Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 26 Aug 1926, p. 17

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i. no longer . am tn! the n compan- have can. to r.- hues u 3 "tiafaetory a“ auxiliary amputation. A tkt. understanding on the part of the . of the utility's problem! In. in Jess 'compeh'tion ind it we now It mn't I l-ton truck. It was "hundred-eight" truck. in body was described " u No: te lorry." h '3: sold "ex hendon" not "r. It bitt city. [ Some people getting a: fearful of We Cops, that they brink back it}: alarm on seeing ttiem from a "troad car window. m" for your commercial traveler. Bat in spite of the new words, that m hung about it, it was our old had. the Chevrolet. 's the cost with gas Busineu‘doesn't always talk the Rte Inngmge here ant in Em be editorial eye lighted on a. " “human of u motor truck in the Idea Chamber of Commerce Join. - than aiattearM1lioqt pa... ”many. “WRONG! m. It musteogttimge beam "rrtie-irtli.nthqmrsas Manhunt“. Hathaway. Detroit." t It could be had also as a “chart. he." or u r "eompartmented box One of the joys of a sojourn at 'i.eountry asserts. is (Wendy thb max of canned-food from the near- Community spirit is tine, and the is say that your fruit should ne- rdingly be regarded u a column. ' orchard. conveni- you an 1r home e plants.' ith dirt, Immuouwmbcw pummmemfolm. 1TH GAS My mph-scion heating C {in Int minimum“. an", new a. In: t your is-te-bod-tut"- oqtta-etftrrorttterea1- one of plants. Tile. nearly R ALL IT'S SAME 0130 Am ltiaeaietoaaythatwerinthe history of the Art Institute haa there been such an opportunity to View the work of the world'a treated-point- erstMriioo-asNdintheHoats collections to he noon in its galleries during August and September. Good exaniplee of work of menwho first began to paint can be seen in is: Ryereongeollection .of Primitive, t create-t painters or the Dutch school are represented in‘the Hut- chinson gallery: the‘early Engliah masters can he aeen in the Gym B. McCormick collection and in the Rim- ball gnllery; the French Barbison school in well represented in the Field collection; the Eniriirh, French and American school- are splendidly rep- resented in the Neilaon collection; the early Italian, Dutch and French schools in the Epstein colleétion: the early Spanish masters in the wonder- ful loan exhibition in Gallery M); the early Americana in the Byron Smith gallery and later Americans in the Friends of American Art collection, as well as in the Cyrus H. MeCor.. mick collection. where some Pad ex- amples of lnneee. Wynnt, Metcalf, and Redfield are shown. Coming down to our present day the entire Hut Wink generics are filled with the work of winters of today, representing widely diversified viewpoints, from the intensely indi- vidualistic canvuee of Ssndxen. Schoenfeld, Greenman and Schwartz, to the more conservative paintings, of Adams, Greacen, Ennis, Meyer, Shou, Costinn. Forsberg, Msnoir and Mit- chell. In the Bhrtlett Memorial col- leetion the height of the French Modernistic movement is touched in the canvases of such men as Cezanne,- Van Gogh, Gsuguin, Matisse, Rous- seau. Dersin, and their fellows. There is one good thing about being 1 mere congressman; When you leave for your vocation the nemoarr"er pho- tographers won't follow you. And in no canary in this country nor in my other can a more complete representation of the Impmsaioniatie school be found in the Palmer, and Ryersoh collections, where Renoir, Monet, Manet, Silky. lem, Guil- laumin and others of this school, are seen at their wet. THURSDAY, AUGUST 26, 198 GREATEST PM HERE REPRESENTED Art Institute Gm; Opportunity for “on of Works at World Masters -..g" P IE RCErARR0Nii' and ik's a hand-built enclosed 1838 Ridge Avenue (”021% 11021)“ a new Lou/ir" PRICE $2,9' fi; Series 80 'iiiiiiisiiiiii; TOM HAY & SON at Bufau- war on}: WWW --termt if dutnd In its native Japan the beetle was well behaved, but since arriving in the land of the free, where it has been safe from its native parasitic enemies, it has increased from a few to billions. spread into thr-tsues...-. New Jersey, Delaware and Pennsyl- vaniaa-and created. havoc to fruit trees and other plant life. m dr. ltereasrthteee sites in the new Mn show how the beetle came to the United States, visualize its life history, shoxoexama plea of the damage it does fruit trees, various plants and turf, and emphasize the control measures do. veloped by the federal and state de- partments of agriculture. Animated drawings show progressive develop- ment of the beetle [rubs during the 10 months they live in the soil. Close- ups show the spraying af bards with coated arsenste of hug: pre- vent beetle damage, the treatment of turf with carbon disulphite solu- tion to kill the grabs, and the en- forcement of quarantine laws to pre- vent the spread of the pest. FIND ENEMY OF THE JAPANESES BEETLE ‘Atoodptendolvelvetbm,when mredaaiemaht-trttttrenttUsnd ttotrts,shemidrmdueeatrtxrtNn1U.. oftm_1t8t_iu.tstr.oektottw nee,ersttt"p.tkdusqrttnetttirf agriculture. 11tierryritimedt!et "teritiamre1imatatmdorgtostdd. Bummededhruedshonldbentb' end b.tomttt.stoieistttmsed%to the feid. Grain: Im the heavier soils ehould be done with more an ttytrtottehdrjtiytft,umudnnrtr' ofpatekintrttteh-rersoittoitte detriment of the weeding crop. he and period of p'tatttrfng velvet been: is about three months, but this Td be lengthened as deemed - ale. Poplllie Sunni“, dies the “Jap- anese beetlef ll the villain in the new “national Mm, “Holding a. Japanese Beetle,” by the U. B. de . of mature. The hero of the story is tte Dexlid tir, '1 mite imported from Japan to help' men ihtht the beetle. VELVET BEANS PROVE EXCELLENT PASTU'RAGE Claimed many funnies are getting into debt, but muny of them will relieve the situation by borrowing some more. The kids are getting so thick in the 61d swimming hole that they as like- ly'to get dirtier from. going in. INCORPORATED 'ttNrtat-doitrdua+r In?“ F- The increased ditBimitf in getting . stead at red clover, experienced in lute you: by [rem in but! see- timtaoftheeottntrr,i_duato improper evil conditions, disuse. 'Pt edepted deed, wrong methoh of seeding, or to the nee af harmful nurse crepe. nay: the U. B. depart- ment of agriculture. Improper soil conditions result from content cul- tivation and the ”WI ion of lime, phosphates, potuh, and ornnic matter, linking the boil unsuited to the growth of eleven . _ of arsenic mutter. _ When clover tenure is enuaed by disuse. e du-utattt variety should be used tt “enable. or some other legume substituted for red elo- ver. If red clover tells on lend well supplied with lime, sweet clover can often he need instead. _ Sn'eh GiditioA an. tk remedied by. npplyinc the elm“ lacking and by. working in mm and other forms LOCAL PAINTINGS I SHOWN AT ’FRISCO l A selection of paintings from the collection of the Friends of America Art of the Art Institute of Chicago. consisting of tmrrtty-thre convenes, is now on dieplny at the Celifornll Palace of the Legion of Honor in San Francisco. From an menin- tion called "Ten Americnn Painters" three pictures from the friends col. lection are'beinz' shown: (“Lady in Green, and Gray" by' Thomas Ewing. "North River Shad," ,1" William M. Chase, and "lee Boxing," by Willard Metcnlf. Chieniris mists represented in the collection include Katherine Dudley, Funk C. Peyrnud, Abram Poole, Grace Revlin, and Walter Ufer. Evanston, Illinois . P. 1. Mill“) co. HIGH GIADI GRAND "ANN DI! In. min-tun at factory rrlrr. *hytettut null: and com MEWMAuOk-cgm. ON GROWING RED CLOVER m HIGHLAND rm ms. 31¢:me Inn. was 53:30 IM" M$0 in Benton Huber, Khakis”. The group now engaging It; Bedou'l oh nation is to cousin of n Inuit It. dorm-y, . pioneer trapper And on In- dinn guide. . _ , are now being lent-Git-” um a wlgigh the may enter work: for tho exhibition"." [ The thirty-ninth annual etrhibttimt of Amerltya1Arttndsmtir-ttt thitrreartrettattrstuart"mrtttnt. from October 28th to‘Doemhu- 18; Entry cards and prospectus blurb Spirit of the Northwest” is but" modelled bysumy A. M". foo theeitrofthmn Buy.Whooosh.to .1.yrmteettMt1rtueftitrttlaiGl " Biqtoeieat today. Hr. Beam received his art education “the Art Institute and ha nude my Mor- eltinx contributions to tho mum 1rftoNnnottho1eatrtirt,rhietrird tine but of Theodore Roosevelt now GREEN BAY TO HAVE SCULPTURRD GROUP iiiiiiriE scam“ I , snow ocr. wane; " DECORA Tmtl any. as New 368 Central Ave. Highland Park Phone H. P. 2443 J. A. Tmtenmn&C6. Maine-antic FALLPA P338 PAINTING DR. CHARLES E; GEM! M_n!§dn monumental map entitled “Th 541; Central" Avenue 10.13 N. Shawna)" u. .dhrlN-. Try the M a; next washdry! Assume wane! that the l i/i'h'iirf?0'i't other washers --that. it it the mtqtter m M it t "tt I'M”, don't kcer it. _' ) . arrnf a Week’s waging Jia1lBhs Just P110 E MAYTAG PRESS WANT ADS mum "amllet" ""ltS'r, 3 ' j," kWh-W01"; oruitt, GgLENVIEW! INN m:u..n.i.am “\I-lul‘ V Jul-I " a""?? WKUKEGAN and 'ct1N'v1ig) ROADS Mr. Sthaefer is well kno i, in 'iiiiiitsif ment places as a' man of ste link clum- ter and of many ideas for$m He will have charge of this r K V i i/,C' i, will actas general manager. 'f 2 EL : I-',."': Charles Bent. l 'ci, I-,', Long the popular place o g; _ , 1t outside'pt Chicago, has ff wi in}. tg. Schaefer to come in as ' ', 62' to Mr. Berg. \ l 1 . Q; :9 ANNOUNC 00311:an vi H: _ f ‘1'... mm: and DANCE'cnd Be ' , T ' Tlie GlenVie' MORAN BIB Plume I W' i L , . t g T, M; _ V l, i: e ’4 1 4;; j, . l, it? _ 3e l, 7V t' 5 5‘ up; tins/I

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