CMPLD Local History Collection

Lake County Register (1922), 19 Oct 1927, p. 2

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The Ladies'® Aid Society will meet at the home of Mrs. George A. Ross -mfl afternoon of this week. Mrs. E. D. Coudry will be assistant T. Browning. ' Mrs. Wm. Schumacher of Druces Lake returned home Snumrl:{ even-- mm .'rnding seve yb her ughter, -- Mrs. -- Frank Bauernsmith. Mrs. F. M. Harding attended the Lake County Woman's Christian Temperance Union moefiv at the Ofil Street Church in Waukegan, on Thursday. u:n.mAfl{o mu':d of mb ond t recei a telegram from her .f".ar Mrs. Maurin» 5-vu of Los Angeles, California stating that her eleven year old son has m'nddmtally killed on Saturday out hunting. Mrs. Davis is well known in this vicinity, being Maurine Bilinski before her marti-- Mr. and Mrs. Will Browder and son of Ivanhoe were entertained at dinner Sunday by Mr. and Mrs. George Thatcher. Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Porteous and children called on Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Exon of Libertyville on Sunday afternoon. Mrs. J. L. Roder and Mrs. Edwin Roder were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Tonne of Long Grove on Friday. _ _ |. _ Mrs. J. C. Dorfler, Miss Loretta and Junior Dorfler, Mrs. Herman mk. Miss Carolin= and Miss rie Kublank motored to Pala-- tine and Arlington Heights on Sun-- day afternoon. o _ Mrs. H. J. Swan was a Waukegan shopper Saturday afternoon. _ _ «Bll Mrs. John Dietz spent the week end in Chicago at the horie of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Car-- steson. | --__ _ o_ . .w.ivr" and Mrs. Lester Horton of Waukegan spent the week end with the former's parents, Mr. anu Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Zersen, Mrs. W. E. Fenner and Miss Evelyn spent Saturday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cady of Barrington. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Henninge and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Fritsch, and daughter and Mrs. E. O. Fritsch of Highland Park were entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Will Rav on Sunday. -- _ Mrs. Fred Kiene entertained the Card Club at her home on last Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Louis Hendee won first prize, Mrs. John Rouse the second, Mrs. R. J. Lyons the third and Mrs. Henry Engel-- brecht was awarded the consolation Miss Jean Roberts of Lake Forest was the guest of Miss Ethel Ray on tended a fgmily reunion at the home of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Hendee of Grayslake on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Volkman spent Sunday visiting relatives in Antioch. M number of Mundelein neople at-- tended the Card Party last Wednes-- day evening which was given by the Fremont Catholie Church at the Rest Haven Stables in Ivanhoe. Mrs. Francis Browder attended the Wednesday meeting of the Lake County W. C. T. U. at Waukegan. _ Mrs. Catherine Dietz is spending a few davs with her daughter, Mrs. Dobner of Wauconda. _ Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roder call-- ed on the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Prouty of Wauconda _ Mr. and Mrs. Louis tended a family reunion on Sunday Sunday _ Mrs. J. L. Roder spent Sunday ev-- éning with Mr. and Mrs. Emil Nich-- olv of Libertyville. ooo The Lake County Annual Sunday School Convention will be held on w at the First Methodist Church Waukegan. This will be an all day meeting. o Mr. annd Mrs. Charles Lehmkuh] and son, Charles, spent Sunday with Mrs. Lehmkuhl Sr. of Highland Park. Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Druba of Wau-- kegan spent Friday afternoon with Mrs. W. D. Porteous. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Brockman, Mrs. Bilson, and Miss Mildred Hut-- chings of Libertyville were enter-- tained at the horme of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kane on Sunday afternoon. _:.John Albright was a Lake Forest visitor on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Chandler and _ Fred Wilkening was a Lake For-- est visitor on Sunday. _ _ _ Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Chandler and Joel Chandler visited Mrs. Julia Chandler at the hospital in Geneva on Sunday afternoon. s _ Mrs. Ray Wells and Miss Emma Fisher entertained --relatives from Des Plaines on Tuesday. . o Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Cook are both the sick list this week. Mrs. Cook n-nveryhan\coidu\dur.Cook is suffering from rheumatism. "Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Tripp left Sat-- urday evening to spend the winter at their home in San Diego, Cali-- "Mr. and Mrs. S. urday evening to at their home in fornia. Gene Hendes, Vgce Ray, Edward| True and Carroll Porteous saw Red: g).uln'l New York Yankees vlay Chicago Bears at Cubs Park in Chicagno on Sunday afternoon. Aynsley Ross and Mr. Hacluni ~!l Fvanston spent the week end with Mr and Mr: George A. Ross _--Mrs. Emma Tennyson and daugh-- ter of Libertyville spent Friday af-- terncon with Mrs. George Thatcher. _ Mrs. 8. Weise and Miss Rose Weise of Chicago spent several days _-,l:d' PRittler's #randmother, Mrs. Duoenbostle passed away last Wed-- =-;hv ut the home of her daughter €W@A. -- -- -- The Four H. Sewing Club was en-- by 'Miss Leone Hendee on afternoon of last week. last week at the home of Mrs. John -- _ Mrs. McLean of Libertvville call-- ed on Mrs. John Gosswiller on Fri-- dov afternoon of last week. --.Mrs. Anna Beck of Chicago is gdhqawoekatu\chome of -- _ J. J. Rouse, Frank Mitchel, Harry Rouse and Ralph Rouse _ returned Friday after week's huntin i 10 South Dakets. & °UP Miss Avis Payne of Chicago spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Payne. s MUNDELEIN « Va E. una.v-'v'.hr-{-w-. EACCRT preached for us 'l'nt Thurs-- vening and delivered a wonder-- PHONE 54%--J Mrs. Louis Hendee at-- m .' " » " was % ':.....E": C uie Pastor went to Chicago My} to appear before the I. C. C. in be-- half du::'v:l'l' )&ofihh&.n Bus w soon operation on Route No. 22. ; Do not forget the Sunday School Convention in Waukegan, Oct. 20th, at the 1st M. E. Church. Oct. 25th is Deaconess Donation D':x. Anyone wishing to send canned ink en susroge mt ' chure ay A ?md Mrs. C. Hans, our hawunh-- )five will be glad to receive it. Cash contributions will also be accepted. ies 5 Arichoon al the C SOSE RERiiee CC CR m c wl o Oct. 27th a Missionary Rally will be held in our Grace Church, Zfl llhl'.l-t 10 A. M. to 4:30 P. M. W. 8. of %w. Northfield, Hlthld and Pra-- irle View will represented by the members of these societies. _ _ .. .1 & _A MB 5 +6 iPraiinmadt s We d Foreign Missions will be taken. Rev. H. E. Grimme and umi}y were Sunday visitors at the C. St'llm homg. P P W & im _ _Services beginning Sunday, Oc Sunday, 10:00, \Chm School. Sunday, 11:00, Morning Worship (2nd of the False Boén Series.) Sunday, 7:00, E. L. C. E. _ MEXICO DEATHS CAUSE SHUDDER Don't miss the wmr and bazaar to be given here in basement of the church on Friday evening this week by the Ladies' Aid Society-- Come early and nxelau. Try to attend annual Lake County Sunday School Convention tomorrow, Thursday, October 20 at the First M. E. Church in Waukegan The Cemetery Association meet-- ing will be held at the home of Mrs. Henry Englebrecht of Libertyville --the session begins in the forencon at 8:30. -- WASHINGTON, Oct. 17. -- Gen Serrano "had it coming to him," ac-- cording to Mexican law. All the same, the state depart-- partment folks couldn't repress a slight shudder at the short work Gen. Obregon made of him a few days '?xo. with his chief lieutenants, for 'Tebellion _ against President Calles. Serrano was Obregon's war min-- ister. They were buddies. "Like brothers" was the way they gen-- _raily were described. Still, there was no doubt about Serrano's rebellion, lhe Emperor Maximilian's gov-- ernment made the law originally, in the 60's. It provided--no cere-- mony with rebels, caught red--hand-- ed--a drumhead court martial and a firing squad--pronto! Maximilan used it against Rebel Juarez's forces for quite awhile Then Juares caught Maximilian and executed him, under his : own law. He said Maximilian was the rebel; not he (Juarez). 1. was too handy u law to repeal. The Mexicans have kept it ever since. It accounts for so many mil-- itary executions south of the Rio Grande. Some -- critiecs -- say it amounts to butchering prisoners of war. No such thing. It's a law. Even though a rebel, Serrano ap-- vears to have been an exceptionally fine chap. _ Washington officials knew him quite well, through his connection with the Obregon re-- gime, and were mighty sorry to hear he'd been shot. _ A good deal of surprise is ex-- pressed over the fact that he took the war path at this time. It is assumed he thought he was not getting a fair break as a pres-- idential candidate, but the genera! verdict is that he was foolish not to wait until after election, instead of rebelling so early--with the oppo-- sition's crookedness, if any, not only unproved but not even committed $ e s -- _ The best guess is that Serrano simply was the "goat." . o Dwight Morrow will be in Mex-- ico soon, as American ambassador. He is expected to be a strong in-- fluence for peace. There are inter-- ests that don't want peace there un-- til, they've got "theirs." If they could have fixed it to have Morrow land in the midst of a rebellion, it would just have suited their plans. the 1st M. E. Chureh. % Oct. 25th is Deaconess Donation 3,Myouwhhhutnnd-d t, vegetables _ or jellies m em to church Sunday, Oct. d Mrs. C. Hans, our Representa-- ..wmha-hdtoneciflh.(hih The time being short, it's imagin-- able that they hornswaggled Ser-- ann into going off at half cock Washington is pretty well sat-- isfled now that Obregon will succeed v~egular way. ENee y CCCEA C C (Leader, Miss C. Wright) Sunday, 7:30, Evangelical Service Wednesday, 7:30, Pnier Service 'Wednesday, 8:15, S. Bd. Thursday, 10:00, W. M. S. Rolly. It is regarded by peace--lovers a* a program devoutly to be wished His best friends don't speak f Calles as tactful. They defend him ns honest. patriotic and courageou*. +»* they have to admit that he is bull--headed, and some say thick headed, too. Obregon is given credit for all Calles' best qualities and first :ate rvility' besides. Forcign 'oil companies in Mexico send word that they're laying off tFands wholesale because the gov-- ernment won't grant new well per-- mits., ® At the same time, combining business with pleasure, they seem to be blaming the Mexican govern-- ment for what they want to do any Official figures show 529 permits granted from Jan. 1 to Aug. 10 While not a record, experts pro-- rounce this fairly~good. for a time when the companies are curtailing 'exican drilling and capping wells, to counteract the A-L- over-- e* n c better be done th':r'.l,'th:.h:n:?m Mexican derricks 'aren't so congested and pumping xutflon consequentiy ishn't so , a m,. AGERPSE CE CWP one an instrumental, the oth-- HALF DAY "master hangman" of the mid--west is ready for the climax of his color-- ful career, The man who has prepared 55 un-- fortunates for their doom soon will lay aside his work with the noose and hood. He is Phil. Hanna, local And, strangely enough, the last noose of Hanna's making will bring death to the self--styled emperor, of "Gangland," the man who capture silenced the rat--a--tat--tat of gang-- sters' machine guns in Illinois -- Charlie Birger. _ _ v"fir.;cr-;;;t'o have been execeuted Oct. 16, but was granted a stay of execution. -- _ farmer. Hanna's job as hangman ends with the effectiveness of a new law substituting the 'electric chair for the scaffold in Illinois. The mur-- der for which Birger was convicted was committed before the law was passed. O L §20C090e It was on a crisp November morning 30 years ago when young Phil Hanna hitched up the family rig and set out for Benton, IIl.. to «ee his first hanging. A strange co-- incidence, for it is in Benton where the leader of southern Mi-- nois'" sanguinary warfare will die on the scaffold. The horror of hanging men im-- pressed the young farmer as he waited with the throng for the luckless victim to die. It took 23 minutes for death to put the con-- demned man to rest. 8 Before he arrived home, Hanna decided to dedicate his life to the purpose of lessening the suffering of condemned men. For the past 30 years he has answered every call to officiate at a hanging. In that time he has prepared 55 men for death. Money has been no object. To Missouri, Kentucky, Indiana--every where he was called, he went with his ropes and hoods and paid his cwn expenses. "I am glad," says Hanna, "that Illinois has abolished executions by hanging. Of course, the new law will not save Birger because his crimes were committed before the Hundreds of people have visited Epworth the past few months just to get a view of the man who will write the last chapter in a gang warfare which has attracted nation-- wide attention and sent almost a score of men and women to their deaths. -- -- Hanna has a den filled with a col-- lection of hangman's nooses. black and white death hoods, scores of guns taken from -- murderers and bandits. The American college youth, em-- bodied spirit of the jazz age though he may be, is a pretty decent sort of a chap after all, if seems. At least he "pays his bills with more promptness and with less loss than does the outside public," according to P. W. McFadden whose campus drug store at Austin, Texas, cashes 3000 checks monthly for state uni-- versity students and extends credit to hundreds of them. _ "I know how to do it and do it quickly." COLLEGE LADS "You must remember that almost every hanging is placed on the shoulders of a sheriff who has mever done anything like that befo!m. _ Mr. McFadden, who has been operating the same store for 40 years, long enough to win the title, "Dean of the Campus," from -- the sudent body, and to be elected mayor by the citizens of Austin, tolls in the October American Drug-- gist what he thinks of the college boy customer. . 80 _ "We especially offer credit to worthy students, but we always give them to understand that this is a business service and that we expect to be paid promptly at the end of the month," he says. "The young customers usually ap-- preciate our position and agree that we must base our credit on the re. port of the local retail merchants' association which takes up the mat. ter with retailers in the students' home towns and soon gives each a rating. We succeed in collecting our student accounts with more prompt-- ness and with less loss than those of the outside public." PRISON WARDENS CREATE REFORMS EPWORTH, III., Oct. 17. -- By MABEL WALKER WILLE C BRANDT . Asst. United States Atty.--Gen. ; (Mabel Walker was born in Woodsdale, Kan., on May 23, 1889 After graduating _ from Tehpe ; Ariz., normal school, she attended | University of Southern California She was married to A. F. Willo-l brandt of Buckley, Mich., in 1910 t She taught school in Michigan Qnd' California. She was admitted to ; the California bar in 1915 and prac-- | ticed in Los Angeles. Mrs. Wille-- brandt was made an lulotnnt' United States attorney general in | 1921 and was placed in charge of , cases under prohibition laws, tax laws )nnd the bureau of federal pri-- sons. | In my judgment the psychiatrist and theorist of today is able to ac-- complish far less than the practical, vl.:--dmhd. forward--looking, ex-- mentally--minded superintendent, warden or guard who makes re-- forms one at a time, tries each out, compelling it to either u&: bu-- man eouttuuo.-' or hb.do ..i't cents economy before heralds as a true method. can, if he will, open the windows PAY UP BILLS I SENATOR THINKS Most We have been exceedingly liberal to France, and I shall stand on what we have proposed in the agree-- ment signed gy representatives of the two governments. The terms constitute a very generous proposi-- tion to France and I do not purpose, LIFE TERM MEN COSTING PLENTY vWev)'uvol;een extremely liberal to France. There are 8 life term convicts in the penal institutions of Il'inois. They, will live a total of 25,500 in-- dividual years, according to vital statistiecs. It will cost the state of Illinois $400 a year to maintain each. This means that the taxpay-- ers of the "Sucker" state have underwritten a sum total of $10,-- 200,000 for the upkeep of these per-- petual wards. These figures cover the partial cost of maintaining crime in Illinois, according to Hinton G. Clabaugh, superintendent of the board of pardons;and paroles. Illinois has an investment in tuilding and equipment of $40 000,-- 000 to serve the men and women who are in prisons. In --round numbers, his means the taxpayers have an investment of $6,000 for each life term convict. The entire band of lifers rep-- resents an investment of $5000,000. The interest on this is $306,000 an-- nually at 6 per cent. In thirty years interest losses will be $9,-- 180,000. Depreciation on buildings and equipment each year at 5 per cent will be $255,000. In thirty years depreciation will be $7,650,-- The entire bill the "Suckers" will have to pay.in thirty years for a group of 850 lifers will be $22,-- 130,000, according to Mr. Cla-- baugh's round number calculations. Mr. Clabaugh recites even more startling figures in his arithmetic of crime. Long beforé the end of thirty years the population of Illinois will have doubled, maybe trebled, perhaps quadrupled, he ex-- pects. Crime is not decreasing. It is increasing at a greater rate than the population, he -- says. _ Hence there will be double or treble or quadruple the number of lifers in prison in this state in thirty years of the number there are incarce-- rated in 1927. _ Ro@ghly speaking Illinois is mortgaged to pay some-- where within jumping distance of $100,000,000 in the next thirty years to support life term convicts. Only 3.2 Per Cent Convicted. But Mr. Clabaugh does not stop hete. He goes on with even more staggering prophecies of the event-- bal cost of crime unless something is done to stop it. Arrests' were made in 1926 for something like 25,-- 000 felonies. About $00 of these will land in the penitentiary he says That means that only 3.2 per cent of felonies bring new residents to the penal institutiong. If law enforcement should gather prestige and increase the number of convictions only 5 per cent it would mean a cost of somewhere about _ *' _ PEBT TERMS LIBERAL By DUNCAN VU. ER 7/ &° Renater foork Flurigs, the school man. vear 400,000 conmvicts leave and penitentiaries in the There's Never An Argument State Bank of Mundelein when bills are paid by check, whether the other fellow is in too big a hurry, Your check is your receipt. Every-- one likes to be paid by check--it in-- creases one's regard for you and makes it easier to transact business. is careless in his records or simply makes a mistake, you are safeguard-- Checking Accounts Cordially Invited. was announced Wednesday by a _flflgffv_l}lrmleeufialdm';fisdat FIND SERUM TO ' CURE PARALYSIS Discovery of what is said to be the first effective commercial specific for treatment of infantile paralysis After ten years' research an an-- tistreptococci serum has been de-- veloped trom the horse as in the case of diphtheria and scarlet fever The seruni is being produced here in co--operation with Dr. Edward C. Rosenow chief of experimental bac-- teriology of the Mayo Foundation, and already 10,000 units have been sent to poliomyelitis _ epidemic genters from coast to coast and even into Canada and Cuba. First reports show it especially effective in Ohio and California. Treats Rabbits. Dr. Rosenow, beginning in 1916, first isolated cne micro--organism causing poliomyelitis. <It was iso-- lated from the infection atria and brain and cord lesions of all epidem-- ic cases treated by him since that time. Dr. Rosenow produced a sim-- ilar discease in rabbits, and then with serum from horses counter-- acted the disease. EII8% FPCDOTUS SNOW effective in Ohio and California, _ C Dr. Ro.:::.u Rabbits. ~ Curtains, -- after :;e 1 s s pate s on ol ns on ; X r o ts mioectiem tm m k nho uo op sadd. rom the infecti 5 own out of Y e dust is brain and cord le ion atria and |n of them 1 they j sion i ot be washed they need iner iabd o ho shes tin (Pe 4e sA mpeal ol t:me. Dr. Rosenow Produced" that | are particularly dirt I": if they; ilar discase in rabbits d. sim-- | them first in lukewar'r'v'a weven souk with serum from | horse and then | Starting to wash them T:'PY before ucted the disease orses --counter-- :_en:\;filt!ed in lukewarm sou:)}; S}wuldl pus +0 i P 4 Y J water, be(':'hmcll Obervations show that either t';"{)';udml dried. It is not g{;(,r.|| here rtiuults are obtained if the until they a:o °',5'~3N'--h them until | Mss been used as soon as the case next spring Tlrmwl': C se Cncun en disgnosed, recovery with Ibe packed away at is, they should out paralysis being reutnugl se I Puma-i e Creing ::m in such cases. The serury;l c:r. Much the iture Co"" en found effective in tre"'n {done with th:m'lm' L en Furm bp] paralysis already begun, and i ing reovers. Those mp ain linen furniture Hiip nadon sn sns (ooftome mt tinal Th yzed. _ > l ently, of course, i reated differ-- The same chemis | preserv urse, if one wish ; A ts w p & e the C es to insulin for diabetes Co:t(;-odle'flo{:ed jeither dry d"i'u':f:(rimafi' h'l;hey may be on the new paralysis serum worked | professional cleaner. I me or by a __________' I','one a very CRfli&ab] s have' often jine such things in theee'{oh of clean-- {er. The gasoline or ben ectric wash-- ed into the washer, th chines gouk. !!'d and spots are 'g A, th""'" soak-- it n aot se id es it usel aing d in th rake Ivaa goin l"l "" | general clz:n':il:x)g gives the pieces g Clinical obervations show _ that best results are obtained if the serum is used as soon as the case REMUS PLEADS "NOT CUILTY" The senses of taste, smell, sight and hearing havé all developed pro-- fessions of their own from the day of the original food taster in the king's court to the tasting and smel-- ling of rare spices today. Similarly, motion picture pmdfers emplo}' men and women to look for "types" CINCINNATI, O., Oct. 15.--Geo. Remus, 49, former millionaire boot-- leg king, pleaded not guilty to a charge of murdering his wife, Mrs. Imogene Remus, when he was ar-- raigned in criminal court today. _ Judge Custer Shook set the trial for Nov. 14 and ordered a jury drawn for that time. Remus' plea indicated he would carry out his intention of pleading justifiable homicide. He will act as his own attorney, he said, and will be assisted by Charles Elston. sOMETIMEs SHARP, NEVER FLAT, ALWAYS NATURAL The question, "Does it ring true?" has foumd its uses also in the el-- ectrical industry which has re€ently perfected a menas of establishing the infallibility of carbon brushes for electric ni)l,vny and street rail-- way motore by adapting the principa! of the xylophone. _ _ and large piano companies engage acute "ears." It is not new that one of the best ways to test the "legi-- timacy'" of silver money is by the ring of it when dropped on a count-- The inspector of these. motor brushes holds in his left hand a brush that sounds G Shlr%; as a tuning fork would, and in his right hand he wields the conventional trap drummers xylophone mallet. Before him lie the rectangular species of brushes to be tested for their stnx'.h. All brushes that ring in accord with his G m "fork" are adjudged able to the strain of railway operation. Somehow when a man gets into a crowd he thinks that he is the only one in a hurry Each question of a child is a round in the ladder of knowledge. Why should a boy waste four years in college when he can sit for two hours in a barber shop and get the complete inside dope everything. , ILLINOIS %fit be amiss. Formevy-- en of considerable ex-- &orienee often do not give the atten-- on to this work that they should, feeling, no doubt, that unlike the luxurious winter furmnhu_lm these are immune from moths. is may or may not be so. But even then there are plenty of other destructive conditions to cope with, and it is therefore best to take a little per-- caution. $ Summer Rugs © | For example, the life of suinmer| rugs is curtailed considerably when| ked away without proper clean--| E:fi'. They should be given a comp!«t=| going over on both sides with thel electric cleaner first. Then t.heyi should be scrubbed, or at least wash-- ed, with lukewarm water to which one or two tablespoonsful of ammon-- ia have been added, and dried thor-l oughlfi in the sun. They each shoulid be rolled on a pole and mrv_)ed in' burlap or tar paper, and sealed. | Or again, if they are already slightly faded they can be washed by first setting the colors by add-- ing one cupful of vinegar and on» of salt. Then the things may be washed in lukewarin soapy water without any real harm. They should be dried in the shade and packed aw-- ay rough dried. _ _ -- Summer Draperies If If summer draperies cannot be| i washed safely, crean them accon£-|§ ing to the directions given above, or @ V-,_J,i,, im mer . T N&"w&f:o concerning Libertyville, IIl. ELECTRICITY, MASSAGE, ULTRAVIOLET « LIGHT, SPINAL TRACTION AND CHIRO-- PRACTIC ADJUSTMENTS Office Over North Shore Gas Co. On account of the death of my husband, I am forced to sell at public auction on the old Siever Farm, 1 mile west of Aptakisic, 2 miles east of Long Grove on Tuesday, October 25th, starting at 12:30 P. M. the following described property to wit: 11 Choice Cows 11 2 Yearling Heifers, 1 Reg: 1 with Calf by side 1 Calf 1 Reg. Holstein 4 good work Horses 1 Reg. Holstein Bull, 3 yrs. 1 Shoats AUCTION SALE 2 McCormick Corn Binders 1 Deering Grain Binder 1 2% H. P. Portable Gas Engine 1 12 H. P. Portable Fairbank Gas Engine 1 Appleton Corn Husker 1 Dort Auto, run 12,000 miles 1 Letz Feed Mill 1 Side Delivery Rake 1 Hay Rake 1 Sulky Plow 1 Walking Plow 1 Pulverizer 1 Corn Planter D TERMS: All sums of $25.00 and under cash, over that amount a credit of 'six months will be given on good bankable notes bearing 6% interest. No goods removed until full settlement Mrs. Peter Sievers, Prop. is made JOHN WICK, Auc 300 bu. Clean Oats 350 bu. Prime Barley 25 T. Timothy Hay e. a word -- ing m'-fiw" ._m.,,.'i Many other articles too numerous to mention Dr. B. T. Lynch, D. C. Hay & Grain Machinery just hang them out in the wind then go over them with the Ifi cleaner on both sides. To do this con-- veniently each piece must be fasten-- ed at the corners to the floor, iron-- ing board 'or, table. After folding these u,fiuu" they, t::; should be wrapped in burlap or P'dF and sealed, for otherwige the dust is certain to get in at them. _ Good care prolongs the life, of all things, and summer -- housefurnish-- ings are no exception to this rule. Saving Search The kind womaf noticed an old man, whose right leg was gone, standing on a street corner with a perplexed look on his face. _ _ "My poor man," y E you! J"t;_)!?'or man," she said. "are "No, ma'am," he replied. "I'm looking for a feller that got his left leg shot off in battle." ' "What is his name*?" "I don't know that," was the re-- ply, "but he wears a number ten shoe." "For heaven's sake. if you don't know who he is, how do you know he wears a number ten shoe?" "I ain't sure he does, but it stands to reason that if he don't one or t'other of us is goin to have trouble with his bunions. Lady, I'm looking for a right--legged feller to go partners with on a new pair of shoes." It's easy to entertain a modern guest. Just show him his room, the bathroom and the liquor, and let him alone 1 set Drags 1 Seeder 1 600 lb. Platform Scale 1 Universal Milking Machine 1 Milk Wagon 1 Cream Separator 11 Cattle Drinking Cups with attachments 3 Truck Wagons 2 Hay Racks 1 Top Buggy 1 Set Bob Sleighs 1 Large Stack Straw 25 Acres Choice Corn CITIZENS BANK BUILDING WEDNESDAY, SATURDAY G. MAETHER, Clerk Cutters Set Double Harness Caldron Kettle GEORGE A. JONES 9:00 -- 12 A. M. 1:00 -- 6:00 P. M. Phone 287--W MUNDELEIN, ILL. Regular Hours DENTIST Phone 26. evssscerecens censescer |a NO-not the rouge that chem-- ists make, but the natural, healthy glow that comes of wholesome -- living nourishing food and lots of milk!' Our pure, pasteurized milk will make the roses bloom in your cheeks. | THINKS IT'S POOR IP/US'NESS To Do YoUuR waASH lat nome / A All Kinds of Auto Repair Work Complete Battery Service Competent Mechanics Welding _ _ IT IS GOOD BUSINESS--OUR SWEET AND CLEAN SERVICE OAK TERRACE LAUNDRY BUY YOUR ROUGE IN OAK TERRACE LAUNDRY Prairie Ave., Highwood, IIl PHKONE 87 Refinishing Bl't{'l health is worth a See the house is plenty WHAT plans have you made for heating Harry Pfannenstill, Prop. MUNDELEIN, ILL. THE STAR Day and Night Service Phone 817 Automobiles and Furniture Made like new MILK BOTTLES D. M. DUGAN Mundelein, Illinois PHONE 494J Garage Libertyville 453 THE of B e

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