Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 21 Oct 1926, p. 24

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UR 48 North First Street 17 Or you, lisâ€" veler of ~step of has been gogamm-mbdlfi e are prepared to do all and: sheet metal work here in time and at moderate ir_you just want a r‘an elaborate cornice M« amnukmmm ; done tight and priced t Chicago , leaving t least a hind! NRY G. WINTER features esh be also is the e in on i pride never e than SDA Y . they. x$ # EVERY MACHINE AND TOOL â€"__ _ »$ OCTOBER 31. i# % "Such a joint attack, initiated four years ago by the California Institute of Technology and the Mount Wilson Widest Variety. e o "Matters occur in nature under the widest variety of composition and form. The physicist, who approaches the problem of its constitution by the most direct route, deals chiefly with the chemical <elements, and evolves powerful methods of research which enable him to penetrate to the core ‘of the atom, to visualize the electrons swinging in their orbits, and to reâ€" move them one by one for detailed study. The chemist, concerned primâ€" arily with the union of atoms: into molecules, and the combination â€" of molecules of one or more elements, attacks matter of greater complexity, extending all the way from the single atom ‘of hydrogen to compounds conâ€" taining hundreds of linked atoms of many kinds. The astrophysicist, pérâ€" mitted by his telescopes to push his researches into space, observes matâ€" ter in the state of luminous gaseous elements, associated in the cooler stars with certain chemical mâ€" pounds. The cosmic cruicibles h”fi- celestial laboratory exhibit conditions of temperature and pressure often transcending those attainable on earth, and thus present for observaâ€" tion experiments on an immense scale, the interpretation of which has alâ€" ready: addedâ€"much to our knowledge of physics and chemistry. _ Ninetyâ€"Two Elements "We now know that there are just ninetyâ€"two elements in nature, the heaviest of which are spontancously breaking up into lighter ones. The basic. element, _ hydrogen, _ exists throughout the universe, accompanied by othér elements in varying proporâ€" tions and states. Certain stable eleâ€" ments can be broken up by artificial means in the laboratory, but no methâ€" od of combining their constituents has yet been found. In the stars, howâ€" ever, there is strong reason to believe that the heavier elements are actually being built up from lighter ones, unâ€" der conditions involving phenomena of radiation and absorption of enefgy as yet unmatched on the earth.â€" A genâ€" eralâ€"study of the constitution of matâ€" ter should thereforte be so organized that physics, chemistry, and astroâ€" physics may all play adequate parts. . "One of the greatest problems of science is the constitution of matters," says Dr. Hale, "and its conversion inâ€" to radiant energy. © The spiral nebuâ€" lae, remarkable as they are as ‘island universes,‘ have suddenly assumed adâ€" ditional interest because of the part they‘ may play in the solution of this problem. | , George Ellery Hale, honorary diâ€" rector of Mount Wilson observatory, views the possibilities of a concerted attack upon the problem of the constiâ€" tution of matter by scientists in the September Scribner‘s Magazine. CONCERTED ATTACK _ BY ALL SCIENTIST3S Constitution of Material Things Greatest Cause of Query of Men Who Study Naâ€" . ture‘s Work UPON PROBLEM OF MATTER THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1926 Nes 11 p The:â€"Local Telephoxfidfe Directory ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHOPYE COMPANY The Telephone dbmpany and give notice of anyfiéhanges or corrections that should be made in their listings This work is promoted by the State Conservation Commission, which supâ€" plies young forest trees free for planting on publicly owned land and at a nominal price to individuals. The Arbor Day number of the bulletin to been set out, and the remainder will be reforested during the next two or three years:in order to train studâ€" ents in practial forestry. Reforestation is becoming a popuâ€" lar school project in New York state. Two thousand trees have been plantâ€" edâ€"each year for the past three years by pupils of the Cold Brook school, and the work will be continued this year. : A good ‘beginning has been made upon the school forest of Watâ€" son, Lewis county, which will ultiâ€" mately cover 98 acres;> trees are planted at the rate of 10,000 a year. Pupils of the Spencerport high school are planning to reforest 2% acres of a 12â€"acre tract. A school forest has been started by the agricultural department of Walton high school. A plot of 5% acres was purchased last year on Pine Hill covered a century ago with virgin white pine forest. About a third of the plot has already STUDIED IN SCHOOL Becomin lar Sub F. CourgespguNew l‘flortdlt Xg Is Reported REFORESTATION IS observatory, has already yielded many important results." Your .permanenfiii‘évnve may also need i{gl‘k‘txtm curls so come in xfid see Marcelling, dyeing, manâ€" icuring, scalp treatments and facials which tone up the skin that has _been neglected vduring}f-;'fq'raca- tion. N us. A Complete Beauty Service Awaits You Here . (MLLIAM DENZFL 6 North Sheridan Road Inthe interest of good service subscribers are requested to call Goes to Press Soon :Bg{aug‘y 6?:0}9 A [ 3 13 PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that in pursuance of a decretal order made and entered of record on Octoâ€" ber 7, 1926, in the above entitled cause, in and by the Probate Court of Lake County, Illinois, at the October Term A. D. 1926 of said court, the unâ€" dersigned, as Administrator of the Estate of Mary G. Mockler, deceased, )will on Tuesday, the 16th day of Noâ€" vember, A. D. 1926, at one o‘clock in l the afternoon of said day, sell at pubâ€" In the Matter of the Estate of Mary G. Mockler, deceased, and in the Matâ€" ter of the Application of William Mockler, Administrator of the Estate of Mary G,. Mockler, deceased, for leave to sell real estate to pay debts. vs. James Irving Mockler, Bridget Mcâ€" Cormick, Raymond Bergeron, Earl Bergeron, Norman Bergeron, Conâ€" stance Jaundrau. The number of girls sitting around without . partners at the dances is a suggestion that the man ‘power of the nation is declining. ¢ State of Illinois,. County of Lake, ss. Plug hats : being worn â€" more, but people can‘t get elected to office mereâ€" ly by putting one on. the schools, issued by the University of the State of New York, was largeâ€" ly ~devoted: to descriptions of such efforts. j IN THE PROBATE COURT OF SAID COUNTY THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS Tel. H. P ®>936 ERNEST 8. GAIL, Attorney for Estate. ‘lic vendue at the premises hercin deâ€" scribed, in the City of Highland Park, in the County dhll:h:‘ in the State of IIlinois, to the t and best bidâ€" der for cash, all and singular the folâ€" :’owing described real estate, in said ecréea described, toâ€"wit: The South one hundred feet of Lotiten in block thirtyâ€"six in the City of Highland Park, Lake County, Illinois, (except the westâ€" erly eighty feet thereof) subject to dower and homestead rights of William Mockler for the purpose of paying debts and claims against said estate, and costs and expenses of administration thereâ€" of. | Dated this Tth day of October lmu I I 368 Central Ave. Highland Park Phone H. P. 2443 â€"A4 NDâ€" DECORATING IN ALL ITS BRANCHES J. A. Torstenson&Co. Imported and Domestic FÂ¥ A L L P A P E R 8 PAINTING BUY IT IN A HANDY DRUMâ€"THERE‘Ss A SAVIN WILLIAM MOCKLER, Administrator of the Estate of Mary G. Mockler, deceasâ€" .d. j Let him give you a copy of "Oiling"â€" Sinclair‘s new helpâ€"booklet for motorists. Perhaps they can save you f .a trip to town! Give him the opportunity of making friends with you. Heris at your serviceâ€" whenever you hail him along the road. He is a friendly neighbor of yours. He knows tractors, trucks and automobilesâ€" and he knows oil. He can tell you how to use oil to get the most out of it. _ IT is not always necessary to wasteid\ree or four hours going to town when your tractor or your automobile is not working right! Maybe the trouble is wholly with your oil. If it is, the man who drives the Sinclair Truck past your place probably can tell you what is wrong and what to do about it-;--and save you a trip to town. ‘‘A L O NG GOOD WILL H1IGH w aA Seals Power at every Degree of Wear OPALINE SINCLAIR HOME-TOW]‘,E LAUNDRY: io es mie mard. 3 Bring Your Bundle in {,‘.d take Advantage bf:o 1 Quality Laundry Work 20% Discoun Dry Cleaning a SM“G Phone 1051 For 543 Central Ave: AGE [3

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