CMPLD Local History Collection

Libertyville Independent, 22 Sep 1927, p. 12

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o r._' :-' cloth4 a':nm ! 00 yoris and a* the Ahriron #1009)--salr." Auo. as ho pelped méscit tolll ~ out beronc that ths ape? ' | (shir.. Ade, as he helped himself to,| ||_ Is one of the narrow passes, faland of Oabu, Haw w: wind b'ows with, suctforce t ieei coble has been a _ to rockr to zsford a iold 'tor { great -- occasioni----will© he "submit --to weuring a coat, and the ordinary vis-- Itor is received on the 'trdut veranda by Asikin attired in his andershirt, a pair of pajJama trousers, and a sarong any employee of the United=States govrernment. _ Twenty--Hve years: ago he was appointed messenger at a sal-- ary amounting to $8.08 o--np. but since then his compensation has been Increased to $10.05 a month.--Only: on Asikin bin Mian, native messenger for-- the United States consulate--at Batavia, in the East Indies, probably receires the smallest compensation oft bronze relief has been> afired to: a great .rock in Yoho, . Alberta, was a member of the Canadian Northwest Ilomnpoflauuflyulflt"_"_ll: fortowing year he learned from the In-- dians of a wonderful lake abounding with game: fish. -- He penetrated the primeval woods, following the Indians' directions, until che. came. upon the body of water which he : ald lake. mmn-:znm was -- "The Lake of. Little -- Fishes." After it had been risited --by Princess Louise, wife of the marquis of Log: then governor general. of Canadg, the lake was renamed in her honor. ... > ,-- "Old Russia at times sought influ-- ence over Serbia, the blood of whose people is also Slavic. For one of the gave the paving, having it laid by Rus-- At five o'clock nchmmpfi clear the street 'of carriages and auto, mobiles and the promenading populace fAlis the space from curb to curb, many mummm,orm] walk cates for coffee and con & | It is an interesting, colorful spectacle, Canadian guides, in whose honor & 'M:;iti-& W:"f?fv' ";*-t "'T""V'(!l the gamut from peasant to man and woman of the world. . ad Teg "ln.fltl-tol:zvlrl_ and 'gieges, Belgrade has had its stark tragedies, 1908 King Alexander and Queen Dragit of Serbia were murdered in their pal-- ace. This structure of ill omen wa WM:MMN&&E the king of a different dynasty | brought about the evacuation of the Turks, and had given Serbia its first taste of independence for centuries, 'xmoflhdtzhuehm' in recent years, and Jt has little now to distinguish it from other Europcan capitals. . Since the World war there has been a marked building boom, stimulated in part by laws_ hold-- Y ago--5 the Save and Danybé at the meeting: polot oc,mgi'% nt ) rees) At the very ape%t. ;&_,',"';'"'-: t . chailk. citf, 'some 200 feet high. TH ! as* the Third-- century~B:--C:, when Cél-- tic tribes Wm- M}( ecessor, tLo town of Singtdunum: {«>_-- "Throuth the centuries© that *have ""Through. the .centurios© that have: passed since, this rock 'has played an lup_orlnt'hnlngzfl_' an aftairs. 'It was held. successively by Celts] Ro-- name, the observer feels, when he sees the white clif of the citadel and sun-- @ry white towers and wallsé. Eyen in narrow, dirty, oriental ways, the view from across the Danube.or from its waters was a charming one. ks Austrian«.©: One of its 'most Important hoiders was the Turk.© From 1521 un til'Hittle mote than half a century ago Lake Named for Princess Place of High Winds ~®-- dice s Jt . 'ot dip--| Wis--Bits, with its praise of "Puritan-- "rerent| som" as a factor in the progress --0f '¥uapgo--| the ~world, has called forth ~some . \~Sike the majority of nature enthu Athe day : .*Until 'a man has roughed it in the wilderness for a {ifllo. getting as close to nature a® elvilized man can get, he doesn't know ';ro 6t 3% Tb Cc'd ;.. f I.M-A '»& wb'. w lorsy: was "".i""' a "thurch supper At:eighty years of age Mrs. J. Stone of 'Denver, Colo., has . everalls and is palnting her tw house. Three years ago Mrs. Stone was " confined -- to "bed 'with paralysis, and relatives had despatred of her the things I will do by--the time'T've [|| . -- answered calmly: ---- * _( ~~*Cav . proud to fight." -- what it means to live, actually live abhd enjoy -- life. ~Sleeping on pine boughs ~with the sky for a "ceiling, tramping miles in search of bear tracks, then making hearty meals oft fAish, partridge and 'venisqn,--cooked in the simplestway, about fire or sic times a day according to the--appetite, puts new life into a person and Ats z'm for : another year of-- work doesn't seem at all bad then."*-- Detroit Neows. * es * empire : without which the unique in-- fAuence of the English--speaking race eould never have developed. > "Puritanism is certainly a brake on the --whool of folly. As suclh it is an anpoyance to all who want to 'go the pace.' But even "those who use the adjective 'puritanical' as a synonym for all that is dull,; inartistic, reaction-- ary, and stodgy would hesitate to sac-- rifice the qualities for which it stands, or to entrust the reins to the irrespon--, aible hands of those who regard the Mdm-thulnug._:i pition of Iife.* ; K France iook the wrong turning, and ing--erer since. Read the history of the --Eighteenth century and see. © which sent the Pligrim fathers to lay ' the cornerstone of the United Statesj||-- . of America in 1620 started the English [|| |!-- revolution in 1640. Ever since, Purt-- tanigm, despite all to the con-- m.mm;&mluhlm * sumed, is not only the most charac-- teristle of British qpalities, but it is the one without which there could not be that 'crowned republic,' that mod-- ern miracle we know as the British empire ; without which the tunique in-- In both-- countries. Moreover, it will be a sad day for both when it coases "Why? Because that serious-- mind-- eduess which has always been the ground plan of Puritanism, whaterer -- -- The following editoria}; . in . Londop Russign, like the Chinese, like many in South and Central-- America, was an orgy of blood,--and was followed by a recrudescence of tyranny which. kept Europe in a welter of war and blood-- shed. for 20 years. W"" ".. W&v .,, :"j + :1 $ % M' q'""m ers _ les Y , any . AB > a lcal'_was a mixture of tyranny, phil-- America?t This time, one word is sut-- similar; revolutions, and the revolu-- tion under Cromwell and Hampden in ""What accounts for the marked dit-- ference between the French and other L 'izfi' ,'EN "H Long Life Planned Real Way to Live " 'and> a "lot ot> other N;gfi-flh: jted ?* * d t i a life empty, and it will-- seem long enough.--Phillips Brooks. Phillips Exeter Academy was found-- ed by John Phillipa at Exeter in 1781 and became known as Phillips Exeter to distinguish it from Phillips Andove, which~was founded in 1778 through The gifts of the Phillips family, Danced Into Royal Favor C f -- M * fua af o . % ; \". '] C p 4 s P fl $ 8' > 4 f t T 1 * _0 M --5 weaters T wo Old Acagemics nELD Fon pearhl| -- Antioch News | {~ \Boyaand Giris ; | _ MF. and "Mrs,'Herman Hoag of Fon _ | duLac. Wis., spent from Saturday un 2| til "Monday with relatives and friends * '¢ Mrs. Harry Shith of Channel Lake, & Fall Coat ud spent 'two--days in Chitcago this week. 'Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Boylan and son ;o'mh:r.'hnnhmqlofleh'om' their two weeks tacation here. * Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Bacon are enjoy-- Ing a two week's auto trip through Canada. _ * -- -- Miss ~Elizabeth Webb spent a few her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom w noette. < / ~~ s ' Mrs. Geo. Garland entertained> her sister ftrom Woodstock on Tuesday. Will Webb of. Los Angeles --and }g.;tA:'-otwuhnn.mq-'n- on friends here, Tuosday. = .: _ Victor Bown and Mr. Christenszen :t;vuummwmuum Miss Ardis Grimm left Wednesday to resume her studies 'at Milwaukee Downer college. °. e k . Lester Niron and Emmett Webb have entered: school at Northwestern dge gave a sented in this wonderful assortment. At a glance, you'll be convinced that these Coats are indeed 'out of the straightlines There are color--and E: EEIT FLICP" Sh 2m 4 . ad 4 + 4 .n' 5n Httis nonee "af Tost 4 : 1 » Riafgriive pettnras ror "Aewer piice." in paw' s d .' ¥all.> They <are wash-- ' i _ stvls«a" has r "value . even To SsaiIet Lole. on | ~dilgante ols mss a--* f uk. 2 «n * « . PR tds ' C4, oats "of --every wanted every style. > -- lgam, _wrappy coats, slightly 18. t § h4 A&re repre-- Although retaiging their mative cos-- tumes in other réspects, niany peopte of India are leatning to wear Kuro-- pean leather Never be An unerxpected giiest to be mu---umwmu;uu Iif you can help it. Evety wife likes at least an hour's warning. -- tickets for the® .. The possibility of telephone or : less telegraph was evidently in mind of Gailleo,; Tor in 16#2 n« through | sympathy of. | magnetic w-a-lfltu-v-rulm -- Bimpler living, deeper joy while things of life, coura; and do-- what is best for yo ually--All.these make for cor selt--respect, and high thini a man thinketh in his heart, is gospel truth --Grit. k +M ie Tater. >3 7 on s hy ¥ug® Back to Galileo "aim e ~» r'uh T ahe to Shoes k iz i. MA n _ * _ _ * ¥4 «+ On the Novth Shorve 1 LooR <2r°0° ~ /.. _ PP s AunHtirr----LGOWCIIZ ; TCmMnNants in > lengths of three--quarters to one yard long, in a -- ' noteworthy group. Blue or red bordered towel-- mg of exceptional quality for kitchen use. Buy <--these for months ahead at each for-- You must be here early, for this is the best rem-- Another sernisational bargain offering at Ru-- sleepers of fine flannelette, rompers and dresses of fine prints and ginghams--many of these garments are samples or in broken as-- sortments. Garments that formerly sold for up to 69c in the lot. Marvelous values for carly Children's 6 Ar+ e to nay so is be," b or wire-- ins -- have noey fight. _ "Big Purchase Sale _ Toweling Remnents Union -- made garments of the better grade of cottonade.| This is _ a. top--notch --value--all sizes. Well tailored. * * % Men's Work Pants «~' A man's mind must be very barren of ideas If he cannot tell his wife of some way in which he thinks she can meighbor's hens. * o-n"gz ay he was 1ool Ing at --them over the fence when he imguired, . "By the way, Jones, what did you pay for those fowls?", "A doli-- lar apiece," replied Brown. "Ah, that explains it," said Smith, "I wondered© what the things had to thuckle about." economtze.--Boston Owing to, the deciine of American Toad's Great Vailue ©* mm«mc?uum in each state. Toads were formerly more numerous. 'They gre now becom-- Iume.to:theymmo_dbynn classes of vertebrates and by \'drought in summer and 'tevere cold in wintér, Their value to man lHes in the number which they eat... * | southern Serbia have trimmed their hair with sheep shears in a "childish bob" since antiqnitv. ~$1.95 _: Why They Chackled bad . been" troubled b «Meost Men Can Do That . Remarkable Lot of Men's. Work Gauntlets, Pr. 29¢ Qnartcr ponnd'Skm in white and colors Yarns All Wool at 69¢ 'to school--youthfal" m'fi mens. They were made to sell euality leather faced--and well tailored. Wear, choice Big value in beautifol quality Ginghams, splendid patterng and coloings in -- large assortment-- 32 In. Ginghams gaged in preparation for production. How fitting would it be if all men, not some of them, vied with nature in making greatest effort to give businessg and industry the largest m~ gree of activity. --Grit. -- * Wisconsin--have passed laws for the protection of their native plants. t:: other states bills along similar lHipes bhave been introduced, but thus far have falled to pass. Unfortunately, such laws are difficult or impossiblée to enforce, 'and they have had little effect on the situation. Protecting Plants ;-- Fifteen states--California, Colorado, Cowmecticut, Delaware, Florida, Till« nios, Maryland, Masachusetts, Minne-- '**"*Dear Congressman," wrote a con-- stituent to his representative at Wash-- AIngton recently." "Some say our coun-- try is menaced by--the Reds. I say so too.; We have a hired man and he said he was a Polack, but it appears he is a Russian. Every night we won-- is a poor worker and has never cut his hair or shaved. His dirt is so much that --be sleeps in the barn: He can falk: or listen to English when he wishes it but at other ti not. Some-- body should do some ;mcflve work 25° 15¢ bottles was set around the inside of the basket. A bed of blankets was then laid in and the baby placed on it and well covered. This proving in-- adequate, an ordinary household elec-- tric heater .was set nearby and its heat directed against the side of the basket. 'This tyrned the basket into a Arst--class ~"incubator" -- The tiny baby is thriving. # --~-- Meat Saved--Baby's Lite ~A tiny new--born babe in Brookiys, N. Y., which would bave been put in an incubator to sare it, had the family been able to afford the inctubator. was sared instead <by --hot--water botties, an electric heater and a little ingenu-- ity. A clofhes basket was lined with paper, which is a good heat insulator. ;. _ Job for Secret Service e. Hoping that you ct lend aid, , etc., etc."--Capper's Weekliy. Worth--While Imitation York, Pennsyivania, Ver-- is the constructive ear. All nature &

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