CMPLD Local History Collection

Lake County Register (1922), 17 Sep 1924, p. 8

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E':"'i»fi fuel" +A ho xj'f.: "?$ 3. . s o i SAoe k > > sc * € P c d ko _ + »,mlj e ns fa wide y toels _ N. d Areugit t +t . e t S 9T o tss P td To' C OR 54 PB K s To ", -- erson of 'Benton; Earl Henry of e s oc C Aetechy Hovard 1. \ 2. B. Jolinson of Antioch; Howard L. peaof :. Scott, : grant; J. A. Thane, Lake : Vils; Ed. Luby, Avon; L. F. Fen-- lon, W. Warren; Frank Webb, Wil-- Ba s Waukegan; John J. Speliman and %:w C. T. Gunn of Lake Forest; J. B. Maszson of Libertyville; R. F. Rouse, a Called for Three Terms of Cir-- The lists of grand jurors for the October, -- December . and . March w&mwzmfilw proved by the board of supervisors this morning. Indications point to a busy year in the Circuit court and plenty of workbl&."d'fi' Waukegan; F. -- J. ~Geraghty, Shields; Warren Miller, Shield; Herman gmn. Libertyville; _ G.._ M. ut, Fre-- mont; -- John -- Molidor, Wauconda; George J.-- Hager, Cuba; August Greiver. Ela; J. N. Blocks, Vernon; John Weber, W. Deerfield; William Thomas, '~Deerfield; George E. Parker, Deerfield. jurors. Following Are p December Term J. H. De Pew, Benton; Fred Fa-- mssen, Benton; Emmett King, New-- 'pot; Samuel Tarbel, Antioch; Henry Pape, Antioch; John Strat-- ton, Grant; B. J.-- Galiger, Lake Villa; John F. Morse, Avon; E. E. Roy Waterman, Cuba; Carl Ernst, Ela: J. B. Ritzenthaler, Vernon; Albert (P.-- Snite and Julivs mer, Deerfield. Wideman and K. 8. s March Term . _ Libertyville; FredlG WE WELCOME THE OPPORTUNITY OF BEING OF SERVICE TO YOU We ap at "* * ~ * * |~ Letters of guardianship of Albert ? B. Bartholic, et al, minors of Wat-- 'erm kegan were issued to Florence M. ton; Fred Fa-- Braun and bond set at $5,000. it King, New--| . Final reports were approved in bel, -- Antioch; | the estates of William R. Burns and : John Strat--| Mary O. Persons of Waukegan. The Galiger, Lake | administratrix was discharged _ in _ \Avan: E. F |the former estate and the executors Wauconda; Coonne ty io ~p hok ppreciate the confidence as evidencg;bg the above figures, and to thdee who are not already friends or customers of this institution we extend a hearty m it of KE County -- Wauconda; R. P. Howland, Cubs; FM%:J.Q'"- d';' } The will of Diedrich Folkers ~of Tion City was admitted to probate }hmmdlmmc- Deckek yeuterday, Letters -- testa« mentary were issued to Otto Folk--= ers. The estimated value of the estate is $26,000. The property was Priig hor mt Ifoififtersner deuth , for ife. rdutb ithtogotothem0m' --Letters of administration in the estate orf Herran Bartholi;s of Wau-- kegan were issued to Florence (M. Inventories were approved in the estates of Clara . M. Johnson of Highland Park, Lucius L, Stirr, and JSosephine 8. Griswold of Waukegan. Braun. Bond _was se Proof of heirship: was appraisers appointed. md?rflnlhlpofflnry Ellis, Jr., of Waukegan were issued tc Mathilda Ellis, Bond was set at $1,000. 'The guardian was authoriz-- ed to compromise a claim for in-- in the latter. CIVES PLANX TO e.vering of hay, together with the heat generated by the fermentation of the silage, prevents extreme "Corn preserved in this way will 4 7 way rot in for about eight inches on the outside of the stack. However, this is at the butt of the stalks and the Joss is not serious. . Stack silage cures gomewhat differently from comt_on corn'silage in that it seems teéed has been thrown down. This h.'dev-bp'bn acid. There. is --a sweet lnhnnodll' o tl"ndfl"" which makes ° m all kinds of" stock eat 4t readily." juries for $500, The ng on th: petition in . .)«:inl.'.l.::znlmtatcot'l!lgundfl'f P--+rk to loan money to the Marshall Farms was set for hearing on Sept. 18, at 2 p. m. (Continued from Page On%¢) was set at SAVE CORN CROP _ *' KIWANIS CLUB MEN -- © Kiwénis needs not plans but men to carry out our plans. 1.." plan ever conceived for *Monofthcnflhufld' l Mr. Read also declared that, u-1 | cording--to his opinion, Mr. Smith | wasiof sound and dirporing: ind | and a keen and sound memory. | before, during and after the @xecus tion of the will. &u with his direct testimony shortly before noon Monday and was turned over ;b_j the other side for cro.-#nimfic. It is expected that he undergo & careful and sharp quizzing as his testimony may decide the will fight. Court was resamed Monday anf.. hn CAaute; * tle 'down.;_~without men to carry it The finest plan introduced into a Kiwanis club for the betterment of ;_e,_p useless unless there are men ;"elubto t :out. :.' As a rule the wiore and the more <in detail plan -- is mtm by a man who is not going to do the actual work, the more certain it is of failure.: Hail with a plan he is willing to carry out. lllg.d!toflu folol;'%u Id'wqu'gtdo.m The man who has not sold him-- self on his own plan that he is will-- ing to back it with his money and his time can never hope to sell that plan to the club or the public. Besides telling how the pages of the will were substituted, Mr. Read told of how Mr. Smith had aided in the drives. for 'm'flfiflh such as the hospital f and .ambulance fund. He said that the financier had offered to pay one--half of the ambulance fund if.the W raise the other half. Mr, also made up deficits in the treasuries of the welfare organizations with his own money, he stated. ey reared. When we find a man with a plan he is willing to work night and day to carry out, we see the true Kiwanis spirit and the true Kiwanis idealism which meets with instant sponse and co--operation from all the membership. : Kiwanis has.no place for cow-- birds, who lay eggs in the nests of other birds to be incubated ~ and was not opened from that time until Mr. Smith's death, nos LAKE FOREST MAN ON STAXND (Cuontinued from Page One) KIWANIS CLUB Resources, $1,207,734.53 As of September 9, 1 ~-- Libertyville t 0 ;i yup seiver's hands in the Cirguit court of Judge Claire "C. Edwards Thursday Small --Line in Lake: County tine / a a Railroad comp-- any was turned over to M. H. Deth-- rick of Wauconda, * ow In a suit filed by Judg« "ZI. C Mfl'h':"mm rustee, it was Ininied that road was insolvent ak m..." . heanige 9n »Which i Mitgantt Default on . Paymen f m,{s'n of plaint filed by Judge Kent stated that on August 1, 1919, the road was mortgaged in ord.r_\a'back $150,000 worth . of bonds which were to mature on Au-- gust 1, 1939. The interest on the bonds was to be paid semi--annual-- Ay. : The bill states that the 'comp-- any has defaulted in the payment of interest since Feb. 1, 1920. : k "The railroad,--which was formerly known as the Palatine, Lake Zurich ¥M the reading of the deposition of Dr. Albert Soiland of Los Angeles, a prominent physician who had given Delavan Smith treatment. -- Sehnator and Wauconda Blfl!'o.d; company, extends from the connection | with the. Chicago and North Western uhm&:t Palatine in Cook county to Wauconds. The distance is about Thomas Dailey of the complainants' legal staff read the' statements of the physician while under cross--ex-- DR. VICTOR C. 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