Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 2 Dec 1926, p. 24

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# 14 #4 xi i y Furnished by . Farm | rL Foods furnished by the f:i\.we C valued at a fair price, some that beâ€" ~tween what would have been received had they been sold and what would have been paid hay they been pur: chased locally. On this bagis it was found that 40 per cent of the average valueâ€"of all the farm family‘s living was represented by food, oneâ€"third o{ which was purchased. The total cos of food per man per year prpried i the different states. It lvemfl $14 per adultâ€"male unit in the | states studied. +This means the cost of the food consumed by the average ) 4 ately active man. The proportions spent for the various food aré: 28 per cent for meat, Es, an cheese; 19 per cent for milk a cream; 12 per cent for fatty foods 19 per cent for fruitsâ€" and vege bles ; 10 per cent for cereals; and 12 pe cent for other foods. The BLUE GOOSE FRUIT SHOP Kentucky and lfuumm f consumption of pork, bacon, , lasses, and corn mealâ€"foods wh ] usually play an:important part in j southern diet. Beef, potatoés, dri’:| fruits, beans,; and peas ere used i j larger quantities on ;ho"urm- : Kansas and Ohio. Milk, x B, |. and poultry were consumed i larger . quantities in Missouri and, Kansas. Ohio and Missouri led in the tion of purchased bread, but w bread is expressed as equivalent flour, ‘the wheat eomnmpmin the four states was similar. . Fresh vegeâ€" t tables and fruits were in |â€" larger quanties in Missouri a Ot;£ than in Kansas and Kentucky, On t whole, the diet of the tunhmm? studied was nourishing and abundant. The chief lack was in the proportion £ of fruits and vegetables to ot;?:er im | * portant foods. + $ |an Various â€" interesting â€" conclus have been drawn from a recent y of food consumption by farm famili¢s, made by the Bureau: of H nomics of the United Sta * ment of Agrigulture. This Ihldy v; part of a standard of living study 1 which figuresâ€"were collected from *,- 331 farm families in four statesâ€" Kansas, Ohio, Missouri, Q?d Kenâ€" tucky. } INTERESTING CONCLUSION Report of Bureau of Home Ecoâ€" nomics Studies What Is . Eaten on Farms and â€" Gives Figures | | SURVEY SHOWS WHAT â€"FOOD USED ON FARM PAGE SIX 516 Central Avenue THIS Parsley We also | HIcH quaLty | rancy Â¥rLtLbow BANAXNA®g 0 0 | | 8 ON FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES OF ALL KINDS. WE HAVE R VED A TRUCK LOAD OF SWEET FLORIDA ORANGES, thin skin and full of juice. SPECIAL THIS BIG SALE Fremmmememmemmnmmemmeneremcemenmsmme | I SWEET CALIFORNIA RED GRAPES weichs from 6 to ner A TRUCI\’LUADhrLORII*A GRAPEFRUIT, LARGE SIZE, THIN SKIN GUARANTEED 94 f SPECIAL FOR THIS PS:LE *Jt l 9409c " > si=$1.15 FRESH ROASTED PRAI\?FTS per newnd .:1...._.: _ cu20k 08â€" â€". XNEW CROP BULK DATES per pound NPW CROP CHESTNUTS each SWEET TANGERINES per dozen ALLIGATOR PEARSâ€"green. or purple Eat for health. Each: )i 0. ) . _> _." FRESH LARGE PINEAPPLES CALIFORNIA SWEET ORANGES, per dozen : LARGE CALIFORNIA S8SEEDLESS ORANGES, sweet and juicy, per dozen GREENING APPLES Per bushel FANCY JONATHAN *PPLERS [3 .=lâ€"_ on =" S I8 THE PLACE TO BUY n# Roops For LEsSs. onEy "3 t THIS LARCE FRUGIT: sffop Kentucky and Missouri For FRIDAY and SATURDAY nound o bave Brussel 8p "1. I y, Cabbage, Hot House ‘ Beans. Artichokes, Oyster Plants, Michigan Celery, Fre . Red Radishes, W:&fi (Horee Radish Roots, b, Fresh Cocoanuts a d Avocgados and many other items BIG SAI 7 lhe. Per laren hasket S Two Doors West of the Post Office THE l’ffiR T FRUIT SHCPS OX THE A ob largest 35¢ 3 4 $1 PC Dds :Jrry. Cabbage, Hot House Toma’tocn.f-l?re-h‘ Gre Olu‘cnmbera.. Fresh lants, Michigan Celery, French Endives, Celery White Parsnips, mnme Radish Roots, Egg Plants, Hubbard Squath, Pop Corn on ts WB ‘ove on e i Gag § Ned o 20 i Vn U â€" The results in New York indicate that the people of the metropolis were more worried about their synthetic liquor than about their milk. / the rare art "chalcography" unâ€" der its wirg, acording to press disâ€" patche This is doubtless much uf::w@’;"‘e than monkeying with geograâ€" Oliver Lindenmeyer, who has playâ€" ed three years with Deerfleld, has held both line and backfield positions. Elâ€" mer Bubtb(has played well at both }gmrd and tackle positions for two years. m i + ' Evanston has three men on‘ the team, Bloom and Thornton two apiece, ‘ Morton and Waukegan each one. Schools on wheels are utilized in sparsely settled sections along the railroad lines of northern Ontario to enable the department of education to comply with the compulsory school law of the province. The cars have been fitted as schoolrooms and will be attached to regular trains. School children will be taken on at different stops and brought back on the reâ€" turn trip, instruction beifz adapted to the train schedule. SCHOOLS ON TRAINS : IN RURAL DISTRICTS Allâ€"Suburban Team _ ; > . Lanning (Bloom) left end. _ Bubb (Deerfield) left tackle. _ Overton :(Thornton) left guard. Downey, captain (Evanston) center. Patterson (Bloom) right guard. Lindenmeyer (Deerfield) rig ht tackle, Eces st: Egbert (Evanston) right end. ; Holland (Evanston) quarter. â€" Kadles (Morton) left half. 1 â€"Minx (Thornton) right half. Jokinen (Waukegan) full back. Two. Deerfield men, Oliver Lindenâ€" m&yer. and Elmer Bubb, are piéked by Mr. Pertz of the high school faculty for the allâ€"suburban team, of which Downey of Evanston is captain, / Mr. Ports was asked to pick the allâ€" suburban team‘ by the Chicago Daily News,. : 3 Lindenmeyer and Bubb Selected byâ€"Mr. Pertz for Daily News Report TWO DEERFIELD MEN ON ALLâ€"SUBURBAN proportion of purchased food was in Ohio, 39 per cent. In Kansas it was 86 per cent, in Kentucky 29, and in Missouri 27 per cent. Food furnished by the farm thus amounted to 60 or 65 per cent of all food consumed. 6 * 25¢ 4 25¢ Ibs. for $1.45 League of Nations has taken 29¢ 60c 20c 20¢ 25¢ 25¢ 35¢ 75¢ 49¢ "_.. 3mM""*$1.00 | |LOW PRICES FRESH MUSHROOMSâ€"for ffi{ny and Sa'urdav. Per nound box ..|. .. CARROTS, RUTABAGAS SwWERT . t POTATOES YELLOW «DRY ONIONS FRESH YOUNG CARROTS per large bunch _..........;.. FRESH GREEN ONIONS :..;.._: Y% FRESH GREEN KALE: *.: 4 ICEBERG F‘l’lEl:A'D .dltETrUCE' J * 256 . "ant ..‘ 2 each FRESH GREEN SPINACH per Mk WPhorinid ie reletin Li e reiy ce SNOWâ€"BALL CAULIFLOW] Large and White JERSEY SWEET POTATAFS : __.._ EARLY OHIO Po'mrons’Li Good Cookers and Good Kee, 8 Fer ‘such i........ 2s 5llciia ut id BEST WHITE COOKING POTATOES 49c °5. _ _ _ $4.85 ENDIVE 3 Large HFE for| | NORTH SHORE FOLLOW THE CROWTDS To Among the supporters of this measâ€" ure in Glencoe are Mrs, Clarence C. Troup, Mrs| George C. Burge, Mrs. Frank: MeK n, Mrs.: George W. T!fln . Fred Patton, Mrs. Otto R. reft, Mrs. Louis Mowry, Mrs. H man, Mrs. Charles i‘uh‘ce' tfls‘q ‘inthrop Girling.: Enthugiagtic support is being given a movement: to establish a Glencoe chapter of the Daughters of American Revoluti n.fifl those who are interâ€" ested attended the initial meeting on Monday |afternoon, November 29, at 2 o‘clock T:t the home of Mrs, Clarâ€" ence â€"C, up, ~260~ Lincoln drive, Gleneoe. Â¥n. Frank Bowman of Sterling, Ill., the state ‘regent, was invited . ?o f‘” present as guest; of honor. â€"| > n § :4 arEnxn. First N States i ty, Iilin Fiftyâ€" Leader c lems con that tim Forty making ‘ tory ‘to ‘ ment pri Illinoi systems 14 lirglj tained An ing pla fuel a 25,000, Yilino ory in ‘35,001 A tul ley, Ill height . a point roots, _ Illinois At Electri in were c liantly Iilinois is one of only four,r} states in the Union having no gasoline tax. Seventyâ€"five per cent of the imaâ€" chinery| used in the entire fruif and vegetable | canning ‘industry in : the United | States is manufactured in Hoopes Iilinois. _ iL. At t rxmt meeting of the National Electrid Light Asociation at Chicago in Igin, Dixon. and Rockford were c as having the most brilâ€" liantly Jighted street3 in the country. A tulip J‘r.eo growing in Wabash Valâ€" ley, Illinois, measures 190 feet in height nci has a girth of 28 feet at a point!3 feet above the swell of the INTERESTING FACTS ____ ~ ‘~ABOUT THIS STATE AND FULL OF JUICE. a° yEDLoW is "l.1. 6 25¢ Large Bunches THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS | 25¢ * 30¢ UY THEM BY THE OZEN AND SAVE _/‘ MONEY . even years ago the Elg’in mented on the traffic probâ€" ;:nting the street railway of peony king"., of the United ih‘ao Gould of Iroquois counâ€" 8. f i# rfll have the largest armâ€" the United States when the armory of the University of 's£nally «completed. . _: linois telephone manufacturâ€" t consumes :enough gas to itg of 75,000 inhabitantsâ€" gubic feet monthly.. Highland Park, 1 s ‘has one of the greatest park in the world, consisting of and 197 small parks mainâ€" |§hielbo. i s h seven cities in Illinois are industrial surveys preparaâ€" a new constructive developâ€" eeting‘to Discuss Moveâ€" ‘nt Held Monday of \This Week OE PLANNING | . BRANCH OF D. A. R. |~I it 25¢ for 25¢ 3 * 25¢ 2 25¢ $4.55 49¢ 25¢ 10¢ 39¢ k % Ko.i â€"â€" Phones 2101 or 1248 x/ . : 6 (%&ts Pab. BE 25 C 5 P t the deus ex. machina of the plot, the opounder of the problem, the supâ€" ier of the clews, and the eventual Olver of the mystery. .. _ A How It Operates "The life of the book takes place in him, yet the life of the narrative its being outside of him. In a 1 ser sense, he is the Greek chorus of the drama. All good detective novâ€" It is not the plot so much as the of the detective himself that ts Willard Huntington Wright, in Wwil un n November Scribner‘s flngng:?e "In the centrAl character of the deâ€" ive novelâ€"the detective himselfâ€" e have, perhaps, the most important original element of the criminalâ€" groblem story," he says. "It is difiâ€" It to describé Kis exact literary tus, for he ‘has no counterpart in y other fictional genre. He is, at e and the same_time, the outstandâ€" ing personality of the story (though ‘is concerned in it only in an exâ€" rte capacity), the projection of the thor, the embodiment of the reader, VIC.J. KILLIAN, LOT IS HELD SECONDARY HARACTER MAKES * DETECTIVE NOVEL 390 Central Avenue riter .In Scribner‘s Magazine Discusses This Type of Fiction and Points Features ' PRACTICAL GIFTS . Birch Mahogany Seat ............;......... 23.50 Church Allâ€"White seat and cover ... ... . ... ... .. 1250 Church Nickel Plated hinge seat and cover. . . ... 9.50 Allâ€"White Seat and cover with allâ€"white hinges.: 9.50 Detroit Jewel Gas Stove, all enamel, 18 inch oven 100.00 Hoffman No. 40 Gas Heater .;:...2...}.}â€""*"!. 150.00 Bathroom Accessories, Easy Set Fixtures * Crane Premier Keystone Heater ... . _ ~x«A4%t* VELBbO Steel Medicine Cabinets :...;.....!.. .. <~AXkc t taO0 Zerozone Electric Refrigerators |_ -' A Graybar Washing Machine ... ... . .. ;. .. ... :. 99.50 Graybar Electric Ironer d sn dn n e icr e s aae . ... ABâ€"O0 MurphyWallSafe'.......;..'..........\........ 25.00 Aetria Onf Burmer : «. ..00.. so.liaee. . . _ 540.00 2â€"Valve Shower with curtain rod. etc..:..:.::..;; 18.00 Mixing Valve Shower with curtain, rod, ete. .. ... 37.50 ToideySeatfortheBaby....-.........._ Es A omm 20x24 Enamel Iron Lavatory with Chicago faucets 40.00 20x24"VitreousChinaLavatory sntierayscys.s 500 Washdown Closet Combination with Chicago Faucet with soap dish and spray Chicago Faucet with soap dish . .. ... .. .. Bathroom Stool Kitchen Stoof ...:[;.}!;... 3. 2t | Kitchéen Katchâ€"All NEA S cyrfon . in Q%XSO inch Double drain sink, with legs Why not give practical gifts, within the family circle% We have a display where you may select the g‘lfts{ When making up your Christmas list jot down a memâ€" orandum to come in and see our display. Below is a list of practical items: _ _ $ For The Family . *"The more successful detective storâ€" jes have invariably given us such perâ€" sonalities as C. Auguste: Dupin, Monâ€" ‘gieur Lecog, Sherlock Holmes, Dr. Thorndyke, Rouletabille, Dr. Bentiron, Furncaux, Father Brown, Uncle Abâ€" ner, Richard Hannay, Arsgene Lupin, Dr, Priestley, and Jefferson Hastings â€"-bonq:wtale_w that come readâ€" ily to mind. ~All the books in which these characters appear do not fall unquamm the true detectiveâ€" story ; but in éach tale there are sufficient elements to permit broadly of the detective classification. Used Generically "Furthermore, (t he se, (Edipuses themselves are not, in every instance, authentis sleuths: some are doctors of medicine, some professors of asâ€" tronomy,. some soldiers, and some teâ€" formed crooks. But their vocations do not matter, for in this style of book the â€" designation ‘detective‘ is used «generically." ‘have had for their protagonist a M of attractiveness and interâ€" est, of high and fascinating attainâ€" ‘mentsâ€" a man at once human and unusual, colorful and gifted. The butâ€" foon, the bungler, the prig, the autoâ€" mationâ€"all such have failed. And sometimes in an egdavor to be origâ€" inal an otherwise" competent writer, misjudging the psychology ofâ€"the sitâ€" vation, has presented us with a blind detective or a lady investigator, only to wonder, later on, why these innoâ€" vations failed. 4 Successful Authors AICabCE. :: 15 05llcl cssn‘ s PLEBQ | erators 5 -' - Highland Park, III Between 1919 and 1925, wWiie t use of fuel increased 15 pé# cent, t power output swelled B0 pbt cen ‘h tdralâ€"s sourcesâ€"was actually mo than t quantity consumed. | | ||â€"| / Mrs. Victor El ‘of ‘"the L Shore ~Drive hotel : Hollis, of Chicago, also a fokmer » dent of Winnetka, : jured ‘in an autom: ‘acdifient, â€" week on Lake Shore IE C They were taken to ‘.‘ I pital. â€" Mrs. Hollis | & rib and Mrs., Hollis‘ was Frattu mmmnmmsnmrenmntifessecs WINNETK A m;m*s INJURED IN A ELECTRICITY HUGE A% U1J Effici i 52 ' pmenthb 3 gel.' â€". sulted In Coal 1 v terâ€"connection, and ¢ op ators are some of the f. s ited with the saving. Improvement in the the generation of elect central station industry Uni States since 1919 has es 75,000,000 ‘tons of ‘coml, 4 figures compiled by the V Sta geological survey. 1 a i money, this saving ‘has| about oneâ€"third of a billlbn to the wealth of the hati THURSDAY, DECEMEB ...,99.59, .. 150.00 zs.oo,} . 540.00 | .. 18.00 | s 9TB0 | . $12.50 Inc. 2.45 Wit 1g *>« Stat lla PV n at MHH! ne ch Hi ne wi SC di M ti &A M il

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