Winnetka Local History Digital Collections

Winnetka Weekly Talk, 9 Jan 1926, p. 25

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24 WINNETKA TALK January 9, 1926 $8 § ¥ 3 Soldiers' Memorial, Oak Park Granite Cut and Erected by J. H. ANDERSON MONUMENT CO. We make the Better Class Memorials 5751 Ravenswood Avenue Write for Catalogue Court Rules Out False Covers for Phone Books An injunction restraining Milton E. Lowitz from soliciting, procuring or contracting for advertisements either directly or indirectly, designed to be printed on false backs or covers in any manner to be attached to the telephone directories of the Illinois Bell Tele- phone company, has been issued by Judge Dennis E. Sullivan in the Supe- rior court of Cook County. The injunction also commands the defendant to desist from distributing on false backs or covers or any other Sanitary Value ber and October?" The Only Cleaning Plant in New Trier ¢ Washington Avenue "Why is it that statistics show as high as 500 cases of some children's diseases during the months of March and April to one during Septem- Of course, like everything else, these conditions are blamed on the weather. But is the weather the cause? See what Mr. Krauss has to say next week. Phones Wilmette 3400 CLEANING @ & DYEING devise which will in any way cover or obscure any information printed on or in the directories of the Telephone company. The ruling applies specifi- cally to the village of Wilmette, Win- netka and Glencoe. The injunction was issued December 24, 1925. The injunction it was explained, was issued on the basis that, since the tele« phone directories are the property of the Illinois Bell Telephone company, just as are all its telephone instruments and other equipment installed by the company, the company has the right to retain its directories as issued and distributed by it. of Dry Cleaning Greenleaf 700 Wilmette, Illinois The Telephone's Inheritance N its material equipment the telephone was born poor. The art of telephony inherited little from older branches of the art of communications that could help its technical progress toward its destiny of usefulness. There was a spiritual heritage, however, for the telephone worker was heir to the tradition that had grown with the years among those who undertook to transmit or trans- port the words of men. The message must go through! Greek runner, Roman courier, King's messenger, and Pony Ex- press rider, sped to their distant goals self-urged by a conscious- ness that human need was being served. At the switchboard or telegraph key, in the mail car or airplane, the manifestation of this urge is ever present. Telephone service by its very nature inherits this Spirit of Communication. For the men and women who comprise the organization that is to-day re- sponsible for the delivery of 50,- 000,000 messages a day, it is the endowment with which their service began. ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY BELL SYSTEM & One Policy - One System . Universal Service 5 Oil Company Erects Large Storage Plant on North Shore Site One of the oldest and largest dis- tributors of all grades of fuel oil for domestic and industrial purposes in the Middle West, The Lynch- Clarisey company of Chicago, have ac- quired a site of practically 21% acres close to the intersection of Main street and the McCormick boulevard in Ev- anston. The location of this new oil storage plant should be of particular interest to all residence owners on the north shore and on the north side of Chicago, it is felt. This is the only fully equip- ped plant located on the north shore to supply the greatly increased de- mand for heating oils. On this site, they have erected a bulk storage station to accommodate a quarter million gallons of all grades of burning oils such as are used by residences, apartment buildings, hotels and industries in the north shore. This plant is equipped with steel storage tanks buried underground, an office building, garage, boiler hous: and a switch track to accommodate i2 cars. Oil is received here in tank cars from the oil fields and unloaded into the Lynch-Clarisey company's tanks where it is heated, strained and filtered in the storage tanks and pumped into tank trucks by electric motor driven pumps through a very ingenius system of loading racks located under the roof of the garage where the big trucks are parked to receive their load. The company's Main office and plant are located at 3211 S. Wood street. Chicago, where they have been es tablished in the oil business for over 22 years. BEGIN EVENTS TALKS The First of the course of lectures on current events by R. E. Pattison Kline given under the direction of the education department of the Neigh- bors, the Kenilworth Woman's club, takes places Tuesday morning, Jan- vary 12, at 10:15 o'clock. The lectures will be given alternate Tuesday morn- ings throughout January, February, and March. Applications for the course may be made with Mrs. Charles H. Bent, 112 Woodland avenue, Winnetka. Miss Christine Heinig, daughter of Mrs. Frank Heinig, of 782 Center street, has returned from a 10 day trip to Minneapolis where she was the guest of a college friend over the holi- day season. ---- Sam Karnopp, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Karnopp of 455 Linden avenue, left last week for California for an in- definite stay with friends. Do you know that you can own a HART OIL BURNER as low as $50.00 down and about $25.00 per month? HART OIL BURNER CO. 1514 Sherman Ave. EVANSTON Greenleaf 1752 742 Elm St. WINNETKA Winn. 1146 FR 4

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