Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 30 Aug 1928, p. 19

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Four colored men and an Indian| chief are charged with the murder { of Beck. They are Clifford Bresette,| John Brown, Claude Clark, Harold Martin. and George Boone. Brown‘ denies having participated in the murâ€" . der and robbery, but the others have all made confessions to State‘s Atâ€". Two murder cases, one in which| Derature around eighty degrees. Betâ€" there are five defendants, and one| ter let the chilly one put on extra cu:dot ."u“!l:' :i:h intent to com!;\i! | garments and accustom himself to. a murder, in which two persons are deâ€", it fendants, are among the matters to I:;a!th{ul temperature. â€" American be brought to the attention of the| "‘*WAtne. grand jury. dappteane Defendants in Murder Case A RULE FOR WORK Chief in importance is the case of No man can be happy unless at the five men charged with the Murâ€" work and unless he feels that his work der of William Beck, Jr., 35 years is useful.â€"The Ameri M 5 old, a farmer who lived near Millburn, | * mercan Magazine. Beck was shot and killed last May: @netermmmevenmenmmenmmenmmmenmmmenmmemmmene when he resisted the gang when they invaded his premises for purposes of ; robbery. 1 «@55 Mag . Work Gu: A new record was established last October when the grand jury considâ€" ered 38 cases, returning 32 true bills and 6 no bills. The authorities express the belief that more indictments will be returned this October. Two Murder Cases fore the grand jury convenes, many more cases will be added to the list. The cases of a number bound over have either been dropped or disposed of in County court already, persons, of the large number held over for investigation, will be preâ€" sented to the grand jury by State‘s Attorney A. V. Smith. courts of Lake county have been holdâ€" ing defendants to the grand jury in wholesale lots. It appears at this Indications at this time point to a record number of criminal cases beâ€" ing investigated by the fall grand jury, which convenes in the court of Circuit Judge Claire C. Edwards on the first Monday in October. It is possible that around 50 matters will Probable That About 50 Will Be Up for Trial; Two Murder Cases So Far Recorded; ‘ CIRCUIT COURT, OCT. TERM SEWING MACHINES SOLD AND REFAIRED Jome réal values in rebsilt machines ‘rom Siz Deliars and ap. 60 N. First St. Highland Park As there are two Since the last grand jury convened J. SMITH TELEPHONE 410 A. H. MUHLKE THE HIGHLAND PARK HOSPITAL We bave_a!rg@y been the recipients of some bequests that have gone into our endowment fund. _ _ _ _ _ _ >_ We m‘ir.nfon_r‘r.ed that others have made similar provisions in The income from endowments provides opportunity for the relief of much suffering., Shonld‘lmalg‘&di-cmthhqnufimdmammlmm That if‘ n;er_e!y a suggestion but one that is worthy of seri AGENCYT Telephone Highland Park 2550 Have you ever considered leaving a bequest to garments and accustom himself. to, a healthful temperature. â€" American Magazine. It isn‘t fair to ruin the health of an entire family or office force in order to make comfortable one chilly or elderly person who demands a temâ€" perature around eighty degrees. Betâ€" Diamond Theft Among the most important robbery cases to be investigated is that of Arthur Zentgraf of Waukegan, charged with having stolen diamonds valued at $4000 from the home of D. Winters, a wealthy Chicago brok er, in North Chicago. He is charged with having taken two diamond rings, a bracelet and a bar pin. "knight of the road" for many years, charged with murdering Thomas Morâ€" rison, a special officer on the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad comâ€" pany, at Rondout, This crime was comâ€" mitted on May 30, 1915, Coleman being a fugitive for over 13 years. ‘ Coleman confessed his guilt and agreed to plead guilty to a charge of manslaughter rather than fight the murder charge, but at the last minute he changed his mind and decided to fight the murder charge. He was inâ€" dicted in 1915, so it will not be neeâ€" essary to again take his case before the grand jury. of Long Lake, charged -'i‘â€"-luvâ€"' Ervin Snyder, 30 years old, son of W. M. Snyder of Lake Villa. He is alleged to have shot Snyder through the eye, rested within an hour after the killing and was under the influence of liquor. Hchi-_;_l.e_ln"_ torney Smith and name Brown as an * | __ Coffill Murder Case ‘ The second murder case to be probed is that of Albert Coffill, 73 years old, Phone 2048 17 Years Experience * PIANO TUNING COAL and SOLVAY COKE HERMAN DENZEL, President j 1205 Deerfield Road at Blodgett ‘Telephone 335 ONE IN EVERY OFFICR Building Material Highland Park Fuel Company Sn PROFEESSION A L Work Guaranteed, Estimates Free H. F. PAHNKE as done by us is a source of permaâ€" nent satisfactioh to our customers. When we erect the work it will be abâ€" solutely firm and securely attached to the building. The cost will not be much considering the fact that we use only the strongest and best materials and employ only skilled mechanies. SMOKE STACK AND "Aunt Matilda, you wasn‘t there! And it was a diff‘r‘nt sweet pea. And I reached to pick it, and it flewed!" Perhaps Jack had really seen a but~ terfly. But before he could develop the idea, Aunt Matilda‘s God entered discussion. Aunt Matilda‘s God was, Jack remarked one time, a great "bovâ€" veration" to him. He forgot the sweet pea that flew in listening to what Allnt‘ Matilda‘s God thought of little lixn.‘ Aunt Matilda‘s God did not think highly of them, it appeared. Moreâ€" over, Jack presently convicted bin-‘ self of irreverence as well as of lying. "Aunt Matilda, if you please, But, up to a certain point, Jack had lhfi courage of his perceptions. "Aunt Matilda, this morning I seen one of the Jones‘s sweet peas fly." "Jack! You wicked child! Don‘t He tells the story of Jack and Aunt Matilda in truly Marquis fashion. A part follows: "It is so much easier to put chilâ€" dren in the wrong than it is to make a understand them, to put oneself into sympathetic touch with the way their minds are working on the stuff which is presented to their minds to work Don Marquis, one of the American masters of humor, believes that liars develop early in life, due to lack of sympathy and imagination on the part of parents and guardians. In the Auâ€" Points Out in Scribner‘s Magâ€" Henry G. Winter 48 North First Street Highland Park, Illinois "But, Aunt Matilda, I seenâ€" "There, that will do! And is a lie CHIMNEY WORK * shades deliver ! I came dred d Afte saved ready "Th says, ‘ from bled ar | months She Tuckal son an FIGH United States, begun years ago when ’hnwtfipfofln old cattle ranges, noted that these cattle were slowly disappearing before the demand for better bred animais. They were once the only breed that would survive the droughts and winters of :"?w_yun&rnulppfioddl powers in patient persuasion," T‘hh--un-a.m s when congress finally approâ€" priated the money to Barnes himself ;â€"1&&‘&& cattle. and there he picked up individual cows of the genuine breed in the remote back country of Texas. Old Mexico had to be called upon to “:“"'""‘-"'" nou o cesit j« voted $3,000 to establish a Longhorn mhbmm?mk in Oklahoma, recalled a fight for preâ€" The historic race of Longhorn catâ€" tle, brought to this country 400 years ago by the Spanish Conquistadors, has been preserved for the nation by the work of Will C. Barnes, Indian fightâ€" er, legislator and holder of the Conâ€" gressional Medal of Honor for Heroâ€" Suddenly faced with the necessity: of supporting ker small son and | daughter Mrs. Darling, who had soldi a few of her shades to friends, deâ€"| cided to strike out for success with | one of the biggest gift shops in New | York City. With a bulging case of! lamp shades she waited two hours to see the buyer for the store, was too | frightened to make a sales talk and | was speechless when he said: J. "I suppose I went home on a slow local train," says Mrs. Darling in The American Magazine, "but I felt as if I were flying every step of the way. I set to work feverishly to have the shades ready on the date set for their delivery. And when I turned them in I came away with an order for a hunâ€" dred dollars‘ worth of lamp shades." "I like these. Bring me a dozen by next Wednesday." "That was four years ago," she says, "and the new business thrived from the beginning. We have douâ€" bled and trebled our output every six months or so." She now owns a charming house at Tuckahoe where she is raising her son and daughter. After six months Mrs. D;nliné_i\;d saved several hundred dollars and was ready to rent quarters in the city. FIGHTING TO SAVE LONGHORN CATTLE Beginning her business career on her back porch eight years ago Mrs. Virginia Darling, of Tuckahoe and New York City, today employs twelve artists at her crowded New York work shop and has for several years douâ€" bled her output of decorated lamp shades every six months. [ All his young life Jack had believed that the picture of one of the Hebrow ‘tprophets in the old illustrated Bible was an authentic portrait of Aunt Matilda‘s God. He had not dared to think any irreverence, for that picture frightened him while it fascinated him. "What Aunt Matilda did not know," writes Mr. Marquis, "and what Jack himself understood only many years later, was that through calling him a liar, when he was really speaking what he believed to be the truth, and spanking him for being one, she very nearly made one out of him. More than that, she contributed to a very early scepticism on Jack‘s part toward the marvellous stories in the Bibleâ€" he began to demand proof of them, just as she demanded proof of him." Started on Small Scale on Her| Back Porch and Now Has _‘ Several Stores woMANX MAKES SUCCESS IN LAMP SHADE ART This called for severe bodily punâ€" ishment, and Aunt Matilda spanked him. But it was hard to silence Jack. "He is‘" he sobbed, writhing under the paim. "In the Bible he isâ€"I seen him baldheaded in the Bible." _ ELECTRIC ARC and ACRTYLENE Cracked motor blocks welded without 490 Deerfeld Avenue 32 N. First St. Tel. H. P. 1234 couldn‘t we get rid of him, somehow ? "Get rid of him* Of whom *" asked _Decause if there is a way, Aunt Matilda, 1‘d like one that wasn‘t baldâ€" BLACKRBURN WELDING CO. "Ain‘t GARAGE and CAB SERVICE LARSON BROS. Phone H. P. 2694 ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS Paper ~~~‘~+ â€" Interior Cement Work & Grading Contractor Cement Sidewalks, Cement Floors and everyâ€" thing in the Cement Line. Estimates furnished on Excarning. An Knd Sf Grading. BUTTER AND EGGS FRESH DRESSED POULTRY TO ORDER 519 Oarkwood ave. Tel. H. P. 1128 PAINTING AND DECORATING Paints, Wall Paper, Glass Window Shades, Auto Glass Painters‘ Supplies Central & Second St. Tel. H. P. 949 Box 591 420 North First St. . Tel. H. P. 1700 | AM Bystems Rechecked and Rewired . Philco Dismend Grid Batteries TEL H. P. 266 §15 LAUREL AVE. Haak‘s Auto Supply Co. Phone M. P. 391 #5 8. SECOND S Batteries Recharged, Rented and Repaired AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRICIANS HIGHLAND PARK MOTOR CAR ELECTRIC SERVICE Repair or Rebuild Any Make of Radiator Takes Bumpe and Dents out of Your Telephone Highland Park 1349 Telephone Highland Park 1482 CEMENT CONTRACTOR HIGHLAND AWNING CO. 8. A. M_««â€") Wall Paper Patterns FRANK MOWERS PAINTING â€" DECORATING PAPERHANGING 649 Vine Ave. Phone Highland Park 1261 HIGHLAND PARK, ILL MHighland Park Auto Radiator Shop LETTERING â€" MONOGRAMS High Grade Work 516â€"518 Laurel Avenue TIRES Firestone TUBES AUTO ACCESSORIES â€" BATT 217 North Green Bay Road GEORGE TUCKER DANIEL A. FAY Telephone Highland Park 542 AWNINGS â€" TENTS COVERS Camiv_d and Ca.ging Tents ROBT. H. HENTHORN HIGHLAND PARK BEVERAGE CO. BUTTER AND EGGS for Sale or Rent _ _ Duffy‘s Furniture Bldg. JAMES COLLINS Auto Painter ioi s 388 CENTRAL AVENUR Painting aud Decorsting | PHONE HIGHLAND PARK 573 Contractor | BRAND BROS. Manufacturers of Carbonated Beverages Order a case of Highland Club Authorized Radioia Dealer P. UGOLINT DECORATORS Aute Body and Fenders your car in and get estimate BEVERAGES AWNING $13 Eim Place Furniture Repairing and Uphoistering Covers and Draperies Will eall for and deliver Sewing Machines mdjusted and cleaned 240 WASHINGTON ST. PHONE reet Highwood, TII. FURNITURE REPAIR SHOP â€" Henry M. Bernard, Jr. Directory PLASTERING CONTRACTORS Tel. H. P PLUMBING and HEATING Phone 219â€"R or 219â€"J Deerfield, HL 217 Burchell Ave When you are contemplating building or Remodeling, consultâ€" Telephone H. P. 993 General Building Contractor 622 Railroad Ave. _ Highwood, HIL Plowing, Ezcavating, Gravel, Sand, _ Black Dirt, Manure _ _ Railroad Ave. Highwood, IIL Upholstering, Cabinet Work, Slip Covers, Box Springs, Mattresses, Cushions, Draperies and Window Shades. We specialize in Repairing and Refinishing Antique Work. Office Phone Highland Park 2750 C. V. NICHOLS, DDS. ERWIN F. DREISKE Peter H. K. Grimson PLASTERING CONTRACTORS Contracting and repairing Attractive line of fixtures PHONE,.HIGHLAND PARK 2222 "Vetter and Better All the Time" RADIO AND ELECTRICAL Telephone Highland Park 53; GENERAL CONTRACTOR NICK BRANDONISIO Highwood Upholstering Shop PLUMBING & HEATING Mrs. Mezzini & Son PLUMEBING and HEATING Durant Oil Burners Phone Highland Park 2440 FLORIST Artistic Funeral Designs 53 South St. Johns Avenue Phone Highland Park 602 Dry Cleaning â€" Pressing Tailoring and Repairing Garments called for and delivered OFFICE 363 BLGOM STREET GUST OSTRAND T. E. PIERSON UPHOLSTERING "Say It With Flowers" Highland Park, AL. . <>> M. A. FRANTZ . 495 35 S. St. Johns Ave. E. NELSON Phone H. P. 2768 EXCAVATING Tel. H. P. 2371 TAILOR FLORIST PAGE ELEVENX SERVICE Highwoed, 1i

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