Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 30 Oct 1924, p. 3

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ms and on &m:m;n Pnd o ofi he Elbownby s 6 lessons is Ned §; , the fixturis in t mlpbt ‘lof the lab 4 ol ihe nlatiee in . t proper Nighting. and 'flnalut and : most &. Hé } how his C have & ,‘h has {8 1924 / THURSDA Y North Shore Radio Shop Telephorle 1805 | on demo Baggage; EXPERT REBUILDING AND REPAIRING . . Mfi gag 526 Lin Time For Fall Planting Is Approaching By plafl{?::fl;lrder ina planting early you are t( % a better assortment s'roL mfiu% u*&zfr mnuJB%n TELEPHONE AND LET eB rlégshtre NurScries _ & : i " ty «is at* Avenue, Highwood. Come to the nursey and seq growing stock before you buy. e n '; shyubs and ,ommenfll shrubs and trees and test &n ns for this ate. x SON Spea Remi A l\ w a y GUST N ka&imwz SupefI-Hetrédyne fbiuét%hl-Freek’-Eisémann and Radiola \|Receivers â€" Nt N BE LUSIYVE RADIO SHOP ON tion every everniing. Come in and hear it to announce that I have moved to IGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS ORRLEN TRANSFER Is, Packed and Shipped, Hauling, Express , Freight Moving to all Points |_~ Padded Vans _ _ _ 4 oval Notice d Park and Highwood wood, II1. | _ Phone Highland Park 523 THE R:I)Io SsHOP Telephone Number is 265 MUZT(, JR. Expressing, Moving Y & WA’T}H REPMG & a t YX ur’SfierviJe 84 Central| Avenue 0 Auth'orih%l | BALKITE DE FOREST TUNGAR (IN THE Deale hneider Telephone H. P. 1509 THE NORTH SHORE Battery Chargers nm@ PROVE VALUE | F ELECTRIC ROADS Extended tests of all forms of loâ€" E: trgntportation in \ gecent . years ve p that the eléctric railways ust be depended upon to handle ass transportation in cities, Britton I. Budd, president of the American Electrig Railway Association, deâ€" clared én speaking before the annual convention at Atlantic City. BRITFON I. BUDD DECLARES President Electric Railway Asâ€" soc#tion Urges Economic _ Necessity of Service . f / That Is Stable â€" . Alth«‘f'nxh asserting that the bus could not supplant the electric railâ€" way, l&’ Budd declared that it ghould and was being used as an auxiliary to electric car service. {f & "I have the utmost faith in the fuâ€" ture of the electric r:ilny:," ‘Mr. Budd declared: "No form of city trans tion ‘has been devised f:nt can e their place. | | © f | . Others Auxlliary . ‘It ‘been conclugively dnxon. stra that : other forms, . including motor busses, can bert:unud upon only u} auxiliaries. Electric railways must c?ntinuo to be developed for the fullest service and not to recognize this by any city would be suicidal to the buginess prosperity and the conâ€" venien(#e of the people and would soon reflect itself in depreciated property values and general community demorâ€" aliutic*n. yB 4. j "Increasing street congestion in evâ€" ery city has proven that mass transâ€" pomti'pu can only be handled over fixed routesâ€"over rails, Experience has proven that only by this method can r:nhr schedules be maintained winter|and summer. It has been provâ€" en thi\i it is the safest form of transâ€" portation, not only to riders, but to the pedestrians and others who make use of the streets. Itihas been shown that the electric railways can handle use of \the that the e great | convenient transports and et1 great ies of people with greater convenience than ‘any other form of transportation, and that the speed and safety factors can be largely inâ€" cre where there is proper coâ€"opâ€" eration between city officials and the railways. & Financial Responsibility j "It has been shown that the finanâ€" cial reésponsibility, necessary in the protection of a city and its people‘s inte , can be found only in a transportation agency that has a fixed inv nt in the community.. The public | appreciation of: the situation, as ined, is shown in the large inâ€" crease in car riders, this inspite of the phenomenal increase in the number of pleasure ‘automobiles and motor busses in the last few years." COLLEGE GRADUATE IN BUSINESS LIFE But Must Start At Bottom; His Progress, However, Likely f To Be Faster, Report ; ] Declares |â€" A â€" questionnaire ~among leading Ameri¢an business men has convinced L. B. .%inpkim, personnel director at Northwestern univeg;ty. he _ told dele; to the Enland Association of Master printers recently in an adâ€" dress at the Edgewater Beach ‘hotel, that at present there is little thought being given to the college ‘graduate who H’,Aentering business for the first time. | M :4 j PREPARATION IS© BETTER _ Mr. Hopkins sent out eight careâ€" fully worded questions to heads of large companies with which he had had personal contact, requesting inâ€" formation as to what these comâ€" panies could offer to college graduâ€" ates as to possibilities of advanceâ€" ment, salaries, and as to just what field of endeavor successivesteps: of ‘promotion would lead,. j | : Bome Are Shocked . _ "Some ‘of these business men were honestly shocked that any one would raise the question u;&o what appeal their businesss might make to college men," said Mr. Hopkins, "and pointâ€" ed out that that very attitude was what ailed most cofiigi men; that their only concern was whether out of a hundred or so, q‘;pliantlwthere might be one or two who might apâ€" peal to them. In faimess, however, THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS 4 are possessed of very special abilitics HUSKING TOURNEY ‘ to 1 £s and goie seem o possess. no *bflltvl (a .8OON TO BE HELD College Man Has Something \ "However, colléege men are .like‘in! that they have spent their time in college while other men.of their own age have been learning the ropes in the business world. Any plan of selecâ€" tion and placement that starts the college graduate anywhere except at the bottom is wrong because it denies him the opportunity to learn, which he needs and to which he is entitled. But because he has other things, it is equally wrong to keep him at the bottom after he has fulfilled the purâ€" pose for which he was placed there, _ "Here he shall be placed at and where he shall go from there can only be determined on the basis of a knowledge of the relationship of jobs such as should be brought out in a analysis of jobs." . ; LE Illinois(lr“Good Roads" Governor ELECTION NOVEMBER 4, 1924 _ THE M CENTR A L Gross Point Road a Chicago Off At the Northern bov PARK. Its founders upon which to establi those who have gone chapel, beautiful lined walks and ! trees, it is unequalled All lots are sold wi the largest perpetual absolutely guaranteed The Be Highland N SMALL CEMETERY CO. OF ILLINOQOIS dary of Chicago there is located a besutiful MEMORIAL could not have secured a more suitable expanse of ground, a cemétery that will for all times be a beautiful home for before. With the comfortable office building, the magnificent park, located on the highest part of Cook County, its flower its quiet dignity and beauty. i | t3 ) Perpetual Care. Connected with Memorial Park is one of care funds on deposit with a strong Trust Company of Chitago ment which keeps the funds inviolable. Full perpetual care is _ NON SECTARIAN h â€"lsa ::'mm-o-m..nvmu.,m. ‘Tel. Evanston 4266 ce, 701â€"4 Marquette Building. Tel. Central 8330 _ [EMORIA L PA RK rutiful North Shore Cemetery M. J. BUCKLEY, Local Representative ; '11.1'? Qh-!;l.pi,m ‘corn husker ofhglik- nois is to be chosen at a state € gadwm-rfimmt to be held near Springâ€" leld, November 14. The contest will baheldunderthanupieqqgfi.m bureau and an agricultural magazine and the winner will represent Illinois is a national contest at NMas Manine«: 1§ a national contest at Dées Moines. "‘Ten of the state‘s best em'm: ers, selected from legally attested records, will compete in the meet. Each will be given a wagon and turned into a field of corn on the farm of F.>I. Taylor, The field ecovers 52 acres and will average about 60| bushels to the acre. Time Champion Corn Husker of State ‘Will Be Chosen in Conâ€" a test November 14 Telephone 1587 i7 l afy" 24e > chicken dinner will be do e io. [k and horseshoes will be TB will be called : clared winner. Arguments on ¢laims of ve! roads operating in lIllincis}for @ fund of $250,000 in fees old public utilities cor be heard at this session of I If Thomas Carlyle had "Herpes and Heroworship!" ‘in | ‘ days, he would have had several baseball and Not merely are the : waate mobiles making trouble, \m * S * V renmmee aicogn CR id it T 4 W AT wagor PAGE TH N ip m & e d Is

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