Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 3 Jul 1930, p. 24

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Creamery Butter Hormel‘s Spiced Hams ............. SHced HRaked Hamâ€"...:;:.... .++ Armour‘s Star Boiled Ham ..... ... Swift‘s Premium Savor Tite Hams. . Swift‘s Premium Milk Fed Savor Tite Whole Chickens .:. .. ... .:.‘.. Armour‘s Tasâ€"Tâ€" Meat Loaf ........ Armour‘s Star Frankfurters ....... Armour‘s Star Chickenette Loaf . SILYV ERBROOK Armour‘s Star Chickenette Loat EM pkk:.......s>:.ygy..nr..} Armour‘s Jellied Pickled Pigs Feet, K: l KK «:. «s sesus issur* i1522 **s Armour‘s Jellied Luncheon Tongue Armour‘s Liver Sausage ......... Armour‘s Star Cervalet Sausage .. Armour‘s Star Spiced Pork Loaf . Melrose Baked Picnics, each. ; .. . . Preparing â€" â€"is a simpler task if you make use of the many suggestions afforded by 2 trip to your A & P Store. Visit the A & P this week for help in planning your menu. Summer Foods A&P 4 C IT has a simple policy and sticks to it through thick and thin. That policy is to charge you no more than is absolutely necessary. (Personal) Customers of A & P know the effect of that policy on their food bills m Bzaked Bezns 3 : Cheese tits‘> Peanut Butter N. B. C. Cookies 6 «i. 25¢ CAMPBELL SWIFT‘S BROOKFIELD ASSORTED A&P AMERICAN, SWISS \ulb FIMENTO, BRICK _ prg 15. 36¢ Ib. 65¢ Ib. 59¢ Ib. 55¢ Ib. 59¢ Ib. Ib. Ib. Ib. 19¢ Ib. 35¢ Ib. 35¢ Ib. 45¢ 1 +184 FAH 6 0%Z. ‘ANS $1.35 BA 2d€C «9 * 21¢ J3€C 19¢ Je 25¢ 19¢ T H OE The first international rifle match in which World war veterans of the Allied nations will participate, will Legion to Sponsor International Rifle Match This Summer The. complete record in the injunc» tion _ proceedings _ started _ against August Froelich, president of the vilâ€" lage of Lake Zurich, and Mrs. Marâ€" guerite Pearce by cottage owners in Lake Zurich, will be turned over . to Masterâ€"inâ€"Chancery Ralph J. Dady July 8, it is reported. All of the trial work will be comâ€" pleted on thatâ€" day, including the checking of the record, which will be turned over to Mr. Dady for an opinâ€" ion. His recommendations, which. will be made within two weeks after he gets the records, Will be turned over to Circuit Judge Edward Shurtleff for approval. Attorney George McGaughey, counâ€" sol for Mr. Froelich, contends that the lake is priwately owned because The Americ pete in the l« selected at competition t« Ohio. in A will To File Record in Lake Zurich Case on ~â€"July 8th, Is Report it is not a naviagable stream.. If this theory is upheld it will bar the cottage owners from the water exâ€" cept through the permission of the owners of the acreage in the lake. egionn&lre arm t i s shooting at 50 and 100 yard ican Legion team to comâ€" international shoot will it the national small bore to be held at Camp Perry, August _ or . September. ; with the highest scores according to figures compiled by the Illinois Chamber of Commerce from true federal reserve figures on the 48 Illinois banks reporting. Savings deposits of the 48 banks as of May | 1, 1930, totaled $411,974,901 as comâ€" pared with $410,928,187 in April, l$407.76fi.784 in March and $405,359,â€" 6634 in February. Of course, there is no such thing as a hoopsnake, despite the fact that theusands of people will solemnly and sincere‘y insist that they have seen Specimen of Rainbow â€"â€" Snake Is in Museum; Is Rare in the U. 8. on artist. _ The museum _specimen â€" is about four feet long. *: The snake lives in swamps in the south, according to Karl P. Schmidt, herpotologist on the museum staff. It i= harmless, and, of course, stingless, despite the hoopsnake story. The reason .people may have associated it with a sting, says Mr, Schmidt, is that it makes exploring motions with its tail as if it did possess a sting. Both because of its own rarity, and because of the popular interest in the hoopsnake fable witk which it has been associated, a specimen of. the rainbow snake has long been sought for the museum‘s collections. Judgment for nearly $2,500 against the state highway department for the condemnation of land in Wauconda on which to construct state paving was ordered by Circuit Judge Edâ€" ward * Shurtleff last week: when he denied a motion for a new trial in three condemnation cases. Attorney George McGaughey perâ€" fectedâ€"the record for an appeal and indicated that this course would be followed: Under the order Vernon D. Kimball was allowed $1,845; George Duberville $140; and M. J. Hughes $0662. & These amounts were far less than the.actual value of the property, acâ€" cording to attorneys for the Wauconâ€" da men. Theâ€"motion for a new trial had been argued through two sessions of night court, Assistant States Attorney S. H. Block and Corporation Counsel Arâ€" thur Bulkley appeared for the state, Savings Deposits in Illinois Banks Grow Denies Motion For *New Trial in Road _â€"â€"Condemnation Suit * Saving deposits in IMlinois banks have shown a steady increase each month since the first of the year, Thursday, July 3, 1930

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