CMPLD Local History Collection

Libertyville Independent, 21 Jul 1927, p. 9

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STATE OPENS NEW LABORATORY; WILL ~-- _ HIGHT ALL DISBEASE -- General Strike Called Off a t Midnight After Series of Springtield, -- July 19.--Describing labaratories as one of the most pow-- erful weapons that man hbhas ever de vised far the purpose of fighting dis-- ease, Dr. Isaac D. Rawlings, state health director, announced today the opening of a new public health diag-- nostic laboratory in Chicago. This laboratory wit" war--s +**~ sixteen notthetn Puu..sco ia lDm.», accupy-- ing quarters in the 'state reseaici hospital at 1817 West Polk street and operating under the immediate direc-- tion of Dr. Lloyd Arnold, professor of pathology at the medical college 6f the University of Illinois, the. . new laboratory is equipped to perform all tesis ordinarily> required of a public bealth diagnostic -- laboratory. In keeping with the policies of the de-- ya....cut of health the services of the laboratory will be free to the physic-- lans and citizens of the stat=. "The -- tremendous grow*~ of de-- mands for diagnnctin l@ahorawty sery-- lce and the imperutive ~requirement for --prompt reports. on tests made in many cases has made it seem--wise to open a new laboratory in Chicago," said Doctor Rawlings. "With more than one half of the population of the state living in the northern third ;of the land area and with transportation facilities leading from all points into Chicago is 'believed -- that the new laboratory located there will --become an extremely>--important fatcor in pre-- venting and controlling contagious disease in lllinois e--:* open and prepared to make tests for the dhw fever, diphth-- eria, scarlet =fever, rabies, syphilis, gonorrhea, malaria, tularemia pueumonia and almost every other communciable disease for which there is a laboratory test. * _ "Physicians in the northern part of the state will find the Chicago labora-- tory much more convenient and pro-- viding the same services that have previously been available to them only from the main laboratory at Springtield. "% * *+ . & --_"With three major diagnostic labor-- atories at.which all sorts of tests can be ~made --located at Carbondale, Springtield and CiHlé@go .respectively, and with seven diphtheria labora-- tories located at Decatur, East St. Louis, Galesburg, Moline, Ottawa, Palestine and Urbana, the department WILL GIVE GREAT SERVICE of health is now in a position to ren-- der a splendid diagnostic laboratory service to the medical profession and the people in every quarter of the state. 'This service is free from lo-- Rawlings Claims New Labora-- *ory Will be Strongest Enemy cal cost." Chancellor Seipel is preparing to convoke parliament in special session Thursday to n--~ t*~-- "aturbances and eBDaACt Ieélmou!41 1tg:0i@~.=«. Hundreds have been arrested. XNewspapers are appearing once more although some are doing so with difficulty as mobs wrecked the plants. 'The general strike was called off at midnight after a series of confer-- ences between Chancellor Seipel and his ministers on one hand and the executive committee of the socialist party on the other. : Immediate 'steps will be taken to restore --the Palace of Justice which was set on ftire by mobs. Vienna, July 19.--Following the violent flare up of fighting which clamied 83 deat and nearly 500 wounded. Vienna was -- almost normal today. Despite the ~moderats -- attitude adopted by the socialists the eox munists continue -- active. Pa have appeared agitating for war by the proljetariat. 24 % VIENNA ALMOST _ NORMAL FOLLOW * A reorganization of the government Is likely after parliament convenes. Viennese newspapers blame "Mos cow agents for the riots." This ac cusation is supported by stactments by eye witnesses that communists be-- gan the firing during the socialist dsmonstration in front of the Palace of Justice last Friday. / A government communique was is sued reassuring the people that the army is loyal. Alt possibility of foreign interven-- tion appgarently is at--an end, despite sensational rumorse to the contrary. There's many a man "Who failed to pass Aiter thinking bard : In the bachelor class. gages, 85. * C'I'?M number of instrumensts filed. 4« .. Total amount of loans, $498,879.45. most is the mere fact that they have ended.--Pana Palladium. sease in lllinois. "The new laboratory is already en and prepared to make tests for e dw fever, diphth-- la, .ul'ltt mo bies, syphilis, gonorrhea, malaria, laremia pueumonia and almost VOLUME XXXV--NUMBER 29 SECTION TWO -- | _ LTBERTYVILLE, LAKE COUNTY, HLLINOIS, THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1927 Kumber of Trust Deeds and DEAD; 500 WOUNDED Conferences. ING HOT RIOTS WHY ----Charleston Courier. LAKE COUNTY INDEPENDENT Lake County's Big Weekly WAUKEGAN WEEKLY SUN LIBERTYVILLE INDEPENDENT By ALFRED F. BAENZIGER Benton, ll., July 19.--Chatrilrs Bir-- ger. the swaggering, boasting war lord of southern lilinois, whose very name rival gangsters learned to fear, cowered here ioday before the in-- criminating testimony of a 19--year--old Harry Thomasson, now serving a life sentence for his confession of the actual murder 'with his brothber. l;:?wnhont a trace of fear, gazed Bi in the eye and told his story of the murded. BIRGER COWERS boy, the states star witness in the murder trial against him, Art New-- man, former lieutenant, and Ray "Izzy' Hyland. -- * The three are accused of plotting the slaying of Mayor Joe Adams of West City. s SERVING LIFE SENTENCE Nineteen--year--old Boy's Tes-- timony Very Damaging to . the Gangster, It was last December eleventL W-----r---------w -- 4 ,:'7'" oi :V_Wfi------v::r*"-----w--};v,._,. # N VIENNA OVERRUN BY MOB. Amm-bumu-.cmrhflghd "Revolution" set fire to the Ministry of Justice to the Y of the rattle of polica machine guns, which were turned on the crow *flfibmwuflflm FPhoto shows crowds in front of the Votivkirciny --------=--* > ty Nmromint kn c% * 70 INATING STORIES A TRUE LOVE match--smiled on by both society and ordinary folks--is the romance of Bud Stillman, heir to the Stillman banking millions, and his bride--to--be, Lena Wilson, daughter of the cook at the Stillman summer home at Grand Manse, Quebec. They will tbo married July 27 at the Church of St. Andrew in La Tugue, Can. Photo shows young Bud after His recent.graduation with high honors from Princeton and his swectheart, the backwoods girl who will by her marriage enter the highest citcles of American society. Austria on Threshhold of Revolution Connle . Ritter. "'Butch,' Birger said to ma--that was my name there--'Butch'. did you ever kill anybody? I said that i never had. Birger looked at me a moment and at Elmo and the said, *we ~«hare. picked you to kill Joe Adams.. --It will be easy because he doesn't know . sither one of you. 'Anybody else 1 could trust he would know. --Now we have it all plaaned out and will furnish you with guas and a driver and I want the job pulled tomorrow without fail.'" roadhouse, Shady Rest, with a load of tobacco. 'That man there (polnt-- ing to the dapper Art Newman), Thomasson began in response to the prompting of State's Attorney Roy "Birger said he would {:u us a letter to take to Adams' He said 'It Joe or Adams or the Sheltons come the Gdoor, shoot to kill but--if yo "t get Joe to the door, lou}' come back later on. "He said hk wéuld send 'us down in a fast siid it was hbot and that it coul be burned lated "Then Connie iRtter spoke up and said that neither the state, county nor all the law was big enough to buck Birger." Thomasson paused and then con-- was there and a man named Canadian Girl He Will Marry chiet and co--publisher of the Ililinois State Register, who died last night Mr, Clendenin, the oldest active newupaperman in the state, began his carger on the Burlington, la., Hawkeye, and then was employed on newspapers in Vincennes and ESbelbyville, Ind.. Cincinnati,. Colum: bus, Pittsburgh -- and Philadeiphia. PLAN SERVICE FOR EDITOR CLENDENIN Dean of Iilinois Editors Dead, Had Varied Carger on I!li-- WwORKED FOR 75 YEARS AT SPRINGFIELD 19.----Funeral From Philadeiphia he went to a °Chi-- ctago newspaper and later was tele graph editor of the Peoria transcript. He ~servred throughout the civii 'war and then went to Burlington, la., w followed by bis em-- 'at Metamora, lL, and Ke okuk, Ia. In 1881 he came to Spring-- field and with Senator Thomas Rees, who is still Hving, bought the Reg-- sons, Henry ¥., George M., and Ciar-- ence. R. Clendenin of Springlield. and one daughter, Mrs. R. L. Geb-- ©crat, supporting Cleveland in 18##, Jolin P. Altgeld, ml%h' first dem-- ocratic --governor, ~William Jennings Bryan and William Randoiph Hearst Facts are stubboroa, but statistlicse are more pliable. Mr. Clendenin is survived by three Mr. Clendenin was a life--long dem-- Bargain Basement in The Basement VALUES TO $5.00 Summer styles in novelty low footwear, eyelet ties, colonials, D'Orsays; strap styles "and -- gore _ _pumps. Made. of Patent Colt, Satins and Women's Novelty Low For Thursday and Friday With high and low covered heels; short vamps; all sizes. Am&honhblato&eflimm;adecfim § Featured In The "We'were asleep when the bomh was thrown and its force threw us from our beds. Luckily our iron shut-- ters were closed and they deadend the jorce of the explosion. This didn't prevent the windows from be-- ing broken > and ornaments being thrown from walls and zhelves." Have Different Meanings The wordt "practicable" and "prac-- tical" are sometimes confused in usage. "Practicable" is that which is capable 1f being accompiished, while "practical" refers to that which can actually te turned to account. For instance, merial navigation is "prac-- ticable" on a small scale; it Is not yet a "pactical" means of ordinary commualcation. "Llanketing a levee" means @ump-- ing large loads of dry dirt into the riger isf front of the levee, in order to plaster .up small leaks. When a leak does occur in a levee, as long as the stream of water flowing out on the land side is clear there is no danger, but when this water becomes muddy, repairs®are immedistelry necessary. Nice, France, July 19.--Jwocal po'lice are invest'gating an attempted bomb ing of the United States consulate here early today, workin; on the theory _that Sacco--Vanzetti sympath-- izers are regponsible. L ; The bomb was thrown during the early hours of the morning and caus-- ed several windows to be. broken, but no one was injured. Occupants of apartments in the consu'atsd building were a waketted and th> bu'lding was shaken severely. "The chief of police calied this morning and offered apologie:." U.S Consul Mumh, told the International News Servigt "The bomb apparently was thrown from the side of the consulate into the garden. It smashed seven win-- dows in the building and my office is strewn with glass. It was lucky I was not in there." Colonel Bootes, USM.C. retired, who lives on the ground floor of the consulate building with his wilfe and danmzhter had a narrow escape. Isolatea «ustralians . In isolated sections of <Australia, where raunches are far apart, a teacher is employed to go from home to home Instructing the children. ; Good w ocirine -- Perhaps it is just as much of a sin to hurt a person's feellp}s as to burt his physical being by" stabbing or shooting him.--Atchison Globe. PROBE ATTEMPTED BOMBING OF THE U. S. CONSULATE *« _-- Repairing Levee $1.50 PER YEAR, IN ADVANCE: The heaviest increase occurred in he treasury department which spent $141,560,000, as compared to $13%6,-- 578,000 the-- preceding year. Oificials pointedé to the necessary increages in government departments to show that thcgrofiottheeoun- try, with its incréasi d«mands on the government, will continue to boost expenses from year to" year. Debt expeuses and other incidents to the war will decline gradaally. For the next few years, however, this cut will not be sufficient to make an ap-- preciable reduction in total costs of government, leaving increasing re-- venues from the growth of businees as the basis for any tax cutting. The bureau of the brdget is now engaged in the preparation of the 1923 budget which js= expected to provids Tor '%fi appropriations than that pre to congress last Decemtber. Interest on the public debt continu-- ed to be the heaviest single item of expenditure, bhaving required a layout of $387,019,000, a cut of about $44,-- 000,000 from tise preceding year. Care of veterans of the world war accounted for an expenditure of $391,-- 470,000, a slight reduction from the 19251926 year. Vocational training operations have been wiped out while bospitalization costs are falling. With the exception of the veterans burgéau eand state department, every government establishmest showed a heavier operating cust than last year, although the increases were small. National defense and engineering projects of the war and navy depart-- ments cost the government $697,717,-- 000, an increase of about $12,000,000 from the preceding year. * Washington, July 19.--Nationa!l de-- fense and expenses resulting from the war cost the government $2,190,736,-- 000 in the year ending June 30, eccord-- ing to figures announced today by the treasury. Th> White House required $612, 197. as compared to $438,768 the year tbefore. HAumm.. 4; wiotors With our growinz passion for motor cars and airplanes and.our neglect of home we may have to change the old The heavy overhead, which com-- prises practically two thirds of the entire cost of government operation, is gradualily falling, having been $30,-- 800,000 less than last year. WAR DEPARTMENT CUTS OVERKHEAD IN WAR EXPENSE INTEREST IS HEAVIEST Shows $30,000 Reduction in .Past Year For Defense and * Small Wars. By ROBERT S$. THORNBURCH to "Hum, hum, sweet, sweet

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