Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 8 Aug 1929, p. 43

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wateh tlvir thereormru. set in. mph! 1terl. Gur, ought tsp 'all, ninton Land mother, The x. cbmpany; to the latter: ities of the ied over the use 8) 5 3m; August: Park's beau- m were cm- and French, it the roads e French, of R. ..Fremh, of the Art 1e township ship in Lake ed being in' the . meeting name, many ettled there mghs, Mrs. Frank W. iarden club won at tho e second of aka Forest he lunchenw gardens of ne Highland natural 'Fo- better than s to their pressipns of ' recent tw, 15 by"phonc. ribates and ”It 8, 1y'2g {was incur- _iwkini, who at and agent first mayor. he' firgt and since after lack of 1h"C- 'KS _ .-" fully appro- Stick ever put to led to have ning it, for love to give r and fam- fox-Gables. in: spend n ’can 511ng manner ot hitway of 'tt light on PARK I ONE DEAD, MANY HURT s NAME _ IN AUTO ACCIDEN'IS L Erin, but id. won out Chicago in , not" barn BELL IPBELL Nab Drunken Drivers A _ Mrs. t Richardson, 4726. Neg: Sawyer avenue, Chicago, had her _; 7 badly damaged Sunday night when she was hit by a car being driven by Gus Orstadios who is employed in a constmetion'eamp at Highland Park. Gus was arrested for driving while drunk‘and Vwas held, at the Highland Park jail; . A sailor, Great Lakes license, nd. 208, with __a companion, were taken to Alice Home hospital in Lake For- t-st Sunday, morning,, for {treatment of cuts and bruises, sulfered ’when théir new Ford roadster, turned tdi.. lle with them at the corner between Lake Bluff arid Lake Forest. Neither were-seriously hurt. _ Yet a jealous wife would be just :2s mad if she knew what' her hus- land's, stenographer really thinks of him.--san Francisco Chronicle. Watch the merchant's windowti and read the “ails" invthis wtek's Press for Dollar Day bargains Friday and Saturday. - _ ' Johnson, driving morth, sought to pass a car ahead of him when he. struck the Lake Forest machine. Miss Bettens suffered a wreriehed shoulder and bruises. Her sister, Anna; and a friend, Evelyn De Rue, were shaken up. T r Thomas J. and _ Antonita Sinkula and their child, Arline, 14 years old, were slightly cut. They were.taken to the‘Highland Park hospital and had wounds dressed; 1 They were. red leased Sunday. when it was found they sufferetrito serious injuries. Dr. Crossman attended the victims, T _Arrest Follows Crash" .. Oscar Johnson, 6144 South Hoyne avenue, Chicago, was arrested-by'Po- liceman L. Cunningham of North Chicago, when he was charged with responsibility for a crash between his car-and a machine driven .by Miss Delphen Bettens of Laise Eorést on Green- Bay road south of Five Points Sunday. . l V Three People Injuied' - _ 'r0rmsiophcwere-iniura1latnr, day night in an accident on the south side of Hikhland Park when a iear driven by Antonita Sinkula from Ra- cine collided with another car driv- ing west on route 22. The car which struck them was driven by two boys. Theywere pick- ed up by motorists to be taken to Highland Park. ----tr- Woman Has Skull Fracture _ Mrs. Eleanor Ford of .North Chi- cago was seriously injured in an ac- cident at Lake Forest Sunday when the automobile in which she was rid- ing was struck by another car. Dr. A. J. Riss'inger of Lake Forest, who attended her at the Alice Home hos- pital, reported that she sustained a skull fracture and a fractured verta- brae. She was reported to be. rest- ing well at the hospital later. . . Miss -, Senna Gottmer: was reportiid to have been in the accident with her. Miss Gottmer suffered slight cuts and bruises. T Lanioni " the Highland Park hotr. pital, is progressing tsatitsfaetora11y, attendants there. report. . T _ Thursday, Aug-Int '8. 1929 (Continued from Pm 2 The first marked accomplishment in operative detail was a lamp with a 'platinum wire burner of high vre- sist'anee, protected by a high" vacuum in an all-glass globe, and with, the leading-ht wires sealed into the glass by fusion. Such a lamp necessarily had a small illuminating power com- pared with that of the are light, which was the only electric light then in commercial use. About a year later, Mr. Edison-discovered that if a carbonized eotton'thread were sub.. stituted as a burner for the platinum wire of his earlier lamp, the slender and apparently frail carbon was me- chanically strong, and also durable under the action of the electric cur- rent. This improved conditions and e1eetrie.1itrhtintr has become the'stand- and for illumination for the entire civilized world. Not: Rich Man's Product It must be emphasized what an im.. portant part electricity plays in im-, proving, strengthening, and upbuild- ing, and how indispensable it is in the activity of. any cbmmunity. the hour not determined at the time of going to press. V t C1tanlirtess, safety and Comfort m factors of benefit. The decreasing cost of electricity also should be con- sidered. 7 _ . Rumors that Mrs. McGraw an'd the roomer, George Sullivan, were har- cotic addieta,.was refuted by Mr. Me.. Graw,. who stated that his wife had only used narcotics on her dpptor's orders; and that she had not re- quired any for over a year. She has been much under the care of a doctor in the past few reariit Mr. Sullivan, stated _ Mr. McGraw,...had been a friend of, his and of his wife’s for about 18 years.~ Recently he had been ill, and for quite a while with- out any steady job, and had been be- friended by the McGraws. Mrs. McGraw, a trained nurse be-' fore her marriage, was taken to New- ton', about J5 miles from. Danville, this' morning for burial in 'the .lot where her parents and other relatives are buried. Danville was’ Mrs. Me- Graw's native town. During her years as a nurse she worked for Dr. Uiirrriir "Ch"irigViiiid ’d'i‘d iiiiiiih WHORE free among -- the poor people of the city who eouhl not afford the services of a trained nurse. Mr. McGraw is a motorman for the‘North Shore line and has been working nights. They hate lived in' Highland Park twelve years, oratory at Menlo Park, New Jersey, where he had already invented many thingss such as carbon telephone. transmitters, etc., undertook the-task of devising a general system for the generation, distribution and utiliza- tion ‘of electricity for lighting and power purposes. Years ago, electricity was consid- ered .the luxury of the rich. New electric litrrb, is coming to be shed on rich and poor alike. ' MRS. MCGRAW DIES RESULT OF WOUNDS Illlilmf00I) SEEKS ' 1 ; BETTER LIGHTING (Continued from Page 4) (Continued from page 2)

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