Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 2 Dec 1926, p. 5

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number of Lyou wish he present over| and have them freshâ€" , twice every day, k Ave. and Ridge €, pink, and red, t a dollar. '- rel Ave. Station, CHICAGO â€" Sinta Claus have he isrgoing to bririg them flown this "s’.i u'; t witgh of % hoo e We mt hm :.}.;*: after the hot air of.the poligical camâ€" TUURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1926 rant, Washington Street Floor; Concourse Restauâ€" d o mho Slod Icacak. ner in the Restauâ€" y"”“;"‘"“"‘f'c;o.; ame~ oods. ien Tr'-ins.'l'h:'eel'&mti: LL Y THIS IS SEASON ‘ OF MOTOR MISHAPS FALL & WINTER DANGERS Fall and winter being the most ferâ€" tile season in the production of trafâ€" fic mishaps, individual motorists are called upon now to exert every preâ€" caution against accidents which usuâ€" ally ate of more serious proportions than at any other time of the year. This is the warning sounded by Charles .M. Hayes, president of the Chicago Motor club, in urging each car. owner to see that no saftty feaâ€" ture of his automobile is allowed to function | inefficiently : during the months just ahead. f: Individual Problem f "Safety, in every one of its aspects, is an individual problem," says Mr. Hayes. "For instance, let us take the case of headlights. . With days becomâ€" ing short, lights are being brought increasingly into : service. â€" Glaring lights, the cause of an astonishing percentage of the serious traffic acciâ€" dents, about in every city in tbq country. They: are illegal in many places; but enforcement of such reguâ€" lation is almost impossible. â€"It is flatâ€" ly up to each: individual car owner to see that his own lights are in proper adjustment. If he will consider the part he can play in reducing acciâ€" dents by this simple step, it is almost certain he will not lag in taking it. . Most Fertile Time for Accident and Drivers are Urged to Exercise Greater Caution THURSDAY, "Brakes, obviously, are another tremendous factor in accidents. It is against the law in most states to drive a car with inefficient or inadeâ€" quate brakes, but it is impossible for anyone but the driver to tell how well his brakes are working. Unequalized Brakes "The American Automobile associaâ€" tion, with which this club is affiliated, in its campaign for greater safety points out that unequalized brakes which â€" may be â€" serviceable on dry pavements are in some ways worse than inadequate brakes at this particâ€" ular ; time of year. _ Unequalized brakes cause skidding and during fall and winter â€"seasons they are the primary cause of hundreds of serious _ "If every car owner will see to it that these two features of his car are in perfect condition, the seasonal acâ€" cident toll will be‘ greatly reduced." INDUSTRIES BATTLE : STOMACH IS GOAT Lfi Acd ts HU sevnitfinedheleicttaralts Siiftent t 1 n on rca itc ~olce zine. The United States Fisheries‘ association has decided to spend $300 000 to teach us to eat more fish; the The great American stomach is in for a wonderful time, says Merle Thorpe, in ‘Nation‘s Busines Magaâ€" same week the bread industry set aside $400,000 to expound the virtues of white bread. â€" The department of agriculture announces a publicity campaign to increase the use of doâ€" mestic rabbit meat. The same day it announced its intentions to coâ€"opâ€" erate with growers and dealers in a nationâ€"wide campaign to increase apâ€" ple consumption. ,â€" x4 Sauer kraut and green olives and andoymn,nbinl.ndmnod salâ€" mon oysters; medicinal cookiesâ€"all are fighting for a place in the naâ€" tion‘s stomach, 4 It‘s a merry battle of industri@s and may the best one win and nobody get indigestion! ClAke _ k:‘f_’_":‘ & : Brzur â€"â€" Zik â€"Z NOPE â€" 9355; i‘p BeTrer. > $ET THAT ( ;:(OKI. & 1. i ' A ) i s/a‘,//," t U AA 23 .: S emmicl} _ U s s / 4 2 }é, ;7 % 7 WHEN PA TRIES THE RADIO SQuaAwK _ ugEez â€"H LETY > «> + Jimky PUSnE > IN THAT THingA BoB, THEN Tens Tht | 4 THING ~â€"â€"â€"â€": ® ‘.on!Q& wWHEg 4B Sturnin Dislgla of This of Wgrk Is lu’;wn on Wal'llg .of Main Gallery | Stunning is the word that most aptly applies to the.exhibit of posters on the walls of the main print gallery of the Art Institute. TlSI exhibit is only a part of the exhibition of recent European Fine Book and Commercial printing, which opened at the Instiâ€" tute on November 9 and which will continue until December 9. The postâ€" ers in this exhibition are especially worthy of study, for they ess that charm of simplicity, togit?er with beautiful color and directness of deâ€" sign, which arrests and holds attenâ€" tion. . The purpose of the present exâ€" hibition is to bring together a collecâ€" tion of the best work of gnropean printers and bookmakers. Since the armistice was signed the arts of deâ€" sign, illustration and decoration have witnessed a forward movement in all the great European eentm: It was to gather the best examples of those together and submit them to the pubâ€" lic that the American : ounders company of Newark, N. J., began to secure, through its traveling repreâ€" sentatives in Europe, this most interâ€" esting collection. It is hoped that its display throughout . the principal printing centers of: the Un!*d States will stimulate the printers and bookâ€" makers of America to :til‘ further efforts, although A&s far as typograâ€" phy is concerned, America %van now leads the world. But we have much to learn in the best way of presentâ€" ing our wares to the public, in giving our message that touch of artistic simplicity and directness which seems the especial charm of the European artist. We are apt to crowd too much in our picture and thus weaken its apâ€" .peal. The present exhibition contains work from France, Italy,TGermany and Austria. °/ | POSTER EXHIBIT AT ART INSTITUTE FINE Paint should never be aflowed to dry on a brush. While still on a job, keep the brushes in raw linseed oil between intervals of work. |Kerosene oil is better for brushes used with flat paint. Hanging brushes in raw linseed oil over long periods of time will keep them in good eondétion. Or they may be washed in t ntine, kerosene or mineral spirits and then with soap and water, dried tporon:hly and covered with wrapping paper. It develops in Florida that even two Republican candidates for the senate can‘t beat one Democrat. PAINT . BRUSHES _ â€"Plumbing and Heating â€" Phone 561 . _ RAVINIA Arnold Peterson x At 1J‘Z4p f ‘ _ Nia \RWwe afeeend _ M . â€" Fad ts a® . A 5y i Fee "e SA i â€"â€" is (K) _ %“ e 1 o :> MAKX SAy ; o“' a* ", m~m4z“ // \ N:# s & 3 wos 1e 2 U @A s % / \@ [ Ah ‘\.. lq\ C mA Pm 9. & { \.._15’ 4 ) & f t 34 uim * â€" dn m fi%..â€"-â€"-â€"-__’_____ OuGHTA. TwmiST â€" is PS l l'//_ In 1884 Thomas A. Edison shipped some of his first samples of electric lights ‘to Leadville, §loudo, and they were recently ed from the ceilâ€" ing of an old church there. They were still burning, and in gervice, (‘But that did not mean they had broken a worl&;i's record forâ€"long time service as the church served a mining comâ€" munity and was only used once a year as the suporting population had mostâ€" ly moved away, A sample of the lamp‘type is priged in the Smithsonâ€" ian Institute, and is carefuly preâ€" served there. These four burned on, at the annual chfichrlervicc, until an electrical man happened to investiâ€" gate the church lighting system. . He mod:i:iz‘ed the lightingâ€"and salvagâ€" ed these valuable antiques. 1 + â€"CHRISTIAN SCIENCE :"Ancient and Modern Necromancy, Alias| Mesmerhm;q;ypnothm. Deâ€" nounted" was‘ the subject of the Lesâ€" aon-%rmon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, Sunday, November 28. â€" _ Tht Golden Text was from I John 4:1, "Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of God: because many false prophets are gone out into the: world." j PRESERVE SAMPLES OF gms'r Among the citations which comâ€" prioe£ the Lesg:famon was the following from the Bibleé: "Then was brought unto him ome possessed with a devil, blind, and dumb: and he healâ€" ed him, insomuch that the blind and dumb both spake gaw. And all the le were ted, and said, Is not this the son of David? But when the Pharisees heard it, they said, This fellow doth not cast out devils, but by B#exzebub the prince of the devile, Andâ€" Jesus knew their thoughts and said unto them, . . And‘if I by Beelâ€" zebub cast out devils, 4y whom do your children cast them out? thereâ€" fore they shall be your judges. But if I t out defil*y::th Spirits of God, then the kingdom of God is come unto| you" ‘(Matthew 12:22â€"24, 25, 27 28).| es .. The Lessonâ€"Sermon also included the following passages from the Christian Science text book, "Science and Health with Key to the Scripâ€" tures," by Mary Baker Eddy: "Human :i!l‘liower is not Science . .. Willing the sick to recover is not the metaâ€" phpzal' practice of Christian Science, but h: sheer animal magnetism . . . By A. B, CHAPIN OF FIRST LAMPS 14 PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS Stormy weather originates in an arca where there is a deficiency of ‘barometric pressure. . Last winter there was a period of exceptionally ‘stormy weather over the North Atâ€" lantic Ocean, which caused may marâ€" Jne disasters, including| the loss of the steamers Antinoe and Laristen, ‘and which furnished the occasion for beroic rescues at sea. It lasted alâ€" most continuously from Dec. 17 to Feb. 27, and during this time a vast EXPLAINS CAUSES STORMY WEATHER Shall bonds of the City of Highland Park, Lake County, Illinois, in the sum of $35,000.00 be issued by the Council of the City of Highland Park for the purpose of paying judgments of confirmation heretofore rendered and about to be rendered against the City of HS hland Park for public benefits assessed in.mehl assessment Wopgmeid * ovellirpre, { i4 o chara af tha mnet af Insal imnrovements. Bonds to bear ho mmavirhflrmauetificatent 1h: tuialroas,.â€"Auwer ~cnnudiies bar oo Phciainiy . in mees oo tedueer on neuponprapaia insd xi 4 T. â€" 9OE proceedings as the cit?l share of the cost of local in:zrovemcnu. said Bonds to bear interest at the rate of four and oneâ€"half percent (4 %) per annum, payable semiâ€" anntually, to be dated Déecember 1, 1926, and to mature $3,000.00 on December 1 in the years 1927 to 1982, inclusive, “,006 on December 1 in the years 1983 to 1985, inclusive, and $5,000.00 on December 1, 1986, and a tax be levied to pay the prinâ€" cipal of and interest on said Bonds â€"‘all u‘f:ovidod by an ordinance adopted by the Council of the City of Highland Park on 20th day of October, 1926, entitled "An Ordinance gxrovidmg for the borrowinhf of money and the issuing of $35,000.00 GENERAL CORPORATE PURPOSE BONDS for the City of Hig‘hhnd‘l‘ntj. Lake County, Illinois, and 7p'rovidin?nfor the collection of : ment of the principal of and interest on said Bonds? Shall Bonds of the City of Highland Park, Lake County, Illinois, in the sum of $30,000.00 be issued by the Council of the City of Byhhnd Park for the purpose :_f {mpfro:iing t:; rmeln“tt Wut,u'work: System in and ort said t)fig!l:y by pi?; MW: ion o and low pumps and pumping pment in said City. gaid Bonds to bear ingmt at the rate oei four and one-hdm cent (4%%) per annum, payable semiâ€"annually, to be dated D ber ‘1, 1926, and to mature $3,000 on December 1, in the years 1927 to 1986, inclusive, and a tax to be levied to pay the principal of and interest on said Bondsâ€"all as provided by an ordinance ndt?ted by the council of the City of Highland Park on the 20th day of October, 1!% entitled "An Ordinance l'&roviding for the bomm money and the 8.?‘?{0_00.00 WATERWORKS Bonds for the City of Park, Lake County, providing for the collection of a direct annual tax for the payment of the of and interest on said Bonds ?" . Shall bonds of the Cig‘ of Highland Park, Lake County, Illincis, in the sum of flmea ue magh moinet mepame parynl on m oo aminine o mpro‘ presen ciner p an .d&tionn{heteto and pping the same with modern znlplunt. said Bonds to interest at the rate of four and oneâ€"half percent (4%%) per annum, payable semiâ€" annually, to be dated December 1, 1926, and to mature $1,000.00 on December 1 in theyearslm_to1984,inclu-ive.ndauxhhviedtopnmhtnll interest on said Bonds â€" all as provided by an ordinance adopted by the Council &Th:biéfi;f-fii;fifi;d Park, on the 29th day of October,,1926, entitled "An o:g: anea!fro %{or the borrowtnz of mo? and the issuing of g:o:o.oo INCIN ATOR PLANT Bonds for the City of Highland Park, Lake County, Illinois, and eCE bralydtns aeode s hy SWE W RTUE bctudifonsstre > EoiA m SR C PPE el ATOR PLANT Bonds for the City of Highland Park, Lake County, Illinois, and providing for the collection of a direct annual tax for the: payment ol'ath principal of and interest on said Bonds?" R SpeaH o ol d S e e i o o Pm en en on o eg Sn T2 00 nnads",â€" Amanties />â€"aaud ‘~ aulbone P repdrtnfien ,undimrovin.exhtingum,duim,ndculvcbhfln City of tghm&.,md goadsto bear interest at the rate of four and oneâ€"half percent (4%%) per annum payable semiâ€"annually, to be dated ?-eanbu-,l. 1926, and to mature $5,000.00 on December 1, in the years 1928 to 19 , inclusive, and a ughhvbdwm&op%dhhmtnuflm-muww an ordinance adopted by the of the C/ dflwmm&cmuy of October, 1926, entitled " An Ordinance ing for the of money and issuing of $25,000.00 SEWER BONDS for the City of Highland Park, Lake County, Shanbondnoftthitdeithhnd Park, Lake County, Illincis, in the sum of $2e00000 be msued by the Countll of the Oity of Highland Park for the purpose of i'fii;';x‘..'iné"immni""" g for the collection of a the principal of and on ‘said Bonds?" Illinois, and providi (Place a ‘cross (X) to the right of the word indicating the way you desire to vote.) (Place a cross (X) to the right of the word indicating the way you desire to vote.) (Place a cross (X) to the right of the word indicating the way you desire to vote.) I'nci'nerator Plant Bonds Water Works Bonds Sewer Bonds A Parisian writer says that the French are a nationsof pessimists, and we think this must be so, especially when it comes to debt paying. cyclonic circulation covered ?rb the whole of the northern half of the ocean. The weather bureau of the U. S. department of Agriculture ilâ€" lustrates the enormous magnitude of the disturbance by the estimate that the: deficiency of barometric pressure as compared to the normal repreâ€" sonts a removal: of fully 2,000,000 tons of air from the area covered. of a direct annual tax for the payâ€" 999 A British radio | radiogram tosMars last 1 k company didn‘t . 1 ‘Up at Harvard | analyzing the 1 be as bad as the 4 Queen Marie says real Americans free we suggest that sht game in which ther arguments over the Aâ€"new York congrt sued for $250,000. m want to sue us for 4 hop to it. s $ YES YES NO NO NO NO of has

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