Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 15 Jan 1931, p. 24

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Decide on t on tias Rate Fight Before Jan. P..", This friendly heat pad comes in a useful cedar box " and together they're all} T he fkecy Hotpoint {hating Pad comes quickly to the tescue when there's a toothache, headache, earache or almost any kind of ache o: pun in the family. It also makes a good bcdfellow on wintry nights. The pad is soft This combination of a Hotpoint Electric Heat Pad and charming cedar chest is easily the Bargain of the Month at your Public Service Store. And you can buy them for only 95c down and $1 a month with no carrying charge. undéliablc and can tiset to keep three different tempmtum. Docton recommend it for its therapeutic qualities. With it comes a handy washable slip cover.. t . . You‘re bound to find a number sf uses fa} the cedar box-m treasure chest for your jewelry A a h,uulkcrchicf container . . a box for cigar . , a vanity case for cosmetics 7 to mention only a few. It is handily sued (12 x 15 x 2 V. inches) and aarcfully made af highly polished, aromatic cedar. trimmctl m brass Am! ll n-‘s tt km: to Luck it. . _ F (a $10.50 value) PUBLIC sermons COMPANY 'tf,' $ 795 II. C. " tiottth tit. Johns 0F NORTHERN ILLINOIS ,Iu-wph m W. Norm. "innit! “Inner l-lunston. 'lllinuis tv? "olds Irtstrirt Superintendent he up th xv wing durvoy Hunmunilios rate fisrht Dickinson tine bids of Nurth THE PRESS " the llighllnd Park 2900 mun thive th at such cost will be small because of the large number of cities sharing the expense. Civic leaders say that one way to hvlp the average state's difficulties would he In abolish One branch of the Irnt'cslature and have only one house in the law making hudy. That wnuld remedy at has! half 'of the "iMculty. 'cordin out will also be distributed , to the number of consum- ouch community has. Waterbury, vt.-A case showing the need of more Veterans' Bureau hospitals, which the American Legion is now urging in congress, is report. ed here by Harry-N, Cutting, depart- ment service officer of the Legion in Vermont, as typical of thousand.» of veterans in distress: Montague Rasrtutissen, Lake county service officer, has received the fol- lowing bulletin, which he thinks ex- plains the great need for more beds and more hospitals for the eat-service men "This case is "m Barre, Vt. The veteran was a granite cutter, earn- ing good money, rearing a family and paying for a home. Then trouble up, poured out nf a clear sky, and the man became mentally ill, for no knuwn reason. and had to be taken to the Vermont State Hospital in Wat. orhury. ' Shortage of Beds Keeps Veteran In State Institution "Of course his income stopped,Hurt not the expenses, as he and his wife had an equity in their home, and theretnie he eouldn't be placed in the hospital as a state patient, flee. His maintenance hid to be paid. This was $7 a week. It had to come out of the equity in their home. The living ox- pauses of the family had to come out of the equity, ton - what were, nut paid for by the American Legion and Auxiliary. "An application for disability al- lowance was filed, and granted. The wife will get $40 a month from that source. At the same time, an appli- cation was filed for the veteran's transfer to the Veterans" hospital at Northampton, but that has not gone through yet, on account of lack of room. As long as he stays in the Ver. mont State Hospital, his maintenance will eat up most of that $40 a month that his family needs. These ner- vous and mental cases are the ones which have to wait the longest, when we all know that they need hospital- ization just as quickly as a case of tuberculosis or any other ailment. "The Bureau rule is that service- erutnveted cases have the preference. That Would he fihe, if wc, or anybody also, could tell far a certainty what cases are NOT' service connected. Men aro breaking down every day from the effects of what they went through in F'rance, and the law sets January l. 1925, as the late date on which these break-down cases can be con- nected with service. The first step in the right direction is more hospi- tals; the next step would be to lib. eralize the rules of service-connected cases. so that the veteran shall have the benefit of service-connected cases. MO that the veteran "tall really have the benefit nf every reasonable doubt, as wt' have been told so often." [Angle Murder Suspect Formerly at Great Lakes whow cupture was made public last work after an eight month sensa- tional hunt for the slayer of Alfred J, 'Uaek" Lingle, was disco'vered to bv the sump Leo Brothers. who was known in Waukegan during the war days when he was stationed for tt period of training un Great Lakes. Brothers.~ St Thursday, Jan. 15, 1931 Louis gunmen-r made public last

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