Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 2 Oct 1924, p. 16

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PAGE SIX P © Black Soil & Manure For Sale T.S. DUFFY FURNI Serving.6,000 square We Carry the |Same Merlt_h ndise as the Chicago Stores VUK kitchen is wwifiotyourhomev 1 should have bright, cheer umination day night. 'Let\xr inftall one of these new allâ€"white DayliteWhtinzF es in your house or apart: ment. lamefor nish| ' hing including a new monthly payments wiff youreiectric bils. * 1 °0 WALTER KNUPFER . Snowy white is this ne kitchen fixtureâ€"whi porcelain L o Armco â€"rustâ€"registit metal and white en to keep spotlesslyclea | ardlifu' Load ; . _ j FINEST OF BLAGK SOIL AND WELLâ€"ROTTED | W MANURE . K NO ‘ORDER TOO BMALL â€" NONE TOO LARGE | PROMPT SERVICE _ fage + ‘OUR kitchen is the worksho For ent address .~ l KNUPFER 3TUDIGS, 400 Arts Building, Chicag f | Wabash 8793 . | g ngh Phone; Evanston 6504 { . x Extra Offerâ€"In buonoufidnowineu’l‘ffi of your tion may be in your home obligatipn. <f _ WM. GUYONI Superintendent * 51 South St. J Highland Park, Hl MENONI & MOCOGNI | PIANO PEDAGOGUE | Teacher of ‘-- Pi?nists of Re’p}:tation Will accdpt a limited number _ of pup ’ Monday aftem?on lephorfk Highland Park 1994 CAPABLE *j’:~ NTS AVAILABLE . 532 Cent A N t , JDT SEE US rmfirr UR P] cas‘run RIGHT! Hers Day [Beds | yz Simgns Béfs, MM and +rin¢s ‘s Fables e Sel Ki f;i- inets } Kimball P " nos and Phonogr'apha GoldOvufted Furniture _ | Rugs, Chalfs, Diriing Room Suites EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME uwve., Highland Park, MI. Tel@phone H. P. 638 14 lephone 518 cities and townsâ€"with Gas or Electricity ht turns on and z‘? at this %ndy pendant switch and you can .ulsp pluk in your iron or toaster here. See the picture at the left. TURE CO0. § There is talk of throwing the elec> tion of a président into congress. This would be very nice on congress t hard on the election. C "The growth of the institution, the spread of its appeal, has been smd{%; and consistent yet the charm that it has to offer does not reach more than two per cent of the population." t be reaching more of the people, n ing a far greater contribution, _ | Coincident with the announcement of Mr. Isaacson‘s engagement by the Chicago company, the evangelist of music arrived here and went into l:% ference at. the Auditorium theatre with Herbert M. Johnson, busines: manager of the opera. 6P "The Chicago Civic Opera compu*y‘ is ‘of the opinion that with opera. as with other forms of artâ€"opera of course is a combination of themâ€"â€" that the vast majority of the people do not have,.an appreciation of t is : made available for â€" ev ¢ largely because they have not become acquainted with opera values," H‘.gl Johnson said. > 43 "Grand opera as produced by the Chicago company makes a large conâ€" tribution to the sum total of human happiness in the city and suburbs. It has not realized its destiny or it would In order to open the public mind and let in:â€"a sense of the beauty of arts, thus adding to the happiness of the individual, improving the public taste and smashing the barriers that popular myths have raised between classes and professions,. the Chicago Civic Opera company has engaged t%e "Billy Sunday of Music," Charles D. Isaacson of New York, and is turning loose this modern missionary of music in Chicago. ‘ A revolutionary advance in sfirfi; lating appreciation of the arts by masses of citizens was announced toâ€" day by the management of the Chiâ€" cago Civic Opera company. . .. "Bily Sunday of Music" Secured To Aid in Arousing Sentiâ€" . Waukegan police officials . ard | ported in hearty accord. with a agitation that is being started by the authorities of Chicago to obtain in the â€" state law which will permit municipal judges and police magi trates to sentence violators of 1 state motor vehicle law to jail in proper cases instead of making a dne the only penalty. ' C MUSIC MISSIONARY 2 IS BOOSTING OPERA With the approach of the base ball world geries States Atty. A. V. Smith is bending his efforts to p t the circulation in the county of. q ¢kâ€" ets from base ball pools which & conducted in the larger cities in flagâ€" rant violation of the law which proâ€" hibits lotteries of that nature. . Charles A. Hillerbrand, 65, of Liberâ€" tyville,, who made his home with a sonâ€"inâ€"law, Percy G. Snow, dkd‘fl?!t webk. 1 Jf Ed Potter, oldest man in Warren township to be born in that comâ€" munity, and veteran of the Civil war, celebrated his 81st birthday Sept, 21, and relatives and friends called at the Potter. residence in Gurnee to conâ€" gratulate him, h Nine cars were derailed and several hundred feet of tracks were t::j ‘up last week when a "Soo" line ght train was wrecked north of Lake Villa, near Loon Lake, P Phone Highland Park 896â€"Yâ€"4 Mrs. Byron Colby, 78 years old, one of the early residents of Waukegan and Libertyville, died at her home in Libertyville recently. e Dr. J. L. Taylor, of Libcrtyflt. coroner of the county, was in Minâ€" nesota last week where he spent five days on his farm, . ‘ #} Mz BRIEF NEWS ITEMS _ FROM LAKE COUNTY NEIGHBORHOOD JOTTINGS Interesting Happenings About ‘This Section of The North _ Shore and Vicinity;. At County Seat Reasonable prices and work guaranteed to be satisfactory Give me a trial CARL SALO THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS PAINTER and DECORATOR ment in Chicago l Send this Coupon for iptive Circulars 8 BR @ s noh s m o8 s uo oss s s TROY METAL PRODUCTS CO., Troy, 3 City Name Gentlemen : Please send descripti | reprints of the editorial article on. ;.lwhn AHWW _ Reason Unknown We don‘t know just why the jcyâ€" clones lingered in ‘our territory| so long, but we are certain that they idid linger and that these low areas,| as they are termed, resulted in condiâ€" tions which produced heavy rainfal}s," he said. "If a cyclone that li in this valley is a dumbbell cycigne, when as a matter of general practice it should proceed on its way, I am in If cyclones which grequently from coast to coast in the spi three and oneâ€"half days had not ered in the verdant Mississippi ley this summer recent heavy falls probably would not have red. This is the opinion of Ward, meteorologica} expert at N. western university and a membe the geological and geographical of that institution. OPINION OF EXPERT HOI Believes That Precipitation ~â€" This Section During Sum mer Due to Lingering Storms HEAVY RAINFALLS DUE TO CYCLOI ‘ . Pratt Institute (Dept. of Household Science), Brooklyn, N. Y. & Elmira Coll Dept. of tic Sei ie ing â€"0 cepainloiadine I yon Psn‘ IoJ:;io su: ’Itlniverdty, C§l ; Omb : >‘ Unlmfla;‘ot Washington, Se ??v‘m' Indiana State Normal School, cmflh Ind. Miss Farmer‘s School of Cookepy, Bolb:,“hu Home Bureau, U. S. Departmest of Agriculture Washington,. D. C. ts I * â€" University of Chicago (School ence), Chicago. That Kitchen Aid is an impo nent addition to modern kitchen e lished by its use in the teaching 0 in the following universities and : CEN TR A L absolutely guaranteed upon which to those who have chapel, beautiful lined walks and trees, it is All lots are sold wi the largest perpetual y At the Northern b PARK. Its founde: Gross Point Road Chicago 0 Hoy Highland State D8 ivel _ of ngâ€" Valâ€" ainâ€" urâ€" ‘thâ€" _of taff AEMORIA L PA RK of Chicago there is located a beautiful MEM could not have secured a more suitable expanse of ‘ a cemetery that will for all times be a beautiful home for before. With the comfortable office building, the 8 park, located on the highest part of Cook® County, its fl jewel like lake, the abundant shrubbery and va in its quiet dignity and besuty. t y t Perpetual Care. Connected with Memorial*Park is one of m!md-udmdtwithnlmfimcmun'yotficv ent which keeps the funds inviolable, Full perpetual is ffice, 701â€"4 Marquette Building. Tel. Central 8380 > autiful North Shore Cemetery In CEMETERY CO. OF ILLINOIS ichenA4id of Domestic Sciâ€" pman is twiksâ€" s es Domom?fic Science chools :| wt s‘ College), New M. J. BUCKLEY, Local Representative "My guess is that recent cyâ€" clones in the Mississippi Valley inâ€" stead of traveling at the rate of 1,000 miles a day, or even fnfiar probably loitered along at from 150 to 300 miles Mr. Ward also the theory that radio activity has janything at all to do with rainfall. | He pointed out that in 1878 before either teleâ€" graphing or télephoning was extremeâ€" ly general, there was a rainfall in Chicago and Evanston o} 4.14 inches in twentyâ€"four hours. The maximum rainfall for August so far as weather records of this district show was in 1885 when the precipitation was 11.28 inches. h \| bnthnadon s Regpiiiatalaeitt Sorarns, 2ighyrhdir CURVORURIUTl » - t â€" 1 5 and he states quite positively that up| Indebtedness Is ApproxImAiC. to July this year there hadn‘t been $150,000; \a C dent | an excess.in moisture, * As Re ceiver 1>% j Defic¢iency‘to July f foul f _ M “Up to July the!'e M‘n & a‘ m chim .‘ ine ‘ w CC M ficiency of moisture of .24 inches," b€| _,;poad, formerly known # * § said. ‘"This, despite the |June record | ,;_ _ mh{g‘ Wautronda \rog of 6.6 inches which was lmostthmwd"’“, placed in rece a above the normal. But July, in the the circuit court at Waukegan W â€" Chicago area, brought epough of *! ing application of Robert C. F nt further increase to wipe |off the slate Wauconda, who has been & clean and put the balance|on the rainy trustee of a trust dleed, since 10 side." ©â€" > > q onb in Bd Inapfanniiaditar a Mr. Ward doesn‘t t the stateâ€" ment of stme meteorol that exâ€" cessive moisture or y comes in cyclés of, say," seven y . â€" He has figures ‘to |disprove contention, opinion," & s NON SECTARIAN ou Can Try Let us give a demonstration in your. 5o thtm{ugim&rywhwkm%;?:“hl ardottieoouponbolowvmbflu Aid to your ttaflmconmhnttoyw. It costs yongno ie nor places you under any obligation ndâ€" the coupon today, C When such favorably known authorities as the Ladies‘ Home Journal ,‘ut Kitchen, aood Houseâ€" keeping Institute, New York Tribunk Institite, Modern |Priscilla: Proving Plant, lim Beautifui Magazine, Charm Magazineâ€"when "authorities as these, after complete and wwn, S ever 4 1"um kh a io y cmd Wromen want saver in an was to know!all about the innmt’ion? P | x Don‘t you want to know more about Aid, this aimpnt magied »hooien meching %"'a.. o much in a new and better â€"what it isâ€"what it doesâ€"how it solves your pmm'! 16 + i6 me ie tm hm City Name Street And it retains the temperature (either hot of whatever product it is mixing. M O op o Nee Liaebe! thh ol srafually), B-hn“mhfiu.tu‘r&h.d& With attachment, it se creams, sh noâ€"-.um!:-â€"mp V € | ’ It grinds coffee, chips ice, chops meat, nuts ins, etc. â€" apss ltnhbn-.,n_,w-'h';h ‘Strains apple sauce. It is not necessary t« Mixes dough for bread, ',' # * joughnuts, roll i ; D‘t.“b Mashes L w Mnelbg b‘.v- ings, ete It alices potatoes (to any «degired thinness) Cuts shortening in pastry. | |. i F. All of this it doesâ€"and more!, Telephone 1587 What Kitchen Aid Does For You nnrud.tom.; J s * = tine, Lake Zurich conda fro4t the circuit court at Waukegar 0Â¥ ing application of C. Kent ©i Wauconda, who . been act 4 trustee of a trust since T919 Justice Kent has applied for P pointment of a réceiver, which wi grantéd by the . *M, H. Detrigi of Wauconda, was appo teiver, un%re;ide::‘o% railroad, and gake bo: or ¢ e | The alleged . indebtednéss, approxâ€" imates $150.000. gmdll ff a 1 of this one engine rail have bein more or less stormy for several year and a number exciting la ts have grown out of it as a resulf. | exgs and icings, batter for pantakes, A 100 year bust / of Washington having turned up A ly, it might be | aorg w4 if our modern sta 8 who it was. f THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, & d.,p” he 1 s an attractive blame ‘em." Ned > COUNTY RAILROAD _/ _} IN,RECEWMH&’ State Phohe No ol woo calpt 1924 H N "p

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