Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 11 Oct 1923, p. 12

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19 & t4 ># § â€" IMMENSE QUANTITY E. f OF OIL IN STORACGE at If all this oil were in tanks of 55,000 barrel capacity, it would take 4,691 of such tanks or 938,000 tons of Tons of steel are used in constructâ€" ing field and pipe line tanks for oil each year; On March 31, 1923, 258,â€" 000,000 barrels of crude oil were held hm.mhfintthe”fim‘t.d expenditure of $500,000,000 for the Highland Park Fuel Compan TWELVE Building Materiz . COAL AND SoLuAy cokKe 02 N. Ist St. HERMAN DENZEL, President Baggage, Expressing, Highland Park and High We“wrigo a full line of insurance in aeveul of Athe beJt companies. 3 i { | | ‘Are You Carrying Ehough? | Also maqq‘ugm for Auto License and Notary Public PAUL SCHROEDER & CO., Real Estate F OR OWIKFITiAUMe e c o0 F Telephone 853. W Insuranceâ€"Fire F. B. WILLIAMS, Manager There will be a car of hand picked potatoes on C. & N. W. Ry. track latâ€" ter part of this month. _ â€" Place your order with ; ‘if combined in one farm POTATOES E. C. OHRMUND Telephone 128 or 1208 GEORGE TUCKER Telephone 1128 j ‘or f , Ti omado; Liabilib __ Oil inâ€"storage is subject to , tion losses, fire hazards and an ‘ transportatio 'cham. in char es and nurki risks, but it sary to .store oil so that it can available as }n assured supply to meet current ti: i 5 f 160 miles square. It would take a automobile 1 veling at 20 miles a hour nearly a day and a half to ci cle this tank zm * each ‘ tank by . levee, the would cove 160 miles square. It wou! automobile 1 veling at 20 hour nearly a day and a h cle this tank farm. :Oil inâ€"stoi is subject t Paet o mt e 2 e . P t Movi: 9 Phone ij'z Y i] 1J Cows need‘ phosphorus and Icium, afnounces an agricultural college in New York. What for, asks the Naâ€" tion‘s Business? â€" To maintain body | ;vigor and to make milk, says proâ€" fessors. There‘s light in minâ€" erals, too.: Suppose that the ration should become â€"unbalancedâ€"a the excess of the two minerals up ‘a sort‘ of : ectoplasmic glow, a sprt of | aurora borealis in the milky w y. Doyle‘s fancy caught and gut in print the phosphorescent of a huge hound that coursed nightly over lonely moors. But the cow 1as| shone only by reflected glory, as _ tness | Mother Goosge‘s widely accepted report | apropos of nothing. | â€"Hey diddle diddle, 1 % The cat and the fiddle, J + . The cow jumped over the ys. .. N;‘i the;“c'c;‘wo is Ito have her own spotlight. will sing the â€" phorescent ‘cow ? flifl-‘ 1 NA in cesc Eun cent. Small wonder, then, if idely advertised | dentifrices and toothâ€" boushes make so little imprtession on the po%tion, that there is a big untouched : field for perfumery fu THISs cow MIGHT _ L | | ~_GET LIGHTED UP Notwithstanding the widespread use of perfomes in all forms, the sale is still comparatively small.| F that matter even preparations for nsâ€" ing the teeth are far less u than péople genérally imagine. A ding to inVesti@thm by ‘different anuâ€" facturers, at least 60 perâ€"cent of the population ‘use no dental prparations whatever. Indeed some inve tors place this number as high as per ,a‘euse. The © shop ‘girl earni little as fifteen ‘dollars a we willing to darn the heels .0 stockings and wash them out night, that she may pay seven « an ounce for perfume; and sh so . without feeling that she fl travagant. â€" A id d :?I k ='r'lm.- t high price for it. Using â€"rouge ‘ of course placed her beyond the | pale. Today not only is rouge permiksible, but the better grades of me have come in the minds of hy people to be less of a luxury n an everyâ€"day requirement. The en idea seems to be, says the N tion‘s Business, that if we may have good music to please the auditory |sense and cultivate beauty to please our vi!s,on, it is no less proper to qdd to the joy of life through the olf Many retail business expe beâ€" libve that cosmetics comprise one of the leastâ€"worked fields of daily commâ€" erceâ€"proportionate to the ibili~â€" ties. They expect that . the a unt of rouge and perfumes used in the next few years will be more than the increase of any. other e â€"day articles. Thirty years ago, or | even less, while there was no serious ob Jection if ‘a woman used a of perfume, it was regarded as wasteâ€" ful and ‘extravagant if she d a t 8004 ie Kulm SCs COsSMETICS TRADE _ ~STILL IN INF ~ The District of Columbia 1 the nation in reading, judged by | those magazines. ‘There Professor eeder found 31.7 of the population| were magazine readers. The ranging of the states follows: Californi 25.8 ‘per cent; Oregon, 24.9; Washi on,: 24.1; Nevada, 21.25; Wyoming, 20.8; Montana 18.5; Colorado, 17.9;} Masâ€" sachusetts, 17.8; Connecticut,| 17.2; Idaho," 17.0 and Ohio, 16.8.| Iilinois ranked twentyâ€"third and PennsyIvanâ€" ia twentyâ€"ninth. i - same as their ranking on intell ;!& reached by army psychologists during the world war, In /similar fashion most the southern states are to be 1 at the bottom of the list. Of the last 17 in the list only two are no h of the Mason and Dixon line, % ‘Based upon the proportion of the r?aden of those magazines to he popâ€" ulation he points out, that the acif. ic states (California, Washin and Oregon) outclass all other i by a large percentage. He also sa that the ranking of the states â€"on as shown Lb}: the survey is about the there to represent the east, |\where most of the. magazines are printed. Ohio, the next eastern ‘state,| ranks éleventh. > * A survey made by Ward G. Ree C assistant professor in the t of school .administration, Ohi State university, shows that the of California lead the nation in con sumption of magazine reading matter, The survey was based on the circulaâ€" tion figures of: the 10 magazines hayâ€" dng the largest circulation. It |shows that California read about six| times as much as Mississippians bring up the rear, It is a curious fact that upon the combined circulation of these magazines in each state contrasted with the population, eight tern states place among the first 10 Only Massachusetts and Comnect t are ..\ For all its many colleges, univer ‘gities and libraries, the east sad. ly. behind the west, it quantity â€" aine reading is any . indicator, CALIFORNIA HEADS K f’lfigfi s . of Country in This Li ‘‘ _ Shown In Report By AInvestigator â€" of Different expe beâ€" rise one of laily commâ€" e ibiliâ€"] the ~amount sed in the more | than exâ€" CYÂ¥ SS 1 On displqug The Gourley Lumber Co. Public Sery ¢ InI:es?tigb,te thoroughly ods and be convinced <1’f t satisfaction, [A put on, â€"| f § M$k¢s a more satis | /C Saves 35% of first _ ‘has passed the mq‘st rigid construction tests. _ O_fi’%rsj five times the strength of board sheathing Exâ€"V The Public Service Company furnishes services of a nature so essential totfemidential,hdmirialar)dagfi- s . cultural development of this territory, that the prosperity and future growth of Northern Illinois and the Comâ€" pany ate interâ€"dependent. , : PuBLic Ssnggcs ComPrany * |. [ OR NORTHERN ILLINOIS xpanded Wood Lath Every three months post offices in more than 180 comâ€" munities in the terfiux:u'ved,ch;ardlvidmdduchb stockholders of this Company. The Company recently paid its 47th consecutive quarterly dividend to common and preferred stockholders. ;Considering also the 39 dividend payments made by its predecessors, a total of 86 consecutive dividends have been paid over a continâ€" uous period of 21 years. _ _ Wm&t«flpmrcmdnwm»w dfi‘m e greater the community ha "Every dollar\paid out in dividends to local stockholders Wflmhugemwywmummm dividends are added to the local wealth rather than going to the development of some outside community." w Omm ,000 ‘square miles, inclm}:' k 180 CML iti ¢ with Gc':‘ und Fleâ€"tri Extract from prize winning letter in $1,000 contest WM. GUYOT, Assistant Dist. Superintendent 911, Church 8¢., Evinston, ‘Tel. Evanston 39090 31 South St. Johns Avenue, Highland Park, Dh Actory and lasting job. 4 hly before lathing by old methâ€" ff ‘éhe’ mat saving and greater coat of plaster and § 180 cthes, towns and smaller communities and Electricity, ¢ vice and â€" | unity Growth $3 easier | e

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