Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 26 Mar 1931, p. 38

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> Mrs. Fascolétas charges that negliâ€" A’.-:Z[.’y kepurtrapeniniig. _1 tu0 0 PnR P s e ne ho *« Zenee on the part of Koeth, owner of the Nippersink building in Fox Lake, se mmfl% Fox Lake, last week filed suit gh her atâ€" torney, J. A. Miller, against George W. Koeth, also of â€"Fox lake, for $25,â€" 000 damages. ‘ox Lake Woman Files $25,000.00 Damage Suit @4 â€"S®>) National Best Blenc fSywâ€"yâ€"rr 4 % Coffee Deluxe Mild American Cheese iSESMS.. Lt Philadelphia Cream Cheese ___â€" _ 2 P« Pabstâ€"ett Plain, Swiss and Pimento & 6%4 oz. Pkgs. V elveeta For Spreads or Sandwiches 2 8 or. Pkgs. THE QAUALITY GROCIRS OF THE MIDDLE WIST siNCE 1199 American Home Blend Coffece for its uniform Gold Dust "*#:=="i# 21c Fairy Soap "= Rthube L Fresh Fruits and V egetables Cabbage Fancy Solid Heads ~~ 3 ibs. 10¢ Asparagus â€" Grown in Sunny California ~lb. 17¢ HIGHLAND PARK 503 Central Avenge HIGHLAND PARK 7 Ruath St. Johns Avenua Household Savings ratt‘s Dog Foodsâ€" _2# popular Cheese and Cheese Foods Lib.new airâ€"tight 9 7e Fi Quality P«PT:'-‘&- Pleases the most exacting coffee taste beâ€" cause the vacuum pack seals and retains the full favor and aroma of this coffee. 1 lIb. Red Can Vacuum Packed Koeth was for a time a justice of known Fox Lake restaurant owner. was responsible for a fall â€"last Wedâ€" nesday in which the woman was critâ€" ically_ injured. _A loose board gave way, throwing herâ€"to the floor and dislocating her spine. â€"She is now unâ€" der treatment at the Victory Memâ€" orial hospital. * * die Our Breakfast Blend a low price. at brad «: 3 5Q@ 306 Wankegan Ar aanity"" Per Pound 20¢ Wankegan Raad cakes 3 ib:. 8$0¢ 37¢ y 4 Pa Lb. 19¢ 27¢ 17¢ 19¢ 25¢ 23¢ 35¢ 35¢ T H E show progress in investment and in service to the publicâ€"made in Iilinois by railroads, electric utilities and teleâ€" phones under the regulation of the commission. He said: "We shall soon be conâ€" fronted with the question of whether doorâ€"toâ€"door freight gervice is needâ€" ed and who shall supply the service ifâ€"it is needed.â€"There is considerable justice in the contention of the railâ€" roads that â€"they are first on the ground in the matter of freight haulâ€" ing and that if the Illinois Commerce commission decides that such service shall be supplied they are in a posiâ€" tion to furnish it." : *~HMimots has â€" made â€"telephonesâ€"inâ€" stailed ~than Asia, Africa, Australia and New Zealand combined, and there are more phones in Chicago than in both France and Italy. The development in the near future of a doorstep delivery system to augâ€" ment railroad: freight service was forecast by Charles W. Hadley, chairâ€" W :the 1llingis Commerce. com: mission when ‘he spoke before _ the annual meeting of the Junior Traffic elub in Chicago. - _ Hundreds of fish leaping joyfully into the arms of farmers through a hole in the ice, is the latest freak of nature to result from low water conâ€" ditions in lakes and streams, accordâ€" ing â€"to reports reaching the American Game association. While Michigan suffered further loss of. fish in oxygenless lakes, the Ogdensburg, N. Y. Journal® verified another "tall" fish yarn: %, _ Through thick ice on Mud Lake, which is unusually low, a farmer saw fish swimming frantically in what litâ€" tle water remained. Being a sportsâ€" man, he turned Samaritan and chopâ€" ped a hole in the ice so that air could reach them. â€"~ â€" * Action came fast.~ Bullheads leapâ€" ed through the opening in such mad numbers he could not put them back in. : * > * Predicts Doorâ€"toâ€"Door Freight Delivery in ~~~*â€"Future; Progress Seen Other farmers came with bags, basâ€" kets and shovels. Five of them seâ€" cured 70 pounds apiece. Apparently they welcomed the strange shower of fish as manna for Lent, for bullheads flooded the Ogdensburg markets at protectors made arrests. 4 This episode and the disappearance of oxygen in several iceâ€"bound lakes of Michigan are believed by experts to be due to low water and dry streams, brought about by drought and overâ€"drainage. = : ~â€"_ March 23, 1931. AUnclaimed letters of foreign oriâ€" gin:~ k €â€" s UNITED STATES POST OFFICE Mrs. D. Budge. Gecodalup Dias. e = The Highland .Pm Club â€"~HUGO L. SCHNEIDER, in Ice Into Arms of Highland Park,â€" HL Postmaster TIME TO PREPARE â€"â€"â€"AUTOâ€"FORâ€" SUMMER The club issued a statement conâ€" cerning general adjustments which may be made at this time of the year on most cars, Actual work necâ€" essary, the club pointed out, will vary in accordance wtih the needs of the car. ‘The statement follows: 7 Directions a â€"*Change to lighter lubricant in the crank case, transmission and ‘differâ€" ential. Repack front wheels with grease. Readjust valve tappets and spark plug points. Replace badly pitted plugs. Possibly the valves need grinding. Take up loose bearings and installâ€"new _ piston_ rings, if needed. Clean battery terminals and tighten ground connection.. Polish distribuâ€" tor termials, if necessary, and readâ€" just them. â€"If the generator was set to deliver a higher charging rate in Car Needs Ov’&l’n'ullfic' After . Stress of Winter Use; T Suggestions bumpy condition as a result of the recent snowfall, many motorists, unâ€" willing to subject their cars. to the severe jolting, areâ€" havingâ€" summer adjustments made while waiting for the snow and ice to melt, points out the Chicago Motor club. the fall, readjust it. â€"Perhaps the generator and starter require new quire polishing or possibly reâ€"turnâ€" Check the fan belt for wear. Brakes probably â€"will need readjustment, or possibly new linings. Sediment should be drained from the carburetor, and fuel pump or vacuum tank, as the case may be. _ â€"â€"â€"â€"_â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"*â€" ing. â€"*"The lurching of a car driven thru ice and snow tends to loosen. body and other important bolts, which should now be tightened. Ice and snow are harmful to the finish of a car, and an application of dressing on the top and some wax â€"preparation on the finish will protect those parts fronm spring rains. > "When all danger of a freezing should be drained and refilled two or three times as a means of removing sediment from it and the water jackets. If considerable scale is presâ€" ent, a cupful of baking soda in the eooling system for a day will loosen muchâ€"of it. Old or weak hose connecâ€" tions â€"should â€"beâ€"replaced."â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" _ Congress has gone home and we hope for its own peace of mind it won‘t spend the next few weeks readâ€" ing what the newspapers thought about it. s x MAIN & COMPANY, Inc. James L. COOKe Investment Securities Investment Trust Shares 636 CHURCH STREET EVANSTON, ILLINOIS TeLepHones, DAVis . . . 1200 CHICAGOâ€"ROGers Park 7474 Thursday, March 26, 1981 Many meeting â€"der Kaj new cor ~Navyâ€"M . past co Otis Cu trict; W â€"â€"district: Col. 1 Bureau many pi eau was last bon1 work, he busy, 1 descende partmen date, he tions had were sti 4200 a ¢ million ¢ bonus Ic added, °; a day «sked th the Bure work wo first. A tions un he ~state 40â€"&â€"8; departm graves 1 St, Ant« of Hos Capt. A Lakes H Veteran chef de . Seott in eau at mander, not leas Ed Hay Hlinois: trict ser the Hig State R and Sh Ray Ba Distr Kapsch Post Co and: ope a Cal} 1 Gaughe laws of all post proval.â€" Upon Dumare Park h: its> cam port of Member are con! paign c be an i newly : Hospit: the Lal ican L Spence) host. and bu tra wit H. P. Loca Di Thursd

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