Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 7 Jan 1926, p. 19

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

L1 ity 1ial 99 te clothing for men enits in every phase was worked out by NC FOR STUDEN‘Ts ue were made in the laboratory and the dem. ne 65 othing : ¢ ouisiana IANUARY re &n service classes of nluh:um economics. men and school of _ || (se * g“ M( on the _~â€"\ ,\C»fl, g ““& N,(;\"\ 307 c . é tike “ 5 3 t 0 \\Aa s \%>_<ll h ‘ â€"‘Unequalle 141 Chicago North Shore & Milwaukee Railroad Co.,g â€" The Highâ€"Speed Electrified Railroad â€" | â€"â€"THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, 1926 Ask your neighbor The estate of the late James Deerâ€" ing, has lent a number of valuable paintings to the Art Institute. Among them are four large can s by Tieâ€" pdo.al?th&nmy%m er, now held in esteem for his many sacred paintings for church and for wall decorations, which he executed with amazing draughtsmanship and color. The four paintings now hangâ€" ing in the Nickerson gallery are suâ€" perb illustrations of the story of Rinaldo and Armida, by Tasso, The first painting shows Rinaldo asleep ‘and above him floating on a delicate cloud appears in his dréam the beauâ€" tiful Armida. The second panel shows Number of Valuable Pictures are Lént to Art Institute for Public BRenefit â€" > DEERING ESTATE * _Express trains every half hour to the Chicago Loop. Nine homeâ€" ward â€" bound trains leaving the Loop from 10:00 p.m. until 1:00 a.m. Telephone 140 LOANS PAINTINGS Save money; use a 25â€"ride _ Lt _ 13:â€" @G% °: > > why he commutes onthe s A+~ â€"‘" Unequalled Theatre Service or 10â€"ride ticket L C â€" Renlen amLe wteriige Anptinkemieen iso n 7 Walter McEwen showing a scene in a Munich charch where the penitents come and kneel and pray for absoluâ€" tion. ~‘The fair penitent, richly dress. ed, kneels in the foreground, over a stall, lit only. by the dim light of &A tallow candle, while in the backâ€" ground is the sympathetic face and fimofmoldpumtwmfi. The painting is called "The Magdalene." the newly made lovers conversing: in an Italian garden, but in the backâ€" ground aretwo warriors of the Cruâ€" sades, who have come to eall Rinaido to his duty. The third painting shows the parting of the lovers and in the final panel the hermit is seen telling Rinaldo of the axg:jn of his ancesâ€" tonundpoinfingtothe glorious fuâ€" ture in store for him. ; _ Another important painting in the Deering loan is the canvas by Gari Melchers, entitled â€" "Mother and Child." In the collection also is a very <delicately colored picture hy Highland Park Ticket Office MeVeenep ut Te *L% picture by . BUBEIC Rofies ts Toulg" . C NOTICE is â€" * given that the Subscriber Administrator of the ‘Estate of Mary G. Mockier, deâ€" ceased, will attend the Probate «Court ofLabeCount.y.utute'rmthfl-nzto be holden at the Court House in Wauâ€" kegan, in said County, on ‘the first Monday ‘of March next, 1926, when and where all persons having claims against said estate are notified and requested to present the same to said Court for adjudieation. F1 j WILLIAM MOCKLER, Administrator of Estate of |â€"Mary G. Mockler, deceaged, Waukegan, I1L, Dec. 17, 1925, 48â€"45pd E. 8. Gail, Atty. Pb Lir Cohte L0 oi ol t m nnt from a California orchard. It would take one as big as th‘“’"T“"e“‘ press our. feeling toward | certain statesmen, % t 4 anmenie e ue Rapid nindoent Lemons 15 inches long are THE HIGHLAND PARK PrRESS was a little less than 10,000 miles, The mileage that has been completed since 1917 totais 46,486 miles... The figures given for the year just passed account only for those portions which are entirely completed, 'l‘bey‘st; not ’mbrl«uroi;d building uflM that are ~sti progress. f are stretches yet to be finished that bv.‘ a total length of 12463 miles. The work just endedo{npm:uu an apâ€" proximate cost two hun and fortyâ€"three million dollars, g?!dvhki one hundred and eleven m dolâ€" lars were paid by the United States government. Since 1917 the go ment has furnished three hundred and seventyâ€"three million dollars as its portion of the road work. : ; The past year holds the record over any previous year for federal aid on highways. 11,8$290 miles were comâ€" pleted. : The previous high year mark reported ed out the seasonal peaks. : This is a tremendous ‘advantage to everybody in business, But the trouble is that most of us don‘t know it." , f PAST YEAR RECORD .. ~ _ IN HIGHWAY AID No matter what business you look ut, you‘re apt to find that it has reâ€" cently undergone a big change due to this elimination of sessonal peaks. We no longer buy enough steel, ‘woolâ€" ens or rope to last for months ahead, because we know that we can get such supplies when we need them. Even underwear sales are distributed rather. evenly through the year. As many furs are sold in summer as in winter, We have vanquished seasons and ironâ€" to mere weather conditions, bt}t go right ahead the year around regardâ€" less of season or weather. It used to be that little building was done in winter; Today in any large city you see men excavating for great buildâ€" ‘ ings in defiance of snow or mud," says Fred Kelly in Nation‘s Business. "Inâ€" stead of having a high peak of buildâ€" ing activity when the season is most advantageous, the same work is spread over many months. â€" But the fellow | who‘ makes comparison with his former {busiest season and takes snap ‘judgment decides that business is rotten. I "It is," declares Mille®, "be%nm most business men have not yet awakened to the fact that we ye overcome the weather, We no 1 mz, have seasonal peaks in busi da â€" Lee Miller, consulting engineér for the American Institute of Steel Conâ€" struction, recently remarked that he has : discovéered why men. co lain about poor busines when busi is really good. __â€" > : £] SEASONAL PEAKS IN _ â€" BUSINESS NO MORE Sons Also Served _ | ‘"Despite‘ the fact that he a man of immense wealth, and at the head o7 many big business enterp s all of which he would losé in the event of British success, Mason was among the very first to speak and act against the unwarranted oppression of the mother country, _ Not only did his three cons serve as soldiers in the Muttonnary war, but he contributâ€" ed $75,000 in tash to the prof of the warâ€"a vast sum in that day." ‘"His line of sailing vessels was known in all ports of that day. |â€" His ships traded in Britain, Fra the West Indies, gnd with the col to the north amhnpnth of the Potomae. It may truthfully be said that he was one of the principal founders o the: American merchant marine. T of his boats bore the names "Was ton," "Confidence," and "Augusta." epsio n eb e and one of the wealthiest men IP the colonies, .His estate at Gunston Hall, a few miles down the Potomsc[frou Mt. Vernon, consisted of fifteen and acres, &!e owned eighty tho acres in Kentucky and a large ‘tract in Ohio. A thousand slaves tilled his land and operated his househo. It was his usual custom to have 000 in cash and twice ‘that sum the credit of his account, , HIGHLAND PARK, ILLiNoIS Prominent Business Man of His Time With Estate Near That of Washington; Aided â€" Great Leader _ _‘ HELPED INDEPENDENCE MASON WAs FAMOUS _ MAN OF REVOLUTION Oe George PRESS WANT ADS BRING RESULTS I have always tried to give the public an efficient and courteous administration of the duties of my office and assure you that your support in the past has inspired me to give the best in me in behalf of the citizens of this county. y Reâ€"Nomination at the I take this opportunity to thank you for your loyal support in the past and will greatly appreciate a continuation of that support in my present candidacy for Primary Election on April 13th, 1926 I would like to discuss with beauty of your estate. The effect that a properly laid out landscaped garden would have is surprising. JOHN ZENGELER Phone 528. HICKORY KNOLL FARM Deerfleld, IHI. _ Tel. Deerfield 248 GUARANTEED TWENTYâ€"FOUR HOURS OLD : $ ' Delivered to Your Door Telephone 1589 WILL KRUMBACH LEW A. HENDEE, County Clerk FRESH EGGS Dormant Beauty Cleaner and Dyer 25 North Sheridan Road WE OPERATE OUR OWN PLANT In HIGHLAND PARK Prairie Avenue, Highwood Landscape E&E‘enln& Telephone H. P. 109 , Doors and Millwork Ridge Road, Highland Park, NL you the prospective PAGE SEVEN Â¥A

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy