; NEW GRADE SCHOOL _ § : :4 OPENS IN SEPTEMBER Fa It will be ready for occupancy for children up to and including the fourth grade next September. Eventâ€" ually there will be added another wing and anâ€" auditorings;â€"ar.dâ€"thereâ€"will be ing line between the districts of the Ravinia~and theâ€"Braeside school. Crowded conditions in Ravinia grammar school and difficulty of acâ€" cess to it by children living in the scuth â€" and ‘southeastern districts of Highland Park were the factors leadâ€" ing to the construction of the new Braeside â€" Grammar : school. ~ This school is of a pleasing architecture, with graystone and dark yellow plasâ€" ter on the exterior. â€"â€" 12 The <school faces Brownville road 4 "will "be the 16 North Sheridan Road BELECTRIC SERVICE COLD AIR FUR STORAGE Estimates Gladly Given ~ WE HAVE OUR â€" STORAGE VAUL';' IN OUR OWN BUILDING Reasonable Charges * SUMMERâ€"DRIVING 515 Laurel A'_venue PHONE HIGHLAND PARK 266 Before starting on .that vacation trip, let us check over your ignition and magnetto.. This may save you time and money on the road. â€" MOLDANER & HU ME R PREPARE* YOURCAR "tepronally ’_é'ï¬y’ .are '- nished in a cream colored .plaster with brown, panelled, ceilings of a new composiâ€" tion called Newwood, which improves "‘The interior of the school 4s very unique and homelike, as well as havâ€" ing modern equipment and artistic and practical furnishings, *Â¥ â€" _ Almost every room has a stone fireâ€" place :of:different design, a new featâ€" on the north, Pierce road on the south, and Lincolnwood avenue on the east. It has a delightful location inasmuch as it has many trees about it and a large fertile ravine at its rear. It is the intention of the school authorâ€" ities to preserve the wild life aboundâ€" ing in the ravine. Deere Park is but oneâ€"half mile east, County line road is very near the school, Braeside staâ€" tion is but one block removed, and Ravinia Park is a short distance north. roveavaecenrevataeronenmenney FURRIERS TH Eâ€"= P RES S * "** * We Call for and Deliver As a teacher of third year English, Mr. Davidson has been at Deerfield three years. â€"He â€"came from the Choate school in. Wallingford, Conn., which is~ a ~preparatory school for Yale and Princéton. Miss Mable Gorman, from the Colâ€" umbia State Teacher‘s college in New York, will take Mr. Davidson‘s place in the English department. f m Mr. Joseph Davidson, English teacher at Deerfieldâ€"Shields, has been granted a year‘s leave of absence on account of his health. He will probâ€" ably travel in the West â€"and "In my estimation," says Superinâ€" tendent Wright of District 8, "you will have to travel a long way to ocem in contact with a prettier little school than our new Braeside school." DEERFIELD ENGLISH TEACHER GRANTED LEAVE OF ABSENCE Last spring (1928), the school board received the authority to sell bonds, and purchased the grougd on which the Braeside school now stands (3% acres), and 5 acres on Clavey road. The building, which is now nearing completion, and the grounds will cost approximately 50,000 dollars. T Highland Park now has as many, if not more, grammar schools than any town on the north shore. There are now six grammar schools, in Highland Park: Green Bay . school, West Ridge school, Elm Place school, Lincoln school, Ravinia . school, and the new Braeside school. : The school was built because of the growing number of children of gramâ€" mar school age in the district, and theresulting crowded condition of the Ravinia grammar school. . ~The staircase railings are of a cast iron design, differing from the usual wood. s The corridors are of a light grayishâ€" green color, and harmonize with all the furnishings. The drinking fountains synchronize with the color of the halls and are an example of the nicety of the attention to details shown in th construction of the school. _ ciency. Attached to each classroom there is a small adjoining room which is fitâ€" ted for a workshop, and has compartâ€" ments for the projects of each child. There is also a cloakroom for each classroom, individual compartments for rubbers and:1like wearing apparel. the accoustics. The beams running crosswise on the ceilings; have small orange supports. e y C Phone Highland Park 54 CLEANING â€" GLAZING and REPAIRING AT SPRING and SUMMER PRICES on YOUR FURS atinga . Representative Lyons, who spoke briefleg, urging the passing of the bill, deniedâ€"that this would be the case. After brief debate, the TIllinois house last week passed the bill sponâ€" sored by Representative Richard J. Lyons, prohibiting the use of cutouts on motor boats. The vote was 80 to 26. The bill now goes to the senate. Representative Charles Weber of Chicago was the principal spokesman against the bill. ~He deéclared that it would require owners of motor boats to have mufflers put on their boats, a costly procedure. 8 Hardin was theâ€"lowest in license fees with but $7,924 collected. Gallatin collected the least from the $60,000,000 and $100,000,000 state aid bond issues receiving but. $525,54. 424,080; â€"Peoria, $4,142,280; â€"Fulton, $4438;180;â€"Madison, * $4,123,120;â€"Iroâ€" quois, $4,116,400; and St. Clair, $4,â€" 089,450. " Calhoun had the fewest miles. of pavement, boasting of but 17.05 and Hardin stood 101. in the .column with 24.49 miles. . Bill Barring Motor Boat Cutâ€"Out Passes In state aid Cook:â€" county received $7,143,550; Will, $5,413,140; McLean $4,925,080; _ Livingston, $4,604,560; Kankakee, $4,584,910; LaSalle, $4,â€" ~_Cook county has 420.30. miles of roads; McLean, 234.19; LaSalle, 229.â€" 03; Fultan, 202.29; LaSalle, 229.03; Fulton, 202.25; Will 199.15; and St. Clair, 198.24 miles. In License Fees In license fees Sook county receiyâ€" ed $6,107,675; Kane $345,456; St. Clair, â€" $340,446; ‘Peoria, $333,129; Madison, $313,319; and Sangamon, $263,838. Lake county had an income for the state of $256,432 in licenses in 1928. In all $3,703,870 was spent on roads by the state and the county had 193.â€" 88â€"miles of pavement. °* > #." The ~twelve counties â€" receiving more state aid are: Cook, Will Mcâ€" Lean, Livingston, Kankakee, LaSalle, Peoria, Fulton, Madison, Iroquois and. St. â€"Clair. 5 s e road,‘although twelve other counties had received more state aid, comes through the fact that its residents have spent almost $2,000,000 in highâ€" way construction. s4% Have Most Paved Roads Those counties with more paved roads are Cook, McLean, LaSalle, Ful» ton, Will and St. Clair, in the order named. ; T ag f ‘Those ~receiving more in license fees are: Cook, Kane, St. Clair, Peoâ€" ria, Madison, Winnebago, Will and Sangamon. _ Lake county stands seventh in the total number of miles of paved road, ninth in the amount of auto license fees collected, and thirteenth in amounts contributed by the state for highway construction in the 102 counâ€" ties of the state it is shown in a surâ€" véeéy following the publishing of a Eighth in Amount of Auto Liâ€" __ cense Fees Received, Says State Report j LAKE CO. SEVENTH _ â€" N PAVED MLEAGE Thursday, May 30, 1929 iP