i OF BALLROOMS HERE) --------, No community in the state would sulter 'from. the first za much as under 500,000 population. 4 The bill is of more--than. passing importance to Lake county. Out in That, in all probability, will 'flo him support from Chicago assembly-- men while downstate l!linois, wet id spots and liberal but mostly érid, will probably yote for the bill. Pas-- sage, figured on that basis, is al-- In the bill it provides for Athe prohbhibition of Sunday dances in pub-- dances but the "clean up" 'Comes on Saturday and Sunday: FElimina-- tion of income Sunday would give the death blows« to the rendezvous of joy. + > Impending doom for countless pub-- He dance halls through the gounty und state is couched in a bill that hzs been reported {favorably by the senate committee at Springfield. The There are public places in the Lake regions that cost upward of $30,000.~ These places bave daily Prohibitien of Sunday Dances ~_ in Cities Under 500,000 _ Due to Pass in State. _ -- lake county would, it is beli¢ved, It has served as the playground for Chicago over the week end and probably will, even if the bill passes, but much of the crowd and money will be lost. Loss of dance halls wilt flso de In Waukegan and North Chicago, where the Sunday dance has flout-- ished for yeare, it would also mean a great loss. Closing of halt or more WOULD -- HiIT _ RESORTS members of the House chalked up their tirst victory of the session when Rep. David Swansou, chairman of the ~hill at the head of Lake Canandaigua. Their cousins and allies the Oneidas Tribe Named "Seneca'" by Dutch Colonists Dutch in employing the term, and thu$ "the great hill people" had fastened upon them the name of another tribe, in another tongue. And even this un der the influence of the Roman name, became modifed into Seneca. missionary who recently died on the Congo, was-- for seven years the pris-- ener and friend ot King Mushudi, a eavage with 500 wives. k "Craword," said a Chicago misston-- ary, "used<to Spin many a thriling yarn about Mushud!, his human sac-- rifices, his almost daily slanghter of a wite or two for proven infdelity, "For his wives were very unfaith-- Seneca is not property -'-1 uame. It,became the designation~ one of the Iroquolan Five Nations by a& curiously roundabout way, <accord-- Iing to the explanation given in the "Handbook of American Indians," pub-- Mahed by the bureau of American eth-- Mushudit would sneer» and quote he proverbs of his race. "What proverbs they were! 1 re-- member three or four. They run lHike this : "'For whom does the biind man's young wite adorn herself? "*In the kraal trust not your wife *oo far or your friend too near.' "'A woman who zits at the window is like a fAg--tree planted on the high nekens became the tribal name of the which excluded from the group and from the connotation of the general name the nearer tribes as each, with Iits own proper native name, became# known to the Ruropeans." C through their ngarer neighbors, the Mohegans. The Mohegans called the Oneidas the Skinnekens, a translation d""bfifim tongue, But the Dutch, adepting the term, applied it to several llfi.di western and central New York, to only one of which,-- the Oneide, was it prop Onondagas, the Cayugas and the Sen-- ecas.© When the Tuscaroras were ad-- mitted to the confederation it became the Six Nun--da--wa--ono, "the great hill the tribal name, Arst came to know the Fivre Kations stone"--the. Oneniuteoka or Ouent-- ute--ronnon, and the name Onelda is Much--Married Savage King The fire great tribes of the Iroquols WETS. WIN '1s8u8e --~ radio commission today began an in-- rnw:«wwz to Canadian brogdcasters. k Wave lengths assigned to Canadians will be cleared of interference. While Chicago, Mar.: 23--Three deaths by gas asphyriation, all of the pr #am-- ably suicides, were being investigat¢éd today by the coroner's office. ' Wiliam Hoenger and his wile Evelyn both 50, were found dead in a lodging house room. Gas was flowing from an open burner.© They had lived in the Mrs. aa A-uhry i: , 43, was bflmm«ww Grange home. Two gas jots were open. The body of Andréew Skubelek, 12%, brother of John, was found Growned yesterday. Walter Wojoek, 14, thild member 'of the trio which went row-- ing . last Friday, was . still being sought. 3% They were accused of acting without proper investigation. -- FIND SECOND BODY IN TRAGIC PARTY Chicago, Mar. 23--Police today were. searching for a glant strangler follow-- ing his attack upon Miss Cora McNeil, 18, who recently came here from Zieg-- ler, Hie. --< --_ w' huge shoes. hours <of the morning by massive hands encircling her throst. When the grip tightened, she fainted. "% Attracted by moans neighborse in-- vestigated. They found the window opened and in the damp earth be-- SEEK GIANT IN _ STRANGLING CASE PROBE AIR WAVE -- ~-- PRATINGNU.S: IN ELECTION PROBE ___ . And God semembered Nosh; And God made a wind And the waters decreased continaally patd the tenth .""""dh"n'd month: in the teath month, on the first day of the mostth, \ -- And the ark rested in the seventh month,--on the were the sops of the monuntains seen. _ **¢ a%! And Noah stayed yet ather seven days; and sent forth the dove; which returned not 2gain unto him any more. And it came to pass in the six hundredth and first yrar, in the first month, the first day of the month, the waters were dried up from 06 the carth: and Mosh re-- < M 4 ao hss s 4 _ The great names upon the scroll { 4y Cerina®icus 85 Yeats. of the world's history, its molders of | tle; fccording to KnoKe. mpb, its leaders of great causes, Its | _ Any further doubt as t Inspirers of mighty revolutions, its un-- ; 0f this tumulos should, . its revealers of mighty secrets in ma-- | CODDer shirt 'of mall an these have generaly been cradled in are belieyed to have gr the mangers of adversity, ___. -- _ | an@ scientific value. ° __ "The next thing, I sappose," growled Mr. Grump, who thought h': liberties mmlh.:m'-t;t:s e erninent : ediet." ub'x'" "They're doing that now Indirectiy," _.--u_\« bis.. Em' . ~ *I --zpend 1 m to my time thinking about how going to pay my taxes,." _ ~ northern Scotland, for the Orst time, exchanges having been established at Dornoch and Golsple, --and adds the There are seven doors to the hu-- man mind, according to Prof. Victor Alvin Ketcham, who is a specialist in expression at Ohlo State university, thermic. Orators can be rated accord-- ing to their ability. to open one or more of these doors, possesmion of all being an important power in develop-- ing the art of making people see the Bcience . has the same effect n@ém'umludu Alling it with smaill holes¢, The con-- erxate so produced is said to be juast as'strong as the ordinary product, Bbut much lighter, requiring leas steal to: suapport it. m"hmmh.@" Bcotland and Wales, at a meeting of the advertising club in Boston recently. He listed the seov-- en as Tollows:--Visual, auditory, mo-- meteorological purposes has been im-- proved by the addifion of the Viett-- "Gassing" to give it added whma.dp-wu veloped in Eweden. 'While the con-- Ma::::;:a.i.-mulnl 'It & yas sousent. is stth 207% ts is intteduced facts the speaker is presenting.--Ohio ner--rotor--apparatus, which had previ-- ously been applied with success to in-- crease the apeed of ships at sea, and which had even displaced sails on an "wo believe that telephone exchanges demonatration of the sugcessfol appli-- eation of this new principle to kite The lifting ability of kites used for Schooled by Adversity Doors to Human Mind that the telephone has just pen-- Mental Control Inving on mb § ¥ "{.'4'!; pa e * ue se t t e yut t XA k hoved the covering of the ark, and looked and, behold, -- forth of the ark, thou, and thy wife and thy: _ And Noah went forth, and his sons and his wift,» And God spake unto N~h, syng -- % h went forth out of the ark. hevak. :: : 3. k 5 ' And he sent forth a raven which went forth to and fro, nth : in the teath month, on the first day of the mosith, Abso he sens forth a dove from him, to see if the re the tops of the mountains seen. { _ waters were abated from off the face of the ground; * And it came to pass at the end of focty days, that But the dove found no ress for the sole of her foot, from Osnabruck and begen a systemi-- atic examination of the mound, which was one of many nature?} imounds and had therefore passed unobservred. The fact that the hillliock is crowned by mighty trees prevented a thorough e amination of <the territery, Becsides, a good deal of earth had.been removed tu-thmuvuh-thhuq a brock has washed away much of the clevation on one side. i The mound in its present state is MW.Mh-Mn'fl; Seet high. The excavators discovered. 380 burned fragments of burial urna and, on the other side of the hiM, where the exrcavations could be car. ried out only in part, 15 simillar frag-- In the interior of the hill, at a height d"lnh-t.z-h.wt&f mneral pyre were discovered, vas about-- thirty--Ave feet in extent, 'The bodies had evidently been laid upon & bed --of stone, which had Abeen quite disintegrated by the hbeat. -- All the pottery fragments show traces of havy-- In'g been formed on the potter's wheel, a contrivauce unknown to the Ger-- mans in this part of Germany up to the--times of Charles the Great. C since the Bronze age the Germans had not: erected barrows to their dead. Instead they burled the urns with the ushes in fiat graveyards. The Franks Jater: 'occupled.--the same 'territory,. ter's whee!; but they did not cremate so the burial place of these thou-- sands of Roman soldiers remained a mystery. Recently, however, a trench to carry a water main for the town of Tburg was béing. dug and the work-- men turned up a Roman urs.. . f: _ It "was after this Gisaster that Varum, on his return to Rome, was met b mm:.mmmq:-v: rus, Varus, D'ul'w clde. Just as the exact site of ztho German --leader, 'Arminjus, in Teutoburger wald,'a forest in the province of Hanover, and lost many: thousands of men. 'Toduy there is not: much left --of this once primevral for-- | est: but on a wooded height stands a many from the Roman invaders. It was long thought that the mom n&mmmmug battle, But a German scholar, Pr@ fessor Knoke, who held other yviews has had the good fortune to discover the aite--of two of Varus' camps nea® Osnabruck, close to the little town of A Anytd&wn-btaumw' of this tumulos should, it is a be set at rest by the discovery. of & copper shirt of :mail and other por-- tHons of Roman armor. 'These finds are believed to have great historical and stientific value, © --'*__ SPOT OF--DISASTER TO ROMAN LEGION® Funeral Pyre on Scene of & Arminius' Victory. Nearly 2,000 years ago the Empire of Rome received a servere blow when the their dead, so that the builders of the Iburg barrow, it is deduced, can only have been Romans, who combined the custom of cremation with the custom of raising tumuli to the dead. _' {lt_"~ by Germanicus six years after the bat-- n 2 ~Famous Early American Daniel Boone, ploneer and expert wooduaman, was born in Buck county, Pennsgylvania, on February 11, 1735 He was a leader of the ploneers who settied Jamestown and one of the most colorful of our early American heroes. when they were about 8,000 feet up the plane went into a nose dirve, # "Ill bet 50 per cebht of the people: down there thought we were falling," .. "Bure," answered Mr. Murphy, "and I know danged well fiopeegd the people up here thought so, mc HOW ARE YOUR FEET? ~----Foot Specialist 'of long practical experience specializing in. the most difficult cases of foot ail-- If it were. ethical d]t%cpnblish the details of many of the di ult cases success-- fully treated dpring the past 90 days it would be impossible to accommodate the many who would demand attention. 214 Madison St.--Opposite 'Hotel Plaza ____ _ Waukegan _ In connection with but apart from the operating Dr., Clara M. Marshall Regular Chiropody service $1.00 Tor each foot treated or examined. Where special service required the fee depends upon the attention needed and treatment given. CENTRAL BEAUTY SHOP Private Offites 2nd Floor % Chiropodist The buresu of standards says that the lightning rod should be connected to the vent pipe. If left disconnected lightning is likely to jJump from the Fod to the pipe and damage the roof. If the soil pipe is electrically continu-- «us with leaded Joints to moist earth there will be no appreciable effects in zide the bhouse from a lightning stroke. All shades of those who had departed their earthly Hves had to cross this river, and Charon, the boatman who ferried them 'across, charged a coin ealled an obol, for the service. -- Hence the custom of placing this coin in the mouth of the dead. A the chief river ef the lower region, the Men, Women, Children * §$1P4! 155 P s ASSTk > 24 ut P c y e Brtes : 5 h e oo e ies [ N hi. 4 2 e e © 4. s s 4 it ntat s P egt e 4¥ -- > * . may émfi;- e 'A,f:~ i. % tA +.3 NBL Tile . 5.0 2 c 16 e g tCt see 4k & tor Sorghum, "by my lovely dispost-- tion. I was always anxious to obBze: friends and to araid making enemie« "**' The first chartered college to conten degrees on women was the Wesleyan, college im Macon, Ga., chartered-- im' 18396, according to an answered ques» . tion in Liberty. "How did you come to embark on a *"I won my opportunity," said Sena« Seizing the Opportunity * First to Honor Women A Political Prospect> _~-- _ KOR a