Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 17 Sep 1925, p. 3

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â€"bring it back own caréful ie workâ€"and jhours of work washtub. ed for your entrance to school. .M ‘ s ,“ & +A B 'r:% w it is impossible e all items.called e in and see our ow you our servâ€" rised at the large Ve,. _ m d we have a stand pxdise at a great ir special is a nolax for 69c rday, Sept. 19. rials each week. URSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1925 ady to starch, iink of the Drug Highwood Pharâ€" on Railroad aveâ€" s south of Highâ€" Telephone 1600 harmacy tore First rs and Dyers â€" DAYS ash dry Co. P. 178 3} RESULTS â€" | _ Mrs. | 52. vase . . Otable & A EPy | J One p B thy vas "K: .AQ‘Clrl PJC _; .Mrs. . A M f Fidk." flow â€" E“'Pe. e ‘ sng -. + t an * 0 â€" blue rib} P im _ . .. . OOC} PM&aT00n UIPS,, â€" y °6 Cxhibit made the gathering of â€" P fGarden club a delightful social "best spe m w ‘ â€" goloring," & for f t c 3 ved | i _._; Miss S: grable me _ jOne pink dahlia in a small blue potâ€" i‘.v, vase won a red ribbon for Mrs. s A Carl Stadlier. . . James Hood received a blue ;@.. for a blue glass bowl containâ€" _ MK flowers grown from "Vaughn‘s 6 re," a combination of pink, and }” Te snapdragon, ‘double and single E,‘ !:d white bachelor buttons. ]A _ MBA ribbon "for all points" was also _ #iven her baskert of gladioli, containâ€" ;;* almost every variety grown. Two ¢ (Mote blue ribbons were awarded Mrs. & 8# "charming display" of Zinâ€" â€"_â€" MBs in a vase, and for a "pleasing" _ _ Fthibit of vegetables in a basket. Her‘ f’r Varieties of dahlias received a blue 4 8 "ch & 5: a v & i of v % Varietie: &4 tifu fiy: le r _ Mihs. W. a itiful for a center piece" won â€" Wehotrable mention in its citation for j( fS..W. A. Wood‘s blue glass vase â€" s PtMming sultana, double: and single S hior buttons and yellow snapâ€" â€" gi°giz__ A blue ribbon was given â€" t Zinnias with Maroon tips., _ Asparagus â€" ferns â€" were draped around a basket of perfect tomatoes. _A blue ribbon was pinned on "Naâ€" ture‘s Bountiful Basket" a most . gratifying arrangement of vegetables | and fruit. The handle of the basket} had little yellow tomatoes on vines draped artistically. This basket were | products of the garden of Mrs. C. C.! Brackett‘s country home, "Sky Mea-! dows," on Wilmot road. An alphaâ€" betical list accompanied this display | of Crosby‘s Egyptian Beets, stringâ€" | less green pod beans, Nantes half | long carrots, Vaughn‘s all seasona‘l eabbage, Golden Barntam corn, Davis . perfect cueumber, Black Beauty Eig’ plant, Hearts of Gold muskmelon, YÂ¥ellow Globe Banners onions, New Sweet â€" Upright _ salad peppers, | Vaughn‘s XXX parsley, Winter Queen | |\ pumpkin, Giant summer crookneck,‘ T ._quuh. Mammoth:White bush squash, |â€" ( Mrs. Brackett‘s basket of pink asters received a blue ribbon for the "best specimens," her red, and white &sters won a red ribbon for "rich goloring," also her lavender and white & for "the best specimens." Her -EA of delphinium and marigold ved honorable mention. . , Miss Sadie Galloway received honâ€" Orable mention for the most artistic Basket of asters. . | Mrs. Ligcoln Pettis was given a blue ribbon for her artistic basket of :m. and orange marigolds, ageraâ€" um, and "black eyed Susans." Mrs. Guy H. Newcomb received honorable mention for a beautiful arâ€" m:ent of wild and. cultivated in a lovely blue basket conâ€" tiining cock‘s combs, boltonia, delâ€" Hn:, bachelor buttons, and golden Table Queen Des Moines squash, Kitchenette Hubbard squash, Lucullus Swiss chard, Purple Top white globe !llrflipt, Champion everbearing strawâ€" Mrs. E. B. Jordan, of Arden Farm received a blue ribbon for the best arrangement of Zinnias grown from the Garden club seed, and Mrs. Warâ€" ner received a red ribbon for hers. Mrs. George L. Truitt‘s quaint basâ€" ket holding okra, egg plant, cabbage, éarrots, lima beans, tomatoes, ‘ yellow globe tomatoes, green peppers, and chard received a red ribbon. for its beautiful arrangement. A, slender, tall silver vase holding a spray of "Lily speciosum rubicum," a lovely, delicate blossom, the pride of its former owner, the late Dr. Warner, was also given a blue ribâ€" To your correspondent Mrs. Geary presented the hydrangea bouquet. Mrs. A. R. Warner received a blue ribbon for her "Old rose dahlia flowâ€" ering zinnia‘s" and another specimen marked "Dream" in a blue vase. eontaining harmonizing marigold and calendula with ferns, and her ;« well selected tomatpes, marked "excellent in every way," were the other prize winners. &ppreciation of the services of Deerfield telephone â€" exchange &et, a beautiful basket of vegeâ€" ‘_wWas presented to her for ber_ SÂ¥ and éfficiency. play of silver, glass, Dotteryr{nd basketry from the beautiful hoines whose owners were the exhibitorg.y The judges were Rev. Mr. Mark J, ‘Andrews, Mrs./W.â€" W. Clark, Jr.,. and Mrs. C. ’w Getty. "asd \. Mrs. William W. Geary of Bries hill road .received four blue ribbons. One for a huge carved silver basket of thé Garden club zinnias (from seed presented to ‘ the‘ club members) another for a cut glass vase holding immense specimens of the. hydrangea, their perfectly formed blossoms inâ€" terspread with New England asters; "for size": was the comment written by the judges. A low vellow haw! Warner, Mrs. W. J. Galloway, and Mrs. Jesse Strong. Five long tables held the beautiful array of flowers, fruits and vegeâ€" tables, all in choice ’onhinera. A disâ€" kuTors Aol Juliack 1C .. m h 6 i Mrs. R. B. Patterson, Mrs :. Deerfield Garden Club Exhibit «The committee ‘of hostesses for the ncondzmul fall exhibit of the Garâ€" den club of Deerfield was made up of the following group of women: ‘THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1925 C. W:; Boyle exhibited Shasta and ageratum in green crysâ€" , for which she received honâ€" mention for "graceful disâ€" _ Deerfield News low yellow bow! xd en ETY AUE | ‘°C% _| the people of Libertyyille: whom Senâ€" 1 a blue | ator Swift said had "inalienable ia flowâ€" | rights," A comment from a woman pecimen | on the visitor‘s benches was that "f ase. Libertyville had not the County Farm olding 2| it would put in a bid to get it." lblcu'}‘.’_‘ Senator Swift pleaded for the cotâ€" e pride | tage system for the care of the county ate D"J poor. Rev, Frank Fitt, minister of lue ribâ€" | the â€" Highland Park â€" Presbyterian 'church, spoke as a citizen and a taxâ€" n Farm | payer, not as an owner of property he bes‘{nex_t to the County Farm, and as a n from | member of the building committee of â€" Warâ€"| the Home for the Aged in Evanston. r hers.| He kpew definitely of the plans made nt bflfl"!or the ‘housing of elderly women. ibbage, | He said that the cottage system was yellow | insufficient for old people not able to s, fl_nd}go out of doors to a dining room in for its another building, that the cottage sysâ€" fttm was degigned for juveniles. "The dr:oped,lbuilding on the County Farm ‘could matome | _ a . C t a good County Farm building such | people could be cared for at the cost | of one dollar per day, (the cost of | maintenance of the aged) instead of eight dollars a day, the price of livâ€" ing in the shospital. Mr. Obee also said that the County Farm actually cost $3,827 an acre. Supervisor Harâ€" baugh said that the water system which cost $35,000 could not now be duplicated for $100,000, that but $800 an acre had been offered by a"synâ€" dicate of Libertyville men to buy the farm in order to move it. He and the farm committee had visited four available farms in the county, none of which offered the advantages of ’the Libertyvillé location. He gave figurés to prove that it would cost !more to build new buildings ‘and an adequate water system on another farm and that eventually fifty or one hundred of the one hundred and forty acres could be gold to better advanâ€" tage and bring, a _lerer income for the care of the poor. Mrs. Luther had also said that if the present buildâ€"| ing served more than half a century, in another fifty years a new building would be needed, and the property could then be sold to much greater advantage. Mr. Harbaugh stated i:nt the majority â€"of the people of Li“vr- ‘ tyville did not object to the location | of the County Farm in its limits, that he had a petition with 54 »:ignatut;:, 4 including the merchants, asking that | the farm be kept in its present ,léu- « tion. All that he askedâ€"was that the | , propasition, Supervisor Obee stated that the County hospital is inadequate for the care of convalescents and that with Supervisor Bletsch said that the house was in such a state of disinte. gration that the scrub water drips through the stairs onto the dining room table, which room also has the large stove: used for |cooking the meals of the fifty inmnfi, and which makes: the room temperature ninety degrees. . 6. } +] not be ‘repaired ;r;; "{ could patch a dea: Four roof fires have occurred in five years, from sparks from the chimney. Some old women have not been down stairs in thréé or four years, because of their inability to go up and down the dark, narrow stairs. Mrs. Lu}l;er preferred to take her chances sleepâ€" ing in the barns which housed the catâ€" tle, because they were more sanitary. and fire proof. ? | should come ‘out." He praised the | fine administration of the superintenâ€" | dent of the Cqunty Farm Mr. Burâ€" |gess and hig wife; they labored unâ€" Eder great difficulties: but performed | a most praigeworthy task. _ Mrs. Harry Luther, of the Highâ€" land g’ark Woman‘s club,. who with Mr. Harbaugh, Dr./â€" Fitt, and Mrs. Reichelt, Jr., visited the County Farm â€"at 8:30 o‘clock, Wednesday morning, ‘told of the bed bugs and cock roaches that ran riot in the building in spite of the $250 spent each year for their extermination, and pleaded for a new building on the present site to replace the house that was built in 1854, and to which additions have been made in such a way as to make it a perilous fire trap. Frail, flimsy iron ladders placed against the building cannot be reached from the inside by anyone but an acrobat. the o fag Lo ... 00*% HeEVICCS To the rearing of families are kept as criminals in cells, that women are not "unfortunate" when poor. )‘ He also stated that Senator Swift bought ‘his farm next to the County Farm, knowâ€" ing its location, but now that the land has increased so much in value (Senâ€" ator Swift stated that Samuel Inu!li received $6000 an acre for the land which he sold in the vicinity) that‘ Swift felt a sentimental attitude for t hi sls td be eese n l ES n in ulA id e n in _ [ .Y ‘court house, in ‘\Waukegan, last Thursday afternoon, when he deâ€" clared that the building which houses the old people on the County Farm is better than the homes in which threeâ€" fourths of the: people in Lake: county live. > Supervisor Obee; of Highland Park made vigorous objections to this statement, and Supervisor Vercoe, of theâ€"same town, said that some of the women live in iron ‘barred cells on the ; farm, $3 m __ Senator Swift rétaliated by saying that ‘he would like to take the men to a few farm homes. He aws aware | that the temper of people is to spend money for public welfare, for crimâ€" inals and unfortunates. This brought the retort from Mr. Vercoe that wom:> en who have given their services to COpriir isnn ED ad taracrhe Cw nc . 1 i o AOAME â€" £0 S ‘State | Senator Rodney m threw a verbal bomb into the meetâ€" ing the supervisors held in the Lake mmy gm" hm_ giic l paw it l‘f‘ _Cflllhy of a bond issue of $250,â€" d any more than one a decayed tooth that E’a)vit .mfi%u ?‘fi To: the "Inquiring Rbporter:‘ sense of the meeting was not so. the care of the aged but the gu of the value of real estate. The ger of a fire, and the subsequen of life, for which the super 000 payable in twenty years, 1 ‘the purpose of building a new homé, be put beforé the voters at the spring election / on April thirteenth, . 126; The resolution was lost by ‘three votes, and a substitute motion to re> pair the old building was tabled, /.. Fashion approves.â€" Flantiels for Fall and Winter. Lo ‘ new shades are noted as dabinet, goblelen,, claret. and ‘oth t . d â€" 54 inches Wide _ Tflis x;rice is very low fog Flanâ€" nels of such excellent (Quality, $8.50 yard, | . C}~ ©}@> $3.50 yard Botany â€" Allâ€"Wool Flannels Remarkable V mirinmenninnemiinen is $35.00. 7~G6 CCHnuenlily. anvites your approval, p â€"A coat of purple pinpointâ€"a new soft supple med with fitch, $@5. A‘coat‘of a new noveltv f: This first showing of new Coats show; quality, careful y orkmanship and attr; coats confidently. nvifefs your approval. f 1 hi Koi t t s on y id 4 (A These new froc merit your attention. Inbéresting variations of the new \ flaired silhouetté characterize the frocks for Fall. Many new and effective \ materials are being employed. The highest standards for quality, workâ€" manship and faif pricing is noted throughout the entire display. : A splendid assortment of wool fabrics in regular and extra sizes are shown â€" at $25.00., . . â€") * y â€" New Fall Dresses of Silks â€" ‘ o | _ and Woolen Fabrics §meg Moderately Priced from _ "iÂ¥e THE HIGHLAND Rarr Remarkableivalues! The large block patterns are quality yargs, The wo warmth, yetthe price is f wool blankels. _ The blankets !'even‘fie}'i or ta o choose tw plend(i,gfleconc Part imibinnnimimnngniei Pij L t C000 . PRe COCin io A MARCART Y rbs. _ The wool : weft gives them k he price is far below that of allâ€" s ts ; 3 + .1 Size 66x80 inches _ [ g .. ts Imay be chosen in grey, pink, blue, and are carefully bound with sateen. wW& or more: at this price would be P _~GARNP w MFla B M M $5.50 st Showingofg â€" _ _ Women‘s Coats _ $29.75 to $89. p â€"~2Pâ€"0yeu, ; 1ne nighest standards for guaiity, workâ€" ricing is noted throughout the entire display. f nt of wool fabri¢s.in regular and extra sizes are shown would be responsible, did not concern the small majority. >\ | . ... Lake County Fair Exhibitors | _ Among the ‘Deerfield exhibitors who received prizes at the ::ko Counâ€" ty fair at Libertyville a | Mrs. E. Jucobson, Mrs. A, C. Plaggd, Mr and Mrs.: Walter Vantyne, Miss Marie Kottrasch and llj:a Margaret Plagge, Mrs. . Jacobson reéceived a: large number of prizes on canned fruit and jellies and Miss Plagge on pickled cially Priced ool Blanl $15. to $39.75 These pretty blankets in 1 HIGHLAND ‘l‘\.“t‘ e pretty blankets in made of the finest _ 1° O "HeSve touches of Tfur. = Of high ractive price, this display of new _ 1. ; : ft supple woolen materialâ€"is trimâ€" © novelty fabric with collar of mandell Bs distinetive touches of Tur ets Anemn Et ILLINOIS Avad SToRrEe nEws Miss Kottrajch took prizes on flowâ€" ers and bakery goods and the Vanâ€" tynes, on asters_of all colors and the largest wamvn in â€" Lake vegetables and fruit. Mrs. A. G. Plagge took blue ribbons on #arden flowers and a well arranged basket of wool yarns. The merits of Carter‘s Underwear are wellâ€"known beâ€" cause they :are knit of selected yarns, fit perfectly and wear longer thanâ€"ordinary garments. We are showing the::n of cotton, silk'ind cotton, wool and cotton and allâ€" When you buy of us you are assured ofâ€"garments that will fl,t comfortably and give excellent service. Our garâ€" ments are carefully selected to meet the requirement of all kinds of Fall and Wintgc weather. > i * . Carter‘s Underwear ; y : Is Featured t Queen of Carnival Chosen ND t N dn t hi dicionsainds s _ O _ Cvery occasion. ‘The colors are bright and cheerful and shapes are decidedly youthful: , s i EC iz 4 Here is a pleasing assortment of Children‘s Hats suitable for every occasion. The colors sra hrlihi 224 1. _ a y Whether your locks are]on“g or shorn, whether yourtastes are demure or dashing, you will find a new hat to please you here. There are hats of felt and velvet in all the favored shades, shapes, becoming ~to every contour of face. . The new. pirate shapes are especially featured. â€" $3.95 to $10.50 ' * 1 A Sure Protection Against Wintry Weather and a Safeguard to Health Children‘s Hats For _ School and Dress Up Wear ‘arm Wellâ€"fitt We are cor anxious that you should visit the fitm There is much here to gain intérest. ‘Frocks, hats, coats and accessories, entic presentations of the styles for the new are attractively arranged on display. We [ beyerygladtohelpyouneetAltumnlp- 5 ria,te;ly. clad. f Eptember Days Bring â€" | Charming N ew Hats . For Women and Misses TT‘S Underwear t l To fls l\ (9e T4 it A. G.| ning from tm-tymmm.u jat ket of *'m"'“"'“lmh&. Â¥3p". MB se Anipnneiliineis catroces... . 4 m-meahnM val and Carnival on Saturday afterâ€" noon, Sept. 26, and donations for the of » im [ 103. ~, â€", " *.; Su0 names of :h- -nd‘?:.c. _____‘t,h'. ages m .hu_?‘ the name drawn out was Hi (Continued on page 4) of ‘the "“j":g; appointed PAGE THREE wt C 14 %6

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