Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press (1912), 23 Mar 1916, p. 7

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ppardize Your l by Drinking :e Water? i l l l I l i I '5" 3;. t i’ not play safe ind drink ‘ hullâ€"BE nigh": « aper than other ad water and _ is pure )ur grocer today 1 case or call it. P. 447 lWINK l Prim rho... Highland rah no lPldg. Elâ€" Highest cash prices few Junk of all hhda ' Wholesale and lets] M in Old Woolen Rags 4c ll) feet Plain Rags lc lb Books 60c 100 lb lron ‘5 ‘0“ Red Brass 156 '5 Zinc 12c lb 8 Rubber 7c lb ’ Copper Wire 18c lb Automobile Tires, Metals Rubbers A SPECIALTY Drop me a postal card or . telephone me and i will call for goods 60 North First St. Highland Park BARTLETT THEATRE Highwood Sunday “All For a Girl" in 5 parts SPECIAL FEATURE Thursday March 30th Charlie Chaplin in “The Miqu" Always a Good Sh"w 5 and 10c first Show 7:30 Slide )(‘rVICt‘ solicited Highwood Pail J. Smith Sect-l Show '_ . ,‘1 l l EBARTLETT THEATR l 3 i Tuesday r e. Statistics of a big or public charity. Frank J. Baker President 0 q the country to redu ination before bottli bacteria. Bowman Milk is so to consumer. TELEPHONES: { same period this season Sept. 1, 1915 t Coke. isiaction in every respect I would not did last season. D. L W. Scranton Anthracite Cor. First Street and Ella: Place Caserta School ot Dancing. 211 ning. Special Notice: Open 10:30 a. m. to 10:30 p. m. These facts speak for themselves. Waukegan. Ill. Antonio Caserta Sari D’ Hiver Studio, New. York. All the life insurance company show that beginning with 100 healthy Ameri- cans. we find 64 living after 40 54 of the 64 dependent upon relatives, friends years, and This is indeed food for serious thought. Will you be one of the 54? Emphatically. No. Ban- ish the thought today by planning viding at least a modest congetency. Persist- ent, systematic saving will do it. Begin today with one productive dollar at the Highland Park State Bank The Home of the Savings Depositors J. Vice-Pres. and pro- M. Apnel C. F. Grant Cashier Use Bowman’s Safe Milk RN Four things are essential in the produc- tion of safe milk, viz. Dairy inspection to keep milk clean. Perfect pasteurization to destroy pathogenic germs. Bottling in ce danger of contam- ng and abundant Re- frigeration to arrest the development of to guardedlfrom cow HIGHLAND PARK, 9. GLBNCOE. 70 Bowman Da1ry Company 101-109 Vine Avenue ’ Some Facts About Solvay Coke From Sept. 1. 1914 to Jan. 31. 1915 l sol o]an.31,1916lso if Solvay CO e Pocahontas Smokeless in all sizes 1.”th Stock of Cut Cordwood in the City FRANK SILJESTROM “The Fuel Man" Phone 65 Raised on Bread of our bakimz. Your youngster will be so happy as he is healthy. The - things that make our bread so superior are: first the very finest flour; second. the employment of the most skillful bakers; third the ' absolute cleanliness of our bakery produts. Can you beat that com~ bination? Geary’s Home Bakery 30 W. Central Ave. Madison Street Mom Hall, Fields formerly Danse latest dances correctly taught. 0 Sr p, Fox Waltz, Two Step Tftit, [inflation Result: Dream Waltz, Waltz, Parisian Guaranteed Mas-ire andFan- Tango c3 Dances Rates to Classes, Clubs orThree or More Couples Private Les- sons by appointment at your residence or our studio. Classes Monday and Friday Evenings. Socral Dance Saturday Eve. ‘ we have a Staff of Four Teachers 2 d 190 tons of Solvay Coke. Over the 614 tons of Solvay did not give sat- be selling three times as much as l a Young Man Gan flotilla come by, Middle tilt l l Amount to “7.779% and From This sum invested ln Six ‘20 Weekly. . about it early enough can double f ment of them from time to time. ' f a \vccli. $1.1M” in your. 1 a cupltul of about 317.300. l ' llfl"l' pusst-d your primm ; in a bank which pays 4 per cent int nuully. ery wcck. $1,000 mark In 28 yours your amount to $17,779.22 principal oesoocooooeoooooo 0 9 no NOT CARRY YOUR MON- ®' EY WITH YOU. 6‘ o You can't spend what you do lo not have. Money in the pocket 0 burns. it is easy to say “no" to . 0 some alluring window or appeal- ing advertisement when you have no money with you, but when the purse is full. how hard to tum away! You can't go if you haven't the price of a ticket; but how much better to stay at home when you have a ticket with you! To carry money around and be able to say “no" to the many opportunities that appeal to you to spend is to de- velop character. resisting power. reserve and strength. it means that you know yourself and can conquer yourself. But until you are strong enough to say “no" and stick to it, you had better let the bank do the resisting for you, for this is what banksare for. You can't spend [11*]8! while‘it is in a bank. ® 9 0 0 G» 0 0 6 O Q 6 O O G 0 0 9 © © ‘0 ® ® 6) a “'ct'li. This is how it figures out: $5.00 per Week deposited in bank at 4 per cent per aunurii compounded semiâ€"unuuully will amount to 31.12339 in four years. You take out $1,000 and invest it in a first mortgage at 6 per cent. Balance on Savings Account. $133.89. in sevenf years the amount in the saungs bunk will be $1,154.50. An- other $1,000 is taken out and invested leaving $13.31) remaining. At each period of nine and one half years, cit-vim and one half years, thir- teen and quehalf years. fifteen and one-half yours, seventeen years. eight» con and one-half years. nineteen and out-dull! yours, twentyâ€"one years, and each your until the twentycighth year one thousand is invested. Seventeen thousand dollars will have been in- vested lu mortgages, and a balance of 3779100 will be remaining in the bank at the end of the twenty-eighth year. This amount. at (l per ceut'interest. yields $1,066.92 a year. or $20.51 a week. The Saturday Evening Post a few years ago gave an interesting calcu- lation that if a man whose income re mains the same year after year will depmiit one-third his income each month in a savings [Hulk that pays four per cent, he will be able to netire at the end of thirty~tive years. and thereafter he or his heirs will receive the full amount of his income. if he will steadily deposit onequar- ter of his lumme in the same Way he will be able to retire on full pay at the end of forty-one years. A fifth of his income sored and de pointed in this way. will enable him to stop work on full income at the end of forty-six years, while a deposit or 1 oneteuth of his income will retire him at the end or the sixty years. as a result of this kind of steady save ing is easler. This can be achieved in twenty-four years by the deposit of one-third of the wages in a sari hank each month: in twentyglgm election will years by the deposit of one-fourth of Waukegan vo l the wages; in thirty-two of one-tenth of the wages. The nation wide compels?! which th A merican llankers‘ Association is con the keeping of a budget of houses prim. as- d no i to ”him Hill Yflllllillfl AGE lHVE Within" WEEK. f In Twenty-eight Years Principal Will Income 1 This is not a gotrich-qulck scheme. it is simply a plain stutcnicnt of how lany industrious young mun who sets i l Cont Mortgages Will Be Upwards of l l 5 income by middle life simply through l $3.00 \vt-t-kly' savings and ‘vise invest- , 1.1-! us assume that you are In your;i l twcntlcs und [huh you are earning 320 f l in order iocqual that income through f l (l per cent investments you would need i ‘ Hero. is how you can do it before you } l Suppcsc you open a savings account l i lost on savings. compounded semi-an-y Sun- and deposit in the bunk $6 ev- . thnoror your principal and interest l equal or exceed $1,000 draw out that sum and invest it' in a first mortgage paying it per cent in year payable semi- ' annually. Likewise deposit your mort- gacc interest in your savings account. continue to withdraw and invest when- i ever your snvingil account touches the will and your income MN. 0 O 0 0 O O 9 0 0 (9 0 O O Q 0 9 O 0 0 O O O O ©'§‘©'r\Wé‘©@©©©<“®©©@® W from this sum inv‘cstm] in good 6 per cent niortizuuos will be upwards of $20 To be able to retire on half income filed by Messr ducting encourages systematic “Vin. and Sheridan. 'bpndo'ned their fight; ; and wise spending of money- camp to prove the pe trons invalid on Ion-i will be hold on Waukegan Sun. 1 Perl his l l i 16-24 Deerfield Avenue. Chicago Laboratory 25 E. Washington $1., Chicago l i 91" received April 26. 1915 shows on examination: per cubic centimeter. Gas formation 12 per cent Acid production none lamination (colonbacilli) negative. sate potable water. Chicago Laboratory. R. W. Webster O 0 On account of misunderstanding: there was no exhibit of domestic sci«. . ence from this school at the Domestic Science Day. 9 o- 6i O. o o eighth grade sewing, and Miss Fax-L ton of the fifth and sixth grade sew-J 3 ing, and under this able direction thel girls have done remarkably fine work.‘ Later on in the season, however,j here is to be an exhibition of all ; ork done in the school. l The children are already beginningl ‘ to show a great. interest in a school ' garden which will be planted as soonl ‘ as the planting season comes. This work which is under the direction of Miss Da Carna is planned so as to give the child an incentive to plant. a home garden. The children are also beginning to enjoy the flowers from bulbs planted in the fall, dafl'o dils and tulips are in the collection. The boys of the manual training classes have made bird houses and feeding boxes and are going to put them up. The spring vacation this year will take place the last week in April. mm ucusrs IN norm CHICAGO I Three Saloons Closed for Violating Sun- : day Closing Ordinance l -â€"___ As a result of the inability of. North Chicago saloonkeepers to keep; within the law three saloons have; been closed during the past week and' one saloon fined heavily. . The saloon keepers who undertook to laugh at the city council when’ they ordered saloons closed on Sun-l day in‘ accordance with the law Werel -Andro Pucin, Recktenwald and Nel- son, Mike Wltek and K. Grygienc. With the exception of Pucin, who1 paid a-flno of $100, the saloons werel closed by the council after a special, meeting called Tuesday night. The arrest of the men occurred after they attempted to open their saloons or back rooms on the Sun- day following‘ a general notice that} the city of North Chicago was through with attempts to evade the law and after it was known that spe- cial police weir on duty for the sole purpose of en arcing the closing of saloons on Sundayâ€"Times Review. i WAUKEGAN tovoitoii mu. I .will be Held Within ty Days I Within sixt days time I speciall held It which time] will be aflorded the: e commission form ofl Objectors to the recall petitions. Schwartz, leCann ' ay. it is hell ved that the cocoon; r about May 10th.â€" l Purity Ice and R The specimen of Filtered ice “'aterirom your plant The water plated on special media and incubated at 37 degrees C. for 48 hours shows 13.800 buteria Presuthive teat ior presence of sewage con- This water is Director Chemical Dept. Cleaner, Pi‘esser and Repairer of Ladies and Gents Fine; 10 N.Secoi§dSt. Highland Park Tdephone372 , Highland Park News Co. - ~-~u~v e a...» ... u- N . -AM.» ~ flome of the dfrigerat‘inngom pany . i . . -(. Highland Park Telephone 341 If you w ’ tlee Absolutely?” Cl t is Man ctnrednt this Phat. i The 65:2“. ”as: Co. l Purity Ice Refrigerating o. r. sluhsntou GuHiMM-m 4 ”3°” H'P'“ The .pleointar hich snblmttedto ' ”I W ’0“ HIGHLAND PARK IGCO. mbrmduhtaimimoummrunsum Phone H. P. 34 Filterlhowedthatitcomalnedtourmnuoihnse ;. I ' pcrUnhedStnasuflon. fluctuated-cam. O'l'AhDERSON icmatterandhacteriswasaflrensovedfihuthe ““1?” DN'BOH 7 WhaWythcioethat you are ' . Minsisbetterthananythatismdsiathedty wig? “5:52.; [19:000. othioagooranyuburbanm o I G Verrtmlym 1mm KENT TheGrurMalCo. Tell; Glencoo 3‘5 9 E you an estimate on electrical work of all kinds. ' Hou, wiring, Power Work, Installing, Interphones, Vacpmn Cleaners, Heat Regulators, F ixtures. etc. hi. W. Huber Electric Co. . 5 General Electrical Contracting ' Highland Park, Ill. a TELEPHONE f0 Au. Won Guam Your Cliithes are Ruined by inexperienced Tailors I ilMyworkisexperthandworkonly 5 Personal attention given all work suitgsponged- and Pressed 50¢ Call gup M. LEVIN the tailor Ggrments. Goods called for and delivered 15 years of. ages: We want boys who are acti”e and alive. Boys who ; king for outdoor work wit good pay. Our work is. ‘ st of training and the kindithat developes good boys into freal men. ~. Apply at once 53118 East Central Avenue

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