Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 12 May 1927, p. 25

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E The strife between the oilâ€"burner 2Â¥ and the coal furnace has, with other t . factors, brought a "permanent ecoâ€" * momic gain" to the consumer, of t worldâ€"wide proportions, declares F. G. (& ‘Tryon, chief statistician of the United States Bureau of Mines. _ h =| Permanent Waving [3 Proceés for perfect waving. oâ€"*." and softness which can only | be effected by skilled operâ€" been reflected in the fact that Amerâ€" iea‘s consumption of coal in 1926 was less than in 1918, Mr. Tryon declares, according to the Christian Science Monitor, and that a similar check has been put upor the expansion of the coal industry in other nations. Staâ€" tistics show that the quiet but worldâ€" wide revolution in the fuel industry has caused the price of power to deâ€" cline in comparison with the price of other commodities. 7 ‘**There can be no question." Mr. Tryon says, "that the prosperity enâ€" joyed by the country for the last three years has been greatly stimulated by cheap coal." 140,000,000 Ton Loss Found sumer it has meant troubles and disâ€" turbances in the coal industry itself, |&@)anit? Mr. Tryon says. He blames the presâ€" ent shutâ€"down of union mines in the United States as due to slack times in the industry produced by these America‘s demand for coal in 1926 fell 140,000,000 tons short of what the takeable change in the coal market has caused a world coal surplus. In preâ€"war experience would have indi cated. Mr. Tryon said. The unmis some cases has made one lump of coal do what two did before. Electric utilities, Mr. Tryon said, in 1926 developed an average of one horsepower by burning 1.6 pounds of coal; whereas they needed 2.4 pounds cent in six years. The trend of fue} economy shows no signs of haiting, Mr. Tryon reports, the limit not havâ€" ing seen reached in the field of locoâ€" to produce a horsepower in 1919:; a motive fuel, absorbing oneâ€"fourth the coal supply; or in heating dwellings, absorbing oneâ€"fifth the supply. * While H. F. PAHNKE, Piano Tuner 35 S. St. Johns Ave. !ik“?-k.mhoh } 15 Years‘ â€"= P Experience M:OMC!HIGBLANDPARK“ â€" . Special prices for a limitâ€" ed time only. Helps to Produce We offer a completeâ€"servâ€" ice in beauty culture. In cur the latest styles of hair cutâ€" ting for Men, Women and C. P. Sullivan Plumbing and Heating Shop Removal Notice PIA NO TUNING 34 NORTH FIRST STREET After May 1, 1927 In addition to fuel econamies, comâ€" petitive fuels have found new fayor, Coal is still the dominant power source; but whereas it contributed 85 ;rd-fl-uh“'u*‘ in 1913; its share fell to 69 per cent in 1926. "Against the tendency toward fuel MR a ns We e . man has no defense. It is a tax that he must pay toward the general proâ€" gress of society." < As a defense against substitutes he urged the coal industry to devise more economical ways of burning coal. At uwundldd.c-fl b«â€"thb-fl- ‘The quantity is growing. #Guraly some engineer can devise tinued, the changing coal market is a blessing. Improvements in fuel efficâ€" i-ty“hvo“mutb life of our resources and reduced the delivered cost of power." . the fact that the price of declining in comparison . . aan h eA e d‘nhenpq‘ufluthtzhm enjoyed by the country for the last three years has been greatly stimuâ€" lated by cheap coal." . Changed conditions have, however, wtllmt‘o(trbnblnbfloeod industry, â€" with an unprecedented period of hard times, not only in the United States, but in Great Britain and the world at large. "In the world at a whole the weawth of coal demand which was _ oo oet oi muri:tkbdbuthnmh- ymm'lr.mm "These broad facts of supply the deâ€" mand are the underlying cause of the worldâ€"wide depression in the coal industry." GOVERNORS MEET TO . TALK CONSERYV ATION Headed by Governor Small, chie! executive of states in the middleâ€"west will meet in conference at Chicago during the week of May 9 to 14, disâ€" cussing unification of conservation laws. Already invitations have been acâ€" cepted by Governors Hamill of lowa, Greene of Michigan, Christianson of Minnesota and Zimmerman of Wisâ€" consin. ‘The gathering will be held during » «ame week as the Outâ€"door Life wiege4 cA DRK. HERRICK OF CORNELL Has Ridden on Average 2000 Miles a Year In Past 40 When it comes to really seeing and enjoying the beauties of the countryâ€" side, the bicycle has it "thumbs down" over the swiftly rushing automobile, in the opinion of Dr. L R. Herrick, hobby for 40 years and, with his penâ€" chant for longâ€"distance "cruises" in the United States and overseas, it is nothing unusual for him to add more than 2,500 miles a year to his record. Americans‘ â€" dislike for "cheap" things, he says, is the reason bicycle riding is so largely confined to mesâ€" senger boys, paper carriers and occaâ€" sional working men in the city. The bicvcle. with its advantages, would be widely used in the United States today if it were expensive like the shire Hills of main object of admiration for boys and an important means of conveyâ€" ance for many folk. The "fad" has stuck to the Cornell professor and he pedals for pleasure, exercise and convenience, an average of one hour‘s 10 days. He found the riding difficult through Indiana and walked about :‘h.llf of the 36 miles of coarse gravel i roads encountered there. the miles is indicated by the cyclomeâ€" ter of his present "wheel" which regâ€" isters 5,000 miles for the past two years. Several years ago when the proâ€" fessor was studying for degrees in foreign languages at Amberst college he passed four months in France. He "eycled" from one end of that country to the other, covering 3000 miles durâ€" ing the summer. Since that time he has made nine other trips across the Atlantic, but on most of these occaâ€" sions he has gone as a tour condustor. i Dr. Herrick‘s most recent cycling feat was a trip back to his old home )-nd birthplace, Westfield, Mass., 100 miles from Boston, last summer. To i avoid the bad roads of eastern lowa and the congested traffic of the Chiâ€" _ Prefers Undulating Dirt Roads _ . His route from Elkhart to Westâ€" field took him through Toledo, Cleveâ€" land, Erie, Buffalo and Albany. He arrived at his former home without incident. He says he much prefers to ‘ride on the dirt roads, when they are in good repair. The monotony and strain of riding for long distances on | level ground is found to be far more \ tiring than the same distance would | be over an undulating surface. cago area, he took the train to Elkâ€" hart, Ind. From there he wheeled the remaining 900 miles to Ius hqm_e ln \ The professor believes the best : mileage he has made in a single day | has been 125 miles, while it is no unâ€" |common thing for him to cover 100 \ miles in that time. The average rate | of speed which he makes is 10 miles | an hour. In his 40 years of bicycling, | Dr. Herrick has maintained his mileâ€" | age in his seven years at Cornell ‘largely through short daily jaunts | about the countryside near his home. ‘He also makes many trips each week ! to Cedar Rapids, 15 miles away. He says he knows the distance within a few rods to almost any point of inâ€" terest within several miles of Mount Averages Hour at Wheel Daily Dr. Herrick was born in the Berkâ€" PLAN TO TEACH USE OF PHONE IN SCHOOL through a subâ€"committee headed by Dr. E. C. Broome, superintendent of adopted and carried out, will help to make the children who are now beâ€" ginning to go to school a generation d“hm&em â€" A number of conversations for conâ€" versation over the telephone have been made in the section on language and composition which the subâ€"comâ€" mittee has prepared. These have to do with elementary instruction as to of enunciation, deliberate speech and the maintenance ‘of low directions are given: . "Be considerate in the use of the * calling during times, demflp--rlym:lw.t heavy 1 BRIDGE CLUBS AND PRIVATE PARTIES MAY HAVE scork PADS FREE BY TELEPYONING H. P. 178 OR CALLING AT THE RELIABLE LAUNDEY. > adyv ‘The National Education Association mmission on the Course of Study, a report which, if wWOMAN‘S EIGHTâ€"HOUR UP IN LEGISLATURE Fate In Fate of the Woman‘s 8â€"Hour bill is hanging in the balance in the house of representatives. Passage of the proposed bill in the lower hol\se, and the‘sending of the measure to the senate, is predicted by its friends, but quiet work is being done to insure they will be able to muster the necesâ€" sary seventyâ€"seven votes. ‘The measure, as offered by Repreâ€"| sentative Lottie Holman O‘Neill, reâ€" duces the working hours of women to eight in any one day, with the proviâ€" sion time in excess may be worked| for not to exceed two days in any one | week, if overtime is deducted from | other working hours of the week. Cerâ€" ‘ tain exemptions from the eight hour | limit are provided in the case of gradâ€"i uate nurses, night telephone operaâ€"| tors, telephone operators in homes | gnd business places and women emâ€"| ployed in the canning industry during | the rush season. | Hilliary Eldridge of Oakland, Calif., has perfected an electrica‘ furnace wherein steel is melted from Monterey black sand, an inâ€" vention which may revolutionize the industry. _ After a several hour fight on the | floor of the house, during which R.epâ€"‘ resentative Lee O‘Neil Browne offered eight amendments, all of which were rejected, the proposed measure was passed on the second reading. Sevâ€" entyâ€"four votes favorable to the measâ€" ure was the highest recorded during the amendment fight. Friends of the measure are seeking to strengthen this support before calling it up for final passage in the house. APPROVE NEW MINE _ RESCUE STATION Establishment of a new mine rescue. station at Belleville is approved by the: House of Representatives in the pasâ€" sage of the bill introduced by Repreâ€" sentative Edward P. Petrie. The measure, which passed by a vote of 107 to 8, carries an appropriation of $15,000 to the Department of Mines and Minerals for the establishment and maintenance of the station. ing Nears, According to Steel From Sand 50 miles an hour _ all day long | _ Net Hengs _ { â€" effort al t smooth 1 > is actuall .f Increasin + _ and incre !__ ere prov 'E which d : _ rideare j â€"~* brillisnt. OB 5 =% I ‘The symbol of the fleet homing pigeon applies to the Essex Superâ€" Six, not only in its ability to travel at high speed with economy of effort all day long, but in its smooth road skimming ease that is actually like filying. o Increasing thousands of owners, and increasing thousands of miles are proving that these qualities which delight you on your first ride are just as lasting as they are ESSEX Superâ€"Six ‘Press Want Ads Bring Results _ SATISFACTION CUARANTEED Hestimates on New and Romedeling Work â€" Repair Work a Specialty M. D. MURPHY J. A. SCHWALL T33 Glencoe Avenue 1323 Wikmette Avenue Telephone Highland Park 2637 Telephone Wikmstte 1898 572 Wrigley Building WILL DESIGN, FINANCE AND BUILD YOUR HOME Information and expert advice given with obligation to you PLANNINGâ€"PLANTINGâ€"IAINTENANCE Telephone Highland Park 990 Ridge Road, Highland Park Phone H. P. 990 THE SKOKIE CONSTRUCTION CCG. Highland Park We have a full line of Hardy Perennials, Trees, Shrubs, and Evergreens. Fresh dug, vigorous stock. Landscape work by day or contract. It‘s Time to Plant The Skokie Construction Co. Anderson Landscape Service REASON ENOUGH > uUuSED CAR IS ONLY ASs DePENDABLE ASs THE DEALER WHO SELLS IT MURPHY & SCHWALL HEATING CONTRACTORS When we sell a man a used car we are naturally hoping that some day he will come back and buy a new car. Honesty aside, that alone seems reason enough for selling him a GOOD Used Car at a fair price. . G. McPherson Phone Superior 6781 Conch, $735; Coups, $735; Sedan, $796 a All prices . 0. b. Detraie, plue 's | ,_2s 4, sast given without Phones 120â€"121 Chicago

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