CMPLD Local History Collection

Lake County Register (1922), 5 Dec 1923, p. 2

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y Lake, f s Wm a Kane, a former Dia-- 5:. mond resident, | ed away at 3 i'& hlfit.{ Jital, Sunday even-- % ing after an extended iiness. x daughter, LaVerne and Mrs. Jule 43. Praies and son, Irving, of Chicago, o spent Sunday at the George Hogan Che _~.'_. . ton will meet with Mrs. C. G. Wen-- ... .. ban on 109 East Illincis Road, Lake «.. .. Porest, Thursday, December 6. La-- Mr. and Mrs. Bert Chamberlain and family and Mr. and Mrs, Julius Chamberiain spent Thanksgiving day ¥ at the home of C. G. Small and fam-- Charles Strong son, Harold, also Of Elgin, Mr. :nu.-.a-_nu,u $ lh:nn.lrmiu. y ). t P m ntertain fi_th-»m.d;&.nnd Mrs. C n':;\.amq rt Clifford, home Mon-- In.'Eden'ln.ldn Carsteson, of Chicago, were guests at the John Diétsz home Wednesday and Thursday of last wiek. Last Saturday evening, Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Harding--entertained Mr. and Mrs. Horace Ellis, of Washing-- ton D. C., Miss Verngtte Moore, of Cresco, Iowa, and Miss Ruth Moore, of Minneapolis Minnesota. The young ladies are daughters of E. R. Moore, of Grayslake and nieces--of Dr. E. H. Bmith, of Libertyville. Miss Vern-- ette Moore is county Superintendent of public schools in Hownurd County lowa, and Miss Ruth Moore is en-- gaged in settlement work in the city "*-' anks dnn' ® M .' and Mre. Lorenz Nock and son, Her-- inetame mt a onch o B rea for m*w s * . sumated by Mr. Cameron himself 'aund closed last week. It is under-- stood that the owner 'will refurnish and 'redecorate, the property and op-- grate 'it as a hotel with an attempt to . reestablish= its former popular-- ity. ~Al of which is much to the de-- Jlight of. the people: of : Area. Not-- withstanding the fact that. Mr. Cam-- mhflvflfimm';!efm: Sighteen 'or twenty inudohhbu,hvfl':nflmd to reside in Aréa. <~He will -:z temporary arrangements until a ne home can be built where he and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs.: Michael Meloy en-- 4tertained Mr. and 'Mrs. O'Donnel!, of 'Chicago on Wednesday last week. . Robert Cameron has sold his | _ property at the corner of Ma-- ple and Lake Avenue to Mr. O'Don-- nell, of Chicago, the sale being con-- MF. and Mre. h Kiné vdeats Mr. rs. Henry , tained the following at 'Thankeiiy ing dinner: Mr. and Mrs. Henry Loh-- wyl'irm:%hflnoyx: » . t "- of Diamond Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Orin Mr. and Mrs' Henry Kueblank had dies will go on the 1:40 clectric car -- Mr. and Mr«. Thomas Russel and #amily spent Thankegiving ""' elatives in Lake Forest, £ _ Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Bradiey, of Ohi-- <ago, spent Sunday with My, and MNre. A. L. Dortfier. x « About --sixteen friends surprised lm Nra J. F. ';meh on Satur-- day evening of last woeek. m;-:;- Ing was very 9 -- Img was very enjorably spert play-- Miss Mary Hook, of Chicago, called at the home of Mra. Clyde Harris on Friday afternoon. Albert Knigge was entertained at the home of his brother, Roy Knigge and family, of Praitie View, on Thanksgiving day. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Baumgartner z'nm. of Mr. and Mrs. Robert , of Prairie View, at Thanks Mrs. F. M.:Harding was a Chica« go visitor, Monday, _ -- . -- 'm.m.;u :r&m Crittended and family, 6 were guests 1t the Willam Amnuh- Mr.. Wil Harris, of. Lake Blaff, spént Saturday mingl'zfl Mr. and Mrs. Clvde Harria. & Mrs. Frank Baomgartner attended f party at the home of Mrsé. W. m of IAbertyville on Friday Charles Porteous, of TLibertyville, called on his uncle, W. D. Portsous, Sunday evening Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bauernamith Td Th wom, and Weieh Boffenger. " PR # o# Waukegan, Mrs. Schmuather and MRS. M. L Lecal Editor lay afternoon and evening. AREA , 'of Eigin, Mr. and Mrs. . 4. C, Dorfler spent Saturday dinner ons maage a?:gm;*onu and eve "Su "an hb onamet tentl home of her son, J. W, Chandler. Otto Tegtmeyer,. who is attending college in Michigan called on Area friends last week while home for Thanksgiving. Rev. and Mrs. C. Arthur Jevne and family weke Thanksgiving guests of relatives in Oak Park. Carroll Portsous spent 'Thanks-- givlnfntfinydlb- Joe! Chandler and Ofiom mmkaund Llh_'fil"'l'l.y I evening. es ~~Gilbert Voelker, who is attending college in Michigan, visited Are | ?.:'.'pomamvb-, ited his father, John and Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Smail on Sunday af _ The third month of school ended ,Friday, November 28. The attend-- ;am_in_ the Grammar Room was .98 per ceft and in the primary room, is first tri--monthly tests were ~given Tuesday: and Wednesday of Mrs, 0. C. Jarrett and sister, Miss Dorothy Casey, of Libertyville were Waukegan shoppers, Saturday Mr. and Mrs. August Gadke enter-- tained Mr. and Mrs. Robert GadldA gand Mr, and Mrs. Wm. Kingma, of lmh"'" ",o Thanksgiving day with Mr and Srs. f f . q'm George &uwm Mam«cthIz and Mrs. Smith in Liberty-- ville on Saturday evening. Thevregular meeting of the P. T. A. will be held at the--community house 'Tuesday evening, December 4. --The> school children will give a e performance of --'"The Smug-- an" at the Community : House evening December®7. There will be no admission charged but a eollection wil} be taken in the hope of securing sufficient funds to pur-- chase the reading circle books for the .year. Everyone is urged to be present.. Don't forget the date, Fri-- brother from the several joli%'u.'.x"-n- Q';i:.b\n'fll:dl! : t fiiawfl@-'angdd- Welton Wolf was in town Thurs-- day night,. > 5 ::»4 :s# >> A SS Ee t on on ea-- pecially . on . Sdtur d Sunday nights. Of late several cars were foreed to leave the pavement, great-- 1y endangering all occupants on ac-- |m-t of-- mischieveons © characters, crooks or drunks, finwm." after-- flnwhmflfibd-d everybody had a fine time, , Last Saturday John Birk, an Whicine, "wer Pmper Mee w 54 . was bumped by --a careless auto driver while papers in town with old <Dobbin "his way of making an honest. living" when the accident occurred. <He was injured quite badly and had to be earried to his home _ English survices will be held at the Lutheran church at Long Grove every second and fourth Sunday of each ~month, thereby giving the young folks a chante and hope this will continue to bring a large at-- lbmlmee. Remember to church first and entertainment afterward. G,. M. Weidner was a business call-- eor at Palatine last tohe t Storm e funer-- al of ; T O# «at Palatine last Friday. ; * take is Ford Toud of: yourg--folk» From bere y ere mwufimb% n.mnetuy,p,'le'wahg rough stuff, as they passed a &gmmnmmhunm aecount can be given what the Abhot meant as nothing was said by foe m ons > or occu-- ng mt the . Upeq: or the &pfl Hu'hd_'md Bill were callers tmare Wednesday night. + _ _ « A, J. Raupp was "r"in"' at Arlington Heights last Woednesday. . Clasde f MceQue .;_ 8 Chicago, apent Saturday afterndon and Son-- day at the Crestmore, he brought hi: saxaphone , ';I'WR-" > the player piano which sounded real ni~~ although Claude stai g the saxaphone onla. he Be ago, h can master difficu wenal wel! 'mn'fi;,-" 1 Bunt : and Max Miller d m boxin; Lake, at Thanksgiving din-- APTAKISIC of this week--at 8:15. of L. match at the Great Lakes Thursday Bunton # 3 at he n.a.'v-fim& ~down 'on at of the of Mr. Foulds. "Frillman from Chicago, was h&nu% | other night a young fellows at Deerfield ordered a young man from Aptakisic, who was on a business trip there to leave town as fast as speed would allow him to. The young man said he would do as mambey is baoiiars n Apoie t his business he started to leave when they followed him, jumped on the running board and out where the cop stayed and went after him and got him to park in the 'back seat of the car and to--. gether : went back to town and were mudbtb'fiu who mm&y 'be deait with rightly as this is their second arrest for the same offense. Mr., Laufenberger, of Palatine, ans vflm;anuya week 'and was,laid to rest at Long Grove last Friday. Claude McQueen <and Al Bunton sv:netflmnumnmch's mummul'rfim View last Thursday night. Y Several 8f our girls played basket-- ball at Prairie View last Thursday where a fellow dug his potatoes with his Ford and the digger attached in the rear. A man at the handles of the digger and one at the wheel. "The women picked up the potatoes." Max Miller and family spent Sun day at Grandma Busch's. _ W. C. Volz, of Arlington Heights, was a caller at the home of George Volz one day last week .. George Volz and sister, Mrs. Ella Knopf spent Friday at Arlington Emil is getting to be a real aris-- tocrat of late, we are here to tell it. While others go for a walk after dinner, he has a fellow with a nice tle his dinner. . We hear he will buy a new car in the very near future, this time a sedan, we presume it will this time a sedan, we presume it 1 be nothing short of a Rolis Roy&- : $1000 an acre--"Whew! Guess we will take our farms to Deerfield and sell them. Sounds good say it again. v':ian whi:'h unntn:om ¥: r e per w t a doubt.:some par-- T ICY T t were --*Now Libertyville is ~as neat pretty a town as--one could wish to and on the boom to , are rms near it. selling for $1000 pe acre? How about it n SBelling farms in a fa that's different, why if a Mhz $800 permere, he'd he patting him-- zfimmmhhl s ww*(ld': may be: to the man used to pass his time. Times have changed, down south la-- bour was cheap and negroes could be hired at 50¢ per day, now one can't hire one at all as they are all travel-- ing in a northerly direction and are being employed at a white man's salary, almost everywhere. Bome one has a great mania of late to poison dogs who interfere with their freedom at night. One | «Mr. and Mrk. DeHR Smith and daxughtor, Valois and Mrtr. and Mrs. Milford Smith were entertained for | Thanksgiving in the 'Wil Smith | homt' it --Gravelake. «_ | +s chained.= The guilty party is known and he had better keep off those m.unm'uiothfim being chewed up by a dog. The CGifford White family #spent Thanksgiving at Aurora with Mr; and Mrs. O. Davis and Mrs. Francis -- Menty Jeriasen was a Chi itor, Jast m'- 'c.r".' nwErnIn. him around town to set-- le dinner. We hear he will buy Mra. Mike Luby visited her par-- ents at Milwaukee last week. Mra, Rayv Morel, Mr. and Mra. Daley, of Chicago, spent*the week end with Mr. and E. A. Brown and wife and daught-- et, Lilah, also John Daley drove to Chicago, Saturday. George Shober is very ill at the prosent writing. ~=~* Mr, and Mra.. George Huson en tortained the Walter Sykes fanmvily Thankegiving day. ; from to h m |n'mt:¢ Milton IX.'.«; Mrs. !JD m "d son, Y, spent Sunday with Mre. H *3 parents at North Chicago. s Dell Richardson spent last week in Wisconsin~ _ We heard a new one the other day '~\~ ARBBA, TLL > _ All kinds of Auto Repair " THE STAR Garage Day and Night Service . ROUND LAKE oownmr.r ARD OFFER OF L A. A. According to received by the IHlinois altural Association, six counties have matched the $100 re-- ward offer of the L. A. A. for con-- ::indtho!lutmghm ficking of tuberculous eattle within Several other counties have 'fi their intention of accepting the o of the I. A. A. but have not taken forma}l action. * ACCOUNTANT _ AND _FINANCE EXPERT ENGAGED BY I. A. A. Of interest to members of farm-- er's cooperative associations hlm county is the fact that the I Agricultural Association has em-- ployed Mr. Frazer, Chicago, as con-- sulting accountant and financial ad-- viser. Hewill be at the call of II!-- inols farmers for advisory> service along. business lines. Mlneal unoc;fiqu for thedpg.lz:n carrying out a program Me up have been formed in Whiteside, McHenry, DuPage, Cook, Lake and Boone counties. s M. H. Petersen, Lake county,: is assisting in the work for the L. A. A. Mr. Frazer was professor of Pub-- liso Accounting and Comptroller at the University of Tilinois from 1913 to 1916; he devised the Tilinois state financial system in 1917; and was assistant. director of finance for the United States government in 1918.-- . In engaging Mr. Frazer, the I. A. A. is recognizing the need for more knowledge on the technical side of finance and accounting problems of cooperative marketing associations. I. A. A, Investigating Co--op. Poultry And Egg Marketing > Word comes to the Lake County Farm Bureau that<the Illinois Agri-- cultural Association is making an g::-t.b-m':: sucessful coopera-- poultry egz marketing as-- sociations in the western.part of the United,States through J. D, Harper, in charge of poultry and egg mar-- keting work for the 1. A. A. ; Writing from Salt Lake City, Utah Mr.. Harper says:"In March of this mr_flnvuhumhuum- ; NU&WMI cooperative association." 80 far this year they. have sold 127 cars of eggs Aand expect to sell 160 cars by the &d&.m In contrast 'to this, : shipped out only 17 cars of egys in 1922 and imported seven Ll never culled my heas lagt fall, I'm it does not pay at all for one hen looks just as good to me as any Harper says. Eggs sold as low as five cents per dozen in Utah in 1922. A few weeks ago a car of Utah eggs sold : on &p New York market for $1475 more than a car of the famous brought on the same day. "I Get No Eggs When Consarn my hens, they will not lay; for eggs I hunt in vain each day. 'They laid quite well when were fine but now these doggone hens of mine just sit around the yard and shiver as though they'd sick-- m*""'"'x'"""""m] me cry, get no eggs egga are high. My hens are housed quite well, I'll swear, to keep out snow 'and draughts of air, I've plastered cloth in all the cracks and filled the windows up with sacks. Each day soon after break of morn, I throw my flock a bit of corn. It's quite enough for them to eat, The Board of Trade got all my whent. I've got no time for new ideas, for erazy notions such as these; of feed-- ing ~meat: seraps for protein or sprouted oats for something green. other, yes, by gee! So I can't jost fhnoutdy'l.mm:;z eg#s are high. > f Telephones: Residence 165--J Works 50 Libertyville Cement Block Works CEMENT BLOCKS OF ANY KIND SPECIAL ORDERS VEID oN SHORT NOTT 9:00 » 12;00 A. M. _ 1% 6:00 P. M. ~AREA, ILL. WEDNESDAY -- dfim Bank SATURDAY ilding 123 EAST COOK AVENUE Next to Franzen Lumber Yard Geo. 'A .. Jones Will, BY J. J, DOERSCHUK inty Farm Adviser. F8 DENTIST the savings in county taxes which wi!lnntfl:&"o!k%l.& A. and county farm bureaus have been doing this year in equalizing vtluflonl:" town t:&fi proach © $2,225,000. j : With the savings:in state taxes secured as the w L A. A. and: county farm by i action : in 1921 and 1922, the total savings in taxes to farmers will amount to approximately ©$8,000,000 which is equivalent to about $15 in tax: sav-- :z.'f:renryfmhthmho!' Not so bad, but it's--merely a sam-- ple of the things that farmers can do when they get together. & hfllfim ._'_4_'-'"-'1" ; ."Pmbleuséllgflfiunmvuy great. They are not the problems of the farmer alone, but of the com-- munity. Idon't believe that any class of society alone 'can solve com-- munity problems." -- Walton Peteet. A lady from Gallatin county wrote the 1. A. A.. that she is thoroughly Paid Your Dues Yet? John C. W in charge of tax wuktotfll.lk A. figures that ~The class extends a --cordial in-- vitation to any one in the community who wishes to hear him to be pres-- ent Sunday. The discussion will be-- gin at 9:55 o'clock sharp. .. * TRY OUR CLASSIFIED COLUMN Community Problems DECKER & NEVILLE A total jof 14006149 gallons were thus soul, divile: as fuollows: Juu".nnwmu'rm':flm mary of this kind issued by the pro-- firv -'-";--flq" Lovaliceatd !m's rock f?"'gl..u"",%" o T mel with num ns i:+sue $,638,751. Ilincis was second w th 2,168,788 and Califoraia third. with the District of Columbin, Porto Pico, and Hawail, where the law permita pnumn of liquor for medicinal use, filled 11,268 469 such preserip-- 1569,742. -- Tennessee, wis 171, wee the lowest. New York Sells 442,096 Gallons. --~The first three--named staites ars> led in the avounts of whisky sold Wpflm New Aork 'sellin= 242,900 pations: hi is 269,070, a i Massachusetts was %fl Now York in wine sales. IL< beinz 4,023 gallons.: New York's totu} 11,268,469 P r esc riptions Filed In Fiscal Year. Druggist Report Shows Your entire family wash returned damp ready to hang up. A health; time and money saver. Try it. The Reliable Laundry Wet Wash! Let Our Flowers DecorateYour Home Tennessee, wits 171, wes , D. C,, Nov. 20----Ds-- any room are these beautiful pos-- ies. -- And what a fragrant aroma they give. »> x ¢ You will find the best specimens of your favorite flower here» at a price that is sure to please you. What an asset to the appearance of Libertyville Flower & Vegetable Company Delivered promptly to any part of the village. year for A08 Porto Ries, with aold 147 gallons. was (Oeh And Canttuanla®s thise j bug in n }@gfifi RAen e tk also sol ; more gin than muny other state, 2,7:0 «u lona, corr pared with !':' in Messachusa':ts and 703 in estimated, have t of the Hquor prescription privilege. "wabve, ©abe plivaictons, or one in & Un wid noile in the Lenagts ho aestat Satee wert: Lenagts hn iptoghot) Sadae weeee I can save you from 20 per cent to 80 per cent onfls:momh or any o precious stone in any . amount from $25 up. Diamonds! R. J. Lyons M3 9P

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