .be t Faminm:;-Bida flfin'"u'f' construction i 1 | & Ln_l-ncmum_u o ed for Spring'ield -- Springfield--Beards-- town roaga, 3 mile strip, to be paved. Bushnell--Chicago, Burlington & Quincy railroad to build new station _ Barry--Wabash railroad putting in new switching track in their Bar-- ry yards, *The weekly industrial review in {Muwufiyhu _ Zeigler--Number of city streets $500,000 hospital of Municipal Tu-- berculosis Sanitarium. Chicago--Work to commence soon :"rbnfldmcofm,WMl! Fairfield--New -- filtration plant completed. _ it te 4 o Macomb--Number of city streets to be paved. Potato crop of state this year es-- timated at 5,368,000 bushels, Watseka--New fire truck purchas-- _ Florence--Contract for sec-- tions of lllinois rimht&tdn. on route 36, at $500,000, Niles Center--$110,000 -- parochial school being erected for St. Poeter's Catholic parish, trution of 'ynll.:'d ~ia> s on new &ndcnl---lnrvn& being made at Sandoval post office. Niles Center--New white way sys-- tem proposed for this town. Washburn -- Washburn -- Eureka road to be graveled. j Ww'mw sued. | from February 18 to Sep-- tember 15, totale! $361,065. Madison--Illinois Light & Power Company to install new white way system, in business center. _ Bnruuto.---Nutbroodmm enlarging their machine shop Cairo--Chain of general merchan-- dise stores, to be known as Blue and White Stores, will be established Elizabethtown--Hardin _ county's :v':onn house under construc-- on in Elizabethtown. -- Chicago--Work !ter_hd__o-_y" Farmington--S ser Creek mine to resume operat ons. _ \'yen posed from here to Grayville. Cairo--Cotton -- picking -- being Evansville--New paved road pro-- fire department. REVIEW GIVEN Evanston Shop Open Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday Evenings f Henry C.Lytton &é Sons State and Jackson--Chicago Orrington and Church--Evanston Overcoats YOUROvum-thnnimmPurchne. You will do well to con-- sider it carefully, You don't want to spend too much or too little. And youmust remember that only by choosing from a complete variety can you be sure of enjoying the smartest possible comibination of style and pattern. All of these advantages are presented here--plus the definitely lower prices which our enormous volume makes possible It's time now to select your new Overcoat. We are ready. * : An Interesting and Varied _ Selection in Our Evanston Shop it location. x mw'lm to be expended for maintenance and improvement along.liu of Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad. , T e FultonFFree city mail ery Chicago--New : St. Philip Neri church under construction at 72d and Merrill agvenue, Chicago--South +Shore club to erect new building on south shore drive and 70th street, costing Warsaw--$14,000 bonds issued to complete waterworks system here. this district. Chicago -- First. Presbyterian church and Woodlawn Park Presby-- terian church to erect new edifice at 64th street ana Kimbark avenue. $1,000,000., j Caro--New -- ornamental . street lighting system to be installed in district B, at cost of $17,488. Moline--New sidewalks being con-- structed on. 15th avenue. _ -- Silvis--Peoples Power Company xnm gas service to east of Sil-- East St. Louis--Contract awarded for pa state highway route 3, 'b:tl.wn;'h St, Louis and Tri--cit-- Normal--Site chosen for building new Normal community high school. Baylis--Wabash . Railroad _ com-- pany "to 'build roundhouse here.~"" Hillsboro----Factory for manufae-- ture of overalls may locate in this Pittsfield--Central Illinois Public Service Comnany erecting transmis-- sion line to Grayville. _ i44 Abingdon -- Modern _ boulevard lighting system being . installed in this town. company considering this city for Grayville--Streets to be graveled. in Edwards section of Gravville. Mokena--New hbridge being con-- atrueted on Tinley Park--Mokena highway. > Glen Ellyn--Contract let for pay-- ine several city streets.. -- _ _ -- Wryoming--New Figch school to be erected in this town. Spvarta--New Alling station to be built on East Main street. Lena--New road to be built be-- tween 'Winslow and Lena. Carthage--New Masonic Temple opened to public. Estimates that state will produce 7,656,000 bushels of apples this year. she will Jroduee from the capacious depths of her kimono sleeve a Jovely time--softened old silken length that -R.n:ndm direct from the Sev-- en Gods of Japan or from Honorable Ancestors. It is consider-- ed ill--bred and common to a degree to carry a bare package through 7 Wrap Your l'.kmreeln he «* me" in Jupan is ' thet. Mmattsr--of--course thing to do. ~ . _If it is a "lady of high degree" THE LAKE COUNTY REGISTrR, wWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1926 Polo--Oat threshing under way in Newest and Smartest $3G5 to $100 By ALFRED P. THOM, ° General Counsel for the Association of Railway Executives, Pursuit, abuse and ill--treatment of the railroads no longer possess political value in tht judgment of aspirants for-- public place. The changed view of the public finds ex-- pression in regulatory legislation now enacted, as evidenced by the command laid upon the interstate commerce commission in the trans-- portation act <that, in determining the level of <returns permitted to the railroads, it shall give due con-- sideration <~to the <transportation needs of the country and the neces-- sity (under ~honest, © efficient =and seonomical management of existing transportation facilities) of enlare-- ing anch fuflitlo?'h order to pro-- vide the peovle the United States with adequate transvnortation -- and the expressed declaration in the same act of the policy of congress "to foster and preserve in full vi-- #or both rail and water transporta-- Folly to Kill Roads. It may have been folly in the car-- riers® not to appreciate earlier the easential truths of their relationshin to the public. It may have been fal-] Iv in the public to persist ton long in : the poiicy of 'crippling. nunitive and | corrective regulation. Be that as it ; mav. if at one tim» foolish. the ran-i roads. so far as the public is con--| cerned, are the @oose that laid thei #olden egg, and the public has came to realize it would be folly to kill it.: Unification of carriers into a re-- duced number of companies and well balanced systems is one of the great problems which now awaits solution. FOLLY TO WORK AGAIAST ROAOS Any solution which is proposed must be prepared to stand the test of whether or not it is in the public interest--a test which must always be accepted and must always be con-- ROCKLAND NURSERIES JOHN NEWBORE AND SONS, Props. Growers of High Grade nursery stock. Hardy perennials, trees, shrubs, etc. Order now for early delivery. agern Phone Libertyville 174--W .fi!'i foe trolling arid supreme in any propo-- isal respecting the regulation of the railroads. The railroads are con-- Vinced that, in order to be practical 'al: successful, any system of uni-- tion that is adopted must be per-- missive as contradistinguished from compulsory -- that consolidations cannot be forced, but must originate in and grow out of practical com-- mercial and business considerations and eondi!iqns and be the products of the natural application of sound economic laws. . Whenever old Eben Toothaker doesn't"understand what you say he says, "what say?" So do his neigh-- Old Eben's wife noticed that he was somewhat depressed the eve-- ning after his boy had got back to the farm from his first year at col-- lege. "What's the matter, Eben?" she asked. > *"ouch" from a sore, lame back. It can uthltmpditcuhhlyeds&e torture at once. * When you are suffering so you can m trermntt *n &mn Nothing has such concen-- mfl.mfiqbaxardm;en. Just as soon as you apply Red Pep-- Emmwmfeeltheml'-cm three minutes it warms the sore spot through and through. Pain and sore-- ness are gone. Mm&thaaiuofbwb Red Pepper Rub. Be sure to get the genuine, with the name Rowles on each "Mary, I've that boy'-'gmfl@"g w.fl!':fi it's know as much as he did when he went to college.' The heat of red RED PEPPER HEAT sTOPs BAEXACHE i5 Ni ve* The sum of $200,000 paid for a box at the Metropolitan probably re-- presents the interest on the jewels displayed rather than that in the ';Why,whatdomnlm.m-l a-au;q:uuh-u eB Curvature can "Well, tonight I said to him that bcwwmd.neeum.hn"b it looked bome'd(itufl'htn'in mw.wmb'M tomorrow, and what do ye s'pose he : ing with the child whe very said ?" 6 Merit-------- _ " and merit alone!" Userswilltelly.outbeWoodstockisamg exceptional typewriter--a composite of all i provements conductive to effortless writing-- plus a rare beauty of type and sturdiness of con-- struction that tan "is machine as a thing It'smainlythisbackgmundotgoodwill-- earned by good performance--that is respoqsi-- ble for its success. c \ LITTLE has been said in print about the Woodstock--but much has been said by thous-- ands of enthusiastic operators. KENOSHL: TYPEWRITEFZ IXCHANGE _ When _ _ your produce goes to market! together. We are pioneers, and most of you are pioneers too. We have prospered with you, and we have gone through hard times with you. And never do we forget that your success in profitably selling your produce is the only thing that can insure qur success in transporting it to market regu.htly. There are thousands of miles of plains, of ragged mountains, of pathless forests that must be traversed to reach the commission houses of the great cities, the docks where ships set forth on their voyages to foreign shores, the elevators YOUR hopes and our hopes are bound tight There are a thousand difficuities to be met and passed .in safety--storm, flood, blizzard, cold, raging hurricane and suffocating heat, elements over which man has seemingly no power of control. Isn't it true your greatest anxiety is over once the stuf is safely on the train? When you turn homeward with empty wagon or empty truck, don't you breathe much easier, with a great weight lifted from your shoulders? --Then comes our responsibility! Don't think for a moment this railway is just an endless chain without thought or feeling! There are 60,000 workers moving your produce and that of your neighbor onward to market. Night and day, in rain or snow, in darkness and daylight, the trains roll on to market. Day after day, endlessly, halting for no obstacle that man may overcome, the procession goes on to market. East to West, and West to East--Nortrword and Southward--the caravan rolls on, unwearied, carrying the nation's food to market. and warchouses, before your produce reaches its destination. Wi the railway, the great cities would die. %thcnflny.tbeculfimedplm' would more become wilderness. Aand with-- out the faith you have in the "Milwaukee" and the faith we have in you too, this would soen become an empty trail. For the success of both ofudegen&nponco-opention. Hupus 124 ds f'? age are important, he adds, and sit-- all the time or carrying heavy m is hamfu?to the growing +egfu (lh UAE

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