.43 This. yho named it Crtttheir Ml schooling directly out. " hm - food heater phat. - - was: into hail-I tar MttttKiF M lat prod-d in $lBr,Ar.t--.tGwru-ikt A third ttrm, the Ban Hindu. (at: Go. the Intent maker of "kW-inthnworld.uuom " h Km. The Kewanee Boiler Co. was or zanized as I separate institution in 1892 with E. E. Baker, president, and B. F. Baker, treasurer. Both are still motive and both retain those same titles. But while the company was capitalized " 't00,000 in the be kinninz and employed only a hand- ful of men it is now capitalized at B. F. Baker was chairman of that "Iliant committee of aggressive, or- (united business men who 1 few years are fought the battle lug-inst “Pittsburgh Plus" to I finish and put the steel industry in the central west on a sound. peofitable huh. Fine Purl System E. E. Baker, known " the wealth. klt Ind man pubiiespiritmt than: in hum, six years an organised I'M m for his city um! to an but than chit "me park I" a. in out: £110,000. Its expansion is such that other allied plants are now operated in Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Alabama. General sales offices are maintained in the east, five sales divisions manage the "trade in the United States and a sixth diiisiom Walworth International. handles-the export business which reaches to all parts of the civilized world. That's quite a step forward from the simple little stock fund heater. Known World Over Kewanee boilers'are known the world over. The Kewanee Boiler Co.. has on its payroll in Kewanee more than 1,300 persrms. The plant covers thirty-three acres and eleven acres are under rhnf. The company fabri- cates approximately 25,000 tons of steel plates annually. Fifteen to thir- ty carlnarls of riveted steel boilers are shipped out every day. I More than $1,000,000 worth of Ke- wanec boilers were sold in New York) City in 102.6. What was its origin?, Bless you. it started right in the same little shack that gave birth to the stock food heater and he Wal- worth plant. Only in the years ill became an individual company and} pursued I slightly different course! City in 102C,. What * Bless you, it started same little shack that the stock food heater worth plant. Only in t8,50o,0o0. Comfort for Humanity . Something else, all the plants in Kewanee are devoted in large meas- ure to giving comfort to humanity. In all these larger ventures here we find the element of comfort applied through the medium of warmth. The Walworth Mfg. Co., employing 2,000 persons in Kewanee, 28 acres in plant, makes a complete line of valves and fittings used primarily in steam and hot-water heating. "This company manufactures about 30,000 tons of fittings here per year. Steel heating is about fifty-tive yeurs or and this Kewanee plant has grownl up with it, from the embryo, so tol speak. 1 So the seed of manufacturing was sown in Kewanee. It brought mechan- ics here. Boys grew up and learned the trade. Men began to have vision. The little plant making stock food heaters is the parent of every plant in this city. The originators pultered along for a few years and reorganization came. The company became known as the Haxtun titeam Heater Cu. Years and evolution followed and the Western Tube Co. succeeded the Haxtun com- pany. - The rcmon for Kewanee's growth can be nothing else. There is no other. Everything that has gone to make Kewanee what it is grew up there, developed from the inside. The story begins in 1862, sixty- tive years ago, when the Anderson Heater Co, Was started there in a bit of a shack, It was a simple thing. Just a plain little stove-like heater whose destiny was to warm stock food and stock water and make a city of Kewanee. . In Kewanee are three of the best known manufacturing organizations P the country, companies making widely advertised Hoods. making them in enurmuus quantities. More than half of the low-pressure stéel heating boilers 'vatutiactured in the United States MP made in Kcwanee. The Answer Is Men Row and why have these things grown up in this partieular spot? The anmwr is-men. Kewanee in the beginning was merely I place on the Burlington railroad, 131 miles from Chicago, slightly south of due west, where thin: stopped. It was surrounded by n prosperous farming country. Yet today Kewanee is a any of 20,000 persons. In the toga-13. um. was nothing at all to am that lie walk-e might over he a city. An. patently it was destined to be a vil- lage, to which farmers might come to trade. In matters of transport. location. water or other advantages there was little to set it apart from thousands of other American towns. m, Lima in??? .7,Jmu.nn=‘ quantities. _More 'w-pressure stéel uiactured in the I â€mug â€mu-um: m: mud Growth T flight" io weight t An eighty acre site has been ac-éhighly 'mercerized, quired just out of Kewanee for they forms the surface central sub-station. The growth off tiilimt, as in sateen electrical development can be judged; Printed patterns I from the fact that three years ago? to sateemt for ma Kenyatta had only one small, inade-l were designed prim: quate power plant. It could not sup-j ings, and were lug ply the larger industries with power! unsuitable for tires and they had to make their own. ‘cotlon charmeuse _ Today these larger plants, steadily l small neat patterns expanding, are putting in 'eiiGTiiifi)iis7G in English min matter of shifting a switch or two; that will link up all neighboring cities using electric power in all the country 'ruund. The cost of this great project which is to be completed before the (Dd of 1928? No one can say just now. Estimates have placed the cost of the "high lines" and necessary equipment all the way from 812.000,- '000 to $32,000,000. Here at Rewanee, at central point in northern Illinois, will be the great central station to become a clearing house fur electric power by the mere Gloves tro oat regularly to the Argentine, Australia, the Orient. Eu- rope and other In plum Big Power Line Bécause these great industries have grown up here and have devel, oped a city of 20,000 inhabitants. something else now comes. A 66,000 volt power line has just been com..' pleted from the Keokuk dam. on the Mississippi river, 106 miles away. Another line, 132.000 volts. is being built in from Joliet. Plans are com- pleted for a third line, 132,00 volts, from Pekin. and P fourth, also I32.- 000 volts, from Rock Island, to be built next year. Today Karma: is the home ottiee and central punt of a organisation operating bum: plum mkib: low~priced glove. for workers ol'ull kinda. The Boa company ttpa an out- put of 50.000300 pain of gloves a year, dmon 1,000,000 every week. The mm b that thi- plut an, link:- more It!“ M- than att the other basking pin “in: in tho Unl- tad stun. PM halting pin thy turned to am ain‘t. A cheap wort glove was hum-undo of not- ton banal. Show: otttne nun-Inn, or higher car. and better quality were made. Ph-ut-s-lar-ttua. Bu ALhhtstrielkartrsltmre HANG - vuma IAI- MIIING "an: .a3"Ctnemq, Bam DYE"! "WING â€All mum-n Cl! and lake Your Appoint-alt for Per-uni Tit-rf, ',',trtx at "at.†. For La“. and Only You will have absolute pri- vacy in our beauty Ind hair cutting parlor. Why go to Chicago for a perma- nent wave when you can get the finest kind right here " home. Don't wait until the hot weather sets in. Now is the right season. If you want fingers, combs, water waves or max-eel waves, phone Highland Pa'rk 1990 for an appointment. Permanent Waving To Buy a Home? To Build a Home? Charles F. Grant, See'y OR TO PAY OFF EXISTING MORTGAGE on your Home? The Highland Park Building Loan and Homestead Association will atsist you! Do You N eedh Money? We Cut the Very Latest human-ulna} i-twail.' min-Imam SPECIAL PRICES FOR PERMANENT WAVING American Home. the Safeguard of American Liberties" Keen Steam Oil Process ' Kewanee seems to give the mswer. Kewnnee in the beginning had nothing that these other towns did not have. It seemed destined to be only I farm village by the side of a railroad. But Kewnnee developed men of vision. energy, nbility to organize '--men with tenacity enough to ride 1 the storms that cam. Yes, the answer is in one word-mat! l Printed patterns have been applied to sateemt for many years. These were designed primarily for coat lin-" ings, and were large, scrolly designs unsuitable for dresses; This spring cotton charmeuse has appeared in small neat patterns much like those used in English prints. Because of its One of the most attractive new materials shown this spring is cotton eharmeuse. It is not actually a new material but an improved quality of a very old and familiar fabric-sn- teen. According to the Burt-u of Hbme Economics Charmeuse usually is lighter io weight than sateen, more highly %erceiized, and the warp forms the surface instead of the COTTON CHARMEUSE AND SATIN RELATED Bureau of Home Economics in Bulletin Explains Value and Uses this As l have gum ahout Illinois tud. ing material for then stories, may pol-Ions have asked me, in my mm. this question: l "What dance Ins I town like ---.NP'V - w"... ... - -._. thtr-th.abowratittatttaal_ -- tron ttpirtKewaneo.t,'-aataB.r thrttmeNn-is.t.oaromnt. commie: mum»: undo! In} "r1ededeh-tt-rrt.s. Not so than either. The Inn... and.“ hunter-{thud Implement Co,, which bag-n modest Mfume!!!" Ind light w. ly, in mum a new phat. $6032†..mharutao-r,ehemueVitir.,rC feet, for a. mat-stun of I? hunt, and Wm. machinery. Tho [nun Inn Ic- _ '.Hi-to.rsis.tittmed- 1te1rf.trmtur.o.t.eur-tlurii7ia" of“: dremhitit, and chum. china: to be the brunt. mar wit w of phia glen. " Mu. nhcturer in this partieuiar item in ha “I, m aha m mg the world. DIV nib for the an]! boy and [ii-M Asihave-.houttitinoisti- San-humben Malibu in; material tor these stories. may in. for Ar-ries, but it u no- kiwi Del-Ions have "Incl no in n..-“ n-) A, . - _ " _ -- ' hm 399 CENTRAL AVE. HIGHLAND PARK hm has the right idea. When a tiataaseiat panic occurs they just close the banks, stop plying oil, the u- eitemmst dies doin; 6tmtidenee is re- stored"and more deposits come in. That's m: we'd all n good fitusneini srotier--Phiiadeismu Inquirer. med u . dam fabric heâ€. " com- in tut colon and is an econ- omknl and new. fabric to m Ne pivow covets, bedspreads. and men for cantata". It column: van with cretonm " ulna. or trimming hands. In . heavier weight. warp nurfue rubric commonly known an Wneti n satin, it is used for up Minus-y |31.11pm“. ELI BRANDT You can borrow money from us at low rates on well located homes, apart- Mr meant buildings, and trust. l new property. , l Prompt attention given ap- l plications or ealt 1 CENTRAL 4565 l Pint Clan (While) Eel Telephone High“ Park 'as AmerieayWthhoryet Bum COMPANY. INC. 30 North hSane Street -- _Estabrushed " years LOW RATES Rafferty Transfer and Storage Co. Office at 37 South St. Johns Avenue in Pratt's United quYlENT BUREAU Storage Moving Packing Shipping Baggage and Freight Transfer u ain't-a" 137:1; 517 Cris I; The Highland Park Hospital Any healthy person between 18 and 40 yea: of Me will be examined free and blood typed. mosB‘USED WILL BE PAID AT THE RATE or $60.00 PER QUART when of blood given. For Pl information and nppointment, apply to Dr. Ora-mm, Wghiand Park Hosp“. Phone Highland Park 2560. Office Phones B. P. 1103 and 1260 Residence Phone B. P. 147 Donors For Blood Transfusion WANTED ROTTED MANURE A"eh'ohe*-tee$trsanmrgt-. Think-01580 thump-IL]: WILL KRUMBACH Sash, Doors and Militant W. "e" in} Atta BIt atuN'l"atdgr1"t%nrR'a, " 'ti, EVANS FERTILIZER BLACK SOIL