PAGE TWO "&og.. Rmae&e of lb{eeponseof c s a re in co agricul -- ture, has been avarder the coveted Thomas E. Wilson trophy, presented annually to the best livestock judge in the university. The a was made by Professor H. P. Rush, head _of the department of animal hus-- bandry, at the all--agriculture ban-- _ Mr. Jean Smith of Wauk is-- Sited relatives and friends in {vanhoc Brilliantly lighted shop windows' during daylight hours draw nearly twice as many potential customers: from the passing crowds as the same | windows unlighted, aoeom to a recent series of tests reco in the ' Transactions of the Illuminating Engineering Society. [ With an unlg'hteid test window on | a prominent shopping street, it was found t.l;a'tso'f the total number of ' passers-- k r eent were attract-- ed to the dhpry. When the same : window was lighted, 16.6 per cent of all those passing in a given time were attracted, an increase of 93 per cent due to the illumination. } It was computed that the cost of , the to draw the lcrfr num-- | nd amounted to less than one--twentieth of a cent a person. ' being new comers had not learned their way about. About fifty men ies o ie meusd eountry si night. e next morning as the chflfn'en of John Meyer were on their way to the Swan school they heard the little m erying and discovered both imbedded in the mud in the ditch by the --pavement gap. Their h:'he Easter services at the. lv:rla-- church were very impressive al-- tho bad roads and sickness kept a good many away. Several young people joined the church. Quite a little excitement was eaused Wednesday night by two little children who strayed away from their home. They live on the Wagner farm west of Fremont and LIGHTED STORE WINDOWs * PAY EVEN IN DAYTIME Emerette Raasch is now stricken with the mumps. He is just about over the scarlet fever but the fam-- ily is still under"quarantine. to be paid id'hc'ifv g A;x;"" &3 Services beginning April 22nd. kh.lday School at 10 a. m. No E. L. C. E. Meeting. 'n;n Meeting, Wednesday at 7:30 P. M. Services on Sunday, April 24th same as we are accustomed to have Miss C. Hodgkins is the newly :robbd n.m:' Steward _ and all money for church expenses are Mr. and Mrs. R.chard Ransom are rejoicing over the ariival of a little daughter Monday afternoon. The little :ady has beon named Marion from Grayslake called on Mrs. Rich-- ard Ramson Thursday. The Mothers Club met with Mrs. Warren Snyder Wednesday after Roon. Mr.and Mrs. Philip Ames and two younger children from Wondsteck visitect at the Fran't Vickery nome NNeammday. _ . _ . >-- : | m. us in Church Fellowship on Sunday. On Sunday, April 22nd we will have no church services, it being Conference Sunday. -- The Mnisterisl Appointments will be read next Sunday night over ll:dli,o S't.ation WJJD between 9 and Mr. Wolf t last week renail-- ing the Qmon the church roof am#® has one side finished. Mr. Charles Hans leaves Wednes-- day to attend the Annual Confer-- ense in Aurora, lllinois. A little son arrived at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Chamberlain Tuesday night. Mrs. A t Wirtz is visiting her w, flrs. Geo. Meyer, at Mun-- this mk'l)orfie % "'. Ruddph r was a au-- kegan shopper Saturday. frantic efforts to get out had only pulled them in deeper. They were taken home and a sad tragedy was narrowly averted. Mr. T. A. Simpson visited the Ivanhoe school Thursday. Aya Collins, Merle Collins, Ho-- ward Ritzenthaler and Carl Nichols, Viola and Myrtle Dubka spoent Sunday night with their mother, Mrs. Alma Jensens at Lake Forest. Mrs. William Wirtz of Waukegan spent the week end with her par-- ents, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Ritta. On Saturday evening, April 14th the Annual School election was held. Will A. Ray was the retiring Director. Mr. Ray was re--elected by seventy--eight out of the seventy-- nine votes cast. Mrs. B. F. Porteous and children spent Monday afternoon with Mrs. . L. Hitts. on Monday. Miss Ruth Sorenson of Fon du Lac, Wisconsin, First and Second grades: Miss Ethel lr!.%pfison of Lib ertyville, Third and rth #rades; Miss Abbie Carr of Sceales Mound, llinois, Fifth and Sixth grades; Jerry: W. Knater of Monee. Illincis, Principal and teacher of the Seventh and Eighth grades. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gross attended the funeral of the latters nephew at Hubbard's Woods Saturday. The teachers for the Mundelein Public School have been hired for the ensuing year. s Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Gosswiller and children of Highland Par': spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John The pupils of the Mundelein Pub-- lie School enjoyed a vacation on migd mm anngat Ipachers mest an eachers meet-- i-if: Waukegan. * : Edna <~Glassnapp of Lake Zurich spent the woek end with Miss Ruth Sorenson and Miss . Abbie Fred Knigge of Wauconds visited relatives in Mundelein on Monday. Robert Cameron of Lake Forest is a business visitor in Mundelein MUNDELEIN PRAIRIE VIEW IV ANHOE PHONE 543--J and family t During last year ten cement mills operated without a lost time acci-- 'dent and were awarded Portland Ce-- ment Association Safety Trophies. 1Two Kansas mills were among the winners of the eight ton sculptured concrete monuments: Bonner Spr-- ings plant of the Kansas Portland Cement Company and the Tola plant of gbe_peh_imortland Cement Co. plete event. The meeting will be called to ord--| er b{':'. E. Tyler, President, Dewey _ Chica Portland Cement Company. A. J. K. of livin Curtis, Secretary of the Committee| of 2,50( on Accident Prevention, Portland| ccmpile Cement Association, will report on equipme the safety work in the cement in--| eration dustry during 1927. Hon. Roye B.' prepare Hinkle, Commissioner-- of Labor, shortly, state of Missouri, will speak at the| man of luncheon. i nad -- h Amon? the'cemént mill officials who will attend the meeting are: L. T. Sunderland, president Ash Grove Lime and Portland Cement Special attention will be given to plans for the annual June No--Ac-- cident drive in which mills through-- out the country will take part. Superintendents of Kansas mills will make plans for operating during ;his month without a lost time mis-- :ap. L. J. Wheeler, superintendent of the Bonner Springs plant 'and C. A. Swiggett, superintendent of the Tola plant will talk at the safety meet-- ing on "How It Feels To Win A Safety Trophy." the logical Chicago district repre-- sentative of the speeders of the world. _ _ He first appeared at Indianapolis four years ago. Three years ago he announced that he was to be wed be-- fore the race. The following year he arnounced there was to be an heir to hisrldn(tropma.'l'hmrmwood- bury is being backed by Mike Boyle, who makes valves for motor cars. Woodbury announced in making his entry that he would come to the track long before the race to com-- Methods of reducing accidents in cement mills and safety plans for 1928 will be discussed at a meeting of operating officials of Kansas portland -- cement mills, Tuesday, April 24, at Kansas City. Sessions will be held at the Hotel Baltimore in co-o&ntion with the Central States Safety Congress. Cliff Woodbury, Chicago speed-- ster, will pilot a front wheel drive in the international 500 mile race at Indianapolis speedway, May 30, it was announced Friday. CLIFF WOODBURY TO ENTEA RACE A Building and Loan Ass'n. Savings Account. Your money will earn good interest and you will be amp-- ly secured. You can make deposits as low as $1.25 per LIBERTYYVILLE BUILDINCG AND LOAN ASS'N diately tb?nag:lfion filegi;- p 0 3flmmmpfldin¢inbothhouu ményon is situated 125 miles below the Grand Canyon and is in that section of the river that forms the boundary line be-- tween Arizona and Nevada. Ae-' eording to plans already prepared Party of Government engine@rs inspecting Boulder Canyon dam site on the Colorado River where it is pro-- posed to erect the world's largest flood control dam. The project is unique in that it is to be financed entirely from the water and hydro--electric power it will make available. s p . With the Colorado River threat--|by Department of the Interior sufficient contracts for thg sale of ening to break over its banks and|engineers, Boulder Dam will be|water and hydro--electric power permanently destroy a dozen towns,| 550 feet high and will create a rifhts to guarantee the returh of the homes of a hundred thousand reservoir 80 miles long and 30 /all money expended on, the dam mlondanimonmofferflh miles wide, capable of holding | plus interest. < L &% land in Arizona and Southern|26,000,000 acre feet of water. It| Construction of Boulder Dam California, Wt of the| will be the world's largest dam and | will provide a site for the develop-- Interior is to oluuh for--| will be twice as high as the largest| ment of a million horsepower of ward the construction Boulder | dam now in existence. hydro--electric energy, according to Canyon flood control dam imme--| Acting on the recomméndation of |government engineers. diately upon the adoption of legis--| Dr. Hubert Work, Secretary of the| _ Legislation providing for Boulder lation now pending in both houses|Interior, authors of pending|Dam has been favorably passed of m Boulder Dam legislation have writ--| upon by the house committee on Canyon is situated 125| ton into the bill a provision which|reclamation and is scheduled to miles below the Grand Canyon specifies that the government is not | come on the floor of the House for and is in that section of the river|to expend a single dollar on the |action the latter part of March, it that forms the boundary line be--| project until the Interior Depart--| has been announced by Congres?-- tween Arizona and Nevada. Ac--|\ment has received from private and|man Addison T. Smith, chairman AUTHORIZED CAPITAL $1,000,000.00 Worth: Considering Under State Government PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION Dewey _ Chicago, April 3--A special report . J. R. of living conditions in communities mittee | of 2,500 to 5,000 population, to be rtland | ecmpiled from a survey of home ort on | equipment made by the Illinois Fed-- nt in--| eration of Women's Clubs, is being oye B., prepared and will be made public Labor, | shortly, Mrs. J. Mare Fowler, chair-- man of the federation's well--equip-- iped home : committee, *announced | from tstate headquarters here today. of admission bearil:gowitnm to high speed, parking without 'l{fihts, left-- hand turns, turning in the middle of the boulevard or some other of the many prohibited acts. It is a rather significant fact that among the violators of traffic laws age out-- numbers youth two to one. deaths, they have adopted a policl lot teaching instead of punishing of-- fenders of traffic. laws. Instead of being ordered to pay fines or sent to cells, they are sentenced to "school" and enml'led as students in the vio-- lator's class. This is not a "stunt" on the part of the boulevard police but a permanent routine resulting from a four years' trial of the ex-- periment. That it has been very suc-- cessful is attested by the fact that in 1927 there were only twenty-- seven deaths in that district nad{-' ing from careless driving and in the last three and one--half years only one child has been killed on the way to and from school although about 90,000 cross the boulevard system every day at least four times. The area embraced in the boule-- vard system where traffic is handled by education instead of fear covers fhifty miles of thoroughfares. The mMéthod of procedure is much the| same as exists the country over, so that when the violators come into court they have their tell--tale cards vtH,. wWHQ . wili pFewuide, at the alter-- . Bushnell, Carmi, Fairfield, ~Flora, noon session; W. G. H. Wulf, presi--' Franklin Park, Glencoe, Gréenville, dent Monarch Portland Cement Co.| Harvard Homewood, Highwood, Lib who will act as luncheon chairman; ertyville, Minonk, McLeansboro, T. F. Brown, manager Lehigh Port-- Mendota, Mounds, Oglesby, Paxton, land Cement Co.;. J. H. Lehaney, | Salem, Shelbyville, -- Silvis, Villa Vice President Kansas Portland Ce-; Grove, Rochelle, Morrison, Geneseo, ment Co.; J. G. Mozln. superin-- Princeton, Divernon. . The report tendent Missouri Portland: Cement| will' include data on the use of public Co.; J.°E. Curtis, general superin-- 'water systems, sanitary and plumb-- tendent Consolidated Cement Corp-- ing equipment, _ home -- appliances, oration; C. M. Carman, plant man-- comforts and laborsaving devices, ager, Atlas Portland Cement Co. --| and facilities for communication, omm mm s ;refi)reati;'m ag('l' i:;me-ainus::lnbent. | Good automobile drivers be _ One hund ousand club wom-- caught in :dogl':sce;ee. C;ica:'ou%est, en in Illincisaffiliated with the fed'i Pari . police believe. . Accordingly,| eration, are preparing a well--equip-- after 'struggling with the national Ped homes exposition to be held in i problem of motor accidents and| Chicago, May 14 to 18, in conjunce-- Co. who will preside at the after-- noon session; W. G. H. Wulf, presi-- dent Monarch Portland Cement Co. who will act as luncheon chairman; T. F. Brown, manager Lehigh Port-- land Cement Co.; J. H. Lehaney, Vice President Kansas Portland Ce-- ment Co.; J. G. Mo: , superin-- tendent Missouri Po:fiandv Cement Co.; J.°E. Curtis, general superin-- tendent Consolidated Cement Corp-- oration; C. M. Carman, plant man-- ager, Atlas Portland Cement Co. The special sitfrvey includes Aledo, public agencies in the ILLINOIS _ FEDERATION oF WOMEN S CLUBS® IS A HOME INSTITUTION THAT IS INTERESTED IN THE WEL-- FARE OF MUNDELEIN AND INDIVIDUAL PROSPERIT Y OF EVERY ONE IN THIS COM-- MUNITY. | : wWHEN YOU PATRONIZE THIs BANK -- YOU . ARE ADDING TO YOUR OWN PROSPERITY. -- State Bank of Mundelein The State Bank _of Mundelein * MUNDELEIN, ILLINOIS THE LAKE COUNTY REGISTER, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, 1928 The most stwiking thing about lightning is the fact that is so often strikes out and so seldom hits, that only -- the nine--lived being has a prayer or being honored. If you live in the average city home, with hous-- es of equal height about you, light-- Even if you are walking alonz the street and a bolt from the blue should rip, off the soles of your shoes think nothing of it. 'You'll soon be on your feet again. The fact is this can 'haptgen without physical in-- jury to the one de--shoed. . Perspira-- tion may make you the most unpop-- ular man in a drawing room, but it has the power to defliect lighting. Legislation 'providing for Boulder Dam has been favorably passed upon by the house committee on reclamation and is scheduled to come on the floor of the House for action the latter part of\ March, it has been announced by Congres®-- man Addison T. Smith, chairman of the committee. In 'the temrerate zones of North America the lightning season is on. Do .you niinduit or. how does it strike you? iterally speaking, it can't strike you. Ndn&neha million. . If you: must--get in bed; but never in a bedliam. BOLTS FROM THE BLACK AND BLUE sufficient contracts for the sale of water and hydro--electric power rifhts to guarantee the returh of all money expended on, the dam plus interest. .t Construction of Boulder Dam will provide a site for the develop-- ment of a million horsepower of hydro--electric energy, according to government engineers, tion with their thirty--third <annual convention. Appliances and home eqnirment*w'hich 'their survey shows are lacking in--Illinois homes will be exhibited and demonstrated. x Harry Pfannenstill, Prop. _ MUNDELEIN, ILL. _-- All Kinds of Auto Repair Work Complete Battery Service Competent Mechanies . Welding Day and Night Service Phone 317 THE STAR Garage A bolt might tear off the roof or try to pull a Santa Clause down the chimney, but it would likely then go and bury its nose in the ground. It would encounter the electric house wiring and be carried, impotent, to the ground.. Artificial and natural electricity are sisters under their skin and are very choosey with whom they keep company. seig ning is apt to single you out about once every 1000 years. It might re-- quire 2000 years, so don't become impatient. And the better wired your home is the longér you and your generations will have to, waft. wells in Penns lvani.ii*' entucky, Louisiana, Okla{oma, y€ and Mexico and Russia, y;d --steal ~de "And some daJ dey 'will have all of de Lord's oil: and',; grease, . and dem axles is gonnawget Wot. _ And i Pennsylvani@; Kentucky, den, a, Okla{oma. and , will and Russia, and{steal de| il and grease.". .. ---- 8 W , & * 'fa ; * #. "Our ¥irm wishes to compliment the North Shore Line on the excel-- lent service given us on our car of Maytag Washers which was routed via yout lirke," writes Mr. Wm. G. Maxted, of the Junction Hard-- ware Co., Racine. "In the past we have waited from six to eleven days for of washers to arrive from Newton, la., but the time was cut to two days on your road." 4 When the modern #girl says she rolls 'em, it can be three thinks-- stockin@s, cigarets or dice.--Illinois State Register. dat will be hell, bredren, dat The oemeteriesmfilledm be hell."--Prairie Farmer. 'ple who thought the world *t Illinois electric comnanies had 1 on January 1, 19 get along without them.