Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 27 Nov 1924, p. 7

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%"* 1; rited to visit t chr ER supplied, ce hed. All hn 7’: out reputa ABuseâ€" o) / gaor 14 YerCU KID lid I) DY lbs. $1 fint : pie« , ) ILL. § p.m. f rn 115 gall 1114 TB Hight 11 44 136 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1924 By Harvey O‘Higgins. Harper & Bros. Emerson said " "Tis the trick of naâ€" ture thus to deéspise today .. ., Evâ€" eryrodhnmhhtotheeyemfl it is lifted, then we find tragedy and moaning women and hard eyed husâ€" bands and deluges of lethe, and the men ask ‘What‘s the news?‘ as if the old were so bad." * ‘This trick of nature has been strong ih our day, especially in the class ol‘ "Main Street" fiction. : The relief in "Julie Cane" is this, that the characâ€" ter most firmly caught in the tragedy of the small town, is able to "lift his own roof" and soar away. â€"> â€"Julie Cane‘s father, the grocer, jeerâ€" ing called "Sugar Cane" by the children, rather fell into everything in his life, including the grocery lms-| iness and being Julie‘s father. The latter fact he never regretted, the former hetes¢aped from in a sort of fantastic scientific interest in which eternal space was poised at the end of the village street, and he was a. suâ€" perior being treading above the world, having in his mind extraordinary powers which he would at some time call forth. » 2 Through the first part of the book Cane‘s naive partnership with his daughter against the world is the chief interest. "You can‘t fight these pecple. See? . You got to live with ‘em an‘ if you once start them pickâ€" ing on you, they‘ll tear you to pieces. ...O’coumthéy'nalototmutto’n- heads, and we can run rings around ,m yon ‘! -. m‘” ‘ & .’ i 4. ; After Julie starts to school we have | less of the partnership and. ;ore of | her contact with other characters who | are less real. And when at last it is necessary for the plot that Cane must die it is as if the author thought| "Well, the realest part is over, we might as â€"well hurry this along." So| one phantom torments Juli¢, nnother‘[ weeps for her, another grasps her| hand and marries her. . And in the end we are told in one terse aentenceL that Julie was successful in the life of a rich New Yorker on which she entered. "For, whatever else you may thinko!her.nhehuccrfi_inlybeeq successfulâ€"as conspicuously successâ€" . ‘ful as Niagara Falls," Remarkable ‘simile! We vaguely wonder whothc: Julie‘s success came in tumbling ove precipices, or ‘perhaps making: shred} ded wheat biscuits. | * .In any case Julie was successful, and we. know, whether the tells us so or not, that it was because father taught her that she could master of her fate. This the tru reality in the book, the onship Julie and her father and: ‘the litt] townâ€"the rest somehow 4ips into P «In any case June and “,ho" MG us so or not, that it father taught her t master of her fate. reality in the book, t Julie and her fathe townâ€"the rest somé less vital world. By Christopher Ward. & Co. beginning‘ of "The Carl Far Fetchten: "Father," said c #f "«Will you tell me the story of my life, so that all these gentle / rs may know about it and be pared for the very whimsical ad , I am about to have?" # 3t about to nave .~ 6 7 Certainly, my son, said t father, a portly man with a high bald foreâ€" head and a highâ€"balled , but ‘beâ€" fore I do so, let me suggest that, when speaking you d qhotation ce > Yy ‘te un ic er without BE OR SNCL s leas o n 00 ging 1 m head and a highâ€"balled , but ‘beâ€" fore I do so, let me suiggest t :t,‘ when speaking you d qhuotation marks. It is so much egoler without them these hot days it is ¢onâ€" sidered very whimsical ty omit them. Besides which, your will genâ€" eraily : be unable to ish | beâ€" tween conversation and na ve, which contributes much| to their| enâ€" _ joyment. ‘--l‘-" J : 4 m h ~Joseph C. Lincoin‘s m« ¢l ~RUGGED WAT 3 is swedping the coun! Its story of th:églidCapo Cod Days: and |the human nature. A that ry human naure. â€" A novel that eyery mem 0 amily e « ber of the 1: \will Oy Its mro. Calvin Ho: is ve, honest, pure é?ld. though shy with the ladies. 00. ( ue "JULIE CANE" "TWISTED TALBS" D. APPLETON. AN?&OIPAN 35 West 42nd St., \New York ht t all booksellers hmy Holt ollo, 1 ghall e have } "Because of the superb nat his material this is beyond tion Mr. Bradford‘s best Boston Transcript. f ~â€"â€" HARPER & BROTH Publishers â€" ‘By the Author Â¥ The Wood Carver of ‘Ly DEEP IN THE HEARTS MEN & By MARY E. WALLER The Chiugo Daily News it "one of the most i things Miss Waller has written." f The great Amerig’:an : of the yearâ€"and it ting in Chicago anc environs. f MakeBookbuying a Plea AT i Â¥o By GAMALIEL BRADFOR Author of "Damaged Souls â€"â€" BARE SOULS Booksellers to the Morl s 218 So. Wabash Ave., Chitago. Ninth Lar i ©â€" $8.00 at all B t Boston, Little, Brown & Publishers _ A Nationâ€"Wide Best Sell What They Are Saying About THE WIDOW‘S EflOU E By KATHLEEN ‘;:or The N. Â¥. Times: "In het masâ€" tery of focusâ€"as well as in her ko'er of conveying poighancy, athleen Coyle stands high. She is mistress of the dr of ‘ . Author of "Sdissors". A story of love you shores of the sunlit) Adri with charm and i swiftly moving tale, in scene shifts from . Venice drenched Chioggia, an fishing village, where t hero first glimpses the mystery of a villa girl Frederick A. Stokes 1s MISUPCSS OL WHM . MEM souls." The Boston Herald: "As ohf ihan,cbeguzi‘on nd ‘ & quali marks llir Coyle as a date for the first up contemporary â€" En | _«IAIEC \ €NCHILL i ists." Why not be amo FIRST 100. to enjoy this h BRENTANO‘S Author of Kindved of the Dost . Maver 430. °* Get Your Copy To A Best Seller _ Ey By SAILS OF That gorgeous new. of the Southwe Edna Ferber by By CECIL ROBER!] . P. DUTTON & New York Lity At bookstorcs, PETER B. K Doubleday, Page Clhe alls ing ver & Co. uesâ€" ’ok.” h work e of Oy Fovel setâ€" her or the yle it candiâ€" among novelâ€" h on the tic, told on. _ A hich the eolorâ€" oldâ€"time younfi uty anc novel , ED day ere g the ) 0O O ook 2.00. . ‘Do, ypu hot why you are doing what you are doing? Do you know how yo cn'mP choose your present occupation ? ‘Chances are, you don‘t. According to f. Arthur B. Mays of. the fHepartment of industrial eduâ€" cation at the University of Illinois relatively few of us really choose &A specific|occupation. . "Most people are forced into an 0¢â€" eupation y a|variety of factors of which heÂ¥ are not conscious," gdeâ€" ch:}d of. Mays speaking before the women|attending the vocational guidâ€" anct inquet here last night. "Freâ€" quently choice of interests made long before (they take up their present ocâ€" cupati is ‘ a determining : factor. ‘Ther, 0, chgice of friendships and t enviromment are important factors. YOCA Every € ance b quently before cupatic Then, | enviror wocati ways. io' . vario show intell rily qurli choos ti w deal yock le n th ;!i‘ n cide Ve .ca e:o{ 0 well & | mo cCO win TB Can Advise Only eat many people think that mal guidance is a sort of hocusâ€" affair in which the expert his ‘hands over the bumps in ject‘s head and then tells him his life occupation is. That’? all ‘ ‘Serious Problem fell that the choosing one‘s on is a mn?h more serious probâ€" or women;than for mén. Men )ick out a career and follow â€" it little or no interruption. Womâ€" ve a different problem to face. of them must at some time deâ€" tween marriage and their work. few women are strong enough to the gouble load of home and sional duties. . It . requires . & n is strong physically as ‘\as mentally." . 1 e need not worry about our next| == . r‘s coal supply nor that for many ] is to ‘ome‘,” says Prof. T. E.|5 j ge of the geology department at\ == niversity ‘of Illinois. Caal suffiâ€"| = to supply lIllinois for several = ies, \he estimates, still clies|== underground. : e eoal field of the Eastern Interâ€"| & Basin covers 6,500 square miles| == ndiana, â€" 6400 . square miles in hwestern Kentucky and 35,000 == re miles in Illinois. The enorâ€"| > s supply of fuel in this field has| = reely been tapped, according , We jwho. are interested â€" in mal guidance cannot tell a perâ€" t he should do; we can only him; : EVe can do this in two We can give him accurate inâ€" ion concerning the character of pccupations. â€" Then: we â€"can im the physical emotional, and tual qualities that are ordinaâ€" otion: and â€"â€" tempermental es . of |an individual count in one‘s work. If he lacks paâ€" he should consider work in he can be with himself a great f"h‘ G.‘ A' 4n ; * 3 4 MION CHOICE URGED L ENOUGH , FOR S EBAfi CENTURIES F‘Yfl l'*rofessoi' in Geological _ Department of Illinois . 3* |\ University EC REALIZE WHY THEY DO THINGS ne Should Know Why His upation Is Selected Professor Says In Statement ' E HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, &L‘v‘ bhinG en w 8th day of December A. D. 1924, at the hour of 3:00 o‘clock p. m. at its office in the Masonic Hall in the said Village of Deerfield, Illinois, at which time and place said bids will be pubâ€" licly opened. The estimate of quanâ€" tities for the construction of said imâ€" provement can be seen at the office of the Village Clerk of said Village. Said â€" imprpvemert shall be conâ€" structed and made in accordance with the ordinance providing for the same and the maps, plats, plans, profiles and specifications for the same on file in the office of the Village Clerk and Engineer of said Village. : Proposals must be made on blanks furnished by said Board and in comâ€" pliance with the instructions thereto attached, which can be had on appliâ€" cation to the Village Clerk and Vilâ€" lage Engineer, and must be accomâ€" panied by cash or by a check payable to the order of the President of said Board of Local Improvements in his official capacity, certified by a responâ€" sible bank, for an amount not less Mutual Coal Company North Shore Cemetery principles of honor and vigilance, 1 FF 1 1 yoÂ¥rvror T | Phones _ Office. 390 Central Avenue, A. P. 272 _ Vards, Vine Avenue, A. P. 27 a Is a business organization conducted strictly ILLINOIS Has all of the desirable qualities you have long looked for in a domestic fuel, It is flexible, resfonm've, clean, economical and is eas to use and contro! j j Phone|Call to M you,d.;.jeg“:l‘.d‘l)ringouruervicemmyw , is Service is Free de iorindeareieuaiiun madmrinae than ten per cent of the aggregate of the proposal. The contragtor shall be paid in Special ent bonds bearing inâ€" terest at the rate of five per cent (5%) per a § & ‘ No bids be received unless the party off it shall furnish eviâ€" dence satisf to said Board of Local Imp ents that he has the necessary fadilities, ability and peâ€" cuniary reso to fulfill the conâ€" ditions of contract : and> execute the â€" work uld the contract. be awarded to Him. * t Bidders examine the ordinance, maps, plats, plans, profiles and specâ€" ifications, and also the locality in which> said is to be done and judge for th Ives of all the cirâ€" cumstances surrounding condiâ€" tions affectiny the cost and nature of the work. The contra¢tor will be required to give a good and sufficient bond so well and faithfully perform and execute said work in &ll respects according to R SALE BY "Clean as the Sun‘s Heat" JOHN WESTERN, President the complete and det: fda tions and full and com drawings, profiles and models nd #c cording to the time and ‘terms ap conditions of the and furthe bond ‘shall be in a sum equal to fB€ third (1â€"3) of the of . sue bid with sureties to pproved | the President of the Board of Loga Improvements., _ _ F The Board of lfi) Improvem@Bt map avitie es [ ASs ‘ W. i Dated at Deerfield, Ilinois, th 27th day of October, A. D., 1924,| | THILO H. TOLL ||| A. J. ENDER w1 GEORCGE E. ENGSTRO! WM. J. 8 | FRED J. E:BAKN P JAS. J. HOOD NT Board of | Local Improve 1 ments of the Village |0f Deerfield, . Illinois. ,i=n LINCOLN Psrzfi. Pres. BORFC CHESTER WESSLING, Secy, 8940 n half an acre of owners and other See on the highest PAGE SEYVEN En ky H $4

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