Th local husband who has to sew on his own buttons seldom sows any boys don't study for the ministry. % # #= wwe is full of regrets. Many peo-- around here are " right now they had cleaned m' out back. Will that violate the cigh-- teenth amendment? . of the furnace last spring. A new national park in the Big Horn Mountains, in Northern Wyo-- ming and Souther~ .Montana, is about to be creat--d if p'ens e~rry. The park will be in t>e shape of a triangle, with cne print across the mountain line and t*e other e go-- ing east from Bal4--Mountain-- and north along a 'ine 'ha* would in-- elude part of the Crow Indi~--n Re-- servation and the fimovus peaks of Sheep Mountain and Medicine P a*. A blue jay was killed by a' «olf| Th+ Chinese game ,Mah Jongg,' ball driven from the <ig=--t--en'h tee W'i*"> has takon Amer'ca l!z.d'.cf-v on the club links at Hempstsad and which is being played Lol-" New York, re--entlv, The or°--s'dort dn Paris and other world centers,| of the gulf club was vlaving in a~a= invented 3,000 'nan aro by a foursome and wa«s the first to d ive C*ine e fisherman whiled away . off. As he stuck *be b~" the bird *' e tine durinz storms playing the} flew from a tr=* ner b=, an4 +al ~*~+ with his. employes. . ______ mcwm.flvflhthmntry, and has also spent a part of his time in small towns, So he knows what he is talking about when he declares that fires in rural sections and in our smaller towns mthemato'mthntnpoomcuhee. He re-- ferred to it but a few days ago w he called atten-- tion to the fact that we are now entering the dangerous riod, when leaves, weeds and grasses are becoming s:y and M\Lw!nflmmlbh. : Ts "ng:..,-"' o t 4 tiger of aigeretty dateigesty even the * or carelessly dropped in woods to start a fire that will destroy many hundreds of dollars worth of timber, and %ujte frequently dwelling houses and barns. Citizens of Lib-- ertyville realize that the season is here when it is ne-- wwmqhimuysmdflmhfmlun- ug. in a stove, grate or furnace, and they should n ydsuemdw-.mlngdongthhuu. Water may or 'nt_hplenfiful-nmmnct:mmfly mwhenthowuunpply?a + e d« particularly need a "fire on day"* to remind us of our duty. Wemmya fire tion day by cleaning up dry rubbish in yards and @lleyways; by seeing that summer rains have not an chimneys or rusted holes in flues and stove Mulbyeleminzthmoutbdmm.aflnh the house. The old proverb about an ounce of preven-- flnnhiuworthtpomxlofmmmunbommk- .en first of fire prevention. At least it fits it mighty wdl-,-cnd_fl;htnowwonldboagoodtlmetoputit A lot of us can't decide whether think: back to buy an automobile or use flu'un buggy money as the first nmtona*dugym& new overcoat. 1 around tha When you go away for a change and & rest, the railroads get (the «::qudthohowmgetthe 5. i . U U That political writer «--who says that the 1924 campaign will be a quie one evidently never heard a Ford running. _ _ _ #. _ t# 8 # < ' Since plasterers are getting $25 a day you can easily understand why| _ Entexed as c:.'ld. matter October 18 1016 March mm Issued m weekly. w . STILL GROWING -- --In the og'i:'xion of the average Libertyville man homesteading has become a lost art. But as a matter g'ffii:wh;:;:t. Onthoe:tnuithmththd- wwmv"fimdm are still into practice. I see a fashion note to the effect KEYSTONE PRINTING SERVICE, & ~ALONG THECURBSTONES Having decided to farming, the undersigned will sell at pub-- ue'.-am.nmf:m-mmmr:r'-.m 2 miles south of Grayslake, 3 1--2 tiles northwest of Area, ,1 mile east of Fremont Center, near 3wan School on * The following: One black team 9 and 10 years old, weight 2000 Ibs. One sorrel team 12 years old. 20 head of cows, 4 with calves by their sides; balance clote apringers. 4 service buills, 4 HOGS 1 Sow with pigs. 20 shoats, wi.'"" **~«,. 2*%@ MACHINERY ANXD IMPLEMENTS e 1-1m~mrdw-u.1m«mw.1:r-vu J--row cultivator, 1 International creem separator No. 3, 1 riding Jrow cultivator, 1 International creem separator No. 3, lm prow cultiveator, 1 new Janesvil'e '"M'yr' 1 plow, 1 springtooth harrow ! puilverizor, 'm 2 heary truck warons, 1 top--buggy * ~ w set of harness and many other articles too numeroust to mention. t U8SUAL TERMS ~" SALE FRED GR Succeeding the W AUCTION SALE Mo=sday, *« * »ber 8Sth FRANKX H. JUST, Editor. Observations By A MAN ABOUT TOW N TIME TO BE CAREFUL s pmer. Commencing at 1 o'clock P. M. Sharp Emabinhed 1556 Auichay A woman may not be able to Marbend Raif srey, tohing Miot how --crazy, w it should'be run. *k The reason people hear so little good about you is because the gos-- sips never broadcast that kind of in-- formation. When it takes a bushe!l of wheat to pay for a~ haircut, you can't blame "the 1 much for grow-- ing less v)m.;d more hair, After all, no one is more interest-- ed in the drop in the price of gaso-- line than the undertakers. Fruit trees may be improved by grafting, but it doesn't seem to work in the case of political timber. They say that moths eat, nothi but wool. «If that's true, a 1"15 suits now being-- turned out in this A fourteen--story botel for Ne-- @rees «will. he MTl't.flis am': :: A'l»nt'e City. buiiding is to *e owned, operated and patronized evc'u~'vely by Negroes, It will be of st--el and reinforeed concrete, and will r--quire an estimated expendi-- ture of $750,000. You -- old--timers "hloh.;. alway's rapping the young fo or ing in their automobiles oum think: back a few years, to some of the buggy rides -- you .took. along dusty roads with the lines wrapped around the whip sorket ard bird fe'l together ehg to tig tee. 206 <h POULTRY ickens, some spring geese, * o'd geese and one gander. 3 ~'d Pekin ducks and one drake. % HAYmm':GhMm 16 10 tons t mow, acres of cory, 40 bushels spring wh«t, 250 bushels barley. --pr B n censes:uu vVem w;&--m > s /vgisterin®itts ies /5 ,vv' the ter. part reminiscent M nutumnmayntneodbth-ommyminlu d 'rich odors. And it really helps us to prepare f ; winter'daysahodwhenmungtw 3 l1 :of aromas that float in from the: kitchen & 's. something cooking to be set before us later on.. _ .. + ! 'Prof. John R. Commons cf Wis-- consin University says thet wage .e-mn "manifest a dogged deter-- ' mination not to accept any cut in | wages," but that they--are le«s re-- :voluflomry than a few years ago. The teaching of the Constitution | of the United States should be er-- : quired by law in every school in the {land. --A m,-?nd'ng of 'our own #overment is theo best way ; our own go 'to beat the AUTUMN ODORS Haddock eat worms ard are vory fond of the eggs of the herring. ;:lll-": ll'lmth---vu V 0e ----'.c-t and --Eighteenth amendment swell the The committed on citizenship of the American Bar Assosiation esti-- mates that there ars in our country 1,500,000 Reds. $X 4 .t::mmouu of the people ami by en-- ent of less fretk laws and tet-- ter enforecement of all laws. , One and a half million radicals, all the way from red--mouthed an-- archists to parlor Bo'shevists and socialistic college professors, _ °* These figures are based on Cetail-- ed returns from the Secret Service department and incdlude the I. W. W. and all constitution 'overthrsw-- ers. It is estimated that $3,000,000 was spent last year on radical pro-- w-da. and that 5,000,000 read ical newspapcrs and . magazines. . There can be no doubt that the world war . st'mulated the develop-- ment of lawlessness, and the mi'li-- Country will have to be check*d by | "*°C» M98* * the common sense and patrictism cf_k:f'__'b,,' ['"_, RED MILLION AND~A--/HALF AUCTION SALE Having decided to quit farming, I will{sell on the farm known as Hecht Farm No. 1 located %, mile south of Libertyville on Mil-- waukee Avenue The following: FRED GRABBE, Anctioneee -- _ JOHN ROUSE, Clerk Gray mare wt. 1450 horse wt. Roan horse wt. 1200 Sorrel horse wt., 1400 Shetland Pony . 4 H 4 ' Co 2 Cows in milk ea mi efistered Heintem Bon Registered Holstein in mifk 4 HOGS 9 Purebred Duroce Spring lmmlz;l Gilts f pigs farrowed in \ Corn Planter with 80 rods ;'fl'iy racks & lred aor Soit ks C 0 n ioaly seing I wagon w':a.muun wagon . Set dump boards 2 #--foot dines 4 Setes double harness 2 vections apring tooth harrow 1 Set single harmess Dunham corrugated roller lz"hh and rope = % Nmm harrow 2 mowers 4 corn ene nearly ? saw new cans 2 aingle cultivators eovoler, ; and utensile F--&-. many :fu- too Set bobs _ awmerous to mention HAY AND GRAIN 25 Alfalfa in mow 175 Bu. Rye 30 Timothy in mow 400 Bu. Barley . 15 Tons Rye straw in stack 1200 Bu. Oata ---- 20 Tons Oat Straw in Stack 10 Acres standing corn Saturday, Oct. 13 ° gopont s t C. F. KOCH, Owner TOOLS AND MACHINERY Binder Road bugsey mre Spreader Light spring wagon At 1 O'clock, Sharp in -- Our HORSES \ ~Deputy Sheriff Lester Tiffany re-- iumht from an 'arrest in the west-- ern part of the"county was called | to the city jail to sée if Cadmore and \Marquist were ~deputies. He was raid, but was finally taken to the city and jailed..>>> :. --/~:>.-- It was thought at first, Hutton said, that they were employes of a nubym dand. . were "shaking-- down" ts on the road. . Cadmore is suffering with an in-- jured left hand which he hurt with a pitchfork Friday. . He fought off his attackers for a while, it was voice," was described by Cadmore. This man, he said, remarked that "we ought"""'strinz you to a tree" und told someone else to get a rope,. 'The others joined in striking him and his companion,, he said, Th._"'su,fi; man", he claimed, showed 'n star. The description ap-- peared to fit:Chief Hutton but he denied Saturday that he had a depu-- tv sheriff's star and did not show his marshal's badge. Hutton described the matter as a misunderstanding of the capacity of Cadmore and his companion. Cad-- more denied he was a deputy sheriff. he said, and refused to answer sev-- eral questions, % yan No action was taken by the sheriff on the matter. He advised Cadmore and Margquist to take the matter up with their families regarding the advisability of* swearing out war-- shown a third Asgistant Firée _ Marshal 'David Hutton, Russel! Edwards, . Eddie Hoff, and Nate Rosenblum went to the scene in Edward's car. -- f ~. Beverely Beaten. _ * Cadmore charged that he and his companion were beaten severely, He was unable to furnish names to the sheriff with exception of Tornquist, which he had heard on the return journey. hy ns They went further down the road near a-- car occupied by Edward Tornquist. Saturday a. 'm. it was claimed that both cars had pulled off the road and were in a field. Klarkowski in the meantime rode to Waukegan and spread the alarm, that a "shakedown" seemed in pro-- gress. He said the men represented themselves. as deputy sheriffs. Li m oL oc an+ A W .. _1 LL > Prnlslt aA 'On the other hand, charge was made that the two farm lads sought to pull Klarkowski from the car, . n!'l.;fil.n y reached a car occu b Frank . 'l.l:'rkowski, son of":dloei'l clothier, a girl, it was claimed. They tookK the number, Cadmore 'charged ~that -- someone shouted that "I'} bump you in the 7 en rack , stocky man, with a mus-- started ~checking -- the * T4 the only source of con--olation left to the fellow who finally decides that a thorough going physical ex> amination might result in eliminat-- ing some diseased condition of long standing that has possibly stood be-- tween him and large succers. A frank admission of physical ailment and the firm application of advice from a~ reliable. physician is the butwaytob-:upm&odluy speed rate set by. modern society according to public healith authori-- would 'be returned against J. Buck-- holtz, Chichgo, ag a result of the killing of Ray Prerdergast, of Lake Foresy,. Th accident occurred west of Lake Forest in the Waukegan road last summer., * In the beginning of deliberations Chase Webb, .of"::.ntioel:i ;vas u;orn as foreman of § ury. T. J. Duffy, West n..dn:fi.nw. C, Hard-- ing, Shields, Andrew Efinger, Wau-- kegan and *~Harry Smith Antioch, were excused from duty and Frank Young, Lake Zurick, John A. Mat-- ysik, Lake Zurick, William Melody and John Whalen, Waukegan were selected to take their places. -- Before adjournmnt today Judge Edwards was to take up the case of Frank McGee, late fugitive: from justice, charged with the theft of geveral pairs of shoes from the Northwestern railroad, who jumped bhbmfinmtimqo. The case of Jdoseph Nila, arrest-- ed after a wide thase on a charge of shooting and wounding Joseph Rod-- riguez, in a pool hall in ~Water street, was also to be heard, it was Amy A. Kaukonen, mayor of Fair port, Ohio, resigned recently after a better fight of nineteen months with bootleggers. -- She clamped the lid on and beat the bootleggers to afinish and then resigned.-- At a mass meeting of citizens hep ad-- ministration was declared t# be the best in years, and all her predeces-- thas ot ie enoortootin 1t in saie the hying Bieid, receryy "In: near re-- turned from college. mu they <were: zeeking to : inform the sheriff of the persons who drive into the fields and cause loud "noises" at night and of those who make road driving dangerous by the lack of lights. * Liquor . injunction~ ~hearings -- in more than ten cases were continued" until Oct. 5 at which time the court. room is expected to be available, | HEAVY GRIST CONFRONT. ; ING GRAND JURY "Better late than never," is about (Continued on Page Four) Reduce Your Fuel and Doctor Bills Built like a battle-- ship of Rudy Char-- coal. Iron these mas-- sive castings absorb all the heat from the burning gases and hold a constant, even temperature. The great, corru-- gated «combustion chamber causes the gases to mix and burn more completely. With 35 square feet of radia tmg surface to everéLs?gaEre foot of grate sur-- face this powerful heater GENERATES and D RS more aat with less fuel. It will save 1--3 to 1--2 on your fuel bills and keep the doctor away. That's why we recommend and sell it. e SCHANCK HARDWARE Not an Expense But an Investment _ wWhen H HA, Aabotchnick pre-- sented a-'"p:gxon in Philadelphia to! have his name changed --to Cabot, n rina. e --Pe va e Order of Foundmmmtg;i When Harry H. Kabotchnick pre-- Eument"@zainst "ieing®'wtuees *In umen agains ;rgt_oum to --any. 3" outside This square house will At in any kind of a lot, either town or ru-- try. (It looks well all by itself and dominates the block fAilled with oth-- er houses. A netas "no paiBling." is "Wetmer 488 no cheaper thin brick or atone, making _ The ample porch is a feature 'hlcg 'ul':;po'l to everyone.. The Autumn Bulbs Are Here Doctors tell us that ordinary heating plants that do not provide for humidity are a menace to the family's health. -- Breathing foul, poisonous dry air--dryer than the Desert of Sahara--they become the easy victims of lfneumonia, bron-- chitis, tuberculosis.. 'They tell us seventy per cent of our children have adenoids and tonsil trouble. k 4 24. The Rudy Hy--power Furnace is indorsed by doctors and users for its ability to deliver clean, mOiit'e invigorating air free from dust, gas and smoke. f t For the Garden--~*~. -- _ 4 TULIP -- HYACINTH -- CROCUS -- NARCISSUS Or for the Winter Sun--Parlor-- HYACINTH AND NARCISSUS IN POTTERY LIBERTYYVILLE _ For Instance : | of the 'petitioners. The court i:htpotlthnu::or"m America. Assumption of the name, it was argued, would "mislead per-- mutothcofl'intndcne'-a; of the 'petitioners. The court front door opens into a reception hall which, E'M _connected with the living room by a large archway, adds n'fu ;&Acl{uu y + the house. & % is the dining room .2'3...".'"' in' ies '"""'"z'&"'i's&u g B ++ r,. exce @ OM, :A ~'Ltlaple io the hospitable family which loves to entertain. ish. _Any local builder or lumber-- yard could readily make an esti-- mate from thé sketches shown. § TS m)s entirely upon its size and fin--