Ilhl 6 21 17

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Great America n Tire Lindenhurst • 1890

SERVING THE VILLAGE OF ANTIOCH AND TREVOR WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21, 2017 DISPLAY ADS (262) 877-2813

VOLUME 06 • NUMBER 5

CLASSIFIEDS (262) 728-3411

DELIVERY (262) 728-3411

147 E. Main Street, Twin Lakes, WI 53185 • Published By Southern Lakes Newspapers, LLC

Local resident touts experience By Sandra Landen Machaj

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Spirited flyer

gether to witness Lindbergh’s takeoff at about 7:52 a.m. Carrying a heavy load of fuel, his plane bounced on the dirt runway, but gained speed to take off towards Paris. Lindbergh, reportedly surprised by the Roosevelt Field crowd, had thousands of spectators awaiting him in Paris. For Lindbergh’s achievement, he won a $25,000 prize, offered by New York hotel owner Raymond Orteig. The prize was available to any pilot who completed the nonstop flight. Furthermore, the French president gave Lindbergh

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CORRESPONDENT

In the early 1900s, travel in the United States was primarily by train while travel to Europe was by ship. Today, most traveling is conducted by air flights, covering distances in hours, compared to days in the 1900s. One person responsible for changes in travel was Charles Lindbergh, who flew the first nonstop flight from Roosevelt Airfield in New York to Le Bourget Airfield in Paris on May 20, 1927. Lindbergh’s plane, created by Ryan Aircraft of San Diego, was built specifically for nonstop flight. Normally, a plane expects to have two seats, one in front of the other, but Lindbergh’s aircraft did not have a front seat because of needed space to hold 450 gallons of fuel, weighing 2,750 pounds. Lindbergh, whose flight covered 3,600 miles, lasted more than 30 hours in the air. As the sole traveler, he sought to conserve fuel for the long trip. With limited fuel, Lindbergh experienced changing weather patterns, including dense fog while avoiding sleep. He brought minimal food on board with reports of just four sandwiches and two water bottles. On that day at Roosevelt Field, 500 people came to-

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~ formerly Antioch Report

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SANDRA LANDEN MACHAJ Hi-Liter

Above: Verne and Shari Jobst, married for years, met when they worked at United Airlines. Top: The original Spirit of St. Louis, which was piloted by Charles Lindbergh from New York to Paris, France nonstop in 1927 now is on display at the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C. in the Milestones of Flight display.

Lake Villa man charged in March overdose death A 35-year-old Lake Villa man was arrested June 15 on charges of drug induced homicide and unlawful delivery of a controlled substance, both felonies, stemming from a March death in Gurnee. Glenn E. Trauthwein, whose next Lake County Court appearance is July 6, remains in Lake County Jail on a $750,000 bail. Glenn E. L a k e Trauthwein County Sheriff’s investigators said the incident happened on March 3, when deputies responded to a home in the 18700 block of West Highfield Drive in Gurnee, where they discovered an unresponsive woman. The woman, identified as 33-year-old Collen J. Todorovic likely had an opioid overdose, a Sheriff’s office news release reports. “Deputies determined Todorovic was likely suffering an opioid overdose and administered Naloxone, while attempting life-saving measures,” the release states, adding efforts were unsuccessful. In an investigation conducted by the Lake County

See OVERDOSE, Page 4

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