Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 10 Sep 1925, p. 14

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tw i C i% A girl‘ sat beside Anthony Lenâ€" Mme. Marguerite Lespans, who reâ€" Mw1 d§burg, dohuhomteosleep'oncpukgcenfly died : at Marseilles, was : o days after ‘henchathlunta,Colo..ndwhennonneeddudzoyuruuo.bntglflt,mtflu“m |attempted: to he woke â€"up his watch and pocketâ€" vived in her coffin and was change the electrid I wiring of his book were gone; also the girl. to health. < house,. : | _ > AAL : C 0o y PAGE ‘{'wo E* g’}fi \Q}!@\\\* ~ Yards, Vine Avenue, H. P. 27 â€" â€" â€" _ Phones: Office 390 Central Avenue, H. P. 272 Fill your bin now, while you can still profit by reduced summer prices. _ o gplof Right now is a good time to send for our Service Man. His suggestions can save you money on your season‘s fuel bill. 10 koc s fik s The clean fuel of economy, for all heating plants and all seasons. *h €U9 Coming soonâ€"cool nights and chilly mornings. Be ready with _ â€" MUTUAL COAL COMPANY 2s y "Y/¢4/" NS }}'}/ 4 /// ‘ PUBLIC SERVICE CongNv f OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS l y is Serving 6,000 squar milesâ€"220 cities and townsâ€"with Gdg dr Electricity Tel. Highland Park 568 _ | Wm. Guyot, District Superintendei 51 S. St. Johns Ave., Highland P Z X‘W} ag t NO s i.\./ ue * l K A > :99 â€" SA \ > 1 gs& < (Wperer, * w. ~ 0e 1 °C3 i4 ho ; Biow)t JC TD l \..\\,‘,""; ‘a,‘./’ Ne y dit stt e | For Sale by At Mundelein, at Libertyville in fact, wherev tial development is manifest, th¢ ‘comforts, conven essential necessities insured by ic service, tran and gas service await your comjing. / 4 The utility companies have pi freered for you a‘nd blazed the trail of modern living. bo oo ffp In the naturally attractive territéry west of Higfl and Lake Forest, in Lake Courffy‘s Countryside : ful development.is taking placefi|| _ . _ (| Those who seek a home out the open spaces, where there‘s fresh air and sunlight spreading trees may well follow the towerâ€"marked trails |of the modern pioneers. A new covered wagon, motor lic Service Company of No modern\pioneers. â€" But the hardships of yesterda The old prairie schooner is imgrinted upon America‘s heart. beloved emblem of early pion «[ j | "Clean as the Sun‘s Heat" i PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS | ) n, beéfing the name Pubâ€" rn Illinois identifies the memories ‘toffay Some of the men think that as good toba¢co costs money now, the women should economize on their millinery. ‘which he bought a year ago. He :’ fitted it up with American: comfo without destroying its quaint and picâ€" * queâ€" exterior. Itw‘z?u ancient ‘ farm _ ‘ a remote , . but a that is M with his youthful memories. It overâ€" looks a lovely, wopded valley where s an old vmh‘lhz. Insull reâ€" members going father to vi in his emfhood. .. The ofifl Mr. was an itinerant pfiebcr\ and used to hold services in litâ€" tle <s¢ ent every now and then. Today, his son, the little boy ‘who went with him, is a man who lmi‘ mudeLu great name and a fortune in the new country across the: sea. In. the height of his fame and success: he, :F‘ former lad," comes back to this‘ ‘little . valley: of : sweet recollecâ€" tions to make there a place of retrest for hiknself'o’erlooflin: those remeimâ€" bered scenes.,‘ It is not a large or imposing abode, jua; a typical English farm house, equipped with American accessories. * | §,» ] loafers should not stand so long in oneposition that they get mistaken for q part of the scenery. | 500 .|‘Willysâ€"Knight : and â€" Overland cars on board consigned to the Overâ€" land distributor there. It.is, so far as known, the largest ‘boatâ€"load of cars ever transported: on the Great Lakes. land Park t J d f, Wnere p>>.. r to t *n ie older }f \| an [ an |._ _ +0 C " 0 m.ulDlBCUSS »'lRANSPOR.TA'flONI MHours 9 to 12 a. m. and by appointment q e {§ s3 Park Avenue ..‘ Chences, IH. an them, in repairs. â€"Twenty Wisconsin cities Kave enâ€" tered a "better cities contest," and they will be:deR'ed in relation to pubâ€" lic education health, location, playâ€" grounds, libraries, parks, and other activities which makeâ€"the life of the community worth while. At the re. quest of Dr, John C, Callahan, State Snpefinten&qt of Public Instruction for Wisconsgi Dr. ) Jno. J. Tigert, Commissioner of Education of the Inâ€" terior > nt, | has designated Waiter 3. Deffenbaugh, Chief Division of City Schools of the Bureau of Eduâ€" chtion, to be one of the judges, Gabriel‘s ’wru would attract no at. tention <in these times, as it would be thought ‘ifi was merely the auto. Idea of highway maintenance popâ€" ular in some towns, is to let the roads get aom people won‘t travel on them, in | which case they need no charge of public institutions TWENTY WISCONSIN > CITIES IN coNnTEsT grade pupils, admitting them to the fair grounds on Children‘s Day, Monâ€" day, Sept. 21. ; ‘ ‘Children will be admitted free on this one particular day in an effort to. interest them in the products, inâ€" dustries and the development of the War veterans will be admitted free, too, the fair management explaining that former service men have perâ€" formed deeds that justly entitle them W, W. Lindley, general manager of the Illinois state fair, announced toâ€" day he had sent 60,000 free tickets to school authoritiee to be: given to "Thus the lines of our power sysâ€" tems cross rivers and deserts, traâ€" verse fertile valleys and wooded hills, and climb the passes in high mounâ€" tains. They enable you to bear the burden of the great white ways by night and of the coral mines by dayâ€" they yield to you the rainfall of the north when drought has parched the south, You deliver your energy ‘ith the same . delicacy of feeling to the dentist‘s hammer and the boiler makâ€" er, and .you relieve a lot of human sweat. Our people now substitute for muscle am, average of $300 kiloâ€" watt hours per year per family inâ€" stead of 250 kilowatt hours but ten years agoâ€"ulthough they mostly do not know what a kilowatt hour is, but they know what to do with it." _ 60,000 CHILDREN industry and â€"generally a wiger d@iverâ€" gification of *u. Beyond this, by @n- terconnéction\ between different regâ€" ions, even g‘ré-fier security and better load factors are secured; â€" Water powâ€" er‘ resources are expanded, for it is now possible to harness the flood flow of ‘streams and to . substitute it for steam power during the ‘highâ€"water season. , All this means not only cheaper cperation but greater securiâ€" ty of supply and enormous expansion in the ‘application | of. electricity ‘to much wider. purposes. « f Substitute for Muscle ( with connoting something that is existent in power production. ‘Guper‘ power has been envisaged as ‘some overwhelming sinister encroachâ€" t into public rights. ‘Giant‘ power been interpreted by extremists to be like any giant hitherto known, as having its only realizsm as a bogey or entertainment for children or or jas a side show for the political cirdus. The practical everyday fact is all this development is simply a centralization of "power houses and inter ns of distribution sysâ€" j We had better. stick to @ en ring terms ‘to describe t ‘ thing really isâ€"central gener@â€" tion and interconnection ‘of: distribuâ€" tion systems.~ If anybogiy can find evil or humor or poetry in these terms, he;iwill need to be ingenious. 14 ‘~~*I need scarcely repeat that all this gréat evolution starts from the scienâ€" ‘tifii' discovery of longâ€"distance power \tnnsmiu‘ion. ~From it have sprung a Jlong train of. consequences truly startling in their efféct. , Central Generation Plants "It has made possible great econâ€" omies in steam géneration through huge central units; it has made posâ€" sible the wide diffusion of the great water powers. Central generation plants bring great savings of capital investment . through decrease . in amount of reserve adjuncts to a mulâ€" titude of individung:nnts, and an inâ€" creased use of generator capacity by combining the high night load for: town lighting with the day load ofi industry and generally a wider diverâ€" CH Eces mm atenmt w dn + Commmerce Herbert Hoover, before the N.?'o:nl Electric Light association convention in San Francisco, stated: "T do not propose to refer to this evolution |as «either ‘sguperâ€"power‘. or ‘Gignt.Power.‘ Both ‘these terms: are T C Te Te To m Ncr o Snd ao:md progress in the electric light and power industry, Secretary “_of Secretary ‘of Commerce Reviews ‘‘‘Progress. In Electric Light ‘and Power Industry Durâ€" _ .â€"â€" _ "|__ing Recent Years _ } GET FREE TICKETS YÂ¥ R DEVELOPMENT | * D* SAE U | I NAPRAPATH 4* enatbnes 'vw“mu.w in will @%Wfln;fig :; oo her" dent omerâ€"I Oufbe oP PURITY. â€" + The Billy Bowden Grocery SM! men And the woman day by day, week, after week must keep on 7 SOUTH ST. JOHNS AVE. Phone Highland Park 1723 . « éSQ 2 ger o ’mfl? al@ BANG! BANG! .. .. Now you‘ll bring down the game you are afterâ€"Good coal at Low Price. ‘That‘s if you aim in j direction. Let the mfi in over our phone. â€"Say~ and how many tons. You‘ll save money. ~ /. +8 OPEN SEASON FOR Young Samson is the brightest boy in the class; his head is cléar because his parents have rbefithmhfiulneu to give him at least a quart of milk a day. May we deliver the same for your yourigster? n BUILDING MATERIAL 4 230 North St. Johns Avenue Paul Borchardt Fruits and Vegetables Tel, Highland Park 67 THE WORLD WIDE . QUESTION â€". SCHOOL DAYS i aevepy y n( i#

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