CMPLD Local History Collection

Lake County Register (1922), 21 Nov 1928, p. 8

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types and with common interests. Says Ideals Would Survive "For instance, there are the north shore municipalities extending to the west sufficiently far to give to the mewly organized municipality a proper amount of territory and population so ) that the right kind of officials could be chosen and have sufficent taxing power, under proper restriction of the same charter, to govern the ter-- m'nn intention of keeping hek of from political ills," "the many advantages to be gained by change." ®rancis Manierre, chairman of the zoning board of appeals of Lake For-- est, said: "As you go from Evanston north, the hoftie owner predominates. 'The home owner has the 'home town spirit' and wants his town to keep its entity. He is a direct takpayer and mwmmuv As long as home owners Efl,nn-mgoum haveé Wotb. towns. Of tourse, all the towns have a com~,, interest im malntaiAiRg the high moral tene of the north shore and preserving good government. There is a tendency of the towns to take mt-_'r__m'tothe_'ut--undaveloped these municipalities should be taken at the next session of the legislature when greater authority in the' mat-- terdhmmleuttobenkedta the municipalities of TIllinois." Opposed in Small Suburbs Mt:wflnot:tmm or union one municipality was vigorously decried by a number of should surrender their identity until such time as we have enabling acts whereby city charters will provide for a much more effective admin-- istration of municipal affairs. "I also feel that the first step to-- present legal status in Illinois this could be brought about or would be desirable. Nor do I advocate that any of the municipalities affected "I wish to be distinctly understood that I do not believe that under the the people who live therein. "Then, perhaps, there might be another municipality extending west from Chicago and to the proposed mew northern miunicipality, -- and south to such a line as would make i# possible to divide the balance of the county into two other munici-- palities. In other words, four new municipalities to take care of the territory in Cook unty outside of gan at the present time 29,500 peo-- ple and sees 56,000 here by 1950. The consolidation view is shared in = measure by Mayor C. H. Bartlett ef Evanston, who said that, while he had not given serious thought as to a junction of the municipalities so far morth, he had given consideration to the future of municipalities within the boundaries of Cook county. See Business Necessity "I believe that some change in the encted, could perform much more efficiently and economically. "My belief is that one of two de-- velopments must come: Either one large municipality co--extensive with the limits of Cook county, under a charter sufficiently liberal and strong to control the proper governmental pride and booster organizations has existed for a long time and it would be hard to give it up. I would not expect to see a combination in many . years, if ever." Mighland Park Leader Talks Leonard M. Rieser, chairman of the zoning committee of Highland Park: "I have not given the matter any particular thought. Of course, it would be legally impossible, without statutory authority, for the towns in Cook county and Lake county to join in such a combination, and the size and development of Waukegan will probably prevent any combinations to the north of North Chicago. The only towns, therefore, which would be concerned in the matter would be taken for the population of Wauke-- Lake Forest, east of the North West-- ern tracks, would also create a phys-- teal barrier. 'There has been cooper-- ation among the different communi-- ties from time to time on matters of vantage to be gained by consolida-- tion.. It would, of course, involve the loss of individuality to the different common interest, such as track de-- PLAN PUT UP of this possibility is almost excluded. There remains the possibility of her having been assaulted with a sandbag. "If she was assaulted, she might have become insane as the result of the blow. Or she might have gone into a condition called retrograde am-- nesia, a condition in which there is a lapse of memory concernng all things immediately preceding the cause. That is she might have been able to remember clearly events of an hour or two before, but for the short pe-- riod immediately before the cause, ments five or six millimeters thick. In the deep tissues we found no evi-- dence of disease or injury." _ Commenting the case, Dr. Hall, who acted as an alienist in the Leo-- pold--Loeb case a few years ago, de-- scribed this as one of the strangest in his experience. "I've come into contact with a good many murder cases, but this Knaak case seems almost unsolvable If Miss Knaak had knocked her head se-- verely against a surface like that of the furnace she would most probably have suffered a skull fracture. How-- ever, as there was no skull fracture, --on the left side of the brain. This enlargement, which amounts to a kemorrhage, strongly points to a sé« vere trauma, or injury, on the left side of the head. There was no skull fracture, but this injury of the brain is typical of a condition found follow-- ing a sandbag assault. found a marked enlargement of the small blood vessels in the two inner-- Tells of Brain Examination "I took the brain to the pathologi-- cal laboratory of the Rush Medical college, and there we made a careful examination," said the doctor. "We she might have suffered a heavy blow on the head. He explained that with lw!njurytothehnmumldhn been possible for her to have started burning herself. He said 'that under that condition she might have felt no pain On the other hand, he said, she may have felt pain, but had not the control to resist it. He said she might have been assaulted with a NOT SATISFIED WITH JORY VERDICT IN KNAAK DEATH Expressing dissatisfaction with the verdict of the coroner's jury in the investigation into the death of Miss Elfrieda Knaak of Deerfleld, who was found fatally burned in the base-- ment of the police station in Lake Bluff, Dr. James Whitney Hall of Chicage, psychiatrist . and crimin-- ologist, who examined the brain . of the girl has recommended to State's Attorney A. V. Smith that there be no let--up in his probe. community is, it is explained, much like forecasting the weather. "Con-- ditions over which the forecaster has no control," it is pointed out, "are Chicago: "I have never given the seems impossible... Ours is a manu« facturing town; to the south of ys it is residential. There are still con-- Figures on Population . : An indication of the--growth of the towns and villages along the North Bhore is to be found in the figures below. Statistics up to 1920 are those reported by the federal census, 'The population forecast was made wflm. mab an mpo(finmnwmm Meoung.dfi-lndmol the region the purpose 6f co-- ordinating their present and future plans for public and private improve-- . Weekend SpecialBrick . _ SODA SHOP distances between the 515 North Milwaukee Ave. Tel, 448 WATCH FOR OUR j@long this line. . The coroner's jury after listening all day to testim@my found that Miss Knaak came to her death Trom burns which _ were _ self--inflicted. The :authoflmmnexwa-odunbexm 1tromthcouuetthnmooneenbex 'tortured Miss Knaak or sided her in 'bumin(herbodyummeflmol ltne coroner's jury did not cause any 'change whatsoever in the views of the investigators. Detectives have been working on the strange case since October 30 and will be kept on \the job, State's Attorney Smith says. Chicago.--The private telephone switchboard of the local gas com-- pany handled nearly 20,000 call in one day durl'qethe October moving | day rush. The peak was reached | between 9 and 10 o'clock when 14' girls took care of 2,880 calls, or a--| bout 206 calls apiece. Anothorbixl hour came in the afternoon when | th?m l:dthoelnpdgn induecl oug to landlords to draw leases which ex-- pire on dates other thnn(ktober'q lnd'lylhll"llit"""".1 lieve theltnlncn""u;m u,thent'w:"q",m are u{; most POD"aw 2 L c oamams GAs COMPANY PHONE GIRLS WORK OVERTIME FOR MOVING DAY RUSH would make no definite explanation first burned her right foot, then her left, and after that, her arms and head. She said that in' the flames she saw Hitchcock and that she com-- municated with him through spiritual channels. She was questioned continually at the hospital by attending physicians and the authorities and claimed that she had tortured herself by burning teacher in the Presbyterian church in Deeffield, was found around 7 o'clock ago, 1 a ples from local fish-- mmmhtaulm dmmmmmm in some way increased. the lake in that vicinity with 10 million young fish will result in an abun-- dance of sizeable fish for commercial use at the end of three years, Captain ESmith stated. All thk Waukegan fishermen co-- operated"with the state department in its plan and during the past six "I am not at all satisfied with the verdict of the coroner's jury, and I hope that the investigation into the matter there would be only blankness in her spawn to be hatched in state hatch-- eries and the young deposited in Lake Between 12 and 1§.million fish eggs, mosily lake trout, were collected and will result in the hatching of about 10 million young fish The average hatch is about 6§ percent of the num-- ber of eggs procured, Captain Smith Commercial in the Wau-- Several times, however, Elfrieda _ «B8 'with movers. torney Behanna of the firm of Run-- 15 to 30 days l yard & Behanna represents Klass| Mr. Radebari and he says that unless the assets|this movemen are all shown Klass will get but 65)/state game con cents on the dollar. The line throu Reports Approved low that in Hli Final reports were approved in the highway route estates of William H. Maurer, Wau-'s;, Joseph, Mi conda, and Louise Heiken, Zion, and the estates closed. I C Hearing on the petition for pro--, Another que bate of the will in the estate of Vin--| one to answer cenzo Natale, Waukegan, was ~con--|ist who h}u a tinued to Jan. 21. on going is eve Letters of administration in the do with him? JILSON ESTATE "From Sunday night on, I was con-- }kuntunmtpmdomed.'be testified. She was listing more every minute when I put off in a lfeboat and saw my wife and child, unable to break themselves away from the Vestris. At 11 a. m. Monday morn-- ing Captain Carey ordered the pas-- sengers to take to lifeboats, but it was 2. No verbal order was issued for v.hewwwton&hem 3. All life boats were worthy. 4. No life boat drill had been held. 5. The delay in sending out the S. O. 8. caused the loss of life. 6. Officers in command showed in-- decision in the crisis about 2:30 p. m. Monday Fred W. Puppe was one of the best witnesses of the day. He is a slight, quiet spoken engineer, whose wife and . The story will be recounted as Uni-- ted States District Attorney Charles H. Tuttle attempts to learn whether any ~American maritime laws were mn&'mvw wl were unneces-- sarily and whether any officer of the Vestris or of the Lamport and Holt lines should be prosecuted. NEW YORK, Nov. 16. --The sea-- man's view of how and why the 8. S. Vestris went down some 240 miles off Virginia, carrying with it a probable loss of life of 114, will be told today in a United States Commissioner's of-- ( United Press) waASHNGTON:"b."C" nov. 16-- _ The season's newest woolens in the full piece DISPLAY SALE AND TAILORING EXHIBIT (Continued from Page 1) OF TRAGEDY 11 PM A representative from this Nationally known house is with us to dem-- onstrate their wonderful Fall: values in tailored--to--order clothes as advertised in Collier's Weekly and The American Magazine. COME IN WEDNESDAY! DON'T MISS IT! TOTALS $16,500 ED h Illinots have seasons opening from | 15 to 30 days later than in Illinois. | Mr. Radebaugh has been joined in | this movement by Keith McCanse,' state game commissioner for Missouri. | The line through Missouri would fol-- | low that in Illinois, by following U. S. } highway route 36 from Hannibal to| St. Joseph, Missouri. , Another question we'd like some-- one to answer is this--if the motor-- ist who hits a pedestrian and keeps on goiqx is ever caught what do they states whose northern boundries ex-- tend far north of the southern line of "Much dissatisfaction with the| present season has been reported to j men," the state director pointed out," | "and the solution, while obviously not possible to please everyone, seems: to be the most logical. "The unfairness to southern Illinois sportsmen is made more evident trek, reach the northern confines long before they reach the southern counties. the extended: season. __In suggesting the change to Paul G. Reddington, bureau chief of the biological survey, Radebaugh pointed out that it was obviously unfair to govern hunters in the extreme southern part of Illinois by the same regulations as those in force in the extreme northern -- part. Because Illinois is an unusually long _ state, the ducks on their annua southward have an open season starting a month later, omOctober 15 and extending to January §1. A division line is already created-- the line followed by the Wabash rail-- road across the state, extending from Hannibal, Mo., through Jacksonville, Springfield, Decatur and Danville, and thence to the Indiana state line the U. 8. biological survey that the state be divided into southern and tor of conservation, has proposed SPRINGPTELD, Ill., Nov. 17-- Hoping to remedy by law existing climatic and geographical inequali-- ties, Gus H. Radebaugh, state direc-- northern zones for duck hunting pur trix in the estate of Arthur Chris-- topherson, insane, was filed and the Petition for probate of the will in the estate of Benjamin J. Barker, Wauconda, was filed and hearing set for December 6. Whhe®Round Lake: " _ """""* * 'The guardian in the estate of Dor-- othy J, Casebeer, et al, minors, North Chhfi'm authorized to expend money for care of wards. . The administrator in the estate of SEEK HUNTING («@ -- BIG DIS P L A Y In the estate of Frances Houlihan, Whmm was al to expend $7 a week for care of minor son of wartl. The waiver of widow's award was The guardian--in the estate of Jane Sweet, minor, Lake Bluff, was au-- thorized to invest funds. The inventory was approved in the estate of : Maria Senft, 'Waukegan, were issued to Lillian Chapman. The The northern zone would retain the Everything For Men Libertyville, IIl. MORSE & CO. SEASON CHANGE CHICAGO National bank fhamed as HERE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21 with the 16 to 21, 1 lun be casily seen what a large part of the commercilal activities of this vast region, and what a large pro-- 'portion of the time and wages of the workers, is dependent upon +rade !with foreign countries. The stake o! the middle west in foreign trade is ialmndy a very substantial one. As time goes on it will become of great-- 'er significance. ; The middle west foreign trade committee, the Export Managers' club of Chicago and the Illinos Man-- ufacturers' association are interested in all that concerns development of that vast area included in what we know as the middle west and the south central regions; that is to say. the Mississippi and Ohio valley. With the development of our internal wa-- terways program and the impetus During the year 1927, in the 12 states genera'ly known as the mid-- die west. namely. the Dakotas. Ne-- braska, Kansas, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Wisconsin, Illinois, Michi-- gan, Indiana and Ohio, there was produced. in agricultural machinery and implements. automobiles, parts and accessories, wheat, corn, rye and barley and _ flour, packing--house products, rubber tires, and certain other commodities, an export toial valued at more than one billion dol-' lars. This represented nearly 24 per cent of the aggregate of these com-- modities exported by the entire coun-- try--a vely favorable showing. . It Our agricultural mid--vert is grad-- ually becoming industrialized. -- Its chief occupation now, of course. is in producing vast surpluses of {food-- stuffs. But an ever--diversifying out-- put of fabricated goods also comes from its mills and factories, which work with the products of mines. {or-- ests, cattle ranches and dairies and the raw matcrials from manv uther sources. our country which is more ~xpc-- rienced by virtue of its own histery and development, its own struggle with problems of changing agricul-- ture, new highways, newly exploited waterways. etc., than the mid--con-- tinent area. -- conditions. l'orelgnmdehtorthspxemna subject of increasing importance in the progressive industrial and agri-- cultural life of these sections. As Dr. Klein points out, more and more all the nations of the world are becom-- ing dependent--or interdependent-- upon one another for certain com-- modities essential to the maintenance of our modern civilization, commodi-- recovering from losses by war. In the development of such economical-- ly "new" lands, there is no part of ties which, in many cases, can be produced in limited areas only. Be-- cause of this interdependence an in-- tricate network of lines and arteries of trade has been built up to facili-- tate the exchange of the products of one country for those of another. There are new regions to be devel-- vital part of our modern economic system, and in no part of the country is this truth--being more fully and practically worked out than in the Middle West. 'This was pointed out by Dr. Julius Klein, director of the bureau of foreign and domestic com-- merce, in a statement today, stressing the importance 61 the eighth annual middle west foreign trade and ther-- chant marine conference, in Chicago, Nov. 19 and 20, in which that bureau is co--operating with the middle west foreign trade committee, the Export Managers' club of Chicago and the Illinois Manufacturers' association. Foreign trade has become a real, ones to be helped in BILLION excellent C3 Thomas A. Bolger of McHenry county, who met defeat in the race for the legislature, announced Fri-- day that he had about decided to contest the election before the leg-- islature in January. The official City, St. Louis and Louisville will be present at all sessions of the con-- ference and available for co--operat-- ing with business men. _ _At this conference the bureau of Toreign and domestic commerce representatives from its Washington staff and its district offices. A. 8. Hillyer, chief of the division of com-- mercial intelligence: E. T. King, chief of the specialties division, and W .H. Rastall, chief of the machinery division, as well is the managers o1 the bureau's district offices in Chi-- cago, Detroit, Milwaukee, Kansas BOLGER READY ancrease. 'This conference comes at & time when our Latin American trade is to receive a further impetus through the tour of President--elect Hoover to the southern continent. With the development of inland wa-- terways and railways serving -- »ur south Atlantic and gulf ports, as well as the expansion of the ports them--. selves, foreign trade will mean more and more to offr mid--west. 4 AfllarmingPDinefle for Young People new merchant marine legislation (the Jones--White act) the interest of this region in foreign trade, particularly Aemenbememenmeeerermm mm en en ies ,.SELLERS Cellery ------ Lettuce Mixed Nuts W a Thanksgiving Your dining room will be delightfully in-- formal if furnished with this exquisitely designed Sellers Dinette. It is just right for the cory dining room ... And the price will appeal particularly to a young couple just starting. You'll like the colorful, lasting finish and the clever way and ease with which the table extends at a touch. A hidden hinged leaf swings up into place ... And your table is extended from 42 inches to 60 inches. Métal slides prevent sticking or jamming.. 'The handsome Colonial chairs have gluc-- $10 key joints----a special Sellers down feature. They will never be6 come apart. See these In= ;':':.:::.:.f_:;_:-:: triguing Sellers Dinettes ":L'::m now while you can save. Phone 340 EXTENSION PINETTE Extends at a touch ORDER YOUR POULTRY NOW FOR Ray Furniture & Paint Store Open Monday, Friday and Saturday Evenings. Phone 9 Libertyville and be sure of having the best Turkeys ..... Chickens Ducks s ol .. Geese Grapes EARL H. CORLETT FOR RECOUNT Big variety of colors ;og cho% ;rom Libertyville. Bolger went to Boone count i-- day to examine the cl&tlxnrze;hrdd of that county. He doe, ~,; expect to find much of a change .n the vote county, although sav. |; ;s mm may be able to sho . --.).. 'The defeated legislative c.,; found that in a number of p. the total vote for the four cans for the legislature was higher would have been possible if person who voted cast three for legislative candidates. make a contest and am practically sure I will do so," Boiger said. "Thc expense will be quite heavy but my friends have offered to aid me in Loo esmm Cmy * s IZOIAOCEALIC candidate, to have been defeated for third place by Richard J. Ly-- this connection Peter Van Driescke, Evanston:; Nettie Florer, Evanston. Harris Pritchard, Des Plaines Helen Novak, Des Plaines. Edward Dahns, Chicago; Blanche Corbin, Chicago MARRIAGE LICENSES Nick Bentivena,. Waukegan; Rosaline Cusimano, Waukegan. John Pankiewicsz, MHighland Park; Ernest Geibel, Milwaukee; Walnuts BCE We Deliver Democratic by 2,

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