Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 12 Jan 1928, p. 19

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| * Another Big Stage Band REGAN and CURLISS f Celebrated Irish Soloist ® _ _ with Esther Ralston and Niel Hamilton . _ GENESEE Mon. Tues. and Wed. W _ Jan. 16th, 17th and 18th Sundays and Holidays |@! _ Adults 60¢ aihzscln,*: [ HAZELLE and KLATOFF Admission Week Days "SEVENTH HEAVEN‘" "SOME SYNCOPATIN" Thurs. Fri. Sat. Jan. 19th 20th and 21st on the stage THE JOE THOMAS SAXOTETTE Sare Artist Supreme Ken Widenor at the Barton Grande Organ Sherwood‘s Entertainers Harry Rappi and other A ""Great States‘ Theatre JOE MENDI Trained Chipanzee in Marvelous Feats The Greatest Motion Picture of the Year on the stage Comedy and Latest News Events _ Frank Wallin and his GENESEE JOYBOYS Victor McLaglen in Delores Del Rio and NOW SHOWING "THE LOVES OF Sunday Jan. 15th on the screen on the stage 99 99 tracting.. Front and rear brakes have been proportioned to prevent side drag or pull: Their total braking surâ€" hu-*bl.nuflhdm- _ Rach brake has an individual, casi~â€" thaft gears, improved mushroom vaive tappets, and larger camshaft. _ An oil pump provides efficient luâ€" brication to all bearing surfaces; while an AC oil filter and an AC air. cleaner protect all moving parts of the engine from dirt and other foreign matter, thus adding materially to the life of the motor. . The new fourâ€"wheel brakes repreâ€" sent an outstanding achievement of General Motors and Chevrolet enginâ€" eers.. They are the nonâ€"locking type, with positive brake linkage. Front brakes are intetnal expandâ€" gine that in road tests developed 34.6 per cent more power and approxiâ€" mately five miles per hour than the previous Chevrolet engine. New Engine Features New features developed in the enâ€" gine include a new motor enclosure which completely covers theâ€" vailve lifts and makes for a quicter and cleaner engine, new crankcase breathâ€" ing system whith eliminates the leakâ€" age of engine fumes through the body dthm:mmmuh-t;mi alloy constant clearance "invar strut" The Imperial Landau is finished in Cossack brown Duco with mountain brown beading and gold striping; the coupe and sedan in Faunce green Duâ€" co, with black body beading and stripâ€" ing in golden yellow; the sport cabâ€" riolet in Dundee gray Duco with Broâ€" catelle green Duco beading and gold stripe: the coach in avenue green Duâ€" co, Tartan tan wheels, black beading and striping in gold; and the open touring and roadster . in Falmouth gray Duco with body beading in black and striping in French gray. Mechanically the car has been imâ€" proved to parallel in performance, speed, and roadability its new beauty. and advanced body design. It is powâ€" ered in an improved valveâ€"inâ€"head enâ€" Bodies by Fisher All closed bodies are by Fisher, styled and designed with the smartâ€" ness and beauty for which the Fisher name is famous. All are of compoâ€" site steel and hardwood construction of the type found on the highest priced cars. And all are finished in genuine Duco colorsâ€"five . beautiful combinations on the seven models. quarters inches. Among the many new body refineâ€" ments is a fully enclosed and indirectâ€" ly Uighicd instrument panel, oval in shape, â€"with â€"the speederaeter, ammeâ€" ter and oil guage, in full view for day or night driving. All passenger models have larger 30 x‘ 4.50 balloon tires and steel disc wheels as standard equipment. Other standard equipment includes spotâ€" light,. rear vision mirror, gasoline gauge, complete tool set, and theft proof steering and ignition lock. Adâ€" ditional equipment is standard with different models. Four Inches Longer The four inches that have been added to the frame materially increase the beauty, and the effect of bigness, of the finished product. Radiator shells are of nonâ€"rusting airplane metal; while thermostat conâ€" trol of the cooling system is an addiâ€" tional feature. es in wheelbase is increased length in several of the body types. The coach body is five inches longer than a year ago. The sedan body likewise has been increased two and threeâ€" Stressing the beauty of line are new honeycomb Harrison radiators of deep, slender, graceful design. Their adtied ‘depth has so raised the front of the car that from the cowl to the base of the new low radiator cap the line is unbroken and nearly level. % The new.car has a distinctive big car appearance entirely foreign to its price class. . This is achieved by addâ€" ing four inches to the wheelbase, bringing the present total to 107 inches. The frame also has been deepened und strengthened to make a smoother riding, sturdier and better balanced Every detail has been proved true in exhaustive tests. As a result, the new line achieves to a degree hitherâ€" to unexampled in the low priced field a standard of smartness, advanced performance, striking color combiâ€" nations, completeness of equipment and minute attention to style, comâ€" fort and luxury. prise the new Chevrolet line. Every driving requirement is cared for in the make up and appointments of the various body types. Beauty in appearance, performance in driving and economy in operation ure the keynotes of the car that owes its every detail to withering tests of days, weeks and months under all types of weather, road and driving five closed and two open types, comâ€" HAS MANY IMPROYVEMENTS Complementing the extra four inchâ€" Seven passenger models, including Déscription of Models to Be Seen in Show Rooms is 3 The Boy Scoutsâ€"of America were incorporated on February 8, 1910. During Anniversary week, February 5 to 12, scouts in every state in the Union are uniting in a wide spread celebration. In a bulletin issued this week from local scout headquarters, the request was made that every church, school, civic club, community and home group cago. Charles F. Glore of Lake Forâ€" est is the regional chairman. Each troop is urged to have a sixâ€" man team entered in the contest, and all scouts, their parents and friends are invited to attend. Local Men to Attend Meeting It is expected that about twentyâ€" five scout committeemen from the North Shore towns will attend the Council Officers Training conferences, which will be held on January 17 and Scouts at the annual first aid contest, which will â€".be held Friday evening, Jan. 27, at the Glencoe Union church. Mr. Jack Oliver, safety engineer of the Chicago North Shore & Mil waukee railroad, wil} be the chairman | of the group of judges, and will be| aided by H. Renner, F. Mead, L.‘ Bentley, J. Jennings, and L. J. Wurtzâ€"‘ ler. 18 at the Edgewater Beach hotel, Chiâ€" T c C@@A [ has the leverage on the foot + -lr:-'::h-tht-ni-‘ with a very dlight pedal pressure. ‘ In addition to the four wheel brakes the new cars <have an emergency br.kl,'ithnwm-l face of 70 square inches. It operates wheet *service brakes, thus assuring the 1928 line is the new shock abâ€" sorbing semiâ€"elliptic springs which run paraliel to the frame and equal 84 per cent of the increased wheel~ base of the car. The springs repreâ€" sent still another innovation pioneered by Chevrolet engineers. "Suppose your seout troop on a hike enters the ruins of an old castle. One of the members, attempting to climb the wall, falls and receives a fractured forearm. What would you do?" times. SCOUT ANNIVERSARY PLANS ARE OUTLINED Organized in America Feb. 8, 1910; Program Planned for Week, Feb. 5 to 12 Another important achievement in such Get Your Paper Earlyâ€" SUNDA Y STARTS ~TELLS IT IN MAGAZINE :/ SOUTHERNER SAYS | _ GATETY COMING BACK Fundamentalism and the Ku Klux Klan occupy the thoughts of a small minority of southern people. Evanâ€" gelical religion, which came originalâ€" ly from the North, is a fading force, and southern people are regaining their oneâ€"time urbanity and gaiety. These assertions are made by Grover C. Hall, editor of the Montâ€" gomery, Ala., Advertiser, in an artiâ€" ele entitled, "We Southerners," in the first number of the new Scribâ€" ner‘s Magazine. Mr. Hall, who is well known for his outspoken quality of his editorial columns, is equally outspoken in his statements in Scribner‘s. Alabama Editor Declares Fund Plan now to pay tribute to the idealism of the boys and the conseâ€" cration of their volunteer leaders durâ€" ing the week of scouting‘s eighteenth birthday. Further information and assistance in planning and carrying out your obâ€" servation of Anniversary week may be secured by writing or phoning the Service Station of the Northshore Area council, 360 Central avenue, Highland Park, telephone Highland Park 2431. . Thursday, Feb. 9â€"Scout Troop day. Friday, Feb. 10â€"Boy Scouts and civic elubs. Wednesday, Feb. 8â€"Boy Scout day in school. Every scout is asked to renew his pledge on this Anniversary day. Saturday, Feb. 11â€"Boy Scout day in church. Lincoln‘s birthday. development of boys into men. Monday, Feb. 6â€"Parent day, Scout participation in the home. Tuesday, Feb. 7â€"Community day. Recognition of the Scout Master. will at h..h?““. week is as follows Sunday, Feb. 5â€" amentalism and Ku Klux Passing Phases; People Not Interested 4( â€" _An Eaic of the Air 5â€"Boy Scout day in t Again Gay 1 _ "We shall once again become a gay fpeople in‘ public even as we are now in private. Gaiety, in simple truth, (is a temperamental characteristic of our people, for all our efforts to reâ€" | press the trait. In an earlier day, ;befon the fierce New England theoâ€" logy of Jonathan Edwards fastened : itself upon large groups of southernâ€" | ersâ€"a victory won over them by deâ€" | fault, a fact which 1 must sorrowâ€" | fully ascribe to the phlegmatic and | unenterprising nature of the Episâ€" copalians on the one hand, and to our congenital antipathy for Rome on The bandits and gunmen are said to laugh at the law, and they will have ample leisure to continue laughâ€" ing while the community is entertainâ€" ing them in its free boarding house. the otherâ€"gaiety was not regarded as necessarily the mark of a dissoâ€" lute and godless people. We danced; we were fond of foxâ€"hunting and cockâ€"fighting. We loved racing horses with a passion that surely softened the asperities of our nature." These are said to be very rapid times, but you would never know it by the degree of speed many people show in paying their bills. "If the urbanite Methodists and Baptists as a class ever get themâ€" selves into such a state of mind as I have suggested, and to me no prosâ€" pect seems more certain, the whole color of southern life will change, for by that time qur cities will domâ€" inate the country politically and culâ€" turally. These boys who "borrow" automoâ€" biles, will find that before long they will be loaning them the use of a room in the county jail. may. appear on the surface. We are mot half so religious, anyway, as reâ€" ported. Prosperous folks never are. "Within twentyâ€"five years union services between Baptist and Jewish congregations will not be uncommon in the more advanced communities of the South. Methodists will have ceasâ€" ed to fear. the pope politically, spirâ€" itually, and physically; they will no longer shudder when they see a nun talking to a child in the streets. They will content themselves with laughing at the pope‘s theology, as they now laugh at Christian Science and Holy Rollerism. "The Kilan is a mere temporary conveni¢nce to shady politicians, rasâ€" ism is not a permanent problem with us; in fact, it is by no means as Politiciuns‘ Weapon Sale at All Newestands Saturday Night ° Within the week, these newspaper guides and mentors have elected him to the senate from Massachusetts, following the recent announcement of William M. Butler that he would not be a candidate in 1928. Anticâ€" ipating the possibility that before they got through they would have him running for congress in Massaâ€" chusetts, the President is reported to have said at the newspaper conferâ€" ence the othér day that as yet his future was his own, and he was in no special need of suggestions, reâ€" marking quizzically that while so far the suggestors had not given the hint, that he feared unless he said something they would be nominating him for councilman in the city of Northampton, Massachusetts. _ Too many people believe in signs of the superstition kind, and not enough in those along the roads tellâ€" ing them to go slow. For some time the newspapers had him formally installed as president of Ambherst college, of which he is a graduate. After this had run for six months, a really historic meetâ€" ing of the Amherst trustees was held at his call in the White House and a new president was selected out of hand. America is said to be a highly prosâ€" perous nation, but the people talk awful poor when you go around with some subscription paper. The next move was his nomination for the post of chairman of the board of directors of the United States Steel Corporation as successor to Judge Elbert H. Gary, but in varâ€" ious ways, the President frowned that thought out of the picture by allowing that he expected to spend his leisure years in doing a little whittling. The newspapers‘ anxiety to secure for the President a dignified and reâ€" numerative post after his retirement on March 4, 1929, has reached the point where they are furnishing him scme amusement. Many Reports of What He Wil Do After Term as Presiâ€" dent Expires; None 09 ns $ o

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