Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 4 Feb 1926, p. 16

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is 1 t _ KUMINATE WASTE _ f IN EDUCATION, AIM colleges may be all right, but the faculty will want to know if they be allowed to manage their own af. ’.h.n 1 * I | The girl, Leonora D. Kingsley, of Chica«~. lost the sight of one eye as the result of the attack by th rooster it was alleged. flehn% mhrbc:lfmv:nmby 3 , Leonard Kingsley, a distant relative of the detendant. | A suit for $20,000, one of the most unique‘in the history of Lake counâ€" ty courts, was started Wednesday beâ€" fore Circuit Judge Edward D. Shurtâ€" leff. It is charged in the suit that a white Leghorn rooster, said to n.?. belonged, to Emil: E. Weinckie, (a farmer living near Barrington, had attacked ‘a young girl and permanâ€" ently disfigured her. }| Alleged That Plaintiff‘s Dangh,*‘] ~_. . ter‘s Eve Ruined by â€" ; to â€" represent the Department of Superintendence, National Education association. « ) beverid~=, sunerintendent of schools at Omaha, designated by Dr. Ballou UNIQUE SUIT BEGUN IN CIRCUIT COURT Hoover of the Department of Comâ€" merce; Professor George D. Strayer of Columbia university, and John H. bers are: Hon. John J. Tigert, comâ€" missioner of the Bureau of Education, and Dr. Thomas E. Finegan, form, state superintendent of education E Pennsylvania, designated by tary Work of the Interior DcpnTb ment; Elliott H. Goodwin, resident vice president of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, and Ernest Greenwood, vice president of the board of education of. the district of Columbia, designated by Secretary teachers, an expansion of health conâ€" servation facilities such as dental and medical clnies, and a host of other demands indicating ‘a ‘ very positive belief in the public school as an IK stitution which is euenlt'i:l to t welfare and progress of the nation. Officials | The commission has elected Doctor Ballou as its permanent president and has accepted the invitation of Secreâ€" tary Work to establish its headquarâ€" ters in the building of the Departâ€" ment of the Interior. The other memâ€" better schools, modern equipqligt, greater play facilities, incmudlr = traâ€"curricular activities, better; & for teachers in order to obtain better all of it. Some of it has certainly been due to a growing insistence on the part of the public for more And Cost Doubled | . | 'l‘hemnmleoctofpubueodmfibn has nearly doubled during the past five years and is almost four times as great as it was in 1915. Some of this unusual increase can, of course, t; explained by the loss in the value the.‘mnr and by the rapid growth in 1 attendance but by no means ing additional funds available for the expansion of the school plant without adding to the present burden of '.Pe taxpayer. { 0K I$ NATIONAL COMM. PLAN Increase In Efficiency School System of the Country Starts â€" 34B SIX student government in the To Seaiy Looking Toward of Farmer: "How «did xou come to bteak that axe handle?" ; Hired Hand: "Well, I didn‘t mean to, I accidentally started to split some wood." a "Oh, you know that Mrs. Van Riper that. lives next door? . Well, 1 just heard something terrible about her." j GOOD BAD NEWS j "What‘s the matter, Dorothy, you lpok so happy." J Jedge‘s Josh says that it‘s easy to cut off a radio any time but the eavesâ€" dropper on the party line sticks till the last word. 4 _ Waiter: "Pleafe be patient., We close up soon." NoT MUCH LONGER Irate (Customer to waiter: "Say, I‘ve been waifing ‘an hour. T‘ll be starved to death if I wait much longâ€" er." k 4 Jedge‘s Josh heard that starchy things made people fat. He cut out wearing stiff shirts and collars but it didn‘t reduce him any, Handy Man:~ "Mebbe ah wudda have ‘been den, only dis here longâ€" eared critter dun kicked me in deo.l;s- der direction." t © HFE SHOULD KNOW BETTER Handy Man: "Ah‘s sorry, boss, abâ€" solute, but a mule done: kicked: me." Boss: "You should have been here an hour ago, anyway." . * Jedge‘s Josh says women in the big cities are more daring than ever. One or two have even been known to go out with their own husbands. ¢ "I ean‘t come, no more, I can‘t, ‘cause I‘m asleep." > "Come on down an‘ play, it ain‘t dark yet." s Litile Piaymate calling upstairs . Little p ate calling upstairs to his buddy:â€"yn“ & Ci¢â€" w r/7(2 Atoy * Li ndhart _iE MAN WITH THE NEw ANp SHINY CAR, is THEâ€" MoST CAREPVQLDRVER / 14 inches highâ€"sizes 214 to 544 : | |/.â€"â€" Moccasin toeâ€"Goodyear weltâ€"Leather or Composition ie solesâ€"at cost price stt on Boys and Girls High Cut : Shoes o4. JOHN ZENGELER SERVICE and QUALITY DRUG SUNDRIES â€" ICE CREAM "January Glove Sale and Other Items" CANDY â€" STATIONERY â€" SCHOOL SUPPLIES + _LUICK‘S Milwaukee Ice Cream ; ~~ . $LIR . _ Also Full Line of Men‘s Every Day Shoes at Special Sale NEVER AGAIN M. Manoogian Expert Shoe Repair Shop _ WE OPERATE OUR OWN PLANT IN HIGHLAND PARK 24. N. Second St., Highland Park Telephone H. P. 313 Cleaner and Dyer 25 North Sheridan Road STANLEY ANDERSON $ Deerfield Phone 228 Telephone H. P. 169 Barber shaving customer:> "What will you have on your face when I‘m through ?" A ' "Nothing much, I guess." : Husband: "I wigh you‘d stop that infernal honking,. I keep thinking there‘s a car behind us." $ Husband is ‘driving and wife, who has bad cold is riding in back seat. Wife has just blown her nose. Conâ€" tinue with story: f & The lone male crept out. Not a barber had orated during his brief stay there, but there had been ample conversation. Times arer not only changing, but have changed, £ "Just take a little off the back and leave the top alone, I like my hair eurled." o *The barber set to snipping to @ feminine vocal accompaniment. t chair where he had once felt at home and free from the intrusion of womâ€" en, held fast praying that his shave would â€"soon be com»letos:i!r His barâ€" ber scraped recklessly 0o his face, keeping an ear toward the féminine conversation and an eye toward a trim ankle in chair number two. f Both women departed, but not beâ€" fore a third person came in with: | From chair number two came a feminine vagice insisting. that "Too much shouldn‘t be taken off the side because Mrs. So and So said it woud not become her." â€" ; â€" | The lone male, cringing in the last chair where he had once felt at home "My husband has more dandruff than I," one of them confided, adding that she had hated to cut her hair in the first place but now that it was done she would not have it any other Two chairs were working, and a third barberâ€" was idle. In the two chairs were women; both talking with two barbers listening and butchering their locks, : The orating barbers, who knew the choicest. bits of scandal in the old days, and who could settle the most difficult international problems as he wound a hot towel around a man‘s face, has gone. ‘ (] But a barber shop today is not the home of silence. A little insight on the business was gained recently by one lone male who straggled into a shop late in the afternoon, knowing that it would be a quiet moment in which immediate service could be given, choicest. ] days, and difficult ir wound a face, has ORATING BARBERS NOW MUST LISTEN Since Invasion of Tonsorial Par lors By Women Talk Is . * Monopolized ABOUT THIS TIME O‘ YEAR THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS orating barbers t. bits of scan ind who could y is not the insight on recently by n the last t at home i of womâ€" his shave His barâ€" his face, féminine toward a LiXv ns Two daughters, Louise Libby Burâ€" rows and Marjorie Burrows Pitcher, were each left $50,000 legacies, after life estate therein awarded to their mother. ‘Two sons, William French Burrows, .l:t. and Arthur Andrews Burrows, ived real estate, the market value of which was placed at $82,717.36 for each. Â¥ ‘The inheritance tax on the estate amounted ‘to $5,509.81. } Burrows left his widow, Annie Libâ€" by Burrows, 66 years old, $10,000 in cash and a life estate. in the balance of his estate, which after other beâ€" quests, is valued at $116,065.16. ~ An estate of $819,424.60 . was left by William French Burrows of Lake Forest, who died on July 30, 1925, according to a report of Attorney William P. Carey, appraiser of the estate, which was filed Monday in the county court and confirmed. BURROWS ESTATE IS 32 REPORTED TO COURT Totals About 300,000 and Inherâ€" itance Tax Over $5,000, â€" J C EB â€" _ Building Material FRANK SILJESTROM C Special LampValue! PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY Report Says a HILE a limited supply lasts we are offerâ€" Wmhg‘this handsome table lamp at $12.50 4 complete. And it may be purchased the convenient "Little by Little" way with a first payment of only fifty cents. j Your choice of antique hammered gold or silver baseandtwo-tonedsilkshadein old gold lined with gold, or tan lined with tangerine, We‘d like you to see this beautiful lamp in your own home. Telephone us today and we will deliver one for your inspection. ‘ OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS 51 S. St. Johns Ave., Highland 7 ~7C wonns Ave., Highland rark Tel. Highland i’ark 568 Guyot, District Superintendert Henry L. Meyer and brother, Julâ€" ius J., of Wadswortk, sold‘ acreage in the town of Warren to Sven A. Danielson of Chicago, for a considâ€" eration of $75,000.â€" There was around 100 acres in the transfer. * Lazarus Locb and wife. of Chicago have sold 48% feet in two lots in Highland Park, to James M. Barnes of Evanston, the deed‘ being filed at Waukegan last week. The considerâ€" ation, the stamps on the deed show, was about $60,000. Two hundred and twenty acres of land in Winthrop Harbor, sold by Roger L. Foote and wife of Evansâ€" ton to Waldo B. Ames of Chicago, brought $163,000, ‘according to the deed filed at the office of Recorder L. 0. Brockway in Waukegan. SEVERAL DEALS IN «. REAL ESTATE MADE Several Tracts of Land Change Hands In Different Parts of Lake County beautiful lamp with two â€" toned shade and metal base, retails regularly at Claimed the boys have stopped try. ing to be ‘president of the U Bfihl'hhtno:’wl:thflum‘ o ways filled 4 want ads. prope® use Alf THURSDAY, FEBRUARY VIC J. KILLIAN, Inc. ESTIMATES FURNISHED Sanitary: Engineer e o 200 Maruk TEL. WINNETKA 1260 874 Center Street WINNETK A be convert arrangeme panies pro into | a mo lhcotm chipd fall , duced to the b pany‘s mi Willamet zation in plant river practical of forest dustry is tion throu of waste: tions;: Fr conclusion Bell com from Dot regularly of thieve lem was but first it from t ding world, h money . to turn } REDU woman â€" hotel r6 bath, whom sh such tri father, always eration death, then at he could peara In the the dfi! ually nothin.\ except 4 service g noss Child Othe under 4 the‘ "F the "N im Hidigee: daily 4 and la made practice file of ject m EASY While The "I ing e farmen letters partme of Mr will e and â€"# nior G format § a This the & answ m ve the ri prese mann mate static Fred chief ice i taker ment ped i In ~I0 easi left {ts

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