gamncmm #A Liks coUNTY To 5o BE VERY SCARCE The. fruit crop in La&ke county and adjoining territory is the smallest it has been in many yeats, according Lake County seems to be getting its customary seasonable. drownin &-}mt, when you. flfin;e xre there--are about 55 lakes in county and 'that it js the play-- grounds for thousands and thousands of Chicagoans, the ratio of deaths isn't so large as to be a;xalling. How-- ever, the number is sufficient to cause thoge going to the resorts to be.careful and, each time they go, remind thwtlgselh::s that with due care they may not be the next on the list. > * _ : ~ @~A¥ken to reports from farmers, 1ne appie crop seems to be hit hardest, a} though other fruits such as pears and peaches have suffered.--© There are practically no apples in this.section. This condition is very noticeable !nthmn. Apple trees here which were Insk#eA@ heavily last year, are like 3 * --~~-- «4 a~seant Crop bond for the--county tregsurer from now on is a proper infand gopuing prromif ioode. Ti ie edtain aeting have:in getting pe - .-- With the county all the interest mds placed in the --hands of a treasurer who is personally responsible even to the point if a bank fails, it has seemed to us all along that--it was an injustice to expect him to furnish his own bond. It will cost the comi%about $3,000 a year for such a bond but in fairness to the men who have the office, it should be done as is now reported is to be the practice. ther early in the spring," one farm er said, "seriously damaged=--all fruit. Blossoms on apple, pear and other fruit trees were blown off by the storms prevailing at a time when the trees needed a period of : temperature to give the fruit . , propert start. xo uzs -- * e "In other years 'there has been 4 big crop of capples from C"il" within a radius otme# of Au-- rora. This season "'h1 less than a fitth of thom PP Trees that formeriy-- > five bushels upward, will this . produce only: about a bushe}. ~ 1 apples that have Mmd J ferior quality and are droj from the limbs. o w':x*": "<"*~ 3 "Raspberrice --also-- wuffered --from the weather and the supply is far bo-- low that of.other seasons. < The pear crop in this . will --be consider-- ably smaller than in other years. . "Dry 3 lflt'm*w treme heat also proved & *: t thmmo?}: pring. lg:.lhp.h:: e e & f pa'rduhflymmfi' need ' of rain." : WEATHER IS . BLAMED Apple Crop Especially, Both in * "The Cuit._e----u iuw"imihl We Wwer® On. October 1%, 1800, the Spanish government by secret u? of . $t. Louls XVY of Francé 38 years priot to this had ceded to Spain all of Low lsfana. 'The United States acquired this territory by pprchase. _ -- ih many cases, however, people wno have had coats made from a good grade of this fur hate: been well sat-- isfied with its wearing qualities: ~Be-- fore being dyed it is a pale yellowish golor. . . »olne Willed T ecth to &." When one of two aged _ d recently in Australlt it was learned that though neither had any of--their natural teeth, the deceased did po#% sees a set of artificial teethb.> These she bequeathed to her sister, who took possession of thent after the funeral She was indighant--when she discor-- ered the teeth did not At ber. °. --> Fur From Japan . An authority says that ~Japanese mink comes mmm At 1s a dyed fuor, and naturall pnot wear well as for x_nt"han&ha'dl_: ~ Keeping Tab on Madame -- We remember the --time when the mistress asked the cook what was her wday out. Now the cook asks the tmis tress whstfllucfi.ylm--&flh son in Collier'®. % rxty = ternity of which there is a record was, body." = &# > C m + mman.td-w-tmm.al Alliah saw how wonderful was the :mm«wm--'um.,"uuu,u»m= 1750 and continued in existence untis, up into heaven, where he spent. after 1772. It was secret, --literary and (days and~50 nights learning .the wiz-- Boclal. The oldest Greek Tetter' fra ! dom of the Most High. Thus equipped t@&mummnmzmmmfi!wfi ence is the Phi Beta Kappa, organized Lenin and sent back to earth. in 1776. p -- ] strode over the earth stopped the * .. ommmmemmnc mm meni c ngh stream of blood. lo::t-ll' ~bappi-- ns and naturally® wil} nat woar #a0° *" 'endure white m mw Waukegan and . Vicinity, i --Hit Hard. j reports from farmers, 'The apple College Fraternities -- * imano s Frarmer K uecen. uy ea. -.nqi-ib{ rains, the "What reade him' great --was the=fact ~that he knew where to look--for advice Among the many legends concern-- ing the life and deeds of Nikolat Lenin already . incorporated in the .popular mythology .of the Mosiem inbhabitants of the soviet whion is one. passing from mouth to mouth in Turkestan in the form of i song and #ummarized as follows by Lenoid Soloviet, a Rus snn writer who. specializes in collect-- Ing Lenin stories, according to the New York Times : x strong enough to eand all this misery, In order to Snd the best man for the job, Aliah set up adouble test. His elected agent must be able to ~turr tine aity ts ut on & How Soviet Leader Earned thousands were being alain because the kings of the sarth wanted to SR their subjects to go to the front and kill--each other. -- The stench of the fallen men and the nolse of the con-- flict rose to high heaven and annoyed Aliah himselt,-- who concluded it was time to call together his most failthftal Then the little champion answered Allah's riddle as tollowa: "The strong-- est is the most intel:igent, who wina every one's love; the happilest is the most honerable, who gives happiness to many; the most unhappy and the weakest is "the man beloved by no POETIC FANCY IN _-- = LEGCEND OF LENIN Paul -- was <quite -- fond> of "Boxing. Whenever hbe was with his little pal ¥Frank he neve@{lost an opportunity tim of 'these: blows, boistered up Jils strength and dealt Paut such a box * n emeig ie bio molels, Hrouk OEA n" + o To c hurried in and fold his grandfather. rait that he--had wopdertul advisers." "What wmade him> great was the fact m':fi!"xntfl*&h any _ ing to be proud of}=--Don't --you know that the good Lord seeh all you do? In the day the sun is God's eye and at night the moon shines on all -- "Ob, that's all right," replied Prack, *I hit Paul on the shady side of the house."--Indianapolis «Neows. ---- Washington's Gréeatness answered Senator Sorghum, without & So runs the legend. He Liked Boxing Mexican Superstition~> _ The Mericans have a superstition that whoever partakes of food that has been gnuawed by rats will be faise 1y accused of wrongdoing. In rolcing a piano the hammers are softened in order to make the <tone more uniform. .'This process does not prevent a plano from being tuned aft: Many a man would have a better appreciation of his home were a real estaté salesman to write an advertige» The crapple <is commonly called bachelor, camp--bellite, new light, sac-- #--lait, tinmoyuth, --carpet and chengua-- pin. 'Isw:xe'urkafl VM( & through the Great CAkes regtonsand the Mississippi vat ley to the Dakotai and south to Teras. Sole Survivors of Socialist Community munamuu.wmgmu--m residents of the once flourishing colony of Liame del Rio, Cal., which had a pagu'ation of 2,000. --They operate an auto service rtation, from whicit | "'r*.'?sg Wouild Sound Better Fish's Many Names "O DEFENSE is being offered by Mrs. S. 8. Kreige, Wife of the nif-- Nenaire 5 and 10 cent--stere man, to the divorce he secks in Detroilt +«Grounds have not been made public. He lost an earlier suit. > es ced 2 ts s ~_¥their cening space to advertising con-- * World'3.Olaest College -- °* It is said that the ojdest college in continuous operation is the University of Oxford : in-- England,> which was tounded in 1050, Pss SBurfaces which are to be painted must be clean and dry. Doust must be brushed or washed off and grease, whitewash and water palnts must be Night Cluab Realism Bavoring of the days when bold pi-- rates ruled the hbigh seas, the cafe will be fitted --with the trappings of buceanser iships, the pirate idea being Clean Before Painting Bz $¥ aleo B uin 3 qusemcans b4p + at 2d wb "2, d c O B Tt'; S ampet 8 se ult 10 90 i tk o e n ce ts o t i § +*' & L u_ ~~~] Changes of Color in #4d i !'m-uhu.mh&g-tnhl ~"Now, dearle," said his grand-- mother, "how do L--Aook in my new Unbreakhable Mirrors A broken mirror Invites seven years a bad luck, according to popular su-- perstition,;--but in the case of an east-- era inventor, it led to success. See Ing a young woman crack the amail mirror in her vanity case, he was in-- spired with the idea of making mir-- ceeded in --fashioning one along the imes of the antomobile lamp reflec-- tors and it proved strong under se-- ¥ere tests. . To k¢tep the powder from spilling -- outof . the vanity bag, ho mixed a:binder with it 'and produced a cake form that would not spill Since then, several other things have been <devised by him.--Popular Me-- 'Thare aln't but pby men' who kan breast pocket ov their overeut without --Josh Billings; .. --_ . :. . only .movement of its feathers was caused by--the wind. Still the large bird remained and sthod guard. As the other birds fiew past he seemed to try to signal to them. He. was standing there in the morning evident-- Iy unaware that the other bird was dead.--Detroit News. | etimes,jowing to a failure of the \ 'of ~water, the Minerva terrace party with its splendid basins, and re-- § les a 'set--of fiuted basins, carved out iif snow--white marble. But when the .water begins to run freely again 'the colors return with alil their former *ividpess and beauty. --> > The changes in the flow of the wa-- 'trer seem to deépend, in part at least, upon conditions prevailing in the heat-- ed rocks. underiying the torraces.-- Washington Star. The age--old instinct of kind to pro-- tect--kind wa= portrayed for a few of the: guests 'of the Fort Shelby hotel whose rooms faced First street.-- A small pigeon fopped on a ledge of--the old Masonic temple and immediately a larger, dark--colored pigeon al beside it. 'The small bird was unable to rise and fiapped its wings weakiy, apyapently ©hoping that by pressing the wings against the stone that would lift it up. 'The other bird, meanwhile, pushed and put its head beneath the other, trying also to lift it ; The little® drama continued for almost an hoar. Then the wings quit fapping and the awered, "you're a regular knockout." "Well, if.a child of mine had falked Hike that, 1 know what Td do," said gown?t' asked his mother. . Glass shells filled: with liquid have been devised by a French investigator as . substitutes for© ordinary lenses. The invention is regarded as an im-- portant one, particularly in the field w By the--French process; a lens equivalent to --one of the . usual ground typé, that would: cost more than $100,000 and take several years to completé, can be made in a few wu less. than : $1,000, it 4s «closed. : between --two. hard--glass . sur-- €roscopes and like uses.--Popular Me-- time:--the fluted edges and sidey of the he variegated. hues are nisin'y due 4o the vegetable--matter, and #o, 4f the Uow of water ceases, these bright col-- or«"rapidly fade, leaving the terraces wilk-- white..In--a little while the edges and walls of the dry basins begin to crumble,and the most beauntiful forms disapbear in white dust and chaiklike Among the specimens is a 'tropical catfish "which: is equipped with nod!-- flkd gills enabling it --to stay out of the: water for a considerable period. Duting the night it frequently:climbs out .of the water and forages for=1ood. It 'generally leaves the water in the early morning when the dew is bheartk y Now the terraces consist of a series of basins,"cach set being a few fect of 'the terraces flows Trom basin 'to at the rims, thuzs'slowly building them ap. -- Wherever the fiow of water con-- ~The Field museum at Chicago re cently received 500 specimens of mam-- mals, reptiles, frogs, birds, fishes and ingects from -- the: Field--Conover--Ever-- ard ' expedition to central Africa, 'tur sometinies in a period of a--few "It is with surprise_that yvisitors .to the mmm park, :who return after an--Absence of a year 'or more,-- find that many clhangzes have securred in the appearance of the col-- ~We All Have Our Pride Tragedy in Bird World tbo. P Events of the @ay opened with a parade which was fifdB--up of many Attractive floats.< There was a carni-- val, ball game and a dance in the eve-- ning to close the affair. *' Lake Forest turned out in fall force. Shops and stores closed and matrons -- cancelled-- social engage-- ments. The day had been declared a holiday by Mayor Farwell Winston. . The Legion post will 'receive half Of the proceeds of the event for its The poor rubbed elbows with mil-- Houailres in"the event which was held on 'the public square.© Master and servant, clubmen and laborers stood sgide by side, visited 'with each other and »cowerd to enjoy the events of tho day in an equal manper of aban-- don and community. spirit. On the streets in the vicinity Fords were--nosed up against Rolls Royces and Cunninghams. =4 There was lively bidding for cakes, some : of which were baked in the kitchens of mansions ard some takcr» LAKE FOREST DAY 1S BlG SUCCESS -- THRONGS ATTEND American Lq:on Annual Event One of the Most Successful / ----~"@Rttentthel! OC was arvecsted in Detroit charred with ns s *somer 7 t o. " > bt .. 6 *"fi; > murder of Henr . Plerce, rich Philadelphian, in 1920. Shown . --. «. with HMloHe above flmmhh-fluuwm <~| . ~ tvee aa Lnown only 3 s . EMPRESS NAGAKOD(leit}, who ascended the anctient thromne éf Japan with her husband, the-- Emperor Hirokito, through the dczth of the laiter's Iather, the laste Emperor Yoshihito, is sqon to become a mother. --All Japan is praying that the oexpected additicn to the royal family will be a man child. The Empress is shown with her mother, Princess Kuni, on the steps of the royal palace in Tokia. wivres in small cottages. Held in Village. Murder Suspect and Wife We Love to Give It + "Advise is like kastor ie, casy enaft to giv but dreiful nneazy tew take.-- TFosh Billings. -- ; ~The old proverb sbout having tow many frons in the fire is an abomin-- able old lie. Have all in, shovel, tongs and poker.--Adam Clarke. causes of the outbreak, and to deter-- mine what measures are necessary to bait its spread. back to the instroument. 1t has re-- vealed hitherto 'unsuspected features t the ocean foor. © The largest Protestant church in the -- United States is the Cathedral of $t. John the Divine, in New York city. 3 The largest Protestant church in the @ world is St. Paul's cathedral, in Lon-- Columbus, O., Aug. 3. -- With 24 cases positively diagnosed as infan-- tile paralysis, and more than two score of suspected cases in three Ohio communities, sta'te bealth au-- the Carib Indian," and that "tornado was Latin, and it means to turn, while es the Shcere" It's sover mime o from the " --It's about time we réturned them to where they came from.--Detrolt Free Press.> opu@fln United ~States navy, whereby a sound signal is sent out and is reflected by the sea bottom *_._ We Don't Need Them A wonderfal device has been dere-- INFANTILE PARALYSIS New Ocean Sounder r Atai /w Bd ay . Aw to investigate