< 7 T -- _ | ¥ _3 2 oiktr . al i * ae s k s : ie > CAPTAIN JILSON, _ ||GOSSIP OF STA ' $ & ® "' ~CA m Rural mail carriers traveling out gam« s of 1600 Hlinols postoffices are co-- ance TAKEN BY DEATH|S>==« with tns Ontted State and _ ft : MAN IS FINED ON ASSADLT CHARGE seven sons--in--law and three daugh-- tervwin--law were present. All came from a radius of 100 miles. It was the first revnion of the 'kind in the Harry Flood {iamily in fifteen years, Dinner was served in the evening. Plans were made for holding the reunions at more frequent intervals. weapon, on the complaint of -- Orla Reichard, of Chicago, Friday was fin-- od $25 and costs by Justice Harry ~RAecording to the report of Chief Deputy Sherif Fred Brown, Reéich-- ard stated that the two had been ar-- guing over a cottage that the com-- r'h'h.m.m 'rushed at him and hit him with an fron bar, bruising his head and seratching his face. Bugene Cox, of Channel Lake, who was arrested Woednesday, Sept. 12, en charge of assault with a deadly ROLD A REUNION He is eurvived by> five children, Ella, Louis and John and Mrs. Lew Hendee, all of Waukegan and Mrs. Crinkla of Richland Center, Wis. Funeral services were held from the White and Tobin funeral home, at -- $:30-- o'clock Tuesday morning. The body: was taken to Graceland eemetery in Chicago for cremation. owned the Mockahi, one of the tin-- est sailing yachts on the lake. He «isposed of this vessel some years ago but this year he has been in ecommand of =the Charles Stae! mer months in his well equippe =l)'cmlhommtholfl He is seurvived by five childrer Ella, Louis and John and Mrs. Lew Hendee, all of Waukegan and Mr Crinkla of Richland Center, Wis. Although he maintained his home on Clayton street, he spent the sum-- mer months in his well equipped and spacious houseboat in the har-- «quaintances in vaApl. wW. W. Jlison, of 49 East Clayton street, hartor master and long prominent in local boating cir-- Away in His Boathouse at Lake Front, Last Night "~-- only makes it a more cheerful and pleasant place to work in, but it saves time, trouble and breakage. In moderatesized kitchens a dlglc cdlifi fixture with a 150 --watt Mazda Daylight rry Flood family of Gur-- a family reunion Sunday. children, 14 grandchildren, ----PuBuc SEernvice ComPal voes Eies Cont «~ _ . :8 South Genesee St., Waukegan for boating state department of conservation. Radebaugh ordered the restora-- tion of signs along the stream show-- ing it to be a preserve, and asked Reign of .the fish poachers on the Main Slough fish preserve in Carroll and Whiteside counties was ended a tew days ago by an order issued by About oneiit=rth of the 1325 peach crop of Illinois tha; moved in carload lots to market was subjected to state inspe on and provid s1 witu certificates of g:ade and quality by the division 0o: standardization and markets, IIlinois deprriment of axr-- culture,--a-- far greaur proportion and a vast inc>--aze in the volume of ;-erdea in com»arison with records of-- former years. Indications are that the apye harvest season will bring increasing demands for® the state inspection service . During the *« ch mo ement, the a>par.ment of agriculture maii'rtainact a temporary «t--:ee in C»> :.:z a While the. aw tumn apple wcvement is under way, f eld headquarters will be open at F'mrdin, Calsoun county, from w ic\ about oneth:.ra of the app:e crop of 1: mois is markem 1. f Auction bids for the sale of $9, 000,000 hard road bonds have been received 'by the state department of Dublic works and buildings The sale will be from the $100,000,000, bond issue and when this amount is disposed of $30,000,000 will remain unsold. The bonds will= be dated September 1, 1928, and will mature: $500,000 annually until May :, 1355< to 1958 inclusive. 'hcbondswm' bear interest of 4 per cent per an-- num payable semiannually. nm' y'leld of around 3.85 per cent eariler i» the year when bond prices were kovering around the highest level in several years. Facing the most critical -- health season--of the year the state health department© Aas added sizx new cursgs to its child bhygiene staff, ac-- cording to an announcement just re-- leased by Dr. Isaac D. Rawlings, state health director. This provides the department with sixteen nurses and thirteen physicians in the: field who are prepared to co--opgrate with local health officials,; public health nurses, school boards, parent--teacher the most vigorous health prometion and disease prevention program ever outlined in Illinois on a statewide bonds return a-- yield of about 4.15 sive report that wil be issued to all concerned. inquiries are also for-- wanded to get information regarding specialcrops, such as broomcorn, pe-- cans, fruit and cotton. operating with the United State and Illinois departments of agriculture in gaining > statistical information "per-- taining to the acreage of various crops harvested on all farms within the --state, and as to intentions for fall planting. This information, when received by the divizsion of co-- operative crop and livestock esti-- mates, will formulate a comprehen-- C¥ Ts commenced nearly four years ago in the laboratories of the University of Professor 'John Stanstfield, former-- ly--of --Cambridge, McGill, Tlinois, Montana and Washington( 8t. Louis) Universities, has just published the interesting results of a long series of experiments in the field of Geology leased a few days ago by Dr. Isaac D. Rawlings, state health director, show that Tilinois had the _ Jowest in-- fant mortality rate, 64.4 pey 1,000, in her history and one that compares ¥ery > favorably ~with "that of= the nation at large and other states. Illinois lost only 65 babies out of every 1,000 born last year as com-- pared to 69 the year before and aum-- bers ranging from 72 to 250 for all the years that went before except 1924 when it was also 69. tishermen but this will be infinitesi-- mal compared to the added benefits they as well as every man, woman and child in the state may derive from having a hunting, fishing and recreational preserve open for them in each county. epproval of the bond issue for the purposes provided will not result in one cent of direct taxation-- It will Thousands of acres of land-- in down--state I!linois can be purchased under the provision of the proposed $20,000,000 comservation bond issue law for $10 to $12 an acre, Charles F.-- Mansfield, Jr., secretary of the Illinois Conservation and Flood Con-- trol association, said in a statement Applications are in order now 4or the 1928--29 egglaying contest which the Illinois department of agriculture will conduct at Quincy, Kankakee and Murphysboro beginning Novem-- ber 1. ~The chief poultryman, A. D. Smith, urges poultry breeders who desire official production records to enter their pens in the contest mt onece. Flock owners with pens on test during the present season will be permitted to renew, and other ap-- plications will be considered in the order they are received. During the past three years, applications have exceeded the capacity, and for this reason, the poultry Aumba ial suggests that flock owners apply provide approxrimately $20,000,000 additional revenue for Cook county. issued for records and evidence of the county board of review. vision commission, has ordered sub-- poenas isgued for forty owners of prominent Chicago loop property 'to State Senator John Dailley of Peoria, chairman of the state tax re c crls grder i map th --AMllegal fishing. His order was the restilt of a peti-- tion from more than T00 sportsmen of the two counties asking that the preserve be ~re--establiszshed --after years. Professor Stansfield wished to re Call in or Peva dopes ol thls 5 . LHL meal, 4 , [ e ts will ow to f light home. S for several & Bovine tuberculosis testing, during recent weeks, bas advanced with un-- usual rapidity,--and of. the 105,000 head tested during August, less than 1,000 were found diseased--the low-- est percentage of infection ever"re-- corded, according to officials of the Illinois department -- of" agriculture, through which this service is admin-- istered. -- The counties now accredit-- ed as free from this disgase number in this muon promptly. n': 'gain this o j practical elimination of tuberculosis from the diary and breeding hends of. Illinois within the next two years, is considered now As contingent only. upon continuation of the preszent pro-- Route 142, section 101--B; Casey g;;n;:mctlon Co.. Casey, IIL., $40,; Route 142, 101--C, Rifing-- ham county; m:uu Bridge Go., Chicago, $5.873.91. . been awarded by the state depart-- ment of public works and building: Route 58, section 583, Cook--county; Ray Mann, Rockford, $85,334.40. Route 58, gection --584, : %& county; Ray Mann, Rockford, $154, 65%.11. This : costly dhe&se is caused by a fungus parasite which grows in-- side the wheat plants and <trans-- forms the grain into a mass of black evil--smelling powder without caus-- ing any material change in the out-- ward apoearance of the wheat head. The disase is easily. spread by the wind and may also be carried {rom farm to farm by threshing machines and seed exchange. (Complete direc-- tions for treating_ th seed before planting can be . obtained from the Natural History survey--at the Uni-- versity of Illinois, Urbana. lnmmql:gndlumudfio the 'point in 1927 where it caused damage®© estimated at more than $500,000, is. still sufficlently preva lent, in spite.of an extensive cam-- paign waged against it last fall, to endanger--next year's wheat crop. In many cases last year, according to L. R. Tehon, botanist of the I!k-- nois State Natural History survey, certain fields were so badly infested with stinking smut this year that the grain harvested from them could be sold only at a substantial dis-- count from the market: price for Rradicating noxlous vo:'ds. an im-- portant task on any farm, rtorm-- work. : In order that all may be.able to learn the --exact. identity of cay weeds that: flourish in --their vicinity, the seed laboratory of the agricul tural department at Springtield will promotly® analyze any' specimens for-- warded, and --will point= ont proper methods for that woed's extermina Bearcy is the Hlinois member of the national Legion committee on child The stinking eaemut disease of wheat, which first became prevalent by Senator Harl B. Searcy, Spring-- tield, to state : and national head-- quarters of the Ameri¢an Legion, for Recommendation of a --survey which might result in radical chang-- es in Iilinois' policy in raising and administering funds with which counties now give relief, in direct aid, to mothers of dependent child-- ren is contained in a report just sent hsvo;lnthmwnmq?huchtmu important phase of subject of Economic Geology, the way in which the valuable ore materials have sep-- arated from the molten rock magmas which have prought them from the depths of the earth's interior to its surface. --The more the mining en-- gineer and economic gologist study the ore bodies of the world's mining camps the more do they understand them and the ways in which they have been formed. The more com-- Stansfield's resuits form a Yery defi-- nite contribution to the more com-- mmmampm underlie the formation of ore Snd an elactrie furnacy s1 the muste * * Btate [mo?ammm -- Rock materials were meolted| and allowed to cool as slowly as --possible so as to form if possible crystalline rocks such as those: which crystal lize from laya flows and similar mol-- ten rock materials, -- Some of Profes-- sor Stansfield's experimental igneous rocks were completely :crystallized, in sopte cases the rock being melted and cooled again within 24 hours. _ . The erperimentally formed rocks have been examined microscopically in the laboratories of Hlinois, Mon-- tana and Washington Universities. The results obtained were of pro-- found interest to the students and teachers of the science of Petrology. Professor Stansfield's experiments The following road contracts have its at the Univeipity of Sit :::lm COACH 6. 6. B . Pot. gr0Ww8 " iD | Faloh, notbhckibon_ mau-. Grai a the OUt | Seott. MM' Grac id by the | with, amvPinlol. 11JI0IH WAausworth drove to Am&hmktodv.l:taal.nflnt Mr. Helm's parents and atatar his vacation. ~He--and his family drove to 'Burlington, Wh..hpdhgg 'Chicago for'a few days visit last week. Saturday, Sunday and Monday '~spent in Waukegan. This woek they will visit"relatives in' Racine, Wis., anddrive to 'Eigin for a short nn'tlum&bhnmwnud 'to work. m es -- & 'Bilver a Sunday.--Fuhrers have' just complet-- ed a new cottage at--that place; -- -- _ Mrs. Frank Clark from Milburn is sate Beigah sBiyraie Dacbs Fustore. _~The alterations which have been made when completed will make the building one of the modern institu-- tions in the county, having the best arrangement of lighting, heating, ventilation and plumbing. Those from here who are attend-- ing the high school at Gurnee are: George Hogan, senilor, Gordon Ham-- Mommmnmn-m;g Lake Villa school opened Monda Sept. 10th, with teachers as follows: Grades 1 and 2--Miss Ruby A. Evelyn Swanson is spending her vacation in California. Mr. and Mrs. John Fubhrer were : _Everyone is glad to welcome Miss Habeél Sctott back. Her father accom-- panied her here from Plymouth, Wis. andthen went to Swoeetwater, Tenn., where he is located. Miss Scott en-- Soyed a trip to Portland, Ore., during ~Mrs.~>C. D. Peacock has returned to her home here after spending sev-- eral weeks with her sister--in--law, at Green Lake, Wis. * ~~Eva Feseting attended 'the theatre in Waukegan, Friday. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Philippi and daugtres and Mrs. Ellen Talbott at-- tended the theatre in Waukegan on , The folks from this town <pretty negarly lived at Antioch the last few days of the past week enjoying and helping make a success of their Fall Festtval. The erowds that focked to Antioch in the evening were simply immense. The speaking and enter-- tainment was of the best. Everyons u-.hl.ptflptm"'l?:uuy Friday and Saturday. _ Mr.--and Mrs.. E. A. Wilton and Howard Wilton attended the Legion celebration in Waukegan, Monday. 'They nay that :the parade was the best they had over seen, . ' _~M. J. Murphy attended the bouts at the "Palace" Antioch, Friday eve-- _ Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wagner and some friends of theirs called on Mr. and . Mra. W. H.® Sheen, Sunday af-- Mbfio;fldnmpudbdfl ened the season's hopes {for the settled over the camp when Stein-- inger, star fullback and 'one of the 4 few lettermen available was put out of practice with an injured knoee. -- The injured man is the largest of the list of tryouts and is well known for his ability 'to run, hit the line, f punt and pass. He is the big threat that the Antioch coach has available | this season and his absence is mak-- ing things hard for the coach. It is expected that ~the. injury, which came during a scrimmage ses-- iuo-.wmnotmpthemnmxout of practice for long and he will prob-- ably be on the starting lineup of the Arst team. -- Charles Manier brought hope into the Antioch camp when he returned to school last week. He was one of the leading performers during last year's grid season and is considered-- as capable a man as the injured Steininger. Asca--whole the prospects at the Antioch school do not appear to be so Yery good to Coach Reed who wishes for heavier material.. Things may brighten asthe prac-- s tice session pass as the ~ material seems to be about as good~.as the | couch ~could Muhvlewotflu fact that but few lettermen are re-- a 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0o ~*But Slemnger dves Out -- With Injured ~Knee -- Music supervision, Miss . Scott. Art supervision, Miss Sebora. Grades 5 and 6--Miss Mabel J. 'ott. ; Grades 7 and 8--Eimer M. Beck-- Grades 3 and 4--Miss Norma Se-- Although the return of a former Clyde Helm in relating about his trip by auto to Minnesota, says his Grandmother Helm, who resides at Dundee, who accompanied the party son Charles visited Mrs. Veasey's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Fubrer. Friday afternoon: They drove down Q--UA@+L I T TFed °__--__-- _ _--__--__AGAIN CHRYSLER ENGINEERING TRIUMPHS-- ~ Ycoring the Years Greatest Success their belief that nothing like the DeSoto Six in beauty, rformance and quality has ever been offered at anywhere Telephone 860 Walter P. Chrysler and his engineers who created the DeSoto Six, invite you to confirm for yourself a tale"495 t....:.'595 * .675 $585 MULTUM PRO PARvVO CARROLL--SEYL MOTOR SALES SEE THIS NEW PRODUCT «because of Distinctive Beauty oc 392 beauty, thrilling performance and amazing economy! Its beautiful bodies by Fisher-- long,lowand racy, andfinished in colors that reveal to--day's mode for smartness and indi-- viduality--are far in advance of wamd standards in the sfhield of low--priced cars. Inside CHRYSLER'S SENSATION CAR Never has any Chevrolet en-- joyed such overwhelming rll.lc acceptance--for never as any low--priced car pro-- vided such an outstanding combination of distinctive day it stands iéfit;fo:{leé}ic} everywhere as o the nation for 1928! Week after week and month after month the Bigger and Better Chevrolet has swept on to greater and greater Milwaukee Avenue At Broadway Luce & Earl, Proprietors a9 by automobile. Hé said although she is almost 80 years old, she stood the trip fine and was not a bit tired. The return trip required 397 miles. said she took the same trip sixty-- five years ago by horse and wagon when it took 21 days to cover as many miles as they did in one deay £5 THE NEW buyers ;l;;'j:x;;x;:;" .l:;. Learn f:!; yourself why it 'i); scoring greatest success this great automotive year! ing mechanism is fitted with ball bur*nawmooo the clutch and gear--shift lever respond to the slightest touch .. and big non--locking 4. wheel brakes give a measure of braking control that is more than equal to every occasion. Come in and see the car that has won the approval of more before was a Iowfi; easy to handle-- But Chevrolet is no less lmpn-f:erm. rolet beauty and style. Never d out they prove anew that fih;umf;'finmhlphn&h' age er dey as attending Gurnee high school the following are students there: Everett Fish, junior; Anna Nadr, sophomore, and Dorothy Hoo-- per and Howard Fiszsh, freshmen. Ruth V. Avery is to attend Holy Child high school in Waukegan. In addition to those listed the oth-- ters of a million m Cb 7 mm *»>