\at the home of won of Chicago on Friday. _ _ _ Miss Ruth Sorenson spent the y apery waae P _ Mr. and ln.' t.l!f:ter km:'r;on _?}E _ W spen week e wi e later's parents, Mr. and Mrs. € Thatcher. _ Russell McBride of Rochelle was § at the home of Mr. and " Ed Dietz on Sunday. iae Bames and a friend from Chicago spent the week eud' 3 her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Char Barnes. > irk Avenue. Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Por ave to Chicago on Friday. s _ and Mrs. H. C. Meyer very clever chalk talk was given Uirs. D. M. Courson of Waukegan. ~guided: the audience in bringing the reasons why women should r into politics Her discussion veory instructive. . A. V. Smith gave a splerdid _ By specific cases he showed re the law before prohibition was h more poorly enforced than it day. He said that there is no & beautifal spot in Iilinois ":han» Lake Region with its 52 lakes the Fox river and thousands of P~ are attracted here. "We have c _ are attracted nere. "We have I pigs today. People think that mething new. Before prohibition Lake Region was a disgrace" Col. Smith "There was ten & more violation in the Lake Re-- before prohibition than there is t/*he stated. He explained why hard to enforce the law. "My ' is that of a prosecutor, not a tive." --"When every citizen and t does his duty. the law will be ced. It is impossible for one to take care of 73,000 people."( the state's attorney. ! nevy,. C,. Arthur Jevne left Mon-- day morning to drive to Peoria to attend the cdninnuon.l Confer~' late: Thuzsds night, 1f he should be 1 Y¥ night. 8 tnfld:l:{hi- absence Mrs. Jev.' ne can him, > e mm Te ns .o *3*:"-* : spen week end wi er sister, Miss Abbie Carr. _ _Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Chandler and Joel Chandler called on Mrs. Julia Chandler of West Chicago, on Sun-- (h'mdtemoon. s | * . Hibbard of Druces Lake is several days with her ughter, Mrs. Frank Bauernsmith.| :u"lu Qscar Pohlman and --two ent, was the evening speaker. ked, "Is there any law en-- 100 per cent?" "There now states where no physicians' Mtion books or any liquor in res is allowed," she stated. 'hristian people of Illinois or ite are responsible for any of-- holding office who should not e." Mrs. Crook explained the Ip" squad in Chickgo consists men, not 150 as the papers ind they do not in any way nder E. C. Yellowley's super-- "The eminent good of pro-- cannot be measured in sta-- said the federal agent. ext conference will be heid a* an. Wednesday, May 9 at MU..C. A. Session opens at ten iylight saving time, and closes im.-- Following is the program nouwy. CO" 2C mousted" Ardicd €BERCE Hulda Mever spent Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Will Mever and vy _ of Fremont. Mr. and Mrs. Meyer had their little son ened, Donald Henry, on Sun-- t end with friends in Evanston. s w-hD- dl'ogft:us ioent S\mk- with r dau ; A rs. Fran Jruba -- of Li jlle. ::ddln. Lom: z agd «ti':o Fremont spent Sun y he home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ch W.C. T. U. conference was _ good numbers on the pro-- --Conference was--held Friday M. E. church. E. May Tibbetts of Lake For-- sided. Mrs. yennie 'Miller of ville was sponsor of this con-- « and _Mrs. Mo¥#ris Chandler .!Ti and Mrs. Frank cs')'a'!fl" r3. . Miller »Ividere. 3. Ralbh Wehrenbers of Lib-- Me spent Monday with her sis-- Mrs. Charles Lehmkuhl. < s. Viola Caldwell is movinzi IEOk into the Luebbe house on entertained at the wm. home on Friday evening. & amt Mrs. Mo¥ris Ch MUNDELEIN Anderson, PROGRAM AT ANTIOCH PHONE 543--J Anderson of Anti-- isses Dorothy and federal prohibi-- was a guest Wm. Peter-- Libertyville Porteous Anderson _ Three Chicago women sustained injuries Sunday afternoon when a machine in which they were rid-- ing was forced into the ditch in Green Bay road, west -- of Lake __Pgut,andtumedoveronitsside. 3 WOMEN HURT IN CAR CRASH ' _ Devotionals, Mrs. N. A. Borop Address, "Prohibition Is Being En-- forced," MrS. Anna M. Crook, prohi-- bition agent. j | 'Loyal Temperance Legicn Mis &i-- display at the Y. M C. 4 C Address, "Translating Resolutions to-- Votes." MrSs IY. M |(nwann winning posters and essays in ade school contest will be on 18, THE LAKE COUNTY REGISTER, WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1928. Department Prof. C. L. Kutil, five years director | of vocational agricultural and &8'81'08-[ sive community worker, was chosen Monday night as president of the An-- | tioch -- Business club. The selection of | Mr. Eutil as chief execptice of the club was made when Robt. C. Abt, four years president of _ the body, announced that he would lrwt'i accep. a fifth term. Under Mr. Abt's, able deadership the Antioch Business | club has grown to be an omnization! ofi influence and usefulness to. the | town as well as to the entire lake re-- | ANTIOCH CLUEB HEAD IS NAMED The return of Ford competition on a grand stale will inevitably be felt by most of the other companies, in-- cluding many which 'sell cars in higher price classes. These developemnts +in the -- Ford plants, are distinctly favorable for the prospects of --general business, but they constitute a most dubio~s omen for the stock market, ~Foru production has bgen running in low since the beginning of this year, with daily outputs of 1,000 to 1500 cars. It has -- now definitely moved up to second gear, with a pro-- duction of 2,000 cars a day at the be-- ginning of April, and good prospects for 3,000 a. day by the end of the month. Moreover, next month. there probably will be a third shift to high speed output with a daily production of 5,000 cars not much later than Memorial Day. 0S ing up of production in the plants ot the.Ford Motor Co. : ¢ Ford Picks Up. provements in industry is the for harbors covering all lines of their {communication. A 5--5 ratio must al-- -'Ways leave the British incomparabiy _superior, as long as they possess the ' When the value of strategically sit-- uited bases is figured. he asserts, the actual power of the American navy is below that of Great Britain and Japan in spite of the 5--5--3 ratio agreed upon at Washington. . s Calls U. S. Program Moderate "A 5--3 ratio would always leave the Japanese--superior in the Far Eas. possessing; as they do. interior lines, a network of naval bases and strategic c'ent in naval bases and strategical-- ly located harbors, like those of other great naval powers, we need this number of units to make our fleet a ~real instrument of national . in-- surance," says Capt. Goss. s "Those of us who are in the navy contend that as long as'we are de-- This is the argument advanced by Capt. N. H. Goss, U. S.N., an out-- w*arding authority on international naval matters, in an article written f'or the May issue of the Review of Reviews. > ant reason -- why the proposed 71--ship program of the navy, providing for 20'light cruisers, 9 destroyer leaders, 5 aircraft carriers and 32 submarines, should be carried through. It also is a point little considered, and even 2vo'ded,. by critics of the naval pro-- gram both here and abroad. NEW --YORK, May --America's lack of naval bases in the Far East Aloutian Islands and other distant possessions, establishment of which was forbidden under the Washington tri--power treaty, is the most import-- t tied lwm elapse between the Washingtor conferencte and the time it is pro-- pos.d to complete our program." Answering the argument that the proposed group of 253 to 10,000--to cruisers would give the United States far greater: actual strength than Great Britain, although the. latter possessed numérical superiority, his Review of Reviews article says' "A: nation that does not possess naval bases, strategically located in war areas and on trade routes,. cannot have naval equality with a> nation that does have them, even though the } "If. now our proposed prozram; seems large to some, it can. at least be seen that it would be: moderate, | even in ~comparison ~with buildins programs of other natiens, had st been spread over the 14 years tha: | navai stations and well located har-,nntown the largest cruisers permit-- bors scattered about 'the --world that ; ted. This appiies even where ue .. | they do--at present," W f 'tlon possessing bases owns only Capt. Goss further poi s out that.|smaller cruisers." | menmmsqmmm;m:be-'. | Armmemminmnizmmmmemmmem~ + | shhi?d the_otlimerlatwo nations in nava!l ELECTRICANA | snips actually laid down _@Appropri-- ie Gdigce | ated for since the w-'dfidbuu con, ~ A "Pig Latin" or synthetic langu-- ference. "The totals for fighting shins age for inter--continental radio has of all kinds," he says, "are: United|been devised to assure secrecy of States 13, Great Britain 41. and Jap 4 voice ncgmmunication across the oce-- | an 99. ; 36e uns . o i dmae men mous ult .. 4n . i w wa o1 naval stations and © Harry Pfannenstill, Prop. MUNDELEIN, HAL. --. All Kinds of Auto Repuxq ~ Complete Battery Servic ---- Competent Mechanies » Welding > Day and*Night Service THE STAR -- _ Garage Phone veen devised to assure secrecy of voice communication across the oce-- an. Demonstrations before Federal officials and scientists in Wl%- ton revealed that the process is * er one of ingenious mechanics than of glib tongues. ~An electric "trans-- THOROUGHLY MODERN--NEWLY NISHED. -- -- R. E. SMITH, PROP. . MUNDELEIN -- I1LLINO1IS Grandview Hotel WE CATER TO DINNER PARTIES Rates: $1.00--and $1.50 per day Board and room by week $11.00 Sm ' |ing v '_or synthetic langu-- ence i ntinental radio has to be _ assure secrecy of in per tion across the oce-- |ences. ions before Federal: entists in Washing-- Home Cooking the alphaDet in a diee box and shak-- | ing well before using. The differ. ence is that when the dice are remily | their r | the alp! to be cast they come tumbling out in perfect order of words and semt-- 'ences. § to keep so buny'e-nhg' *'h_t-;"'. won't have time to spend it quencies employed and sets them into proper sequenee or order upon lthng' brain" the intention-- ally intferminglog kigh and Tow ie One sequenge or order ion. It is Hke flrox; way to save