Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 13 Jun 1924, p. 18

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

WILMETTE LIFE, FRIDAY, 1R UNE 13, 1924 The Exido A or six volt ~atte~y is of the same type as the starhJ!I· hghting and ignition bat~ery on thts car, ~o that the two are mterchang~able m case of emergency. The st.arhJ!I battery which is also an Extdo 1s c~n cealed in the left hand d~st shteld while the radio A Battery IS held m a special compartment below the receiveing set. The B Battery compartment is under the front seat." ~OS Graduates Get Diplomas at New Trisr Friday, June 20 RADIO BIG AID TOPOUCEMAN Wannetka ~ttery Man Explams Uaea Radio is now beginning to loom up as · a real foe of the criminal. In many cities radio-equipped police departments, according to U. C. Abel, of the Winnetka Exide Service station, are either being considered or have already been established. "In Detroit three big Lincoln touring cars have recently been equipped with radio receiving sets. which will enable these high-powered and speedy cars to maintain constant communication anywhere and at all times with police headquarters. It is planned eventually to have seven of the se cars in service. "[n Philadelphia plans are under way for the in stallation of similar radio equipment, which will be used in conjunction with the searchlight system inaugurated by the famous General Butler. Upon the speed with whi~h the description of th e criminal can be placed in the hands of every policeman after the crime has been committed depends, largely, the probability of capture. This has time and again been demonstrated when men and women without previous criminal experience and record have committed crimes and in spite of their lack of experience have actually managed to escape. Had the police been warned in time, the awkward efforts of these criminals would have quickly caused them to fall into the police net. This also applies to the class of criminals 'known to the police.' "The usual method, which has been in use for many years and which undoubtedly will continue to be used in addition to the radio method, is that of telephoning descriptions and other in formation into police headquarters. From there it is telephoned simultaneously to every police district in the city. Then as fast as the policeman on the beat "pulls in" or reports over the telephone he is given that description. In the case of stolen articles, slips are made· out and distributed to pawn shops and junk dealers, who are warned to keep on the tookout for persons who might try to dispose of their loot at these places. Naturalty, there is more or less delay_ io thia ayatem which it is hoped Will l>e ellmlnate<1 to a greaL extent by means of radio-equipped banditcjl~sing cars and other receiving pomts. "The radio set most generally used is a five-tube neutrodyne using hard tubes throughout, with a loud speaker hung from the rear top brace of the car. The aerial is concealed in the top, the frame of the car acting as a counterpoise. Especially interesting is the battery equipment, which is composed of a six-volt Exido A .B attery and an Exido B Battery of ninety-six volts, assembled in special trays. Hartwig Moss Adl e r , Edwin Clark e Alle n, J~s e ph John Antonio. Donald B a t e man Bark e r , H ple n .Mur·i e l Ba rre tt, Phyllis E1lee ne Barry, Cath e rin e !lf.ar; B e hrens, Edward A. B elolan, Margaret K . J . B e nn e tt·, Eva Mari e B e nson , D o roth y Kath e rin e B e nson, Flore nce Patricia B e n s on, Harr y B. B e rndtson, Arthur Edward Be st, Myr tl e V ic t ori a Be st, Winifr ed Beatrice B llsland, VIrginia Rose Bixby·, Loui se Fredrl ca Blum , Ro~e rt R e inha rd Dorg feldt, PhiliP n o rncamp·, Ada Kathl pe n Boulte r·, Ruth Vlrgrnia Bowe r· , Dor·othy M. Boy Ington. Betty Jan Bra ithwaite, Flore nce Cain Bra nson , El ea'!'or Elizabe th Brown , Ge rtrud e Ella B r o wn, Ri c hard Sa mue l B urk e , Barbara V11·gen e Campb PII D o roth y Van Hlse Campb e ll, l\larland Edwar(l Challlnor, George Andrew C hr~nls, Norma Ella. Cla rke, Eleanor· :Martha C lltrord, Richard John Cody, Frank F rP d e rlck Compto n, Marc ia Burnham Conv rs e ·, John Foster Corle tt, Agn e s Ca rt er Corn ell, Donald Crawfor·d, L eota Wilma Cresm Pr , Edward Bla~e Crush, Ervin Rldgawa y Daggy, G eo rg e Stanl e y Daniels· , L ester Benjamm Daub er, Ruth L . David><on , Emil y C. D e ming· , Donald Johnson Dick, Ruth Minna El se ndrath· , Ge n e vieve Emrich, Dorothy Augus ta Engelhart, Carolyn Jane Everett, Edwin Joseph F e lk e ·, Lillian Fitch, Rober·t William Flint, Joseph Foerster, Jr., W a ltE'r Ev e rett Fox, S~· dn e y Frank, Jr., Goi·don Gillispie French, Bert Emme t Gathe rc o al , William George Gauger, Nellie Marie Gibbs, Evelyn VIolet Grant·, Caroline P a r· ker· Groman, George Gordon Hannah, Kath e rin e Hamilton·, Dor·is Jane Hanvlll e, Mary Louise Harris, Blossom H a rvey, Ethe l Rose Hecht, Mary Mina Hemb, Ervin Dyer HlnlzJ>ete r , Nell Hirschberg, William Chapman Hold e n, William Hoyt Holden, H e nry N. Hudson·, VIrginia Ingram, Louise Low Jettrey, Clarenton Frank Johnson, Eva May Johnson, William H e rb e rt Johnson, Ellis Rieg e r, Jones, Merton Edward Jones, Elysabeth Joy, Richard Wlc~ware Joy, Caroline Kimball·, Anna Kimmel, Allee Jane King, Katherine Marte Koerpe r. Etlgar Eisner Koret~:, Charle" Watson Kraft, Bernt John Hlldlng Kr·aft, Harold Carleton Larson, Edith C. Laurltson, Wllllam Edward L evi , Marjori e Jane Lips, Norman Bandean Loomis, Mary Chapman Lowe ll, Mar y Mack , VIrginia l\1acLeish, Josephine Elliot MacRal\. Helene Rae Markens, David Graham Marks, Edna Mal·tln, Harry Leslie Martin, Lore n Johnson Mas se y, Robert Gordon McAllen·, Edmund J.,eavenworth McGibbon, Charles Dunk e l 1\f.cKinne}, Florence Marie Mel bye, Marcellite Lorraine Melind, Gladys Me rrick, Nicholas Miller, Harrington Calkins Mitchell·, Harry James Mitchell, Jonathan Mayo Mitchell, John James Mulvann e y, Emma Mys lcka, Dorothy Corinne Nelson, Evert Frltjof Nelson, Harold David Nelson, Morgan Henry N elson, Martha Nutt, Alberta Jane Nystrom, Allee Jan e O'Connell, Benjamin Ott, Irma S. Otten·, James Peabody Parker, Myrtle Victoria Parson, Moncur·e Daniel Paynter, Clyde Edwin Peaster, Cora A. Peaster, Edna Florence Peterson·, Theodore Rueben Peterson, Harry Portr, Jr., Ruth M. Porter, Robert Noble Prentiss·, Robert Scott Ramsay, Lucy Malvinia Rankin, Edward Al>bott Ravenscroft· , Marion Edith Reese, Grace Georgia Reid, Joseph David Reinert, James Packard Reinhold, John Laurance Robertson, Hazel VIctoria Runnfeldt, Walter Benjamin Sanders·, Edward Joy Scheld e nhelm*, Flore nce Scribner, Walter Francis Shattuck, Jr., Ruth Shellman, Katherine Sherman, Allen Leroy Simmons, Marjorie W. Smith, Russell Frank Smith, Richard Marshall Spenc er·, Gabriel Bamberger Spiegel, Julia Spiegel, Margaret Gloria Stattord, John Elliott Starrett·, Richard Charles Steele, Commencement exercises at the New Trier Township High school will be held Friday evening, June 20, at 8 o'clock, with 205 members of the 1924 class participating. Of the 1924 students 181 will receive diplomas for completing . the required work. The other 15 will finish all necessary reqmrements at the end of the summer season, August 15. The address will be delivered by Edmund Vance Cook, the poet and author, Cleveland, Ohio, under t~e title, "Nineteen Hundred and Now." The invocation will be gtven by R~v. Douglas H. Cornell, of Glencoe. A male quartet compose~ of Rtdgeway Daggy, George Massey, Kurtis Brownell and Hardm Van Deursen, wtll render several selections. The 1924 class will be presented by S.uperinte~dent Fre~erick E . Clerk and remarks and the presentatton of dtplomas wtll be hy the p;esident of the board of education, Leslie F. Gates . The graduating students will be represen.te? by .thetr class presi1Jant, Edward J. Scheidenhelm. The be~edtctwn ~vt~l b~ ma?e by Rev. George P . Magill, of \Vilmette . . ~nzes for dtstmcttO'}S m English will be awarded by Henry P. Wtlhams. The class of 1924 consists of the following students : · · "Let Us Do It!" Be careful about trying to clean clothes or dresses or fabrics that you set any value upon. The best thing you can do is to let us do it. We're expert in cleaning. Hemstitching DE LUXE CLEANERS 1105 CENTRAL AVENUE Phone Wilmette 690 Sever at the the Jos Ray Kt for nor; jumped class di childre1 pounds. Sears s The 1 to 3 ~ A class class, 7 1 75 pOU! school The Our Bran Bread is even better for you than our regular white loaf, for it contains all the mineral elements that Nature originally put in the wheat grain, Tasty, too, this Bran Bread of ours. Made by men who know the knack of making bread light, moist and fragrant. - ~bet\; Thalman, David Parshall Thayer·, Martha Rose Thomas, Virginia Harrl:!,~e s~!!!~ t-~~~2-'£~~!.:21~~~.!-~~~~~&~~~.tuJ~:~l'.t Hope Thompson, Lorranle Helen Thoms, Mildred Elizabeth Tldeman, Allee Elisabeth Tlplady·, Ruth G. '.rruska, Margaret Edwina Vosburgh, Darrell Pascal Ware·, Elizabeth Virginia Weber·, Lydia Virginia Weber, Charles Leroy W~lch, Edward Todd Wheeler·, Margaret Macintyre White, Carol Genevieve Whitman, Ralph Crawford Whitsett, Jr., John Harold Wieder, Mary-Eleanor Wilhite, Margaret Borwell Wilson, Washington William Winberg,, James Glendenning Wray. · Honor Students. The following students are members of the class of 19H but will not complete all the requirements tor· graduation until the close of the summer seulon, August 15, 19%4: Llla. Evelyn Anderson, Robert Edward Danly, William Frank Fisher, VIrginia Marie Graham. John Henry Heuer, Mary Katherine Kalk, Thomas Archer Kennedy, Jr., John Jetrerson Mahan, Aubert Theodore Moritz, Lawrence Bradford Perkins, Elwood Morrison Russey, Claude Kelsey Sanders, Harry Gould Turner, Gladys Elaine White, Mary Louise Worthington. Co smas Chats Do you lmow that our buyer ia 011 South Water Street e.ery IDCWIIiaa at 6 A. M. He ~ and that ia the reuoa oar tnack ia back ia Wilmette at 8:15 A. M. ICNMW with laacioua Fruita and palatable Veptablea. You ahould take aftaatqe of each eifort to aerve the houewife of our f. o. b. T olcdo beautiful Wlaae. Come _ in ~d ·joy the MI'Yic:e we take pleuure and pain in Maderiq. ~orld's!Alvvest1?rice for a Touring Ccir · With Sliding Gear Transmission ONLY TWO touriul ca1'8 now ... priced under $500.~ The complete powerful Overland - withalHceel body and baked enamel fi.ni.th-speedometer, fourdoorsand24 bi&-caradvantaceeoow u only $115 more titan the cltetlpal t:M 6uilt with starter and demountable riml, Overland alao bulldt the world't lowett priced ..,. dOled car with de~ front and rear- At eoly .160 more than the To. rinl Car. Prica f, o. .. T....._ L.ave your order Friday to iaaare canfal aelectioa ....J .......t delivery 011 Satarday. Muahrooma, boz ............................ 39e Garden Spinach, per peck .................... Z3c Beeta aad Carrot., bunch .................... 85c Freab ~per~·............ : ............. 48c ~..,........, choice, per baDcb .. ! · · · · · · · · · · · · 171/ac ucumben, fancy, larce ........ , .........·. lOc Tomatoes, per lh. . ........................... 2Sc Apricota, larce buket ....................... SSe Canteloupe ................ 3 for ZSc and Z for 2Sc Pineapples, larce ............................ lie StrawWriea, qt. ..·....·........·..·....... lie · Melona, lata .............................. $1.8 Saturday Specials Soar Oaeniea, Gooae Beniea, Blue Berries, Red Raapberriea, Sacar Plama and Sweet Cberriea at LOW PRICES. SERVICE PRICE Co....U and Freah Fruit and Veptablea are SYDGD7JDOUS QUALITY ..... - COSMAS: BROTHERS ()ppoaite the Villap T'laeatr.-WILME1TE

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy