Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 31 Jul 1930, p. 24

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§ 9. Phone 2048 700 Central Ave. The Lawn Mower Shop PHONE YOUR ORDER NOW WE ARE HAYBFEOGX AGENTS LA WN MOWER SHARPENING Full Quart Brick @»55 Map iyâ€"m c ‘mign 7 Y DHCDX MACAROON. STRAWBERRY SHERBET AND NEW YORK ICE CREAM EARL W. GsELL & Co. PHONE 3090 We Call for and Deliver _ _PROFESSIONAL P IA NO TV NIN G ANY SIZE Work Guaranteed, Estimates Free 530 South Linden Avenue, Highland Park, II. 17 years experience There is a Hydrox Agency Near Your Home PHARMAC H. E. PAHNKE Highland Park, III. Highland Park, NJ Telephone 2600 T HE PRES 8 Representing himself as Dr. Frank| J. Williams, Waukegan eye :-;pecill-i ist, a confidence game operator forced’ his way into the home of Mrs. Alice| Spring bf Millburn Tuesday eveningi of last week and took $117, leaving a cheap pair of eye glasses for the | woman. \ The fraud was discovered Wednesâ€" day when Mrs. Spring called at the oftices of Dr. Williams at 19 N. Genâ€" essce street, Waukegan. When he came to the door she asked for Dr. Williams and he told her. that he was the doctor. She then learned she ‘had been beaten out of all the money she had in her home at the time. Eyeâ€"Glass Peddler in County Defrauds Aged After a cursory examination, the man said her eyes were in bad shape. He handed her a pair of glasses he took from his pocket, and said the charge would be $74. She went to get her pocketbook and returned with its contents, $117, and the man took it all. Mrs. Spring, who is a widow, told Dr. Williams that a man had come to her door, stating that he was Dr. Williams, and that he would like to examine her eyes. As she had heard Embarrassing Question Are we more ‘hypocritical today than when we pretended to be decentâ€" ly dressed when we were notâ€"when instead of having our clothes really clean, we wore reversible cuffs*â€"The Country Home. The Fate of Greatness A movie star on a rampage makes much more noise than a scientist disâ€" covering a few million more worlds. â€"The American Magazine. of Dr. Williams jand was having trouble with her eyes, she permitted him to enter the house. As the glasses did her no good. Mrs. Spring came in to see Dr. Williams last evening and with him she went to the sheriff‘s office where she reâ€" peated her story. Woman; Takes Her Cash PROMPT EFFICIENT SERVICEâ€"WHILE YOU WAIT Elm Place Service Station TIRE REPAIRING AUTOMOBILE GREASING Elm Place and First Street PHONE 3545 High Test Tydol Ethyl and { Two persons, a five year old girl iand her grandmother, were fatally 1inj\.n'ed. and four others hurt, one perhaps seriously, when the automoâ€" ‘hile in which they were driving to Chicago from a birthday célebration \in Grayslake overturned one half mile | southeast of that village at 7 o‘clock ) Wednesday night of last week. The dead and injured are: | Dorothy Tatce, 5, 6834 Altgeld avâ€" enue, Chicago, dead. Mrs. Marie Benning, 52, 925 Mariâ€" ana street, Chicago, dead. Martin Thelliman, 45, Hillside inn, Grayslake, driver of the car. John Benning, husband of the dead woman. Mr. and Mrs. Curt Tatce, parents of the dead child. [ Mr. and Mrs. Tatce, parents of the | dead child, were the least injured of the party, receiving only slight cuts and bruises besides being shaken up by the crash. Mrs. Tatce was almost prostrated with grief upon learning that her little girl had been killed in {the accident. TWO KILLED AND 4 INJURED N CRASH Grayslake Auto Accident Last Week Fatal to Child and Grandmother Injuries Prove Fatal Mrs. Benning died enroute to the Elizabeth Condel Memorial ‘hospital in Libertyville, while the child died in the offices of Dr. Herbert Struthâ€" ers of Grayslake, where the injured persons were rushed following the accident. Both Mrs. Benning and the Tatce girl had fractured skulls, inâ€" ternal hurts and severe bruises. They did not regain consclousness. severe bruises and lacerations. He has no broken bones. Thellman, driving the car, was rushed to the St. Therese hospita‘ after being given emergency treatâ€" ment by Dr. Struthers, and is sufferâ€" ing from possible internal injuries, Benning, â€" whose 58th â€" birthday party was celebrated at the Hillside inn yesterday, received a badly cut hip and back, but was discharged from the Libertyville hospital after treatment. R Thursday, July 31, 1930

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