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Libertyville Independent, 21 Aug 1924, p. 11

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1 Bs« ~While arrangements were ebing <©~ama for MsCoy's trial, Albert A. w»~Mo the slain woman's former hus-- ;';5,1( a made formal demand of the -- wmutborities to assist him in gearch \-- AOr Mrs. Mors' jewels, vatucd at be-- »fi im ~$60,000 and $100,000. Me . i that some of the '@wels |%; e held by McCoy's sister, Mrs. --alemnoe Thomas.> Attorneys for Mrsa: -- APhomas said if she had an jewelrys ~ Awhtc! 'had been owned> by <Mrs. . k she would return it today. «B m on 5 (0: _ _ > MAYREFUSE PART O . 'INGERMANLOAN ---- »mere _ 10 '; «'tion 10 &bm p «when hb fi?';'fl" wtur ) 9 Ei ramina . * o Ksos -- Angeles, Aug. 20.--Allenists \ alliese coday began exbaustive exam-- . ulnations of Kid McCoy in prepara-- olition for the expected insanity de-- plea of the former pugilist 4 i be goes on trial charged with »lthe murder of Mrs. Teresa Mors. _ WeCoy, indicted yesterday by the !'_ jury on cight counts Including «. ® , assault, and assaylit with in stent to commit murder and robbery, .. W examined and under obseray-- ¥ Bpringfield, 1!1., Aug. 19.--All of the ©2$60,000,000 raised by the bond issue 1e for'the lilinois hard road sys-- GJ"'&-GM by the bond is-- uo' tw puy: for the: Iiinois hard road ¥ will be expended before Nov-- . 1, Govérnor Len Smail-- said, * Jolle the sale of the last of the _ Bbonds last week. All of the money _ mwectived from this sale of $9,000,000 . worth of bonds has been obligated "': «ontracts on which work is now uhder h of defense alienists, headed by Dr,R. 0. Sheldon. w are being made to rush the WMet trial and District Attorney &Kuu sald it would 'probably Mart within 30 days. \ALIENISTS ARE --EXAMINING KID -- + M°COY ON SANITY ; Thomas W. Tamont, whn asted for 4hb houso 8f ¥ergan in 'he interpa-- 2& Bankera' nogotintione ore com ently, oppornd Freaxct »ccupation aftotha Rahr, TAriont andt sther bank-- epe feared thar: the prasonge of atd Beéiglas troop« -- ix the would Inoterfers with thw Pbe very greatly curtained and it will Sbe several years belore the original wilate highway system can be complet-- «gd. ~If the proposed $100,009,000 bond +Ama is approved by the people in Ne , the present record break-- Sng rate of highway construction can wBbe continged without interruption, and ewe.will be able to make Illinois the «dJbest pared state in the Union within Uhe next four or five years." London, Aug. $0.--J. P, Morgan' & C0., the world's most powerful inté¥-- 1 banking firm. may refuse to f pate in the Notation oft the pro-- [ ~ $200,000,000 German jJoan bk 4 of continued Fronch ocoupation : the 'Rubr. 4t« was doarned-- from 'an authorltatite adurca this aftcrnoon. (ALLROAD BOND MONEY IS SPENT -- ON NEW ROADS "I wouldn't be surprised if I live to 106 .100. I'm'learning how to live. . "People should eat raw food, and tqmw eat whole wheat bread. factor besides proper eat-- am will make men live longer | be the moral legisiating, not by daw, but by common sense, of tea, cof-- ¥ee and tobaeco. They will be taboo «Mke Hquor." wermor said. "Unless these bonds are imuthorized, state highway work must way, he expiained. ® * ?'*hh emphasizes the great import-- mnce of the proposed $100,000,000 bond dsesue to be voted upon by the people it the November clection," the gov-- lem, that the welfare of civiligation »+demands the end of armed conflict. "Men will live to be 100 to 150 be-- veause they will keep the carbon out 10f their systems. * y "After all, the6 human machinery is tMike an engine; Keep that machine in Mune and it will wear almost indéfnite-- war for :umum. because the inter-- -- minglirg of peoples, made pasi ' by the transportative power olw 'tomobile, will show them that wars <have been based on misunderstanding, that fraternity is better than antagon-- 'A«anglellow and acquired recently by Mr. Ford he mage the achievements »+Oof the &lu a basis for predictions of Aman's future development and event-- -uumtu 100 to 150 years of A P "Bome of Ford's forecasts follow:; . When coffee, tea and tobacco aré 'taboo, like liquor-- "morally ligislated «»ut, not by law, but by common sense 'M:;llu are going to learngo Hve, «mew inventions will come, and @f what little 'poverty n-ur' --*arth today will be gone," Ford & ~*The automobile will have ended \Bouth Sudsbury, Mass., Arg. 14. f*ym'sm to Hye to Be 100 \Talking informaily with friends as-- --«sembled at the Wayside Inn, historic old tavern immortalized by Henry W. Savs Men-- Will Learn to Live When Coffeg, Tea and #. , l}" W baceo are Taboo. .= % MAKES MANY PREDictions é TELLS FRIEXN.S , and most|;~ _ tury the Holy Name me ethaiof O# E*' Shough not "ehjoyseg That ..'.','" --_ " Organization . which . later . i tb.o inter.| ~ 1t gradually woh its why tc ooreiaice] | evene | . r of --| '~" In 1432 the city of Li th at ! salk aut 2+ i ~Mowever, theie are other banks, it is said, wiiling to assume |cadership obAhe~--Aotation of America's share oi the bonds even If J. P. Moigsa & Ca. Incrensed resenment on tho part of the German people. -- 'Organization . which later came to ¢ _ #B, gradually woh its why to untver-- ';';-gfil tavor. f * In 1432 the city of Lisbon in + ~Portugal was aflicted with a ter-- ~ wible plague. 'The people were dy-- Charles V in his day came as near ruling the whole world as any man, perhaps, who ever lived.. He was Emperor of 'Austria, King of Bpain, Emperor of Germany, Mas-- ter of nearly the whole of Italy and the thern ruler in Europs His boast that the sun naver maet upon his Dominos was justified by the greatness of his possessions. He bore upon l,qlr escutcheon itwo globes and\had stamped upon his two plllars representing the ml:u ®f Hercules with the mottb *Plusultra' denoting that his Kyn-- 'plro was bounded by the Western mits of Burope and then more beyond. The armies at his com-- mand were gpormous, One of the ; » We read with interest how in the Birteenth Century two powertul kings of Spain took up the Holy m.-o cause and ordered its estab« ment in every part of their Do-- minions. . They were King Charles V¥ and his successor King Philip . : These sagacious rulers appre-- Clated deeply that the best way to gecure respect for law and order to themselves in their dominions was to cultivate a love for divine law A&nd divine order in the hearts of their subjects. ;',&'o canonic¢al erection oft: the oly:Name Society to the Domint can Order. Spécial letters patent ted a diploma which, in the m:t o modern society may "be termed a charter; ever since mwas lostered and sptead by the great religious giants of more than fAive hundred yéars ago, it also at-- tracted 'the attention of the civi} yulers of the day. axtraordinary epiritual privileges and indulgences. At this time he ebserved that the Holy Name So-- tiety in various places was desig-- aated variably . as "Con{fraternity bf the Holy Name of God and of Jesus," "Confraternity of the Holy Name of Jesus" and "Contratern} ty Against Oaths." ,Following the example of Pope Piis TV, the Popes of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, notably Pope Innocent XI, made the Socie-- 1y an object of special solicitude, encouwraging . its promotion . and granting induigences and regulat-- Thg.its organization. Pope Pius V thn 'a' special pontifical document Issued in 1571 absolutely restrict attentfon which he attracted to the great ideals and aims of the sodkity won for tke Holy Name movement its greatest triumph. Pope Pius IV on the 13th of April, 1564, solemnly raised the Holy Name Society to"the dignity of a confraternity and attached to it and proclaiming honer 'to Holy Name. Henry Suso, the wrapped in transport in his " enthusiastic love for his crucified Maater, tattooed the name of Jesus on his breast with a sbagp instru-- of prayer in honor of the Holy Name and the marvelous and un-- Rccountable disappearance of the plague was accepted everywhere as a mark of the Divine bounty for devotion to the Holy Name. In gratituda. for their deliverance on January 1, 14383, all of the people of the City of Lisbon joined in a monster Rally parade in honor of the Holy Name to give thanks to God for their signal deliverance. Victoria wrote the rules and the constitution-- of the Holy Name fBo-- tiety, His masteriy .preaching of the Holy Name cause and the wide ?g everywhere by the hundreda. With that pecullar turn which the Feligious mind of man has always taken in the face of great public calamities the people accepted the plague as a token of Divine anger against the sins of the people. 'The Bishop of Lisbon, Andrew Diat, turned to the Holy,Name devotion and in armies thousands strong the people sent up their great chorus Didncus the Organizer . °* . The next great figure in the his-- tory of the Holy Name Society was great public disaster, Great pub-- Holy Name Society Backed By ment. Vincent Ferrer known to religious historians as the Angel of the Judgment for his marvelous preaching, won thousands to the side of law and order by stirring in their hearts respect for the Di-- vinity of Christ and honor for His Name. Thus for more than a cen-- tury the Holy Name movement, ibrose of Bienna and Bernw -dlhlu'dl'uauyclla their eloquent preaching 'de By MRV REVEREND M. J. RIPPLE '_e_--*"*""**" Jt National Director THE HOLY NAME SOCIETY 4Copyright, 1924, By M. J. Ripplec) of THE STORY Oor (Instaiment Two) special out and with little warning Fran-- , ols J. Capillas and his companions were approhended by .the (Man--! darins and hurried on to lntll' With a lofty courage born of J:'-" in the power of the Holy @ I theso men prepared for death as : Ior some great feative function. We read in the account of their' death how they marched out to the' place of erecution as in a Holy . Name procession. The Holy Name Banners were carried at their head. They sang hymns in honor of the Holy Name and proclaimed their Adelity in the great doctrine of Christ's Divinity,. The procession ended in death, but these.religiousa beroes, eager for the= crown of gloty, offered no reststance, but kneeling bawed their headgs whigh , their Chiness executioners severed : from their bodies with a stroke of ; the sword. Their success was most gratity-- ing. Among their many activities was the' establishment of a# Holy Name Society. But in the very midst of-- their labors came the dreadful tragedy,. A violent. per-- kecution of 'the Christians Bbroke 'The Holy Name SBociety in China Francis J. Capillas and a litile group of companions, all Dominican Friare, after endless journeys by land and by sea and many . vicissi--, tudes and adventures settled down at last in the Province of Fukien in China.; There they bu!llt their little --Mission Chapel and with} apostolic ~zeal began to-- spread among the Chinese the ever won-- derful message of Christianity. Wihoria rad Tloct prounces an aniwmcy more #®erviccable thin either of !l' paroot #tgsk, -- _ , e uce Around the world again it jour-- neyed to the Orient. We find this wopderful Society for the bonor of the name of Christ taking root in Valuable Gocts Breedia "The crogeingy ofi the yak s mon eattie ns peosctecd in N Slherln rixd lixdt nouilnuce: au --The growth of the Holy., Name Society was csxg:ord'.ury. By the end of the 'ee-,v.h Century it existed in every country of Europe, The movement had even stretched itself . across the great Western Ocean on the trail of Columbus in the newly discovered lands o€ America, for we read that a special' Bull was issued by Pope Grtgoryl XIll on the 24th of March, 1§80, in which the Moly Father granted special indulgences to the Com-- fraternity established at Cusco in -- ~King Philip II followed his father |Chnh- V as the presiding genius over this world--wide power. Saga-- clous, shrewd and dlong lired mons arch that he was, he quickly recog-- nized the wisdom of his father in bestowing the royal favor upon thi#great called® --the*** Holy Nmoum Instances are plentiful --during the century, and a half ¢overed by the reign of these two _ rulers Of the excep-- tional prestige in which the Holy Name movement was held. Thus, we see that both Church and State appreciated in the high-- est degree the extraordinary powet of the Holy Name idea for both spiritual and social welfare. Bince the establishment of the National Headquarters and the dis-- semination of better instruction on the history of the Society the an-- clent tradition, both as to the ofi-- clal color and the oficial emblem, has come into its own. ground of red. of the Holy Name movement the 'ollchlcoloro( the Society was a royal blue.. Emblems depicting the head of the Christ Child or even the whole of the infant form were reverently borne in these parades for the babe Christ was al ways the official emblem of the Holy Name Society, * :>, . "In its development in the United States the Society has lived up to this tradition. Here and there in odd places, before complete organ-- Rally parades everywhere. Men and women marching solemnly is uncounted hundreds in--the varied and picturesque garbs of the age. We can see their silken banners of varied patterns carried at the head of each local contingent. The predominating color is blue. Tra-- ditionally, from the very beginning According!y he took up the cause of the Holy Name Society and fos tered its spread in every part .of his great Dominos. In Spain, ig Augtris, in Germany, in Italy and in the Netherlands we can pictureé to country sgurely must hare ap-- mtoChsrlann-utap- propriate means of welding . his world wide possessions into one great loyal unit. The principles and ideals of the Holy Name Bociety stressing so solemaly faith in Christ and loyalty 'm' sAys of him that one of a-m Of bis groatness was Big knowledge of men. He knew their weaknesses and their strong 'points and knew how to turn them A0 t. In the government ot -3::_" empire composed as it au.: maRy peoples, nationally, ' and in many other charac-- teristics distinct from one another, the problem of winning the loyalty to their Sovereign lHege lord was one of no little magnitude. Te be Continue$} x tiin com in Monzelia F. Liczkus and wife to A. J. Sutkus and wife, jt tens. Lots 7, 8,| and 10 in the resubn of block 3, Dreyer's subdn. WD $10, stamp $1. E. A. Dato and wife to Chicago T. & T. Co., Tr. slock 1, lots 1 to 15 in } block 3, lots 8 to 22 in block 4, block . 1, 13, 14 and 17, lots 1 to 10 and lots | 15 to 24 in block 18 blocks u.zoum_E 21, lots 1 to 12 and lots 15 16 17 19 |== and 20 in block 22, blocks 23 24 25 26 == 27 28 29 30 33 34 35 36 37 39 40 and 41, § lots 1 to 20 and lot 22, in block 43 and block 43, all in Marquette Highland E second subdn, Sec. 9, Waukegan. Deed tg $10. Susie M. Bills and husband.to G. A. > Moore. Lot 6 and part of lot 5, Lan-- '== ¥ 42 Residence and Office 1609 ington St., Waukegan, Part of the SW .quarter of Sec. 32, Bhields. WD $10, stamp $11.50. H. K. Boice to A. D. Farwell. Part of the SW quarter of Sec. 32, Shields. WD $10, stamp $11.; O. Hook and wife to E. B. Neville and wife, jt téns. Part of the NE quarter of Sec. 34, Avon. WD $10, stamp 50c, O. Hook and wife to E. B. Neville and wife jt tens. Part of the NE quar-- ter of Sec. 34, Avon. QCD $10. ° _Dorothy K. Boice to A. D. Farwell. Bec. 14, Deerfleld; BW quarter of Sec. $10. ©ec. 14, Deerfleld; also part of the .3:4' quarter of Sec. 15, Deerfleid. Deed 10, . A. C. Greene to Union Bank of Chi-- cago, Tr. Pdrt of the SW quarter of Sec. 15, Deerfield. Deed $100. J. Pollary and wife to J. Liukku. Lot 1, part of lot 2, part of lot 4 and part of lot 3, J. W. Besley's resubn. Waukegan. WD $825, stamp $1. * L 8. Chapman to W. C. Lindsay. Part of lot 26, South Highland Addn to Highland Park. QCD $1. . A. C. Greene to cago, Tr. Pdrt of Sec. 15, Deerfleld J. Pollary and Lot 1, part of lot part of lot 3, J. Waukegan. WD $ L 8. Chapman Part of lot 26, S to Highland Park. O. Hook and w R. H. Edwards and wife to . Heath. Part of lots 46, 47 and Washington Manor. WD $10. Elizabeth D. Downey and husband to N. Trivess and wife, jt tens. Part of lot 4, Whitewood subdn. Sec. 18, Avon. WD $10, stamp 60c. Church of Christ at Gurnee to May B. Dixon. Part of the NE quarter of SBec. 23, Warren. WD $10, stamp $5. B. Lowenmeyer, Tr. to 8. M. Gun-- derson,. Lot 117, Bonnie Brook, Sec. 5, Waukegan. WD $1 stamp $1. Worarek. Lots 21 and 22, block 2, Nix-- on's addn. to Waukegan, Sec. 20, Wau kegan. WD $1, stamp $4.50. . ¥YErekinary SUrgron %' PHONE 1095 ; "Imite -- Waukegan, Illinois * We trade and make _ F8 easy terms of pyyments _ _ Zion, 1. TERMS: FREE----50 Gallons of Gasoline Given Away Free With the First Five Used Cars Sold at a Price _ of $200 or Over. -- "Trade--In" Sales Not Included. " e DR. J. L. REDDING We have a large stock of USED CARS and in order to move them quickly we offer you a big reduction in prices. f Tourings -- Sedans Coupes -- Roadsters ONLY 2 DAYS L. Toulouse and wife to Aima Friday and Saturday, Aug. 22--23 AMAZING Greene to Union Bank of Chi-- r. Part of the SW quarter of Di Zion White Front Garage 48, To -- "hadal N m frad +3 . 3 ; h 6P HHNLH d I I APb ELNE j un a# j w';';vl" :P:J:'("'! 11!'I!l.,:|l | ;""y!'!' '-.'I"y'" P o ZION INSTITUTIONS AND INDUSTRIES Wilbur Glenn Voliva P}I Do you enjoy North Shore Gas Company's dividends as well as North Shore Service through the ownership of their dependable 7% preferred shares? | ts . * An investment in our 7% preferred shares meets the demand for safety as well as attrac-- tive yield. : North Shore Gas Company _ _Do you know that the North Shore is one of the most solid communities on earth? ment. -- The solid character of the community served is reflected in the steady growth of the service supplied by this company. The cubic feet of Gas sold in this community in the past five years The solid character of the North Shore Gas Com-- pany 7% preferred shares is a further reflec-- tion of a balanced service and a strong invest-- The North Shore Gas Company is serving this community with a necessity--Gas. : ur Do You Kno.\:y ?Yo § _ Comm USED Gentlemen: Please have your representative call at my address given below, and present your plan for investing and saving. -- COUPON Name. Address--..... IN ter of Hee. 10, Deerfleld. Deed $10. -- J. Kuyawa et al to Margaret Clark and A. Clark, it tens. Fart of the 8B | p, quarter of Sec, 20, Waukegan. WD $1, | ;,, stamp $1, . \Overlands -- Oaklands Fords -- Chervolets .. [H Eli!:!«'{ "Ei:" E : :v;m"m Phone 75 OPEN EVENINGS ___ Truth Pertectly w pre Truth is like the dew of h progerve iIts purity it must be in a clean yesse!.--Voltaire, _ _ Used Car ; to

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