CMPLD Local History Collection

Lake County Register (1922), 27 Sep 1922, p. 7

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'm"!-m. 2%.--Prohibition Dounnlesioner Huynes will seek an ap qropriation of $9,125,000 for the en Apotcement of the federal dry laws dur-- 'Jng the next fiscal year, 1924. 'This wum is approximautely the same as that muthorized by congress for dry law en fercement during the current fscal Becks Appropriation of $9,125,000 for Enforcement of Prohibition Dur-- 'Jng Fiscal Yeat. 1824 FOR BIGGER DRY NAVY Am 12 miles from shore, Tallahassee, Fla., Sept. 26. --Judge J. R. Johnson of St. Lucie county .court, who ruled that state authorities could make no arrests in prohibition cases unless the liquor involved had been determined by anaiysis to be intoxicating, has beén removed from Mr. Haynes. was dec.ured to take the view that while a larger sum could be utilized. the equlvatent of the amount now being expended would en-- uble. the prohibition unit to carry on all the activities now in force. The "dry" mavy is to be expanded to en able federal agents to take advantage of the provisions of the tariff act of Haynes Warnts Larger Fleet to Enforce New Law. .' 1922, permitting search of vessels with-- Waushington, Sept, 16. --Employment penditions lImproved materialy in 30 wut of 42 important industries of the Acountry during the month of August, Rompared with July, the Department of Labor announced. The largest increase Ju empleyment appeared in the stamped wure and fertilizer industries ~and printing, the report said. Decreased employment sccurred in those indus tries manufacturing tobacco products and meu's clothing and in car build-- ing and repair shops. Thirty--three of the 42 industries canvassed indicated .mhthmr-lwolmu pay rolls for montb, while nine office by Governor --Hardee. The re-- than 1,500 county residents had signed » petition asking the remova!l of both the judge and County Prosecutor Car-- penter because of alleged laxity in law Cincinnati, Sept. . --Clarence A. Wortbam . of Danville, 1IL. widety kmown showman and owner of nine cireuses, died at a Cincinaat] bo«pital, fullowing. an attuck of appendicitis, He was torty yeurs old. Funeral #serv-- teps will be held at Danville Wednes Thirty important industries in United States Report increases in Employment. Clarence A. Wortham of Danvilie, ii1., (Maregsice A. Wortham started his busivess life as a newsboy at Paris, Tex. Wortham's sons are in a mill-- tary acadéemy at Chlengo.) industries registered decreases. OWNER OF 9 CIRCUSESs pigs May 100. No.: 1 heavy clover 'mixed. $11.00@ 16.00, No. 1 clover, w. mypde anid thrashed :z'- .tz. Oxim-- homa, a and Dakotas prairie, $18.000178.00; .1Nincis.. Wirconsin and Towa feeding pratric. $19.0@1100 FLOUNK--Hard «pring whagt--Ehort po+-- ent, l'.l;_&:: cent, s'&. Sofi winter wheat patent, '$.80G5 » . 8 per «qnt. $55G6.@. Hurd winter wheat on ffe ow 'I."'mv.":l'o.: ts P-- t® 4. 50. medtum, 6 1594%. dark, ©.561% HAY--No. 1 timothy , ©301.0000721 oo No. 1 light clover &C'h' No & timothy, w& No. % timothy and sample, $12 ; No. 1 dlover mixed. WA0GI10. No. % clover micod. $12506 100. No 1 heavy clover 'mixed. $11.00@ 008. Tipa © dre Arsta, B@Ne; ordiatry : lota, 1@BRc 9 cases, G #e rolum, . 11 . € 19@190; ref-- sows, BWAAA canners $000100, cot temn, $.90@* %. bologna buils, $1.50@1.% LABOR CONDITIQONS BETTER .Mm 8# score. By the Go¥e:nor: -- 'tho'wuatry were not treasured. at |of rest after the trawbles and wor r;mw--"om Lowis L. Emmerson, l-l!hrtlnnmmm« stuck up| ries of the voyas~ had been passe Address ail communieations to l m.'-;a«& . ngre: Secretary of State. on lamp posts and other publMecl and seemed to be th@ best little city '.&Mhmm' mm;m@mnm Sirenetiteiitnrge-- ---- e . Prices to retail trade > o 'I1 Give Him Enough Tobk He: Prints, tie. EDGEGATE: _ He Won't Have to Steal Any More Time--the Squirell G ough 14 $11.000 SHF* to THEEMARKETs Chicago, Sept. 1922. Opet-- _ High us: Clos-- ch~~ -- immbe, $2.400 aareasatinen arl $ * velmw: 1.08% ad ¥% 14 . Gov. Len Smal: has isued a pro¢-- lamation 'setting aside October 9 as Fire Prevention Day and asks that all residents of Hlinois co--op-- erate in recucing the losses due to fire. He points out that the fire losses cre « heavy drain on the re-- sources and prosperity of the state and nation and asks that the prop-- er steps be taken to eliminate much danyer. He urges also that the week of October 2 to 9 be observed As Fire Prevertion Week. 'The prociamation follows: By the Governur of Hlinois, To the People of I!linois, Greet-- 'fln losses in the United States ure continuivg at the rate of a half billion doll=s a year. Those of our state are ==nin, at twenty million dolars a your. > ngainst fire, and adequate exit fa-- rilities in case of fire, be provided. That a careful examination of fire ordinances be made by local officials «nd any defciencies remedied. _1 urge every mayor to issue an appropriate local prociamation. 1 suggest that pastors may render Imlmtty'dpit appeals either on Sunday, October 1, or 'Sundny.ms,brtbem cf fire prevention. * The great majority of, 'fl are | preventable through the o'u*l of erdinary carefulness. M;,lo-i operation by our citizens along this line would materially® reduce this | wreat waste of life and pfiy Therefore appealing for co-- operation ty our citizenship, I| hereby proclaim Monday, the ninth | day of Octoser, 1922, as Fire Pre-- vention Day. S l That all nremises be carefully ex-- «mined and fire hazards removed. Especially should there be'a thor-- ough cleaning up and disposal of sn besting: eqtiiaentsrihmeetion of defective electrical wiring and elimination of inflamable conditions generally. :lb.t \r_fll -hm be made of tions »chools, churches, theaters, public sA private hospitals and institu-- Educational evercises should be held in the schools to instruct the pupils in jfhe elimination of fire hazards. Fire d:ills should be held in «chools, facrories ana stores. They rhould be continued, =ystematically during the year Public meetings shcu'd be held where possible to stimulate interest in fire prevention. I also urge that the week of Oc-- tober 2 to 5 be set aside as Fire Prevention Week and suggest acti-- viti¢s along these lines: * Conservation of life and property fw' ds a patriotic duty. There #@ be . generous co--operation from citisers individually and or-- ganized co--opera'ton Irom Chambers of Commenrce and all other civic bod-- ies. The press is earnestly urged to give the influence of its active support. = In witness whereof, 1 have here-- unto set my hand and caused the Great Seal rf the State of Ilincis to be affixed Done at the City of Springfield, this twelfth day of September, in the year of our Lord, one thousand vine hundred and twenty--two, and of the State of T'linois the one hun-- Ired and third. , hotels, stores and factories, LEN SMAL! "What Europe. needs is A m e rica n enmrflao and American energy to 'wake it ut of its dying state. . Amer-- ica could help Europe, and the countries there look to this nation for aid." Thus Dr. and Mrs. M. J. Kaye, 656 --McAlis-- | ter avenue, who just reéturned 'from a four months trip to IEumpv where they visited ev-- ,ery country of importance, ex-- plained the situatioh as they tfourd it first hand. They left from New York on June. J7, on the liner Ma-- jestic with a party of friends from Chicago. The party separated when it landed on the other sige each group going to the *part they preferred to visit, It wa$ just four montns later, on Sept. 17 that they landed back in New York aboar\ the Celtic. "The countries of ceptral Europ» «re devastated and most-- of th> large cities are dying for want of business and _ financial~ backing," Dr. Kaye said. "Warsaw, which bore the brunt of the fighting in Dr. Kaye said, "The languishing business and dying cities of the mhan.dmmlrnc enterprise to put life into + The cities which were formerly beauty spots in the world are no longer worthy of the praise which was once given them. The money rate there is unbelievably low, with America~ dellar reignirg supreme. The dol-- lar is the password *o any country in Europe and will buy things that the Kronen could not approach, Mrs. Kaye, for instance, bought : a handbag and paid the round sum of one million kromen for it. This was bought behind closed. shutters --for Had No Trouble Dr. and Mrs. Kay# s#aw many of the ravazed cities, most of them in the process of reconstruction . al-- though the work needs to be speei-- e up. They dii not have muc» saw many Irish preparing to leave for this country as :t offered' a ré-- fuge from the troubles in their own the storekeepers were-- so afraid 0' cutbreaks and riots among the dis-- satisfind populace that they lockeéd their windows with shutters when t vuble on their trip as they avoid-- ed the dangerous districts. There was a great deal of unrest in the central European countries but un-- like the Frahers who went to Ire-- land, they did not have any exper-- iences with holdups or bands o% soldiers. The party left the Balkan countries too soon to get caught in the Turkish outbreak, but heard the rumblings of the coming eonflict in the general uneasiness and unrest «{ the people. They did not travel to Ireland as the British government . warned tourists not to attempt a journey into the troublesome land of <the Free Staters und the Republicans. At . Queenstown, Ireland, the party _ Millionaires Plentiful "Everyone can be a millionaire there.-- Mrs. Kaye passed out a pile of paper morey to some beg#ar; who were asking alms and when ghe uPgured the amount it turned out to be about two or three cents in Ametican cash." _ > Dr. and Mrs. Kayt lef' Vieana@ be-- fore'the government oriered: the tourists out, The people of Ahe country did not like tho Americans fot they only served to emphasize the poverty by showing a lot of monty. Berlin was a fine city, with everyone working busily, he -- said. They noted that the crown m of the éountry were not trea at all for there were some stuck up on lamp posts and other public from ; The + While F him to appear {cth'ers of & attempted to L{r;tl:v his nple--without success. | gociety was quite |cont.ent with MF. Parry' proof that | perpendicular 'Q"'wnta] and put |of further @xpe¥imental prome-- nades. Mr. Party returned to his 'beat a bit dizzy @#d incohberent. He stood his gh € His courage gou Though not up | Ris jolly He bravely *'" 1or minds what comes--. " \'. t Unbroken * woes, Heo's sticking by biooming guns And W"hi& foes. ; In Zion, Mpf world is fiat and the sun @48 moon hang from chandeliers in ~ groat -- celestial dome, mvity"' in-- as effective as it was when fnvented by Isaac Newton, and eer Wilbur Glenn Voliva has o 1 -- geodetic commission to «diggéove. why . this should be. %F No one was gurprHise| to--day when Policeman Isgag Parry siarted to walk up the side of the Zion co--op-- erative -- mercantile _ e--ablishments' building. None Of ti~ city ordin-- ances forbid : one fron walking up the side of a RO@USge, nroviding he o5 l & does it in a de&@ROUs («shion. could not get close to the bar for a day because of the rush. There was no change for anvone who was not on the spot when >« three mile lim-- it was mtn ret.a drink. The was & _ wonderfu) N&MDI'.'KI)'Q said, It was built by Kaiser (or his personal use to be hiw emperia| <hip when he had conquered the wor'd. The rooms are the most beavif@l of any shin !afio't having wokse of art and | paintinigs by the »o# Artists in the | world." The crew «as not organize] | very *bwo\" for it had be» |taken from the O' T: and did nor {l'vlv' the loyalts ond spirit for the Majestic they >~' for their rez-- lular «bip. | _ The best part ( the trip, they He was a # sive cope A fellow 5 uck , And if neaf N§ger he should Right there is % he stuck. does it in a deCOFOU® '«<hion. 1. Policeman P'l'i[,"'h' prompted to 3; the experiment by no --pirit of vain--| glory. He stopped beside the bund-l' ing and put his. up against it :' to tie his shog,. When he attempt-- ed to take it . he discoveredl' that he had obtaimed a firm foot-i' hold 'and with W@Bturcsome origin-- |, ality he put up the other foot. He|! walked three full gtep: in full view .. of the Zion GeORRAPhic society, .nd[' Mr. Voliva's 'fivlw'nt, before he stepped throu@gN & winJow, lost hi: balance and fell, ~ ||' "It's my Q% declared . to Overseer Voliva: "Bomething seen--s At Coblenz iFe the American army of a is stationed there was the t demonstra-- tion for the The Americans are bécoming ted to the German way of living and can speak German fluently,, Normandy Pretty Spot Normandy was most beautiful spot in their tra oqutside of good old . Waukegan. . thrift -- and flowers could be noted on every side. Italy impressed them by its poverty and lack 'of com(orts for the com-- places i was furnished i: had to be bougcht in big bottles an< was in the end more expensive that the wine. The people "there surprisad them by the number of times that they ate. Six and seven meals : day was the reg-- ular custom an< was not though After leaving cry Ml they were surprised to find that water was the Airiest hiE to -- get in plentiful but water had to be fairly begged befere it could be had. When The bar on the ship was the most popular place during the voyage. When Dr. Kaye s:tempted to go\ something to wrench his mouth he The best part / the trip, they said, was the trip into Waukegan. The horme town |ooked Jlike a haver the _ 'd'nfi Shoe -- But Read It for Yourself A Bit m. But-- waiting" him t« n 1 # ry s the the 7 mercan '_ e~al Nofla the C rbid : one fron: w of fi pro n a pMs (a<} wan PARRMK wa-- o 6, vichiy water hi / yISYSIR But _ mige, JS IN TA H1 S arl I¢ $36 4 TCM *4 OO Y¥Y, SEPTEMBER ted by Isaac Wilbur Glenn 1 _ geodetic _ why _ this perils , well, invented @ beer were to be fairl; nould stop stuck. gauge, never tell _ _A crv for help aroused him aft~; an hour or $we.~ He looked acros { the street " discovered to hi horror that & game of baseball vio lating ordl.nfi 86 of the City of IZion was im progress. But whe _he attempted to answer the call hc { was unable to move. Gravity wi. | asserting ita@lf in marvelous fash |ion. He could not lift his fee: (He leaned baek against the lamp | post once mere * * * and then | the light came to him. He shrieke ' until a resewse erew | arrived . an< lchiselvd out two squares of side walk to free His feet, | Is All a Jolly Plot "It's a plot," he declared. "Last week 1 invented a procéss for sav ing shoes. I found that if thin places in the sole are coated wit) wWaterproof glue and sprinkled wit» sawdust they could be made to give i indefinite -- gervice. | The _ sawdust | would stick to the last. Since I started the 'process I have carried y own board walk with me. But the shoemakers are jealous. They 353\1 that my #mvention was going to | run them out of business. So they |\bribed the hardware man to sell me | ordinary to "Not in W declared Voliva dignantly, «/ _ _ ___ _' So Policema Parry let the n ter rest h: good la post against which might 1 while po g on the scientific pects of + _ "Why shoes ?" eler. "It is forbidden to go unshod in Zion," replied the poliseman as he clattered home on his bases of side-- walk, "and, besides, this concrete will wear longer than sawdust." SsaAVE YOUR -- EYHS--CONSULT DR. OTTO R. THOMPSON First National Bank Building. 'Telephone 57 _ LIBERTYVIL DR. J. L TAYLOR Office im First National Bank Bldg Hours: 1 to 3:30 and 7 to 8 p. m. Hours: 1:30 to 5 & 6 to 8 p. m. S.h,'.fldihnby'"" DR. 0. F. BUTTERFIELD VETERINARY SURGBON -- 161 Stuart Barker, Pres. Violin Cello, French Hom. Area, HL ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR ~«@»---- Telepbone 18. _ _ . C. B. OLNEY. D. V. K. LIBERTYVILLE _ : SCHOOL OF MUSIC AND DRAMATIC ART | Suite 10--11, New Castle Hetel G,. C. MELENDY SURVEYOR Assistant State Veterinarian Assistant State Veterinarian Professional Services OPTOMETRIST ROOM 9 MURRAY BLDG. YETERINARY SURGEON J. H.-- HESLIN B. H. MILLER "TH IEF did'nt you take off your inquired an ignorant ehiw_- Telephone 304--R ' --yan, Piano, Vocal, Violld, s¥ Phone 2413 of -- water P Damp Wash _ *.: $1.20 Semi Finished *%.." $2.50 Entire Family Wash _ Finished Complete 25f(;l:s |$4-50 | | §rai i y The Reliabic Launary REAL ESTATE, LOANS, RENTING AND INSURANCE Office Phone 3148 N. Ashland Ave. Lakeview 478 CHICAGO, ILL _ 2 Doors South of Belment Farms, Hoeses and Lots Sold for, -- Ruchanges of Property a Cash Or On Easy Terms If you still wash at home, the "old--fashioned way," have you ever seriously considered the genuine economy of sending your clothes to the éareful workers of this laundry--not only in satisfaction and clothes--conservation, but in actual dollars and cents? 25 lbs Damp Wash tor $1.25 N ® ® L % lbs Semi Finished *," $2.50 Ironing Washing Cleaning Housework needn't be spread over the whole week. Most of your routine tasks can be done . in a single day when electricity is in the house . for them then & Electric Washing Machine Electric Vacuum Cleaner will'take the drudgery out of the operations and lengthen the hours. Every lamp socket in the wired house yields power to run these and numerous other comfort bringing appliances. Electric Iron Sure it pays to use the Register Want Ads! MEMBER COOK COUNTY EEAL E8TATE BOARD All in a single day 6. at sonle Reorame t + Pads ) ) ey t hy Als r'flao',_?%' Count the Cost Lk T P¥AS THS _ -- THE Doctor GACE JOHN HEIM OF NORTHERN ILLJNOIS W i Orus a. u.m.00 Dry Cleaners and Dyers Libertyville Phone 67--R Highland Park Phone 178--179 9 _ gundry * PAGE \ !/

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