& Ru 4% s / _ «* Mr.and Mra Toner and son, Mer: * Gurnee Sunday. s Mrs. Earnest m'h:-l" a Wau s hospital after having an oper k: zfoc appendicitis on Saturday. ki _ Mr. and Mra. Clarence m -- dpent Friday in Chicago. _ Knigge and daughters remained until * . Mr. and Mrs. Frank -- -- and son, Frank called on Mr. and ?'M Herman of Waukegan _\ home of Miss Flora Doiton. The " day will be class ___----_ Mrs, Walter Stark and sons, Bud-- _' dy and Roy spent Saturday and 5.8 i Th Wis, Borman Abrigh _/ 'have moved from their home in Dia. e C t on Sey . ol "s o ¢" -- was > &A ml Teey C Mn o is in 1. cqe 3 n in w 3 _ Mr. and Mrs. W.; O: Bell of High-- _\ Jand Park and Mr.and Mrs. James -- «. Robinson of Rogers Park spent Sun-- ,"_'._' \n v',",,.,_:' P Mr. and Mrs. F. GC. Shaddle. /.. Frank 'Bauernsmith : is enjoying a '\ Wmreation from his duties with the C + Saturday. Work has béen started on the basement of Fred Wilkenning's new Mr. and 'Mrs, Waters and family of Grayslake were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jooe Dietz. : ~ "' s« «Mr®. Holmes who has been visit-- . wome time Beaturday for us e "&. K. Y. _ Mrs. Bert Mills and: yon, Donald und Mrs. Bobby Wells and son of W were week end guests of Mrs. William Albright. : _ >>" _ Mrs. C. Arthur Jevne was a Chi-- wage visitor on Monday. ' sc . MrS.. ,,ffnkgmdl'th °fu mm is Epending a few days with her par-- ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J, Rouse.: > . §. L. Tri ived. word: that in fows "'v:",.:&.:g.m It 'wh away on . _M_ y . morn-- _ The Ladies Aid Society held the first meeting of the season at the home of Mrs, George A. Ross. The spt nds with mlane is1 tiags: ue ¢. and Mrs Clyde Harris and _chil spent : Sunday with the ~Ao parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Marris of Wauconda. -- -- 38 H. Piper company. _ The class meeting of the girls in Mrs. Albert Roder's class was held gffln home of Mrs. Roder on Sat-- ing was held after which the girls P in a 'contest.> Ruth Flora® recei ree. mext &w be held at the E;d Mrs. H. C. Meyer, Miss MHulda < Meyer and Henry . Meyer mm# the home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Meyer of Lake Zurich "'? . and Mrs. William Vieck-- of Chicago t Sat» Nrs. BR D. (?-:. She & who is wen known in has a number of patients sons, Fanui and ari, P and . aIFE hn Pfsnnestill and his brother and visitor on Sunday. davghtar Mias o) apent the woek end with Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Bluhm. family of Kenosha were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs H. L. < Mr. and Mrs. Herman Zersen of Wheeling were entertained by Mr. and Mrs, Will Zersen Monday. -- Smith of Rockford on Monday. Chicago visited at the H. L. Burdick lu.?cau'dm Eve lyn of Libertyville, called on Mr. and Mrs. Will Kaigge Sunday. x Mr. and Mrs. -- Yoftr, Mr. and Mrs. Ma- ager of Waukegan motored to_Area on Sun-- day--and called on Mr. and Mrs. W. Mr. and Mrs, Bert Terpening of Park Ridge were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Rouse on Bunday. -- oo "aur h ) :4 g:fln. E. Kelling of Wau-- were entertained at the home ' Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Pfannestill. _ NMr. and Mrs. Warner h is Tot from Will Kay and ate ng a garage. built on it. mother, Mra. C. G. Small. -- Miss ~Hattie ~Price was very w-mfl-advhi.dht ' dropped in Saturday noo hhcaoro(ht*firm ---- Those present wore Mrs, Jones, Mrs. Julbius Chamber-- Emma Fisher, Mrs. Harry Mra. Floyd Rittler entertained egbinC-.c-althonu '"an Area business visitor on AREA Paul and Earl, Mr. and Mrs. ' and Mrs. E4. Pfannestill en-- Tag t "7' Nettie Smith, Mrs. R. D. } D. Cook, M C, Arthur Jevne, Mrs. George g;i:' f » ons Ahe biges of Mise Price, her i added totaled 811 #. _ ; a very pleasant after-- : ts consisting of ice cream cake were served. Miss Price thoroughly enjoyed the after-- P o es e rnfoitate s vory ving helped her celebrate a very happy birthday. FEBT . 'Harry Pfannestili made a business trip to ;'d'h'o on Monday. Mrs. Dobner and family 3#% called on Mr. and Mrs. *) M mfio s W L AMr. . Mrs. John WA Lib-- ertyville, --spent Sundqs;ifitl':'their daughterx. Mrs. Damon Mu\d ". Mrs. George Seiber entertained her mother from Evanston last week. &,g,w i oulldey s it tme i au spen ay wi e 1mea,';;m_h.hr. and Mrs. Win-- " "m' NB ,1» s "'. _ Mrs. Clyde 'Harris 'and children 'spent Friday with her sister Mrs. Busching of Leithton. Mrs. Sandman _ of | Libertyville spent Thursday with Mrs,. Clyde Har-- "'. Al'rl" Ritta is in a l\fl!pifill in Chi-- cago suffering from a very serious s mipy tohis eve. One Of his 6yes injury tohis eye. One of his had to be removed on Monday: wm, sCOUaNd, -- F FABUCC, . ALORIAINYq Belgium, Luxembourg,: Switzerland and Italy. He found five of his father's cousins in Alsace Lorrain and some of his mother's relatives Roy Hecketsweiler who has been touring Europe with several ffiw this summer returned. home last week on the Olympic." He visited his parents. Mr. : and.Mrs. Jfi Hécketsweiler -- on» Friday and SA nmy MOI" fflf Ml M in ludiana, . He -- visited. . England, in hfind and" also in 'Wales.. While on the ocean coming . home they encountered: a severe > storm which lasted 24 hours. One thing of special --interest which. he visited while in Rome was the Vatican. His friends regret that he could not stay in Aréa a little longer._ .___. ____._ -- Kenneth Connor spent the week lcndinDolton.lll- s um 4 iee Agh * ?nnkdnmba of . Waukegan, .our motorcycle policeman, started work llutmkndlndflv.u'nem the mark. 'Some of our prominent Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Prescott and children of Aurora, 111. were w visitors at the home of Mrs. E. Dun-- ning. Mr. and Mrs. A'xel Neestrom of North Chicago called at the Larsen kome Sunday. k - " Miss of Chitago has been um*hw the past weék. _ 0 ~ Last "Bunday. the 4 were entertained at W: 4 h.::n. Mr. and K. B and the Misses Louise and " Lena Schwerman of Gilmer. Otto and Will Nagel of Chicago were Sunday visitors at the Edw, G. Ngl home. . and Mrs. Harmie Baumann and son, Floyd motored to Gridley, Iil., last Monday. 37 citizens have had. the privilege of standing on the carpet. i and sons Herman --Albrecht of t lmundfl::sz und a of other rel-- atives and. friends. ' daughters, Beverly ma of Wauconda are now residing with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Huntington on the Smith farm. * e AM.WM"W. Albrecht at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Henry Blume. Mrs. Albrecht at the time of cher death was 84 years old. The funeral was held Saturday with Anterment --at Schumburg.: She leaves to: mourn her loss her daughters, Mrs. Henry Blume and Mrs,. William Kruaken . Besides the home brew on the table, the equad uncovered another boore supply consisting of one pint of whiskey, two and one--hall quarts of colored aleohol and ten gallons, one--half ~barrel and eight quarth of beer. The booze --was spilled«p{ter samples had been. taken for evi-- ;d..l. n The state's attorney's sponge squad under the leadership of C. A. Brune raided several places Sunday night and found liquor flowing. At Joe Teikus' place at 825 Préscott atreet, ~Waukegan,-- the moppers found five men at a table drinking SPONGE SQUAD IN MANY RAIDS RECCYV 7 Mrs. Louise Hendee, Mrs. in TORECORD QUAKES c.fi' ter Accuracy !s Also romised by Savant. -- Washington.----The' Georgetown udl-- versity | *«m observatory, which in the last 18 ; rs has given to the world fArst news of many earth-- quakes, now agsures the public that its reports in the future will be even more dependabie, The university today bas among Its instruments _ a/ »~ new ~ gelsmograph, knows as the--Galitzin vertica) seismo graph, the only one of Jts kind--on this side of the Atlantlc. _' . > The special features --of 'this delicate. plece of apparatus are magnetic regig-- tration _and photographic recording, whereby .}h','fl.qhm'Qm of friction in the: other types of machines ~Is entirely . eliminated. ~Aecording!y, the muchine . will permit Of the récording 'of--mang . more of the world's qaakes and permlit -- of a more nccurate 'Interpretation of: the writings of a shaking earth, <~.__ . Doctor Sleberg of 'the Jena seismo. logical station places: the. number of quakes felt sensibly or Anstrumentally the werld over: from 9,000 to~10,000 .yearly. Of these in the past only 90 to 110 have been annually recorded 'of . Georgetown. © Father Francis .. Tondorf, director of the obgervator$, ~hopes that this number may now reach from 300 to m "a¢ . o m When it first was founded in 1911 the Georgetown observatory Mw one seismograph--of the Welchert typé.. It carried a stationary mass of B0 kilos. The rocking during .wind-- storms of the south tower of the Healy building. in whose base the instru-- 'ments were at first placed, necessitat-- tod their removal to a cave beneath the quadrangle. _ ; ._ Father -- Tondorf® <inaugurated ~the work at Georgetown when, in 1910, the International Seismological m requested.the Jesuit order, with m® ny colleges in the United States, to estab-- lish a chain of stations in this coum try. Pilot Willing to Be : ------W"Deathw an ex eed army pMot, bas news to fNy a '" Grindell Matthews""Death Ray". and claims that the ray will not bring him down in "even at' the mean height cm He also states that an experienced 'fAyer. would not have bis plane wrecked by the ray without some sort--of a struggle. Refugee Family Tells of Hardships in Mexico Norfolk, -- ¥a.--Deprived > of -- %1 ranch and .n.:am in 19 Pbycions is hr.:v:m & iBre Mexican «4 p a and without . food, Wm denfels and his famity of: four. h«ve artived here en route to Germany, They brought<--a harrowing: tale of fight from their home in the interior of Tabasco, a 48--hour trip down the (iriJaiva river to Frontera in a dilapt dated -wt steoted by a Mexican girl; of direction and the: piling of the craft on the rocks and the fight agninst drowning and. Anally, of the lang journey afoot from Krontera to Yera Cruz. At YVera COrus the refugees, hauhers and sick, bad their lfii&g good luck in the presence in the harbor of a steamer, They had no money, bu: Captain Grashoft, a fellow country-- man, waved aside the <question -- of nnssn ge among its Texas is in 'town and the Museum of the American In h%; \beard about it. 'Capt. Jim Gillett is in town and the Natural History m a's In-- dians sulk in waxen dignity. The cap-- tain can't--find .even so-- much as: a wooden cigar store Indian. _ _ . .' Well, then, he--was one of the fron-- tier battalion of the Texas I ingers in flptl'lln-nbbht Beyenties. ':':* ns .msm etf-iu Paso in the eg% f ~tles, when m : eeplog the |aw in , E}!fi.;g mean job, Fequiring the | pid and expert manipulation of osive }TW?WJ the captan ,m $ 3 redakins tha n in ane 0 \ Capt. Jim Gillett is <« For more than'hair » century Cap» tain Giliett fought re<--:i~s, punched cows, kept the peace, :n| ranched in the wildest state.Now, for the first time in his life he's come NO'th, "He's been doing New York. |!~ sat--In the m mm'l"" reminigced of Old times, of when he (it the varmints, when no day. was start mflm fighting. ty--eight, started Enfield musket some ® ; z"' a the Civil--war. ! a. fence rall and twic« mm had to sh e couldn't hold It u; Fifteen Lipans from 0l@ Mexico had swooped < ,z ranch and made ""'flmk horses + * ~~They rode .40 fto 60 miles a day. m by aeciden: in a nest of rattlers and several horses were bitten. Old "Captain Robert never faltered and after. some days t the-- marauders and cap thers after--a wild figh: Self rode --down. the chi« but had a narrow esca; and arrows. Merrimac's Prow in a the gonng Indian 11 akins came just after the frontier talion. 100C BIG don't know «who Jiw © Gillett of went after them fichter, now aix» ing with a 'Q} ie brought home was w# I¢ & € as huv'w ot with a ® ~ .. aAnd, ob, how 1 right without ~ sPR The service men of the--atate have quietly, but none the less effectively o naine og apomane Antial to e of 'their comrade, Col.--A. A. Spra-- gue, candidate --for the U. 8. Senate. Under: thetitle of <the Independ> g:m :'ns':h Com':lhn aw:th . 'h. l.q! .,. w en ". 4 " Chairman, "the state has been or-- ganized 'into twenty--nine districts with a prominent sérvice man as the district . leader in each, and ~sub-- divided the districts into . the ~ 101 eounties of the state with a county leader for each, . In ! + . the soun-- ties have, been subdividerfor or: ganization purposés into. the town-- ship, city: ward: and . precinet" ~or-- ganizations. = 3E o "The adopted slogan of the service men in the campaign is "Over the Top with Sprague," and though it is stated that the majority < of -- the leaders among the service men in the: movement are of Republican in-- clinations, the movement has been organized along strictly. independ-- 'ent lines with Sprague as their sole T date, more than seventy thou-- sand .ervice men have subscribed to the movement and _ compose the Committee. The campaign is being conducted along. military: lines, and the "operations maps" at" their headquarters disclose the daily im-- provyement in the situation right down to the precinet. 5m Open Quarters. ° Headquarters have been .opened up in each of the twenty--nine dist~ ricts and in many of (the-- county seats.> It is claime thcthhh'fln' Tlr;;oriaiud State movement of . the service men to put over dne of | their comrades on an independent ' The DeLaval milks as cows should be milked 1 Look at the above illustrations show-- ing how the De Laval Milker is made to suit the temperament of the cow. \Embi-trid\l for the greatest production of milk in the shortest time. pulsation speed year in and year out; 'The master pulsator on the Pulso-- Schanck Hardware Co. TELEPHONE 39 -- LIBERTYVILLE, ILL, fi"mmm% adei i~ mecomplishing that, ond, he M Rmamn on ol ~--Anngunt t 4s f ©I ¢ h. B Howmfi mbw at 214--Sherman » Co,. Sprague, under the auspices of the service men,'is scheduled for an extensive and intensive visit .to every county 'in the state, and the enthusiastic --receptions. already.. AC-- eroded Mnf: on ::lmt.rip to the north ern--tier of. cou is an hdw that the service men mean business and will unquestionably be a large factor in the Fall election. * s The State' Committee : includes suthnames ag Maj. -- (jen. --George Bell, Jr., Col: Edw J; Blair, Capt. Jacob M. Dickinson,Jr., Col. Thos: R. Gowenlock, Col. Horatio,B. Hack-- ett, Col. Albert E. Halstead, 'Col. Joln 'A. 'Holabird; Capt: Raymond Hurley,; Maj. Reed. Landis. Maj: Ceorge F. Lee, Capt. Wm. D. Mey-- éring, Maj. John 8. Miller, Jr.. Maj. Frederick McLaughlin, Gen. Wm-- * Nicholson, Capt. Geo. Hull-- Porter, Comm. Chas. W. Schick, Capt. Ferre C. Watkins, Col. Frank R. Schwen-- gel, Col. Albert Culbertson, Capt. Hubert ~Howard? Capt. Earl B. 'Dickerson, Col.P. J.. H.-- Farrell, Gen. George H. Harries, Col. Thom-- as 8. Hammond. WAUKEGAN IN ----~ ON RADIO OF B"~ STAT: N "Tune in on your radio," was the word sent out Monday by E. H. Clifford 'see. of the Chamber of Commerce, who announced that sta-- tion W.M.A.Q., the Chicago Daily News -- Broadcasting: Station, has arranged for a."Waukegan Night" program to be held Friday, October 10, in which only local talent will be allowed to broadeast. self--adjusting teat--cups ht comfortably, over any size of teat ; pulsatot is close to the udder to assure vigorous milking, M&odumficduiudufi cows have become accustomed to during We will gladly tell you more about "The Better Way of Milking." P90 w&fw\ffl Slams Homer To Win Own Game, 4 to 3; The Fugua Giants of Chicago try: again," is not without.success for they . traveled ' to ; Libertyville 8\mdl'"y' ffl"im' ird a'm" " played on the Fair Grounds this yeatr, ' _ The game was one of those in the -- first> round _ of "the: Inter--city Hamilton, hurle? for the Fuquas, aided materially in winning for his team. > He socked out a home run in ~the seventh inning -- with . one on base and put his ~squad one tally <to the good. . . 8e --~«RDean _ Bennett -- hurled. well ~for Libertyville, scoring 10 strikeouts during 'the route. Hamilton whiffed six, andwas tight in the pinches. Sceore by innings: A Fugua Giants __._ 110 000 200--4 Libertyville : .__..... 300 000 000--3 of L. mixing ~with ELibertyville the Fair Grounds, All kinds of Auto Repair Work THE STAR 3. i * Waot La ce t w B