Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 1 Jan 1931, p. 18

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Patronize the Press) Advertisers i 276?!ch DAY-AFTER NEW YEARS SALE Don‘t f ail to see the many bargains we offer. Lowest prices New War A Happy and Prosperous 1931 to our f ritnds and patrons. We thank you for the privilege of serving you and hope that we may have this pleasure for many years to come. ishing SHERONY HARDWARE 'The Bvst Slow- - o. the We send you the Season's Greetings with the hope, that every day of 1931 will tind you a little morghappy, m?.re Waukegan, Illinois healthy and more wealthy than the preeedinst one. We know no reason why 1931 should not he nm- of the best years of a life- time. And you may be sure we are going to do our level best to make it an. High wood May Your q NEW YEAR be a happy and prosperous one. THE PRESS Despite the opposition of Rear Ad- miral F. C. Billard, commandant of the United States Coast Guard, Rep- resentative Chindblom last week said he would continue his fight to secure a coast guard station for Waukegan, according to a report trum Washing- ton. The tenth district congressman has been aware, for sometime, of the coast guard's objection tn building at Waukegan, he said, but this has not lessened his determinatién to obtain nas.MtRe of his. bill authorizing the pump; project. The bill makes it mandatory for the coast guard to give Waukegan a station to protect its shipping, speci- fically authorizing and directing the secretary of the treasury to estab- lish the station. ' Pointing out that Illinois now has more diphtheria than any other state in the Union, with 175 fresh cases weekly, Dr. Andy Hall, state health directnr. declared last week that de. layed treatment is costing this State two lives per day. An investigation of a large number of cast-s this fall, the director said, reveals that two- thirds of the patients are not seen hy physicians until the third day of the disease and more than oneutalt 20! no antitoxin until the fourth day Delay in Treatment of Diphtheria Costing 2 Lives a Day in State Continue Fight For Coast Guard Station or later. Milkmen Bttur-Cortortttm" 1:30 " "ming Fries a C tt.m.-Adttltn Me, Children ". F'.vrn'"ue-AV 50¢. CMldnn We Bland-y Priee--Adtttu, bte, Ehildrrn Me Sunday “The Right to Love" Mon., Tues, Wed. WAUKEGAN Thurs, Fri., Sat. “The Silver Horde” vitaNtmse Am In A Production light! Mud; IPA-all R-K-O TAUDKTILLE RUTH CHATTERT0N TH F. BRtrr-lrnr--TN F. BEST EVELYN BRENT LOUIS WOLHEIM JEAN ARTHUR "Whoogtee" EDDIE (‘ANTOR PAUL LUCAS' hum-g Candle. Don't Mil. THIS nu the with AND Jan. li, 9, IO Jan. 5, 6, 7 N on Event. Jam , Home Movies Now Take Place of Old Fashioned Album; Many Attractions Not so long ago. the typical winter revival of vacation ,memories con- sisted chiefly in poring over the old family album, filled from "kiver to kiver" with snapshots of Cousin Bess astride a burrow at the Grand Can- yon and Aunt Jane on the boat deck of'tlie Mauretania; pictures, all, that were taken on vacation and most of them specially posed and therefore unnatural. But the world does move, and today we find the two-by-four snaps supple- mented if not replaced in many cases by spirited pictures " the same burro kicking. while Cousin Bess holds on for dear life. unmindful of the click- ine of the movie camera, and of ship. board friends actually doing their "six times around is a mile" on the identical liner. The so-called nationwide depression ls having little effort upon the ton- nage handled at Waukegan harbor, according to the 1930 report ot the' army engineers to the secretary of war, made public last week, The'report, comparing 1928 and 1929 tonnage, shows a decrease from 267,200 tons to 265,684, but, the value of this tonnage increased from $1,- 130,9M to $1,180,3M. _ Tho report shows internal receipts at Waukegan as follows: Hard coal, 7,400; soft coal, 257,984; total, 265,- 384; value $1,000,336. moeal receipts, all in fish constituted 300 tom. worth $90,000. . What the woild seems to need just about as much as anything else right now is a conscience that will function l but: re its possessor is eaueht.--taruis. .villo Times. snap ot 2t swttem, at. was» uvu v' three. manufacturers are producing equipment ideal for vacation movie taking. In every case the camera is small and compact, taking up no more room than the familiar snapshot camera. Some models a year in colors to match the feminine ensemble. Al- though the initial outpay is consider- ably more than for a "still" camera. demanding as it does a' projector to show the films, the thrill of seeing familiar scenes and persons move and live upon the screen-perhaps in color --more than repays the investment from our point of view. Waukegan Harbor Shows _ Slight Tonnage Decrease " N. Ptrat ttt. Hixhlnnd Park J .' SMITH JUNK "tt switch,, At least two or TELEPHONE 410 Thursday, Jan. 1, 1981 Dealer In

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