Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 19 Nov 1925, p. 10

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<B | j 1 } PAGE TWO Baggage, Expressing, Moving Highland Park and Highwood RIVEREDGE KENNELS Telephone 1806 JOHN ZENGELER ALL the cream is there in every bottle of BOWâ€" MAN‘S MILK. It is whole milk. That is why it is such a favorite. h % Th« Start using this whole milk today. Mix the cream well before using (tipping the bottle will do this), then you have Nature‘s greatest health food in all its richness and purity. t UOne mile east of HALF DAY, ILL., at the Des Plaines River Post Office, Mundelein, Ilinoia Phone Prairie View 606â€"Wâ€"2 Chow Chows, St. Bernards, Wire Haired. Fox Terriers We have one of the most modern kennels in the United States, ,___ and you are cordially invited to visit us t TOP NOTCH .Short Buddy Boogin men‘s, boys‘ and youths‘ sizes. Made also in hip lengths, red or black, for men and St.rm King len;.‘s for men, boys and youths. 1000 CNUCTCH, _ ‘he most reliableâ€"stores have them. The Beacon Fq)lr’fiuhbc Shoe Company, Beacon Falls, Conn. Th&"fop Notch Cross is your guide to durable, dependable rubber footwearâ€" boots, arctics, rubbers for mm.'wm and children. _ The _ most reliableâ€" THB "muscles‘" of tough, live rubber give astonishing endurâ€" ance and recordâ€"breaking long life â€"without adding wegight â€"to Top Notch Buddy Boots. These ribs or muscles, strong as whal¢ebone, add strength to the tops and prevent them from cracking. The tough gray soles stand up under the hardâ€" est going in muck and stumps, in ditches, slush or ice. The longestâ€" wearing boot your money caniuy. The "muscles" lengthen itS life ym _ ToP NoTCH Give Your Children Whole Cream Milk! PUPPIES FOR SALE Cleaner and Dyer | 25 North Sheridan Road WE OPERATE OUR OowWN PLANT IN HIGHLAND PARK DOGS BOARDED Telephone H. P. 169 furet Next to the United States, Canada has the greatest number of telephones in use on a per capita basis. : At the beginning of the present year there were 1,083,964 telephones in Canada as compared with 1,022,782 at the beginning of 1924. The Province of Ontario has the greatest number with 476.054. â€" Quebec follows with 208,629. Then comes Saskatcheâ€" wan, British Columbia, Alberta and Manitoba, followed by Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. Prince Edward Island has but 4,240 telephones .nd1 the Yukon only 350. CANADA IS NEXT TO U. S. IN TELEPHONES What is needed is not an impossible library of 1,390,000 books, but rather 100 essential books, boiled down into 10 volumes, with an education in those 10 ‘volumes. The thing could be done. This proves that organization and condensation are lacking in education. Buckle is said to have read 60,000 books. Voltnire'npologized for ‘his "small" library of 6,000 volumes, each with notes in Voltaire‘s fine handwriting, Catherine +of Russia bought the library, and. everything else in Voltaire‘s house. ? Since Yale‘ university started 224 years ago, books in the library have doubled in number every 20 years. The total now is 1,390,000 and every year 50,000 books are added, others being put into storage to make room. Such a discovery, if made now, would make oil from the ground as unimportaht in power production as whale oil now is in the production of light. ; Some Edison of the future will invent an electric battery, light in weight, carrying power sufficient to drive an automobile or an airplane across the continent. the tides, already begun in Englana_ and in Maine, and later direct use of the power of the sun will make power cheaper than it ever was. Sir Richard Redmayne, who underâ€" stands oil, say‘s the world‘s supply will be exhausted in one hundred years, and the United States in 25 years. That is largely guesswork, of course, Nobody knows ‘how much oil is hidâ€" den underground, in the lands along the Pacific, up in Arctic, in Mexico and elsewhere. . Don‘t let Sir Richard‘s predictions hurry you into buying poor oil stocks in any jcase. The work of harnessing The Government doesn‘t print such reports concerning the steel business, oil business, or other business. Why is it necessary to broadcast to the world at public expense, reports of which the résult is to injure American cotâ€" ton growers? Governmental crop _ reports â€" anâ€" nouncing gigantic production do more than give information to buyers. . _ The Government announces that so many million bales more than usual will be offered for sale. That is equivâ€" alent to saying, "Don‘t be in any hurâ€" ry to buy. You will get it cheaper later on." j Cotton growers are discouraged, and their complaints are just, against a Government helping with its reâ€" ports to put down cotton prices. j But for the sake of children, womâ€" en ‘overcome all fear. That woman on a lonely ranch killing 140 rattleâ€" snakes with a club is a picture of primitive life. 1 C% When they lived in caves the danâ€" ger was cave rats that would eat the child in sleep. That made women hate rats and snakes. Women fear snakes as they do rats. Evolutionist : gentlemen . will tell you that when our ancestors lived up in a tree the snake would come out along the limb and seize the woman‘s sleepâ€" ing baby. s A ranchman‘s wife . in Colorado killed 140 rattlesnakes with a club, fighting the reptiles for two hours to save the life of her twoâ€"yearâ€"old child. . It is not eéasy, however, to be snapâ€" py and reverent at the same time, The Salvation Army does it, Talâ€" madge, Beecher and Spurgeon did it. It is not easy. Dr. Jenkins tells clergymen to seâ€" lect snappier titles for their sermons, imitating newspaper headline writers. "PEP" FOR THE CHURCH. | KILLING COTTON. | IN 1950, NO MORE OIL? _ CONDENSED KNOWLEDGE. Dr. B. A. Jenkins, of Kansas City, advises Clergymen to imitate the Heâ€" brew prophets and P. T. Barnum, and advertise., The ancients certainâ€" ly knew how to attract attention. Daniel in the lions‘ den, Elijah with his chariot of fire and trained ravens, the ‘pious, incombustible; three in the fiery furnace, etc. You could not ignore them., f THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS Jt m i Subject to late in public places in Chicago, esâ€" ,p«r-lfy on‘ the clgnaed line platâ€" forms and along the North Shore Line electric stations. These are really high class pictures, of a kind that lifts them out of the average advertising poster into the realm of art. It is in fact introducing art in advertising. , uw 54 hi : They are intended for advertising, for they call attention to\ the ‘interâ€" Many Notable Ones in This _ gion Made by Students of e t Art___’lwt‘,l'\m . Many persons havg noted that a new type of poster has appeared of late in public plac%q in Chicago, esâ€" ARTISTIC Big reduction to those who come to our Nursery and get (the stock, 1 > Nursery is just west of Linâ€" coln avenue on Peterson rd., Chicago. . Peterson Road is the north line of Rosehill Cemetery, Freshly dug; roots not dried The land.of the Peterson Nursery has been sold, an« spring to sell off the stock. This is your op portunity. Cash and Carry B U Y NO Wâ€"Trees, Shrubs, B A R G A For Sheriffâ€" SHERIFE â€" . J. STAHL A Business Administration A Positive Candidate For ote This coloring, with the intense blue oftho'skya’ndavfarmor’lznof horses traversing the splendid highâ€" way, makes ‘an appealing p s which is not disfigured. by a mass of lettering anywhere across the iscene. with care and wmmm represent a bit of autumn out in the country a few from the city, and the picture is in beautifulâ€" brown,. tan . and yellow shades, with a bit of scarlet t;mwn in, which can be seen at this tipc of the year. > s #] paintings done principally in esting things in the way of architecâ€" tural design and landscape beauty to be seen along their railroads. . The originals of these posters are actual and Support at the April Primari'es; f T N S. we have only this fall and nextâ€" Fruits and Ne lh 4n We c sc Bd e ied wond 4 800 e the: buildings of W ids high school recently and gave t an insurance Aappraisal of 8 muww”mmlg‘u! value of the buildings. 14 and so treated as to /blend in style and coloring into the spirit of "",u,. ture. . Many of these m:?«#,. b-e,ndod’n-dbv!twfimoflhy;’m Institute. Instead the lettering is THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 80 N. LA SALLE STRE For those who do not care to do their own planting, we will deliver and plant. â€" .‘ We have a fine stock of large treesâ€"for winter planting, â€" Fire insurance appraisers inspected WeDoPlanting Peterson. Nursery, Telephone Main 36 at w4 + tp | #, *# #*

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