Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 16 Feb 1928, p. 10

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I PR ooet Emm COCSED BRCCET WIVT LNE !; s "The commodities which have been; engine running means almost cerâ€" x "responsible for most of the gain in tzin death." a our exports to Canada are coal, :uloâ€"l ons L "E mobiles, tractors, wheat and rye." ‘ MAKE ‘%‘Kw PAPER 6â€"~>â€",. The fresif®ig" : .@e that our| OF" OLD DIRECTORIES ? P %Nd.w countries | â€"â€"â€"â€" + $ could not buy from us because they} ?ld Lel]ephone directories are careâ€" would be unsble to sell to us. The| fully collected at a financial loss by E P 5 i 3 | most telephone companies to prevent * internationalists told us that unless { customers from ealling obsolete numâ€" TA we cancelled the war debts whichi bers by mistake. They are usually ' Europe owed Uncle Sam our forei,'zn{ sold to waste paper companies for E trade would be wined out. Evidently! less than the cost of collecting them.{\ ; both these schools of political though.t; di The 'f"“s"’, P‘tper fiom;“ mr]:he : were in the wrong. Our foreign tradel irtpiarics in oba engt U o ied j . ' C / them into small bits in a powerful ' continues to grow and the Europeant chopper, and churn in a vat of liquids. ‘ nations themselves are gradually pul-‘ t!'he pu_lp is then again ready to use 6 ling out of the mire of postâ€"war deâ€"| in making paper. i 3 flation. So it is b i evident that the best faid theorics of tne| , The modern iden of parental on | f A y css lligation is to provide the children | polmcal. ec(mumx:\'ts some times ex-} with clothes, and turn them loose in plode without doing a great deal 9{| the street headed for public school or | ‘- damage. | Sunday sehool. I _ _ Jn spite of the dire predictions of .. (the free trade pessimists our foreign © Â¥xade continued its growth in 1927 acâ€" â€" ‘earding to the report of Dr. Julius ‘ . Kiéin, director of the United States Bureau of Foreing and Domestic Comâ€" Increase Noted Notwithstanding "Turning to the regional distribuâ€" tion of our trade in 1927, as compared with 1926, the United States has exâ€" ported more merchandise to all conâ€" tinents except Oceania. in our exports to Canada, based on tem months‘ figures, and that country advanced to first place in our trade, supplanting the United Kingdom, which has held that position throughâ€" out most of the history of our counâ€" _TOur ‘exports of finished manufacâ€" tures have increased in each of the last five years, and in 1927 were over 50 per cent higher in value than in "There has been a particularly large grain, amounting to about 14 per cent, &‘.kiuofouum,br.mgin The "North Western"‘ system also paid taxes in 1926 to the nine states in which it operates in the amount of $8,212,027, and to the Federal Government in the amount of $2,340,364. In addition the "North Western"‘ system in 1926 paid for materials and supplies, including fuel and equipment, $39,425,591. A very large proportion of this money was paid out by various companies to their employees in the form of wages. + In 1926 the "North Western" system lines employed 56,237 individuals whose aggregate wages were $93,026,264. This amount was distributed over a large terâ€" ritory, briefly stated as follows: MATERIAL increases in wages were granted in the year 1927 by various boards of arbitration under an Act of Congress providing for arbitration as the method of settling wage disputes. Wyoming . Illinois . Total The modern idea of parental obâ€" ligation is to provide the children with clothes, and turn them loose in the street headed for public school or Sunday school. o It takes less than ome per cent to cause quick death. "Much has been said on this subâ€" ject, but every year sees a toll of hundreds of lives taken by this inâ€" visible foe. Carbon momoxide is a simple %rem.\cd compound, and is produced in varying quantities when cny fuel containing carbon (and there are few fuels which do not) i+ incompletely burned. . Complete combusion of carbon forms & gas known as carbon dioxide, which is comparatively harmless. "Carbon _ monoxide is colorless, odorless and tasteless, which explains briefly why it claims so many victims. To stay in a closed garage with the engine running means almost cerâ€" tain death." ois that dizziness will result if air containing five parts of its in 10,000 be breatherd; twenty parts in 10,â€" Four Parts in 10,000 of Air Safe to Breathe But Over president of the Chicago Motor club. $93,026,264 $23,872,164 26,005,004 3,393,241 9,326,249 17,642,462 39,827 4,387,558 7,180,887 1,178,872 size to the modern hippopotamus: a Skeleton of scelidodon, a somewhat smaller ground sloth; parts of a southern mastodon; parts of the armâ€" ament of the great glyptodont, panâ€" ochthus. a huge creature somewhat resembling the modern armadillo; parts of the type of sloth called lestoâ€" don; the skull and leg= of the type of prehistoric horse known as equus; parts of the large headed and shnrt‘ legged pseudoâ€"horse hippidium; speci« mens of the marcrauchenia, a curious creature with the general appearance of a camel, but having a trunk like an elephant and threeâ€"toed feet; and specimens of various prehistoric memâ€" bers of the Hama family. Many Difficulties Members of the expedition on their extensive explorations into remote sections of the countries encountered many drawbacks. For a long period they had to live on goat meat, Mr. Riggs said, and later were forced for a time 658 Chicago Ave., Highland Park Phone Highland Park 1799 wROUGHT IRON SPRCIALTIES Complete Specimens E Included among the more import~ ant specimens obtained by the Capâ€"| tain Marshal) Field Expedition is an| almost complete skeleton of mega~} therium Americanum, largest of nl]‘: types of ground sloths; a skeleton of | smilodon, the great sabreâ€"tooth tiger; ; ied n orisnnn io lc thinnadeiild AAA 5 a skeleton of glossotherium. a heavy~ bodied ground sloth _comparable in Tales of weird superstitions held by the native Indians with regard to the bones of the mastodon, megatherium, _sabreâ€"tooth tiger and other creatures of which specimens were collectedâ€" creatures which lived from one to nine imillion years ago, according to scientific estimatesâ€"were related toâ€" day by Mr. Riggs. Natives‘ Reaction ‘ "The people of the valleys where these skeletons are found, realizing that they are different from anything now living, have built up a belief that they are the bones of giants, both human and animal, which still have great powers for good or evil,", Mr. Riggs said. "Some of these Inâ€"| dians tell stories that they have seen the skeletons come out of the river banks and hills at night and go down to the water to drink. Because of the native fears, many earlier expeditions encountered much opposition and difficulty. Once an expedition was followed by a period of floods which destroyed erops, and the natives blamed the disturbance of the bones for the ill fortune. They say that if the skull of one of these creatures ‘breathes‘ upon a man it will cause instant death, and tell of unfortunates who, they say, perished in this manner. Other native #Troups regard the giants as more benignant, and families keep teeth and small bones they have found as #bod luck charms on their persons or in their houses. Many of the natives, howâ€" ever, because of their fears. are even today unwilling to hire themselves as laborers to aid the white men‘s exâ€" peditions in excavating or transportâ€" ing the bones." ART METAL WORK Year in Search The Captain Marshall Field Exâ€" pedition, led by Elmer S. Riggs, assoâ€" ciate curator of paleontology at the museum, spent more than 3 year and a half searching and digging in South America% cliffs, river banks and mounks®e"~ ""~. abr the remains of the long extinct animals. The expediâ€" tion recently returned, and the last of its collections are now arriving at the museum. ‘ One hundred and eighteen speciâ€" mens of huge fossile mamals just acquired for the museum by the Secâ€" ond Capt. Marshall Field Paleontoâ€" logical Expedition to Argentina and Bolivia, together with the previous collections already on exhibition, give the institution its preâ€"eminence in this branch of geology, Director Davies declared. The largest and most general colâ€" lection in North America of skeleâ€" tons, skulls, and other bones of giganâ€" tic prehistoric monsters which once roamed the pampas of South America is now in the possesion of Field Muâ€" seum of Natural History, it was anâ€" nouneed today by D. C. Davies, direeâ€" tor of the museum. for homes and buildings Estimates cheerfully furnished THE SWEDISH ART METAL CO., INC. North Shore Rranch Hand hammered copper, brass, pewter, and silver also was unavailable. An electric power shovel, having a dipper that will gouge out 15 cubjic yards or nearly.24& tons of earth in one bite and lift itâ€"to the roof of a tenâ€"story building, has been ordered by the United Electric Coal Company of Danville, IIl. This shovel, which will be the largest in the world, will be used in the open pit mining of coal in Illinois about May 1. One seoop load of dirt by this big shovel will be sufficient to fill a room the size of the bathroom in an ordinâ€" ary home, or to fill eight large trucks. It will pick upâ€"enough coal to supply an ordinary family for an entire year. To Be Used in Danville, ELECTRIC SHOVEL To LIFT 24 TONS EARTH curator of geology some of the â€"matcrtial collected is naw betfe prepared 1o} exhibicien‘in ty museum at an carly date, so many specimens were obtained that it will require from 10 to 15 years before all can be made ready for public view, according to Dr. 0. C. Farrington.; many places no wood was available for camp fires. Torrential rains ofâ€" u-â€"fldth-m,m‘-.\ to follow the seasons in work ing locations. In several places exâ€" on their backs, and slung on poles shouldered by two to four men. On Mount Hermosa ‘ Among the regions in which the expedition worked was the historie locality of Monte Hermosa, made h-‘ ous by early researches of Darwin. Other regions in which work was and DO0C" CCEIDNS in which work was done were the Argentinian coast near Port of Necochea, interior of provinee of Buenos Aires, Catamarca, the banks of the Quequen River, Miraâ€" mar, Tres Arroyas, River Quequen Salada, all in Argentina; and the department of Tarija in Bolivia. The Argentinian specimens represent the pleistocene age, ranging from 1,000,â€" 000 to 1,500,000 years ago. The Boliâ€" vian specimens represent the pliocene age, from 7,000,000 to 9,000 000 years Other members of the expedition were Robert C. Thorne, Dr. Rudolph Stahlecker and Senor Jose Strucco. Small collections of modern mamals and reptiles, and plants of the regions visited, were also brought back. While Know real comfort SA_LE ENDS and convenience with a complete Gas FEBRUARY 29 _ yithscomplete _ The Logical Place to Buy Modernâ€"Convenient Gas Appliances fi“fi.fl}.,fl- e streams. It was often cold at night, and at North Shore Gas Company Telephone 3300â€"3301 Save money bymaking your choice of upâ€"toâ€"date gas appliances from those on our display floor marked with GREEN TAGS. Know real comfort SALE ENDS m}d convenience FEBRUARY 29 with a complete Gas Buy Your â€" Modern Gas Appliances port Says. in_§}flp Mining at opremntemin s icAE I 1 mss snM tz trol it. He will probably be assisted by an ciler. Power will come to the shove? through a trailing cable. is to rescue beautiful American heirâ€" esses who wander unattended around the Smhara desert on camelback. could dig out the entire field and deâ€" posit the dirt on the piencherye * From visiting the movies we have â€" Everybody Readsâ€" HIGHLAND PARK PRESS Columns in _ The Highland Park Press Try a little Want Ad today! A few lines in our Want Ad columns have helped to solve many a problem. The cost is very little in comparison to the results. Try a little want ad in the Highland Park Press and watch the results it will produce. The Want Ads The A British celebrity advises the Engâ€" lish to film Homer‘s Iiad and he deâ€" clares that Hollywood can‘t do it. Is that so? Well, if nobody in pictures at Hollywood can read Greek all they have to do is call in a couple of resâ€" icans must like American taurant men. One senator suggests that the onâ€" Now!

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