Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 24 Oct 1929, p. 15

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weomers in rtant racial ca~ had ever at time, no nd ~not even Eastern seaâ€" e wilderness to start a th. well that the rwegians deâ€" ns â€"andâ€"riflies sers left conâ€" chair. â€" Wonâ€" ble that it is Oct. 24, 1929 : struck out n, over the a vision that by.theâ€"mists and dreamed well painted When he E in the rich le county, Ill. came walking Lake Ontario Theatre ellent cast he walked on, town. consistâ€" ne of which SCHOOL P MC | I additional names have been added to ym _ LA . alhed $1.00 ants burglar 4 to 6 ntinuing 26th eek of CH scattered move m o nnces oiE Few| â€" . ~~~~iIn .& QVUâ€" years‘ quring: wWhichn _ iB & w’o’ ! as . seen -ue! art:.e changes and progress in nearly all directions of human activity, at least ~â€"one thing has remained almost exactâ€" Iy as in ancient times. That is the > form of tombstones. A study of the targe collection of ancient Egyptain tombstones, collectedâ€"by the late Edâ€" ward E. Ayer and now on exhibition at Field Museum of Natural History, will immediately impress. one with this fact. Organizing Rotary Club _ at Glencoe; 25 Members ___At a meeting â€"heldâ€"atâ€"theâ€"Glencoe State bank Friday evening of last week it was decided to‘ organize a Rotary club in the village. Â¥e A league for the preservation of Modern Type Differs But Little] peryas, sideburns, goatees, long flowâ€" from Those of Thousands ering mustachios and whiskers of of Years Ago A any gometrical form is being deâ€" hR < manded by a distinguished company ie t oo e t o uit e o o on oo t 1oA.. â€"a4.... | â€"Of. .‘ mEOWSsDAper . paragraphers _ a n d ~In shape most of the ancient Egypâ€". tiin tombstones are practically idenâ€" tical with the conventional types used in our cemeteries today. The maâ€" terials used centuries ago are comâ€" monly still in use. The sentiments on the. stones _parallelâ€"in aâ€".general way the epitaphs of the present time. Many Specimens The museum collection contains 52 tablets, ranging in date from before 2000 B.C., down to the Christian perâ€" iod of Egypt‘s history. For the most part, the carving and painting on the stones of the later periods are cruder in: execution than those of early times, indicating the decadence of . During the late period prior to the Christian era the conventional design consgisted of a carving, at the top of the stones, of a winged sun disk and sacred jackals, and below it the diâ€" vinities Isisâ€" and Osiris, with the figâ€" exhivited stones are from the graves of unknown persons, and carved blank oblongs on them, intended for the insertion of the name, indicate that the cheaper tablets were proâ€" duced in quantities as is done today, and sold when required. s The stones at the museum include one of a king, several of priests, those of nobles, petty office holders, common men and women, and whole families. On most of them is a prayer to Osiris forâ€" bread, meat, beer, water andâ€"clothingâ€"inâ€"the hereâ€" after. One stone of the Christian period has a carved figure of Christ in a chapel. â€" Most of the tablets are of various . kinds of limestone, but some are of black basalt and black granite.. The epitaphs contain brief biographical sketches of the dead, and expressions of the affections of their relatives and friends, together with the prayers for their welfare in the other world. Urganizingâ€"Kotary Ulub â€" ’pmnh. t cause last week by taking /A encoe: P avy dose of strychnine while her at Glencoe; 25 Members husband and a niece, who lives with State bank Friday evening of last ti;‘lchd by her screams as the burnâ€" week it was decided to‘ m’ n poison took effect, her husband Rotary elubu;n ;; villa:oe e *° ®| rushed to her room whither she had 3 j * _â€"] quietly retired a few moments before _ Signatures of twenty members were | to find her dying on her. bed. : then obtained, since which time two|. Dr. Herman Struthers arrived on a additional names have been added to hurry call a few minutes before Mrs, the..list...._It.is anticipated .that the Pegan died. With her last words she maximum number of tw-n win | Mn =the â€"â€"physician,AA8L..BHE f idix "| had taken the poison with delibe have been secured by the time of the | tion, refusing to assign a motive for organization meeting. the deed, according to his report. LParis Plans League â€" ___to Preserve Beards; Frenchmen are beginning to look much like the men from New York, Chicago and Philadelphia, is the lamâ€" ent of the organizers. The real Frenchmenâ€" always wore beards, the great kings of France were always "barbue." Such wehaklings as Louis XVI who wore no beards wound up with their heads in the guillotine basket. P a< United Press report from Paris. _ Maudice de Waleffe, who heads the movement, exclaims that the individ= uality of Frenchmen is going down daily in ever increasing mounds of hair on barbershop : floors. _"One day a Frenchman you know," he writes, "a man of distinction, inâ€" dividuality, bearded and coiffed with elegance, goes into a barbershop and comes out a mediocrity, no longer a Frenchman, a smooth faced fool you could meet anywhere in any country in the world. â€"Just as our delicate apertifs have been swallowed by cockâ€" tails, our fine old music under jazz, so our beards under the vogue for the smooth that has blown across the Channel and from America,; clipped The proposal is that a league be established and beard wearing be made a prerogative of membership. Notable Features of _ _ _ Free Guide Lectures â€" "Primitive African Art" and "Drama in the Orient," at 11 a. m. and 3 p. m. respectively on : Monday, October 28, are the opening subjects of â€" next week‘s free guideâ€"lecture seum of Natural History. ~On other days at the same hours subjects will be: Tuesday, "Fishes, Past and Presâ€" ent and "Early Man"; Wednesday, "Indians of Plateau and Desert" and Thursday, _ two generalâ€"tours of the museum; and Friday, "Fibres of Many Kinds‘ ‘and "South America." Parâ€" ties for these tours of museum exhiâ€" bits conducted by staff lecturers asâ€" semble inside the north entrance. Mrs. Herman Pegan of Grayslake, ears old, the mother of four chilâ€" Grayslake Woman Is Suicide; Last Week Fear American Style icide without apâ€" â€"<>=â€"{â€"â€"â€"qWIFTS PREMIU M SLICED â€"BACON "Why are you looking so fedâ€"up?" "I bought a book called ‘How to * 9%?" -A oo f Aes "",i "Well, it says you take the girl‘s hand, look into her eyes, and say: "I love you, Beatrice‘." "What‘s wrong with that?" â€"_ "My girl‘s name is Lizzie." ~*NORTHERNâ€"PRIMEâ€"OÂ¥STERS â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"Q5/,â€"â€" POUND _ POUND ... FANCY FRESH DRESSED BROILERS POUND . NONE BETTER â€" POUND.. THE BEST NATIVE POT ROAST POUND Shop here and you will get 16 ounces every pound, and the very highest __â€"â€" quality of meats and poultry _ SWIFT‘S PREMIU M FRANKFURTERS QUART OUR BEST SMOKED HAMS POUND SHORT LEG of the Finest Spring LAMB POUND LEAN BOILING BEEEF Lincoln Market 519 Central Avenue one Highland Park 3 4c iC 0 esns aitension e e ali ce 0. oleatconrectendin ie Fortyâ€"one ‘states now place severe signs.â€"Wornman‘s Home Companion. j Telephones > Shop H. P. 1404 _ Res. H. P. 489â€"1342 Our long experience in steamâ€"fitting insures satisfactory service. 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