Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 22 Sep 1927, p. 17

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_ _ Review of Progress Made In Imâ€"| Coâ€"Operates With Federal Auâ€" + provement of Highways Of thorities In Effort to Make . Lake Co. During Year; Survey of Employment , Many Details Conditions made by the division of highways. â€"Round Lakeâ€"Long Lake bridge, secâ€" tion 36â€"Bâ€"15d, has been completed «. * Aual inspection will be made soon. Paving on Ivanhoeâ€"Graylake road, section 37â€"15d, was begun on Septemâ€" ber 9. â€"I feel confident that this conâ€" tract will be completed within the time limit. Paving on Milburn road, section 39â€" tion and I anticipate their final. in spection can be made within ten days. The Cuba <township, < countyâ€"aid grading has been completed and final was completed on August 1st and has heen‘opfned to traffic and acceptâ€" Grayslake road, section 35â€"15d and 35â€"Wâ€"15d, have been completed and final inspection made by the division of highways. Round Lakeâ€"Long Lake road gradâ€" ing, section 36â€"Gâ€"15d, has been comâ€" pleted and final inspection has been ‘The county aid bridge over squaw creek in Grant township has been deâ€" signed and I am prepared to advertise for bids for same as soon as necessary right of way is secured. _ _ county . aid bridge in Antioch townâ€" ship and the structure is*now being section 34â€"15d, was completed on July 21 and opened to traffic on August 11. Shoulders and ditches are now completed and this section should be The Deerfield road bridge, section 34â€"Bâ€"15d, has been inspected and acâ€" cepted by the division of highways. Deerfield road pavement, section 34â€"Wâ€"15d, was completed June 16 and has since been accepted. . pleted August 21. The entire road is now open to traffic. Shoulders and inspection will be made this week. $000000 mm 20 is served mmhwmm AWfounts l t out country. ous lu.-‘-ml‘:slm mflhme&wwnfigMMb& Mm apparent many stai and o‘._“_g « with thoor:mh ”fl:"fll‘l were 'gim, Insurance carried on all county|with the alien being given m status property amounts to $615,3425 accordâ€"| of a state ward, and it is thus imposâ€" ing to a report submitted by Superâ€"|sible for the immigration authorities MMP.'MWM%@!NWMM and ”M:de;thbnrdol 1 superâ€" Tisors Friday prior to their adjournâ€" TELEPHONE 410 ment. â€" Rressurmucrs| J.SMITH mlhfldundhflvhhhm- e Complete report is as follows: Dealer in Court house and jail inc. _ _ _ TTTUILITT3Y INSURANCE CARRIED ON COUNTY PROPERTY Paving on Wadsworth road, section 33â€"15d, was completed on June 28 and the pavement was opened to trafâ€" fic on July 19. Shoulder work on this in shape for final acceptance within section 32â€"15d, was opened to trafâ€" fic on June 29 and the work of conâ€" structing shoulders and ditches was started soon thereafter. Four miles of these shoulders and ditches have now been completed and accepted. I am confident that final acceptance of this section can be made before Octoâ€" ber 1. erintendent in his quarterly report{reau, Department of Labor, is coâ€"opâ€" submitted to the board of supervisors,| erating with the federal authorities stated that final.acceptance of the| which has requested & survey of emâ€" Green Bay road pavement will be| ployment conditions with the obpect made before October 1. !!c'zrnhd of a stricted enforcement of the imâ€" in detail about all paving done| migration laws. Employers of labor this past year. are requested not to employ aliens The report of the county highway | unable to show they entered the counâ€" superintendent, in part, follows: try legally. â€" ENGINEER TELLS BOARD| STATE BUREAU is Deerfield road, section 34â€"W2â€"15d, The pavement on Deerfield road, R. M. Lobdell, county highway supâ€"| The Ilinois Free Employment Buâ€" was started June 23, and comâ€" HabiMly? ® court houre. (Comp. -m,ll / Jobbin hask farvsre for the ns 2. _ $8 . o e ies t 2 > o2 1 lt Nee . 19c oo nalk oad oi ns o . t c 357 THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HJIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS In asking the assistance of the Illiâ€" nois Department of Labor, James J. Davis, United States Secretary of Laâ€" bor, states that many of these aliens entered under the Seamen‘s Act, which provides that men discharged from incoming vessels may remain for 80 days if they so desire. Before the time limit has expired, it is explained, many. of these men obtfin employâ€" ment from American firms which are not diligent in making inquiries as to their status. Other aliens are smugâ€" gled across the Mexican and Canadian borders, it is explained. _ immigration authorities when sentence fare. _ Records have been traced of inmates received at penal institutions and where possible to deport undesiraâ€" ble aliens these were released to the Once securing employment the ali~ ens double their efforts to escape the detection of the immigration authorâ€" ities, and it is explained an absence of a check on immigration across the northern and southern is the cause of frequent embarrassment. â€" Many reâ€" ports are received that Mexicans, apâ€" parently illegally in the country, are holding positions and forming colonies in various sections. At the same time the bureaus will coâ€"operate with the large employers of labor, asking that a survey be made of their plants and where aliens who have entered the country illegalâ€" ly are found to make reports on these. Requests are also made that employâ€" ment be refused to new applicants who are unable to give a clear record covering entry into the United States. It is believed the survey will not only result in the locating of many who entered the country illegally, but it will also open many places of emâ€" ployment to citizens and help mateâ€" rially in solving the labor situation in Ilinois. Criminal Authorities Coâ€"operating For a number of years there has been good coâ€"operation in Illinois with the immigration authorities on the part of the Department of Public Welâ€" As m result of the survey being made by Free Employment Bureaus, located in thifteen of the leading cities of Illinois, with the assistance of the employment offices of leading industries, it ®is expected to locate many not entitled to remain in the United States. Reports will be made on these to the immigration authoriâ€" ties who will handle the cases. Will Search Antecedents Superintendents of Free Employâ€" ment Bureaus will make careful inâ€" quiry of all alien applicants for emâ€" ployment as to their antecedents, and where there is doubt the applicant has met with the requirements of the imâ€" migration laws, reports will be made to the federal authorities. Carpenter and 457 Rex. 1985 Immediately after the desth of John Nicholas Emerich efforts were made to determine how his fortune should be divided, but due to the lack of the will the attorneys met with failure. The court decided that the real estate anpd property should be given his direct heirs with a ninety year trust provision and this ran out in 1902. Since that time the Astors have continued to be trustees of the estate and property. Mrs. Carnahan tore loose one edge of the lining and on putting her hand in the space came near to fainting away. Fearing to bring out the paâ€" per herself she called a friend and he brought forth the document which proved to be the original copy. â€" Found Will In Chest Discovery of the will of the deâ€" ceased in the lining of an old chest is believed to have made it possible for the heirs to receive their allotted porâ€" tions of the estate. L The committee is composed of: William Wehking, 8315 Eads avenue, St. Louis, president; Mys. Edna Carâ€" mnaham, Rollinsville, Colo., secretary; and Jack Emerick, Jr., of this city. Letters have come from New York, Brooklyn, Buffalo, Chicago, Pittsâ€" burgh, and large cities in Indians, Missouri and lowa. The will was found by Mrs. Edâ€" na Carnahan at Eau Claire, Wis., last January when she acted on the adâ€" vice of attorneys to tear apart all of the old fur trader‘s belongings in search of the document. After searchâ€" ing several other places it was decided to look through the chest. 7J NCT ZINCTICK, JF,, Of URAE CitY, 4891 _ Arnold Reeves, of the Temple Stuâ€" as soon as all have been heard from, dio, who had been called &l:“ to the ‘case against the Astors will b¢| muke pictures, became interested in started. . a heap of semiâ€"petrified bones that The organization looking after the| workmen had excavated. Picking up rights of .tlu heirs is expected to|the full skeleton he carried them to meet in Chicago within the next week| Kenosha where an expert examined with severalâ€" heirs who live there. them and found them to be from a The committee is composed of:| buffalo. The bones, he said, had been William Wehking, 8315 Eads avenue,| buried fully 200 years. Eifforts of J. T. Emerick, Sr., Beach road, Waukegan, to‘ secure over 5,â€" 000,000 due him through a will made cthollNklolulh-hk.fl ner of John Jacob Astor, New land for trader back in 1816, are adâ€" vancing rapidly. Communications have been receivâ€" ed from over forty of the two ‘bunâ€" dred odd heirs throughout the country by Jack Emerick, Jr., of that city, and WAUKEGAN MAN HEIR FIND SKELETON OF UNDER ANCIENT WILL BUFFALO IN COUNTY Efforts of J. T. Emerick, Sr., Beach llhl’esflll Te k iess Ao serare caver It Soue take Comhs Taiets" ut y Jahe Michona Emm map gation by Experts ‘Dr. George H. Mitchell General Practice of Dentistry Office Hoursâ€"9 a.m. to 12, and 1 to & p.m. 7 to 9 pm. « Profitable Training! for the moderngirl~ JHE oneâ€"year diploma courses A Happy Homeâ€"â€" Moldaner & Humer Bldg. Phone Highland Park 1035 ered by this school are the most woman could seek. . ~ _ ‘h-h&hm-dmd practice of the arts are taught are highly complete and modern in every respect, while the location of every while the location of efforded are ideal. For the girl who wishes to prepare ~.€-..‘d~-' =l-d-â€"-â€"iâ€"o-d from the soutine of home making and turn it into an endless round of plessure. Por the girl who would be selfâ€" The demand for trained graduates of this school, to fill responsible, 14 NORTH SHERIDAN ROAD This is your oppornnsity. W hy no« SE O I t Pn en Eqy vpe Mo ¢an mean to you. ~â€"far exceeds the That the expert was probably a trifle high in his estimate of the age of the bones is the opinion of some who doubt that guns were flourishing in this vicinity as early as 1727, alâ€" though a number of explorers had been through this part of the country by then. Reeves sold several of the teeth at 2 apiece and kept some of the smaller bones of the skeleton. "Here are some for fifty dollars a dozen." Loyalty to our government will last as long as it has such a large number of offices to distribute. The skull of the beast showed a elean hole bored right through the eyes. Probing deep into the bone was an old type minute ball that was bome mouled by the hunters of old. Just Ailing Like "I want some flowers for a sick friend." that!" + A discovery of the unusual interest, that pictures Lake county in the day of the Indians, has been made in the Paddock Lake region by workmen preparing the John Fulton subdivision there, it was learned today. Goodness; she‘s not as sick as The price of the Sport Sedan Landan is PIERCEâ€"ARROW combines the charm of many cars Sport Sedan Landau In every detail, the richly apâ€" over to you so that you may see for pointed interior is fully i-hepi.-'; yu-ndr:ow !plezd:l;z meets with a car of such spirited aspect. your requirements. Potagop oi lo cromis 14t0 17 miles per gallon of gasoline. 153,000 mm.mw fiavorâ€"is mounted on the famous 130â€"inch Series 80 chassis, with its which the low, rakish, leather lanâ€" As if to summarize, in one model, all the charm for which Pierceâ€" Arrow has so long been noted, the five-p-e:qupmSedmhodn q:ly es its place among toâ€" s foremost motor cars. _ The superb Pierceâ€"Arrow body A small down payment gives mw-} 7 fiurm:wa‘;:iad TOM HAY & SON 1834 Ridge Avenue, Rvanston, Tilincis ‘Telephone Greenleaf 50 H. F. PAHNKE, Piano T Experience _ Phone: OFFICE HIGHLAND PARK 2648 35 S. St. Johns Ave. 15 Years‘ »*2025 LOEB BUILDING BARBER SHOP 8 North First Street All work gusranteed. Charges Reasonable. Estimates Free Open for Business PIANO TUNING Prompt â€" Courteous â€" Service Handbuilt, the Sport Sedan Landan not only evidences the traditional nwt;‘neoomhl to owrln and:: use an ordinary car. It had in a wide range ofml::{nd National Association Ladies â€" Children â€" Men ‘wheels and cowd lamps extre so that you may see for for Gilbert St. John * PAGE SEVEN

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