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Lake County Register (1922), 11 Jan 1928, p. 4

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CI President Coolidge. casting tradition to the winds, is going to have the cherished ground of the United States to visit Cuba on Jan. 13. His mission. although not " important " the one that." Mt Wilson to Vanilla, is expected to be sig- 'aiae-tinttt--netette-nttoatttetterreutioas between 1aa,tinaarFtameheomn. Lindypevedthewafznowcu is going to an the job. i The thought that there are hundreds and even thousands of lunatics and half-wits at large, any one of whom may be suddenly ' with the desire to hill, is not reassuring to normal persons. "pedal" parents of small children, but there is no cause for hys- tCiI in the situation. ' . ' Until society places and keeps under restraint all such unfor- tumt. human life will be insecure. The situation is too serious to wait sentiment to interfere with its correction. True, it is hard to separate the mentally defective from their relatives and to place than behind stone walls. but the anguish and sorrow thus caused is as nothing compared with that of the relatives of the The success of Cat. Lindbergh's goodwill flight; was repeated igoieameua.sstwinrthtttthepeorudowntureareiustas human as we gm. After he comes back, Uncle Sam ought to consider sending him to other isolated places. such as Hollywood Society my not permit the state to impose capital punishment on the insane m. but in the future it will insist more than ever on the emtti-ent of the mentally irresponsible. andlion. , CAGE THE DEFECTIVES Charges od expert: on mental dioceses that the country is over- run with natal defectives who are potential "killers" seem to be eqtegxttreteatqd by the male: of the Les Angela school girl and two" qtthee similar killings withigrnhe some fortnight. The nation's eadienditure on personal appeagance may seem excessive, but one forgets the cost when there come to mind the shiny noses, undressed tresses and Ttton stocliings of ye:- have". Apparently vanity is no longer sinful. It is generally con- ceded that one of woman's duties to society is to beautify her- self. and it must be admitted that smoothing and displaying her fine feathers is as natural with her as with the peacock. The doubly standard of morals, which some say still exists, acts to them of the fair sex in at least one respect. Pride and vanity, admired in male of the species. There are some who will be provoked to wrathful protests- tion at the thought of two millions being spent for the beautifi- cation af mothers, wives, sisters and sweethearts, but most men will admit, at least to themselves, that the results justify the Federal experts have compiled statistics showing that beauty parlors, which have sprung up in recent years in every city and town, take in not less than $5,000,000 every business day, and that the total cost of beautifying girls between the ages of 8 and 80 exceeds 81,825,000,000 a year. It mmuaity would offer interesting talks to children by ope-ht! living a gift toe appealing to young folks. the same inns- -dwith-suterietur-outdmmrttututreto.e Ar half our bile, and political corruption in a term of years would be much A GOOD INVESTMENT / The annual canto! keeping the American woman the guest handmhtheworldexeeedathesmrdebtlofhalfadoun European countries to the Uniteqtktatea. When it comes to the amounts paid out to maintain the pulchritude that is the pride of American women and their male admirers, the female of the species is far more costly than the male. 4.--'l'lnt laws should be obeyed. They can be shown that in qteder to live together peacefully and comfortably. people have to ghrttrdetitenethintrstherwouid liketodo. 2.--That we have a wonderful country. built up by wonderful people. They should be led to admire great men like Washington, Lincoln, Roosevelt. etc.. and wish to follow the example such ones have set. so far as they can. 3.--Xhat we are all penners in the business of carrying a, the public services of government. That just " a business is made emcee-eh! only by constant industry by the owners, so our bud. use od government will only be successful, if the people take an intact in their public affairs. MAKING BETTER CITIZENS The Chicago Young Men's Christian Association has been using a gift od $5,000 to hold more than 1,000 citizemhip meet- in... which have'been attended by from 2,000 to 5.000 children in each case, in many instances their parents coming, tool There are lectures on citizenship accompanied by moving pictures. Criminal qtdhatses fell off 23 per cent in the districts where these lectures were carried outwith intensive work. This experiment suggests the means through which better ideals of citizenship could be promoted. . " ' Several ideas need to be conveyed to children and young people to encourage good citizenship, as follows: _ 1.-drharerime does not pay. The police sooner or later get the crooks and put them in jail. Also that the business firms that who considerable successes have to be honest and straight- forward. SQUIRREL FOOD If the pleadings of persona accused of mu'rder are to be re- garded as the truth. this country is rapidly degenerating into an "turn for the insane. Squirrel food, it seems. is all about us. In all at the recent sensational cases the excuse for the com- mieeion of a crhne has been permanent or temporary insanity. The lama for the defenee hate been hard put to make their -rnents eeem logical. so they have invented a condition that is Insanity is a good excuse for any crime. Consider Hickman. Leopold. Loeb. Remus, Snyder, Gray, Scott. and the others. They all eetgtte" that they were a bit off when they killed someone or other. It is a pity that they did not realize it before they ran muck. _ MumndthaamMOfioborl$lDlflatflnmLofflcou 1durtr%tu,t1timtid.xmd.rAettsfMareh8.itrt9._d weakly. called "twilight insanity." Whether this means that the person is - partially nutty, or that he becomes a menace after dark. in for the public to decide from the printed reports. Certainly it ia a new disease that we did not hear of until the big case: came into print. _ FRANK H. JUST. Editor and Publisher in women, are considered unbecoming in the WNW-WM" was. m, ttTyler/r/r/rc-rr-chi 16 {Wright o...........-.........) 17 f BRITAIN'S TWO-PIECE HABIT TAXI I telerrtiom, pole. SMITH'S duke? Wu it lack of something upper or nether that induced _ the ttmt royal mtsht gnaw the}! is n com ting s iciency mm Le,G2f,,'Tdll', the Order of the Gplden F'leeee.-Nation't, Business The differmtee between Lot's wife and the wife of today is that Lot's wife looked beck and turned into a pillar of salt, and the wife 'ttpar' looh'beck and turns into Well; there they stand, a sort of old guard, clinging desperately to their familiar shirts and drawers. And who would not when so publicly exposed , The men seem to feel, the report tells us. that the one-piece sttit--or, as they name it, the "com- bination"-is a garment suitable only for women. But that judgment seems as gratuitions as shininry's boast that it can clothe women» syn- thetieally, and the women scarcely know it. Like ancient Gaul, the men con- sumers are told off in three divisions --the workin man, who wants his underwear Sd'll and substantial; the tradeaman, who demands finer materials; and the office worker, or "banker class." who wants under. wear of the finest cashmere or silk. But what of the nobility? Can pride alone, insulate the marrow of a sure, in passing the word that one. piece undergarments find little favor smolrlig British men. 2e, intimate inte igence is tr,tt mm a trade bulletin issued y Mr. Hoover's tex- tile scouts. As for British women they have modified their lingerie references to conform to modem styles, and now sudibly demand light-weight undergarments. It is only, the men who nre reactionary. Johnson 'Krumrey Muhlke .. Bluhm .. Nicholas Johnson Frauen Hubbell Petser Lovell Swan Wright Gray -m.r.M.-.' Penney _..-.. Hutchinson McCormick Wright I'm-my Triggs pr Gaddis .. Lawrence Woolf Am_ Smith ___ Krumrey Casey _ Goulson Bluhm Said at W. Novelty Store , IN non " mom a! LIBERTYVILLE BOWLING CLUB. The outstanding feature of the rolling in the Libertyville Club roll- ing in: week we: the spurt which mud George Ives and his crew out of the cellat, leaving Joe Wright in undisputed nonunion of that pluce Ita auxin of Ime super - "en Ay swath Helfer ... Slater ....tr Blah- Mtsrrie _.... Sehnaebele Iver' team took two from Framer: and should have made a daniswoep but lacked the necessary assistance to win the final gum which re- suitesdinatieat 16.- httherg#l offWanaesnwonandhgHoettoftrit Panel Beman .rt.-Nr- W. Peterson Weart .._ ..... H. Titus, ._. Franzen ___ . Bluhm had a good night. and took three from Krumrey. while Dolph won two from Mnhlke. The new!!! game of thirmhteh was the big kick of the evening, Huhlke getting 929, for a new high mark and Dolp Dolph t.rrw. .. Jones .__er.-.. Conner .t._... A. layers . Wehnnberg The scores: MIMIC Waterhouse Underbrinlr , H. C. Meyer Corlett .-wret.._ Muhlke M.et.Vr'_ tolling 902. V - Swan took two from Johnson and Lowrance took two fiom Wright. No .eoMdettee it violated, we feel 719 ' Stamp. l 16 178 124 lift 144 767 786 145 136 118 150 135 156 177 841 763 160 133 117 135 177 150 126 189 142 17 5 144 132 164 158 167 119 183 178 791 145 136 128 100 168 852 164 195 145 157 754 158 124 815 181 124 174 138 179 194 188 166 196 144 161 143 171 17 15 15 15 . 14 " 13 12 11 1o THE LAKE COUNTY REGISTER. . WEDNESDAY, IANUARY Ll,_1928 645 2220 115 116 162 119 134 764 2190 7382296 145 136 12' 150 829' 2467 as EG 151 119 142 168 173 197 181 815 789' 2532 172 137 190 183 171 165 138 184 168 159 144 167 112 192 2898 487 412 375 522 A31 432 402 Itil There "unit [thing to put in the 368 papers now that the international ffl) chem tertteCU over. ' V 10 12 12 lf/ 13, ii! 518 489 449 502 621 571 432 Col. than", . Maury ot! War, stated. 'iiMi'lW2','h' Cami has ruled that itiitjfiteiisit,ei1ii,e?.)t businesses are not subject to un- tio? as we priyately-onmed enter- pnses. Montgomery, Au.-mu, tState .of Auburn-will receive no tax revenue from the federal government's greet electric power development " It cle Sheds. accordinv to a deck" of Col HanfordheNider made Jn reply to s letter from the chm of the Alabama state from he chin)" of the' Auburn state tax Wu, asking that the "vehi- ment pay taxes on its power busi- This building, represents the last you! in minimal development. "New in the second which it has received, the mhitects of the "Win: him: animal! beer? tee-, triitd medil bestowgd by the Archi- t.eetss' We of New York, 1927. builds: tmtrtntt previously been tec- otrpl by. m "that and mi The Broadway Association of New York City recently presented a, bronze tablet to the New York Tele- phone Company "in recognition trf itseontribution to civic advance- ment and its stimulation to other business concerns"_ by the erection of the new New York Telephone TELEPHONE BUILDING GETS BRONZE TABLET If a woman Men in silence' it an? be, thtt she Bnds pleasure in . Every mortal who is weighed in the balance is found wtuttirttt--some- thing Vhe-doesn't deed.' A - w" The only man in Libertyvilre we donft like' to meet is the one who is so busy' with other people's Mair-s he hasn't time to take care 'of his own, As a rule a trout doesn't grow to ten pounds until you have caught one and told tin P'VA few times. Corn is unprMtabre at aft, ttnts a bushel, but at. $12 "a pint it is pos- itiveiy dangerqus._ i' _ _ _ You often see a woman fishing around to pull by]: a slipping ahoula der an]: but you never see _ one wrig ing around to, get away from a corset stay like _you_ once did. 2 . As it "mm, the law's teeth' are too often .kind that dont stay in place' at night. _ Lindbergh is going to Milwaukee/ At last he is getting to a town that, know; somethipir gbopt hops. i If a <torrtttti tiin love a. tighgwad, Elle can love aipin thatis sticking er. . ., q _ _ A 10mm is interested it a man as long as he. knows" something: that she is anxious to (tnd out. - is received. We are expecting author car in a few (his all will Ill all u I..- u it their Mon-hon like. You should hear Libertyville people holler for the Poca- hontas egg coal fur- nished by the Watt.. bln Coat Co. from The on Meadow Lane. It will be" of wood be: Ctt8t" he went. a friendly, bogey hone. or course we are furnUhimt the" materiel; tereqt' of the people of Libertyville and vicinity, by'ihe LIBERTYVILLE LUMBER CO. '0. A. New. Editor trim, ream." Pnblhhed in the in- 7 Usiuik thGrsomutvrsroN M9 N. MILWAUKEE AVENUE a LIBERTYVILLE Lumisn co. Libertyville, Ill. f' Phone- " and " NEW HOUSE Gen. Hull-n.1, the Inter mun-tor, in tilting a m home ALABAMA OF TAXES T ON MUSCLE SHUALS ALONG THE CURBSTONES ttt tt l A MAN ABOUT TOWN that Observation- By } If we hadn't read in an exchange "hat' "Pifty dollar bills are being _potntterteitedl1 we wouldn't have Elmown that they make them in that idenominattori. _ The rewind fot food behavior may sometimes be sow in' coming, but you never hear of git! behavior getting 31mm in tron Ie. 'Who can remember the old-rfash- ioned Libertyville girl who wouldn't climb a fence i_f-a man was looking? When a mark 50 the We is over and he knows-ht hasn't drawn anything, hut a 2rlf man of 19 or 20 is gust shaking t e box for his first t row. _ _ . If a Libertyville child wants turf hide behind it's mother's skirtst" these days it would have to get on}. a high-chair to-do it, ' X figtita o o 0. d. , . Ir' if AUDITORIU M E te 9.. . - A As reasons for delay of. tccept- ance he gave instinct and dislike of change. "The first thought comes from instinct, the second, or perhaps the third, from intelligetiee,. and you must continually presents new idea until you can get intelligent consid- etetion." With that observation there will be ready agreement.. Less familiar is the finding that "bank- Industrial receptivity to new ideas is not a matter of instantaneous ex- posure when timed by Charles F. Kettering. "It takes an average of four years from the. time you pre- sent a new idea until you are pre- pared to offer it to the custmer as a commodity," this vice-pres nt of General Motors told members of the American Chemical Society. F NEW IDEAS SLOWLY ACCEPTED S""".'.' wuz_ne ready agreement.. Less; more intelligent use -erf our. re- familiar " the finding that, "bank-i ttoureetr.--Nation't, Business Matra- ers 'reter;d research as most danger zine. Admission: 15c and '35c ference in importance between searching for a fact when it is need- ed, and searching for one when it is not needed. But in the degree of need for the fact is the basic differ- ences between applied science and pure science. But it is not necessary to t"li2 science to believe that it hol the new wine of a ing Montcalm to the clause: it brim in industry Why should! we be fear change , Good hairless, as M tering took occasion to goint ntrt the, flow of my, _ut tl clauses it brings in industry." Why should. we be fearful of change? Good Milieu, as Mr. Ket- tering took occasion to mint out, is not the flow of money, t the ttou of useful commodities through the ghamgels of Quads. Jt may require a on, and 3 thing that makes bank- ing hazardous-due to the rapid channels of tr _ . It may reiiuire a tine focus _of A A to tree. no dif- {a Every motorist In!!! on via a woman driver put " be hand she's going to stop or in or slow up or powder her noon or "all the car, unless she keeps on going." JANE McALISTBR SCHOOL OP N183- ING, VICTORY 1Pllltyt ORIAL HOSPITAL. WAUKEGAN. leadin g to degree" Erik. 1 glans gun Feb. lat. Far Lop-apo- unlit-"W" -- -ie ofem, a Three yen: F" .......

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