Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 5 Jul 1923, p. 3

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d most ttached P pleasâ€" u want t afford we conâ€" the balâ€" ents of rk er th gas PARK ETKA ny i h Building Material Highland Park Fuel Company 102 N. 1st St. HERMAN DENZEL, President â€" Telephone 335 Do You Own North Shore Real Estate? | J. J. Mings, Embalmer Expert Demiâ€"Surgeons 12a0y ASSt Store and Chapel, 517 Elm Place Office and Residence, 334 N. St. Johns Ave. Highland Park, Illinois IF you do, and you should e'v‘}er wish to sell, it will be an advantage to be represented by an organization the namé of which has become synonymous with N&rth Shore Real Estate in the minds of thousands of Chicaâ€" The North Shore ha§ been and is being popâ€" ulated by representative Chicagoans. McGuire & Orr, for twentyâ€"eight years, have participated in this movement, serving buyâ€" ers and sellers with equal satisfactionâ€"they have represented thousands, without loss of prestige or confidence. | COAL AND SoLUVAY COKE To obtain bonaâ€"fide purchasers, quickly, with a minâ€" imum of annoyance, and without ‘having your propâ€" erty submitted promiscuouslyâ€"simply phone Ranâ€" doiph 2981 or Highland Park 146. The integrity and the financial responsibility of McGuire & Orr may be verifed through any large loop bank or trust company. Telephone Highland Park 169 JOHN ZENGLER, Cleaner Efficiency in Service and Workmanship 25 North Sheridan Road McGuire & Orr While too late at present to do planting Perennials, it is the right time to plan whatev! Telephone 83 J. J. MINES & SON Let our Represer 69 W. Washington St. CHICAGO HIGHLAND PARK Funeral Directors Established 1890 Established 1894 Ravinia _ Highland Park _ Lake Forest Ave., Offi ;jée and Greenhouses Laure] One Block West of Depot. } tative call on you, no Highland Park, III, Telephone H. P, 1403 Home Lady Assistant sBCY. OF INTP Sa (By Hubert Work, Secretary of In A| terior) laska is one of the many paraâ€" mbunt problems confronting the govâ€" ermnment of the United States. ; {NV hether this vast expanse of land, cdntaining huge mineral richeg, surâ€" rdunded by almost| pricéless tracts of odean waters teeming with sea food afd furâ€"bearing animals, shall be deâ€" véloped or allowed Ito remain dormant ig‘the question thu‘; has induced Presâ€" ident Harding to visit this terrirtory djiring the summet. j | The president will be accompanied by the secretary if the interibpr, the s@cretary of agriculture and the secâ€" rftary of commercp, and for the first tlime in history th¢ chief executive of i:‘tp government will tour this north n country. f and the other ha and persons of di Alaska‘s greatest resource 1s 1 mineral wealth.| There are go silver, copper, Zinc, antimony a tungsten in imménse quantities. posits of coal, i cluding bitumino and lignite, have been found. have oil and petroleum, in additi to platinum, ledd. ores, quicksilyv graphite and asb“estos. Fisheries of Value: _ The fisheries of Alaska make up principal â€"commgrce. Salmon, h ring, clams, shrimps and other foods in â€" abundant quantities & taken from its waters annyally, a an immense . canninig indugtry been built. In 1922 $34,720,000 fish products weke shipped | from territory, represqnting an increase $12,000,000 over the previous year. In the popular fancy, Alaska supposed to be j forbidding, iceâ€"c oved â€" elacierâ€"crowned land of of shrubs, trees or | er is to be dione this | uolet I tter how little or how mtkh you contemplate doing, we will be glad to give GREENHOUSES, HIGHLAND ASKAN R%SOURCES DESCRIBED BY WORK In the ponula supposed to be j ered, > glacierâ€"cr teams and pola of the matter is of delightful cli the year, with, gquare miles fifi development and crops of almost the year, with _‘an area of 100, square miles fifted for agricult development and|capable of produ crops of almost|endless variety. The American government has completed the construction of a road through th far-q(mwildernes, Alaska at a cost of about $56,000, This line extends from Seward Fairbanks, a distance of 467 m penetrating into the very heart of territory, and is the first rail ever built and ¢perated by this ernment. | | 1 pfng up the floor in the hot wea Ptr. the ‘men folke can‘t do much buf jsit around and mop their brows. § | While the women folks: are pop Inestima FRITZ BAHR, Proprietor RIOR WRITES 11 be accompanied f the interipr, the lture and the secâ€" , and for the firs chief executive o 11 tour this north f Indians, Eskim vers nationalities. Lst resource is i There are go inc, antimony a nse quantities. cluding bituminfl rounds Beautiful bears. â€" The tri that it is a coun ate many months Riches > | ;\ and _ hidden a | 1!'}- Hlinois Chamber of Commerce | |Sending OQut Checks for | _ Sums Not Utilized; i State Cleared 8i op of 1} ABoUT $30.000.00 ISs USED| j' Imniediate Response 1 A state-wl;lie appeal was made. The ? ‘response wasg immediate and without f precedent. Checks began to come in | | by the hundreds. Within five weeks ‘nearly $60,000 had been raised. of 3§ithis sum almost half is now being t | returned to the subscribers. Ninetyâ€" t four per cerft of the contributions to ¢| the Herrin fund were not members of d | the Illinois | Chamber of Commerce. 8 | Thousands of people from hundreds f | of cities, towns and villages subscribâ€" if | ed. Most of the subscriptions ranged f | from $1 to §20. i | â€" In addition to the money raised, the } | movement gained nationâ€"wide attenâ€" f[ti(m. Htm%reds of editorials . were h-' published in leading magazines and F | newspapers) throughout the country. t?‘ President Harding wrote to Presgident ’:fi John H. Camlin, commending the 0’ Illinois Chamber of Commerce for its | activity and said, "There is a conâ€" llscience in | Illinois which will not g] tolerate such a disgraceful thing. It ‘is very pleasing to me and reasuring igt | to the wholé country to know that this l‘-" conscience |s finding expression." to bf LE ul o I 5;;! Williamson County Blaimed ivf-"fr Pmudet}t Camlin of the Illinois te Chamber of Commerce gaid today, if|"On behalf of the 1ilinois Chamber of \Commerce I wish to thank the thouâ€" 20 men were killed and many others injured, it b¢came evident that no effort would (be made to prosecute those chargej with the crime. Atâ€" torney General Brundage declaged atl once that he was exceedingly anxious to proceed with the prosecution but his office was| without funds. Goverâ€" nor Small, when appealed to, said there was na money in the â€"state treasury for such a purpose. A conferenge was held by the board of directors of the Illinois Chamber of Commerce) and a committee was appointed to ;carry on a campaign to ALF OF HERRIN _ FUND IS RETURNED i Pb e on noomine ie alifnneaet, f raise the. thoney by public subscripâ€" tion. This committee consisted of George Woodruff, Chicago, chairman, Gerald B. (I)"dffnks of Peoria, Wayne Hummer of LaSalle and Edward E. Gore, Herman H. Hettler and John W. O‘Leary lof Chicago and Harvey T. Hill, segretary of the Tllinois Chamber of | Commerce, had charge of the details. > consclence Js NNdINng CAPICSS®IM« As a result of this action of the Illiâ€" nois Chamker of Commerce, Attorney General Brundage immediately began work on the prosecution. Investigaâ€" tops were employed to secure evidence. | The grand |jury of Williamson county | met. . Aftér several weeks, 214 inâ€" | dictments were returned. Of these 44 | were for murder, 58 for conspiracy to | commit murder, 54 for assault to ;murder and 58 for conspiracy and |rioting. â€" | : , generously to the Herrin fund. They saw a duty and were quick to answer to the call, We have accomplished all that it was in our power to do, that Our Landscape Department is at your service to assist you in any and everything to be done on your Grounds and furnish you free of charge a sketch. : d We still have a fine lot of Gerâ€" aniums, Petunias, Cannas and Vines for Window Boxes at greatly reduced prices. Is is to furnish funds for the prosecuâ€" tion. There have been no convictions for that awful crime, the worst blot on the pages o{ Illinois history, but the failure now lies at the door of the people of Williamson county and not of the state of Illinois." . his western trip, but that was not probably so bad as earache from office seekers. | > Claimed| that the colleges | are doomed unless they are liberalized, but the students of Illinois claim they will gurvive all ‘right if they enâ€" courage football. Public Noticé is herehy given that the Subscriber, Executrix of the Last Will and| Testament of William Arnswald, decéased, will attend the Probate Court of Lake County, at a term thereof to ‘be | holden at the Court House in Waukegan, in said County, on the first Monday of Sept., next, 1923, w and where all perâ€" sons having c against said esâ€" tate are notifi@d and requested to preâ€" sent the same to said Court for adâ€" judicatfon. Waukegan, HL, June 18, 1923. E. S. Gail, Atty. f 1 President Harding got No Electricity Put a Warm Heart inside your furnace The Worthington Oil Bumpr requires no électril and uses no g except for convenience in & Many people in Highland Park, with motor driv burners, are using from $10.00 to $15.00 or more month of gas and electricity. ‘That would buy 150 lons of distillaa; or oil that we burn. During and April our burner in the store did not use than that amount of oil in two weeks. They operating expenses for Wort ington Burners in K; City as 10% lts than coal. | Be sure and look at burner before ¢onsidering any other type. : [ Representative tfar Lake Forâ€" | Representative for est. Glencoe, Deerfield i _ gan .. ADJUDIGATION NOTICE OIL BURNER Plumbing and H 15 S. St. Johns Ave., Highl T. H. DECKER & C , ILLINOIS Tel. P74 ARNSWALD, AN sunburn on Executrix. our ideas. 17â€"10 FOURS â€" sfiXEs f | y â€"â€" CE f LAKE SHORE MO (Not Inc.) 55 6. St. Johins Av. . _ No§Gas Necessar World‘s Gritest Car Vaiues Rlectric Shop at 186 N. â€"~G.â€" KOQ H. C. LUSK Tel. 1176â€"R REPAIRING JOBBING T he â€" 201 P. 116 49 P

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