CMPLD Local History Collection

Lake County Register (1922), 4 Jun 1924, p. 9

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| weave | OMsubs . o.hudayafumm!mh- m'fll'oul'bmmw pienic. The Domestic Seience Club will hold their last meeting Tuesday| _--The Domestic Belence GIBD WIM!pa, / hold: their last meeting MY' night. M."mhlfifl'fi'gw"my "White Rose" and Gotti's Soda Shop $100 a afterwards, es isR _,,'Of mey _ The Misses Smith and A! sp»t the week end in Chicago. On Saturday of this week is the Alumni banquet. . Come out and kgupport your class. ' Miss Johnson spent Saturday and Sunday in Waucatoca, Wisconsin. Sticking Until the End This is the closing week of school and in order not to make it a fail-- ure the remaining work needs to be «do~» thoroughly. o -- There is nardly a day but what someone reminds the student that this being the last week of school méans that earnest work must bo' continued. Everyone knows that up until this time there has been hard work for all, so why not complete. the year with the same effort and have it a success? The last week marks a turning point in everyone's life the seniors finish their high school work and the other classes advance into the next year's work, which proves that everyone needs to do his best. This is the most im-- portant week in the school year, so let us do our best and stick until the end, The Botany class had their pic-- THANK YOU! ! We take this opportunity to offer a sincere expression of appreciation to the Register for publishing our school news and for their continued interest and good will. ' + Particularly do we wish to thank them for thegenerous amount of space given us each week during the entire fchool year. _ _ ~-- _=~ We trust that you have enjoyed 'reading our current events and ath-- letic writeups. not to mention the stories and editorials, plus the jokes 'M M & % x ho t % the sp At this, the close of the school vear. the editor--in--chief. wishes to thank all the students who have as-- sisted. in editine the school news, the onlymmbdugthn;thenuu't more to thank. o.' . s 4 " ?omnm will be better and T 'Mn[ next 'than hbeen this vear. !"l' 'n % . PeCRORC Hu ul 0o o n se e hwmm.h"mnu'kofvfit. mirth and humor, and has jyrone dminmhimofh'r.n.s. as a'marterpicce. It proved to be the greatest of Mr. Walker's long list of successes. wHAT's THE USE Weep and you're called a baby;, Laugh and you're called a fool. Yield and you're called a coward, Stand and You're called a mule. Smile and they call you silly, Frown and they call you gruff. a PP uie mente s U2 C W i n oi D Put on a front like a millionaire, And some guy calls you a bluff. HEY, MAUD! Maud Muller on a summer day Raked the meadow sweet wl'fn hay; The judge came riding by that, WaY» And this she heard him harshly say: "Wake up there Maud." | Mand raised aloft her raking too!l And shrilled with anger, "Darned old fool"! $ m Jw ,ep"d' "Fair mido w I was but speaking to my "Step lively Maud:" f GYPSY ROVER Come out lnditlon according to H. L Jamis | dairy -- extension specialist of 4 Lfim College of Agricuiture, who assi [ the Eud in the organization and direction : week 0' school these associations. Mr.-- Larson minkn"lt a hfl-'now realizing $400 a month tr and -- Aurell nat this de-- r and more than it has *% | da heondn.zia d f sehool | !" tnfdl-tu ldlhb.}" ut what s ent that:':; f school Mh' ; that up| *' een hu!l,: complete , ¢ Joining a cow testing association has nette; Julian barson, a Boone county farmer livingy near Capron, Earnings Become Better With Joining of Farmer to Ranks $100 a month and saved him the feed of seven boarder cows which he suld to a butcher within -- three months after he joined the organiza-- 15 cows whereas his herd of -- 22 cows returned him < only $300 &A month before he joined the associa-- tion. When first asked to poin the as-- sociation, Mr. Larson was skepti-- cal about the benefits which farm-- ers could derive from a membership. However, after he had been visited three times by farm adviser J. C. Kline he became convinced that joining the association would be a big step toward helping him put hiahcrdon'nbett«payingbuil. The association started operation in January 1923 and it the end of three months the records which the tester had obtained on Mr. Larson's kerd were so striking that seven of the 22 cows were immediately sold because the figures showed them to be poor producers and m'pl;ofit:ble. LAKE COUNTY STEERS TOP CHICAGO YEAREING MARKET q"""' Emt ue o sales on the Chicago market. The 85 head were western branded white faces that averaged 1,002--pounds in weight. 'cely. 'llo more hawking, senu®Ming, uuncous discha headache, tmglmmmth at night, your : -- cata is gone. + Fron't stay stuffed up! Get a small ;u.ottL'oOm-'Btbfifl!"' uogist now. Apply a little of thit matth u. Auty ie reprce hh Nagoy Balm is what every cold and c# doen wifferet "has been' mecking. TVE Ant Wh:;;hnlh(t o air pablegen o Als open up, air passages our head are clear and you can breatht cur now. Al & utC oOf Sule wirant, antiseptic cream in your no# se swollen, inflamed mucous membrang, herd was further reduced _ cows when eight more w after the tuberculin test NOSE CLOGGED FROM A COLD OR CATARRH e cuder 9 4B Asinintnit, I Cone ile, let it rl'l" th .amage of head ; © ' Ahw now gctm 'i f $400 from 15| roughly. "!h"d' testing cows both | nd for ubemlosis.) line. who cites this is 2 sample of what i any county could testing association rofitable:| _A good start duced to | enlisting suppo! re were basis. Committ test bhad ' the drive. Fa 3 \m help support ©" a K0. 1 ccaok Aikailu nf of the wb in of m is from wWORKING FOR FULL--TIME The Lake County Farm Bureau }bat of the W has launched a drive for an assist--| Association, 8# ant to the farm adviser.who will de--| V. Vaniman, vote his full time to the boys' and field organizal girls' club work that has gotten quite | cooperative,. a start this spring. The committee| keen 5 realizes that the junior club work is-expn:u C of first m to the future a sound se welfare of in Lake county I. A*A. . and particularly in developing lud-' will k \ ers for the farm organization of the says Mr. WiG future here. With that in view, we| that he bas -- have started out to raise the fuudu\ovo'r the state to get an experienced club leader}tor gatherings on a two--year basis. lcor.ed the au A number of folks have been in-- f h o s 1 terviewed, organizations interested ""","'-"4'_",';@-.» | and a banguet meeting neld at the FORD COUNTY YMEN | Hotel Clayton in Waukegan -- on| FORM CREAM SELLINC POOL: Thursday evening, the 29th of May. 4 wovviiamimner B. H. Darrow and Bert Ball, both T Ask* ' of Chicago, were the principal| Ford county m. now have| speakers. Those present at the meet--| a full--fledged cream sellins organi--] ing were unanimously-- in favor of,nu.. M'fi.fi,'a'm Advisor doing all that is possible to complete| Doerschuk of Lake county. since the | tnis purpose. There was consider-- 114 dai ffi representing 496 able discugsion by. all present and;em.-- :L w pooling con-' enthusiasm was strong for organ--| tract of the Ford County Dairy} ized boys and girls work on the| Marketing Association mer at Pax-- farms. A number of organizations | ton, May 27, and eompleted their or--. were represented. 'ggnintion gecording to the Tllinois: Cook county has long had muli"fleultu'nl Association plan. By-: paid country life and boys and girls laws of the new COoperative were workers, and the results obuhed]dnfbd and officers elected. Fol-- have been very fine. Surely noth--| lowing are the five members of the ing is too good for our Lake county ; hoard of directors: Eliven J. F. Nel-- boys and girls in developing a bet--| son, Paxton, president; 0. G. An-- ter country life and leadership. !demn, Paxton, secretary; George L. A good start has been made in Stanford, Lota; James Gourley, Pax-- | enlisting support for the two )'ear'm; Nels Hanson, Paxton. Eliven 1baa!s- Committees are working on J, F. Neléon is chairman and sames | the drive. Farmers are expected | Gourley secretary of the Paxton lo-- 'm help support the work as it will | cal, 4* .4 | most vitally affect farm boys and| Tw of the directors are appointed | girls and their business. t from the dw of the Ford 1' With good ecoperation on the Part; County Farm Bi pean and three are | of all concerned we should put fl"'telecte'* from members of the Dairy | drive over. There is no reason why | Association,. All directors are farr | | we should not nave from 500 to 1000 j bureau members which is one re 'lbo'" and girls in the club 'work in) quirement of tne Ford County or \ Lake county. $ * |gmiuthm. T m T L P is L o+ tha: manline tion. -- Notable Lectures EDITED BY J. J. DOERSC County Farm Adviser. R e d p a t h CH A U T AUQUA FIVE BIG DAY Season Tickets Only $2.50 ULL--TIME | elevators. . 'Ine CLUB LEADER) sored by the L s IBumu with J. ~ "gUCCESS WITH EASE" GEOFFREY F. MORGAN "THE BASIS OF LIBERTY" "NEEDS OF THE HOUR" FRANK PRESTON JOHNSON JUDGE GEORGE D. ALDEN Chautaugqua Week Here June 17th to 21st "THE NEW INDIA" BHASKAR HIVALE ns | ton, May 27, and completed their or--| 'xlni:ltion gecording to the Illinois: "lEAgfleultu'nl Ml'. plan. By-: rIs laws of the new Cooperative were "']dnfbd and officers elected. Fol-1 th-- | lowing are the five members of the ty , board of directors: Eliven J. F. Nel-- et--| son, Paxton, president; 0. G. An-- !demn. Paxton, seeretary; George L. in Stanford, Lota; James Gourley, Pax-- Car | ton; Nels Hanson, Paxton. Eliven on |J,. F. Nelson is chairman and james tad'l @.".1_ . o ainkname naf the Pixton 10-- AT says MYr. ESAAA UCHE wnoetings 2 he bas h :4 'v neetings a over the state with farmers' clev: er " wl ich have et sn the soditing servic. tor gatherings, all of W" th have en* j Be that as it may, we saw several| corsed the audit fee. | worth while things. At W. C. Dil-- ___,___,;',%_ | lon's farm, south of Volo, he had _ AXo ... 3 Ce. | perhaps 25 acres of a promising FORD GOMW'"\ 'field of alfalfa sown a yvear ago.. FORM CREAM | ING POOL|The seed was bought to be ceftified f ..% Grimm's alfalfa, yet thorough ex-- y . o ealrae) amination by Mr. Hackelmann of Ford mfl"' now h"'e'quite a number of plants dug up by. a full--fledged creanm geliin: organi--| a spade failed to show any of the: zation according to Farm A\dvisor) usual characteristiecs of this valu-- Doerschuk of Lake county. since the| aple variety. He had bought the 114 dairy farmers represonting 496 seeq from a firm that was selling so-- Ford county mv now have a full--fledged cream gellins organi-- zation according to Farm Advisor tural Association sfi" m threfi months Ford County will be free from bovine tubereulosis, which will make this organization the first co-- onerative marketing association in I!linois that is selling products from T. B. free cattle only» . i *4 m for a loan at one --of the banks, which loan will b-.l from reserves, There is no tock and member hali ®. l als of the ols Agricul-- sociation state in three Ford County will be free : appointed fon the knolls overlooking Siocums the Fordtx,m. Mr. Brooks 'had used rock | three Are phosphate on both clover and alfal-- the Dairy| fa,. and the results were noticeable, s are farM|al)though on the clover the phospnate is one T€" had been applied nine years ago. Al-- County fi?'fnlf; was grown on the Brooks farm 38 years ago, perhaps a record for the pooling Lake county. Does anyone know of AY, JUNE 4, 1924 day, although handicapped by the| disagreeable, cold weather, was in--| --... teresting and valuable to those who| ,.pon_'nth.bd. The University men, J. Farm C. Hackelmann and Prof. Jamieson presi-,hld'uly those dates open, and "! Ivisors' was necessary to take advantage of d'm as decided by the Farm Bu-- ""f.'. \ reau committee. We are planning .umn' now on a good tour about the mid: rest is\ gie of July, before harvest, that will! "r DaV€ pe worth the while of every farmer| Il,b f"'::i in Lake county to attend. It is fair-- b¥ t9¢ ty safe to cxpect reasonably warm *Wk'"lweatbe;- by that time. As it was, WeeK$»| yeports have it that several have A" $238 not recovered from the chills enur-i ."g'; f'l tained on the tour coming from the @leva*" raw, strong northeast wind. ' DEMONSTRA _ ~ ; jany fields l derable in the CEsSPUL *utwA'%D Lake 0"':!-%'""' br the DAIRY FARMS|lead among all eounties in e the total acreage of alfalfa, the 1928 The alfalfa tour held last Thurs--| estimate by the State Department to huy this spring. .Nothing is more | A. 1. DOmOs, WEHHSR® S12 * important in alfalfa growing than to| on first test, showed the be sure of the source of seed. Sev-!home grown feeds, also g eral spots in Mr. Dillon's field where ing up of a grade nerd. the alfalfa did not seem to be doing!' Mr. Hackelmann gave a well were tested by--the advisor and| also on the corn borer an were found not to need limestone, as| root and stalk . rot disea 1they, were not acid, but were prob-'were causing so much loss | ably needing phosphate. ' Illinois. _ He explained th eeaing> paguaBpneii's" 0000000 5) st ount BAE anaex: caretful rot called Grimm again this spring con-- siderably under the prices charged by reputable Grimm seed dealers, and from whom the Farm Bureau, sfter an investigation decided not they were not ACKE, OUC _ NXCTC-- F" ~I ntmate . / HK . ably needing phosphate. ' Illinois. _ He explained that on ac-- At W. E. Brook's place, »west of | count Of our: careful rotations we Wauconda, we found splendid alfalfa | used in Lake county including much knee high in a thick stand, growing| use of legumes, and the fact that 'on the knolls overlooking Slocumsimost of our corn is put into the silo Lake. Mr. Brooks 'had used rock;that we were not in such great dan-- phosphate on both clover and alfal-- | ger from corn diseases and that when fa. and the results were noticeable, the corn borer came our way from: although on the clover the phospnate | Ohio, where it now is, we would had been applied nine years ago. Al-- stand a much better chance of suc-- {fnlf; was grown on the Brooks farm | cessfully fighting it, sincs most of 38 years ago, perhaps a record for the crop is 'removed from the ficlds TE V CAOL 3. Cmauim'~'Ahisc was frood news PHONE 1882 ASafe Investment With A High Rate of Return Wt in Weatherstrip Installation RAY B. HOFFMAN North Shore Gas Co. Operated by William A. Bachr Organization At Mr. Dietrich's farm we stopped to look at 70 head of steers he had been feeding about 40 days on silage, \ alfalfa and snock corn, They had made good gains and he expected to 'finhh them out on grain for the August market. * any fields planted before that time * "TMV ture showing that fa- acres of this, our mo G Mw sahowing that we had "~of this, our most valu-- able mfid account records, kept by ecounty farmers have shown conclusively that the alfalfa crop paid the best of all, and was the most important cog in the cheap production of milk. At the L. A.Huson farm the prac-- i':"'vp';"'o;r'. not one case in ""3 tical results from feeding & home requires _ internal -- treatment. ab grown ration of alfalfa hay silage,; m'h""&r"'" "S""me' Q'nhe ground h.::y,b corn a;\d l':"n were | mg o;ou :;u?:d:w" ind by observed ran only being pur--| c Robinson--out chased. From 24 cows he had aver-! e.%:uj the l"lal:lllfl: :un mdmdutral. aged 18,000 pounds of milk per% t. Jacobs 'wh"m"" dl'b"- month, and the past few mka'."'-'u"wm'.' burn the 'm"'z v since turning out on sweet clover """m pain, soreness and stiffness from pasture, his production increased; aching m muscles _ and g,.,:& from ten cans per day to fl;;emahau'"% m' , backache . without having any cows * old cither, again provine the practical| _/ up! G"*s.fj : \g caic" af Aatel clover pasture. . | [ 9L oldetinie, honest "St. Jarghs T8 Frank Ehredt had 22 producing| cows on sweet clover pasture thtt' were producing 10 cans per day of milk. These were the cattle recon-- tly purchased from Barron Co. Wis-- conson, an accredited county, that showed less than ~% of 1% T. B. in cattle from the entire county on .the last test. 1 | ~A. B. Combs, whose herd was clean | on first test, showed the value of !homc grown feeds, also good breed-- \ing up of a grade nerd. l' Mr. Hackelmann gave a short talk \ also on the corn borer and the corn \ root and stalk . rot diseases which [ s Annbine un much 10%s in central where --such as the seven per cent investment _ 4. this company is placing in the hands of ,4 the residents of the North Shore, in the. «%) shape of Cumulative Preferred Shares, is S a rarity nowadays. | f These shares are being rapidly taken by our consumers who are receiving dividend checks every three months -- January 1, : ° April 1, July 1, and October 1, at the rate ' of 1% per cent quarterly. These shares are free from the Normal Federal Income Tax and exempt from per-- sonal property taxes to residents of WAUKEGAN, ILLINOIS Theslummaybehldonacuhbuisat $100.00 each, Par value $100.00, or on an attractive saving plan at the same price... Let us tell you of our HOME OWNER-- SHIP plan whereby your money is placed in a safe steadily paying investment and remains right here at home and the divi-- dends as well are kept at home. This was syu-dls-i&.fl dairying. We hope that next tour held will command a large attendance of be gained by getting together tf?l'h county, and her be our Stop "dosing -- Khnecumatism. .n'.mg:ty;-otoneauh"' requires . internal -- treatment. -- R .'l"'.'!'rp'i;'.';ry;ao(oneauh% mx:;ll_'es internal u&m;m. * oil" soothing, acobs rigmooQC"uuderspo"udb!thc time you : say J*kiow mflnrheqnmmmddnm "St Jacobs Oil" is a harmless rheu-- Rub Rheumatic Pain From Aching Joints Rub _---- NOWY PREVAIL ----~ WILL CONTINUE UNTIL o O Heaiae. . ol ul * CHICAGO -- on MICHIGAN AVE. BETWEEN VAN BUREN AND couo'kg& EVERY NIGHT $X aXo son ENTIRE MAIN FLOOR $2.00 AUGUST 30 ONLY $150 ana $1.00 | '§'§'$ -- BOTH MATINEES WED.£ SAt ENTIRE MAIN FLOOR $1.50 SaALCOmY $100 Smi'th, 50¢ SAT AND SUN. EVENINGS ENTIRE MAIN FLOOR $2.50 Pain right out with email "dosing" Rheumatism. trial bottle of ol« "St. Jacobs Oll." 'wbr ¥% o

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