Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 31 Jul 1930, p. 14

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Ravinia Opera "The hours when we indulge in our ‘hobbies‘, be the latter those of physiâ€" cal exhuberance or adventure of the mind, will not only help us in keepâ€" ing usefully alive but, eventually in the days of retrospect give <us a prateful feeling that we have ‘lived‘." May we indulge now and then in an appreciation of what this sumâ€" mer capitol of the musie world in Ravinia means to â€" Highland Park and the viecinity. The Public Library looks forward each season to music Highland Park For the NEW MAJESTIC RADIO 20 % DISCOUNT 618 North Greenbay Road â€" Highland Park > PHONE 178 | _ Reliable Laundry and Dry Cleaning Company LIBRARY rood Clothes Deserve OURâ€"SAVING IS YOUR GAIN As was predicted, quality Dry Cleaning can not be turned out at chan prices. This is being demonstrated continually. f Instead of reducing our prices on Dry Cleaning we are sticking to quality work and service, and our business is showing the good results. If you desire to save 20% (the cost of collection and delivery) bring your CLEANING and LAUNDRY to our Plant and call for it. The Oldest Business Corcern in Highland Park arrival some weeks ago she has not missed oneâ€" performance and she saw 87 performances at the Metros politan last winter. In a moment of greatest enthusiasm she confided that Edward Johnson has fully met her expectations in his rendering of Lohâ€" engrin. STEEFEFEN AUTO SUPPLY see Highland Park‘s Exclusive Dealer | Careful Treatment T HE P RES 8 suthors published during the preced o# from the pen of an original and interesting author. and should be within the reach of persons of averâ€" age education." History Our Business Civilization, by James Adams. The Tragic Era, by Claude Bowâ€" The International Institute of Inâ€" tellectual Coâ€"operation of the League of Nations, for which body the list is prepared, has directed that "the works should be selected from those dealing with an important.Asubject Law The Dissenting. Opinions of Mr. Justice Holmes, by Oliver Wendell Holmes. | Ed. by Alfred Lief. Social Science . > Men and Machines, by Stuart ing year. Men _and Chase. Frontiers of Midd!letown, Lynd. s Chicago, by Life and Labor in the Old South, Ulrich Phillips. Trade, by Julius Klein. by Robert and Helen E. Merriam Phone Highland Park 350 War as an Instrument of National Policy, by James T. Shotwell. Religion Religion, by Edward Ames. . Labor Speaks for Itself on Religâ€" ion, by Jerome Dwight Davis. Philosophy and Psychology The Quest for Certainty, by John Dewey. The Modern Temper, by Joseph Wood Krutch. _.A Preface to Morals, by Walter Lippmann. _ C243 A Farewell to Arms, by Ernest Hemingway. ' Dear Judas, by Robinson Jeffers. Laughing Boy, by Oliver La Farge. Firehead, by Lola Ridge. Cavender‘s House, by Edwin Arâ€" lington Robinson. The Wave, by Evelyn Scott. . Angels and Earthly Creatures, by Elinor Wylie. & ; Drama The Theatre; Three Thousand Years of Drama . . .. by. Sheldon Cheyney. ; Street Scene, by Elmer Rice. j Grandmother Brown‘s Hundred Years, by Harriet Connor Brown. â€"â€"_ _ Belles Letters and Art For Lancelot Andrews, by T. S. Eliot. The Life and Letters of Joseph Pennel!, by Elizabeth Pennell. A Victorian Village, by Lizette Woodworth Reese. La Fayette, by Brand Whitlock. Life and Letters of Stuart P. Sherâ€" man, by Zeitlin & Woodbridge. Travel and Social Life Car]l Akeley‘s Africa, by Mary Akeâ€" _Mrs. Eddy, by Edwin â€" Franden Dakin. â€"The Life of an Ordinary Woman, by Mrs, Anne Ellis. Hackett. Herman Melville, by Lewis Mumâ€" ford. ; The Thinking Machine, by Charles Herrick. ley. Ends of the Earth, by Roy Chapâ€" man Andrews. _ The Magic Island, by William Seaâ€" brook. Science Our Face from Fish to Man, by William Gregory. SprhtAnaie Introduction ‘to Social Anthropolâ€" cgy, by Clark Wissler, Great Apes, by Robert Yerkes. Companionship Death in battle or in shipwreck, with a number of our fellow beings sharing the same fate, loses much of its horror simply because it loses its loneliness.â€"The American Magazine. Can Tire of Peace Many husbands and wives agree because they â€" chronically disagree. Failing to achieve harmony, they also escape monotony. â€" The American Magazine. I 'Héfiry the Eighth, by Francis Thursday, July 31, 1930

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy