Overcast
49°
Dekalb, IL
Overcast|Forecast »

Looking Back: Jan. 2, 2013

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

Ministers of all denominations came to the Loop district in Chicago from all parts of Cook County and marched on city hall in protest against New Year’s revelry in cafes, hotels, restaurants and saloons after 1 a.m. The marchers called on the police chief, mayor and aldermen and demanded the 1 a.m. closing law be enforced on New Year’s Eve.

Jack Johnson, black world champion heavyweight boxer, purchased as a Christmas present for his white wife a home in the heart of the exclusive Lake Geneva summer resort. The purchase is to be followed by the establishment of a negro club there, it is announced. ...If either Jack Johnson or the 10 members of the social club attempt to establish a residence in Lake Geneva, they will find Mayor Frank Utosky against them. The mayor declared he would confer with the millionaire residents of the village and take whatever action they deemed best.

75 YEARS AGO

January 5, 1938
Postmaster Boyle estimates George Stevenson, in the local postal service for the last 33 years,  has walked 118,000 miles, more or less. This is more than five times around this mundane sphere mortals call the earth.

Ernest Burtch, 21, of DeKalb, was taken into custody by DeKalb police for a theft in which three piano legs were taken from the Great Western freight house. Bail was fixed in the amount of $2,000.

Anne Gilbert Danielson, daughter of  Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Danielson of Sycamore, born in Sycamore Hospital at 3 on New Year’s afternoon, weighing 8 pounds, 3 ounces, was Sycamore’s first baby of 1938.

One out of every 12 in the United States is jobless, while in Sycamore, one out of every 20 has no steady work.

A pocketbook containing $15.27 in actual cash, one check for $15 and another for $3,300 was picked up in front of Danielson’s cafe Wednesday afternoon and returned to its owner.
More than 3 million pieces of literature, endorsements of 32 governors and promotional ideas ranging from parades to the pasturing of cows on historic Boston Common helped to increase milk consumption during National Milk Week.

50 YEARS AGO


Reader Poll

How do you observe Memorial Day?

Attend a parade or program
Visit a cemetery
Barbecue with family or friends
Go to the pool
I don't