CMPLD Local History Collection

Lake County Register (1922), 9 Aug 1924, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

SAO PAULO, CITY OF MODERN IDEAS Washington.--SBao + Paulo, . JBraF!, scene of a rebel uprising, is the souree of the morning aroma from m of steaming coffee 'eups all over the world, "Suo Paulo, the eity, is the prog# Iuan o heva 20 mates. the 30 JAz halk i'm";'i'iz'nnu Capital of Richest of . Brazil's 20 Stutes. _ Washington headquarters tlional Geographic society. Of Hao Paulo is larger than all New England : and-- Peppsylvania combined, It . comprises only . one--thirty--second part of Bratil's vast area, but con-- "Io the visitor It seems as If the state bad .two. major products, coffee and--statiaties ! Its aggregate acre age <of coffee trees exceedas the com-- bined areas of Delaware and Rhode Island. -- There are more than--seven colffee ;prees in the state for gyety man, woman and child tn the United States, At,fiouu-amunwmm Sao Paulo about $840,000,000 ® Iy for her 1,135,000,000 pounds of cof-- fee produced. -- As a specialized whole only to be compared with Cuba's sugat "Geography, religion and romance are 'strangely blended in Sao Paulo's eoffee. -- Bolomon, for all his --wisdom, overiooked a potential source of great lieved to Fave originated in Abyssinia, where Solomon's descendants reign to this day.-- It was not introduced into Brazil until} 1728 _~."A Portuguese sallor was the Cap tain Jobn @mith of Sao Paulo. He married the .South American Poca-- hontas, daugliter of the chieftatn T+ vamePeguit missionaries, who are ac credited '{ounders of the state.. and on the versary of the conversiop of St. Pau} they named the country for that apostle, . _ ---- "Curionsiy enough," ~rules in Brazil, while two indigenous. South Américan crops, corn and the "Irish' potato, are mainstays in North Amer-- ©"Sao Paulo, the city, is purposefully ©2 woterp, so-- much $o. thit some of the , *'D¢ socinl "and engineering ~projects 'were : put : info: effect there while they }were wl ipuzer povepnins' Jn Noith Km | * _, "FOF years now, when a new school| * House is built in gao Paulo, the schoo! | * phygicians have pasged upon thelight | _ 1 ing. the kinds of seats to--be used and | 8¢C other. hygleni¢ details. Indeed, they | M . must even approve the type and its | fou spacing In textbooks before they are | hic adopted!-- 180 "An unusunal sight of the city is the unake farm. The znakehouses, looking "the anakes are the sources of serum used to treat safterers from the bites of rattlesnakes, the deadly jaracas, amd: other venomous reptiles. " ine port of Santos is given over principally to shipping. but lacks the equalor of many older ports. It has a beantitul: beach, wherathe sand is packed ?' that . automobtlies® may drive to the water's edge. ;g'" city ""'W theater, with a. telescople meéans of an elactric %.' be removed In ten m" the #0 that ahortly: f %am in available tor danoing." . ' , 4 marked that all remaining to be fone was the gilding of the tops of the telegraph poles. s 4A Pecullar GQeography.. "The steep raiiroad Aimb from San-- tos to Bao Paulo giver a hint 'to the pecullar geography of the stats. For nenarly 400 miles along Its const is a ow ! harrow in the north ' and m:to-wmudqhm s«outh, Here the wenther is hot--and amolst and the crops are bananas, co-- aonuts, vanilia beéans and cacao. This dowland is marked by a line of hilis, tback of which is an undulating pla-- hhfi"mm'm "Sao Patlo is notable for its varied architectures, ranging . from chalet Of the French Renaissance petiod to modern office structures, / Its outlying #treots are as --plenteously -- planted with trees 'and as well-- interapersed with Aower--planted parks as Wasking "The rallroad from Kao Panle to Santos, the -- world's foremost coffee port, is famous among . engineers~ the world over." There in a drop. of 400 feet in meven jmmilés aver one section. Steel ~cables, <stationary efigines and hbanana. or -- coftee trees, torrentlal Atream --or gorge of dizzy depth. "The road is sald to be one of the best--paying in the world.. Bince the dtvidends are limited (by law, its n o sP #4 SOCLIAL WY Stute 'Departinent of Public Health pecame known today and reports the wide--spread prevalenec of these diseases, however, declared Dr. Isaac : Rawlings, state health commis-- ( nna m hq-flbi- for sending more patients to hospitals, asylums, -- almmhouses \and the jails than all other conta-- &L --;'l:'-i":v-fl I Qf*h year 15,000 cakes of veneres! di-- diseases, however, declared Dr. Isaac! White people hold many false be-- D. Rawlings, state health commi®--|liefs concerning the Indian But "g'"mm"": none of them is further from the ereal infec Bre iprobably Y9-- | facts tha their idea of the position m e P en e? | woman o:en'lo' before the al to hospitals, awylums, . almshouses | "/"!M / peans. 'The commion notion z'fio jails than all© other conta-- is that her place was little, if at all, diseases combined. y 4 #o above that of slavery,© whereas in Awuwncmmmmm e ?v eases of syphiliz and gonorrnea have fact the Indian woman then enjoy authorities during the past five years hoe mpremiets mor< en hatt able represents no more. than ha of the total incidence of these di-- seases in Illinois. § E4 s ~~*The most lamentable feature of the venereal <disease wituation : per-- from one generation to another. _ "Syphilis, for example, amn; such terrible disasters as paralysis insanity and other disorders of the nervous system and so lowers the normal health tone Of an individual as to ¢ause the onset ctfww the degenerating group. It is also an important cause of stillbirths, 5,-- 900 of which, are reported. annually in lHilinois, and of abortions, pre-- mature births and infant morality, ~~"Gonorrhea : leads . frequently ~to ophthalmia neonatorum, a disease which in -- plain -- English -- means a severe inflammation of the eyes of new--born babies. Wlnn-:'m ly and properly treated, ophthaimia neonatorum often causes life long of this disorder are reported annual-- ly in the state. -- -- he "If thneg youth of the land had:a and | wide--spread prevalence of the ,._fih"vfldoatc"mldhoflflt'.le attraction. I!t_bcMundeutood; how | difficult these infections are :",Mun'qmekwudthe 'patent medicine verdors' would lose mn enormous business. Once infect-- ol-hm{dlo"vl_p'fl"h" stance will avail himself of the high-- In a vehicle count made in one section of Chicago between 6:80 p. m.. of a normal week day, it was found that 3$1,680 commercial . ve-- hicles earried 31,700 cecupants, 42,-- cars carried 880,000 passengers. cars which used o-z.t- per cent of the vehicles on the stredt. For economy of space~ nothing equals *""'- hss m¥ ~The street car does not make con-- gestion, comparatively, but rather relieves it. --Current Topic, Chicago. Flagg's\Barber Shop STREET CAR _ SPACE SAVERS Nearly 75 per.cent of the passen-- . 1 g TL j l.'"./ z You'll never say when Air is cut our spfen-- lid way L¥ Everyone says it's "Great, Okay" "For heavens sake"! IMPORTANT --PROBLEM Libertyville at SQUAWS 0 WERE dian Villages, History Now _ Reveals o l e day. vileges than do civilized women to-- Contrary to -- the general belief, in in w uies man, 1e Kio i the Christian Science Monitor. The man ~furnished the meat for his family, and skins for + This frequently involved . toil-- some journeys. F t was the fundamental problem of" primi-- During the man's absence, the woman cared '"'?" family, -- She Hothing, and eared for the children "When the man returned to his fire-- tive life. ply of meat, it was necessary for quiver replenishing with arrows. mmwhdgg. f When the tribe or family was on a journey, the man had bz:fi.fl" watch for enemies and on the look-- out for game. 'The lot of the wom., an was to care for the family be-- 'It was in the sedentary agricul-- tural tribes that the woman's in-- part of the United States A.+ »A * atve For 1a? The announc »--ment that the Public Service C iny of Northern Hlinci® '"been awarded flw%" A. Coffin 14«*--' '*or 1923, is a tibute to :+:~ Prbritory in ich this Co Ap oper-- ates wei!l as the service it 13 This award asfMade to this Company in petition with the e}ecfm'ht" «4 power comp tb of the United States -- distin-- guished contri n to the development of Slectric light and power for he * ence of the p ) and the benefit or the industry." c::rwu hisg | had . to . ao &: mm volved long. toil-- | g to F&'Eu:u band was n problem of-- primi. | send 'him . c return. If PUBLIGC OF | Serving 6,000 square the , for ' f P 1. 4 w s f SA e c --<#¢ /¥ i : TY ) aA ie & ol c f o * %;* ff oz '2'.._ § ,.,:,." & A ' a x 3t v OR Be is > .A':--' . "'_' 5 a )~ ' Lk J '; ' ce ,';» 4 C ns 15.'~ .'. j hn ".1"'1";,1: -- :' i,( 4 4 4 ndu-s - '. r'i, ;y »v {« !.v._,:,i': :&i 1 ---- [ \ &A ,a ', * '.i'"':v « '\u{:-: 4 t"', x Iy_: V q ] * ;" ~ "5 s PYaR-- " j 3 ' L % ; .: ~ CH wXA s 8 fi U Ts 1 "Nel Comrauy ~» Ferritory -- _ \~*#2 t all held priesthood while the .¢ of the tribe woman --was femily. -- She o1 its furnishings mentale of Iroquois . f right to her 6 age --was traced ageable age she mate for him . "'. ding. Al | the young couple L'* to. do was " € ) and live ( '" p ""'7-_ e * v:' P 4 b'" h' ';'"'"" ; to the wif@ If the hus-- -: g& as not od. te h she could send him out of the house not to .,fi,',n. as : it be his mo-- "'f ected & " z;': him who Wiieq it are furnishing . smivice to approx®! ,. 4s perc ar 104,347 of the £,500,000 farmers im the United States, gecording 10 port 'of Rural Electric Service Committee of the National Electric Light Association. ~--Minois spends capita per year f vice and about $ year for public 'pv «ituation 1 fellow who pref "her son berume of marri-- "agp + > w F1 found a »ras i fl ~her --own d' he4 ." M ~arrange -- with the giri's mother for of No. 8. in a series or st&tements about thisg Company's business MGHTY--0 c e electricity sold by Public s : .a any '; ;'--',. "»-','!~ "._b mwer. * _ Power is @@sential uction and the industries mfi lines c! Company vailable for their re-- en the preatest pool Oof electricity of any similar 1 & itic ¥/ '-). ¢ t in Re of the B women the rain were in-- '"as they _least in-- the white funda-- this the --example. of the and eultivated exclusive line-- f companies approxi« 347 of the United V mot to ;:uwlu be his mo-- ~him who CA condition is le diseases. ~gents per health ser-- eapita per _ A large ' spent for RDAY, AUGU » Indeed, e culture atly, the as of the to Supplying electric light to 160,000 homes, es a tories, furnishing e! c street light-- 7 citieg and towns and p@Wer to pump water in nities, this Comps '( TVC8;: tinually in-- list of Industries with elegtric power. 7 dig Cotpans 0 peokection y this Con plays in production DIST Boston, Ay 'M,\ ) T--Having devot-- ed most of ":' & e to the better-- ment of dogs of all breeds, Dr. J. E. DeMund, of: New York. President of the American Kennel Club, the most extens ',' d influential or-- ganization in the history of the dog game, has thrown his weight be-- hind the work of the American Dis-- temper Committée wich is heading the drive in tigq country to abolish th,:k dread . malady of distemper, which annually kill M T than al! other dise: I"llm" Dr. DeMund, who is perhaps the most noted fancler arid dog lover in the country, has informed. Charles H. Tyler, secretary--treasurer of the American Distemper Committee, with offices in the Ames-- Building here, that the American Kennel Club will do all in its power to ad-- vance the work of the drive. . . On a recent number of the Ameri-- can Kennel Gazette, Dr, DeMund, in a special messA@ge to dog owners, urged that every mber of the thousands who are . >A _ in M organization do Ris sha: e in helping to advance the work of the: drive. "Do your part W '. drive and then, in an unaShamed manner, &4 land look at your dog an flm im what you've done," he wrote, . _ Noted Mar Time it Deadly ed.by flames for tire preve member clubs *Pth. & ;fim fsllen in line and are devotin 'fl or a gertain . ' ion -- --Of 4 fie"n ceipts from th .:fi'_- * cause while contrib * re bei "i s s P m .-.x-J'@, se mer eeived daily om individual dog h,,, ers all over the United States. -- ?fitdcanpanies ww.m of businesses in the terfritory, it shows the Steel Co. iet Manager Libertyville, 1J | 144--W towns--with Gas o# Electricity m iPs 4 'VTmmans " _ -- A ug! '")"" --Having f :B §'," to the gs of all breeds, , of York. P erie "llnnel C ns# "'E; d influen in ' of ork of the Americ mmit€ée wich is in tig country to | y of dis ually kills more . ther diiseases com|! ol of electricity of any > ,".: 2 "i' furnishing e stre and pow } ¥ et Gives Away with Toy Tinkers 0 Co. Whne Cotpormtion Mather Funembmiing 49350 Newel Grader Russell C i ABY M onctmartsil * P44 °+ -- * + uk t it S ) M 4 8 P * uts ks == t ¥e \ G s ComPhaf Yegs it y° JA c sn 'y --.fi ; ;' es "s c 424 (eh, n P * JE :. e $\ x * ks \lae :; ) PR 29 °C r¥a HIT A aboli of an ico a bat down the fortress of tra-- dition, jon and l1 the v Bookman, ¢ * » t o s S take the left hand turning, because "thither go all the lords and. lovely 1 "_xw" and se Qf ars and 3 _ s,". the--merry come pany who keeps th ;"'m"'" yay beaten .....3 .:a ':ud. t is the import 0 tings; that is what he would have you think. The: bitter truth is far otherwise. . Don Marquis is incorrigibly moral, hopelessly inhibited, a prisoner of virtue. His literary works are but a vain appeal to & non existent baser nature which he hopes may some day materitalize and liberate him from his DON been ruled and ordered by a cons-- fiag? cience which would have carped at the Roundheads as spiritual slackers for sybarites. Give Our Want Ads the OnonOvc" PARADE m e t ons masamtnae Thousands of dollars in prizes F. --A. Hutchinson SATISFACTION GIVEN . Foundry Ca Old or New Work 601 West Park Avenue FLOOR SURFACING eustomers, < EP us 4 M Lake County -- ----TUHE --FARM --ON "A Mammoth Show of ~--Treactors and Farm LAKE COUN TY ANN U AL FAT R REPUBLICAN DAY BATURDAY, AUGUST 30th and Evening) . . . _ --_ HIGH DIVING ACTS _~ Many Free Attraction LIBERTYVILLE August 29, 30, 31 and September 1st, 1924 Year's Roundup of Boys' and Girls' Club Activities and the And Such a Midway! * %#, P e m ie HARNESS RACING STOCK YARDS DERBY : Agcus'ru The Fast Runners From Haw-- thorne Race Track Running Races Every Day of:] > "Educat thins /on' Biegest " Poe Seale," All these daily (afternoon m Elxhj'fldu,fl $ ns rm W": equalled lfi UNTY FAIR State's Best Dairy SPECIAL RATES ON RAILWAYS DA W, L WwOoODInN, John G. Wirts, Tlist year » -- DAY AND NIGHT Ever the 1925 Models Machinery FAIR DAILY Fair Auto ad Augl« T 39¢' U wl / 1# 4. 4 46 a7 n

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy