Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 11 Apr 1929, p. 22

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Thursday April 11, 1929 v oAJ0IM 0J _ > t â€"¢ Great PRITIDE t B to on e s mis o ot | f Aaietoy Brench) : . \* ~* 20â€"22 South Michigan, CHICAGO . Telephone James G. Barber Service Station, 1508 Eimwanal A . THEâ€"NEW S TRAILGHT EIGHT FROM._#211% 1O t$200. iT BUFFAL O In purchasing a car from income, the average allowance on a good used car usually more than covers the initial Pierceâ€"Arrow pay ment PIERCEâ€"ARROW SALES CORPORATION â€"_â€" ~And soâ€" with Pierceâ€"Arrow ownership. If great pride did not enter hereâ€"and if it were not Another quality that sets Pierceâ€" Arrow apart is that of pride. The men concerned with Pierceâ€"Arrow manufacture have a regard for the name which borâ€" ders almost on reverence. _._ _ _ 125 Horsepower Engin'c r 83 miles per Hour > Nonâ€"shatterable Glass r Fender or Bracket Hea [ OST of today‘s automoâ€" M biles are made for the many. Pierceâ€"Arrows are created for the few. Thatas always been soâ€"always will be so. And the resson is that Pierceâ€"Arrow fineâ€" ness results from the very anâ€" tithesis of mass production. Body and Engine by Pierceâ€"Arrow wre use GO _ Lelephone Michigan 241 1508 Elmwood Avenue, Evanston and Pierceâ€"Arrow in every nrll o f The resulting new Straight â€"~:Eightâ€"the fairest, fleetest is Pierceâ€"Arrow that ever bore the ~â€"nameâ€"arrived at the psychoâ€" logical moment. It is making fine _ car history hourly today. E ur + 133â€"inch and 143â€"inch Wheel Bases Headlamps optional without extra charge, _ When this new car was conâ€" ceived by an expanding organiâ€" zation, it was determined that it should be big and powerful; yet slender and ‘gracefulâ€"and that it should, first and last, be Pigerceâ€" Arrow at its finest.=_ . _ _ somehow shared by America at largeâ€"theré would be no such triumph as that of today‘s Pierceâ€" Arrow. oo t e P ai THâ€"BEB PR E § 3 ~â€"â€"â€"|\ â€"â€"â€"â€"on Vocational House â€"â€"â€"â€"1!â€"â€"Expecting to finish the â€"vocational â€"~â€"> . 1| house being erected by the industrial _ _ J arts department of the Deerfieldâ€" o Shields high school by . June, Mr. â€"â€"]| Durbahn, who is in charge of the â€" 1| constructing of the house, reports the finishing touches are now being made. _True said that without the help ‘of the other two officers he would not have got his man. w 1 ht Apparently the federal ~treasury will have a surplus, but it might have been better to conceal that fact careâ€" fully from Congress. °. * Many towns complain of having too many dogs, but anyway the cats will get plenty of exercise. f The passing of the years can‘t be helped, but the passing of the buck always can be. sÂ¥+= Gee of that city, but True insisted on dividing the award with Lieutenâ€" ant Earl Hicks and Patrolman Tom MeMahon,â€"who assisted in. the _capâ€" ture of the man as he was about to break a window in the Warner Elecâ€" tric company. â€" ~â€" Comméended""for his. quick ag;ion recently in killing a burglar with a long police record and many aliases, Patrolman Ben True, of Waukegan, was voted the $50 â€"police award for March: by Commissioner Wilson L. The plastering throughout the house is entirely finished, the roof is~ just being conipleted, the stairâ€" cases, which were made by the voca:« tional classes are just being erected, the putty is being put in the windows, _â€" and finishing,touches are just being put on the woodwork. Copper Gets Reward ' _â€"_~â€" for Killing Bandit w"The work is progressing very well" says Mr. Durbahn, "and I exâ€" pect.. to be through by June if all goes well." ; 4 + Put Finishing Touches ~The department of health and the police department joined forces ‘ toâ€" day in an effort to find and kill the squirrel. All the attacks were in the vicinity of the 1300 block on Addiâ€" son street. â€" s $y ~a «* The seven who were bitten were in no danger, physicians said. Actingâ€"Police > Captain. ~James Walsh, to whomâ€" Mrs. Meyenberg told her story, said it was the first time in 87 years‘ service he ever had heard of a sduirrel biting a person. _ _ Augusta Schrader, age 6, was on her way to school when the squirâ€" rel jumped at her, biting her hands. Harry Franke, 4 years old, was bitâ€" ten while at play. Mrs. Rose Vogel, her son, Carson, and Lawrence Flourâ€" noy, were attacked on the street. Mrs. Marie Meyenberg said she was hanging clothes on the line when the squirrel jumped on her shoulâ€" der. When she tried to brush it away, she said, the rodent, began bitting her. Her husband also was bitten, the squirrel leaping upon him as he sat on the porch. arms, neck and shoulder, when she ran into a police station and told of the attack. SBeven persons, four of them chilâ€" dren, were bitten last week in Chiâ€" cago by a red squirrel.â€" One woman was bleeding from 20 bites on the Seven Persons Are 3 â€"Bitten by Squirrel .

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