Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 16 Feb 1933, p. 13

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w ay s R eas onable ) ENGINE f a new and exclusive Chevrolet THE OcTaANE sELECcToR ht twist of this dial makes sutâ€" quired by the family if they reâ€" mmm& k uid â€"be setf austafning rang. be & and. re oved from the charity rolls, Or, fanting that the family does not come entirely . independent within is period, their project will have veloped into a subsistence farm, least, and the major claim on arity ‘removed, * f If the state needs ready money to rry through with the initial inâ€" stment and the first year, a bond uld be issued to be taken up by @ Federal government, f A second objection may be that Necessities forâ€" the first at the price. . MICHIGAN REFINISHING {ES MADE ) » o UES IR â€"= of i1d certainly be no more and, in probability, less than would be people won‘t be willing to ga.to land far cnhulatamen _ x land for EADS RESS ERING â€" .of any grade of gasoline assuring maxhaum economy. y In fact, you â€"will find car you have ever driven. AY, FEBRUARYâ€"16, 1933 â€"â€" Phone H. P. 583 m : . ol e ; 8 633 Central Ave. ./ Tel. H. P. 197 °_ _ PAINTING and DECORATING C | Paints, Wall Paper, Glass * * Window Shades, Auto Glass‘ Meierhoff Hardware Co. â€"â€" ‘Tel. Highland Park 57â€" â€" Glencese 59 f Lake Shore Creamery C. B. RANSEN | Generator, Starter, Ignition Units Repaired Elestric System Rechecked and Rewired Autolite Bosch Delco Remy Dyneto Stromberg Philco Diamond Grid Batteries 4 AUTO BLACKSMITH BODY AND FENDER WORK TEL. H. P. 266 29 8. SECOND ST. _ JOHN NELSON , > CaABINET WORK FURNITURE !fl’m Refinishing and Upholstering Repair or Rebuild Any Make of Radiator ‘Tuakes Bumps and Dents Out of ‘Your * Send your lawn mawelr® "#" _ _/ * frowt / < 2 0 C Mf o aw ‘â€" â€"SANTI BROS. DAIRY â€"‘Highland Park, NJ PASTEURIZED MILKE AND CREAM BUTTER AND EGGs ELECTRIC SERVICE AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRICIANS Rentral & Second St. : _ DR. B. A. HAMILTON DR. A. J. WURTH Auto Body and Fenders Drive Your Car In and Get Estimate o tghets i on se m apl ‘â€" .822 North First Street Phone Highland Park 77 Garments called for and delivered Tel. H. P. 495 _ 35 8. St. Johns Ave. JOHNSON & DAHL ; 2 North Sheridan Road 0 oob t ts onb Peiatty Ssd w w hfe n ce td ts N CE 0 t C0r 77 en e en ria o Te Butter and Eggs ~*John‘C. Fay, Prop. 100 Central Ave., Highland Park, M i 3 PE T \ean Em RELIABLE L LAUNDRY | DRY CLEANING CO. 437 N. Green Bay Road Highland Park, M For Quality and Service Call H. P. 1581 We call for and deliver Lawn Mower Shop E. NELSON ur lawn maowers to us for North Shore Trust Bldg. ‘%f‘éfi fi?‘% Tel. H. P. 949 Nein uie t i gev‘ i years ago he went to Hammond, Indiana and workedâ€"steadily several years with the Standard Car Works, I believe the name of the plant. _ . "The plant closed last spring and this man was without work,. He eame into this neighborhood and he and his son, also out of work, got a part time job hm:;sthmththo summer months. were given a years with the Standard Car Works,| money and an extra dollar here and I believe the name of the plant.‘ _ |there working in theâ€"community 8 came into this neighborhood and he| raised that such a plan will not aid and his son, also ‘out of work, got| our present problem of overproduc umfinohbhmwm tion and distribution. . . summer months. â€" were given a| . We increase the number of| farms that time they had a vegetable garâ€"| What we urge is the productic n of the garden. * They also bought \r| small tracts of land. Much pf this traded some of their tools for two land will come from the merchant pigs which they raised." . farmer and cut down mass producâ€" .. "In the fall they asked me if they tion. #x 5j éould occupy a â€"vacant house on our| . How will this plan help the unâ€" property. The son had worked for employed in the cities ? + mafcwdtylmthothn;:ing The number of idle men will be and I liked his work sa well that 1| decreased; the amount spent on ‘permitted them to move in. They| charity will be decreased and the slaughtered their hogs for their winâ€" | money so diverted will help) stimuâ€" ter meat and lard, they had their| late industry for the city dweller, . eanned goods and they had about| Are other processes more imple ? 80 bushels of potatoes which they| â€" We â€"can think. of no : proce had raised in theirâ€"garden. whether it be shorter hours, forced . Fuelâ€"From Dead Trees projects of construction, or rehabiliâ€" "I have permitted them to milk. tation, that is, less involved, less one of the cows out of our beef susceptible to confuse and ; less breeding herd and they are getting | liable to ~create new problems of about a gallon of milk a day. As | bureaucracy and administra‘ _u‘th‘ln far as I know abfitho only thing they have to buy been flour and coffee, I employ these men for an pccasional day. The cash they reâ€" ceive is about $5.00 per month. . In exchange for the house they look after any livestock which I might putinthepnmrouuithairhonse. They obtain their fuel "from dead trees and fallen branches in one of the woods nearby.â€" They are inciâ€" dently cleaning up our woods in this way. ~"There are five members of this family: Hâ€", his wife, the son and wife and the younger couple‘s infant child. This family is getting th:ongh the winter in fine shape and the younger man seems to be an excepâ€" tional man and I expect that I will be able to give him a pernianent job in the spring." Unemployed family men past midâ€" dle age aren‘t seeking new enterâ€" measure of peace and security f0"| need to make it workable old age and they will be the most|~ To begin with, it must likely subjects. administered under the | There are many instances wher®| and.control of the states. families are being broken up by the | tral government should } depression. An offer of a homestead | of it as much as possible. â€"simple as may be the life promâ€"| â€" To be a selfâ€"liquidating isedâ€"should have an appea! to 2| there must be no new 1 pércentage of these cases. up. . No chances or tem; * When this idea was given its first| graft put in the way. bit of publicity several people wrote | county and. local . adr in with words to the effect: "Show | must ‘handle it at a. m us the land and we‘ll go to it." "| cost.. d en e ie . _ "Make Your Subsistence" Title To the. A percentage of our unemployed | . The homesteader must be present~â€" family men will jump at the chance. | ed with a proposition that appeals to Our state can then say to the| his self interest, but at the same others: "Here‘s your chance to make | time he must be made to ize that your subsistence" and more and |\he must work for 6 ing he is more will see the light as the plan to recéive but that he will get comâ€" works itself out. : ‘fort and security as a reward for Someone will say: "But suppose | diligence and hard work. [He should you do get the man to go to the soil,;| receive no help from the state after can he make a living at it?" the end of the first year, but he We have taught him to drive a| should be given a title to the land ;ur;tobeshippinxelerkontmut at the end of a five period if packerâ€"if he can learn these things | he has rmv-d himself |deserving. he can certainly takeâ€" a seed cataâ€"| The la should then to a taxâ€" logue and learn how to plant his| ableâ€"status. . s i focnprennan nereiy o.3 M .. ~~ cumtilam â€" af in!ltflfifll AROORSE TTAE C Sm in there will be a large number _ of these people who have already hld‘ gardening and truck farming experâ€" ience. . e iL s13 They will not be new to the soil, but will be RETURNING to the soil. And betterstill, the plan eontemâ€" plates having dirt farmers operating in a supervisory and Pistructural capacity for groups of new tenants, Another objection will be raised that we haven‘t the land nvsi!afle members. We are very TOrtUnae iN "MMT more land available than we could place tenants on in ten acre subdiâ€" visions. We have far more land than any of the great nations riow underâ€" R o d M hnd i c d ud o Cdaranit ce going economiec: stress and unemâ€" ployment crises except perhaps Rusâ€" sig. ‘The land in the hands of large holders such as corporation agriculâ€" turists and defunct subdivision proâ€" moters is only & portion of the availâ€" able lands, Large farms Goute"""0 on taxes can be subdivided W! nm.ndmntedwithout‘ injuring mmovinl the present owner who is defaulting his tax. . . Around the large cities, for inâ€" stance Chicago, there are large ‘tracts of forest preserves and thouâ€" sands of acres of privately owned €arm lands. Portions of these priâ€" t 10 l 10 BP 0 0 ucss hnscc teiecleomih ladtty in ine F vately owned. farm lands could be e a o in io 00 h ie ddnee ~â€"Will the effect be temporary OF the land" movement is one of 168 strongest points. You get the peoâ€" SEon un s PPA o 0 00 0 W waks ding ple back on the soil, homesteading there and theh you are through with them. If we keep feeding .“‘f;‘! The Insting effect of the "'\:"IJ_M touumbetii/r j Fogenites M‘} &3 ;’&"hm T they will never get off the Only a Portion very fortunate in ha is mm s en s parit e w e cugh of any appreciable also consider that un hi wors , or milk a it suppose | diligence and hard work. |He should to the soil,;| receive no help from the state after g» the end of the first year, but he o drive a| should be given a title to the land or, a meat | at the end of a five period if iese things | he hni‘-’dpmvad himself |deserving. seed cataâ€"| The land should then to a taxâ€" plant his| able status. caferie d 1J for & at | with the idea that the suceess of the of | plan depends on hard wo for both ad | the homesteader and administrators. this simple method of state| admin istered homesteading. tm Kept Under Control A very strong point about thi plan that gives it an advar over some others is that it can be|stopped at any time and ptgl be a plefad project. The distribution money and population can be kept under control by this very featu It will drive our people back into primitiveness, we are. told. Those who are unempl! are living under conditions tha require a harsher name than "primitive" to describe their sorry plight. There are no bread lines on the farm. 4 $ } â€"Being close to nature, ming a property owner, â€" building home, rearing a family, are inly no more primitive than living in deadly fear that the job and live may not last until â€"the day is ‘ishegi‘[. Granting that the of plan seems reasonable, what will it need to make it workable ~ To begin with, it must, be locally administered under the sypervision and control of the states, |The cenâ€" must ‘handle it at a minimum cost.. : Title To the " The problem of inistration must be carefully thought out and every administrator operation and willingn that we went into the World War. One of the alarming features of the deprolsi_on-hn__ € tb’J mm-z the family, ‘Take as example this story told by one df the nuns at an orphanage near Chicago. A young married couple living in Chicago, the parents of a small child, lost everything they possessed after the husband joined the. ranks of the unempleyed. decided that they should separate, return to instances onstration of the new Eureka electrric ¢leaner Full details of this demâ€" onstration are given on another page of this paper ‘I‘ve never the i. THE PRESS â€" orced | PAnd, ns 1 ’:‘un_ chickens â€"to d, less wash, mend ms of typical day: m than |, Up by la" adminâ€" é .b’e.‘.kf' £ MnE n it e t t se Wls oib PP ETSE TD F4 1 Mmyummnauhm‘mnusmm popnhrlud-that‘!tmmnhoo! was elected chairman of the elub to beeominc,ouwfonr;mdhnlvk-madllfi.uu"nnn. Hosâ€" m“nmmmflumntm”:fwmm"nm wquorvkho’suh“‘mmafl-twmmumdlu.au& more true than today. Frayed euffs| Boone. 4 and worn elbows are making their The community is invited to the appearance in the most exclusive Washington‘s Birthday card > party business men‘s clubs of ‘our big| at the Wilmot School â€" â€" . pride than apology. .©â€"â€"__ _ ©â€" _| A medical report shows insanity Mrs. Lucy Caldwell of Wells,|is decreasing. This may be due to limoh.ulkinttothamnnuohth‘atmthtmnymwb Homemakers, at the State Univerâ€" were considered crazy several years fityhctmonth.toldthc:tqyo!llfo nso.‘?mat’t'hz'.mflomduy. on the farm. band, his hired man, to be fed, 1,000 chickens to look after, clothes to wash, mend and iron, yet she does all her own work. She called this a That "My home has no modern convenâ€" fences," Mrs. Caldwell said. "We are comfortable and happy with cil lamps, an oldâ€"fashioned heater and a kitchen pump. We always have one hired man, most of the time three, and sometimes more. I board xmmthem. I can meat in the ter and surplus fruit and vegeâ€" tables in the summer and fall â€" about 600 quarts last year. : In these ‘days when so many women usurp Imen’ajob'.lmhmyeofll!wnry lamps, an oldâ€"fashioned heater and a kitchen pump. We always have one hired man, most of the time three, and sometimes more. I board xroomthem. I can meat in the ter and surplus fruit and vegeâ€" EiT w Up by lamplight. A breakfast to cook, School lunches to pack. Children to school. | Home to housework. ‘ Chickens to attend to. Milking: equipment to be washed nd sterilized. | Meat to prepare. Dinner to get. | Washing, mending, froning, sewâ€" STUDEBAKEAR 386 Park Avenue <Especially see how Power Drakes,Me _ rp oy offer advances yOUuLr PFf Ccar, year‘s‘ gireatest engineering dev'elop- nozsuer,bow new, does not give you. ment, make brake operation practically > . Fa00pHTED automatic in all the new Studebakers. %é’gm“n sn‘le“:r‘ 1:):: 1 100~ The slightest pressure of your 10€ UP _ â€"rypâ€"persrprnTt EIGHT _ .. 132540 1650 on the brake pedal brings the CAf _ rup sppppwAY PRESIDENT 1625%e 2040 smoothly, surely to a stop. j Pricerf. o. h factury . .> * COMB,‘ see and drive these sensaâ€" tional new Studebakers that operate almost entirely without physical effort. See how Studebaker engineering genius has ‘tucceeded in giving you cars in which you nfeed scarcely ever touch the clutchâ€"in which you switch on the ignition and start the engine at the turn of a key in the dashâ€"in which you never have to work a choke or adâ€" just a carburetor. moments with the family Gears shift as smoothly, silently and safely at any driving speed as though there were no gears. Spring action is automatically controlled by shock abâ€" sorbers that instantly and infallibly adjust themselves to all conditions. ‘Especially see how Power Brakes, the ‘Bumof&amfiwm- _ â€".d presents a 1933 line _ of almost entirely{/; "I told you so."â€"Life, PIANO TUNING Inexpensive Skillful Service SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Formerly with Lyon & Healy and Cable Piano Co. â€"PHONE HIGHLAND PARK 14â€" ; H“Wsuâ€"r.chw.thorMMI Estimates on New and Remodeling Work â€" Repair Work a 188 GLENCOE AVENUE 89 CLIFTO ‘Telephone Highland Park 2687 Telephone HJ M. D. MURPHY 3. A. 8 eutsmmmmemenrionnnsieniionemmmnemmmememmmemmn ces i L s CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING RQOM 4$ NORTH SHERIDAN ROAD â€" * : WEEK DAYS 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.! _ > BUgDAYS 2:30 to 5:30 for reading only. YumMWhMthM:“ nwchrhmuhu-m-ubnfl. ad or p Maintained by e ied A BC MURPHY & SCHWALL Heating and Plumbing Contrac First Church of Christ, Scientist Step by step, Studebaker engineers for years have been eliminating more and more of the human element from car driving. And now they are giving you cars that are not only more comâ€" pletely automatic than any other cars in existence but that also lead in safety, in economy, in power and in stamina. Come, drive one of these smartly Highland Park , luxurious new Telephone H. P. 171 No Charge for Second Cup Delicious Food PHONE 557 H.; P. Y our W ant Ad Phone .~~â€". PAGE . THIRTEEXN where the Bible and all T $. €% m

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