Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 22 Apr 1926, p. 14

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€% || 48 Eii 4 H it hy % . .. "Ought to be, it cost over a hunâ€" dred thousand. . Besides Salsby had a bunch of goldâ€"dust handed to him on a silver platter. In fact all the chaps I‘ve met here have seemed to hititol!hin:::ny‘ormothot. You musn‘t let t ; you unhappy. Besides you‘ll xllybo' thrown with girls who “w Y& know, mmhg wn level,‘ ‘and the .. "She does act a bit Ritzie," he adâ€" mitted, "but, my dear, you‘re so much more attractive that you should get quite a kick out of being in the presâ€" ence of: Mrs. Crawford." I j _ "It isn‘t that, Curtiss, it‘s just that they have such an awful lot of everyâ€" thing," 1 concluded.. "Look at their home, it‘s simply stunning ?" « I <still under the Inffoence of Herrict Cramdord" t baid as he sat down beside me. My tone was sullen. Mn _ When Curtiss came in at twilight hfmdmdfiiubodd.thowbdflv', unsmiling and sullen.© <~ 0+ ~~ "Come now, fell us all about it," he pleaded, coming over and gently tilting my face so that. he could study servants it would beâ€"impossible for her to understand or sympathize with a less prosperous Later I gave the of letterâ€" writing and so she the chautâ€" feur to turn back and me to the Tutwiler hotel at which we were stay. ing. j "What‘s up dearest? Where‘s my little Life of the Party?" â€" | ‘ by told me just last night Curtiss Wright had already made a for Himself as an set ({I believe that‘s what he im) anyâ€" way, ‘he mentioned several denlm crodim that he already has to t." } It didn‘t take me long, however, to analyze the feminine ber of the House of Crawford, Stl:ntunfini- ably snobbish. â€" Herself a child of luxâ€" ury, she was absolutely unaware that there were others who were not in the same financial status. Naturally she took me to see large and preâ€"possessâ€" ing places whose owners were abroad or in Florida and who wished to lease their homes for the season. © I thought I might as well be hmunbontthotypehome "Just place lained, “mm.m "Nm‘."-l-w | I coludn‘t bring myself to go into detail about our recent financial trouâ€" was not the sort to inspire confidenâ€" tial disclosures. Wi&hrbm home, her smart clothes and Sallie Grows Dissatisfied . _ Finding an attractive house at a rental Curtiss thought was reasonable, was no easy matter, wm.m working on his plans for the , subâ€"division, I looked at many places. One. afternoon‘ Harriet Crawford took me, in her new limousine, on ‘a houseâ€"hunting | expedition, : Salsby Crawford, to whom she was married, was the scion of a fabulously wealthy family and we had become quite intiâ€" mtewiththe-baum of the fact that he and Curtiss had been classâ€" mates at college. } t Renipe ie in mc arpnibpedint t mjarpactyrem |as, cpet i qrniunie pninr paip rndpndsomipaty ies prrine pnaip wpnipri n s innbnrparterbestadperysipal xc " PAGE FOUR ht _ of a new wife lustrated by Paul Rebinson i cve oo on e o on o on on on o ue nn on m on on on on on on n on un hn e o on hn on un in on in n in on in ue in ; ELLCLLLELOLEOLEEETTEETTTTTECECTETITTTTTTTYT, u99 : U i , & m _ OM : | is ¢‘,y'//¢ V & | d _ Mn & N ‘\. l” 4 /‘/7@ ‘ ,‘ & ? C } ‘ ;‘.â€"_l, f vf ® x3 l h. Y i || V 5... d t $ N .&':;: & .‘ *4 tcoalp, 4."~ Nisi: AP * 4 “.“ ART ) PA iC 1 \*“. 1925 by Publishers Autocaster Service |_"You girls of this generation lack gourage, absolutely, You can‘t face any ‘situation that isn‘t all bmz- guckles and roses. . Look at your anâ€" cestors! ‘Those pioneer women who grossed the continent in those lean days of the covered wagon. Think of the deprivations they suffered and look at their spirit! It was the women behind the men that kept them going and made them fit for their shining achievements. Here I‘m asking my m to live simply in a comfortable ngalow with me and you‘d think I‘d asked you to share a life of abject misery. The trouble with you, Sallie, is that you‘ve been in the limeâ€"light go long that any normal perspective you might have had, is blindedâ€"your viewâ€"point â€" of ‘life is out of focnl.} You‘re pouting now because you can‘t be the leading lady. You can‘t bol anything, until I get on my feet, but My eyes opened wide in mumut.! Was this Curtiss ! He paced the floor and without being actually in a rm% he was plainly moved inwardly by what he was saying.. Without waitâ€" ing for my reply, he continued:. ‘ it won‘t take me long to get my afâ€" fairs reestablished and with a little faith and encouragement on your part the whole thing would be easy. But you‘re so unwilling to sacrifice a fow unnecessary pleasures and m possessions that the effort is j ruining your disposition!" se uries, while I was once more (etJ‘ ting started. It isn‘t the first time that a â€"man‘s investments have been awept away leaving him almo‘a stranded. I‘ve explained to you tha‘ He smiled at my vehement decripâ€" tion of the section of Europe which I had previously found so alluring. [ "We didn‘t look atâ€"cottages," I reâ€" plied, a word that I thought had first mentioned. "By the way, Curâ€" tiss," pursuing the thot'xlfht vmz had started, "I hope we‘ll meet some people b:r’o“ ;;o t::"m;:l -ophnm:l# money. | It t harder playing around Ldth a bunch who have all the things we ahould and would have had if you hadn‘t lost so much on that darned old Riviera." , "‘Insist‘ is an ugly word, let‘s .m s coag an: w went ou{o:ith Mrs. Crawford ?" yu* "Oh, don‘t worry," he said in an attempt to be reassuring, "we‘ll meet plenty J! young couples who are just starting out and some who have even less ml‘ we have." $ : "I hardly think THAT would be posâ€" sible," Iâ€"answered curtly. I hadn‘t meant to be unkind but somehow the prospect of living in a cottage fi relinquishing the things, that all my life, I ‘had been used to having, “T none too rosy. "Now look here, Sallie, I‘m worn out ‘with your complaining. ‘You‘ve done nothing :«::ndm ‘ht.h:'t from the moment you ‘out t you were going to have to‘give up a few luxâ€" beâ€"â€"what! is it the newsp then‘; |Oh, yesâ€"the ‘mflm d.'nn“’” t / He was in a wonderful humour. °_ ‘@©But, Curtiss, I can‘t even find houotdnnin."ldoclmimw' to the gubject which was always upâ€" pe in â€"our conversation. "There are plenty of houses to be had," I con tended, | nothing as small as yoq insist on having." e s Baker 1 18 &1 4 t tL &1 14 48 ta o+ 48 L1 u8 81A #8 L 0 ta 11 t# 11 118 L0 O 0 _ 18 U# t# &8 44 8 1# t# t# t# 11 ts 30 t4 t# t# #% t# 8 18 &“:é H i t# u 1 4 Â¥ i i Coolidge economy must become an American habit not a mere passâ€" ing impulse. There are a few optoâ€" ‘mistic spirits who have rather assumâ€" ed by reason of the extraordinary gains made in the al and: efâ€" fAicient adminis of governmental functions, that the tale had been told and that nothing further remained to be done. The t passage of the taxâ€"bill with the guts which it proâ€" vides in the taxes to be paid by all the people has given stability to that impression, ‘The gains made in tax reduction have apparently created in the mind of some congressmen, mainâ€" 1y Democratic, impression that what was saved be spent. As a resgult a multitude of bills are beâ€" fore congress for expenditures which completely wipe out all the savings made by the Coolidge proâ€" gram, | ; Representative Tg::n. of Connectiâ€" cut, house leader, has already noted this situation, and has served notice MY . WIFE. Do youâ€"understand that Sallie?" His vdg‘ gained in emotion, "the helpâ€"mate, of a working man, a doer, a common, ordinary goâ€"getter, If you wish to remain with me under those conditions and â€" act pleasantly about it you can make me very happy, if not, then therg is only one <other course that is You may return to m?‘h?'_; itil I can woo you «"No, I don‘t want you to decide in a hurry. . This is a serious and vital moment in our lives, Sallie, and I want you to think it over. I‘m goâ€" ing out for a walk and when I return you can give me your decision." ~ â€"(Don‘t miss Sallie‘s answer > ~\~ next week!) * back WITH A FORTUNE." I started to reply. What my anâ€" swer would have T do not know but womanâ€"like I suppose I would have attempted to (defend my position. However, he silenced me before the opening words of the sentence had been uttered. 1 f COOLIDGE ECONOMY Musr%un HABIT Congressman W; f. Tendenâ€" °> Toward Lavish Rapendi~__â€" North _ Shore ‘ Gas Compa[* ture; Have Money HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS Repldce the Old Gas Appliane towards the purchase price of a New Cabinet Gas Range equipped with the "LORAIN®" Over Heat Regulator." : :::: !=>./â€"_ . Houseâ€"cleaning means getting rid of a lot of old, worn out articles. Our Spring Gas Range Sale will help you get rid of your old Gas Range or Cook Stove and inâ€" stall a new modern Gas Range equipped with the "LORâ€" AIN" Oven Heat Regulator.. _ . . 4 § The logical place to buy Gas appliances on. his fellow a-bnq that the orâ€" ganization of the house is strongly opâ€" posed to this, grabâ€"bag meth as the congressman is, he: ; do it all.. What is now W is a new and public assertion of the dulgr&: the people ‘that the old spirit of and decent administration be = ued. â€" With reasonable: the taxpayers, the public bills will vanish like snowbanks in the sunshine. 1 I The attitude of the con 5 whohlnfinh'oducedwm ' is based on their that the peoâ€" ple approve of the i# program. Once: it i;t:ade plain to ¢tbumth$ governme expenditures for ; theureduetiomtmldilwu ME t Ob i MAAA ME I | ‘ AEAERAAEAO NNE EC EEEEE O ENEA NANARAURIRNTENOUE Landscape and Road Building connumj Tel. Highland Park 85 P. 0. Now is the Time Telephone Highland Park 194 continue will materially increase your mainâ€" tenance budget. nous surface of Tarvia and stone, and avoid future annoyance. D. S$. EDW ARDS that your driveway is failing and if allowed to FREE Let me give you an estimate for a bitumiâ€" During this sale we will give a uséeful nineâ€"piece "Pyrex" Cookâ€" ing Set and Aluminum Roaster with "Pyrex" cover on the purâ€" chase of a new Cabinet Gas Range equipped with a "LORâ€" AIN" ‘Oven Heat . Regulator when no other allowance is ma‘de.‘_,'” 8 TURN IN YQW GAS OR _ .COAL E> . $8.00 ALLOWANCE For your old Gas or Coal Range fat too high by the average taxpayer, in smothering the measures which they introduced with the purpose of meeting what they thought were popâ€" vlar demands. We must remember that after all the margin between a federal surplus and a federal deficienâ€" cy bill is none too large. A New Jersey bootlegger is said to have shown the prohibition officers how to make liquor out of hair tonic. But it still retains the property of growing fur in your throat by the morning after. 9 Did you know that man ate meat before agriculture and. the â€" cereals were known? t id 3 f . | FOWwnIS. _. 20 â€" bus * I anyhaw * P > "'"’q ~| ~"That‘s a fact, replied Con. stable Sam L. â€" *"But might get one you SMMM' on his . | American right to as much tro £| ble for public j as he chooses. â€"|â€"Kansas City f s Did you know in Egypt 5.000 yeats ag were branded? â€" AT guhom?"m THURSDAY), APRIL 22, 1928 "Ho seldoomMm gt 49% Cr tle 4Â¥ of Anyhow the wet a odinary a foe propar som iT not led of fthe wast gaged, altl more than. ”“: E‘M propagand! country ot] sq that thi w," denationali z‘ iMling Hars to and wi spent 1. in. use in / achievemen in behalf ¢ fn on world to his own . influence tk themselves ‘ targets of fluences. â€" 4: ous influen form gl:;t."::' : forcing int children th units MA k in ie m shore line mouth of the work tem below C country, p water , ice and not at where ::' | ship will fore the e ol )00 )00 the prc tra ove bue )e )e survf ht ro& Ju8 t} ym M APPI THUCRS [ mt ho A V whiaAl itior t of hC & re hig un i1d M 1 11

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