riiuTimTrrTi'iTii'ii'""""rrTr, T. V. Nichols. and mrpooe of elect- Rutrnmrwho has _ister Mrs. Gren- of Mr. comedy to be club of Deer- tol on Pets. 10. lerviee of High- 1d next Monday the community run-mow ‘V. 1., rughter Mrs. B. E. inme fire i new! and Rev. will new will meet Bat- " Mm. Gordon m w... L. -trfPurt of the Wtthinnd Parr, ofthadiroe- nwillbeheld before. of the mem- Human 'T'"'] r 1lllWLh.il.f)g , I Hutch and making me the - Pt "ar'", mm; 109 “an, and rub. the following: milk um dog kennel, table, carpenter shop, ne- oline tulip; Mont brthre,ytmdrt, 1982. Tttidetrartmetttiaaiati. stHoearttngrrtutt88ttrssirtatttmtto. 1_uoma)nstrrres, 14m...- tn print- out“. an in hum, three in Mb, four in 3pm“, tmoitehtrreltttrhm-,iuts,a: _tyrtmyP'tttdf-s-tdotteruetsot "A'rtmtiotttttrrtr,e. 1llrrry.ttttr2tarsinresuenee, in Biehhtnd Park last year, " in brtekirstdeneer and 48 hi frame hm.» '!herrysshrras46ematrttre. 1elP.fmthtysehtihreitrtn July .-t Aug. ---..-l'r Sept. ............22 Nov. w...........', May April .........'....: Petr. iffiiffw‘ March w..........', follows. Heaviest Lou in June The heaviest loss to insured build- ings and contents during any one _month of 1982 was $4,375, in'irmie. The insurance involved that month was $11,600. Eleven runs were made that month. ' _ . The smallest loss to insured build- ings and contents was "in August, when 3125 loin, me all, that we: chalked up against " runs by the department to protect buildings and contents vnlned at $109,500. The report of fires and losses by the month in Highland Park in 1932 There Were two fatalities from fires here last year, and four acci- dont-l-a-utr-ter-semen-ae--- suited in the year’s work. _ were nnswered, nine rescues were made, and nine {the alarms were 'utttmmsd. losses. The average loss per fire during the year was Wt. Six calls for assistance to other towns were answered by the depairt- ment in. 1932. Eight inhnlstor calls loss of only $1,624 to the owners. The total net loss to the owners pf insured buildings and contents dam- aged by the 11ers in 1982, therefore. was only $6,106, or about 60 cents per capita actual loss instead of $1.62 total loss per capita. The loss on, buildings not insured here last year was only 8705, where- as the loss on contents not insured was $1,725. This was a total loss of 82,430 on buildings and contents not insured, which, added to the loss on buildings and contents which were protected by insurance, makes the total loss for the year exactly 819,- 820, not deducting insurance paid on “.482 to the owners. With a loss of 86,435 to ainured contents, the insurance paid covered that loss to the extent of 84,811, lowing a net ....-.......11 Tth"iiiiiiiai from pug. 3) .12 .31 l5 925.00 479,000 70.00 1,100 4,375.00 11,000 800.00 33,005 25.00 109,500 725.00 10,000 1,533.00. 10,100 1,900.00 100,700 2,117.00 203,000 1,910.00 ' 55,425 81,000 ' Howard-Udell merit were detailed to public idii.. eringu for protection for a total of 29 hours. _ A total of 1600 fire inspections were made by the'department dur- ing 1932, in which 312 hazards were found and corrected and 12 build- inc: were tawdgled tqremove hu- ards. A total of 309 extinguishers were inspected and, 46 were re- charged. Eight tire' Prevention dem.. ottstrationa were given, {our the prevention talks were tiven to, trehookr,-MFHire drills were held in schools, " ttrea were investigated as to cause, and the state tIre :11li made four ittrmtitortions here. Uni- formed members "of the the depart- Lincoln school, the / Rnvipias school, the Braeside school (where 105 left the buildingin 60 seconds) and the Green Bay school. Fire" drills were held during the year at the Deerfield-Shields high' school " (where 1300 pupils and teachers vacated the building in one minute and three-fourths of a 1ittqtmd1,_tuniludtueehniMtns_ tion bureau, brought the siiidk-ir fire prevention into the schools, homes and business houses of the F'ire Prevention Bureau In addition. to the year’s work of ettitttruiahtntt fires and protecting property, the Highland Park Fire department, through its fire preven- chimneys, an and arson were the causes of two fires each, One blaze each is attributed to oil use, re. fritreration, defective tire place, and electric motor short circuit. French Fried Potitoes Saturday N i'ght.- Furnaces and stoves started 9 tires here last Tear, and short cir- cuits in automobiles also started that number. Five Brea were started by electric wiring, and four “each were started by sparks on shingles and engine sparks. Spontaneous combustion, explosions and blow torches were responsible for three‘ [his]: wag relpou'ible for the stat- ing of " but“. Gartmre burner: started 2t 1,ir_r,tk,,tjh,igay.i, 'eti'i,t,te,tt ..v A atoedhiryt'iritiiithht"i"ii"ftri"i' sum and its produeta stu-ted 18, and oil burners and automobile buck firett started 10 traeh. TEN DERLOIN STEAK each; and lightning, detieiiG 5:30 to 7:15 45e t1ytdiihs7nnee huiuikaik TI! Pill. nuns: Icon: blow three Min 45.19 9tntrarAvei-r--- Tel H: R3140 Lirkoln Market Bqnelm Rona-Pm Loin Rout, lb. C.' !,:atett!yt9tirhtrme.t,m. ..i....... vmsmlb. .....'...c....,.'...t., Swift's, PremiumSliced Bacon, 1b.. . . . .. Finest RibLamb Chops, lb GenuineCalves Liverilb. o.............' Choke Native PttRoiitrt.lb. .uooo.ooo. Very Best Native WSW lb. ..... ?3,tttMt.ttteters,p.,.f.i....C- Deliciou- Boiled let, sliced toorder, lb. DISTRIBUTORS or? DIAMOND PETROLEUM PRODUCTS 311%“ itiiiiiiieost FUEL OILS OIL COMPANY - mm Park 1561 - no...“ 521 HIGH QUALITY 'aeon,1b...........:22e ..lb. rur--nfe Steaka. .........Me At these prices you can’t word no de- prive your family of good meats. ' Here Far 714e .10e EC: 35s: