8+ _ _ Antioch Men Seeking to Aid ____-- CShe Hnake Couniy Regiater QJ _ selared it a failure from a death--dealing standpoint, ang _ _' that it has not stood up undér tests. /\ 1[... o that's that. 'The mysterious death ray, blight-- ' \.\ing invisibly, remains a scientifie nightmare of the fu-- »E In the mfig:tflnre Ni hee:a%emcamtod in Eis ht MI:' a ra does bl blast without '* Hiom. ~ n(ylnothlngmy'nfioumn. It is '; nerely a solar heat, immensely intensified and dirécted Ts if'm sort of combined burning glass and search-- fs: Autoists Meet With Rough the matter with America. m-m matter October 18, 1916, at the r office at Libertyville, !!linvis, under Act of | March 3, 1879. Issued twice weekly | ' Tnflnuawbde---inexeeuoflmym, so something else to be thankful for. _' % reports show that some of the big manu-- hfim of the country are eutflns'thclr work-- ing , it must pe remembered that this is always the mcnn the summer season,. It is true. that auto makers did overestimate future demands, and My Banker says that too many fellows know how to make hay whlie ray," announced by a British inventor. And now comes A iepatch stating that the British Air Ministry has de-- Uncle Sam continues to issue crop reports as !lv:ahu&oonuwstmtout.mmehgdu to be put into and everybody, When we see a Libertyville man smiling now we can't help wonder-- n.fl he hasn't just reading.a crop report, or he has seen wheat go to the $1.25 a bushel mark and corn prospects take on a brighter hue.~ Pretty soon the cotton forecast will be along, and the chances are the South will be in posi ontom}okealongwith all others. Already we are assured of a fruit crop-- ------ We've been reading considerable lately in daily pa-- pers reaching -- Libertyville about the famous«"death the sun shine but haven't got sense enough to put it in the barm. x PAGE SIX purse is just a port where "leogl_'.t a pay ie e Soe o hok t 6 f m.hthfimofy;urxthc eollege graduate starts to worry over We . are also back to the season when every gri store has a con-- "Wflnflnmm- PAIR BEATEN IN NIGHT BATTLING Antioch. While driving utw rate of speed when they saw an au-- tomobile _ ahead. of them standing erous wiss in the road, almost gKirls at 11:30 . o'clock ~.Saturday night between Channel! Lake and '.'l;owm men _ were beaten up and two Wauke-- gan men barely escaped the same treatment Saturday night near An-- brothers, business at 404 Mnfir'ahc-. .:m tioch when a party of Chicagoans sought to stop an auto party. Leo Kutzler and John --Kutsler, _ When the Waukegan party ap-- proached the automobile, the stand-- ing auto suddenly backed up, send-- ing the local machine into the side of the road. COme of the halft dozen #0t out of their machine At that moment, two _ Antioch youths, Russ Smith and Milton Crandall, approached and _ 'dashed into the rowdy group with the in-- tention of breaking it up. -- They met with resistunce and being out-- numbered three to ome, soon were badly . beaten. > About this time, the Antioch con-- «w.tmulw the -- that were arrest-- ed..'He ordered them to drive to Justice of the peace but the men falled to obey his directions and And the average Libertyville man's KEYSTONE PRINTING SERVIC®E, Publishers Queceeding the Waukegan Wee'sly Gazette Sbod «o+ o Dh ind l ALONG--THE CURBSTON Es By 44 A MAN AB0% T Tto Win FRANK H. JUST, Editor. * A BRIGHTER OUTLOOK "FIZZALED OUT*" 2 ad two It takes a marriage license to get maytied: on: now--a~days 'and an auto Mhfi}&u *# e e anedone se er does his growling. . _ and fath-- SE Srotk's toun hicknet on an bitious widow or a jilted old maid. when some men wrapped up M&qnfinmm sick doesn't have much trouble be-- lieving that the whale wasn't doing anything wonderful when it got rid of Jonah: > n iad drove off. SUSPECT IN MAIL THEFT WOUNDE BY PALS, BEL} ing it on the door of his machine while the fight was in progress. It number of the rowdies by seratch-- showed that it had been issued to M. J. Milles, 2220 South Michigan avenne, Chicago. The --Kotusiors :.'"m:ylm.'aln".: ustice --mo and took. out a stite warrant for the arrest of the owner of the ma-- chine Take Onut Warrants, Leo Kutzler secured the lHceonse | mmummmmmm.. It re-- | quires sunlight. It also be a mt defensive | weapon for the American climate belt, it shoula | aiso have valuable commugmhanyncflonblouod | with plont{hoi sunlight. inventor s the appli-- | cation of ray can be perfect! ctlulxd and used | for such homely purposes: as h&um and cook-- ing eggs. (This is worth while, war or no war. 'The | world mustget ready Tor some other fuel than coal and | gas--they can't last--but a few years longer, ks. ons Faees seay Aud Werhed uies rvigh visie awa. of half--inch nhel'and ucl.::'molim in less him unsolicited. Uncle Sam says more money is oeing spent bfi the farmers;. If home lxmhmts)npe wrfi it they'll have to use printer's ink, because, mail--or light capable of goncentrated heat rays to a great distance, lm to a young E'_'_'!"'_':its: catalogues are being sent out in summer as well as Wintierx. : s > :020 30. .015 Th ons 09 . + s on ol a year ago, and backed up thestatement by declaring the mail--order houses report increased business and an-- nounce that they Meget their receipts to run as heavy this year as in 1 The merchant who sto advertising because business grew a little dull, ougn: to do somefl\inmki:ifmrthis, for it means nothing more than that the --order, house is taking advantage of his shortsightedness.: They're making hay while the summer sun is shining, taking the 'dollars the home merchant could get by going after thm;flug'lgh his home--town paper. When the year ends the mail--order When the government recently sent out a crop re-- port it stated w other things that the farmers ap-- pear to be in better financial condition than they were house will have a | house will have a t as large as it had' and the bpmeAmgmfl'wfll have only what _ Where is the Libertyville citizen foolish enough to nudloatthenunwho::xl shall some day use sun-- light for both heating l&u purpoges ? shall _ not do. We've a notion that the men of the country will have %h:nds full if they'll devote their time to attending to own business. hair;. we know others who would not "loofk.ro'd" with hair bobbed. But in --each case we can't that it is up to us, or anyone else, to say what they shall do or | e UNCLE SAM KNOWS penheimer --Jr:, son--of the .president Tofi We anee td in m tss $ in onnd id sat wis taken to the, Highland ~Park m ' . i;tf:;) ?5,' t f " '.n.' . Churchill is said to have heard some sort of noise at the rear of m as he was driving"a F his head for the x minue, and in th:'tt;: :-Ilo deep ditch, and turned complete-- y amee, * * * * _ The steering knucklc~--of the car later was foupd to be broken and this is believed to have been: the real cause of .the tragedy. *' * BOBBED HAIR _ Miss Mayer, Block,; Wineman, and Oppenheimer were able'to 'craw! out of the wreckage. . They made fran-- tit efforts to release the rest of the party and begged passing automo-- bile parties to stop and help them. ; Help Finally Comes. _ . It was two young men in a small truck who finally stopped and gave .'-'Y\- ; C p and 'enaate " ste waie wan t 'was . ty highway motorcycle, police ar-- rived on the scene, stopping in thuir chase after a ' ga' e "'"A}'x""'...,. llu uces the Lake Shore Country club. _ A'll excepting young Wineman live in Glencose. Young Wineman lives at 5121 Kenwood avenue. -- -- The Epworth League will hold their annual picnic at Round Lake Wednesday, July 2. -- Meet at the ehurch at 6:30 standard time. Trans-- portation will be provided. Last Sunday night the League en-- joyed a social hour before the devo-- tional service. Lunch was served. Richard Schanck is now first vice president and Ashley Seott fourth vice president. AAN DROW NS IN _ LAKE:OF COUNTY ' (Too Late To Classity.) & _ cxmetmemmniith FOR SALE--Child's bed, mow-- Cr, ite cream fi'*;?*t * Perfection cil stove back. FOR SALE--Combination range in g'd condition. _ Very yreasonable. _mio. «* * "UMUAIt FOR SALE--Fins ripé Mtrawberries. Will not deliver, Petes Poetges, (Continued from Page One) ® be able to take *- quire Registep 90. _ _ B1--6tpd LEAGUE LOUD SPEAKER THE LAKE COUNTY REGISTER, WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1924 l fil e s 'o EL have heard}> the rear of | & along: Re | ye | &% ' he road-- | it | agreements t Arabisa, ~Bal \m_fi dive islands, Nigeria, Nyas sls, Santa C landd, Russia, #4Thinmels th When New Zealand Letter Cost $2.50. "_ "The difference between $2.50 and a 2--cent postage stamp represents to the individual the most dramatic feature of the Postal union's accomplishments. Ten years before the Postal union was thought of it cost $2.50 to send an ounce letter to New Zealand ; todhy it eosts 2 cents. -- -- * Washington.--On July 4, the league ef postal nations, the Universa! Postal union, embracing the earth, will bold Its fiftisth anniversary at Stockhoim, Sweden. "It in significant that the delégates of the nations of the earth gather for this celebration of postal peace on July 4, ~American Indeperdence day, be cause to the United 'States goes the honor of laying the foundation of the Universal Postal union," says a bul-- letin of the National Geographic soci-- ety from its headquarters at Washing: "This confederation of utloninl' Afty years, is the--oldest comprehensive erganization of-- world states. -- It has reduced the world's postage bill by bil-- lions, and increased the letters ex-- changed by millions. It has made neighbors of Kalamazoo and Timbuktu and put sewing machines in Turkish POSTAL UNIONIS 50 YEARS OF ACE Meeting at Stockholm, July 4, Marks Semi--Centen-- nial Anniversary. ~"The blow to the high cost of malil-- Ing illustrated by the United Stutes-- New Zealand instance has been repellt-- ed to a lesser degree with all foreign correspondence. Reduction of the cost of an ounce letter to England fraii: 12 cents to 2 cents, to France from 72 cents to 5 cents, and to Brazil from 30 cents to 2 cents, dates back to a--con-- ference called with the approval of Abraham Lincoin. -- Agreements of this conference were built into the postal convention signed at Berne, Switzer-- land, in 1873. Although the actual Af-- ty--year anniversary occurred last year, the Universal Postal ~union will ¢ele brate it at Stockholim this year, #ince 1024 is the year of its reguiat miget-- "DMMspatch of 22,000 sucks of --mail « m <~Ce from the New York foreign mail post ¥ ofilce is not unconimon today. On oné £ trip recently the Mauretania 'brought x' * oi t M ¢ h l'mm n:,u 384 t 4 ty 2 > "Last year the United States spefit|| ; A husband's mad plufige in $10,000,000 to send 415,000,000 plece# | | : speculation--a flg'- sgilent of mail, Excluding parcel post, abrokd;|| : ; struggle to avert ruin. The and recelved $62;,000,000 picces. 4t is theme'"d as big as a life! Not a far cry from these thousand8>04:}] . a preachment--still there's a pést 'ofice for all Manhattad+ [ 2. R . 'ar & conthry,. In this old tavern ned¢ tha.' = 7 Even the king of Hodjak had to give up recently the old custom of dump-- ing mail in a pile where the pligrims in Mécca, at 'their leisure, picked out "No man who sticks a §--cent stamp grandfather sending a letter only to Canton.. First his grandfather had to choose one of five ways of sending the letter.© It might go hy German mails through England--to Brindis!, Italy, to the Orient, or through Germany to. Brindial. It miglit pass through Gréat Britain via Southamptom or via Brin-- 'disl, or might go by the Uaited States packet. Each way had a different 'charge, varying from &0 cents' to 68 cents. In our grandfathers' time.each 'sender had to pay the cost of transpor-- tation over and above postage; now nations' _ representatives. : eglopiate transportation ~costa, ~cancel ofl, banks do with checks, and pay. "The parts o the world not repte. sented in the Universal Postal+ nnion, agreenients toddy aré Afghanistan, Arabis, ----Baluchistan, Johore--« and. Trengganu i the \alay statés, Mal-- dive islands, Northern and Southern [z.m Nyasaland, Northern Dot Santa Cruz is\ands, landd, Russia, Iraq and m *Through the ofices of the Universal Postal anion magazines have become international as 'well a# nationil by tirtub of the economy in cost Xto. sub-- scribers. -- Foreign mails take the. Na-- tHonal Geographic Magazine to 61 in-- dependent countries and 92 dependen-- cles. 'The same material which is read by members of the society in the Unit-- ed States is read n»y other members in Gambia, Monaco, Abyssinia, Gabon, international as 'well as national by tirtub of the economy in cost Ao0. sub-- scribers. -- Foreign mails take the. Na-- tonal Geographic Magazine to 61 in-- dependent countries and 92 dependen-- cles. 'The same material which is read 10,000 pounds of reindeer meat soon will be purchased hy the government to be served in the dining cars of the Alaska rallroad, according to word re sceived© by the Seattle Chamber _ct AOE "'--;Im-\.v, ;'"--_--'.;""f.; Seychelles." U. S. to # COug up has a hbols through It us if plereed by a anill, m 7"'8\\"."(."'" Arst time that a inrge market for rein-- deer meat has been cteated within Alaska Meat on Alaska Frains Seattle, Wash.--Between 860,000 and Countries Not in ~Union. . the --tribulation -- of :bis for by dependents, the appolicatio® must be sent to one of the following plases; depending dn the apy ant's branch of service: For the Army to-- 8 Adjpsted Compensation Branch, The Adjutant Gene. al's Office, Washington, D. C. % Washington, D. C. For the Marine Corps to-- . Adjusted Compensation Branch, U. 8. Marine Corps, ""@shington, D. C. f 6 For the Navy or Coast Guard to« Adjusted Compensation Branch, Bureau of Navigation, FIERST LOT OF HONUS BLANKS ARE READY Mrs. John Welch is breaking all préecedent in the character of the colored mammy which she is taking in the musical comedy to.be given July 10, 11, 18, by St..Joseph's Dra-- matic Club. N VF / --Auditorium + _ Theatre . Sunday July 6th e REGISTER OFFICE faige «es us SPdly Office 90 . Telephone WMW + LIBERTYVILLE, ILLINOIS T ¢ l / } WE WILL ALSO FINANCE YOUR BUILDING OPERATIONS yside Park JANE NOVAK . »>~>* | BEN ALEXANDER Admisgion :; 30czand.10c--No Tax Where Is Your --Wife? Prices will positively ad-- vance again at midnight : July 10th, 1924 After that date it will be impossible to pur--. chase any of the homesites then Femaining . unsold, at the present prices. _ Buy now and reap the benefit of this matérial Advance, ; Work is to begin very shortly on Wm ation of improvements. _ _-- >\ ;--'0"' §:Y;"" TokA * 2 THIS IS YOUR LAST opmnmwggg obtain a choice site for your fubure home,5 .. or for investment, at a ridieulously low cost© . . and on very easy terms. in t > HOMESITES 58x205 AS LOW AS Featuring H¢ e t w on ie . in 1i es ts PA )'fi- fl fagbes 4004 whort' > Paos/¢ oo M wis oi 5 -- aipaam se $ T\ BULL MONTANA