_Messrs. John Whitmey and _ Otto Jirava were Chicago callers Thurs-- Mrs. Charles Seiler and da_ughar, Mrs. Mark Gardner, were Wauk shoppers Wednesday afternoon. ] The Misses Ida and Nina Wheeler and Mrs. M. Haas and daughta;. (';t'i!lh. motered "to Chicago We-- nesday. | cents. Announcement has been made of the birth of a daughter to Mr. © Mrs. Fogd Wells on Friday, Decem-- The Friendship Circle will have a luncheon and Christmas party at the home'of Mrs. John E. DeLong, Fri-- day,December 16th at twelve--thirty. Each --member will be asked to fur-- nish a dish to pass, and a pnse':t caller Thursday. Mrs. P?er Ha: sahopper Tuesday Mrs. Edward Carroll, son, Char-- les, and daughter, Elizabeth Anne, spent Friday in C}lieago I Miss To Wheeler was a visitor at Rogers Park Thursday night. $ Mrs. John Nelson entertained se-- veral friends from Chicago Friday. Fred Knigge of Wauconda visited relatives here and ~at -- Mundelein Mrs.\Frank Baumgartner of Mun-- delein ealled on Libertyville friends Wednesgday afternoon. | P.--W. Pettengill left Wednesday on a business trip to Providence, Rhode Island. Miss Helen Carroll was a Chicago visitor Thursday. LAKE COUNTY ] that will make your Holiday shopping a pleasure instead of a financial burden. ; Join Now--Save a little every Week--and get a eosts not more than twenty--five 'ociety and LOCAL NEW S CHRISTMAS CLUB ¥visitor F. B. Lovell Co. A Delighth Christmas Gift A wool Skating Cap given with 3 each pair, | 4 o r Hansen was a Chicago A pair of the famous V. L. & A. Hockey Skates with Shoes attached * A Merry Christmas Libertyville, Illinois Capital and Surplus $150,000.00 Hand In Hand CHRISTMAS CHECK : your Holiday shopp: pair $9.00 NATIONAL BANK ightful Members of the Libertyville Club are fasting in preparation for the big stag dinner which will precede the election of officers at the club rooms next Tuesday evening. The entertainment committee has . an-- nounced that the feed will be one of those famous roast beef dinners with plenty of it. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kessler, Mr. and Mrs. William C. Hubbell and Mr. and Mrs. George Cherry of 5LaGrange. faormeriy of this city, en-- joyed a dinner and theatre party in Chicago Wednesday. * Mrs. John Whitney -- entertained the Five Hundred Club at her home Thuxsday eveming. Prizes |were awarded --to Mrs. George Decker, first; Mrs. William Schley, second: Mrs. Henry Wehrenberg, third; and Miss Maud Helfer, consolation. _ James Molitor and Ralph Conners. who have been making their home--in ferng: amplornd af the SC Hary: of ng yed at t. Mary o the Lake Seminary, returned to their homes in Chicago Thursday. The Misses Louise and Dorothy Schanck of East Cook Ave%oh.n departed for St. Petersburg, rida, where they will enjoy the winter| months. | The Ladies Aid Society of the lo-- cal Methodist Church will hold a bakery sale on Saturday afternoon, December 17th at the Titus Bro-- thers' Electric Shop. . " Walter McLaughlin is convalesc-- ing at the home of his aunt, Mrs. P. J. Bockelman, following an appen-- dicitis operation which he underwent at the Victory Memorial Hospital two weeks ago. next Wednesday evening for a so-- cial time and a business meeting. Mrs. William Knesley entertained the members of the local St. John's Evangelical Lutheran Ladies' Aid Society at her home Thursday after-- young people of the Methodist Church will meet at the parsonage f':a.ln;lln.c..l.hpo'onand 0. mnwflimimum !P'lyi'l"t!_offl . and Mrs, L. A. Huson and family Sunday. TIllinois W. L. Collins, J. A. Treptow, Fred Bockelman and. Charles Doane of Sycamore 'returned Monday after-- noon from Fayette, Missouri where | they attended a convention of mon-- ument dealers? The entire trip was 'made by motor with Collins at the wheel and it is reportad by the pas-- 'sengers that W. I. shakes a mean i steering wheel. a first. t The Post Office North Pole and one little boy. for-- got to put his in an envelope and ai pose 1 ccgld all about T--v my-- new zipp and water tr and so was s --Paul Pette: wife a widow ly one she does make too. 4 ¥ inlntibletetsintrines . 5 un n qun un o ie io 0 ies tg ol fesN 4o 1e M sM sM, .N t3 c e u1 e aMip M sNMe u)h ie atle ol er l stle NMroMecMe sMMc ob e M Bc e No i ~I took myself over to the John L. Taylor home for a visit last ev-- gning and found them out. I knew the local Presbyterian Church, Rev. Guy E. Smock, attended the Older Boys' <Conference at Waukegan in the meetin%hending last Sunday af-- ternoon. ey were John Harms, Paul Ray, Jr.. Richard Schotanus, Kenneth Grabbe, Percy Knudsen and ; Carl Edman. Daisy May Woolf, you were cer-- tainly the topic of every one's con-- versation yesterday and do you sup-- pose I ccgld find out' what is was all about?"--why, I nearly ruined my new zippers, standing in snow and water trying to hear what so and so was saying about you. $ --Paul Pettengill has made his wife a widow this week and a love: I was going to have bad luck that dy because I put on my left shoe Mr. and Mrs. Max Kohner were interested spectators and ~so ~was Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Lasley. Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. Rav were with Mr. and Mrs.. Osborn. I also saw Mrs. James Rutherford there, which was quite a surprise for Libertyville does not see her very often at its social affairs. Mrs. John Mitchell and Mrs3. ALrt.hur Jones mel to enjoy her also. & v The Edwin Austins were the Tirst there and the last to leave. Lynn Beman was seen carrying either a plant or a bouquet of flow-- ers home last night. Was that a peace offering or a Christmas pres-- ent in advance * § My, Dears! did you know that we have a pirate in town? At least I saw the footprints of one. Zero --weather didn't keep Mr. Hubbell, Mr. Conner and Doc Bet-- zer from bowling last evening, and six stitches in Mrs. -- Ray Smith's hand did not keen her home. . I should be in the hospital with a 110 degree fever if I ever had two in mine. I could adopt a dJozen orphans af-- ter hearing Mrs. Helen B. Paulsen discuss "The New Generation'"' Wed-- neglay evening. She was the best ever and only a small crowd to en-- joy her, but I am sure the blizzard was responsible for that. The Kindergarten Class of the North School received the picture, "The Shepherd Bov," which is a-- warded each month to the =class having the largest number of par-- ents in attendance at the Parent-- Teacher --Association meetings. A-- bout two hundred persons --were present at the: meeting held ~Wad-- nesday evening, at the local -- high school, a jcint meeting of the Par-- ent--Teacher Association and the Libertyvville: Woman's Club. ® The Christmas exercises. of the pupils of St. Joseph's school will be held at the high school auditerium on Friday evening, December 20 with a big Christmas tree and Santa Claus himself on hand to take charge of the festivities. He has sent ahead a quiet tip that he will have a surprise for every one of the children. . At thik time the children will present a Christmas fantasie entitled "Listening In." Miss Marion Dawson of Evanston, Illinois was a guest at the meeting of the Girls' Dramatic Society of the local high school held Wednesday evening at the home of Miss Ruth Hafemann. Miss. Dawson"was a for-- mer Seience teacher at the high school and the originator of the Dra-- matie Society. * an operation for gall stones per-- formed by Dr. Besley and Dr. Os-- good. He is now convalescing under the care of Dr. F. H. Martin of this city. j : -- The -- First . Methodist Episcopal Church is making a campaign to clear up 'all financial deficits, to pro-- vide for the lgrger budget for the present yef&r, and to paint and re-- q_air the--dining room of the church. he responses are very encouraging. The subscriptions were increased over two thousand dollars Sunday. Austin ~W. Tripp returned to his home Saturday from the Victory Memorial -- Hespital, < > Waukegan, where he has been for the past three weeks. While there he underwent Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sawusch an-- nounce the birth of a daughter on Tuesday evening, December 6th. continuing until all have been serv-- cordial invitation to the public to at-- tend a program given by her Violin Ensemble Class at the Auditorium Theatre Sunday afternoort, Decem-- ber '11th beginning at three o'clock P. M. The program will include vio-- lin, piano and organ numbers. -- 1?. Sarah Leighton has returned to her home here after enjoying a few weeks' visit at the home of her .daughter, Mrs. Louis Bockelman and family, at Chicago. The Presbyterian Ladies' Aid So-- cigty will serve a chicken pie din-- ner 'Wednesday, December 1l4th # the Methodist Episcopal Church commencing at five--thirty P. M. and BY THE LADY ABOUT TOWN Six young men 'with the pastor of Miss Hildegarde Hapke extends a OBSERV ATIONS _ has --received addressed to the THE LAKE COUNTY REGISTER. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1927 "Ciegst 'l&'mqgsa Springfield, TII1.--Under an opinion handed down by Attorney General Oscar Carlstrom, aiding and abetting an inmate to escape from an institu-- tion for the feebleminded is not a statuatory offense and does not come under the provisions of the law passed at tht last session of the gen-- eral assembly. > mrami>!._ According to the opinion of the attorney general the penalty pro-- vided under section 92 of Senate Bil' No. 378, is applicable only in the case of a prisoner--one under arrest or conviction of a criminal or quasi-- agined. Unlike so many "highly perishable'"-- Christmas --gifts, this unique present, which is available in $5.00 denominations and selling for $3.50, extends its entertainment over weeks and weeks into the New Year. Here's a rare Christmas Gift, in-- deed--a gift of real entertainment. ATTORNEY--GENERAL RULES ON sSTATE "ESCAPE" LAW every energy to the grim business of winn;ng fl\f :"--' :"fi group of. people brought a dgreatly appreciated custom did much to bring a ray of sunshine into the 'livés og'- so'l'('lanetz in m tickets ad:?itting the bearer to the-- atrical performances were "fifim the men by their friends "God-- fathers." Soon the boys began to speak of them as "Smileage Books" becau:e o;l the entethrt;inmalt which was thus placed at their disposal This Christmas the Auditerium theatre is offering Christmas cou-- pon 'books which are quite like the war time "Smileage Books." A more appreciated gift could hardly be im-- along." Way back in 1917 and 18 when thelfnitedStutesmmb camps. <It was the "Smil _Coupon books> which the end of a very long list of "toys wanted" he wrote "And Santy Clause, if there is anything else you can think of, why just send it AUDITORIUM THEATRE HAS UNIQUE CHRISTMAS GIFTS U fire insurance is like buying a ticket in a raffle--the chances are against you. You've been putting it off. Let me write it NOW! ' ; "East. Side West Side" Monday -- Tuesday, Dec. 12 -- 13th. GEORGE O'BRIEN AND VIRGINIA VALLI, IN wWITH JOHN BOWERS, GENE STRATTON, BESS FLOWERS, AND. DAVID TORRENCE. |AUDITORIUM| WNING a house without Sunday, Dec. l1th. _ Gene Stratton Porter's epic of the American family "LADDIE" "Jaws of Steel" At the matinee, Episode 8 of "Hawk of The Hills." -- Saturday, Dec. 10th. A WARNING AND : ADVICE A story of New York. Also animal comedy, "Down on the Farm" Scenic, * Matinee at 2:30 RIN TIN TIN, IN Fox criminal offense. Under this law a person--aiding a prisoner to escape, or who shall assist or conceal a con-- vict after escape, shall upon conviec-- tion be sentenced to the same pen-- alty as that being served 'by the prisoner, with the exception that in case the prisoner is under the death sentence the punishment shall be life aprs *% o nX _ Bakery Sale at Titus Bros. Elec-- tric Shop by tlie Methodist Ladies' Aid Society. f # A # * * Monday, December 12th. Rehearsal of the members of Lib-- ertyville Musical Society taking part in January program' at 8:15-- P. M. at the M. E. Church: Friday, December 16th. Junior entertainment at L. T. H. S. auditorium at 8:00 P. M. Tickets reserved at the Decker and Neville and Lovell Drug Stores, December three acts by the Young: People's Sofl of the Fairfield --Lutheran Ch at the Fairfield Schaool Hall at 8:00 o'clock. Tuesday. December 13 Stag dinner and annual election of officers of the Libertyville club at the club rooms. Dinner at 6:30. Sunday, December 18 "Why the Chimes Rang," a Christ-- mas play given at the First Metho-- mas play given at the Firs dist Episcopal Church on numbers at the Auditorium Theatre at three o'clock. Public invited. All Phones 25 Just Opened Another Barrel of Swift's Winchester Bacon in a piece, _ 28 ?ampbells Tomato Soup, 3 Cans * A en re ns ariee!" . 1*~ . re Thursday, Friday and Saturday Trer Lh.:..:...:::.....".:.s" Jello, 3 Packag's for..:::::::::: L Fancy Virginia Sweet Potatoes, S ILibs.'for.::: :#3 k3 ce c oo oo Michigan Baldwin Apples Per Bushel.................... Fresh Spareribs, e HOME OWNED o \_STORE COMING EVENTS Saturday, December 17th. TRIGGS & JOHNSON Whether it be a watch of lat=st model, a necklace, a novel pin, a hair ornament, opera glasses, silver-- ware, rings, gem sct--diamond rings, there can be mo more welcomed gift than those which are on display in this store at the preseat time. The ""stage Ssset" for Santa Class. Whit will ha give this year --¥ ¥'motre than men, in 2 _ ~"S social way--to the theatre, to dances and partics They mingle with other mcn and it is but natural they should ire pretty things, beautiful gifts-- --Specials y, December 11 ven by Violin Ensem-- lildegarde Hapke, with lin, piano and organ MecDONALD'S Jewelry and Gift Shop Libertyvill& Hlinois © <©hHIS IS a 14th,. @r=+s00m es 200 Sunday aous Wb aannits w us d' w if--they'd--just move Paris over here. With these New York--to--Paris planes. costing $25,000 apiece( and always falling into the ocean at that) it would seem to be cheaper W P NY an I yO y WV Sothenr ATP \urth dreao-- 'vnnhp/m MA Home Owned Store @u.oree murory we. e ic tew i éflj'& e 25c 19¢ 15¢ have not paid your dues for th month you stand suspended. A. S. Dougherty, i have made my report for Nov-- ember to thg_Headme:mp.'lf you work is urgently requested to be present at the next pzacfiee llont?iy evening, December 12th at ei,ght- = teen P. M. at the Methodist Episco-- pal Church. I have As there will be but four more re-- arsals for the January provgram Starting on September 6. Regular Com-- mercial Courses, Advanced Courses in Commer-- cial Work, Civil Service preparation. CALL FOR PARTICULARS LIBERTYYVILLE MUSICAL 8 A. M. ATTENTION WOODMENX Step--ins, Petticoats Pajamas _ Shorties & Bloomers & : Chiffon or Service Hose W. W. Carroll & Sons Co. Silk Vests _ Gowns i For the Xmas List All branthes of beauty--culture; also Finger-- Waving done the New Swirl Style by Mrs. Matthews. Phone Libertyville 438 The Harriet Beauty Shop at their enlarged space can take care of their many patrons with more privacy. Students Registering up to and including Monday, September 5 for _ Open, evenings by appointment. Supporting Enterprise QONEVWELL made my : First National Bank Businwgmakamwyv-bmukeqmnym that makes business Ambition' and cntelv:%(:eckmtd\cplmwbacludyapl" tal is avgilable for legitimate undertakings. This baixk brings together in Libertyville the deposits of a great many people, and thus makes I'ilberty\nlk a place to which progres sive farmers and bugness men can turn for support |in their undertakings. By banking here, you: join hands with an institution which is of g+eat importanct in the community's pro FALL CLASSES Leerryvicee, Phone 341--J MRS. GEO. E. McDONALD 'ress 311 W. Park Ave, Phone 130 NOTICE Libertyville, Hlinois LIBERTYVILLE graph. Good, old friends will ap-- preciate it because it's you--a gift that money can't buy. Time is required for careful workmanship in finishing fine . photographs so don't put off vour visit to our studio.-- A Dozen Personal Gift Yellow Cab 8 NOW S Just Call 306 when you want Taxi service and we will do the rest. : 420 N. Milwaukee Ave. T UDIO!| 8 P. M. PAGE FINE