1urner _ Shingling â€" for 2] <«lb. cans for e Flarnel, Ties, gm.dï¬- unity Shop cans, Ceries $ ones 475â€"240 for pint bottles $1 DE BY ns & CO. AY | ERY UGUsST RAVINIA Phone 2300 mt Paper and _ Wall â€"#" $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 uuâ€DAY Solvay Coke MASONIC TEMPLE > â€" #3NSheridanRA _ Highlond ParRIII. _ Telephone 8 North Shore Trust Compan) General Banking Come in before or after the show and enjoy some « refreshments. _‘ 8 , ~BODAS. .: : SANDWICHES . SALADS _ beGeeeu W TeA Po wWOMaAXN sTags MAN AT â€" _ FORT SHERIDAN BEACH Injured Man Taken to Post Hosâ€" _ _ pital; Woman In High: is wood Jail a %!o‘ mi m 'henr: Sheridan Road and Central Avenue _ BeSafeâ€" _ _ Strike or No Strike Paul Borchardt â€" Highland Park Fuel Co. Open Evenings Personal Accounts Solicited In all probability there will be a strike in the hard coal mines. Numerous price advances ‘have already come. Others will come, with the arrival of cold weather. Now is the time to buy your fuel. Buy Chicago Solvay Coke and be "all set" for winter, strike or no strike, You‘ll have a fuel high in efficiency, clean and smokeless, one with fewer ashes, which will cost you about the same as the best grades of soft coal, and 30 per cent cheaper than hard coal. AUGUST 20, 1925 . Phone 67 Order from your dealer ftoday °‘CcH I CA G 0 uy it Burn it You‘ll Like it the Fort Sherâ€" » irom wounds , who gave her , stabbed him nt Menday afâ€" Frank Siljestrom (A State Bank) %umoon. Thé â€" incident ‘~on \the beach near Fort Sheri The i‘m were with a party of strangers | who were picnicing at the beach. : ‘â€" ‘The stabbing was wi by a | group of pesple from Fort | Sheridan who were also, having a at the |lake. $3 W Lt \The injured maty . w& nost hosrital, and the : Phone 335 $ rus.)td to the woman was inâ€" P 1617 | noxr Henry Foley . won the Highland Park open title by beating Lloyd Larson 12 up and 11. Larson never had a chance against the superior golf thup Foley shot. â€"Foley shot nearly par golf and was never in trouble. %uring the whole tournament Foley never went above a 76. â€" FOLEY WINS TOURNEY . © AT LOCAL GOLF CLUB Defeats Llovd Larson In Final .To reach the finals he beat Art McCaffrey, P. Carani <and Swede Olson. Foley deserves the title as he shot id steady golf. ‘For winning Foley is awarded the Cushing cup. : In the second flight Martin Hart beat 8. Bobey 4 up and 3. Hart had the best of it all the way. Jim Collins won third flight by defeating Todd 3 up and 2. wocs The tournament was successfully run off by Professional Kelly and his assistant Joe MceClory. Club Championship Next > ‘ Next Sunday the club championâ€" ship â€" qualifying round ~will be played. Only club members are eliâ€" gible to play. There will be â€" three flights. Last year‘s winner of the 1st flight, Chaylile Carey, will be on hand ‘to defend his title. Foley will attempt to win this title also,. _ Others who have a chance â€" and should easily qualify are Swedeâ€" Olâ€" son, Nafey and Lloyd Larson, N. Geminer, â€" McCaffrey, Carani and Fred Johnson. Richard â€" (Dickie) Martin just joined the club so that he would be â€" able to play in this tournament and with the brand of golf that he shoots he should beâ€" the winner, $ The new course will be open in two weeks.: Names for the holes sugâ€" gested by those who are competing in the contest should be in the hands of Secretary Crawford or Professionâ€" al Kelly before Sept. 1. HELD UNDER $4,000 & . _ BOND ON 2 CHARGES Grand Jury Will Decide Fate of Man Accused of Handling Stolen Car Harry 8. Hansen, a railroad collecâ€" tor, whose home is in Chicago aveâ€" nug was held cver iq the grand jury nug was held over a the grand jury ::}er bonds ofâ€" $4,( t a hearing ore Justice A. E. Smith Wednesâ€" day night,. He was unable to furnish bonds and was sent to the county inil. Hansen was charged with reâ€" eiving stolen property‘ and altering the engine number on a motor car. On July 8th a Kisse!l sedan was stolen in Chicago,. According to the authcrities the same car was sold in Highland Park July 15 to Leona Bell, wife of Harry Getsen. This woman happened to be wanted by the police, because Getsen was shot and killed July 5 in Chicago when he tried to hold up . Lieutenant Cunningham â€" of the Chicago Police department, and she was believed to have assisted in the attempted robbery. THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS She was traced to Toledo, where she was found July 25, In her possesâ€" sion was the iissel‘fsedan.. It is said that the machine was sold to her after the numbers had been changed, for $425. Representatives of the Kisâ€" sel automobile company, who appearâ€" ed at the hearing declared that the machine is today worth $1,500. ~The car has been returnéd to its owner. HUFF IS SOUGHT BY > CoOUNTY AUTHORITIES Highland Parï¬ Police Asked to Find Man Who. Failed to Appear ©:‘â€": According to the authotrities Huff was supposed to begin serving on Monday a ninetyâ€"day sentence imposâ€" ed for violation of the liquor law. Huff: had appealed the case and was given extra time, but was expected to report at the court ‘house on Monâ€" day. He was reported to have startâ€" ed to Waukegan at eightâ€"thirty o‘clotk Monday morning to report. at the court house at nine o‘clock, but he failed to appear. & T4 Robert Schneider, the fourâ€"yearâ€"old son of Postmaster Hugo Schneider, was slightly injured Monday <afterâ€" noon about five o‘clock when he was *struck by an automobile in Oakwood avenue, near the Schneider home. The child was playing near the edge of the | street. Another car parked at the curb kept him out of: the sight of the driver. The automobile which struck the boy was driven by Harvey ‘Erskine, a tourist frone Michigan. It was an Essex coach.:~‘ POSTMASTER‘Sâ€"SON STRUCK BY MACHINE MISCREANT AN _ ALIEN: _____ _ AUTHORITIES NOTIFIED When Justice A. E.‘Smith discovâ€" ered that John. Fralek, arrested Sunâ€" day for annoying visitors at the Raâ€" vinia beach, was an: alien, that he had no passport, and that he had no right to be in this country, the man was sent to the Lake County jail and the immigration authorities were notified. At a hearing Monday â€"morning Fraâ€" lekmï¬ned'mflandem.wnch kp was unable to pay. He will probâ€" a;ï¬y. be deported. Match; Hart Takes Secâ€" _ _ond Flight They say that she is dead, 7 But wait! how can that be } When all her joyous, life Was given to you and me? : Hér radiant smile, her weleg:?o sweet Her gentle guidance of little feet, Her patient toil, her generous praise _ Through long school hours and holâ€" idays; AEsig She freely gave herself away t She freely gave herself away $ ‘ Her very soul; and who may say That| gift was vain? : We mourn because she‘s gone. 6 _ But stay! She lo,veff not tears, Her cheer dispelled all gloom, > Her courage scattered fears! If in those hours of care and work _ We failed her, or in outr task did & .hirk i And caused her pain‘! Ab me!â€" We should y Weep hard jas only, the contrite could ~* #f + But if our love smoothed out her way â€" Or added sunshine to her day ‘Tis not to grieve. A€ They tell me she is dead. > NIXON EMPLOYES TO : HAVE PICNIC SEP':. 7 Four Hundred_ Sales Workers Will Spend Labor Day In hgï¬re than 400 members of George F. Nixon & Company‘s sales organizaâ€" tion will attend a Labor\Day picnic at the Nixon Company‘s club house on Prairie rodad just east‘ of Ridge road. The club is housed on the historic old Fagan" homestead, where log cabins were converted into children‘s play houses and the old barn is now an eightâ€"car garage. / The Nixon company reports a big demand for: their â€" Highland: Park properties, principally in their Forest Ridge addition: at Clavey and Ridge roads, and Highland â€" Park Gardens, Ridge and Deerfield roads, : FRANCIS ROUSE WINS ; IN CADDIES‘ MATCH In the caddy tournament held at Park Ridge Francis Rousé of. Highâ€" land Park won the individual title with a 40â€"41â€"81. The Briergate team got second. R. Stupple of Exmoor got\'eeond in the caddy mastérs‘ tourngment. N. Fisher of Lake Shore got second in the caddy tournament. The ‘Lake Shore and Bob O‘Link teams failed to, place. f HIGHWOOD MAN DIES AT DAUGHTER‘S HOME : Mr. Fred Albrecht, father of Mrs. R.. G. Smith of Highwood, died last night at the home of his daughter. Old age was the cause of ‘his death. He was eightyâ€"three: years rik He was eightyâ€"eight years and four months of age. Funeral gervices will be held Saturday afternoon ‘at© two oclock from Prior‘s parlors and inter" ment will be in Oakwoods cemetery, Waukegan. Mr. Albrecht leaves four sons jand three danghters|to survive him HIGCHLAND PARK STATE BANK Are You Chasing ~â€" Rainbows? â€" An Appreciation MISS WHITE _ Like a rainbow which soon disappears, the getâ€"richâ€" quick investment proves to be only a beautiful "vision." _ Though it fades, the rainbow leaves behind it hapâ€" py thoughts of its resplendent grandeur, The "getâ€" richâ€"quick" investment leaves behind it only disapâ€" pointment and remorse. on mt s j ' ighland Park Chasing rainbows caii do you no harr1, but (Ehasmg s "wild cat‘" investments can ruin you financially. j ’Sbop chasing either and consult your banker before making investments. : He knows the facts. x"> Mrs. Rex L. Jones. The Home of Savin~s Depositors | MOTORCYCLE RACES AT *‘ WAUKEGAN SUNDAY | Noted Riders Participate; "First | sw Motorl?cle Races to be t Held Here In Years be* heid Sunday afternoon at two o‘clo¢k in Waukegan. This will mark .the ‘revival of motorcycle racing in }.the middle west. Among the riders participating will be Harry KelMy of | Chicago, Bill : Hoover‘ of Hammond, | Ind., Fred Barney of Gary, Ind., Bedâ€" | well of Los Angeles, Calif., and Don 1 Moyle of Los Angeles. The track is located on Washington . street, about ‘two miles west from Waukegan. / STREET LIGHTS ARE â€" ‘ 3 A STOP TO CRIME ~ Adequately lighted streets constiâ€" tute the greatest single detriment to crime, according to R. J. Malcolmâ€" son, street .lighting engineer of. the Public: Service company of Northern Tllinois, in a recently published handâ€" book on street lighting. 3 "It has been said that the one street lamp is worth ten: policemen,". the handbook says. "It is evident that the elimination of the undesirable conditions 01 dangerous, dimly lightâ€" er streets, is of inestimable value. In one town‘ crime committed in a newly lighted district decreased nine per cent." ; Proper street lighting as a reducer of accidents also is discussed in the handbook. â€" It estimates the lack of adequate light as responsible for 54 million dollars of accident damage anâ€" nually. } The handbook shows that a recent investigation of municipal financing disclosed ‘the rather startling fact that while 21 cents of each dollar is street lighting today than they paid twenty years ago. _‘The handbook traces the developâ€" ment of municipal lighting gron 200 A. D., when lamps burning animal fat were hung before the homes of prominent Romans, until the present time.‘ Vessels filled.with tallow Ightâ€" ed the street intersections of Paris in 1558 to be followed: in , 1745 byâ€" oil lanterns. The discovery of gas turned attention to it as a medhm.{ of light. Baltimore was the first American city to be lighted with gas in 1817. [ o. e bppee €4 Electric are lamps were introduced in: 1879 and improvements in street lighting since that time have been rapid. Today we have the gas filled Mazda lamp. Invention of the latter marked the beginning of modern street lighting on a scientifically deâ€" fined plan and made it {possible_ to combine in a street lighting system both utility and decoration. â€" Such systems have been installed in many northern Illinois towns. & In conclusion the handbook declares | good street lighting is an indication of prosperity; that it creates an im:l A spectacular moto Green Bay road and Laurel avenue. Rev, F. R.Cardwell, pastor. mm ~9:80 a. m. Bible School. Search the| 74 Seriptures ‘with us: ‘ should "10:45‘ a. m. Morning worship. 7 p. m. Christian Endeavor, »‘Supâ€"! 2‘_" ' in : 4 Perils of Envy, 7:45 p. m. Evening Gospel service song and sermon, . Wednesday night at eight. o‘clock, ‘r mesting. Anger and Hatâ€" race will Automobile Insurance ‘The kid‘element don‘t see why they should be expected to take care of their shoes, as dad will always give them ‘a new pair. [ss Central Insurance Service _ A. E. Smith, J. P. lc I P se t6ks The women are bringing high purâ€" poses into politics, but the men â€"in the great majority of cases are still handling the campaign funds. s Property â€" Damage â€" _ Public Liability Collision > Theft _ Fire PAGE FTVE jnt