Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 24 Mar 1927, p. 20

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WUVIEMIMIAY MrgN00Nmtfis c». ”Mm. Permanent Vivi} - 3 Min: Immune»! M MtJhir.uioemostdeUrmtoroqrr ttt Familmm.hveyw --- WWW”!!- Ehi'Aiitgeiiefr iiiedie' iieiile- BEAUTY TALKS low to in" bobhsd hair it no let "When history dawns mankind wt: living in cities. Historical event: canker on cities and their relics are It records. Cities ire the mum works of nun. Each epoch 9f civil- hltiun rises and falls, as. it ttowers, In in cities. . "Westero civilization ttteds wholly mm cities, and they are ts yet ally in prospect." 'ar modern civilzation is not able to organize such regions. then it too will pass, and without having ma.de what would seem to be its supreme ioestribrrtion d, the history of civil, ization. "The Utopian hopes of mnnkind “lave often most centered around cit- ies. from the New Jerusalem. and the Plutonjgullepnblic. to the most ad- unced projects of our own why. But seldom. if ever, have they been con- eeieed in regional terms. "Perhaps hodem eivihation makes it possible as never before to etree- tively organize such nppregates and "Our great cities have been dubbed metalopolitan. and dinosaur. and many erities within and without wres- tern civilization have seen wars and world-famine as possible results. The cautive rédistribution of modern mankind has often been discussed. Modern mankind has been said to be at the cross-roads. The decline of the wen seems impending. Regina] Basis l "Civilization is only possible in re- gional aggregations The new agri- culture and rural life of today is ”wearing with such, while elsewhere depopaution, decline, and decadence face it. The cities are planning on the regions] but. The best things in modern and American life today are coming to pass in those regions, ”all! of towns and cities, centering tina3trl on I metropolis. These are civilizaq tions which have learned by ens of ‘ experience. Modernism is still young: Our regions are scarcely mom than! suburbanized cities. l; "The modern city is on the hori- Ion," Prof. Bailey stated. "And mod- em western eivilixation needs, those - and newer cities. It can not survive,while it: supreme-means of Winn are only Mini-modernised citiSIV Our world is on urbanized one, u compared with the medieval and its leading couutries are exces- - so. Three-quorum of all the cities of over 1,000,000 are in Europe and America, Half of those over 100 Moitsthe-tdsreinEuzotre. In both northwest Europe and certain portions of New World countries, ov- er half the total population: in in regions little broader than the ten mile girders around the trmat eitier. Vital. ol Civiliulion "These regions are the Vitals of western civilization. Older countries of vast population. like India and China, show the some phenomena. It has always marked the development of all eivilsations, for pivilization im- plies aggregation. The trident euas- ital world, Ind perhaps the more an- cient Egyptian and Mesopotamian civilizations. probably ended in such colossal concentrations in the regions of great cities. But in India and China1 these regions are very much more extensive, and there is no cor- responding concentration in great cit- ies, with vast proportion being dis- persed in agricultural villages, and in a well-guarded and orderly svstem "There cu: be no doubt that the {mm of wave": civilization rests upon the etNetive nomination of it: out cities uni their regions," aid Dr. William L. Bailey, of North- wm univenity. in an address hat week in the university's "contempor- u'y mouth" course on "Cities and Civilization." role-or Says New 'ttIi-tr Are Vital; Applies Ann-eats to Conditions h, Western U. S. PROPERLY ORGANIZED ALSO. COUNT TEX "Whete's the notary?" cried the old gem. "Bill's dropped a safe bn my toe and I want to swear!" - I The willows m weeping tor JEST LIKE A WOMAN John B. Best; "Tske an in your arm and tell me, He danced the llhels on his how much you love me," the Fltf medicine chest! Lady in "te side-show requested air --- the Limitless Wonder. , MY PET OLE OLSON‘S PHILOS “his ban I gude yoke on me," said Olson. as be spilt In egg on his vest. Who shook I mean bale of hay, Though not a Hawaiian She was always trying, To out-wiggle our own Gilda Gray YE SNAKE DANCE There pps a young ftapper named “I’m En furor oi light which: and sun-as." insimaated the ritzy society Kill. . “Not me." sun her partner. "The “mes at gin aie dearth." “Down but not out," cried the con", vice as he lay on the ground inside! the prison walls. CERM9E. HOW COULD YOU? Mike: “That boxer is in the pink of condition." Tyke: "Yes, he makes me see red." MODERN m0 IANUII What is a garden? It is man's report of earth at her best. It is earth emancipated from the commonplace. It is man's love of loveliness carried to completion - man's craving for the ideal." A gardener is a master of what an Italian writer called the charming art of touching up the truth. Box 142, Highland Park Tel. H. P. 2575 The Formal Gzirden RIGHT. T00 mam CONVERSATION Couples desiring to my an no doubt get the knot tied for 86 or less. but the chances of Mn; divorced for that sum are not good. Ford mly Rave refused a billion dollars for his 1:111:11:ch my but we know a fellow who has a new pair of boy twins and W1 take a billion apiece tor them. A European philosopher declin- that Americans are deiieimt in real intelligence. but anyhow u know enough to keep out of Emma en- tanglements. l leUTIAL Hunk! Th unl- m it [um mil. AIME-51“” [Hi-(timing: Min-nu tiththethmtrr that twat-dau- AIN‘T " so: "Yep," said the campus philoso- pher, u he eyed at (map of Ms rfussirttr earh otUr don the hm; “life is just one darn thing new In tube}? _ _ You" rue-rest your all: sod have it too by baking Hm cakes. . . UW‘I’AKZP. Humor _ "nere's when we roll th- in...“ ettered the uadertuhrs us they pluc- ed the can: in the 1.30:1. "To Mabel", Inns-x Lamas." "Then whyn‘am (Lou. uh?" "Oh, her (In: rammed that t In er Show my Nee again in hm‘ ins SMUUTH BIRD "I have a 1.12 with the cop." aid the man, n he swapped emu; with the policeman. MY PET Lizzie's thin, I keep her lean By feeding her on kerosene'. “Wther with the "r""u'"a'arramor-rrtaatarramr.naoat" PEOPLE ARE THAT WAY FIXINDE BESS OPINES BLACK MIL musk, VIC. J. KILLIAN, INC. Phone Highland Pith 2101-1148 Cleaning & Dyeing Co. Kelvin D. threetUmt, me. an“! Ave. and See-l Bt. PM: Highland Put no Mm!!!- Plumbing and Heating mummo-p. The largo! dyeing phi! - Knit-n. Flint. AW Railroad Avenue. Hith'ood ' no Cent"! Avenue no“ Phone mm Park awn mil-hm ulnxm "-NthothPtmetrtg%q For Basins -- Seethe Want-ad Page D. SHERONY CHRYSLER Chicago & North Western Ry. Subulban Service them“ KRAUSS :5:5:.. %CW,%&¢W ._._......- Mh‘wm.“ JIL MP (lingo: lil, mutant. you “in; GGaiAiiGGiiG int Ui,., oxtondod to the“ of“. (mun-1. -tenagrtx to IN. out!“ Norm”; When! modicWP‘rhmkmrmt‘ono th'nt0y'roodoe-i"toext-atto-ri. 1 how .rf?ee..1toyy-et2te-ootorutiifsvitto-oe What-auburn Totrotoessf.mttriii.coor- mrtatuotrs_utorie3utr-rtt-ceirtr, mmmuo‘oommuudolmupmo "rPureodotr-temrorrtrf-trsomotor crowd- ed thorougthmr-dooeL' t "not. The trains that have been added under your management: with particular reference to the theatre train, have been a wonderful help and the courtesy of everybody connected with the road is such as to make us proud of the service at on? command. c. a N. w. may 26 W. Jersoo Blvd, Your ncknowudementof the proxy of I and! stockholder is sounusual aodkindtution_coen-e. A-ttness-s-uses-o-tmr-uses-n "eor_"tt"ith-ryu"_tto-oe-otit tfr...rry.d 1Tfertt, Ptes, AnAppreciation ,1 With the approach of spring, that old, restless feeling will soon begin to make itself known. But you" can easily turn it to good advantage. Springfever is merely the surplus e n e r g y, which winter has stored away in your system. Put it to work and you will feel a thousand times better. The mer- chants on this page have many valuable offerings which will help you to do this. PUBLISNw BY ”MISSION OF MR. Lon '-.-"t.aN-. Spring Fever In the Akyoo Theatm Bldg. kc Cm-I. “IMAM “WP-in. LL'ICK'S ICE CREAM LAWN“); ANCHOR INN Io'~ a. mum 1W _ "I “I? oMaWqPt IVQIIV Yours verrGulr, In.“ "Arriva-- Hug-stile m." March 3, 1927 P. L Hecate. LPILG. Gm in, land. mFrood, 11L Highland Park Nut Sales sue NASH a)». ram CABS Rub Lead- the World in tbr. tor Car Fam.. Purl Are. "NoethtHe-dtgtreet Teleph-eIIWPu-tm Fenders I Body Igniting JOSEPH BARILARI “was” HIGHLAND PARK yrnolsmn AND cumin Inn BABE-NEW Furniture Made to Order 3:35.“). [by sum mum“. In” It In! Mia-8m gm snap Mm sad litr- he Cut: 7- CNeohteo R. A. LAWWN

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