Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 22 Jan 1925, p. 3

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“was Mm- t,T,'drd m r-v- GEE 'll tees', ind . Edema M tr MUSIC FED A R 1990 km otthmll “I U310 Shop ods Henna; Facials Bumble acistl tekbhono _,_', I the . [a I!!!" tf' ' tsrrrqiMt bell“ Our " FE] FT.. ly pun The Highlanh Park Press Emu“, JANUARY 82, ttt26' Ptheutidwastvs, . E A COMM INSTITUTION The Mitt! in mm a a community int community tyttteitt. Its value cannot be"talcitlate cents and almost alway! it . in) ibla to op rtyeruet.witl meet expendit tits. m; is true o pitals, whether in small towns T in 1ttribeitietr. A be considered solely as a bani can proposition. Ir.t of'things it must do much fo humanity for whi 31:ng oompensation. The ho vital is regarded a! table factor in the community (when of any kind the, facilities. Because of this th a community interest and it at hospital passes a certain lim it must to tinge extent de largec, Instrumentq cost men We costs mount rapidly which there are many. TN WW Pail: hospi is no exception. Its experience; has been the ",pariaintar, of ' Y, others; It is not alone in seeking i pubic “upon. As other hos tdlg have secured such support and‘ are receiving it mm. thi hospital also ehbuld be so backed, up by the community. Hi nd Perkwill not be content to do, kill for its WU than oth T communities do for theirs. TheI local hospitel is a splendid ding, ,adeqnately equipped and ably! managed. It " built end eqni to provide prompt and adequate‘ some for many years. Its builders one? to that when it was‘ enlarged. They built for the uture " well "as for the present, as all for-sighted builders do. y have done well. But for the! present, and until the comm ity served is large enough to pro} vide suttieient paying patient to make revenues meet', expendi-I turee the hospital relier.uponjthe public to make up-the deficit in) annual operation. In the past thirburden has fallen on compared tively few. This is the first time the general public has been naked to do its share. The general public is benefited by the exis- tence of the hospital here. Lives have been sawed arid much suffer, ing averted through its ministrations.. It is a community insti- tution and should have the wholehearted support of the com-, munity. ' T 3, FOR ACCIDENT PREVENTION ' Secretary Hoover, in an address before the rational conference on street and Highway safety, asked for. the co-Operation of .all inurerttrdri an ettort to reduce the nowsrapii11y increasing number of deaths and injuries due to traflit actidents. He stated that there were 22,000,!uch de1ithsaynd 678,000 serious injuries last year and that nearly 80 per cent of the highway accidents were due to the automobile. - _ .u' _ -, - .. .. _ . Here is a suggestion for lessening accidents. In the old days,) iriii a road was rounded up like a railroad. .with deep ditches on GGiil Mr aide. Probably two teams pnssed at a pace of about three or iii? in tin miles an hour on every Manila stretch". Today our modern grades i ins t are largely the.aame, wi _ a strip of pavement in the center 0mm- whith:seorets of automobiles pass in a mile traveling at a rate at ! phsasr speed “trying-from 25 to " miles an hour. With good driving,’ from there are no accidents. Misjudging one away or another, however, C my; anautomobile crashes with another car or agoes in the ditch. I parti .Instesd orditttrintt ditches on each si eat the road, use them”m same labor and extend the grade and the culvert coverings from} In, the edge of the pavement at a 'gentle slope to the fence row on I he le each "side. In other words, have the curve of the road more like trust a street. This is possible aihmt 90 percent of the highways at no and 1 additional expense. Thus it the tendency for cars to erprAin the trust center relieved and eometiuptlt the, danger of accidents is 'dell NUMBER _ a and Chaim-r 11mm. 1911. " the pout ethos a High ,el3gi.t'it,,t'i,t,t/t the Aet of Inch 8, Mm). lessened, STATE FEES COLLECTED Total fees collected by the office of Secretary of State Louis L. Emerson during 1924 amounted to $16,286,966.68, hi" increase of approximately 82,000,000 over total collections forla928 ac- cording to a report of the, business of the of.riee "for 19% issued today. This is an increase of $14,486,966.tW {over total Efees col- lected in 1916, the year prior to Secretary Eininerton'tr electiOn to the otBee of secretary of state. . . 7 The cost of operation of the omce during 1924 was seven per cent of total collections while the automobile department is operated at four per cent. a lower cost than any similar depart- ment in the United States. This is a decrease in cost pf, operation from nearly seventeen per cent,for‘the entire oftke in the eight years of Mr. Emmirsort'tr administration. The report trrtorrfittreoitetttd, Ireh,1trfite, tgnr,tthnt of Luv [UPI-VII: suturi- nvw Mri-i"'_'e"'" -""e" _'-" - - $1,762,166.71 and from domestic corporations, 82,862,12't.61 or a total of $504,293.32. . ' l io: .in the executive department amounted to $37,965.- 52; in the 'llhll department 5431.25 and in the securities depart- ment $57,069.24. he total fees collected in these departments amounted to $4,989,769.38. ' I 1 C E - -- um: _......._4....a " on Mt: one ox dhrink the year. -iaiGaiie better the year 1924 amdum 1.123.784 automobmrand 95,343 ehautteurk ,........ -_ mm Ambassador Frank B. Kellogg, as the British post is known in di fame " a lawyer. Kellogg is tt matters and hisprtaeintt as ayl1y.i "rrri'iripi"iiGiuiyrt but that othe Abimit. Some of these my occur at a later date. V V ' _ Highest Grade of tf 1215 wtettiatrtoh. Mai-p ", Pmrwm 4q CLEKNING ti.,)rirljrttyNG Kitty,..,!,),,),.!,?,)...)........: *yt.trrytt a a community institution. It is a Its ply cannot Nr'talcitlated in dollars and buy! it . .iltt “ble to operate it sothat expendit as. TI is true of nearly all hos- mall tpmt, r in lugeicities, A hospital cannot Trdutt "t,t,'ty, Go. " Highland Put. Lukg Count! nut-mu gladly aim! “(gene "ai-a trunk liner, ” to remember " ' Work Direct to, the Household tau proposition. In the very nature "humanity for which it receives Ttty mind is regarded as! pstsudo-thtpi. in that, in case of accident or emer- hospital is looked to to afford its .hoepital becormtsto a large 'extent .sppport a' tottttttypitsr, my. T Until t tn the number of its daily patients and on outside aid; Expenses are , and depreciation is rapid; main- especially in emergency cases of alter changes will take place in the. cent on the 4th of March and adme 1924 amdunted to t11,lu6,206.2S, ehautteurtf licenses were issued THURSUAY, JANUARY'22, 1925 Wy Wilmette, . minis ml, In, the will melvodJn the _ ' ml he left two-thirds of his estate " (e trust for the education of boodt 10 and girls. _ As tht income {tom tty trust fund will amount to] M” 4 is annually, It will provide tor the _ " iluettiott' at 2,000 ambitious~ 1 each year. _ ' .3,” l SIGNER BELIEVED m on: Chicago Recluse Die; but“? Mueh Pt?pertr; Will M.” 2'3: q intr:Bit Turns th, 5* . 'Mysteriously L {*5 SEEKING WINES _ (_,-" , [N‘BIG WILL CASE Search tdr a mining with!“ l _ $6,000,000 will contend ih“ . , county last” srefk In Cotttit# 't'. ':, Lew A. new r8tehtd "t'r" notj A from Chicago anon-nay: that the. _ T _ was believed to be I Winkedan f dent.: “ 's, "I " ., _ r _ This man,' whom, 1mm. “In _ ., known definitely, in I we el polished gentlenun 0100?”: 1 Following th'e signing '0! M will i. October, 1928, he diupmfd I has hotbeen seen since. _ r The history of the cm, at w., lined by the firm of Davis, Bang. and Kathe, ‘209 South Latu street, Chiago, yiieli,Siiiii; one of the moat intend! tr. . has ever come to thy incurs: load ysuthtsritUs. Pir11owind, it _ story: r" t i. '5 Edwin B..Jenninxs,n. wen kn "h', Chicago millionntm, up , “ eccentric recluse died on 13 f 1923, at the use tif 64 It Sq. L ot hospital, Chieago. ' l 1;; After his depth, search tl: _ If form will, but none was to d. v lt had seventeen "fetryuroit ho T in_a Chicago bank, but nobo' A mined the .will. When "tire ' A amounting to $6900,000 Wu) _...' bated; it was turned over; to I ministratora, as' no trpetMe he! 'u, or attorneys were mentioned,. 7 j At the estate hearing; Fink Cherry .0: Chicago teratftied (that' l,' had been one of the vitae-m i the miliionaire's will, but Ed‘dr'-; I know the numevoof the other (ma stated that tho other manjdid live in Chicago. 'i, -eFF v"a' Three months later the Will. received in the mails from dome: known person, Ont, of the skin tuna was partially oblittsrtttd, _ was made thit to be one or,'the f H . lowing names. J. M. Gold“. Go T den, Garden. or Holden. The l g this are either J. M. or J. W. 't, i. n Mr. Jennings, the recluse; Ii (r in two' (com: ot " old hon-alter: a} ing the. test of the room?“ hoe 6, en. Re never spent a .pent' , pleasures, preferring to get [ 1 from name of his wealthy jbu ' naaoeitttetr, Ho shay: secured ' _ . tickets to banquets; handball " " partierarid shows, and waited 18F, beknown asnpotnpersqn. I' I' The relatives no also mum: _ ed for they inherit $6,000,000 tht will of the nelme'i h. ' John Drake Jennings. the 1.0 'F. which the. eccentric man M19: C liletime. l T -- J L, "i.'. A Iyte reward bu beén. I'tt . for this location of the Mr. Gordon, who" testimony t reguded u the' highest value . ' settling the genuine”! of:tht doiid ment. , T [ l -r More accunte translations of dt Bible as being made, but the in TT ' need niit think any of tttKun, . C ' mwdmentl will)» {map C " . -iiile" >bgll touérl an mm may for the 1925 neuon, but tht bay tir. aers haven't organized yet.' , 't ThredMen ot Distinction Ate Saved From Death By , Relief Workertr (i' 'While the little girls ate e . f their’ Christmas playthinks, tiiith' tT' ones .the having fun my the l Ct'. kind of tois culled henna; ' ')i', li,: AMERICANS RESCUE : 4 'PROMINENT masons Three' men whose gnomes have _ cently been prominent with _ _ columns in England and America‘ I among the million arrange" . , owe thoir lives to the carrot . " can relief workers. . ‘ it'/1 __ Col. A; Ruwun'son, mace M am British tield marsh] who was out?! the three mat with? 't'smre1Aii1e the World war, In: just? rteety his mémoirs itt' London. hi d M lng his heroid postwar expel-tong. in tTet and Turkey,1 when ope t two yen. in man. pill T" he gives unbounded praise to, ( work of the Near East,' re1ieC?;to,' which he owed his life. , '.ii,i,f " Mikhail Mordkin, the treat 3% sin dancer who has recently and, in America, won for mahy gttQ ,r a refuge ‘in Southern Rani: god Armenia. ”He w" found drirtii) typhus by American who! wot 'i who nursed him back to bank." _ Harry Ekisinn, 3 than“ on “i- AmisHenn battleship Utah " who hi just won the title of "stritihmata Tr , in the American any.” win fo . . '& an Armenian orphan in zone, otfj'; irurtittttilrm maintained a thtr ', qt 5; Em ttf, tn It arm-QM“ "ie' J W” F “P l , ' his hogan“ had died of 'p,l;'tl'i'iii,1i? his own-life was for 1 We . tFB, B, of. But he {unmoved rhrtidr8rtrtii), ‘later wentuo America. when In " nisted in the navy. " h "-235 THE HIGHLAND PArutantrrsit, HIGHLAND PM aiming LAST THREE DAYS Big Stocks, Low, Prices Make This ‘7 Our Greatesttvf7r,tiritrnce Sale _ . ' _" ONLY THREE ii"bAi/1i LEFT _ $l,Ij'll?llEltii,l)illllll00llf BISll?0filjijlL SALE Men's Overcoats _ Fl Reduced) REGARDLESS OI? FORMER VAL; Ulilr "C0LLTilGrAN" BRAND. ' Coats as low ttti kti,h"Ui 2 $5.00 value! 2.!» a customer 36 inches wide; bleached 3 day: only i ',r LINGETE BLOOMER i1hRl)i[llifll5f?S "Tom Sainrer" Brand $2.26 Valued. Fine Quality Lingette _ $1.50'value IN yd. $17.95 BOYS’ FLANNEL BLOUSES _ DAISY MUSLIN HEAVY PLAID BLANKETS , $3.95 $1.59 95c Fs',%S, HIGHLAND PARK (it our Final Reduction on Ladies' Coats PRICES CUT TO THE CORE. Every kind of Dress Gmirits, silt), Curtain Nets, Phr- iaii, etc. (ii) THOUSANDS op YARDS ' Oi? REMNANTS . Rig. tr value. 319.ng ittls MENS BLUE can; BRAY WORK SHIRTS LADIES’ LISLE HOSE CLOSE OUT LADIE& SILK & WOOL HOSE $9.95 up Values up to $1.35 Excellent quality Valued to 66e wonderful Values 27t 67c 79c no: mu: il'), qi If h'

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