CMPLD Local History Collection

Lake County Register (1922), 25 Jan 1928, p. 8

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---- -- story of wealth undisciosed could & euax a penny from their pockets They believe, and have reason to _ . believe, that fortunes have been taken from the burning sands of va-- rious South Sea atolls a~c that other ----_ fortunes still are concealed here. In particular, there is the well sub-- stantiated yarn of $16,000,000 in Pe-- ruvian gold and jewels, monastery ISLE TREASURE CGREAT MYSTERY 44 loot, which has uot yet been found. But this is another story--the sad pnartative of how apparently a for-- Truly, it is a fabulous treasure anc is is here in the S uth Sea islands merely awaiting thr inspired spade of some lucky adventurer. Buch is the velief of many old is-- land adventurers, whuse years of knocking about the Isles of Romance have developed such canniness and PACE EICGHT PAPEETE, Tahiti Jan. X. -- Go'd ----great heaps and piles of the glit-- tering metal; literally the wealth of the Andes, Carnegie and Rockefeller; Wednesday 15¢ , Saturday and Sunday 25¢ Antioch Palace DAY NIGHT. Te o poaeine. (pen EVERY WEDNESDAY, SATURDAY AND sUN-- COAL, FEED, SAND, GRAVEL, CEMENT, E€IN-- terest of the people Vol. 1. Published in the in-- GRAND DANCE AMERICAN Kings of Harmony LIBERTYVILLE | LUMBER CO. | renty years." Libertyville, IIL. Phone 47 and 48 Saturday, Jan. 28th 8. A. Newsom, --| HARTMANN HOUSE la taod JOHN G. BORST " --___----_. is El * Office and yard at C. M. & St. P. Tracks The Four By Six e Auspices Libertyville Post No. 329 TICKETS -- 50 CENTS Dancing 8:30 to 1:30.-- Music by the Legion Serenaders. Phone Libertyville 679--M--1 WHEELING, ILLINOIS, RONDOUT, ILLINOIS something the baby | street. _ "Universal m:fi"'hhflgfinum"mm fin the older>| as a plaster base. Sm bangs to indicate he | _ --Come in-- _ The econom-- ialfdwisthem who got married in the back yard so his hens would get the January ©20, 1928 AT THE his l The winter term of the school of the Art Institute began on Jan. 3, | 1928, and will continue until March this time is "viva." and uninhabited, it is rarely visited by either natives or white men, not over two calls a year being made to conecteoconnnuxorchemut copra--dried cocoanut. 23. The spring term hogm on %uv:h 26 and continues until June 15, commencement day. The second visiting instructor, who came to the school to give criticism was > Henry G. Keller of the Cleveland ; School of Art, the first having been Her-- man Dudley Murphy of Harvard UnivenitI. Other visiting instruc-- tors to follow are Boris Apisfeld. the Russian winter. Daniel |Garber and Charles W. Hawthorne.: ® Fortune nas smiled upon him, and among his possessions is the island of Anu Anuraro, a mere dot upon the largest maps of the Southern Paci-- iic, and totally ignored 'by most cartographers. About 400 miles southeast of Tahit .ound himself on a tinv dot of an island in the middle of the South Pa-- cific and was so entranced with it that he stayed. Only now he is man-- ager of an Australian trading firm, and he is known wherever a wave laps the shore of the lowliest atoll. and **=t the deck of a two--masted schooner, which looked as thougn it had bat-- mmedrmnytnle."doyoumtto "W%tre you goin'?" was the spirit-- less reply. "Tahiti," came back the answering hail, and mistaking :t for Haiti Thomas Erskine jumped at the chance of getting to the West Indies Bunkley was born in Newark, N. J and a roving disposition was his heri-- hood, he found himself penniless, up-- on the end of a San Francisco dock, a fcriorn and dejected figure. tune taken from under the nose of a native of New Jersey, Yhomas Ers-- kine Bunkiley, one of the outstanding romantic figm -- .. the Another thing we'll bet young Mr LEGION Drop into the ot-- [ fice afut let us help It strikes us that ignty qgood 'piace to live. What do Kn with your build-- kn ho netved supply of new";'dh: What Do You Say? tired) of by No. 3. '; ,,,!gfl_« X ;E P Wt se c 1 --Public utility companies are com-- }ing to realize that is pays to be . neighborly, writes Frederic H. Hill, vice president of the Elmira Water, Light and Railroad Company, in Nation's Business Magazine. | % The old idea that it was the util-- ity's business to sell gas, electricity and traction service, and that--it was nobody's business how it was done, iis passing. It is very much the communit{'s business how 'its utility 'eompnny unctions. The fortunes of | the two are inseparable. If one | prospers, so will the other, under 'nomul circumstances. '__Mr. Hill . says that about 15 I years his company was "in bad" }fmt about as far as it could go. The | company decided to see what could be done to change the situation.»> --. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Jensen attended Qmsm funeral oéhkth:g:ormer's mother ay in e Miss iiillie Wrench, Miss Becker and Miss Alice Thorngren ate Sun-- day dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Allanson. Mrs. Caroline Mitchell is staying with her aunt, Mrs. Lizzie Gegner, of Evanston, who has been in ill Mr .and Mrs. Park Allison spent Thursday in Chicago. -- s ning, Jan. 27. Dinner will be served | %nning at 6 p. m. ' The menu' consists of chicken pie, mashed po--| tatoes, peas, salad and pie. The Aid' Mrs. Stanton and daughter. of Chicago, visited Saturday and Sun-- day with the former's sister, Mrs. Harriet Hewitt KinT. at the-- home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kane. Frances Towner has been ill the past week with influenza. 7 --If you are tired of your wife's cooking, take your family to the Ladies' Aid dinner given Friday eve-- call from one of the company's rep-- resentatives. -- These afints showed the community that the' 'company was honestly tryinfi to give the best service it could, and to improve con-- stantly. The personal element took most of belugcrenc{'oout of the cus-- tomer's attitude toward the com-- pany. The agent saw to it that the customers were satisfied. This was the first step taken to remind the community the company was human, and it worked. ;on.s. Besides these, we got several undred letters. These first com-- plaints were striking. If we thought we were hated before, we knew it now. ~Many replies were frankly profane." _ --:~----=.-- * * Mr. Hill explains that eveg com-- plaint was promptly followed by a "We began," he writes, "b{ asking our customers to tell us what was wrongs with our service. We invited eriticism and complaints. It caused some surprise at first, when we came out in a newspaper and car-- eard advertisement asking to be told what was wrong with us." . "At first nothing happened. We kept the advertisingeup for several months. Then we began to get re-- Klies. The street car employes kept lanks for the purpose. The news-- paper 'ads' carried complaint cou-- oncers ard svners feel the support of a corstructi\~~ public opinion. Reg-- viating auth-->it'*s reflect that senti-- ment. The railrcads and their own-- ©rs are seady *to cgo forward with the cdvancerzent cft: American business and wel{lare generally. ' It is generally recognized that the quality of railroad service consist-- ently performes in recent years has contributed in no small degree to the continuauce of the present pros-- perity of the American people. This realization is being-- translated. into a willingness on the part of the pub-- lis that railroads be allowed a fair chare in the prosperity which they had helped to create. Profit at Smaill Margin. f eome of the distinguishing features of this prosperity is that profits have been made by turning over an enor-- mous volume of goods at relatively small margins. Such an accomplish-- ment would have been altogether im-- possible without quick, dependable and adequate transportation Expe, dition of railroad service has re-- 'lected favorably upon the . entire economic structure. What has thus far been accom-- plished, however, ~represents only the beginning: of the improvements that are possible in the railroad in-- dustry itself and in its relation to American industry and agficuiture. Trinsportation needs of the future *"an be measured only in terms of the possibilities of the growth of the country itself. The ability of the railroads to promote this growth has by --no means been exhausted. Eco-- aomic changes are occurring in our methods of production and distri-- t~*'«= to which the railrord industry rmust co~*nue to adapt itself. 'This is due chiefly to: two -- out-- standing factors: First, _ railroad service itself is better than it ever was, and second, the people yf the United States know it and want it continued, and railroad investors are encouraged --to furnish imore capital for the expansion and improvement of that service. R 125. *He was made a brigadier gen-- eral in recognition of his wartime services in 1919.) . By GEN. W. W. ATTERBURY (Pres. of the Penrsylvania R. R.) AWilliam Wallace Atterbury was born at New Albany, Ind., in 1866 and was graduated from Yale uni-- versity in 1886. He began as an ap-- prentice in the Altoona shops of the Pernsylvania.railroad in 1886, rising from position to position until in 1903, he was made general manager of lines east of Pittsburgh. He was zrarted leave of absence in 1917 to direct the construction and operation of U. S. military railroads in France. Gen. Atterbury has been president of the Pennsylvania railroad since Railroads today are operating with greater confidence in the future than they have done at any other time in the past 20 years and the most sat-- isfactory feature of the existing sit-- uation is the spirit of co--operation m the part of the employe *\C_:, RAIL OUTLOOK SEEMS BRIGHT DIAMOND LAKE HUMANIZING PUBLIC UTILITIES,. M N t o P ap "hie to'sell also. THE LAKE COUNTY REGISTER. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1928 That he makes this affidavit for the purpose of comgllying with the requirements of Sections 9 and 10 of an Act of the General Assembly of the State of Illinois, entitled "An Act to Provide for and Regulate the Administration of Trusts, by Trust Companies." That. the foregoing statement of the said Libertyville Trust & Savings Rank on December 31st, 1927,; is true and correct in all respects to the best of his knowledge and belief, and that he has examined the assets and books of the said company for the purpose of making said statement. j A. L. JOHNSON, -- WILLIAM E. LARSEN, > CHARLES R. GALLOWAY, Subscribed and sworn to before me this Third day of January, 1928. $ Evel yn L. Hull, Sninawts o (ayic 4+ > Nom Public. Accounts, Springfield, Illinois, as required by law, to secure kTmst DepPOSIES....--.s<c..------~......:--«scmcmatentetentamnccoctnncess Ivcrsires --#00;000:00 STATE OF ILLINOIS § f : COUNTY . OF LAKE f°** > -- § William E. Larsen, one of the managing officers, and A. L. Johnson and Charles R. Galloway two of the directors of the Libertyville Trust & Savings Bank, a corporation of the State of Illinois, being severally duly sworn, each upon his oath states: : . A Libertyville :woman may lead a harder life than her husband, but it is more than made up, for by the fact that she doesn't have to shave every morning. 12. as shown by the annual report made by said bank as a trust company, to the Auditor of Public Accounts of the State of Illirtois, pursuant to law, and filed in the office of the said Auditor of Public Accounts on the ' Third day of January, 1928. ; * OF LIBERTYVILLE, ILLINOIS: 2 AT CLOSE OF BUSINESS--ON THE 31ST DAY OF DECEMBER yans aliecroasr""'ng in Havanas. the flyin«a co:>~~! was entertained Syndar by nurm:rrous officials who ock hiis_on a tour --of : interesting plaves »«bout Panc ma City Tnday he will inspect Fis good will plane. the Spirit of 8*. Louis, which has recent-- ly been overhauled. ) 4 report shows a decrease in juvenile crime, and a corresponding increase in the average nfie' of inmates re-- ceived at the penal, reformatory and corrective institutions of the state. ing a total of 3,873 received during the fiscal year 1926, the average age of the --inmates increased approxi-- mately six months over the previous year and approximately one year over the avenfe as shown for 1924. For the year 1926 the average age is given as 25.09 years, as compared to 24.12 years in 1924, and-- 24.62 LINDY RESUMES 6008 WILL TRIP PANAMA CITY, Jan. 23.-- _ Colonel Charles A. Lindbergsh this week will resume his flight of good will, ard will start 2A ambitions pro-- rram cthat includes visits at seven cifterent places and --flights over much difficult territory. 3 Embracing ° seven _ instifutions, three of which are pertal, one refor-- matory and three corrective, show-- The present generation is not go-- ing to the dogs, according to a sur-- vey just conducted b& the Sttate Department of Public Welfare. The years in 1925, Diamond Lake M. E. Church. W. Scheuermann, Pastor. Sundax. Jan. 29, 'will be the cli-- maxing day of our series of sermons on the place of the church. ~The subject is "The Church's Country Home." A helpful hour of song, worship and 'meditation awaits you. _ Ne expects to leave here January 27----Friday--for Bogota and --will 'and there that same day., . . Other visits include: , Caracas, Venezuela, January 29 -- Saint 'Thomas. Virgin Istands. anmuary 31-- :-- * 1, -- Loans on Re: 2. Loans on Col 3. Other Loans 5. U. 8. Govern 6. Other Bonds 7. -- Banking Hou 9. Due from Ba where they attended the lllinois fig\- , tures on it. , ricultural Association meeting. Mr.; It is probable that he will carry Gilkerson of Grayslake, Mr. Gripton, | this new money in his pocket as long Mr. Gurnee, Mr. Minto and Mr.\as he lives and that his children Edwards, Antioch, &lso attended and grandchildren will carry it. So| the meeting. . s Iwill a most familiar thing in the Shirley Mills is spending a week ; lives of the multitude, a seemingly with her gnndmother, Mrs. A. O.) stable and changeless thing, appear, Rockenbach at Crystal Lake. ' in a new guise. $ I Miss _ Marvel, Sunday school| 'The secretary of the terasury has worker from Chicago, spent Sund-r spoken and all the paper issues are, at the Diamond Lake Sunday school. | to be made over. ' ~Miss Ryder has resigned her po--| Not only that, but all the tills in Don't forget the Illindis Imhhxte! In a little while now all the paiger which is to be held in Waukegan, mmey uised between Kodiak and ey Feb. 15, 16 and 17. Avail yourself West is to be changed. Mr. Ameri-- of the opportunity to attend these can vitizen is to lose that currency fine meetix;fa in your locality. _ 'to which he, his father and his Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Mills returned dfather were born and get in Friday ' night 'from Rock Island, mlee a new size with new pic-- where they attended the Illinois ,;gh , tures on it. ricultural Association meeting. Mr.; It is probable that he will carry Gilkerson of Grayslake, Mr. Gripton, ' this new money in his pocket as long Mr. Gurnee, Mr. Minto and Mr.\as he lives and that his children were present at the church social REDUCING UNCLE SAM'S BANK Friday evening. Everyone reports ROLL. LIBERTYVILLE Porto Rico, February: 2. Haiti, Pebuary 6. > Havanga, February § -- He nas no*t decided as yet on Reserve Accounts......... Other* Undivided Profits (Net)............_._._._...__....._........_. Par value of securities Loans on Real Estate......._._..._.._. Loans on Collateral Security..... U. S. Government Investments......_............._._._._._.... Other Bonds and StOcks....................c--/::--=s9c4.----..--v«: Banking House, Furniture and Fixtures................ Due from Banks, Cash and Other Cash Resources. t > _ ~OPPFICIAL PUBLICATION : Statement of Resources and Liabilities of the Total . Liabilities...... Total Resources.................. TRUST_ & SAVINGS s on sene esn 4008 sen s ns nank enmimes enen ons aan s s s nes en n a male an 6n ts roure sessesenpress000000e s sbureu000 e00008 4« snen0e n 00 58000500508 24 84543 24808 48 08 se a0 8 o0 ire 0 : the same vitriolic langua K «danuary. 4t 3 marked his opposition to the Virgin Istands.|measure both in committee and when up for passage in the house of ry 2. > ngnmhfives. [R 'the event test of the law is Te --| ordered :'y the 't_ut?nme court the & expense of prosetution will fall upon d as yet on his | Sangamon county, now heavily bur-- in Havana. w the result of previous poli-- s':'"fm' "um"d The : supreme -- court -- adjourned of -- interesting: ai:hout handing down a decision in seasesesss nhan+ hens nan en en nent nan s snnb an en un a n n e n e uns s on +/% & BANK LIABILITIES wair of shoes that hurt their feet. where people lived for fifty or sixty ye_ars-'b'e'gm they happened on a The world seems worse bedause you seldom -- hear ~much -- comment about the bad things that never Request of Miller for the filing of a test of this law was protested sev-- eral weeks ago by State's Attorney Fullenwider on the grounds it is the m of 'the state's attorney to up-- rather than seek to destroy laws of the state. Action asking a mandamus --resulted. Miller in addressing the court was lacking in the dignity usually ob-- u-veti in proceedings -- before the highest tribunal of the state, devot-- ing more time to a personal attack on Governor Small than to a discus-- sion of the question at issue, and fi the same vitriolic language marked his opposition to the measure both in committee and when up for passage in the house of 'the event test of the law is ordered ob'y the supreme court the expense of prosetution will fall upon Sangamon county, now heavily bur-- dened as the result of previous poli-- PLEA FOR MANDAMUS UNDER ADVISEMENT: ----BY SUPREME COURT W. III.--Plea of J. Bert . Kankakee county for man-- damus of compel H. E. Fullenwider, state's attorney of Sangamon coun-- ty, to file action to test the quo warranto law passed by the last ses-- sion of the legislature has been taken under advtisement by the su-- promis court. : --:-- _ _: : :--:~= ---- > smooth flow of a smaller, simpler paper money will be established much to the benefit of the user if the department of treasury is not in error.--Nation's Business Magazine. Finally they will all be gone but , those that remain in the hands of | the numimfim,h thus profiti{u; the | government which is not called on' to redeem them. In the end the, smooth flow of a smaller, simpler| with Auditor of Public as required by law, to Not only that, but all the tills in all the cash boxes, cash re%isters, hllerl':.s:ainthe nation will need to be over to fit the new money. So will the pocketbooks that are manufactured to carry it. Even the nature of the "roll" one carries in his flank pocket will have to be changed. -- _ x . The new bills will not be long enough to roll and incase in a rub-- ber band. A new habit of car?ing currency will be developed. . Even the fingers of the people will have to accustom themselves to the feel of a new agent that helps them to buy and sell. § ,........-.....-...................".......'..-'748;594.30 There have been a few-- cases «. --~£,020.06 ....... $748,594.80 $50,000.00 50,000.00 8,640.95 147,954.34 475,047.49 8,947.55 8,003.97 $64,500.00 217,414.24 103,428.53 8,300.00 197,817.69 7,898.90 151,205.38 s uit » 1927! (__WASHINGTON, Jan.., 23.--Objec-- i tions of ornmzuiPu'lman porters to the general pract'c> cf having a por-- _tion of their income paid in tips were , heard Saturday in formal arguments before the intersiate commerce com-- mission. Henry T. Hunt, a former member of the railway lator board, | represenc ted the Brotherhood of Pull-- man Car Porters in urging that the , commission require the Pullman com-- ; pany to "cease and desist from per-- mitting tipping." & (AGAINST TIP AS \ -- PART OF WACES Mr. Hunt argued that the entire |giy,{ system now prevalent of having the y porters' wages largely paid in tips 'clain from the traveling public was unso-- [ fied cial The Pullman company, he S@id, | sam, required its porters to act in a minof |tion, way as police officers, to . enforce anti--gambling and anti--liquor legis-- i lation -- and at the same time made w NAIL HAMMERS ............_.._..... . INNER TUBES _._.___;_.__..: 5_: JARDINIERS ....:....._._..____ _ .. FORD HEATERS ... 12 GAUGE SHELLES--_--_.:__._: _ 6 FOOT EXTRA RULES_________ VACUUM BOTTLES ......__.._.___.._. ECG BEATERS __________'._. PYREX OVENWARE ___,____ CAKECOYVERS ... 2 ONE GAL CANS MOTOR OIL _ LANTERNS:_..--_.._--..___ _ CLOTHES HAMPERS ____________ 25 LBS. COMMON NAILS_________ EVER READY FLASH LIGHTS _ 6 cans: No. 2 size Lake View Vegetables, asst...._s.. 8 cans No. 2!/4 size PeRCheS...........................comsmmmimemimi: 4 12--0z. jars Pure Fruit Preserves, assorted flavors... J 1DS. GEHL LOTLOE .......:.refoelecalnlee moncennesenmnevivncorsmrnnorm mrntonormmmonmessomomen o DOCKS IEQED P OA ENE --:cenmricene 20200122 im trnn2223+.. on ererntnioonirngoenmommipent ¥ Guart Di P HCIATES....... .: e nlprreinine e ++e. 4e 0e ie e e es se es i enirem omm noninine T quart Sweet PHEKICS......----=motermeretrmnnemmenncrim mm mm onpermmmitions S F UUSTE JAY OUVIES: ....--.... => en leotntgee e ons en orninsenmnimeniemmnentinnsine 2o Dars P. & G. SOAD) ... erthurthrens neccnnss,sonom n iommmmrrmess 3.pkgs. Pillsbury Pancake Flour, large size... l'uehu'm such -- a DOLLAR DAY ~ Bargains FRANK H. EGER Max Miller GROCERIES AND COLD MEATS 410 E. Park Avenue. January 27 and 28 the porters' demands, said that the company had long prohibited porters from scliciting for tips, but that the tipping system had been long estab-- lished, and was generally discussed in wage negotiations. vocation by requiring them to look for contributions from their passen-- SPECIA LS f ALFRED,'}!. TURNER, Executor. Waukegan, I!!., Jan. 19th 1928. 6--8--10. Georre Kelly, general solicitor for H A R DW A RE Libertyville. eetveerennensseesana0s n ADJUDICATION NOTICE company, hole, tut you may : ed enongl to keepn to dive into 2a stra»e swimming you $1.00 wWITH J. A. Jadrich and Frank Jeffers Suite 203--1704 Sheri-- : dan Road, North Chicago, LIST YOUR FARMS FOR SALE OR TRADE TIllinois. PHONES: 1766 .$81.00 $1.00 2574 t ie hari--head-- i@ from killing

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