Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 11 Nov 1926, p. 17

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11 ‘1095 Rrponaadd the‘kial the word! There are Pkc thilAv_mAm What, let us earnestly &sk, ig the uropean debt question or the corn. *hflhhulmm*.m ammock *â€"Boston Transcript. Rich ) station of the North g‘“d"‘wm <pch day Ping here tebo un d h Chicagy Values I,\ l“’ Co Line Phone ‘or ‘ % Apeolepepipdpdp d y qq 4 4 4 4APARATE A un * ' WO ce blip Covers, Now Topa, Curtains § } r Bevel Plate or Colluloid j E* ; }9}, Windows, Fieor Rugs, + ", Aute Trimmings ¢ & J. M. BILHARZ _ § i,, !e- 32 8. First Street CE [ Â¥ ?‘J d‘{ R :"A"" "“ : f Local radio etigineers and radio ediâ€" tors were present at a showing of a new short wave adapter which Powell Crosley, Jr., Cincinnati manufacturer, claims will open the air lanes for 100 additional stations on the low waves without causing congestion or necesâ€" sitating the junking of present radio sets.: This device, attached directly to any standard radio receiver, it is claiiad. enables the fans to pick up programs radiocast on wavelengths below 200 meters. . At present only a few stations areradiocasting proâ€" grams on the low waves, but with the continued demand on Washington for licenses many radiocasters think that allocation of the lower waves for genâ€" eral radiocasting is inevitable. Pupils of the amiddle t high schools were invited by"‘the show management to enter an essay comâ€" petition in connection with the expoâ€" sition,~ The youths have as their subâ€" jeet, "The Educational â€" Value ‘of Radio." The judges, wha have been watching <the amateur setâ€"building contest, report that the workmanship displayed by the boys is excellent and that the®winning set will be as well built as many of the factory assemâ€" bled jobs placed on display in the Coliseum for this year‘s show. A feature new to the Chicago show is the presentation by E. C. Raynor, publisher, of the gold microphone cup symbolic of the most popular anâ€" ouncer of 1926 to Earl E. May, anâ€" nouncer at KMA, Shenandoah, Ia. "Pat" Barnes, annouricer at WHT, Chicago, wins the silver runnerâ€"up eup. This annual event has heretoâ€" fore taken place at the New York show. Mrs. Harrauff made a daily talk on radio in the home, and her audience was always keenly interested. Variâ€" ous women‘s clubs of Chicago, memâ€" bers of the third district, Illinois Fedâ€" eration of Women‘s clubs, have atâ€" tended the show on blo¢, sitting in on the lectures. "Mother and the Radio" was the subject of one paper, and then Mrs, Harrauff also spoke on "Interâ€" esting Dad in the Radio" and "Young Folks and the Radio." Trophy by Radio James H. MacIntosh of Gary, Ind., received a trophy for excellent reâ€" ception in the 1926 international broadcast test. Radio was employed to present a trophy to Jennie R. Milâ€" ler of Oswego, N. Y., for the finest report of reception on a oneâ€"tube set of the station at Buenos Aires, LOW. Station WJAZ of Chicago carried the presentation speech of U. J. Herrman, promoter of the show, to the absent fan. + With the improvement in reproducâ€" ing instruments and the growing tenâ€" deney toward ultraâ€"simplicity of operâ€" ation, woman‘s interest in radio is inâ€" creasing daily, as evidenced. by the large number of women who attendâ€" ed the daily reception to "America‘s Radio Queen" Mrs. Lotta Harauff of Princeton, IL, at the Chitago Radio show. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER i11, 1926 MANIFESTED â€"~AT ~EXHIBIT Annual Show In Chicago Feaâ€" tures This; Trophies Are Awarded; Success Is WOMEN‘S INTEREST IN RADIO GROWING Gratifying ATTEST: EDWARD M after of the County Clerk compute the rate ne ye®xPs,. .. _s..0 0. .00 c Eo thetre are insufficient funds on hand to p:g the same shall be paid promptly when due from the current funds on hand in advancement of the collection of taxes, and when said taxes shall have been collected reimbursement shall be made to the said funds in the amounts thus advanced. | ; BECTION 5. That a certified copy of this ordinance be filed in the office of the County Clerk of Lake County, Illinois, and such Clerk shall annually compute the rate necessary to produce the foregoing sums in the foregoing 7 & Secretary, â€" t ts | Section 3. That for the purpos» of providing for the fi;ymnt of principal and interest of said bonds as sam~ become due and payable, there shall be and there is berebfilevied a continuing direct annual tax unon all the taxable property in The Highland Park Fast. Park District aflchut to pay the principal of and interest on said bonds as same mature, and that there be and is hereby levied a tax upon.all of the taxable proHerty said Park District sufficient to: produce the following sums for the following years, respectively; For the year Interest Principal > * Total * * 1926 $2,400.00 $ podacnil 2,400.00 | 1927 1,550.00 2,000.00 $,550.00 â€" 1928 1,000.00 20,000.00 ©21,000.00 : ‘ ... 1920 .© >> .: ‘950.00, . : â€" 10,000,00 : . 10,850.00 _ 1927 1,550.00 2,000.00 g $,550.00 â€" 1928 1,000.00 20,000.00 ©21,000.00 . 1929 . 250.00 10,000.00 > ixo.zso.oo ' Provision to meet the requirements of this Section shall in apt time and manner be made in the annual appropriation bill. «e 3 SECTION 4. â€"That interest and principal coming due at any time when thore are insufficient funds on hand to pay the same shall be paid promptly And it is hereby certified and recited that all acts, conditions and things required to be done hgrecedent to and in the organization of The Highland Park East Park District and in the issuing of this bond have been done, hapâ€" ned, and been performed in regular and due form and season as required E; law; that. a continuir}findirect annual tax has been levied u p“.(h the taxable property in said Highland Park East Park ?istrict t{’:: the payâ€" ment of the g;inc}iful and interest ‘of this bond; and that the total indebtedâ€" ness of said The Highland Park East Park District, this bond included, does not exceed ahy constitutional or statutory limitations. <| _. .. _ ; _ " 1N TESTIMONY WHEREOF, The Highiand Park East Park District, actâ€" ing by its Board of Commissioners, has caused this bond to be lm by the President and Treasurer and attested and countersigned by the tary of its Board of Park Commissioners, with his seal of office affixed, and has caused the annexed interest coupons to be executed with the lithographed facâ€"simile signature of said officers, this fifteenth day of October, 1926. ‘ ie mt ie se ethiindt es argeic. d h E5 On ‘the fifteenth day of........................, 19......, The gighhnd Park East Park District promises to pafi to bearer 'l‘wonti;-l“ive Deoll ($25.00) at The Highland Park State Bank, Highland Park, Illinois, being semiâ€"annual interâ€" est due on that tate on its Park Bond dated October 15, ?&ze, Number............... L ANG 2 ... ne old nuts ons clcnrteacemainirianmnnrcmcceccisssâ€"â€"$13000:00 â€" * / OCtODer 15, 1928 8, 4. .0 6, 7, B, 9, 104 11, 12. 13, 14, Ib, 16, 14, f 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, «fig1:gggod October 15, 1929 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32..........................$1,000.00 _ October 15, 1930 Both grmcipal and interest of said bonds shall be payable at The ighâ€" land Park State Bank, Highland Park, Illinois, Said gnda shall be: gi by the President and Treasurer of the Board of Park Commissioners and Attested and countersigned: NOIS: a es § nc Section 1. That there shall be, and there are hereby directed to be issued, thirtyâ€"two (32) Park Bonds of this District of the denomination of e Thousand Rollars ($1,000.00) each, to be dated October 15, 1926, all &u&z interest at the rate of five per cent (5%) per annum, ‘yli)le umi-tnau‘g{ such interest to be evidenced by interest notes or coupons attached to said bonds respectively,. se Â¥i hss f* Said bonds shall mature in accordance with the foflofiinfi:&dflle: Numbers ; Amount Dates of Maturity L MNC 2 1c oraled ocfi im io ce iniiaiong pcets$1,000,00" * "OctOber 18, 1998 8, 4. .0 6, 7, B, 9, 104 11, 12. 13, 14, Ib, 16, 14, Ault 4 { 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, .4..;1:3830‘ October 15, 1929 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32..........................$1,000.00 _ October 15, 1930 East ____NoW, THEREFORE, for the purpose of providing funds with which to E the price of such lands: ® { BE it OrDaiNED BY THE BoOARD OF coumgom:ns oF _ THE HIGHLAND PARK EAST PARK DISTRICT, OF LAKE COUNTY, ILLIâ€" AN ORDINANCE PROVIDING FOR THE ISSUANCB OF PARK BONDS OF THE HIGHLAND PARK EAST PARK DISTRI T IN THE SUM.â€"OF THIRTYâ€"TWO THOUSAND DOLLARS ($32,000.00), AND PROVIDING FOR THE PAYMENT THEREOF. . * WHEREAS, The Hishland Park East Park District is a duly organized Park District under the laws of the State of Illinois, and is charged with the dntzvof utg:iring and maintaining a publicunu-k or parks in said district; and HEREAS, said District has q':rchu suitable tracts of land fmk purposes at a price in excess of Thirtyâ€"Two Thousand Dollars ($82,000.00) and.does not have sufficient funds to pay for same, and %h Board finds that it is for the best interests of said District that Thirtyâ€"Two Thousand Dollars ($32,000.00) be borrowed for that purpose and bonds be issued therefor? â€" In older days the country‘s prosperity was deemed to depend on the welfare of the farm communities and their consequent buying power; perhaps it is yet to be determined how relativeâ€" ly important that influence is today. Financial reaction or hard times in Europe used before the war to affect our own situation seriously; it would occasion recall by Europe from our markets of capital which we could not spare.. In that regard, the shoe is now on the other foot; New York is standard,‘ and when Presidential elecâ€" _"The agricultural gituation," he says, "is not favorable; it can hardly be other than a dark spot in the situaâ€" tion, so long as prices of farm prodâ€" ucts average, as they . have lately done, only 35 per cent above preâ€"war values while nonâ€"agricultural prodâ€" ucts show an increase of 59 per cent. Discussing possible factors to halt the era ‘of prosperity. in American business, ‘Alexander Dana Noyes exâ€" presses, in the November Scribner‘s Magazine, interesting views on the effect of politics. BUSINESS NO LONGER DEPENDS ON POLITICS I inion of Financial E pert P \2&: S:y: Most C':mtrov:r- gies Settled er its Puum;“lg SECTION 6 Secretar of ‘the | CLARENCE B. LOUISE M. Teacher of Piano EV AN S Tmfler of Violin Accompanist Viols, Ensemble Residence studio:â€" 820 Ridge Terrace, Evanston. Tel. Greenleaft 802 Highland Park Studio, 8355 Central Ave., Tel. H. P. 1083 r&otthc 13th day of LAING This the ordinance of October Park President (Foniz\s_::*re Coupon) of nt of the Board of %mnmiom of the Highland Park East Park District. shall be Commissioners 1926 _of this ordinance be filed in the office Illinois, and such Clerk shall annually e the foregoing sums in the foregoing A Virginia prize Plymouth Rock hen laid 329 e in a year. Evidentâ€" ly she never heard of the fiveâ€"day week, © © 8 2 *Whether uncertainties of politics will hereafter exercise any dominant influanee‘ on American finance and business, it is not easy to say. They did so undoubtedly in older days, when _ even‘ copgressional elections were expected to <shape the governâ€" mental attitude toward questions such as protective ‘tariffs or the ‘silver tions © certainly > determined â€" it. But electoral campaigns in the United States converge| at present on very different issues.. Most of the great economic contr ies have, for the time at any rate, been nettleé; the atâ€" titude of both partiés regarding them would have called conservative in preâ€"war da This may be the reason why evzg_ the sensitive Stock Exchange has pfl.id little or no attenâ€" tion, during the present autumn, to the political ‘¢campaign. . Whether that attitude will‘ hereafter change, with the coming of other issues into the field of political controversy, no one can know today." ; the international zndar, and can inâ€" crease or reduce its advances to forâ€" eign markets agcording‘ as our own country‘s intu:&o may require. District. in THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS full force EVERETT L. APe and effect from and MILLARD. Treasurer Treasurer President President 87 The condition of the crossing to which referenee is made in the followâ€" ing letter from F. 8. Wayne..western manager of The Iron Age, was disâ€" eussed at a recent meeting of tha city council and it was voted to requost the railway company to maintain a 24â€"hour watchman service at this point. The letter: ME Highland Park Press, Highland Park, II1. Gentlemen: . URGES Pl‘co'mcxgon, ~ _ _AT GRADE CROSSING F. S. Wayne ,w:mei Letter Tellâ€" ing of Narrow. on : _ â€" Deerfield Road On Saturday night, in driving from 18 7 6T n ® For instance, the day‘s paper may contain a cable dispatch about m the League of Nations, and next to it one from Washington, in which : © Bank of the several American senators are quoted on the subject of the World . An alert Court. Both these questions are of the very warp and woof of inter. national relationships, with their bearing|a court decision ucothetuduurkr'zl:n on national deb:tthevd:di' ty of credits|of a widely sold tion; a suit n] and the value of foreign bonds. They|motor company‘s stock, Matters like would, therefore, concern the American Mfihd{nfiiddinwdyw investor in foreign securities and the|the reader, but each of them carries mmm::r.m its own particular implications udconu-{ Then, one may of the arrest|quences, as intelligent reflection discovers. of a criminal N :xmdmc _ Sometimes the significance of news will mmlcaoac:u& itself, Millhions of eyes now read and â€" holdâ€"ups mnfl?“m M&W&qfl?fl.mmm &@Mflm&nmfic fifi‘m»mu & â€"â€" Then, one‘s eye may fall sion of Suate debt incress, whith may af. pubhc Â¥" news m m:flhm.mm the.coming of a new food staple, rei fected in the quotations on its securities; any atter:&x to trace or to classify the various economic influences which flow from that great modern institution, the American néwsp: jit is necessary arbitrarily to fix mcefuin .p;l’:sea and toignoreinnumerable 0 . So varied and complex are the activities and influences of a newspaper, one would otherwise be lost in an intricate and confusing maze. As themarket place of the comâ€" munity, functioning through its advertising columns, the newspager produces economic results that are fairly obvious and easy to identifyâ€"such as convenience and timeâ€"saving for the buying public, the stimulation of trade localiy.and nationally, the lowering of FHCF‘ and increasing of profits. Likewise; the influence of those disâ€" tinct sections or departments of the newspaper, devoted to the news of commerce, finance, industry and transâ€" portation, are not difficult to trace. 1s$ 1*% But what of those other columns in which the reader finds the genâ€" cral news of the day? It may be the simple notice of a bitth, a wedding or a death, or it may be the news of some devastating calamity such as a flood or a conflagration, It may be an "Act of God"! or an Act of Congress. But whatever its subject may be, scarcely an iteim appears which fails to stir into instant life the business or professional activity ot some individual or millions of people. reason for high premium rates in this class dimn;â€"‘:nmmdmmml Peach Twigs and Scientific Planning "NEWS and PROGRESS" ECONOMIC SIGNIFICANCE AND SERVICE OF THE AMERICAN ‘I;J'E;YIVSWER AND:;I%WS!LA'!ER ADVER’IJIS”I)IL({;â€"-FM }amt m Manhattan Library opu onomics ebli. in serial form t courtesy of Bank of the Mcngwun &lmmy; xfm York. : In preparing for the growth of telephone facilities to meet fuâ€" ture demands, there is no peachâ€" twig substitute for foresight. All expenditures of labor and money must be based on scientific planâ€" * ward, so many believe, when held over underground water supplies. So firm is the faith of some people in its supposed inâ€" fallibility that they never underâ€" take the labor and expense of digging a well without making a test for hidden water with this natural divining rod. f THE peach twig dips downâ€" ward ‘nn manit haliaua. urhar FOLLOWING THE NEWS ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY . BELL SYSTEM t One Policy + One System â€" Universal Service g a Deerfield to . d Park on the ie m reey homiy sen donn ig r was ‘very run down ‘a Chicago North Shore & Milwaukee train g- the. north, . which npptoncbug' crossing > without whistle or bell. The crossing was ‘ungarded, at Hixhhnd'P&k; (to whom ¢ t was made) sayâ€" ing that th't watchman went off duty at midnight the view is obstructâ€" ed by construction buildings to the north of Deerfield avenue. There is only one safe course left open to moâ€" torists, and that is to get out of the car and go ahead and then flag the car to come on. /~ \In this day and age, no public seryâ€" ice\company has any legitimate reaâ€" son or excuse for constructing a nev‘ road crossing highway on grade, and. dreoierek oppertuany In cesael head wflfl.'lmmumthu ing, Three Mill m l‘:.""';-':-‘.',-.-zut:fi:::‘mfiu cussed and contractors and subâ€"contractâ€" Incidentally, it is interesting to note the @ould seom at Atst to have little reintion to them. For example, in a recent arti One of the vital phases of the Bell System‘s task of providing America with a nationâ€"wide uniâ€" versal service is that of foreseeâ€" ing and providing for the future needs of the nation. ning. â€"Careful studies must be made of present and future conâ€" ditions in the locality to be served. Probable population and the volume and nature of teleâ€" phone traffic must be estimated years ahead. Plant must be made capable of expansion. Capital must be arranged for in advance if growth is not to be delayed. © Bank of the Manbattan ank of the Manhattan Co., N. Y. hL opportunitics for business °) _ Yet all of them, even the poorest, ¢ ict and deak with. That‘is passifle as economic.news is readily and | Fedrone but deily enc tar ythqhoud:nndâ€"de f i (Next articl, "A Unifying § > character of the reader, A housekeepet, a broker, a laborer, a schoolmaster, ‘a social idler, each has a particular ' ors will require contract bonds. By ingqrirâ€" In a similar way he notes and int many other items and thus proves alert mind may find the news mndad. with opportunities for business . The significance of news varies with the mddebmt:‘uud, hase why .u._'wb.'ww-iam Two people we haven‘t mu for ~are the extreme | > wants to abolish the r and the bumptious jingo who we ought always to fight ’iu of the hat. § t «3 This letter, while ,tfi ” §t for publication, is writ the purpose of em $ in correcting this si 31 4 ~ M :. no community is safegharding:â€" ‘the interests of its citizens it permilth such construction. The police of Highland Park are not at fapilt in thi matter. â€" They say they recalved countless complaints. But, the ‘Bit; of Highland Park should * ly take action to wipe out this dang@r, Yours very truly, No. 0 | PAGE F. 8. Wa t e ks »

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