Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 5 Nov 1925, p. 22

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|I ING | wale 6 14 0‘; >!’(‘)R‘, y ‘AT t 4 _\ WIRED Mgé | iw ; CLEANING & DYEING ‘Cfim IS URGED l ARE WID NE ue cLEANING & CURTAIN || [ IN DRIVE SLMAN in thhet Phing in ;’?‘ ‘Repairing, Cleaning \â€" and| Remodeling _ ~Margaret Devlin $54 W. MADISON STREET Phone Van Buren 4525 Chicago ‘ fl?n "a o fi h Sing a song of a good warm fire, To this gach one of us aspire. When : your aspirations lead you in search of reliable, reâ€" sultful coal just go to â€"your phone and ask for us. â€" Coal of complete calorific character. Qurs is a splendid coal service for your accommodation. for y Paul Borchardt BUILDING MATERIAL +280 North St. Johns Avenue Into the home of Mr. Wise Comes the finest food supplies. Opon that one thing Mr. and Mrs. Wise have always agreed â€"the food that is placed upon their table must be the finest, purest obtainable. So this groâ€" cery supplies them. The Billy Bowden Grocery There was a man in Snow Hill To whom we sent a small bill He sent us a note And here‘s what he wrote "It ;di;iln't take much from my "till." > # Fine Groceries Fruits and Vegetables 1 sOUTH ST. JOHNS AVE. Phone Highland Park 1723 Style â€"and workmanship ‘Guaranteed AUTO LIMERICKS ThosE Fei1r0WS bow‘r soax you |__ IF YyoOU ARE A | CAREFUL SPENDER | _ You will recognize the advisaâ€" bility of allowing us to do your rep@ir work. Men who know how to effect every repair from enâ€" ging trouble to a thorough overâ€" hauling. * t | ; l:Lt:YDm. and Battery q:pert gn Phane H. P. 254 Waukegan Ay. GENERAL AUTO REPAIRS 2 P} s uOTI C ball Outis Welding â€" STRETCHING . | . RELIABLE LAUNDRY PHONES 178â€"179 | Tel. Highland Park 67 By LLOYD BOTKER Highwood Garage , ;NOVEMBER 5, Is * Cook: County Child Safety Cam:â€" paign ~Being Organized _ A+â€"Bâ€"C, the slogan meaning "Alâ€" ways Be Careful," is to be carried to children of all ages in Chicago and Cook county for one year, through the af::;u of a group of 100 business and professional men operating as the Citizens Child Safety Campaign comâ€" {mittee. â€"The campaign will differ from any campaign ever conducted in Chicago and probably ‘any other big city in the country, in its method of instruction, ‘its duration and its sysâ€" tem of financing. j Visual Education Visual education is the method to be employed primarily. Bright colâ€" ored pictures will tell the story of how typical accidents happen and how they are avoided. The long tried method of preaching safety will be, continued in a table of 12 commandments and in many slogans urging the child to caution and pointing out the proper things to do and not to do in crossâ€" ing streets and handling traffic sitâ€" uations. A catchy song, "The Meanâ€" ing of Your Aâ€"Bâ€"C," carries a further lesson. | This instruction will be given through the medium of attractive four page books printed in four colors in handsome combinations to make each book a prize possession. One million of the books will be issued mionthly with twelve million during the year of the campaign and with each new million there will be a complete change of lessons. Every Incentive Besides the interestâ€"holding feaâ€" tures, every incentive will be given the! child to know his safety lesson. The brightly colored safety picture will be reproduced in black and white for coloring by the child and rewards will be given for careful work. The thild‘s part in the lesson will require ‘close study of the picture and its deâ€" tail will remain long in the child mind. Essays will be written in schools and the good ones will bring prizes both from the committee and from civic and budiness organizations. Campaign Is Experiment | The campaign is an experiment conducted for the citizens of the naâ€" tion in a system which requires no financial drive and no heavy outlay of funds from any one agency. In each of Cook county‘s thousand zones, 1,000 (more or less according to denâ€" sity of population) of the books will be distributed through a depot and each lot of 1,000 will be paid for either by the depot, or by a civic or commercial body or public spirited citizens. o0 Three and oneâ€"half cents will cover the cost of printing and distributing each book and the return which ithe donor will get besides the compensaâ€" tioh of humanitarianism, will be the appearance cover. Popular Plan . Attesting the popularity of the system, in the first five days of Ocâ€" tober, the month set aside for subâ€" scription work, nearly threeâ€"quarters of the first million books had been subscribed. These will be issued in November and monthly thereafter, Many contracts covered the entire twelve months. The committee is headed by Oliver G. Temme, chairman, assisted| by James S. Kemper of Herbert Hoover‘s committee of 1500; Frank J. Tomâ€" czak, former head of the mayor‘s safety commission, and many widely kmown citizens. BENEFIT DEPARTMENT HAS SPLENDID RECORD Public Service Co. ‘Employes‘ Society Reports Many Cases Aided The employes of the Public Servâ€" ice company maintain a benefit asâ€" sociation, whose last report indicates that during the first eight months of this year, the association handled 221 cases of disability. This resulted in CHaStS UP MNSRCCUCY! ts i a loss of 6,577 days. Compared: with the corresponding months of the prevâ€" ious year, the los{ time per case was approximately the same. As in prevâ€" L ol ies o o rresalns: mt & EUZRIINIUTCCC pID ENCY io}:; years, tfle outstanding caus%s‘of disability were as follows: influenza, la grippe, severe colds, pneummonia. There are 2843 members in the association or 88.3 per cent of those eligible for membership. Every new employe on the regular payroll â€" of the company is eligible for memberâ€" ship and is given an opportunity to ‘join just as soon as he qualifies phyâ€" sically. j ? The association â€" renders reports monthly to the United States Public Health Bureau at Washington, D. C., and secures in exchange the benefit of the government‘s. study, which is carried on constantly in connection with benefit associations. There are 22 associations that render these.reâ€" ports to the health bureau, and the officers of the association have been linformed that they give more benefits |for dues collected: than any of the "other 22 associations. } ALWAYS BE CAREFUL" to Lessen Menace of Auto Accidents of his name on the back In Short Time Since Invention Perfected Its Value Has Been Shown ;In the short time that (has,elapsed gince the art of sending pictures over "telephone wires placed on a commercial basis onl;ifew months ago, a large number of uses have been found for the new btoceu. The newspapers were the first to make+use of this new invention, and: among the news events, pictures of which have been sent 85â€" the conâ€" tinent for newspaper | publication, have been the Santa Bath&ra earthâ€" quake, the Boston dance bhall disaster, the funeral of William Jannings Bryâ€" an, the Ku, Klux Klan parade in Washington, the start of the Amundâ€" sen expedition, and a number of picâ€" tures in regard to murder trials. However, the newspapers have by no means. monopolized the new service. Business men also are finding it of the greatest value when they wish to ‘get information to | Chicago or across the continent without delay. A wellâ€"known gutomobile manufacâ€" turer, wishing to acquaint his western sales force .with new designs that were bein:: contemplated, sent â€" picâ€" tures of them by wire. ‘The Califorâ€" nia Railway & Power company of | San Francisco, desiring the directors: to see a picture of a new type of trolley car, recently placed in operaâ€" tion, sent a picture by telephotograâ€" phy in time for the meeting of the directors in New York. (Bankers have been experimenting with the sending of pictures of checks so ‘as to identiâ€" fy signatures,. Advertising agenties have used the service in sending adâ€" vertisements so as to secure immeâ€" diate publication. _ Xâ€"ray pictures, greeting cards, fingerâ€"prints, cartoons, [charts and â€" engineering â€" drawings, ‘ shorthand notes, typewritten letters, architects‘‘ pencilled sketches,. the cover of a magazine, wills and other legal papers, represent a few of the many other uses to which the servâ€" lice has been placed. . When a spokesman for the Presiâ€" dent declares that he sees no reason why a special session of congress should be held in the fall he has the agreement; of just about everybody except those who have an ax or two to grind in a special session. We are all doing quite well without congress, and doubtless can continue to stagâ€" ger along at the present rate . until it comes time for a regular congresâ€" sional session. â€"Springfield Union. . The â€"stenographerd |who have trouble with their eyes might consider whether they haye not been winking them too freely at the boys in the THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS DO NOT NEED IT ARE WIDELY USED ‘The New Cadillac emerges triumphant â€" in every contrast Paraphrasing Kipling:â€" A Six is a o1X and a l Eight is an Eight, and never these twain shall meéet."‘ tl0 ud 3 ‘ You cannot get Six riding and driving qualities in a Four; nor Eight riding and driving qualities in a Six. | 0 = | ‘ ho ucth Nor,.by the same token, can you secure Cadillac Eight riding and driving qualities in any other ES Sa y Gu o 0s cditl . »~ KAakg A sR EMAE u0 O AHL. car but the new 90â€"degree Cadillac. Is this mere sayâ€"so or braggadocio? As you well know, Cadillac has never indulged in either. .. _ ; / â€" The evidence is overwhelmingly yours whenever you care to make comparison. [ | Whether you drive the new Cfa.dillac%@first. and the others afterward, or vice versa, is ‘of little consequence. ; se C caxg || & The contrast in favor of the new Cadlflac will be equally striking in either case. e fi 1. 00 _ The Highâ€"Speed Electrified Railroad _ © _ . ‘ Highland Park Ticket Office Telephone 140 Chicago North Shore & Milwaukee Railroad Co. e hk gfl dagrcci pIvisiON oF GENE&Ar mMovrors corpORATION All southâ€"bound ‘trains arriving downtown between 7 p.m. and 9 ‘p. m. will make a special ntop‘atangrm and Wabash, at the doors of the Auditorium. 3 From 9:58 p, m. to 12:58 a. m., all northbound trains will make a special stop at Congress and Wabash for homewardâ€"going passengers. Yor Prices range from *2995 for the Brougham to $4485 for the Custom Imperial.. F. O. B. Detroit. Tax to be added. General Motors‘ own time payment plan (GMAC) furnishes purchasers with the most economical way of buy= ing a Cadillac on time. a #p 16 d s\

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