Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 19 Nov 1925, p. 12

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® T _ TONY SARG‘S â€"â€" MARIONETTES Tuesday Evening, December 1st, at 8:30 _TREASURE ISLAND PAGE FOUR Elm Place Auditorium Highland Park, Illinois Pied Piper of Hamelin Reserved Seats 75¢ to $1.50 TREASURE ISLAND Send mail orders, accompanied by eheck, draft or postal order, payable to â€" MRS. C. G. BINGHAM, Box 397, Highland Park THIS IS A WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY TO SEE THE "MARIONETTE MASTER" _ AND HIS WONDERFUL PERâ€" FORMANCE For information ‘phone Highland Park 84 between 8:00 and 9:00 a.m. or 5:30 and 7:00 p.m. DON‘T MISS IT Tuesday Afternoon, December 1st, at 4:00 â€" The if -\}0 . L4 / M\ // C i & y Z4 a 16 _Â¥ \‘\‘ Lo , ’//:/,I * “; # C / Reserved Seats 75¢ to $2.00 Rx%a:ud‘;a&?. & -'fi Mud e Miss Rush says: "Artists are spirâ€" itual adventurers and the strange beauty of the southwest country, splendid and generous, lyric at one turn, dramatic at another, invites us to dare all things. Compositions are marvelously made befbore our eyes, offering lesson after lesson in form and color. Up and down over, rocky roads move flocks of goats, ; burros laden with wood, troops of blackâ€" shawled women or white veiled little girls, cowboys on holiday, Indians come to town to sell their handiâ€" crafts, horse and burro riders, white covered wagons, ancient buggies with faces looking out curiously upon the unaccustomed town. Though one may never paint these | things, they. are poetry and color and life and sinâ€" cerity; and are of that environment that goes to make the world exquisâ€" itely worth while for him whose work it is to ccncentrate on the spfritual values‘ of life," . ; Dr. Snyder, who is professor of English at Northwestern‘ university, said that to interest embryo business men and women in literature, the uniâ€" versity teacher must be able to satâ€" isfactorily answer the question of the ktudent, "What good is all this to me?" He said that until the univerâ€" sity teacher can convince students that the study of letters can make them both wise and happy, "can give them significant information about men and women, and help them estiâ€" mate the present as well as underâ€" stand the past," it will be hard to popularize the study of literature with students, but that as soon as they recognize that such study will make them better business and proâ€" fessional â€"men, the teacher‘s problem will have been satisfactorily solved. An exhibjition of oil paintings and water colors by Olive Rush, of Santa Fe, New Mexico, has just been placed on view at the Art Institute. Miss Rush is a native of Fairmount, Inâ€" diana, and obtained her art education in New York, studying with Twachtâ€" mann, Mowbray and Howard Pyle, and in Paris with Richard Miller.‘ In the present showing eleven of her paintings and water colors are hung, principally of scenes in the southwest, which country she paints with symâ€" pathy and understanding. * Oil and Water Color Paintings by Olive Rush of Santa B Fe at Institute NOTABLE EXHIBIT "When the teacher of literature is abl> to show his students this union of truth and beauty in the material he offers them, when he has interâ€" ested them in the ideas presenited, and has awakened some esthetic appreciaâ€" tion of the form in which these ideas are clothed, then he has virtually acâ€" complished the hardest task of allâ€" he has made it possible for the stuâ€" dent kimself to justify that study for which today too many persons seem prone to offer apologies." "One thing more we must assuredâ€" ly hold before ourselves as an ideal, and that is.to bring home to our stuâ€" dents in some way the fact thag litâ€" erature is an art, to be studied, jultiâ€" matély, as an art, and that it! can make men and women fiappiei by bringing them into contact ywith an enduring and ever appealing form of beauty.. Here, of course, the task of the teacher becomes Herculean in its difficulty. To avoid the vaporings of the longâ€"haired esthete is in itself not difficult, but to suggest sanely those things which will most certainâ€" ly bring one‘s students to the proper. state .of mind is sure to prove baffâ€" ling. ' % x "Culture has never been bred in a vacuum. Dante effected in the ‘Diâ€" vine Comedy" an immediate and sigâ€" nificant correlation of litersture and life; Thomas Grey, academic recluse that he was, was an eager student of politics, philosophy and science;: Lowâ€" ell was a statesman as well as critic, reformer as well as poet. â€" ) . ie ‘‘"We can not expect to hold people to the old tradition ‘by raising the cry of culture unless we are willing to change our methods and our ideals," ‘ continued Prefessor Snyder. are "To put it baldly, literature qualify as a ject," said Prof. Fran der, of Northwestern céntly in an address | nesota ~Education as Snyder‘s: topic was "T ture" and in his rem: be â€"s0 ..\ structor the teac him. > LITERATURE STUDY MUST BE ATTRACTIVE THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS to be influer of literature vividly pre r that the Will Interest Them OF WESTERN ART age young American toâ€" influenced to the serious rature, the subject must the student letters and Franklyn Bliss Snyâ€" tern university, reâ€" ess before: the Minâ€" i association. â€" Dr. s "Teaching Literaâ€" remarks he, frankly tâ€"today many young the universities to rercial pursuits an‘d ‘lassroom where litâ€" , we must make a vocational sub. inklyn Bliss Snyâ€" .?,!jfi@% mss se hold people raising the Minâ€" Dr. ("A protective tariff amply high to safeguard us against the pauper labor soOUTH WANTS TARIFF; _ "DEMOCRATS AROUSED t] Laco O Green Bay Auto Station _ â€" _‘ Glencoe Motors Highland Park Nash Stales 500 .N. Green Bay Rd., Highland Pk. 120 N. First St., Highland Park Patk Ave., Highland Park Springer & Person: : Laco Service Station. _ ;‘ \Laco Service Station ° 11 Park Ave., Highland Park â€".* Waukegan Road, DecrfleY Waukegan Road, Northbrook Glencoe Motors | Paige Motor Co, | \â€".‘<‘Righland Park Auto Mart V'fmon Ave., Gl@ncoe . y Vernon Ave., C \â€"~.â€"*:Deerfleld Road, Blodgett _ Quickâ€"firing and nonâ€"carbonâ€"forming Boyceâ€"ite Bluâ€"Green Gasoline, if used continuously will insure a quicker start, sary use of the choke sends it into the cylinders in practically a raw state makes starting hard and performance poor. . How can this be prevented? â€" Byadopting Boyceâ€"ite Bluâ€"Green Gasoling as your standard fuel. It isn‘t the motorâ€"it‘s the fuel. Sluggish gas and the excessive carbon it What causes that blanket of â€" poor performance to settle over . your motor in cold weather? produces when the constant and necésâ€" RFGAI;DLEBS, of the deâ€" sign of your motor, or the grade of gasoline used, if after adopting Boyceâ€"ite treated gasoline:as your standard motor fuel, you ever again find it necessary to remove carbon, have that carbon burned out and send the bill covering to Boyce (® Veeder Co., Inc., Long Island City, N. Y., U.8.A, A check will be sent you immediately. Buarantee â€" DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS Te il Corporation a way as to avoid the restrictions and limitations lawfully imposed ‘Kereunâ€" der, and to provide penalties for vioâ€" lation hereof." w3\ Â¥ : Said Zonilg-qummitm of the City of Highland Park was duly authorized mnd. established ‘by ordinance passed by the Council of the City of Highâ€" land Park on May 9th, 1924, with powers as provided by an Act of the CGeneral Assembly of the State ‘of Illinois entitled "AN â€"ACT to confer gertain additional powers . upon. city ‘of the Orient ‘and the ‘nearâ€"pauper Iabor of Europe is essential .to the ‘prosperity of the farmers and the inâ€" \dustrial interest of the country alike. ‘The south needs ogrotoctbn more than any other part of the country. : _ "I ‘know . that there are thousands and hundreds of thousands of southâ€" ern men who belive thoroughly in a protective tariff:â€"and who would advoâ€" cate it openly if they felt entirely free from the political standpoint of voicing in public their ‘views which in private they hold." - For Sale at the Filling Stations mpetrik tA Listed Below: $Â¥ minimum use of the choke in starting and keeps your motor carbonâ€"clean at its vital pointsâ€"vailve seats and stems, spark plug points and piston rings. f Enjoy a clean, quick starting, sweet runâ€" ning motor all winter by the regular use of this ideal winter motor fuel. The sooner you start with Boyceâ€"ite Bluâ€" Green Gasoline, the sooner you will reap the benefits that come with its continued The best time to staft is right NOW! THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1925 ‘councils ‘in cities and‘ and ‘boards of trustees in villages and inâ€" ings and structures, the of e of Jot nrens, the eltsstifation of trades, : industries, , buildings, and structures, with ‘respect to. lpcation and regulation, the creation of disâ€" ‘tricts of different classes, and the esâ€" ’ublhllment of regulations ‘and reâ€" strictions applicable thereto, the esâ€" tablishment of Boards of Appeals and the review of decisions of such boards by the court,"" approved June 28, 1921, in force July 1, 1921 and all amendâ€" ments thereof. Copies of said proâ€" ‘posed amending ordinance are on file at the Office of the City Clerk of the City of Highland Park and accessible for examination by interested parties. ‘At said public hearing an opportunity will be afforded to all persons interâ€" estéd to be heard in irelation: to said proposed amendment. _ .. _ i amen ie l %'.CMBM. ‘â€" GEORGE E. BLISS CARLETON M. VAI Zoning Committee of the City of Highland Park. It cannot injure the finest metal surface 5 A F E | o. e eoo F4 $'H aa

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