Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 8 Oct 1931, p. 49

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no solicitaâ€" le attended show held hoped that n Germany r can get a Tammany he invasion ther states ch as that enyon Act the enactâ€" dment but »pportunity e first step e national e divisions, ly engaged of liquor respective e program rganization juor tramic an laws be the wishes ple, which aft"or corâ€" al temperâ€" insive, sciâ€" m of temâ€" : this Fall peal comes the always loped with id boudoir vely bathâ€" litical maâ€" it it seems yton Daily invited to intelligent of solving oes â€" from shop, and and Molâ€" es will be ‘and Garâ€" rtil,> Mary eir objecâ€" return of enrolling sidered a laborâ€"saving appliance in most conditioningâ€"the "manufactured weather" «3 _ was developed. Today. 350,000 families in 319 ..._. gas and electric, undreamed of 20 years ago. _ MODERN pioneers do not trek crossâ€" . country in covered wagons. They do not battle Indians and live on buffalo meat. Modern frontiers are found in business and science: In 1910 a struggling utility company in gle electric genemtingmdon»was substituted â€"The experiment was successfulâ€"so sucâ€" cessful that the Public Service Company of Northern Iilinois was founded in 1911 to repeat it on a larger scale. Service was extended to an everâ€"wideningâ€"circle of towns and vilâ€" lages around Chicago. Rates were lowered again and again. A "superpower network" had invented. â€" Here was a field for more pioneering. The Public Service Company took 400 of the new irons,. demonstrated them.in customers‘ homes. Women were quick to appreciate this new help. Electric irons became a part of goodâ€"housekeeping equipment. _ _ â€"â€" : D EC A D Es PN T HWE s ERVICE O F oN OR T HE RK orLLIN 01 s As fast as other practical home appliances were introduced, the Company introduced them to its customers. Through its stores it Before the World War a handâ€"wringer that __â€"_ Today, improved 'refrigera‘tors‘ are being ewed on to the side of a washâ€"tub was conâ€" _ â€"welcomed into thousands of homes. The airâ€" This is the fourteenth of a ;m'e; o[ rmrmrbm;xlug‘lajc;bp;e; of tbe_Pubhtm of ~ Northernâ€"Iilinois and the service it is bringing t the area into which Chicago is growing. Coptes of previous chapters will be mailed you if you will write to the Company, 72 West Ad.sms Street, Chicage | 0 Fo PR IPVAT E CINITIAT ELVE A ND L 0C A L â€"C A P IPTA L f Cbap_ter XI_V. o PIONEERING â€"IDEAS PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS THE PRESS _ When magazines hegan to picture mechanâ€" _ in d niinine en o rece ols a new job of piongeering began. The Company _ _ selected what it believed to be the best of these â€"___ home "cold storage plants", installed 2 numâ€" ber of them in northern Illinois kitchens. sponsoredâ€"is still sponsoringâ€"dozens of time and laborâ€"savers. It is showing homeâ€" makers new ways of doing old chores. And back of every appliance soldâ€"is a performâ€" ance guarantec. â€"something that could hardly be anticipated. The Company explained the situation frankly to the buyers, provided free servicing, offered free replacement. Customers lost no money. "make good". Something went wrong inside hand. Company engineers are estimating posâ€" sibilities, cooperating with manufacturers of equipment. Small machinesâ€"that both wash and cool air are being tested. It will not be long before homes can be as comfortablyâ€"cool during summer months as they are now comâ€" fortably warm in winter. â€" s Who knows what will be next? Modern fronâ€" tiers are found in business and science. ‘There is always picneering to be done. _

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