Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 5 Nov 1925, p. 16

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[3 5Y i i t $# bw 8 P 644 i An inquest was held Monday afterâ€" noon at the H. M. Prior company‘s Ernest Cook, laborer employed on the concréte coal elevators being erecteéd for Paul Borchardt on St. Johns avenue, and whoseâ€"skull was fractured last week when an iron form fell from the top of one of 64 foot towers on. his head, died about 5 o‘clock Sunday evening in the Highland Park hospital. He had only partially ‘regained consciousness at times and ‘was paralyzed on one side. E. Cook Injured Last Week by Falling Iron, Fails ACCIDENT VICTIM SEASON SUBSCRIPTION for reserved seat; $6.00 and student f TJCKETS ARE ON SALE at P land Park. f The Highlamd Park Allâ€"Star Cou mittee, is under the direction of Rac Get‘Our Figures on Complete Bungalows, Garages, Bath Room outfts, etc. We carry a large stock of pipe,: valves, fittings, at a 50¢ on a dollar saving. _ Herman Felber, First Violin Carl Fasshauer, Second Violin New Wall Board, Standard sizes, 4‘x8‘â€"12 ft. 100 squar C y see _________ $3.00 Standard Bungalow Windows and Frames, â€" Best Grade Material, single and ; divided lights; each _____________ $5°85 or Sheridan road direct to vin . fiatn'â€"'a North Westâ€" sute Take Advqntage of these Specials High Grade Government Inspected Lumber, taking down very carefully. Free from nails, clean, sound stock. | $15 Per M and Up - AitiNNNNNNIRENIINNNINNNORATINARRErrmermmmmmemmmnenr mm cmmmemeswl,........._ Large Assortment of 6 inch and 8 inch Boards, Shiplap, 2x4s, 2x6s, 2x8s, etc., at Big Savings to You. â€" This Big Sale Possible LUMBER! LUMBER! LUMBER! TRAINING STATION New Cash Purchase Makes AAAA one mill. _ Per M board feet _ DEERFIELDâ€"SHIELDS HIGH‘SCHOOL AUDITORIUM id Ernestine Schumannâ€"Heink a, Monday Evening, November 16, at 8:15 New !4 in. x 6 in. Clear Redwood beveled Siding, large shipment just received from HIGHLAND PARK ALLâ€"STAR COURSE WRECKING Violinist Tuesday Evening, Dec. 8 Come to the Camps Bargains in New Material Dept. THE GREAT LAKES NAVAL ELM PLACE AUDI(TORIUM Renee Chemet Josenh $ s take, Waskeas | FREE, Iustrated: é ‘Jouse out ‘any aay" Catalogue‘ W. N. 5 OPEN SUNDAYS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE DIES IN HOSPITAL Tuesday Evening, January 26 Guiomar Novaes Pianist Tuesday Evening, February 23 Chicago String Quartet _ SPECIAL for the five concerts $10.00, udent ticket $8.00. ; at Pratt‘s United Store, 39 S LARGE STOCK of HEAVY TIMBERS, WINâ€" DOWS, PLUMBING, etc., at less than ONEâ€"HALF ACTUAL VALUE. Write‘ TODAY for our § _ Course, sponsored ‘by the C%:mmunlty Music Comâ€" { Rachel Busey Kinsoiving. | We. have various â€"styles to select from. Glaze in your porches with our Windows and Frames at a 50% saving to you. These Windows are very well constructed from clear White Pine; are 1% inches thick; come complete with ‘frame, sash and trim at f Ench dn ts ue ie 99 i e m ue ie ooo m on se o $3.95 IECUIY "mAS ACVeLmed. ,v’ E ; Little is known of Cook who had worked here for a couple #&r: No papers were found in his; = ings except a dischnrg_q,x;‘m the Canadian army, in which he had| eviâ€" dently enlisted early in April 1917. It is also thought he had ‘relatives in St. Louis, Mo, Police Chief Moroney has written to St. Louis in an effort to locate the relatives and also is in communication with the Canadian consul in Chicago, j . fore a jury composed of c} Cosâ€" tello, Ed :Rudoiph, Ed Balding, Howard Wood, Fred Glader and Ww Henning. A iverdict of death" from meningitis following ‘skull 'fna'e in the manner described in the testiâ€" mony was returned. office by Coroner J. L. Taylor, beâ€" Joseph Schwarz â€" Baritone _ Tuesday Evening, Jan. Robert Dolejsi, Viola Naoum Benditzky. Violoncello $10.00, which entitles holder to x $49.00 St.. Johns‘ avenue, Highâ€" ty J ug SPum , _ Where Moline runs chiefly to the metal trades, Rock Island perhaps has some greater variety of indusâ€" tries but éven here metal working is ‘predominant. Among Rock Ilhnd's ind strial products are pipe organs, 'gh&cts and _ beverages, vending machines, petroleum products, | store and office fixtures, millwork, cabinets, textiles including underwear and Motor cars are made too, and the éengines that propel the great pasâ€" senger busses in our ‘chief "cities. They will tell you that 84 per cent of the people in Moline are home ownâ€" ers. They will add that the most reâ€" cent strike in any plant there was 26 years ago. Contentment they will tell you is the reason; understanding between employer and employe. In Rock Island t To pass from <~Moline ‘to Rock fsland is crossing a street; a barâ€" rier invisible. ©These communities are eternally knit and there is a plan] to unite them into one city. stores, â€" schools _ and laboratories throughout the nation. Last summer it completed a . $165,000 order â€" of equipment for the Tilden Technical high school in Chicago. Another orâ€" der, totaling ‘$180,000 went into a great, store. It has filled big orders. for ‘Boston, New York, Pittsburgh and Baltimore. i €1004 * Here is a wood-v#orking plant which fashions "tailor made" fixâ€" tures, to special order, for| great They are carrying on, these cities, building on the foundation laid , in 1837 when John Deere put out his first plow, forerunners of millions to come. Let us get a picture of the people who have built here. * _ ___| Millions Swarm In P Blackhawk gone, Nordics flow in. First New Englanders, then Swedes, other restive blueâ€"eyed men, Belâ€" gians, their kin perhaps, Germans, English, French and finally Slavs, Italians. It is a melting pot of the old world. So there is a great, variety of blood and genius in those cities of many peoples, all the artisans of the white world. © In the Molines are twenty . grey iron foundries, three malleable iron foundries, two steel foundries, three; draop forge plants, twelve brass, bronze and aluminum foundries, three pressed steel plants and a group of tool and dye makers. Here is a company doing a business of ll.fiOO,L ‘ 000 a year in heating and ventilatâ€" ing devices; one of the two great plants of the nation ‘making . "stop and go" flash signal apparatus and electrical fire alarm and police sysâ€" tems. North of Blackhawk‘s Watchtower, stretching _ along . the ‘ Mississippi where its shorelands furnish level factory sites and its hills residential property beyond compare, are Rock Island, Moline and East | Moline. Across the Father of Waters is Davenport, Iowa. > The iron plow, father of a group of cities in which now live ‘150,000 peoâ€" ple. ; Coming of Plow * * We look again. Now we see the iron plow. For here amid these hills, now dressed in autumn tints, the iron plow was. born. John Deere, blackâ€" smith and artisan, starts in his litâ€" tle shop the manufacturing whifix is to make the prairies of the nation bloom. The {h‘st great step forward in plowâ€"making in centuries of agriâ€" culture; the modern plow born back in the 1880‘s on Illinois soil. _ Sentingls grim, their faces ‘set, stand beside us on the Watchtower and gaze down upon their stolen acres. Groups of red men. with weapâ€" ons. Blackhawk and his band are setting out for war. It is to be the last stand of the red man in Illinois and all but the annihilation of the tribe. White men are streaming in, their goods in covered wagons; ox drawn, here aq;‘i there horses. With frowning brow these red. men see their‘ fields wrenched from them. ; It is . here Blackhawk‘s forefathers ;had tilled and grown crops. Below us the shocks of : corn beâ€" come brown tepees. Below us the people ‘of old © Blackhawk .are busy with their smokes and fires for here, on thege flats when the white | man first comes, is the Sac and Fox city of Saukenuk. h h ‘â€"Blackhawk‘s | Watchtower. _ The thoughts that those words impel. Let us turn back the hands of the clock of time a hundred years. . ‘ Visions of Past . By Lester B. Colby .. Illinois Chamber of Commerce We stand on Blackhawk‘s Watchâ€" tower. We get to the top of this inâ€" spiring and storied hill we leave the motor car and travel the last stretch afoot. It‘s a good pull, too, ‘Suznu,c is red and oaks are ‘purpling. Far beâ€" low to the south lie the Hennepin canâ€" al, the divided Rock River, beautiful islands amid blue waters. Beyond are fields stretching far away to an autumnâ€"brown horizon that melts in smoky fog. ‘ MARCH Wonderful Growth in Mississippi Valley Since Days of Black: hawk; Colby Visits Rock Island, Moline > . _ THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS Woodworking Plant Meacirs CTVILIZATION M of One Thousard Dollars ($1,000) each,‘ numbered from one (1) to twenty (20), both numbers included, and mature in numerical ordq $10,â€" 000 on October 1 of each of the years 1927 and 1928. That said bonds bear interest at the rate of five ‘per cent (5%) per annum, payable semiâ€"anâ€" Section 2.© That said bonds be desâ€" ignated "Park Bonds," be dnm Ocâ€" tober 1, 1925, be) of the deno n Section 1. That for the purpose of providing funds for building, protectâ€" ing and improving lands for| parks and for the payment of the expenses incident thereto, there be borrowed upon the credit of ‘said Park District the sum of Twenty Thousand Dolâ€" lars ($20,000), and that bonds be issued therefor. | â€" | AN ORDINANCE providing for the issue of| Twenty Thousand Dollars ($20,000) Park Bonds of The Highland Park East Park. District, Lake County, Illingis. BE IT ORDAINED BY THE BOARD OF PARK COMMISSIONâ€" ERS QF THE HIGHLAND PARK EAST PARK DISTRICT IN LAKE COUNTY,â€" ILLINOIS, AS | FOLâ€" LOWs: «160024 The ‘second installment olt year thereafter and ‘so on annually until all installments are paid. j Dated at Highland Park, Illinois, this 5th day of November, 1925, 36 Notice is further given that the said assessment is divided in ten (10) installments. That the , amount of the first installment is $5100 and that each of the remaining installments is $5100. That all installments draw interest at the: rate of six (6) per cent per annum from October 9th, A. D. 1925. The first installment is payable on the.2nd day of January, A. D, 1926. § .o% All persons ‘interested. are hereby notified to call and pay the amount assessed at the Collector‘s Office, City Hall, corner Green Bay Road and Central Avenue, Highland Park, Hliâ€" nois, withirn thirty (30) days from the ‘date thereof. * hok Public notic¢e is hereby given that the County Court of Lake County, Illinois, has rendered judgment for a special assessment upon [property benefited by the following improveâ€" ment: â€" For the construction of a reinforced concrete pavement imâ€" provement in Oak Knoll Terrace and Pine Point Drive, all in t_lgfiity of Highland Park, County of Lake and State of Illinaois, as will more fully appear from the certified copy of the judgment on file in my office. That the warrant for collection of such asâ€" sessmént is in the hands of the unâ€" dersigned. | â€" Tepee, cange and Indian arrow to this in less }han a hundreéd years! What of the inext hindred? As one dines on the thirteenth floor roof garâ€" den of the great new LeClaire li‘b‘tel in Molins and gazes up the river to where ithe United Railway and Light company | is | uilding a $10,000,000, electric plantâ€"Tâ€"one‘ wonders. | . SPECIAL A$SESSMENT NOTICE SPECIAL WARRANT "NO. 293. Blackhawk, Lee and the South, turbulent Europe, your history is written here in these green yvalleys on the western rim of Illinois, But the greater romgnce is in‘ the growing future for year by year brickmasons and stone workers are raising bigger and ‘newer‘ buildings for the good of ‘the comman weéal. t * ‘The older buildings, of gray stone, date back to! Civil: War days. The néwer and less formidable are temâ€" porary work shops of 1917 and 1918. In a level stretch sleep hundreds of men, row on row, under white stone markers in the cemetery o fthe Conâ€" federate dead. . "op: ‘They seem to be not fearful at all of "upsettiny the labor situation," a ghost that rises in some (places of lesser populace when a large indusâ€" trial plant offers itself. But their specialty, always, is the metal trades: _ .Site of Arsenal ) â€"~ Jn the middle of the river, on an island seven miles long, guarded still by federal ‘employes, is the great Rock Island arsenal. Here glant buildings whert were made m and, explosives for the World| War by 15,000 workers. ‘These walls are now filled with military supplies and guns from the battle fields of Europe. overalls, mzl, books, rubber and canvas : . r, â€" ehiropractic supâ€" plies, structyral steel and a variety of implements. ; «+1 FRED W. RUBLY mereof at maturity, there be and there is hereby levied upon all the taxâ€" able property within said Park Disâ€" trict in each year 'M of said bonds are ‘outstand} 8 direct anâ€" nual tax sufficient for that purpose, and that ther;s be and there is, hereby levieddponnltlxubhm c y withâ€" in said .Park District, the following direct annual tax, toâ€"wit : ‘ hcleny to relee gh un o pramh / ient to raise the sum of $12,000 being $1500 to reimburse current J funds advanced +n foe un 2 C s §1 1000 .00020 707 fvrvencs s ROmreven ($...............) at The Highland Park State Bank, Highland Park, Iilinois, ‘for interest due that day on its Park Bond, dated October 1. 1925. Na: Section 4. That in order to provide forthccollecthaol-dh'act;nnm tax sufficient to pay the interest on pay and |discharge the princinal to bearer .. * (Form of Coupon)| No...uticsd Tp oo rornet remeciky On the first day of ............._.., 19...., The Highland Park East Park Disâ€" trict, Lake County, Minois, will pay +n hoamae ids Countersigned : IN/TESTIMONY WHEREOF The Highland Park East Park Distriet, by its Board of Park Commissioners, has caused this bond to be signed by the President and Treasurer of said Board and countersigned by the Secâ€" retary thereof, with his.seal of office affixed, and the coupons hereto atâ€" tached to be signed by said President. and Treasurer by their respective facâ€" simile signaturés, and said officers, by the execution of this bond, do adopt as and for their respective propet â€" signatures their respective facsimile |signatures appearing â€" on said coupons, all this First day of October, 1925. » And it is hereby cértified and reâ€" cited) that all conditions, things and acts required by law to exist, to be, or to, be done precedent to and in the issuance of this bond, exist and have been done and performed in due form and time; &at the indebtedness of said »Park (T~â€"tricts, including this bond, does not exceed any limitation imposed by law and that provision : has beéen‘ made for the collection ‘of a direct annual tax, sufficient to pay this bond. and the interest hereon as the same mature. ’posd of providing funds for building, protecting and improving lands for parks, and for the payment of the expenses incident thereto in and for ‘said) Park District pursuant to and in all respects in compliance with an Act entitled "An Act to provide for the organization of park districts and the transfer of submerged lands to those ‘bordering on navigable bodâ€" ies of water," approved June 24tly 1895, as amended; and an ordinance duly enacted by the Board of Park: Commissioners of said Park District and of record in the record of the proceedings of| said Board, and a copy of sime certified by the Secretary of said [Board has been fiiled in the ofâ€" fice of the County Clerk of said Lake County. B Both principal hereof and interest hereon gre by made payable in lawful money of the United States of América at The Highland Park State Bank, Highland Park, Illinois. For the prompt payment of this bond with ingerest thereon as aforesaid, and for the levy of taxes sufficient for that purpose, the full faith, credit and resources of said Park District areTLfiereby irrevocably pledged, his bond is issued for the purâ€" by *3 OF LAKE THE . HIGHLAND PARK . EAST . C| *|~PARK DISTRICT * ! PARK BOND > and Treasurer by their respective facsimile signatures, and that ‘officials, by. the exécution of bonds .mi' adopt as and for own proper signatures, their tive facsimile signatures appearing on gaid coupons: that said bonds and coupons be payable at The Highland Park State Bank, Highland . Park, Illinois. (6 , . Section 3. That said bonds and ,eo:rons‘ be in substantially the folâ€" lowing forms: 3 t Octobcrgofuch‘yur;,thtnflbnds be signed by the President and Treasâ€" urer of said Board and countersigned by. the | Secretary thereof, with his seal of office affized, and that the inâ€" terest upon said bonds be evidenced by coupons thereto attached, maturâ€" ing on the several days when such interest| matures, and that such couâ€" pons be signed by the Said President nually on the first days of advanced to pay interest (Forms of Bond) Secretary /. ; staiinibnicd shoictcadh dalll 526 in nd . said officers,| _/ [ this bond, do their mpoctige' their respective appearing â€" on Treasurer. Treasurer. President. President. principal 1 e that this is due largely. to tlntldequuprovfiiu"u interested organizations for t&hlnmtotthe’yonfliéo(g imunity on that evening., Une or two andâ€" a few « main it was the quietest A Eve on, record .here. It is Highlar â€" â€"Park ~â€"2004 Highland .Park police repc quictest Halloween this year i experience. ~Practically no m was done, and the only pr ported missing was a hw. the Special Chemicals comt qQUIET HALLOWEEN _ â€" _ HERE, POLICE § â€" E. A, WARREN, _ Secretary of the Board of Com, missioners of The Highland Park East Park District. ( . $ Passed Sept. 14, A.'D.‘gfi. Approved Sept. 14, A. D. 1925. Adopted September 14, Ayes, All, â€" |_ $ ‘Nays, None. |* + \< +‘ EVERETT L. MILI President of the rd of missioners of â€" the Hig _ _ East Park. District, ; ATTEST: .. . \ak Section 7. That all i resolutions and orders, or parts € of, in conflict with flwm this ordinance, be and the sanje . hereby | repealed. ; wh Â¥ Lake, who lhn,_inâ€".* for .a the years 1926 ahdp#n, clusi ascertain the rate cent ‘require to ‘produce the aggréegate tax. Here ‘inbefore levied for each of said yean respectively, and extend the same (fo collection on the tax books in eop nection â€" with other taxes d ‘in each of said years, ® 194 in .nabyuidmrkohm neral corporate purposes of-’.id Par "4&;5 trict‘ for general, corporate py of, said Park Dinttiet,nsud in cach of said years, such ann tax * levied and collected by sgaid Park Dig. trict in like manner ag taxes for genâ€" eral purposes for each of said year are : levied and collecated, and “ collected, such taxes shall be used for the purpose of payin‘w?pfi;qm' ‘ and interest upon the bond» rinbefor described as the same shall mature, Section 6. ‘Thatâ€"said bonds be 6x ecuted as above provided and the upon deposited with the Treasurer the Board, and be by <him ‘ del: to the purchaser thereof, upon of the purchase price, the same be not less than the par value of &: less Mien x That‘s always spic & ,4_4 | sgan and clean; |§ _ The Spotless '%’;. (a great reknown, | [ â€" Designed to serve this n . ustling town. B With soap and brush § . : inside and out _ ‘M | We gut the germs andl ° ust to rout. _ â€" _ K . That principal or interest ma inxlt‘nytihevwm foregoing tax . to pay the s1 be paid from the flfl‘reut fund said Park B_i’:rict ~mand ;M-hm ment made ~thereto ceeds of taxes bflufl ) the same shall hw»aodhc: This is the Cab of And said sums are hereby priated for the of paying in |~ a sinking fund to ny_efrindpal * M on at maturity. a /Â¥ t ~~For the year: 1927, a tax *ficient to raise the of 1 500, being $500 for, interest April 1 and C ‘1, 3 .and $10,000 for principal due maturing April 1 & Octol ‘1926, and April 1, 1927, and for interest due October 1, $10,000 for principal due Oc THURSDAY, were t & 13 spend the * i brother‘s 4. This but the includes formed by the : Eatomâ€" ities. â€" Mr. ushers at and : the 1 McCallum, Claude 4 Miss Lu ter of Mr. of Oak Pa the bridal ; of the bri couple left reside in F Saturday Baptist Roland W. of the maid of} hold of C or,: Mr October 20 Mrs. Boyd for a brief Crosby. acted as 1 were: Ni cago and » <Mr. aw Rosewood Mr. Mr. Invi Ele y4

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