Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 24 Mar 1927, p. 18

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26 North First Street Phone Highland Park 1531 * Â¥.â€"â€" _4 _ (@â€" Arnold Peterson Crockery Department S P E C I A L S _ Light weight, clear crystal, special polish finish, fluted optic pattern lgc 6 glasses for American Ivory Semiâ€"Porcelain, Octagon shape Oups and Saucers, durable and very classy, 6 cups and saucers, SI 12 pieces 100 piece fine quality American decorated Semiâ€"Porcelain Dinner Set, regular $24 set $12o95 22â€"piece Semiâ€"Porcelain American Dinner Sei. Regular $8 scet. 69 at & Japanrese Ovide shape, decorated fine china cups and saucers, 6 cups and saucers, s1 12 pieces for nz Cups and Saucers Water Glasses Dinner Sets You‘ll be proud of your 0 -A-mâ€"_ Am ' home after we have made w maullite U' s' it plumbingâ€"perfect. You‘l be glad to have guests arâ€". PROTECTION: NECESSARY ‘_ rive. You can pay for the =â€"â€" in the home is a great satisfaction, and a source of safety. And one of the chief paints to watch carefully is the basin, in each room where one happens to be. A stoppage means overflow, with consequent damage to be sustained.. Guard against overâ€" flows. Let us overhaul your plumbâ€" ing and provide against them. Modern Plumbing and Heating Eâ€"timates Cheerfully Given | Jobbing a Specialty wITTEN BUILDING 360 CENTRAL AVENUE Telephones â€" Shop H. P. 1404 Res. H. P. 439â€"1342 terms if you desire. PLUMBING _ AND HEATING Tel. H. P. 561 Peterson Plumbers Plumb Good Plumbing 385 Roger Williams Ave. Moran Brothers PERFECT PLUMBING o 1‘ Ts Thner s R. F. Pack, President of the Naâ€" tional Electric Light Association, emâ€" phasized the fact that in order to bring about rural electrification on any appreciable scale, bothâ€"the power companies and the farmer will have to look on the farm as a factory, and ‘hpply electricity in a multiplicity of ways to increase output and cut labor costs the same as it has been done in the city factories, says the Manufatâ€" turer. He pointed out that it is an econâ€" omic impossibility to deliver sma‘l amounts of electric energy to scatâ€" tered farms at a reasonable price, and that failure of most rural lines in the past has been due to farmers There is much that is true in what Mr. Fyffe has to say. But he errs when he calls this a new doctrine. It is not new because it has been the doctrine on which the American proâ€" tective principle has grown up. Amâ€" erican protectionists have always believed â€"in high wages and they have known that high wages to Amâ€" erican workers could only be perpetâ€" uated by keeping the great home marâ€" ket for American goods. They have always maintained that protection aids prosperity by increasing the purchasing power of the worker and so enlarging the great home market which is, after all, the greatest marâ€" ket in the world, absorbing as it does cightyâ€"five per cent of all of Ameriâ€" ca‘s manufactured products. p P't::clio- Is Reason It has n the protective tariff which, by giving a job at high wages to the American worker has brought about the prosperity which is so widely diffused among all classes_ In so doing it has for all time disproved the free trade claim that under proâ€" tection "the rich grow richer and the poor, poorer." R ~ Mr. Fyffe wisely states that so long | 2s our high wage system is maintainâ€" | ed our prosperity will "pull through" | ~nd he declares that this high wage| system must be maintained at all! costs if we are to remain permanâ€"| ertly prosperous. With this every| good American will agree. And the‘ best way to maintain our high wage | scale is to protect the home market and not subject it to the competition of lowly paid European and Asiatic workers. Some time ago Hamilton Fyffe had an interesting article in the London Spectator in which he related some of his experiences studying American business conditions and asked the question: _ "Can America prosperity last?" Among other things Mr. Fyffe declared, speaking of us, that "no country with a vast population has ever shown prosperity, or let us call it purchasing power, widely diffused among all classes, in any degree comâ€" parable; no vast population has ever been able to spend money on anything like the same scale." High Wages ° Mr. Fyffe also marvels at the high wages paid our working people and declares this is done without grumâ€" bling because "the connectiqn between spending power and prosperity has been firmly fixed in the American mind." He tells how Henry Ford anâ€" nounced how "he was paying high wages in order to increase the spendâ€" ing power of the nation and to stimuâ€" iste production by enlarging demand for products." ELECTRIFYING FARMS ~NEEDS COâ€"ORERATION Both Power Companies and English Writer In Discuss Conditions, If Present Plan Maintained Farm as a Factory THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PAREK, ILLINOIS ' County, at xtggn;;hereof to be holden at the Court House in Waukegan, in }said County, on the first Monday of f.lune next, 1927, when and where all persons having claims against said | estate are notified and requested to { present the same to said Court for | adjudication. "It is up to agricuitural colleges, manufacturers , of both _ electrical equipment and farm implements, and last, but most important of all, the limiting use of electricity to lighting. on the farm. "Nineâ€"tenths of the cost of bringâ€" ing electricity to the farm is in disâ€" tribution, and farmers should not be fooled by those who ta‘k about deâ€" veloping water power as an aid to bringing electricity to the farm. If electricity could be produced for nothing it would have little effect on the cost of service to the farmer, for the costs of distribution greatly outâ€" weigh those incurred ‘by generation of electric energy." J ~â€"â€"_£ PUBLIC NOTJCE is hereby given that the Subscriber Executrix of the estate of Mary E. Brand, deceased, will attend the Probate Court of Lake with the power" companies in bringâ€" ing about rural electrification," he LUCILLE STEERS RUSSELL Waukegan, IIL, March"7, 1927.. 24 BRIDGE CLUBS AND PRIVATE PARTIES MAY HAVE SCORE PADS FREE BY TELEPHONING H. P. 178 OR CALLING AT THE RELIABLE LAUNDRY. ady The women can copy men‘s clothes and wear their hair cut the mascuâ€" line way, but they‘re g;nngâ€" }n:-l;p against it if whiskers ever come back into style. s % Now that there is a government radio commission we are expecting a visit pretty soon from a couple of federal static inspectors. The expert puzzle solvers of the United States are having a convenâ€" tion in New Jersey.» We would like to see them tackle the present Chiâ€" nese political situation. ‘ YELLOW CAB RATES PHONE HIGHLAND PARK 2000 First twoâ€"thirds mile 35¢ Each additional 1â€"3 mile 10¢ No charge for extra passengers. C. & N.W.Terminal Restaurants This new Eitel feature is of particular importance to C. & N.W. Ry. commuters as it makes every minute count in Chicago â€" gives each member of the family more time to skiop or catch Now Offers You a ADJUDICATION NOTICE CHARGE ACCOUNT EVERYBODY READS THE WANTâ€"AD PAGE *I have tried other plant foods in mak lawos." writes Mr. Floyd R. Murray, of _ 'l-:-bncqufl'm'nhV-- oro for lawas, flowers, gardens, shrubâ€" bery and trees. Clean, odorJass, easy to apply, it is not to be compared with any other plant food you have ever known. Its cost is HATTSTROM & SANDERS A Swift & Company product T02 CHURCH STREET, EVANSTON . Phone University 1848 Opposite Orrington Hotel better : lawns â€" DISPENSERS OF QUALITY â€" "No other plant food has given the suits shown by Vigoro. "Grass was up anthin mine days after VIGORO Your Vote Will Be Appreciated Resident of North Highland Park for 25 Years Scientific and Manufacturing Opticians T . W . B A R TL ETT for Justice of the Peace patronage. for the eyes. to every person who enters our store. To enjoy through honest dealing and fair giving our patients the advantage of ELECTION TUESDAY, APRIL 5 â€"the implhcit â€" con OUR CREED the finest of known quality optical Y O TE F 0o R fit the eyes of our patients with t in the science of caring Compare these prices with the price of the same high grade seed from other places. 610 Central Ave. â€" Highland Park, ML We offer the choicest Lawn Grass Seed at 35¢ per Ib. Lawn Grass Seed for shady places at 45e Ever Green Lawn Seed 22¢ Evans Feed Co. POULTRY SUPPLIES AND STOCK FEEDS Phone Highland Park 124 THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1987 BABY CHICKS? Of Course! Order Them Now!

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