CMPLD Local History Collection

Libertyville Independent, 14 Jun 1928, p. 9

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| MHENRY COUNTY | TURNS DOWN BILL | ~-- FROM MOUEENY 1BOARD TAKES ACTION ecommendation frornm 1 rpecial com-- mittee, appointed by Ubairman Frank McConnell to do so, was presented to the board. The report of the comniit: tee, of which was made up of the follow members, V. E. Brown, A, he bill be dis--allowed and that he @ek his remedy through the proper The report was signed by the mem-- er= of the commitcee mentlioned in and Jahn Conley, follows: . ~'Qll&¢rlbu.mbylp- y the chairman of this board, to audit the bill or James Mc-- The Woodstock Sentinel cartied the following story on the matter: The much talked of ¥cQueeny bill j:blulon"uptormh'?bo-_ fore the county board of supervizsors for ééveral months, was dis--allowed by the board yesterday after a re The James H. McQueeny bill be fore the McHenry board of supervis-- ors at Woodstock, was turned down Fuesday. McQueeny's claim is not known but it is understood that it is more than, $1,000 for detective work done prior to and during the States Attorney Pouse skipped. € . a&t one time, was employ-- " by States Attorney Smith. _--~ "Irs. Stafford is one of the coun-- %y s oldest residents, not ~ouly 'in | po'at of years but in residence in' #he county. Her old home, the© Fa~--dorn place north of Liberty-- *le, is one of the --well " known ALirms in that locality and was oP %. tyat tie.Faustsel Products com ¥®ay baes be>1 attempting to pur-- $ proverty in the vicinity, but buerty ovners are holding on <to xr land fof larger profits. --'"ara zsad mor» reports of, mer-- Curz f'nds are coming in all-- the 2.. A store site, owned by Mar-- I'a Svete, vas the scene of a find out a year ago, which was never @erated for years by her--son, George Brsozdon, his death several years & followed by that of his sister, Feeser of Druce Lake, leaving: ¥re. ~:cfford alone so far as her' immediate family is concerned. : ow men ofr women have possess ed tze wonderiul vitality and per-- sistence and ambition that she has had with the advancing years. De-- soite sher proximity to the century mark. she has continued doing her. %v- housework at her home on Utica street and her tidy little res idence is the pride of her life. A elear mind, conversant with all. : heppenings of the community, de spite luxyearl. she is a daily reader of SUN and the average person would take her to be at least '8 yeats under her real age. Well Known Utica St.. Resi--, ' dent Nears Century Mark | é But is Now Sick. } m PIONEER O F COUNTY And, it was--but on Monday morn-- 4nz that this wonderful old lady did her own personal washing in line with her insistence of doing that | and other work about her hon&i And then, not long afterwards, she became ill and a doctor has been , in close attendance since, Her con-- * dition is not regarded as serious bet --suf.iciently so to confine her to her bed. A niece, Miss Feezer, wi Druce's Lake, is with her Ml her friesd's are hoping -- that she %ou't be ill long. } Mrs. Sara1 Stafford of North Ut+ €a. street, widow of the late Joseph Stafford, reached her 91st birthday on Tuesday and, whereas she had bad exceptional health for one of hoer age all these many years, Fate intervened and instead of 'modestly celebrating the event by going to a show, as relatives had planned, she way confined to her room with an ettack which ber physictan said mitht be gall--stones. Detective WhoOnce Worked . Here Loses in Long Fight For Pay. « Relatives are of the beliet that her wonderful vitality will . permit her to shake o'f the present attack and that she soon will be-- herself again, busy about her . home and with renewed interest in--the activ-- fties of this city which has been her home so many decades. swession until his bil. is pald. ~ rbvhtthh.mandwhat?o /..oalyhtor-um:nmm in a roneral way as to hours put by his various investigators, and iting said bill, but from informs-- given us, we are arasle to make beadway in relation thereto, ow-- to the fact that Mr. McQueeny wobmtd&athbum ¥ 40 give up any evidencée in his my .. beg leave to report that we, Oh three different cccasions and | tried to reach some method of: STRICKEN 0 N 9IST BIRTHDAY sby artached and submitted, we desire to have this board unity, N a se s 45| BACK TAXES 1O No. 24 Ack-- luiti for back taxes and fio.dolvo , into. tax matters for the purpose of 3m-myw¢tohavohu | lost to the county.-- . Just when the board of &mvh- ors considered themselves from ; BE SOUGHT THRU | > SERTES OF SUIS | ~Pioneers found the decaying rem-- nant of a huge wooden cross at a i point near the south county line, , not far-- from Highland Park.-- This they replaced and established a 'cmtory and built St. Mary's log church; and at the time the. new | cross was raised, in 1835 or 1836, In-- . dians stated that the old cross had as a state aid road by the board of supervizsors who vyoted on a res-- olution to present to the state. At the same time the board voted to demand refunds from the gas tax for the purpose of paving this strip.. These resolutions were fathered by Supervisor ~Frank Stanton, !n:lo-i side, and Supervisor Dave Van Pat-- ten, of Newport township. | WOLF HUNTER'S Henry county line to connect with State Aid Route 59, today was urged about July 1. He cannot, he states, get in' beforé that time as it will be a matter of several weeks of dig-- ging into records to find out how much is coming. "It might be $100,000 and it might be $500,000. It is all a guess" ~ Any 'adverse ruling before -- the boasd --of review would be 'carried directly to the appellate court, he stated. * lmar:m;'gdt!:q e proj uent 1 O!uthclrhunoeo'bornu::?"l VOTE HIGHW AY ~-- AS STATE AID guzge, also made a special study of Marquette's writings, He reached what seemed to be a logical conclu-- sion that fog upon the lake, which foretold a storm, forced Marquette to land about where Waukegan now stands. It may be fairly-- concluded that more than a century before the Revolutionary war Marquette, the explorer and 'Taithful missionary had traversed this region On foot. . La-- Ml'o and Hennepin visited here n 1679. in the seventeenth century by Mar-- auette or some of the French. mis-- sionaries or explorers. His contract called for forty per-- cent of all his collections,. He plans to start a number of Charles Dilg, of Chicago, who was a careful student of the Indian lan-- Hon. E. M. Haines, from investi-- rations, concluded that Little Fort trading post was -- established by ¥French in 1695, on the bluft where Sheridan Road and Water Street now intersect. Up to the time of the Revolutionary war, this was one of the best stations, The Indians went by canoes all through the lake -miontodo:adrmmmp- ping.. The early settlers used to tell about an old trapper and snake-- hunter, by the name of English John, who had made himself a home by digging a hole in the sand of the bluff near the present Sheridan Rd4. bridge. He would tell the young boys stories about snake hearts be-- Ing the choicest food ever tasted: 'noahuducootp-nnurm' one of the ~reasons for this being Attorney Charles E. Jack Tues day entered into a contract with Supervisors Employ Attorney Charles Jack to go After SUMS -- ARE UNKNOWN Tho route from Graham's corners, iar-- Long Lake, west to the Mc-- A paper read at a local meet-- ing of the Daughters of the American Revolution, by Mrs. Jesse Longabaugh. l Arch Marked Period ; The Dayughters of the American Revolution ' History of .@MIF Lake County -- Money. HISTORICAL COMMITTEE -- MISS LOLA A. SHEPARD, CHAIRMAN is the polint d MRS. C. W. SOWLES (EY_INB omm en en ____ C onl nne aiirniier nc 2 OX SEOTION TWO, LIBERTYVILLE, LAKE .COUNTY, ILLINOIS, THURSDAY, JONE 14, 1998 _ $1.50 PER About ::mammuu.mu attention and then left, * The projects call for two motors for theelevator at $1,000,--the repair-- ing.of windows, doors, and casings n!m.o:ndhm:l&wnuuncugu'h orating the t court, es chambers, jury rooms, bailiff's rooms and states attorney's office at 'an expenditure of $700, 1. General improvements _ for the county building were voted Tuesday totai amount of money 10 be spole amount of money | on the items on which bids were called <for, is $2,200. -- o ' allowed. WILE DECORATE IN COURTHOUSE vote by\making a motion that the bill be allowed.. On roll call 'all voted against this motion excéept Bupervisor Charles Crapo,+ Wauke gan, who, seeing the board unani-- mous against him, asked permigsion to change his vote, This step was that 'time that the expenditure was Bairstow, in a suit started by the township, had a judgment of $4,450 brought again'st him in cir¢uit court. This judgment Leld the bil} for poor ~d4 Lake counties o'a & portion o the country acquired by the United States government by treaty with the Pottawatamie and other tribes of Indians, ~at --Prairie du Chien, Wis., in August, 1829, By terms of the treaty, the Indian title expired Feb. 21, 1835. But by stipuilation, until August. 18"., when they were +emoved to lands zzzig=:ed them west of the Missour{ river.. By an act of the legisla <re of the 's of M nois pagssed in 1936, the county of 7 was erect i out of a *~r-- ritory tak> from Cook and LaSalle counties, -- The legislatuare 'was peti-- tioned and at its session of 1838--39, passed an, act dividing> McHenry county,.and creating therefrom the county of Lake. The name was derived from a large number of small lakes within its boundaries. -- George Bairstow, former: supe: visor from Waukegan, was denied payment on a bill for $2,710 to Sarah Showers, his poor hmo- tor while in otfice, by a unaximous vote of th> board of superviszors tween Little Fort and the McHenry county line. -- Mr. Charles: Kittidge told me that when a little boy, he used to ride out on the beer wagons that went. between Little Fort and McHenry, to be with his uncle, who were constructing this road. Then they would pick him up again on the wiay back. The uncles used a portable saw mill and cut the tim-- ber from trees at the sides of the road. Mr. Haines wrote in 1852. "All must acknowledge that ° this road has given a great impulse to the business affairs of Waukegan, and greatly enhanced the value of property throughout the county, e# pecially the central portion." The land --~~--~~rising McHenry _ The first newspaper, the Little Fort Porcupine af'd Democratic Ban-- ner, was established in 1845,. > All shops and stores were on Sheridan Road, or State Street, as it was its of Waukegan, Gage's Corners and Hainesville. In December 1843, the County Commissioners granted then called. The old Plank Road now Belvidere Road, was built about BAIRSTOW BILL == VOTED DOWN BY -- ~ LOUNTY BOARD SUIT boat laden with provisions up the north branch of the Chicago river to its source in what is known as Dady's slough, Trips . to Chicago by this route were made on skates in winter. + tablished at Tiernan's, the west lim-- Refuse to Allow His Request of $2,710 For Poor In-- 1835 or 1836, Jacob Miller pushed a vestigations. | KY INVOLVED ho~zepowez; engine, -- --Roe was the ftirst Englishman to fiy, and his flight in 1907 was the tirst ev&r{made in the Britihs Isles. It k place at Brookilands, and his _was a biplane driven by a 4 horsepower motorcycie engine. / AB aA hwt of this feat, Roe was e the "mmnf i u:luvo 'as no _but danger could be seen in his further exper-- decided \to give a banquet to A. V. Roe, famous British pilot air-- eraft manufacturer, to co'mm'ogonte the 21st anniversary of his first i Wife Near Collapse k The tragic end of their venture in America came as a severe shock to Mri. .Andréa Florie who remained at the bedside of her husband for the greater part/of the time of his removal:to the hospital until his death; As she sat beside her hus-- band hour after hour the enormity of the tragedy was impressed upon her mind and her suffering was ex-- ceeded only, by that of her husband. the tragedy. -- Conferences were held throughout most of the afternoon and the equipment which figured is the explosion was thoroughly Ain-- spected. <~-- I The ufifhat power was coursing through wires while the men Dr. J. L Taylor, county coroner, was notified 'of the death of Florie this morning and he likewise started an investigation into the tragedy. It hmod.howwn,mm the seh of a jury to view the re-- mains of the victim he 1 defer holdlnlotntnqmtpufil the development of the condition -- of Kyle, as he alone is acquainted with the facts leading up to the explosion. body. mml'yh'dn as his" was seared by flames. che w&;*' E forth on a runway. Both M"fl finally catried to another room and rushed to the Vic tory Memorial hospital in an amtu lance where ap examination by . Pr. M. J. Kaye showed Florie to be near death and ~Kyle as seriously injured. Investigation Underway * Following the explosion officlals of. both the Public Service company and Allis Chalmers company oapened investigations into the accident to determine it posdible the. cause®> of were working on them is one of the points at Issue,. -- . -- .#iqI0, wWwuo wiln AYIiC, was an employe 'of the Allis M-meo-: pany of Milwaukee and engaged -- in AInstallation of new equipment in the plant, came to Waukegan with his wife a month ago from his ~native land of France, & 'Flash Ignites Oll The explosion occurring in anoll container--~syrrounding an avtomatic switch was due to the ignition of the oil by a flash from short «ir-- cuited wires. 8233 Both men regarded as expert elec-- trical equipment installers and . re-- pairmen, had 'been working ngar the switch, wA The explosion covered them with burning oil. The roar or the blast attracted other workmen in the big power plant and they rushed to the assistance of.the two men. § Florie Eluded Rescuers The clothing of Kyle was quickly extinguished and he was carried> to safety in an outer room but it was with somes difficulty that his re= c amecgks put out the % vered body. Drives by pain as his" flesh which covered his entire body, An-- drea Florie, aged 29 years, residing at the Clayton hotel and a victim of the explosion in the plant of the Pub lic Service.company on --Dewéy ave-- 50 wulrvice cumpany on --Jewey ave-- nue Tuesday morning. died in the Victory Memorial hospital a tew :l:um before 4 o'cloc« this morn-- % # William Kyle, also 29 years old, of Milwaukee, Wis., and a second vic-- tim in the tlast, survived through the might and was gaining strength today. ~Indications are that be will Andrea Florie Injured in Ex-- plosion at Local Plant Tuesday Succumbs. After 'surviving for nearly 18 hours despite second degree burns VICTIM OF BLAST > DIES EARLY TODAY; COMPANION LIVES the blast is to be shipped to his native land of France for burial. it was announced by ODr. M. J. Kaye this afterncoon that Wil-- liam Kyle cannot survive and indications are that his death is not many hours 'away. The body <of Andrea Florie, # + ESC --The Royal Aero club has BULLETIN IS -- UNDERWAY throughout --the :county and formed a wide circle of friends during his long residence on a farm near Wads-- worth, ; t f The deceased way the son of the late Hehnry Lewin, pioneer farmers 'and was born in the neighborhood in which he spent his life. .. He is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Frances --C. Hewitt : of Waukegan, two sisters, Miss Ida ~Lewin : of Waukegan and: Mr3. Matme Craw-- ford of Millburn and two brothers, George of Waukegan and William of Funeral services will be held fzom White and Tobin funeral home at 2 o'clock* Friday afternoon, ----© Charles Lewin, aged 63 years and & resident of Newport township for all of his life, died in the Victory zr-n?oflul hospital at 5:15 o'clock morning from a heart affection. The deceased was ill for about two '"h. P * id +] ' Mr. Lewin was prominently knownh were not helped much by the rela-- tively good prices for food products during 1927 because they did not have enough products to sell, Case explained: In other words, he point-- ed out, good prices for farm prod-- uets were due in a large measure to low <production and 'poor quality of crops in many -- sections, including 1927 after paying all of op-- erating bis farm and xvlng him-- self hired man's wages, he said. This is the evidence from the ac-- tual accounts kept on 1,300 farms of the state and from other studies made by the college. whatever of prosperity may have prevailed has --not been reflected in the Agriculturist's billfold, H. M. Case, in charge of farm manage-- ment and organization department, college of agriculture, University of It is doubtful if the average farm-- er of the state got 2 per cent on a fair valuation of his property in BANK ACCOUNTS-- SUFFER SLUMP IS SEEN --IN THE INCOME OF THE FARMER Tillers of Soil in Hlinois Show . £ L Vinyard and wift to R H Ber-- ning and wife. WD $2400. Lote 45, 0 B Von Linds subdn Deerfield; L Lamb to E Strenger and wi. WD $14,000. _ Lot 8, pt lot 9, bik 4, Highland Park, Deerfleld. J Keete to L A Warner and wifé. QCD $10. Lot 175, Shaws Third subdn, Grant. ~ J. Wendling WD $10,500, land Park. > E. L Clavey Wolfe and hus 2, Olaveys su Deerfield. A _ Niblack and wife to Onwent-- sia Hunt club. WD $105 ~NW ar of 8E ar Sec 32, Newport. im J. Wendling to 8 Crimo. and wf. WD $10,500, Lot 21, blik 4, High-- land Park. > > s * E. L Clavey and wife to M De Wolfe and husb. WD $10. Lot 26, bik 7 %flcn subdn, Evergeen place, Deerfield. A Hein and wife to R Roy and wife. WD $10;=~ Lot 66, Belmont add V M¥ Hart to M E Snyder. WD $10. Lots 103 and 104 Shaws 3rd subdn, Grant. -- ; ¥ H. Bartiett to G A Miller. and wite. D $10... 1, blk 3, Bart-- l.mnsr-rfi't e t G A Miller wife to H E Swen son and wife. WD $10. Lot 7 bik 3, F H Bartletts N 8 Park. F H Bartiett to C G Schuh. and wife. <D $10. Lou.tandtblku' Bartletts 'N 8 Pptis. H T Cook and wit et al to. W Wick.. WD $10. _ Lots 33 and 34. Kimerest subdn, Wauconda. C H Joy and wife to C H Joy QCD $10.. Lot 9, bik 3, .Port' Clinton, 8 B McDonald 'and wife to Brae Loch Go}f and Sports club. WD $10. SHec 30, Warren,. C Buche and wife to E. B. Hoim. D. Lot 2, Millers subdn Crooked Lake Ville, Antioch. ~ M --E Snyder and -- busb to C M Hart WD $10. Lots 103 and 104 A F Sullivan and husb to W Mc-- Cann, WD $.. Lot 504 Shaws Ard A. Hein and wife to R. A. Faulks. WD $10. Lot 9, blk 1, Yeoman & KFor the--third year in succession Urbana, IIlL., June 1%.--Once more rmers' income in Illlinois have t nB We Furnished by the LIAKE COUNTY TITLE AND TRUST-- COMPANY Abstracts of Title; Titles . _ Gusranteed 420 Washington St. , Waukegan, HL PROMINENT AS FARMER, DIFS Transfers JUNE 9, 1928 Third Year. List of For 9 -- The deceased--was born May : 20, 1880.~ Through Wer long 'residence in io mt mt se cisnnt be sorrowed by her death. f< Bhe --was the daughter of the late Willlam Wright and Mrs. William Wright who survives her. Besides the mother, two sisters, Miss-- Harriet Wright of Waukegan and Mrs, Er-- nest Scoville of Norfolk, Va.., and w brothens, William, Cyrus and also mourn her passing.. Her Tather passed away about three years ago. t _ *as +Funeral services will be held from the home at 2:30 o'clock ©Thursday afternoon, with Rev. Howard * Gan-- ster in charge. Interment will be made in North Shore cemetery, Migs Gertrude M. Wright, a rest dent of Waukegan for all of her 48 years of life, died at her home, 312 Center street, at % o'clock 'Tuesday afternono from pneumonia. GERTRUDE WRIGHT TAKEN BY DEATH PNEUMONIA IS--THE CAUSE Deceased Was Born in Wau-- kegan 48 Years A?o and --Resided Here All of Life. was the leader among the women. She and>Carison will each receive & silver trophy from Clarence Di yer of Waukegan, president bf the university trustees, for their schol-- mhlp. % : $ Among the four women who rte-- celved the Shield award for leading the class in scholarship for four years was Miss Tsuneko Omatéa of ed Mr. Strawn with the degree of Doctor of Laws, and conferred upon Calvin Hervey French, of the Class of 1888, president of Hastings Col-- lege, Nebr., the degree of D. D. > Arnold W. Carlson of Lake Forest captain of the tennis -- teams at Lake Forest university for two years, was the ranking man in scholarship in-- the class of forty-- three graduated from' the institution Tuesday. * pre s Myrtle Hubbard of -- Libertyville do something for hisz--city his: state or his country." o Mr. Strawn interpreted culture Aas the "ability to observe and: to understand, the willingness to work, the kindness to sympathize and the capacity to accomplish.' He indicat-- ed that the basic purpose of a col-- lege is to train persons so that they are. able to educate themselves." At the final exercises of its Tiftieth commencement, Lake Forest honor-- Innai, Korea. immutable. The er is that the maintenance of those principles an4 of the ideals of the founders of our republic may go.by default, neglect-- ed by the best brains and energies of our citizens who are too 'deeply. engrossed -- in production and acco mulation.. No man should be con-- sidered a "best citizen' who does not possess high character as well most to the world's-- progrant,. ofr who have created anything that bas endured, have spent their time in BEING and in DOING instead of in complaining' and grumbling." He also admonished ~the 1928 graduates to be civic--minded, since "the greatest <'peril to our country today is the indifférence of our so-- which our government was founded. called' '"best * citizens'. toward the problems of government. local and "vast and potential as are tho--nat-- ural urces of the United States, the fact is that the greatest assets of our country are not in its natur-- al resources, its great industries, or Its marvelous trensportation 'sys-- tems, but our men and womenwho are industrious, intelligent, progres-- sive, 'courageous, loyal to the govr-- ernment, free from bolshevistic ten-- dJdencies, and who are conscious of the fact that every citizen,. rich or. poor, has an equal opportunity with every other citizen to work out his destiny. Mr. Strawn Appealéed for the constructive, -- analytical think ing which society: has--a.right to ex-- pect from this year's graduates, for "the men who have contributed the Speaking from his experience as United *States special commission-- er to China and Mexico.Mr. Strawn warnged against the petty irritants in the conduct of the United States tagonism in other countries that re sent our position of international the American Bar As.ociation, "one must know our form of--government and the basic laws by which all our rial and artistlc progress necessar y dovolvu, upon > those who by their education have qualified them-- selves for leadership." Silas Hardy Strawn in the 'commencement ad-- dress at Lake Forest college Tues day morning appealed to the gradu-- ating class of 43 persons to uphold the Constitution. "To assume lead-- ership," asserted the : president of EDUCATION QUAL-- IFIES A MAN Silas Hardy Strawn Gives Dochrhqthuth not only for the | for the advanceme LONG A RESIDENT Aa o ts 2 g*s ! 7 I§ . . who does not e "responsibility maintenance but CONFERRED hy hy l'b-rsm*i tween this limit Ml;la.gz fns caus mm: W | powen . mos rty, m matc wortied Tuesday afternoon. st : the, rmlm-;;huu otuhnhuuu. mzmfl%w.ma-; listed in the Ssearch and he found Ziehm in & shed : near the home. He The.deceased had made his home in Wauconda for about five years. The funeral services are to be held-- Thursday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock in Des. Plaines: and thee burial will be in Ridgewood cemetery there. Besides the widow Ziehm left a daughter, Bertha, 12%, 'and two bro-- thers, Charles.,of Des Plaines, and George,* of Chicago. 'He had been born Jan. 18, 1888. Coroner J. L. Taylor called an inquest shortly after the body had been discovered and the jury agreed after a short hearing, that Ziechm was a suicide and that he had taken his life because he,was despondent over-- his 'healith. The deceased was . well known through that section of the --county and had been extremely popular in the --neightorhood: in which he lived. The widow, shocked by the tragic death, was--or a verge of 'a collapée Tuesday: after' she was notified of what had taken place, C HMe .Mn time ?'m,dwhwhofmmbnmod A half 'million matches are used w? States every minute. If ,lm out as soon as they served their purpose a considerable gain in fire safety would result, ac-- cording to bureau experts. .~= | intch of the heads. To determine what length of match stem is hneces-- uarily burned .up in the ordinary uses to which matches are put bur-- in=, with an average of 10 sgconds. % Mw'"bold with the stems hori-- eA whinn are tho bhont positions 4 are the u ns m burning matches are held, Scientists have been ~conducting testa with matches whose stems are To Cut Fire Loss s MU.*S. By He <had -- been < suffering from i!l health and the coroner's. jury' blam-- ed his health for the fatal step. -- had often been heard ftom~ the FOUND B Y -- NEIGHBOR tod . suicidea--Tuesday <afternoon UJMM! through the head with : a $§ calibre regolver. LIEUVT, J. N. McCORMICK WHEN THE WINGS of their Cur: > on the average about 30 efore the steins were 'con-- this limit and what is re-- Lucky Escape S. By Usi New Sal::gul most of the fires at-- matchs, ~ hxk 40, owner of a $1.50 PER YEAR IN ADVANOE Match geological surveys will be made as mulhohurutht:;ml down and fewer people are-- milling over the property. Shafts be mkinnrhumdflg&n block in an effort to the mer-- cury pocket. As the t of the mineral is being re in wider wUngo VTol, Smnnnio 1uaL us JoSEeL of free mercury, which has tested 98 percent pure, must be in the vh cinity of t¥e home owned by Mrs, thinned out. io > The mercury was first fount -- in the basement of the home O Car-- dmarhonvho'm'kntgll. Anuis to discover l"flfit "'&".:'."u".'.?. auc:;h t: that an: Visions of mercury "gusaers" sim-- Har to oil wells were scouted when experts declared thal the mercury is far too heary to flow from a Aristian avenue, they hbhave already fZound enough mercury for the usé of hundreds of gas meters. ~One eunce of the mineral is used in each meter, and even if the gas man bad spilled his supply, there would 'be mo way to account for the presence dtho-hufluh.dflog clear up to the South school pupils picked the stuff up and drop-- ped it in their ink wells. > Individug! property owners atre holding their land in hope of large profits from the sale to large miw '_"n_._.g...m Soar is miged aud Beked determine 'whether or not there may be several such pockets in North crowds witnessing the work have place over, estimate that the pocket well, !« sulphuy. " e dorat Are siid is" oC ~mmtageting t Shemselves in the find. It is report-- Feported until now., 'The store rent-- @r was digging a hole and came up-- on a regular pool of 'mercury.= He .mhov what~it. was and, be-- t frightened, --covered "it . 'up <-- According to Mr.: Neary, the find-- Ing bf mercury in Australia started 'ket_ was located ~and "the, to distill-- off the now <the cinnabar, the oar contain-- Ing mercury, is being minet from the 4,000 toot tevel." ~ ABrs, 2180\ confident that the merecury Tind is & valuable lode and will be ~deve as a money making prop-- fifiwt';?. :tmu y report i mry"hllvmbflh% s residents out in the vicinity of_ ing an .'.'."..m:.'?"'""'.c'"'-u.:' fuee nearly every well in that® 'mectlion the bonanza were talked ovet.. An-- ing literally "that g-f':na. bo1y," is one of 3 ; weits of common law, ata lbw-- yer in an article in Tberty, Its yer in u"uudo' ;"l'...'&fi. Ats pu explains, is t _ tne 'Production before i.':.".'. a person claimed to Wa. § held in custody to what right be is t'= MERCURY DISTRICT / WIDENS AS SEARCH Corner Stone of Freedom The writ of habegs corpus, mean-- +4 ¥4 ## wost

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