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Lake County Register (1922), 25 Nov 1922, p. 1

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was the cause of the car's sudden swerve toward the boy and over to the wrong side of the street. Bow was accumed of being intori-- eahed und. recklcan his car, driwen south in Victorin street. struck the boy as the latter stood neat the east curb. mofovgy tem witnesses was introduced to shew that he had been drinking at the time, The defense countered with the contention that Dow was sober and that his driving was not reckless. Attorney James Welch, representing the defendant, held that children playing in the street * before returning the verdict. George J. Dow, whose automobile kiNed Samue!l Orlowski, 3 years old, 1548 Victoria street, * North Chicago, March 1%, was acquitted on a w of manslaughter in the s+0u8t of Cirenit® Judge Claire C. Ed-- DowWw ACQUITTED IN Then followed various acts of cruelty on his part, the bill charges and the young wife was finally com pelled to leave home. She seeks to have her husband pay the lawyer's bills and alimony fixed by the court Mrs. Torosian complained to au-- thorities last summer that she was about to become a mother. _ She ramed Torosian as the man who had wronged her. He was taken be-- fore Judge Walter Taylor and h agreed to become her husband. The marriage ceremony was performed with her, carrying out his threat to kill her, and selling their furni ture. Suit was filed in the Circuit court Weduesday to dissolve a marriage contracted under compulsion last summer when the wife, a 17 year old girl, complained of mistreai-- ment. Mrs. Esther Torosian, Grays-- lake, sought her freedom from her husband, Nashian Torosian and was aided in her suit by her fathcr, Ernest Potts. A child was born of the marriage and is now six months old. The young wife charges cruelty and failure to support in the bill The court granted injunctions re-- straining Torosian from interfering | with her, carrying out his threats | _In the office: of -- county'--judge, Judge Persons will succeed himself and will retain his same office per-- Bullock has not indicated who will somnel, it is understood. Martin®C, Decker, newly elected probate judge., has not announced his appointments. GIRL WIFE ASKS DIVORCE DECREE said today that he would have as his chief deputy, J. B. Morse of Lib-- ertyville. No changes in the rest of the staff with the exception of appointment of a man to take the place of John Bullock who becomes In the office of county treasurer,| newly elected treasurer Ira Pearsa!' ; will have as his deputy, the present treasurer, Roy W. Bracher. Mr., Pearsall iftimated that there would / be no material change in the cler--| ical staff at thigm | In the county'elerk's office, Lew} Heridee will sucteed himsel{. He| According to reports, newly elect-- ed Sheriff Edwin Ahistrom will have as his under--sheriff, T. J. Stahl, loca! realty man who was an active work-- er for Mr. Ahistrom in the recent campaign and who has a wide ac-- auaintance throughout the county. Others who will be conected with the sheriff's --office in the capacity of deputies and bailifs are said to in-- clude Harry Ahlstrom, Del Weale Lester Tiffany, Walter Stark and Fred Grabbe. When interviewed on the matter of possible appointments Mr. Ahistrom declined to indicate the personnel of deputies for sta-- tions throughout the county. "The list has not been completed" and 1 Lm in no position to make any an nouncements right now," he said. Of particular interest today was the unwt of deputies and clerical chiefs by the incoming of-- ficials. In three instances, however, mo meaterial shakeup will be made. . Inguguration of Lake county's newly elected officials will take place on Monday, Dec. 4, and already preparations are being made for the thange in various offices. The usual ceremeonies will mark the occasion. NEW COUNTY: CHIEFS TAKE SEATS DEC. 4 gEVEYTY--SECOND YEAR-- BOY'S DEATH PROBE Ohe half hour: NO. 90 of Bible .reading in tn. public echools. The constitution states that selections from any version of the Old and New Testament shail never be held to be in confliect with the constitution. Another change i: concerning the getting of criminal« before court; we provided that ex-- cept in capital cases the States At-- torney may bring the charge against them with the consent of the court of of the state felt that there should be one house that should represent interests outside Cook county. We have given Cook county a very com-- plete measure of home rule. We have provided that they may form their own government by charter. They have the chanee to unite the various taring bodies in the city. There are over _!?Q--*M muni-- cipal corporations § Chicago. There are nineteen bodies'in the city of Chicago that ha¥e taxing power. They can now combine them so they only have one my. thus sar-- ing many employes and much er-- pense. They can also run the trans-- portation fndlltfu in the city. '"There are three changes in tho| Bill of l_lights. ._Flm_h the question | Mr. Hendee explained that though there would be,a place left in his foree by the assuming of another office by Mr. Bullock, the work done by the latter would still remain in the same hands. With Mr. Bullock will go much of the work which has come under the office of the county clerk and his deputies. | Probate Clerk Elect Bullock an-- nounced that he has chosen Mrs. R R. Dunn to be his deputy and as-- sist him in the duties cf his new of fice. Mrs. Dunn at present is in the loffice as a deputy county clerk. "Lake county has 40 percen population of the state. The stitution," he said. '"The revenue. judiciary and legislative procedure have been changed. Most of the other changes are of a minor char-- acter. made a talk in the Waukegan high | school Monday on the new pm-1 posed constitution of Illinois to be voted on December 12. '"There have not been a great number of changes from the old con-- Elam L. Clarke, who was a mem-- ber of the Illinois Constitution con-- vention and chairman of the Com mittee on Phraseology and Style CLARKE EXPLAINS county officers elected will come lat-- erx. The bonds for these offices have already been filed and the board of supervisors will meet Saturday to ' on them. ~County Tle¥k Wendée announced that no new appointment was con-- templated in the place of John R. Bullock, deputy clerk, who on Dec. 4 becomes clerk of" the Probate court, handling the work of Judce' Martin C. Decker. Mr. Bullock was elected to his new office in the re-- cent election. 1 It is now Probate Judge Martin C. Decker, The commissions of both Judge Decker and Judge Perry L. Persons arrived in the office of County Clerk Lew Hendee Thursday and the judges are now reacy to take office "If the people want me to run for president of the fair association, I will do so on the understanding that John Wirtz, secretary and Earl Cor-- lett, treasurer, are returned to of-- fice," he said. "It is a gigantic proposition to manage a fair of the scope of the Lake county exhibit, but with a year's experience we should accom-- plish even more than last year. How-- ever, there is no use to tackle the job alone when there are two exper-- ienced men available like Mr-- (Mav_ $FCO2CUC PMHCZ LIETE are |Wwo exper ienced men available like Mr. Cor lett and Mr. Wirtz." The annual mid--winter meeting of the fair association will be held at Libertyville next month. BULLOCK NAMES HIS Mr. Woodin indicated his future action depen on public sentiment. in an effort to gain Mr. Woodin con-- sent for re--election. They are urging him to continue at the helm of the fair association for the purpose of putting acro=s the seventieth an-- nual exihibition in the same suc-- cessful manner as the sixty--ninth. ociatior, friends of W. T. Wobdi;\, present incumbent of the president's chair, have brought pressure to bear Since J. C. Cooper of Diamond Lake, was forced out into the open +s a possible candidate for the presi-- deney of the Lake County Fair as-- Urge Woodin For Re--election The commissions were signed by nemiamame morg NEW STATE CODE has 40 percent of the icated today that depended entirely the sixty--ninth Lake County Register _ ASSISTANT of other people Supervisors gathered this morn ing with county officials at the court-- house and accepted the invitation of Supervisor B. F. Naber of Antioch. They motored to the seeme of the celebration. _ A barbecue greeted them as they stepped from their car. The road has been under construc-- tion for some time. Regarded as an important step in the improvement of the road system the officials call-- ed for a proper program. Artioch held the center of the stage in Lake county Wednesday. Supervisors, county officials and residents of Waukegan and other cities journeyed there to take part in a huge celebration which marked the formal opening of the new road the main street in Antioch. An elaborate program of music and var-- ied entertainment was arranged. The Elks' band of Waukegan took an active part. COUNTY CHIEFS ARE GUESTS AT ANTIOCH Mr. Carison, who was well known| . , ____, _ p@°"°,"' '~« Ausband in North Chicago, was found near .'m August. Fox Lake under the chicken coop owned by John Pan-- epoil of Ihe summer moonlight, was cek at 6 o'clock Sunday night. Mr.| MCDtiOned as the scene of the al-- Pancek was locking the plaze vh'n'll:"d leve """""'*. He charged he recogmized the form of a man ve in a bungalow with the younger nearby. Assisted by Albert Oster--| WV ,-- berg, a neighbor, the body was car--| _ "! °d & free and casy life while ried into his home and Dr. Miller| Y husband was away pending the summoned. Upon examination Dr.| diYOrce suit," said Mrs. Perguson, Miller pronounced the man dead. Dr.| PUt ! £0t sick of it. |'n so happy Miller testified that Carison had |"°W that Charley is back. We were probably been dead an hour when | %°P@rated ten weeks. And, oh it found by Pancek. | was so lonely. Now we've been women C e Giatates arectcercararsamcoes ies | back together a month." ceased showed that he had been drinking whiskey quite heavily dur-- ing the past week. John Nelson, North Chicago justice, testified that he saw Carison at 3 o'clock in the afternoon, Sunday, three hours to the man being found dead, and that he was under the influence of liquor at the time. at the inquest held into the death of Gus Carison, North Chicago man found dead in a field at Twentieth street and Stewart avenue, North Chicago, Sunday night. Testimony of friends of the de-- A mc / " _ P , 7/ ( J d Tv7C)29 D &n P ' & .l\s'jfiy_',--: roony ne tomes y "5:7 a . BACK TO PUROPE \ ul \ D', (% 2 , ILJI" THE OL D a l'. ~"a e (MM"" y ty Lo\ P\ owcald ercrntine PeAce * @ &\C l t --U 54 N ;tkrpr To n;em x _-- ] 3 L £ 1 W ~ TT @) 2 p &\ ";'A\ A SS hx Q_x P 54 zr% f j\ PA 'lv"/ ',@1 ',1'" i l Y 4 /{? /":].lb' _ @' a ' 'r"/,, 7"',".,:«'\".'\ -?fjiz / P As \ im\ o ".' 'A'/ "/", A k '\v' Bve \' "" Pect J ' ~J 1 ,'?,'fi /' E N ' \ /m NoT PCA \. A\ '9" n'- (2 ®G _ C [( -- e 2 PP -- 5 ' o k ~./ ,'m,',":" | AIMUQ® . _ KHIKED OUT O LROPZL : > meniPe s y 2 0 P LIBERTYVILLE, ILLINOIS.SATURDAY, NOV, 25, THE OLD AND --NEW TURKEY P OORLLLL___________ ©OTC (APPMUN UR OUT UETCTEd The schools at Rockbridge, Jersey |2):o for the lovely flowers. cority were recently closed on ac. | Mr. and Mra. Glen' Fry count of the prevalence o diphtheria | Jay Ritzenthaler among the pupile, | Joseph Ritzeathaler. The quarre! which is said to hav involred charges of misconduct o: the part of the pastor with the re-- action of the slander suit filed by the latter against Decker ans others. It is charged that the al leged statements issued 'from the de fendants. The battle in the rank: of the North Chicago church at tha' t Charles S. Marsoif, former pastor| 1. q.2 _..20, 2000 0 of the Presbyterian church in North| _ H®@ distussed first the history of Chiemgo, and County Judge elect "'" previous constitution and point-- Martin Decker, will resume their ed out that the questions of contro-- dispute of several months ago when | "***" of those carly documents the slander case again:t Decker and then as bitterly attacked as those various other members and forme; | !" °UI Pres@ht ¢ourt have been prov-- members of the church is called for *" *MV2! #2d inconsequential. trial an. 2. The dat» was set by | HO dhowed cleariy that the in-- Judge Claire C. Edwards in the Cir | Creased , of the new consti-- cuit court this afternoon |tution outW@igh ail possible objec-- MARSOLF . DECKER "I want to go back :© the man I love," she cried. "BUNGALOW ZOVE |' CASE DISMISSED erguson created a stir by running from the witness stan n;r hus-- band and throwing her «rm# around During a preliminar; hearing of the divorce case last \ugust,. Mrs. Mrs. Fergfuson was charged with undue friendship #ith Herschel L Bradshaw, 25 years her junior, in the action brought by the husband in August. Fox Lake under the spell of the summer moonlight, was mentioned as the scene of the al-- leged love violations He charged love in a bungalow with the younger brought by her husband in August. Incidentally the truth of the say-- ing, "Absénce -- makes the heart grow fonder," was carried home with considerable emphasis yester-- day when Charles Ferguson, the husband, dropped the civorce action and became reconciled with his wife. the summer, has been erased from the mind of Mrs. Alice Ferguson, 1542 Juneway Terrace, Chicago, Fox Lake and its memory of bun-- ;_:Iu love which held sway during Published Twice Weekly TO RESUME FIGHT divoree RCtION | fore tions, most ®f which emanate from groups who huve sought to inject into the document their own personal desires as OPpoged to the provisions which are fog the greatest good of the whole people. * He discussed first the history of our previous constitution and point-- ed out that the questions of contro-- Tuesday evening at an open meet. ing held by the Woman's Club and the Commerdial club in the rooms of the Commereial club, Senator R. B. Swift gave & very interesting and instructive diseus:--ion of the pro-- | es of disposing of liquor in prohi-- | bition territory. He was taken be-- lfon Justice Coulson and his bonds "fixod at $2,000. According to the state's attorney's |\ report, there were a crow of men | drinking in the Pink place on 12 | Eleventh street, when the raid was |\ Philip Pink, the elusive North | Chicago "Moonshine " _ was {ml-mmmlg"&m ]lr-n_eo_ltho_qongg_qudum The Pink place was raided twice about six months ago and each time the raid was made, Pink was away. It is alleged that he deliberately evaded arrest, so is to be prosecut-- ed on the old charges. Pink has been arrested on sever-- al other occasions for selling moon-- shine, serving a sentence of sev-- enty days in the county jail, for one violation. He also has been fined heavily ¥or violation of the prohibition law. -_mw"umnn-fl-'.nyw b'""'-h'-te-w-dml w. T the men dashed their glasses to Sherian the floor. rf....... Pink is alleged to have been eluding the state's attorney's men for months and will be prosecuted on old charges. Card of Thanks | ITSLAMIC CONQUERER DCTATiNG PEFACE TERMS TO THE ALLIED POWER 5 CAUGBT BY SQUAD t] At the high point of the discus-- sion H. Jordan arose to diseuss at length the condition of Greenwood avenue, where he declared the city bad fallen down in a verbal contract with the county. No such agree-- ment had ever been made Commis-- slomer Carl Atterbery insisted. { fully gu. | from me | learned { ef the | | ferred t« being ob comprise rapidly a W. T. Hardie who spoke for the --Sherian road petition declared that he presumed the road to be used for the trucks would be North avenue. "Sheridan road has borne the heat of the day for some time," he said, "and we feel that it is about time somethiny is done to save the street if it is to be used as the through road from Chicago to Mil-- waukee." titions on file and suggested that a committee of representative property owners on both streets be appointed in az effort to work out a solution. The North ave. petition protesting against the boulevard proposa!l was signed by three--fourths of the prop-- hmwmmv" w-w a mm'oumlu the Chamber of Commerce scheme to make Sheridan road into a mdmhuhndhfi down a "back street," oly North avenue. At conclusion of the squabble the council placed both pe-- BCULEV ARD SCHEME HAS OBJECTIQONS th cent ning ing bi({.'« While the deal has not been def-- initely sealed, it is known that a survey of the prospective site is underway and that developments woe promised in the next month. In auvition to the Chiwaukee property, it i also understood that efforts are being made to acquire the Van Ingen land adjacent to Kenosha. Approximately $150,000 has been offered for the later site alone. Means North Shore Boom 1' the Harvester people go through with the project along with the development of the Johns--Man-- ville plant, it means a material in-- dustrial boom for the north shore which already has developed into ore of the most active and growing centers in the middle west. . Begin-- ning at North Chicago and exte=d-- ing north are located some of the Lake county's boom to the north ofi Waukegan along the lake front is to extend into Wisconsin, accord-- ing to reports Thursday that the McCormick Harvester Company is negotiating for 1,000 acres of land between Chiwaukee and Kenosha for the purpose of transferring several Chicago units there. Industrial Boom Indicated For No. Waukegan untry. McCorm ruarding men on big concern will to Chiwaukee. Op btained on the grov e the prospective as possible. an big ick ck interests are care-- their intentions, but the ground it was that several units cern will be trans-- )rosperous 1 this se Options ground w us proguc section o 1 which site as l In the dispute over the petition |fnr a boulevari it was suggested that the best solution might be to divert traffic east of the hill in Sheridan road and near the raflroad property but steps in this direction were not deemed advisable. Several 'inten-stod residents from both street: were present at the hearing. City Officials declared that the pro-- 'pml for a boulevard seemed un-- on Tuesday, November 28th. Music will be furnished by McCormick's orchestra A Thanksgiving szpper and dance will be given at the M. W. A Hail. Ivanhoe, by the members of 8t Mary's parish, of Fremont Center Mayor declared that steps to p.m avenue are to be taken soon and th'mu.." carrying the proposal pre-- pared in a short ime. The delay in this regard was caused, he said, be-- cause of the detour now being made from Sheridan road. timely and should come at a Commissioner _ Atterbery disputed the statementsg and pointed out that he was positive that cinders had been placed in the road at least five times. Available retuins show that 74 house chndidates were d-e:: = publican and democratic, the indorsement of the Anti--Sailson league. Seventy--seven are required to pass a bill in the house. It is thought that the organized dry forces, for the first time in several sessions, have lost control of the house. The senate probably is dry "Mr. McBride and the Anti--Saloon league may as well be informed that the house will not be organized by any combination outside the |t lature that intends to put over prohibition commissioner bill. The immediate result of this bill would be to hand to the ESmail--Thompson-- Lundin combination a machine that would have made the old 'rabbit shepherds' and the 'fish nurses' of the Yates administration look like a bundle of German marks." "l',' and a mm-brtb""v* Epretsny tnt sivamontoder in ty expre: language : According to the coroner, a bot-- tle of moonshine was found near the of the accident. "mu-idulonndhhnnn- day that Kingard was not badly in jured and that he was expected to return to Round Lake, SPRIfl(.}m, Il., Nov. 21.-- Saloon 'League® of Illincis among -- M reppblicans elected to the approach= f ing.Jliinois house of reprezentatives» _ = SEE DRY_REVOLT AGAINST LEAGUE IN LEGISLATURE day night. A letter in the pocket identified as P Relatives of the man v of his death and went to Thursday afternoon ar the body. er 5 p. m. abc railroad depot. tnat the train going fast, a Atw::dmigfldr.l".lnn Coroner Taylor made a partial in. vestigation at Round Lake Wednes-- The passenger train was north-- bound and a westbound freight train at the crossing is said to have ob-- structed the view of the driver. Kingard, the injured man, told the police that he hed ben picked up by tre driver of the truck, whom bhe didn't know, shortly before -- the Peter Nyge!, 327 North Central avenue, Caicago, truck driver for the Sorenson Transfer company, Oak Park, was killed Wednesday evening and Edward Kingard, a passenger, was injured, when the truck was struck by a St. Paul railroad pass-- enger train at Round Lake, Ill. lound MEETS DEATH S IN ROUND LAKE TRAIN SMASH _ _ $2.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE SUPPER AND DANCE accident ent occurred shortly aft. about 150 feet from the ot. Coroner Taylor said ain could not have been _ as it stopped at the : station. _ over the petition it was suggested lution might be to the dead man'g Peter Nygel. . were notified to Roung Lake and identified : from the 'aylor said have been ed at the er, a bot--

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