CMPLD Local History Collection

Lake County Register (1922), 19 Oct 1927, p. 6

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

_ RAPS POLICY _ INNICARAGUA i# AMestons but E> Shy! us not on ¢ good wil '« _ peace an« ; ----If Une g+ "We already have the beginnings + mha-c&-«mm § CGas, Light & Coke Com-- x m-l-hmflthlh ol Indiana Public Service INSULL EXPECTS GAS FROM MINES when he was appointed to fill . vacancy by the death of United Senator Ladd. He was re-- to the senate in the fall elec-- jon of 1926 for the term 1927 to }3. Nye is a newspaper man. He his career at Hortonville and been manager and editor of several newspapers in -- Wisconsin, Ilowa and North Dakota. 1 fear that in --Nicaragua the wsumhmmuu.uit h.fornnotinobunukin'. history that will cause our chil-- dren to bow their heads in shame. Our action in hustling, as we do, to the protection of an Ameri-- zu\u, no matter to what of the world it may be taken ' planted, and no matter how may be the cause which that planting, cannot but fasten further upon us Shylock cloak which is costing us not only lives and trade, but that good will so essential to lasting peace and understanding. * If Uncle Sam were one--half as golicitous for the welfare of dullars muly invested at home, for , the farmers'" dollars, as he is about those planted abroad, it would be an unqualified blessing. public officials who are charged with eonducting that business, and if pos-- sible to elect a majority of the mem-- bers of congress, so as to be able to _ 'The Nicaraguan case is a glaring example of the apparent Yurpooe of government today, namely, to re-- spond to every call from those who seek new worlds to conquer financi-- ally, after having fastened their elutche firmly upon résources at bome, while it continues only blind to the needs of the people who are paying the cost of that government. The two--party system lays certain ::.d'imthupon party mem-- In any organization the will of the majority must determine pol-- icies unless there be chaos. The sys-- tem of primary elections was insti-- tuted.so as to give every . party member the chance to express an opinion in regard to policies and eandidates, Up to the time of the primary election it is not only the right, but the duty, of party mem-- bers to make known their prefer-- Out government is founded on the two--party system, the party in power and the party in opposition, each with definite functions. The functions of the party in power are to carry on the business of govern-- ment, to elect the majority of the ences. But once the majority. has dbcided the minority must logically abide the decision that has been .. This is not merely a political maxim, but it is based on reason TWO--PARTY POLITICS By SARAH SCHUYLER BUTLER, Chairman of the Women's Executive Committee of the New York Speaking before 5,000 delegates to the American Gas Association's ninth annual convention at the Stevens Hotel, Chicago, the utility : said gas producers would f unite just as the electrical in-- has formed superpower com-- Mr. Insull, "and transmission over electricity. "I can see no reason why the mwassing of production in economi-- eal plants centrally located," said quite as feasible for gas as it is for at the mine and delivered hundreds of miles direct to the consumer, ef-- WWM& of reduced transportation costs. ublic Service '6;;-'"' of North-- which supp bcy:::h :I E_-u ity limits, e TROPICS OFFER GRANARY IDEAS Mr. Insull said the big savings in ':'b between" cities occurred r ¥ariation sof peak--demand "In northern Indiana we have miles of intercommunity gas m under one management." By GERALD P. NYE, United States® Stnator 61 NEW YORK, Oct. 14.--The trop-- teal beit with its land area of more than 10,000,000 square miles, which now i K e nromnpoge may a gran-- for future dflll-t::' in-- l temperate lands forces s _man to exploit new fields Samuel Insull Wednesday across 'the state with the 1e 187 mains man's agricultural efforts have teen confined largely to islands, such as Ounly necessity will drive man, white or native, to further conquest of the tropics, the geographer holds, because of the infectious indolence which accompanies the climate. But despite this and the handicap of generally unreliable native labor, rubber and coco--palm products have risen from the status of incidentals to places of major importance cn the world trade list within a few years. Cuba, Java, Hawa'i and Ceylon, and to the costal fringe of the main-- natives to some extent, hold ¥rcat promise if intelligently cultivated. Important products of the tropics to'ymli;::od to sugar, rubber, C , eoco--palm product mo. it is pointed out, ln: Such developments indicate the potential importance of the tropics as great grain raising regions, the article in Asia points out. Tropical rice, already of vast importance both to the native millions and the world at large, still is in a com-- paratively undeveloped stage, while Recent Development Remarkable. "In a Little Spanish T own" _ was Written in South Dakota Romantic Song Hit Re-- sult of Author's Game of Pretend New York City--A desolate, treeless little village in the West was the inspiration for the most glowing romantic walts song of question, tells how it happened. #«When I was a little girl." she 5t Spnde Thg mort thumbes thit Thet carcmed o bie mep "of that country. lii-ufiul turning to m l-l-.n;n:r:::in: my had gone wrong generally. is s txeg-- as a to from & one town to another. 'Got used,' I say, but I guess I never really did get m reconciled to it for the bleak towns always made my heart ache. At least, they did until I o Miss hibA Dists Tas aingen Te most ntavuitul irochman at he Ohi: Mable W who wrote "In a lle Supaunh Toon." the jour in ~ En a litHe Spunish tun}Taas on a night Te this , .. Stars ware pruska broing dpwn Toas on a night lilg thi s and millet, both raised by the OKLAHOMA COLLEGIATE BEAUTY u-yh'hndu.lwedm last one them to my favorite dream countries. In an effort to atone for them for what they had missed, I always located the very bleakest towns of all in Spain. discovered anlxlrloefiy lovog game that I could play by myself. "This game allowed me to make up little stories about the places, and since there need be no limits South Dakota and when I looked out the train window, I beheld the most dismal town of any. The few people I could see had such Spanish Town,' we had reached T POCP T o, as if Mmchonhfi;.fin.;wmro- "I took a pad and percil out o# my purse and began to scribble to keep myself from crying. I wvas blue, anyway, because my head ached and I was wondering whether I mmu be a vaudeville ham all my life. Well, those of 'Iin a Little ?IH Town.' I felt so sorry for that Dakota place that I just dressed it up Spanis}." ommo!flnn have not been de-- veloped to a point approaching their "As yet the white man in the tropics has not reached a stage cor-- responding to that of the hoe ¢ul}-- ture of the tropical people who raise cassava, yams, sweet po*atoes and pumpkins," writes Mr. Hunting-- ton. "Whether he will go on to an-- nual crops of cereals no one yet can tell. The chances are that he will." possibilities. LAWS, AUTOS NEW YORK, Oct. 17.--The new race in America is between laws and avctomobiles. There are 1,900,-- 000 laws now on our statute books, Merle Thorpe, editor of The Na-- tion's Business, reveals in the cur-- rent issue of Collier's Weekly, and these are being increased on a mass production basis, "Ninety per cent of legislation proposed has to do with business," he says. "A shoe dealer, an intel-- ligent, thinking man in a middle-- west city, asks my support in get-- ting a law passed to limit the styles of shoes. IN BIG RACE he, 4s ced ob any shoe ers from more than 50 styles to show in any line of shoes. > "The Texas state commission 'of agriculture proposes a would prohibit Texas ¢ ers Ifrom WOruing DUIT PCR TUG M OI li'ness, or infirmities, hours, from breaking land with a an-o:mim:fi. ed the tractor, plowing with a cultivator, |best of medical and skill or picking in any other. way than| _ All in all there rests about the 1I!-- by the human hand. ___. _ ~{inois Soldiers' and Sailors' Home all BULLETS END THREE LIVES U, L _AE L l oo cvedfs--coovima <oolr< mmntatadit® ns lt ces se dsn docccpe t w2 "In the government printing of-- the word home implies. This nee se t on mank wecin Fhee Reth sepectally true "arcicr "the CHICAGO, October 17. --A tragedy of long--standing youthful love, a girl who liked to play but did not want to wed, and a suitor stricken with hopeless iliness ended in the death of two girls and a young man--here today. Margaret Martin, 18, school girl, and Catherine Stadler, 19, stemo-- grapher, were shot to death and hurled from the automobile h'm they were riding with Winter, 21. Their bodies fell 5@ feet apart by the roadside. A--few hundred yards f#rther along, Win-- ter fired a bullet into his own head and the car piled up against a tele= phone pole. Al three were dead when they were pick_d up o > Winter and Miss Martin had been "sweethearts" since they were small children, police were told. For three years, Winter had begged the girl to marry him, but she war un-- willing to quit school. She tod him repeatedly that she liked him as an escort but did not want to wed. | I!linois Soldiers' and Sailors' Hen Unsurpassed in the United States in Comforts Afforded Apparently Miss Stadier was shot simply because she was in the car. There was no i1 fee'ing between her and Winter, so far as friends knew. A few months ago Winter learned he had tuberculo«is. ILLINOIS HONORS » NATIONAL HEROS lie making, Thorpe in this :gu;cnl h-&-*gd ing it many -,n:um: .n&ur:? ew law, to provide in | with vacatior peal of some already | terest or in v and checks are drawn against this deposit. More than 500 of the vet-- erans carry amounts on deposits, and there is to their credit in the trust the institution under the same pro-- eedure & deposit is made in a bank, fumt} a total of $93,705.49, an in-- crease in the past 10 years of more than $50,000. This is the largest trust fund carried in anv state in-- The grounds surrounding the in-- stitution are all 'hlctb lexgmertd land-- scape gardeners are e to devise. To the beauties of nature has been added sunken gardens, with names of national heroes standing out in brilliant verdure; historic cannon, now spiked armd silent; heroic sta-- tues; but best of all there rests over the entire institution that sweetness, 'i-dut. happiness and satifaction which is epitomized in the word Under the manasemer® of Col. 0. C. Smith the home is being made the center . of patriotic gatherings for western central Illinois. trd'm than 20,000 visitors particivna in the Fourth of July celebration, and even a greater number is looked for on Armistice Davy IMinois in its care for its heroes is paying the debt owed to them in a manner which is unequalled by no other state in the union. Women used to worry about tight corsets. The only tight thing that low who gets away with parking wrong has to be smart. gh-i in 1926 a total of 69,366,-- 823 tons of coal valued at $148,604,-- 'm'my with murder is no r c achievement, but the fel-- Winois has 515 coal mines which is. Where a veteran and wife Pr appecial quarters are the mhneo:'dlif ".:3 con e, mforts possible on the outside o those of ample means, those in need of hospital care, now is husbands. or infirmities, ty--three years, according to the scientific calculations of Dr! Ray-- mond Pearl, Director of the Insti-- tute of Biological Research at Juhns Hopkins University, will be more mthndfwieo as Nw'ill.l.u it is zod:l;y. ty propér ¥e a' popula-- tion of 18,948,/000.-- In the area de-- ecribed as"Greater New York" there will be 17,797,000 people, and in the suburban area the total popula-- tion, according to figures based on the law of growth described by Doctor Pearl, will be nearly 30,-- 000,000. How will such an enorm-- ous 'city be cared for? Chicago, Los Angeles and Detroit will bave population problems al-- most as serious. Other great cities --Seattie, ~ _ Galveston, perhaps Charleston, S. C.--will likewise have to turn to modern science to solve difficulties of congested liv-- ing. The population problems of every great city fall into three fields: Housing, feeding, and transporta-- tion. New York City in 2000 A. D. will have advanced farther in these fields than we can even imag-- ine clearly today, writes Myron M. Stearns in Popular Science Month-- ly -- But in all probability trans-- portation matters will be the most pressing--just as they are today. Transportation of food and trans-- |:'(;:;:}r':' portation of building materials will | onee a run along smoothly enough, b"'lthe ho transportation of people goes for-- | maiden ward, in congested centers, only \he ap when conditions become intolerable. | shifted That will be as true in 2000 A. D. |of his as' it is today. Our grandchildren |Cially: and great grandchildren will get in-- | ~~~--~ to some terrific traffic jams! When | for instance, they have to fly over | the city for miles before they find | a single public landing stage with | rcom left for them to park on. Or they may have to stand, packed | like sardines, for three--quarters of | zn hour, evening after evening, be-- i N\ fore they can fight their way on | & to one of the great tunnil--buses of o the Underground! t f Most amazing, perhaps, will be huge pipe lines of milk, carrying preat white streams into the city from the dairy regions, 200 miles away. In large measure, provably the food itself will not be so very cifferent from what we are ac-- customed to today. pigskin when it takes a lot of beef to be able to play with it? Skyscrapers will be taller even | than they are today. A hundredi <tories are not beyond possibility | even -- within -- thirty years. A | single apartment hotel forty stories l high and covering an entire block will be nothing unusual,. Some may ' house 10,000 or more people and | supply them with food from a | single kitchen. e New York City in another seven-- --three vears, according to the Why do they call a football gskin when it takes a lot of l whs Children Cry for °_ _ yo~o y MEMORY OF CRIME CLOSEs CHURCH ineig t tion, Flatulency, Wind Colic * and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food ; giving healthy and natural sleep. & To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Zxt[liia Absolutely Harmless -- No Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend i Eighteen years ago, a murder was committed in the little Method-- ist church at Rattle Run, near Mt. Clemens, Mich. 'The pastor o. the church at that time, Rev. John Carmichael, temporarily crazed, killed a member of the congregation, then killed himself * Superstitious folk quitted the church. The attendance'dwindled from year to year pntil recently the doors were closed permanently. cotton *3

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy