Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 19 Nov 1931, p. 18

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

l fLiML ___|l_â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"~â€"of MHOHLANDâ€"PARK.ILLINLIS.â€"mcsusccccile | _‘ ||_ ‘Free Lecture on Christian Science § j C-E‘ 13 Pz t ©ifs rz [f $ /1 it § : hiz â€"â€"â€"â€"iâ€"â€"Fipst â€"Church of=Christ, 8 || deoprermstercins 3‘“‘""‘""""‘.‘0“‘ Uineamix nde e avig K EIGHTEEN EXPECT LAW SUIT AGAINST NONâ€"HIGH SCHOOL BOARD Members of the Deerfieldâ€"Shields high school Board of Education exâ€" pect their suit against the nonâ€"high school board of education to come into court within thirty days. tion of unpaid funds due our board on unpaid tuition of nonâ€"high school students for the last few years. These nonâ€"high school district stuâ€" dents come from the outlying towns of Lake Bluff, North Chicago, Half acrial view of Deerfieldâ€"Shields as snapped from a plane piloted by George and John Niemeyer, rerficldâ€"Shields as snapped from a plane piloted by George and John Niemeyer, : f OF PORTLAND, OREGON Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, * First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts to be held TO BE HEARD SOON Monday Evening, November 23, 1931 PAUL STARK SEELEY, C. S. B. Deerfieldâ€"Shields from the Air DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS Deerfield Avenue East of Waukegane Road Public Is Cordially Invited to Attend In the past the Deerfleldâ€"Shields board has billed the nonâ€"high school district on the basis of what. was paid by those living within the disâ€" trict. This included the cost of maintenance of the school and such Day and Prairie View. other items. portion of the bill given to them, eclaiming that the high school would have to be maintained whether their students attended school or not, and hn cb doneicein. â€" Weiriquiredr o oninaiewis. . anciiegnteniepteinkMenindccngentt negitveient anmbe E00 have to be maintained whether their | greater than last year. Wonder how students attended school or not, and| much greater it will be next year that therefore they should not be ) if American growers decide not to charged tuition for such items. â€" |raise any? ; board of the nonâ€"high school| daysâ€" by THE PRESS Richard F. Locke of Glen Ellyn is the attorney handling the case for the Deerfieldâ€"Shields board. > If Governor Alfalfa Bill Murray keeps on using his militia freely, he is going to get himself blackballed by Frederick Libby some of these It is said the Russia‘s cotton crop Governor Alfalfa Bill Murray TO ATTEND BETTER | ‘HOMES CONFERENCE I TO MEET AT WHITE HOUSE Invitation Received From U. S. ~â€"President by Mr. An invitation has been received by Mr. Durbahn, vocational instructor at Deerfieldâ€"Shields high school, from ~Presidentâ€"Hoover asking him to attend a conference on the subâ€" ject of "Home Buidling and Home Ownership" to be held at the White House December 1â€"5. ~The conference is being called as the result of President Hoover‘s consultations with his Secretary of the Interior, Robert P. Lamont, on a plan for promoting interest in the buildingâ€"ofâ€"homesâ€"costingâ€"lessâ€"than $10,000.â€"As thereâ€"are many more than in other walks of life, it is fitâ€" ting that there should be some plan whereby these people can have good, substantial homes at a moderate price. When people own their own homes in a community they take much more interest in the affairs of that community than if they are just renting. Mr. Durbahn was asked to attend thisâ€"conference hecause of the honor . and prestige gained by the high school in winning first prize in the Nafiog;lwt_l}g;%:‘flom Contest of _ America in the Boy Built House ‘The thing that was really considâ€" ered so great about our boyâ€"built house was that a small house was built with a maximum amount of ‘The school received a prize of seventyâ€"five dollars for winning first place, but as Mr. Durbahn says, "It is not the money which counts, but the honor gained in winning the act what .it_turned .out to be, .Mr. Durbahn points out. A ::5 vod part of the work was shared by other departments of the school. The art department and the home economics department lent their help in decorâ€" ating, furnishing and landscaping the premises. room at a minimum cost. Waukegan Residents Are Granted Patents Two patents were issued last week to Waldemar L. Lindgren of Wauâ€" kegan for dish washing machines. He was allowed a total of 19 claims to new ideas in connection with both inventions. One of his applications tents has been assigned for manuâ€" facture. Another Waukegan inventor was Andrew K. Barr, who invented a hoze nozzle and filed his applicaâ€" tion Feb. 16, 1929, Two claims were allowed. Waukegan due to many mechaniâ€" cal ‘plants compares well with any number of to citizens. But it was not the vocational deâ€" filed Aug. 14, 1928, the other the trad the serv thro no % less rule hea bas co put: lick tea has whi the cha han fre Car apj lin car ati

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy