Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 2 Apr 1931, p. 25

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last date fo 1930 ‘plates date 300 8t h"e m &all delinanas _ _ voâ€"operation of police in Illinois municipalities is not expected to aid the secretary of state as much as in formér years to collect delinquent fees." The imminence of . elections in portant example, â€"will probably| mean that .no arrests will be made by city police until after the first week in April. With "hard times" prevalent, it hm ‘ Mop ‘Ayris o# 2hak. Y yor‘s secretary ofoState William J. Stratâ€" ton is making every effort to collect the $8,000,000 ontstandéng. He needs ?sflxlnoncy to meet state payrolis for With a million 1931 state :ttltomo- . platés issuedâ€"and at least 300,000â€"autos on and highâ€" ways with the ‘old 19380 plates on. Stratton Starts Drive 3 to Enforce Automobile | â€"~~License Tax in State . _McLean county led all counties of the state both in amount of crop and limestock valuation.. Its farm crop was estimated atâ€"$7,859,880 and‘liveâ€" stock at $5,150,000. % Corn production value_ was the greatest . din 1980;, M“ the state ilc]_gg.‘;, o croj .m’ Suntâ€" ing for 49 per cent of: the J?ohl tz figure â€" $147,745,000, tame hay was second â€" with â€"$49,151,000,â€" and oats third with $44,388,000:â€"____ The amounts disclose a decline in the â€"value of ‘both crops and livestock as compared to 1929. Crops, the reâ€" or the state showed, fell $122,â€" M’L’E down $62,000,000.. P mss _ â€"â€"Depression Causes Decline â€" _ Valuations of Lake county crops And vestock.â€"AIqollowed _ general The long Gdrought which â€" burned stock ‘and caused many farmers to ship their stock to market is blamed for â€"the décreased â€"valuation â€" in â€"both Lake county and the state as a whole. The entire, state. showed a gross farm valuation of principal crops of $301,207,000, while the total . value of all livestock on Illinois farms at the end ‘of‘ 1930 was estimated at $221,994,000. VA ved "at " 32;50 ‘ \’ ing _ m;r ‘the customary one and a half per m&m,mmgfi% crop| cent interest payment. _ _ state and federal departments of agâ€" The nna.nce committee of the board riculture. _ § o of supervisors reported to the main t Reduction in Crop and Livestock Valuation Seen in Report _ for Year 1930 =~~~ Thursday, April 2, 1981 LAKE COUNTY FARMS . Su&ercv: mss Pies supervisors Take Time | body at the to Consider Requat of March meeti dinter fevietorse ns A was made by Frank Read, of Lake Banks ‘affiliated with the Lake| Forest, president of the organization. Cgunty Banker‘s association will not __Read explained that the bankers in be given an _answer before April on paying‘the interest were losing money =requestâ€"for.theâ€"county. to.deposit| on the account which bankers term â€"~G U A B DOMESTIC, APARTMENT HOUSE a8D COMMERCIAL ~._comners or crevicesâ€"are easy to clean and keep m\“w ~your â€"Generalâ€"Electric at our y showrooms today. o se enb / ) Join us in the General Electric % Program, broadcast every Down payments as low as $10 Saturday evening, on a t nationâ€"wide N.B.C. network, (24 months to pay) ks Now Greater Vailue Than Ever 19 North Sheridan Road T H E VIC. J. KILLIAN, Inc. lic money as the other one and a half percent.goes into the purchase of a surety bond to protect the deposit. _ body at the concluding session of the March meeting that more time would made by ‘ran â€" d.â€"of Laka ‘ HERE’Sthe finestGeneral ElectricRefrigerator ever builtâ€"newly refined and improvedâ€" the lowoest nrick in C anarnl Kl=zsaeia Krk,l.__ the lowest price in General Electric history. Matchless in efficiencyâ€"the Monitor Top mechanâ€" ical unit is sealed in steelâ€"runs quietly through the years, without oiling or attention. Three zones of cold, plus an accessible fastâ€"freezing control, meet every refrigerator need. Roomy, allâ€"steel cabinets provide greater shelfâ€"spaceâ€"have no New Low Prices New Features x: unmnnolq. LLEKCTRIC WitzA coonaas Phoné 3800 nankers have urged the finance committee to rescind its decision forc: ‘to protect the deposits with governâ€" ment bonds.â€"â€" 5ce â€"~**Some â€"banksâ€"willâ€"have good govâ€" ernment bonds and others will come can‘t take a chance on having quesâ€" tionable surey to protect its money," Supervisor John D. Thomas, of Zion, declared. Bankers s ie y« na~ m-gâ€".”_"d 27 s on Anstgntmnctenins 4 wC

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