The P.T.A. voted to give the Shoreâ€" line one bundred dollars of its nearly one thousand dollars received from the production of "Student Stunts" last E under the direction of Mrs. and her committee, a full report of the work was read by Mrs. Danley... Mrs. Harry Paul, the new president, began her year‘s work with great poise and a fine sense of parâ€" C. Touton, professor of education in @Ufl_;dwm Mr. Durbahn related the system| married Martha Von der Heide and of trying out students in the building | lives in Arlington Heights. He is trades in order to determine adaptâ€"| with the Corn Exchange bank in Chiâ€" ability. Vocational diplomas are givâ€" , cago. en, but they do not entitle a student| Minnie Bleimehl married Henry to enter a university. A Ilcnh-ofArliuun Heights and study in secondury schools" by Frank Miss Wood told of the art necesâ€" sary in home, church, school and facâ€" tory, and her desire to have students look for beauty in everything. Mizs Comer said that there were The membership committee reportâ€" «d 478 had paid dues, due to the efâ€" forts of the committee in the difâ€" Mr. Schneider talked on the indusâ€"| trial arts and home economic courses, ) of the model apartment in the school, | and the budgets which_the girls are | taught to make and live within. He‘ aiso briefly told of his own work in his department. Books bought in the ; Lillian died ten years ago. Sigwait high school book store save the lll-klad‘Siuer sewing machine factory dent body $1700 each year. _ _ | in Arlington Heights. John Sigwalt Miss Conley toid of the student 210 ) Louise Bleimeh!l married Harry fund. Miss Wilson, the new dean ) Williams and had three children, of girls, outlined the lkill..tthll_!&‘.‘nlh. who died in infancy, Charles Mr. Pesrs taiked of the journalism‘ and William, who are living in Chiâ€" course, which has thirtyâ€"five students | cago. They passed through the terâ€" in the beginning class. EiEghteen are) rible ordeal of the Chicago fire and editing the Shoreline, which costs Obe sought refuge in Lincoin Park. The hundred and fifty dollars a week t0 next morning when Peter Bleimehl print, or thirtyâ€"five hundred dolhn; hunted for his daughter all that reâ€" per year. Seventy dollars per week| mained in the park was the wreck of ments, which are now more easy to| her baby cab. The frantic father secure, for merchants realize that if| finally located his daughter‘s family they have anything to sell to high in a tent on the lake shore, in Evâ€" school students, the school paper i® | anston. M a good medium. Mr. Peers emphaâ€"| _ During the Chicago fire Frank Tupâ€" sized the fact tthat journalism teachâ€"| ner and Edward Bleimehl sat on the es good citizenship. . I shed jof the C. W. Pettis home, where â€"Mr. Zipoy of the cammerce departâ€" | the knuk gasoline station is now ment, deplored the wretched mflonted. and caught sparks from the ship of the students, who come to| fire that were blown to Deerficld, a him with a desire to be bookkeepers. | di<tance of oyver twenty miles, by the Time must be taken in high school . strong wind that prevailed that night. to teach students to write, which| Charles and William Williams are should have been done in the gradt| married and live in Chicago. Theéir school, when it was éasier to acqnit"hther was a stage carpenter in the a good style. Four hundred and nine~; Lyceum and Criterion theaters in Chiâ€" tyâ€"five students are taking business Refreshments were served by the women of the Lincoln school district. district 19, held at Berwyn, HIL., Oct. 18. ‘The program will be one worth while toâ€"every P. T. A. member. Kach pruaient. Ns 2. Dt theven thns work by phone or postal card so tranzporâ€" Every member who can should plan derly town, as the picture shows. Mr. to attend the annual conference of Snd Mrs. H. Zochier moved directly to percent from the six months‘ work. Miss Conley told of the student aid fund. Miss Wilson, the new dean of girls, outlined the social activities. Mr. Pesrs taiked of the journalism course, which has thirtyâ€"five students in the beginning class. EiEghteen are editing the Shoreline, which costs one hundred and fifty dollars a week to print, or thirtyâ€"five hundred dollars per year. Seventy dollars per week Don‘t forget it. Phone 1600â€"J or Miss Buzard had the different types of passes that are used in the school Miss Buzard made a frank critiâ€" cism of mothers who oversleep in the morning a frequent excuse for the tardiness of pupits.â€" Stow clocks, and flat tires are other unnecessary exâ€" unexcused tardinesses deduct three Mr. Burwell asked for employment for students who desired it, and said that many adults were now out of emâ€" With fourteen golf clubs in the viâ€" <inity, children do not see the necesâ€" §ity of stremuous life and study as F do in industrial centers, for Park, Ravinia, Lake Forest Deerfleld are the playgrounds of Chicago business men. Pruicipal R. L Sandwick, of the Deerficldâ€"Shields high school, told the Parentâ€"Teacher association last Thursday afternoon at ence was so large that it was necesâ€" sary to hoid the meeting in the high school auditorium instead of in the "But accomplish little. "They fool nobody.2 Wilmot P. T. A. Notes CCTOBER 13, 1927 motions Waukegan when their daughter was less than one year old. The Zochlers had three children who married and Tived in Deerfield; Sylvia became Mrs. Sammel Hutchison and had three children: Irene, Roy and Minnic. Treme Hutchison married Ray Reeds and has three sons, Duncan, Walter, McElhose of Ariington Heights and lives in Hion, N. Y. They have two in infancy. Irving McElhose married Ruth Evans, a teacher, and lives in Schnectady, N. Y. He is an elecâ€" trical enginger with the Public Servâ€" ice company. He has two daughters. Anna Bleimehi married Frank Snyâ€" had seven children, all of whom are college graduates. The Frank Snyder family lived in Towa. Their children were: Raymond, Harvey, Alvin, Elâ€" mer, Laura, Aida and Lucilie. Luâ€" cille died at two years of age. Rayâ€" mond Snyder is unmarried and lives in Towa. Alvin Snyder married Luâ€" rena Strand, an Towa school teacher and lives on the Snyder farm in Towa. Laura Snyder is unmarried and teaches school near her home in De Ridder, Louisiana. Elmer Snyder is an electrical engineer and lives with his sunt, Mrs. George Vetter in Chiâ€" Zoehler, daughter of Hieronimus and Bertha Fritech Zochler of Rossieben, Saxony, Germany, a college town for Elizabeth Bleimehi married Charles Sigwalt of Arlington Heights. He is now eightyâ€"four years of age and cut four teeth lately. He reads withâ€" out glasses. He lives with his son, John. _ Elizabeth Bleimehl Sigwalt died. The Sigwalts had two children, Lillian died ten years ago. Sigwait corner used to be the village water works with its "old oaken bucket." At the "husking bees" every time a man found an ear of red corn he could kiss a girl, and Charles always carâ€" ried a load of red ears in his pockets when he went to these parties. BleimehI‘s second wife was Louisa Wunsch, of Arlington Heights. Chartes Bleimeh} remembers that a liberty pole stood at the corner of Deerfield and Waukegan roads, which had a big fish on the top, that served as a weather vane. This was during the Civil war, and.every time that the North won a battle, the young p_eopl: _played "Copenhagen" around October, the year of the Chicago fire; and her mother recalled that her friends in Europe discussed the big fire in America, and wondered if some of their friends, who came across beâ€" fore the fire, were in danger. nearly drowned in the Tupper well, but "the old caken bucket" drew him Woodman, Herbert Todd, John Horenâ€" mehi yard was their playground, and the Tupper barn their indoor rendezâ€" vous. One of the Tupper boys â€"was BLEIMEHL FAMLY DATES BACK TO 1647 CUarter, Minnic Hulchison mari "" °. 0 ASOOR APADDCeite ARCDRRTCTT West Virginia and , which Ray Gunckle and has one son, loy 12,500. Kentucky n;fl..‘l-.o“_'_‘hA*â€'_hm (Continued from page 1) in organization of . more than 3,600 stores in Ohis, Michigan, Missouri, "If a crank is somebody who knows exactly what he wants and who inâ€" sists and persists until he gets it in exactly that way, put me down as the worst crank in town," declared Berâ€" nard H. Kroger, of Cincinnati, head of the B. H. Kroger Grocery & Bakâ€" ing, Co., and reputed to be worth $60,000,000, in an interview with the American Magazine. "Let us be frank," he continued. "I have said that people who accomâ€"~ plish things are all cranks. Likewise most of us are egotists. We like to pailm off our egotism as self confiâ€" dence; sometimes we call it faith in ourselves. But whatever we call it is ego, the ‘I" exaited. Purposeful, conâ€" fident acdtion must be founded on a belief in ‘I,‘ for without that belief there would be inaction. s "Pick out the best looking woman you know," Mr. Kroger iMustrated. "She is a crank about her hair and years ago when he owned a single him of being "cranky" in buying proâ€" visions to suit his customers. By the Master Leland Plagge, agoed 4, visited school Wednesday afternoon. He wandered into the school buildâ€" ing and was discovered by the urst grade teacher, Mrs. Knaak. She brought him up to the principal‘s ofâ€" fice. A telephone call to his parents revealed the fact that the child had wandered from home and they did not know where he was. Mrs. Plagge said, "Send him home. If he is big enough to walk to school, he‘s big enough to walk home again." He arâ€" rived home O. K. While it lacksâ€"the equipment and advantages of some of the more fayâ€" ored north shore schools, arithmetic, writing and spelling are taught for longer periods than in some schools. Many interesting comments have been made by the high school teachâ€" ers on the preparation of its stuâ€" dents in fundamentais. â€" The first "who‘s who" follows: Principal Carl Everett Bates, B.S., M.A.; second son of eight children of Chalon and Lelia Bates; born in Parish, Mich., Sept. 18, 1897; father and mother living; father is pastor of First M. E. Church, Draper, S.D.; education at Néewell high school, graduated 1917, lowa State College, 1917â€"18 1919â€"22, graduated B.S. in egricultural education, and, Univerâ€" sity of Chicago, 1926â€"27, M.A. June 1927; experience: Aug. 1918 to Feb. 1919 in U. S. army with 216th Enginâ€" eers, Camp Kearney, Cal; school year 1922â€"23, teacher in high school De Soto, lowa, agriculture, . manual training and mathematics; 1923â€"26 superintendent of schools, Gilbert, Iowa, agriculture and mathematics. MILLIONAIRE GROCER DECLARES HE IS CRANK Says Frankly That He Believes All Who Accomplish Things Are Same Way thoroughness, And the best cook in the world is the peer of all cranks when buying her supplics." â€"Mrs. Sliza , temetery. Her father and mother, Mr. and.Mrs. Jacob Antes, are buried in the ‘church yard of the little Gerâ€" man Reformed, Lutheran church on Carl Everett Bates, the new prinâ€" cipal of the Deerfield school, has planned a series of articles about éach teacher on his school staff. The faculty is larger this year than ever before, and the school has emerged from a country one to a fair size town school. Peter Bleimehl married Clara Lauâ€" benheimer of Chicago and has two children, Helen Marie and Elizabeth Ann. He is a towerman for the Metropolitan_ railroad. Mary Bleimeh] is secretary for a real estate corporation in Chicago. Dundee road. Josephine, who died one year ago. Myrtle keeps house for her father, who is a towerman for the St. Ptul railway. Earl married Jean Shaefâ€" fer and has one child. Park, son of Daniel and Auns Fiysn Murphy; Ruth Marie, who died when two months old; Edward Charles, and Robert Peter Bleimehl. Edward Bleiâ€" mehi, Sr. is a storekeper in Deerfield. several years he married her sister Josephine, who died one year ago. Ear) Bleimeh] is employed in the Union Trust bank of Chicago. He has been in busines: two years in the village. Fred Bleimehi married Anna Knudâ€" son Critchley of Resier, Norway. McElhose of Arlington Heights. They who lived but a short time. After Edward for After his wife‘s ‘THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS Gramwar School centinue to go well of out the subject of Ned csw en e e s be afforded to all persons interested in the changes above mentioned or any other changes in said ordinance to be heard in relation to said proposed amendments, _ "AN ORDINANCE to regulate and limit the height and bulk of buildings ; to regulite and limit intensity of the use of lot areas, and to regulate and determine the mreas of tpen . spaces within and surrounding such buildings: to classify, regulate and restrict the location of trades and industries and the location of buildings designed for specified industrial, | business, . residential . and . other wes: to divide the entire City of Highiand Park into districts for the purpose of this ordinance; ‘to fix standurds to which builiâ€" ings or structures shall conform ; to probibit uses, buildings wWh with e_charneter of such respectively : ordinance; to fix standards to which buildâ€" inws or structures shall conform:; to prohibit uses, buildings or structures incompatible with the character of such districts respectively ; and to nrevent additions to and alterations or remodeling of existing buildings or strucâ€" tures in such a way as to avoid the restricâ€" tions and limitations lawfully imposed hereâ€" Mivck 60, all in the City of Highland Park County of Lake and State of Illinois: also ; Lots 13. 14. 15, and 16, Military Academy Subdivision, all in the City of Highland Park, County of Lake and State of Illinois; also â€" oo o e e t e ym Lots 21 to 28 inclusive in Block.1 and Lots 21 to 28 inclusive in Block 2 Compton‘s Addiâ€" tion to Highland Park, all in the City of Highland Park, County of Lake and State of Iilinois and classified on the use map of said City as Class "B" Residential Districts be changed to Loca! Business® Districts, â€" At said public hearing an opportunity will under. and to under_and to nrovide nenaities for violation hereof" in the following manner: a ie o e o e t the heirht and bulk of building»: to regulate and limit intensity of the use of lot areas. and to regulate and determine. the sreas of open spaces within and surrounding such Duildings ; to classify, late and restrict the location of trades nl‘l?‘i.ndutï¬a and the I coticn nf baildings desiened for specified industria), _ business, . residential and . other im : to divide the entire City of Hiwhland Prck into districts for the purbose of this At said public hearing an opportunity will be afforded to all persons interested in the chanses above mentioned to be heard in reinâ€" tion to said propesed amendments. ber in the City Hail in the City of Highland Park, IHinois, on Thursday, the 10th day of November, 1927, at elht o‘clock P.M., which said public hearing will be conducted by the undersigned, the Zoning Committee for the Citr of Highland Park, designated and apâ€" pointed by the Council of the City of Highâ€" land Park for that purpose, to consider amending an ordinance entitled : of Sections Ten (10) und Fifteen 415) in Township , Fortyâ€"three (43) North, Range Tweive (17}, East o(r Third Principal Merâ€" idian, in Lake Count, ML, ail of said premâ€" bes being situated in the City of Higbland Purk. Lake County, Ilinois, and classified on the use map of said City as Class "A" Resâ€" idential District be changed to m Local Bus~ iness District and {t is proposed that all of that portion of Section 27 lying south of the south side of Deerfleld Road, between the west boundary of the Chicaxo and North Western Railway Company‘s rightâ€"ofâ€"way and the east bounâ€" dary of the Chicago, North Shore and Milâ€" waukee Railroad Company‘s rihtâ€"ofâ€"way. ail o7 said premises being situated in the City of Highland Park, Lake County, Illinois, and classifird on the use map of said City as Class "A" Residential District be changed. to a Commercial District. & Jt is Druvu-d"ï¬ai Lot 8 Block 22 ail in the City of HighlMnd Park, County of Lake and State of filinois, and classified on !he use map of said city as Class "B" Res tinl District be changed to a local Business Disâ€" trict : ie en o s e 2 en t OmE City of Highland Park, designated and apâ€" Wiflh\ibl!h%udlu(tlecibnlll‘_'h. land Park for that purpose, to consider amending an ordinance entitled : tures in such ;-w;_y_rmmmb: tions and limitations lawfully imposed hereâ€" under and to provide ML for violation hereof"" in the following manner seven (47) to Fftyâ€"one (51) both inclusive ani Lots Three Hundred Fiftyâ€"nine (359) and Three Hundred Sixty (360) in Krenn & Dato‘s â€" Hixhland | Park | Addition, | Highland I‘"lr\‘i: IIlinois, being a Subdivision of parts many states, and in many locations the hunters are in more danger than the game. under hot, wlmhmfl;flu‘;ufl; the winter weather is too cold. NOTIGE 13\ HeRebt GIvVER they s yub a lic hearing will be held in the Counctl Chamâ€" N. were made as places to throw lighted matches into. NOTICE. OP PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE IS HERERY GIVEN that a pubâ€" ic hearing will be held in the Council Chamâ€" AN ORDINANCE to resulate and limit The people who were growling beâ€" The hunting season is is proposed that Lots ‘One (1) to Twenty both inclusive:; Lots Twentyâ€"two (22) ortyâ€"twd (42) both inclusive; Lots Fortyâ€" RADIATOR HEATING One Year to Pay feel Zoning Committee of the City of Highland Park gl. s)_lr RIESER, L. E. LEVERONE, I~ M. RIESER, S. ST. PETER, L. E. LEVERONE, E. S. HALL X. VIGEANT Zoning Committee of the City of Highland Park Decker Heating & Plumbing Co. 15 8. St. Johns Ave. ® Highland Park, M Phone 201 alterations The largest plant in the world manâ€" ufacturing telephone cable is locatâ€" ed in Illinois. It uses 170,000,000 pounds of paper, lead and copper anâ€" nually. The geographical center of Illinois is in a cofn field about oneâ€"half mile southeast of Illiopolis. Sangamon county. « If the professor who predicted the su-mgn y could on : !h&%‘ as accunw would soon be richer than Henry Ford. There has been in Illinois an inâ€" crease in population equal to more than 15 inhabitants per square mile since 1910. per 1,000 of population was 11:5, as against 11.3 in 1925. The world‘s first 142,000â€"volt unâ€" derground electric cable is in Ilinois. It is part of the greater Chicago area‘s great power pool. There are more foreignâ€"born Gerâ€" mans in Illinois than foreignâ€"born of :ny_other n!tiomlity. _ _Negro slaves were introduced into Illinois in 1719. There were 82,529 marriages in Iâ€" linois during 1926â€"2 565 more than INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT THIS STATE A good radiator heating system adds from two to three times its initial cost to the selling value of a houge. It‘s an investâ€" ment one cannot afford to overlook. And it makes of the house, a home. . May we not show you how easy it is for you to take out the old heater and install radiator heat and pay at your convenience? Estimates Freely Givenâ€"No Obligation SAVE wit) SAFET Y Telephone Highland Park 144 Free Delivery Service Opposite the Nerthwestern Passenger Station In every way an excellent cream, â€" It is used for massage and to cleanse the skin. You should use Cara Nome Cold Cream freely, as it keeps the skin youthful. ROBERT W. PEASE, Pharmacist CARA NOME COLD CREAM atyour $l.00 Price were 14,125 diâ€" A real mirror, generous conâ€" tents, a dainty lambs wool puff, nonâ€"tarnishing case of chic deâ€" sign, a catch that holds firmly, yet easy to open at your wish. Altogether a vanity in which you may take genuine pride! The last word in convenience for the handbag or purse, likewisc in beauty. CARA . NOME POWDER AND ROUGE Office Hoursâ€"9 a. m. to 12. and 1 to § p.m. 7 to 9 p.m. FRED C. BREMER : Carpénter ‘and Builder Storm Sash and Storm Doots CABINETS Jobbing Promptly Done Shop Phone H.P. 457 Res. 1985 513 Eim Place, Highland Park Dr. George H. Mitchell General Practice of Dentistry @pecial attention to pyorrhea and prophylazis * 16 NORTH SHERIDAN ROAD Moldaner & Hurger Bldg. Phone Highland Park 1035 WATCHCASE VANITIES OF DRUCG STORE