CMPLD Local History Collection

Lake County Register (1922), 25 Apr 1928, p. 6

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' l Iillllf 1 tt IE - HEALTH BAY -t%tttmtoreoereettrinsttetstuts", atttert-tthtttmttSenttamineiudim: -rtttrttteertttiemten. 'ttetttmrtttmtnoeetttnnL000ttre- "hetqteehttttrenqrereeatnmtrted, lama"!!! muons 'etrraattmtth.trAttttttle.Mardt" -tatIt-tt-htgttteettMenee Mt-ttttpe-ttOtter. "Wttntmnrtroemttavesttuto -."mpctt1teneqtntintmriPs ".beietste_Ctt_t1tteltttdtq11trttte Mtteltgtterttmumtttipttttterttt sum momma". . 3' Mt-ri-dt-tttester/to a8tdhaNqtntteteqrttmgtttnettteentm- Ihnp-aet-ta.tottefoittnntt ear-ttttrd-ttttmane' Intelli- -nrtddt-drtemtsteetee. The -ttufCttiMBtnltttdttritrttope." no some peopleawaHIeisasort of J,trg'tu'ife, me, served invariably . butter and maple !rrmp,.ard...rt.ereratnnrmeaiimt hug!" Whiehmeamithntsome P_eetgrUhimmrvertteeninitiatedifitG fdgfpgt,','.2,tta',5e2,,z,oj.ie,i-" turthyr tett,tht',,'g,1rt' Wadi." thtrrriv- "t.,yttufth-trusmitr: A "humanism". attach ttttlt"'"'""'"'"'") Por-ttnet-is-tated mm" Andaman inItiitrothermlesthruttiiiit" l! a Wat nttmetion-exeelunt.. Jgtht.tyghytargutiitG'iir. An ---e -- - -. W-" m'. n all. has in the homes of such ttttlt"'"'""'"'"'") For a walk inn is tumble at mm" Andaman tp'rgtatttegttee,teii ' 1omqkfttgtuttraetion-Uareehai] a" tb.y.rgh that role is Men. In t%riiiit;a'rl,,chu"d'S',ur'd' me-tttBoer-Matt-tts qsetttsetmttrr--uttroeemnnttstertresr tt-etttttrmtMa31inottoersaneeot "may. ©ttrrit-gtttetotrJrt_otstteAPt -drentrtttterttnmttm-simerut- Beautiful things-a and celebrated my: aftignes are closely allied. on it is not altogether 'tmltrtxt. to find the Rounwald col- km M, glass associated with the RARE GLASS SHOWN AT ART INSTITUTE an: of ttfe'" most prominent $211090- pic "(We poet)! - 'Mitts Mummould Be dealt with Jmtnt ttttbttme.when therm- tgt-ugtttenrettetntrintd.ttseettuu tBrnenttthetrtottenetrieeted. 'gtnttattesareettedtoattowtttePt tmttoecttudBetuttt days last year M on the but: of these We; vat mum on my 1.19")? have" to have In important m tn Improving the trenerdDtteaitr -tdtttttmintheUntted States. My. Jean Wis Voltaire, the ride a! King; Innis}! huge, was a - of envy in the Prussian dart and Frederick the,Great fair- It pleaded with this brilliant and and: wit to make his residence in Berlin. In 1750 after t temporary sojourn in a Paris prison for inop- 'Peet-te freedom of speech, Voltaire accepted the Prussian invitation. I!" his arrival he was showered with Varied gifts from the King. As dale atthnt time was consider- ed elegant, rare and costly, doubt- less among the many offerings for the new MM. were a set of table pieces. In ti: Rosenwsld col- Iectionatthe A Institute is a iatiiiun"tgttiiet'sBuiot Rummy met-tBttorer,eitestttesueeem o: 'ro,omepeopieswatne i tsf 'tggtutet, one, naughty . butter and !rrmp-dltryrratnnrr, "that. Whiehmemth 'attAtetff..A.e1ryr1rr an "ttvtttesAn the United Stair atmtMr-h'taptannedirtHawah [an "In reports manta. MArtthefoBmrineuttswerrtyt otmitttsttedinetttesandstatetro'me Set, alnio - the hstroaetunGtGatrj' fi ter 1't,hQ'i','httitt1'gLf,t,t " e, 'lil/Ill?' byword into. the and! 't,'tl'lgglrtg wine" giai, (tttyt" trliryirieat y is! Mound with a drinking scene of rollicking with), which is supposed to be put of the Mons of Voltaire during his p10 tears) residence at dhttraetihtttittettonrtiGsenu. 1taei-forafmrorthemorenr. intttegitk when of the vane minnow. Some ofthcm are a? In. Phyllis K. manning t, one Mica Departiiien Pat"'"' For Eleetrieat Develop- no My of the dessert varie , 1t'.'l'f%hSu't"','fdl,,'g2e,,'g famumet. Almaty: "edettei-rr,eatsirrmade, w bid'-asteketrie "Menu: at $uhtMeextrtstttxnensmnrtettlirtary - ' tgt-d-d wane Recipe " i 3 imbued ht' the "a "no dew very F.metryrey*-etjrft'.rortet- count. watrubattterismotrteaaity tuntit-srqrryhxretrritehtr. waqu ttatter_hamtstttemn4e I. u: dune: W); shady: SIT-.1 i7hhii" ion shortening the better the ,mtnr-artthin limits 9: INTRODUCING THE WAFHE FAMILY Debate. tn a sumac Inven- r!. {and that more than 16,00t, In: had been given protective Stntitrttea given show "ttvitiet an h eiidrt of Wm: the Gait. "iiieGirCiii iEr-ritiiiemtor " ' in toCttl 3110 It 4 teaspoons bean; powder . % teaspoon salt 1% cup milk a 2 ,e,'gh 6 "N33001:: me shortening Mix sift together the dry in- gredients. Add the milk. to the egg yolks, and combine with dry ingre- dients. Add melted shoveling and fold in beaten as: whites. e: with ample, sugar, maple gimp or hpxgey, fly if you peter a tartitr have-you. order that it my not lose its leaven- in: math- "iiGiiGriiit on; sort" of creamed com- binatioev--ehieken, ham, eggs, mush- rooms, salmon, tuna itah or what- % cup sausage meat Sift together the dry ingredients, Add the milk to the egg yolks and contniue with the dry ingredients. Add the melted shortening and the "usage meat. Fold in t e beaten egg urging, and bake. Serve with ere chicken or mushrooms. Corn BrentWollu 1% fl"ll coal: meal cu our 4 teaspoons asking powder 2 toblespoons sugar 1% cups milk 2 cash 4 Sfgtttlt tr ortening Mix and t the dry ingredients. Bai-ttire-antidote-milk.. Combine with dry ingredients and add melted qhortenirt. Bake. Serve for Mat with the well known iAmmnndetrtmorhamartdetrtrm %' cup milk 1 teaspoon salt Mix and sift the dry ingredients. Add milk he tr yolks and combine- with dry Ltiaut Melt the choco- late with the shortening and add. Add the ground nuts and vanilla and lagtly fold in the ttimr. petite" egg whites. Serve plain, with but- ter and powdered sugar, or with sweetened whipped cream. Walle Sharlcake 2 cups tlout _ 2 tablespoons sugar 4 teaspoons tttfit""" % teaspoon t v 1 cup milk . 6 tablespoons melted ',t,"t',tt Sift the dry ingredients toge .r and combine with the milk and melt- ed butter. Mix well and bake. Serve with butter and crushed fruit topped with whipgd cream. _ . . usage _Wune. 2 cups flour " 4 teaspoons bakin M'""" 2 tch'i'ei,l'i",'i',t,t. I', . 0 mug 1 cup milk Be undeceived tr, a sudden snow fall or a 11:3,: ast from Green- land or the uts. Spring has comet The Salvation Army has clos- ed its free over-night lodging houses beam of s dearth of guests. The masculine floating population --the harvest bind, the road buildér, the ditch digger, et al-that froek into the city when winter shuts down on their gas. last winter Med the Amy's orth Side lodging home, Acne, two hundred strong gteavy, We Fencm Around School Yardg Saves Many From . - 'Haro.. The blame tor the increasing, number of child killlnxe due to, tuttomotpilea. the ertlcle continua, enact be pleced entirely upon the; ehouldere of automobile duvets. A child. needles of naming tmt' my. may duh Into the nth and under the wheeh " even the moat carefully drlven car. The ohm} remedy for each condltlonn I: not! to heap (teeter reetrtctlone upon' driven. but to remove. Inlet" u we". the likelihood of the ehlld'e act of needle-hen. That this is A really serious prob- lem ls Indicated Jry Btttthtgtttet, quot- od tn a. report of the National Automobile Chamber Pt Commerce. than: that nearly 3 million child- ren of schobl age have been killed or Injured on the roads and streets by automobiles during the put eight you: " in an!" podblc to eliminate much hr the danger by protecting the play Iota. A play ground In no more than u vacant lot until It a fenced, " is stated. . "Fencing the ochool rard and myground". the article states. "will so a long was toward reduc- Ing the number of :ccldenu to children. I . "In spite of laws and warning signs. curs speed 'by school houses " n velocity greater than the aw. ernge speed of locomotives pass- Ing elty termlnnl statlone Insofar as killing potentlellty is concerned. tt In debatable whether or not the automobile In not on dangerous as the locomotive. Whatever care may lack tn use they cemlnly nuke up in numben. sumac! prove that far more chlldren m kllled or Injured by ttutomottWeq than ere killed or injured by lo. comotlve; ' CHILD playing on the (age of an untenced hool ground near . street or highvny is m f/ ' no le- dormer thou " though he romped over the platform of a railway terminal. according to an article In the School Board Journal. It is pointed out that the an- road right-of-wty In fenced. and while It In Impo-lble to fence roads and and: tn this manner. A face. in his opinion. would "comm this. "School bank." he continual. "inn the no. problem to solve which has need every large unn- 2 cups sifted flottr teaspoons baking powder % teaspoon salt . % cup sugar li cup ground nuts squares melted chocolate :i'ivrilri:iiNirthe, Chi-Id from T Vaca nt 1,,ttt: l Playground S % 9n.» GdrtfTing 2eutt.sfJyar Nut Walks MlllrtuiBliill i Illf FIRST WIFE ST. LOUIS. Mo., April 'B-Contrary .0 Charley Birger's woman. the body of the notorious southern Illinois gangster. who was hanged " Benton. 111., yesterday mange tannin} the tion at the Franklin county. Jail, he was asked by a deputrstteild when he wished to be buried. and replied "In a Catholic cemetery; that's the last place the devil would look to and mt 100 persons gathered at the Ch Shel Emeth cemetery when the body was buried. Although a rabbi accompanied Bitter to the "1. lows, none was in attendance at the ttmu rites. Hebrew prayers were read by relatives. ' After the hanging. however. the Body was embelmed at Benton and bromht here by motor hearse. which was given right of way by the Illinois highway police. The body was claimed by Mrs. E. Aarons-Portland. Ore., his ttmt wife, and by Mrs. Ray Shaman. his sister. St. Louis. Birger was hanged in the presence of 500 witnesses for the murder ot Mayor Joe Adams ot/west City, Ill. Before dying. Birger spoke from the gallows forgiving all. He apparently had completely repented for the no- torions career which spread terror through the southern half of Illinom "No," returned the veteran of the boards. "Several times after the first act I'vsthought of going round to the front to see what it was all about, but somehow I've never quite got there." i _ t The Waukegan Baseball Club held a dance at the Woodman Hell, Tues- day night, with: hundred couples ,in attendee, . 7 - - friend on "What? it about? F f'Don't know.". _ "For heaven's sake," exclaimed the friend, "surely. you've seen the thigg, you're in _on_ it." - J He was a veteran actor, with 3:11 extremely 4iiterent outlook on life, appearing in a very good show bui! in a minor part, ( A fHyr's the playgoin'g?" asked al the Mrs. Julius Bratzke mid little sons have recovered from the "ilu". _ Mrs. George Winter is eontitied to her bed with blood-poisoning and in- Jlaenga. _ F Mrs. W. W. Arpleyard was the guest of Chicago iiends Tuesday. Donald and' Allen Smith have been victims _or"ftu'_'. this, weeks" - Mr. and Mrs Walter Giulaff and daughter Eleanor were Chicago vis- itors Wednesday 3 Little Edward Ittg has been ill with a severe cold is- part week. , Mr. and Mrs. P. 'G. Smith have recovered from their recent illness, Robert Stedman. has heir: serious- ly .ill wit)! pleural pneumonia, but is Impronng. . Mr. and In. M. s. Johnson mot- ored to;_(_3hi_cngo Sunday. A - - _ During the gtuitr-tord's tumm- in. Ws E. 2ortiy" HRH ,tith ittitu.. A playground in nothing but 1 meant tot until u to fenced, he points out. Children Ito not diaerv entlate between .ochool property ma the surrounding neighborhood unleoa there In some burner. With»- out a fence the .plnyxround extends into the street and into neighbor- ing territory. _ Added protection to children while at play upon school premis- ea In another good reason for build- Ing fence: around schools. the u- ncle continues:, T ufucturer tn the country. A large body of human, beings mutt Cont negate about rtt"rtsettoot or factor! In the morning, at noon. and at night. These hours. trattle mun- ties prove, we the rush hours of the day. More autii'mobiteo nect- dents. to adults and children occur " these hours than at any other hour of the dar.". _ "An automobile _ with broken which failed to work ran into A school yard where 300 children played. A policeman probably and severe] live. by shouting to the children. The driver menu! into the ma before " ear atop- Ped, Then he was mated tor reckless driving., Todd, he in, no doubt. very. very mum that he isn't chewed . with mnnatautrttur. "The unavoidable aectdent angle must be taken Auto consideration which n repent editorial from o current newspaper will nerve to u- lustnte. an or It: children mm and other- ertptttmt beam the bra.- on on automobile mm to work. "Mini from "other inch. this conduct: my one be ruch- M: If there Ind been I atottt (not between the huhny end a. school, the onward nub of the on would have been checked." . nukeo would be reading that TOTALLY INDIFFERENT Jewish - culinary. cttesed, Shel meetinf Kim. - flit, 'm told," __- .2). GURNEE ," drawled THE LAKE Slfillltt Margy} 1h.0il1NiiCphrN'RIL 2f, 1928 Fem. Her mother Mrs. hens, of ", Naperville, is with her. . Miss mick attended a con- cert " (a Matt in Chicago Wedneidgy night. The concert was trjtett lgy 919'me Field Musical age; the Borden Collection of etch- ings by Millet; the Deering Collec- tion of drawings by tie most famous artists of all time; the Mosle Col- lection of Japanese Prints, recently installed in two large galleries; the Rosenwald Collection of rare glass _ now Exhibited in America ofor the first time; the Public School Art Society Collections of reproductions from famous paintings; the annual 'exhibition of splendid photographs by the Chicago Camera" Club. These are some of. the temporary exhibi- tions which the visitor may now see at the Art Institute. One hundred tend dive other galleries contain the (permanent collections. The Freshman clue of the high school will present the play "Am I Intruding" on Friday night, April 27. The play is under the direction' of Miss Bernice Marshall, class sponsor. _ The Warren Cemetea Association: met at the Woodman all, Wednes- day. Hostess were Alice Bracher, Nellie Sneesby, Ellen Limb, Ruby. Faulkner. . . anhof'which her brother is a mem- r. . The wealth of art, U, be found in the current exhibitions now on view in the "galleries of the Art Institute, has never been so great as it is w day. There is the important Inter- national Water Color Exhibition, showing the work of the greatest aduarellists of England, France, Germany, Spain, Sweden Russian, Poland, Hungary and the United States; the exhibition of modern European Sculpture;' Portrait Draw- ings by William Rot1teptstein, of one hundred and fifty grgminent person- These locomotives' are found to have advantages over the light, steam locomotives, for smtching of l the character involved m this dia-l trict, as they have a greater pick-up and tglare power at low speed requir-) ed f switching, and may be operat- ed 24 hours of the _day, where- as the steam locomotives must be taken to a roundhousefor cleaning. say North Western officials. No ob- jectionable amount." smoke, com- putatively little noise, no need for staking, increase of study power, and twenty-four hour semce, make the oil-eUetrie engines a .superior equipment for' operation in dense areas, and a big songs in fuel costs over the stem engine .make them economical fir the railroad, say] Mr. E. B. Hall General Superintenii.. NORTHWESTERN MAY USE OIL-ELECTRICS ent of Motive Power. mm L. Allen at the thl and neonatal: Won at America In 1410.!" and. In the American City loath" also We! that ochpol and phi (round- be fenced. "Deanna" and qttutrgrtatq ptnq EM" The oil-electrics. were designed only Htt: years ago by the Joint ettorta , three big companies. The 'tmetettt locomotive being used for cinching burn a fuel oil in a modi- fhratiogt of the huge Piesel, marine E hay the an added protect- - at Mound or ochool prop- "0! board: have found " [mt (but told nine In fenced phy- mndn. Mr. Allen point. out: 1. They reduce the we»: oil We" equlpwd and tended phy- grounds. pumound expert men. would. (In the child who would "hm be romplnzpcrolu urea:- or pinyin: In gutter-g pine to and that Ind hour of pg! god at the do. time-loop [simian]: out of the n! ot'rulh hour mam. _ "can teach: ma .gqulpplnc TM result. he points At, in n tmftte jumble which" mono! avoid with: in neciltenrp. . V was The slot ma/kink will titherthan human of it) is its ability to take the exact are. or will makeidetect the spurious coin and spit it change if the tnv'eler inserts a aix-'cut. This is done with the help of pence or a shilling. There is only electricity which tests the coin for one money slot. najnattegwhu the eondurtivity. denomimstimtaoft,,ttte 'coin.or coins ---------------' thtrtuue dropped. rto it, The only thing we envy abeys.t I Still mokitriti)t of it (or more "3 in! code ot motor-vehicle It" In "an m In the union. Third. sanctum: In and, and accident moon will be Incor- poruad Into "been. public and [mm Fourth. . compnhenuvc Pro- gram of W! "deaths and the elimination ot (nae cm will b. urn-Ion 'out throughout the union. elimination" and. m will! "no. an other device. not be can" ,out throughout animus» u-e being adopted all over Mon. idle esosmtrrtnotattempt toro- Chief. of police in uncu- emo- duct tho climbing madden! nu throughout the apnea Bah- -re;duc to ntttomobMea,'for with the "routing the adoption of the all- §crowdlu of the human, munic- Iuel body an I m at "(Sunni-how that more than 25.000 per- mits-le- Ind deaths due to Mei-on- are killed and nearly 000,000 era-la. . ,tnhlred every year fn Name to- M"! emulation- um uum- ictdonu Minty. I It's getting so that' in" of pr- ----------"--- can thinking their ehihheq not! a The only thing 45-9 tetvy gbout I ' charm the children that the pur- tramp is his don't care disposition. Gia should have t on" rto Myideaofaltaekyetrttt-e tit "9th has dytqtMtiin while hir de in otlissoetagtrietredurtimtdiet. line chum nu ma mm- to re- am the too My minus. wooden (one. or wooden out and iron up. can! on all -- ttgnttagMrmqgt" or a an; curves. MM - mun: autom- tte plea And Menal systems a

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