Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 17 Feb 1927, p. 14

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$4 Â¥4 cR t e t & %+ #34 "She wasâ€"queerer than Dick‘s hat band. She was thought to have the power of uttering more disagreeable things in twenty minutes than any other person living. She kept pace with nobody; she had received she said, the fatal gift of penetration, "She ‘could not sit, she could not sleep; a demon drove hern pen: For she had survived, a witness of the lofty and terrible religion of John Calvin, to rebuke what she regarded as the poor, pale, unpoetical humanâ€" itarianism of the new day. Her voice was the voice of a sibyl, issuing from the caves of the past. Was a Dwarf "Miss Emerson was the daughter of the former minister of Concord who had died in the Revolution. She was a dwarf, four feet three inches tall, with a bold pinkish face, a blue flash in her eyes,; and yellow hair cropped close under a mobâ€"cap. She was short and erect as an adder about to strike. . "Miss Mary Moody Emerson lived in her shroud. <She, had stitched it all herself, and when death refused to come she had put it on as a nightâ€" gown, then as a daygown. She was even seen on horseback once, in Conâ€" cord, cantering through the village street, attired for the grave, with a scarlet shawl thrown about her shoulders. LIVED â€"IN HER SHROUD Curious Facts About New Eng land Woman Brought to . Light In Magazine Emerson‘s eccentric aunt are brought to light by Van Wyck Brooks in an article in the February Scribner‘s Magazine. Calling her "the Cassanâ€" dra of New England," Mr. Brooks PAGE SIX Curious facts about Ralph Waldo 5 WANT ADS BRING RESULTS Travel smoothly and comfortably at high speed, over the only doubleâ€"tracked railway between the two cities. way between Chicago and Omahaâ€" first in point of lerc:i':e. 16 Fine Trains Dailyâ€" Chicago & North Westernâ€"the first railâ€" The Best of Everything in the Best of the West Convenient Hours of Departure from Chicago 10:30 a. m. 2:30 p. m. .405 p. m. 4i ) W. P. Kopf and wife to Public Serâ€" vice Co of Northern Illinois, QCD $10. Part E half see. 18, pt SE and NE quarter of sec 7, part sec 6, Shields. & T. A. Garling and wife to C. Wilâ€" ‘born and wife jt tens WD $1. Lot 16, blk 2, J. E. Burchell‘s subdn, pt sec 15, Deerfield. per?" You‘ll not wonder at the cozi~ ness of your home after installing a warm air heating system.> The :gtml distribution of warm air ‘in a scienâ€" tific way will penetrate to every corâ€" wn*x;:. ANIING LO Glr!-‘t'li“iOU'lt; j & rut of stereotyped adve ng nâ€" atillinfi a little “pey” into our so we will tell Km of one of the town boys who walked down the s the other day and seeing something lying wonder whether this is a girl‘s bathâ€" ing suit or a fancy cigar wrapâ€" ner of your dwelling. Let us demonâ€" strate some of our warm air heaters. other day and seeing something 1 on the sidewalk, ufd to hi,m,wl,:i ,}8 WE‘RE TRYING TO GET OUT and her migsion was to undermine the vanity of the shallow. _ _‘ _ _< . ~Was Satirical : _: . "Was some high matter. broached in conversation? Did some rash supâ€" pliant invite Miss Emerson‘s opinion ? ‘*Mrs. Brown,‘ the siby! replied, ‘how‘s your cat!‘ Was some lady praised too warmly in her presence? She pricked the panegyric: ‘Is it a colored woman of whom you were speaking? (‘Give us peace in our boarders?‘ she wrote on one occasion, and, when shown the misspelling, she said it would do as it was.) ~She tore into a chaise or out of it, her nephew Ralph Waldo Emerson observed, into the house or out of it, into the conâ€" versation, the character of a stranger, disdaining all the gradations by which others timed their steps; and if she found that anything was dear and sacred to you, she instantly flung broken crockery at it," E. Reiche and wf to W. H. Billingâ€" ton and wf jt tens WD $10. Part of lots 3 and 4, blk 79, Highland Park. F. Anderson and wf to J. C. Laegâ€" A. Dunas and wife to L. W. Keasâ€" ter and wife, WD $10. Part sec. 36, Deerfield. s . C T & T Co tr. to A. E. Gilster and wf jt tens Deed $10. Lot 65, Sunâ€" set Manor, pt sec. 27, Deerfield. M. H. Easeman et al to R. 0. Berger QCD $10. Part sec. 31, Deerfield. . ~State Bank and Trust Co. to R. O. Berger, D $10. Part sec. 81, Deerfleld. C. F. Edinger and wife to L. S. Arnold and wife WD $10. Part sec. State Bank of Chicago tr. to Clara Stoekel and Bessie Stoeckel, jt tens, Deed $10. Lot 20, Woodland â€"addn to Lake Forest, pt. sec. 4, Deerfield. 5 T & T Co tr. to A. E. Gilster, and wf, jt tens Deed $10. Lot 68, Sunâ€" set Manor, cor pt. sec. 27, Deerfield. On Time Artivals HENRY G. 11:50 p. m. 3:49 a. m. 7:25 a. m. 8:13 a,. m. 8:25 a. m. 9:30 a. m. 11:35 a. m. 3:21 p. m. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS 144 North First Street Mn oo ‘:d%:;;‘ &‘,é Hfuner oi Gpnie YÂ¥rA S Constance Roberts to Millic Callaâ€" han. WD $10. Lot 28, blk 4, Raâ€" vinia Highlands, pt. sec. 36, Deerâ€" H. J, Herzog & wf to C. 0. Balyeat. WD $1¢. Lot 11, Deere Park, pt. sec. 31, Deerfield. i C T & T Co. to Urho Jusenius and wife, D $750. Part see 22, Deerfield. : U. Jusenius and wife to Joel Stoneâ€" wall, WD $10. Pt see 22, Deerfleld. . â€" Lillian A. Hall to Mary Gedney Supple and hus. jt. tens WD $10 Lot 28, Lakeside Manor, pt. sec. 36. Deerfi¢‘d. * f eler and wf jt tens WD $10,000. Lot ‘8.5 blk 6, Exmoor addn, Deerfield. . _ Elizabeth S. Heitler and wf to Lois K: Ho¢2,dWD $10. Pt Its 38 and 39, Everts Jeffreys addn, Highwood. 8. Grossman et al to E. T. Elâ€" kington jr. WD $10. Pt lot 4, Carolyn ~_C T & T Co. to 1. C. Rasmussen ;x.lfi’ aunt, D $1000. Part see 29, Deerâ€" I. C. Rasmussen and wife to A. C. Swenneis, QCD $10. Lots 49. and 50, Deerfield Acres. sup of pt sec 81, Deerfleld. THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS DIVIS1I0ON OF NATIONAL D aAalR t :-.EMS FIRST of all: the immeasurable value of more pure, rich crea more of it than the laws of this state or the laws of any other state req: : SECOND: The definite value of pure fruits and flavors instea â€"â€" the false vah’ie of synthetic flavors and extracts. ‘And THIRD The enérgetic, posi_tive value of pure cane suga stead of théiinsipid, illusionary value of glucose. These are the rea:s _ why the food values in Hydrox, both in quality and quantity â€" both cernible and indiscernible â€"â€" are higher than the food values of any Cream known to the Middle West. . ' Your taste will tell you that Hydrox is better than any other Ice you can purchase in your locality. But your chemist will tell you that there are fo&d valuesâ€"hidden valuesâ€"values not readily discerniblé to tasteâ€"values that the integrity of the manufacturer alone is responsible for. There Isa HYDROX Agency Near Your Hon What are the Hidden Fo Values in HYDROX? What are these values? SPECIAL THIS WEEK _ BANANA, PINEAPPLE '. CHOCOLATE Â¥| 1J PURER BECAUSE CARBONATED W hat are Those Values for Only the Integrity of the Manufactuter are Responsible? § which I had not previously n:%cd. It gave the price of puppies at each. Fred Kelly in Nation‘s Business Magazine writes: "In front of a fashâ€" ionably located dog store window conâ€" taining a display of Chow puppies, I saw two Chinamen laughing and slap» ping each other on the back in their outbursts of glee. I don‘t know when I ever saw Chinamen so emotional. Out of curiosity I sauntered near and tried to see what had amused them. It wasn‘t any cute antics of the Chow puppies, because all were asleep. Fiâ€" nally, I asked one of the Chinamen what they were laughing at. ‘This brought a fresh outburst, but, after gaining control of himself, the one who seemed to have the best command of English pointed to a small sign Puppies Quoted at $50 Each in U. 8. Worth 35 Cents In * China, Report CHOW PRICE 50c QUART BRICK Cie 0t The Pathe News Film service cONDâ€"| Faop ;fl'-n'; i siders the activities of the research N t < ig in nature department of the Art Inâ€" C or extra * stitute school worthy of recording in PHONE HIGHLAND p. ~‘*"Cat, him cost more," promptly reâ€" plied my new acquaintance. "Good cat catch miceâ€"cost two dollars." BRITAIN ALSO HAS A bh » SCIENCE OPPONENT | which the girls use "But how about a trained dog?" I ;'_ko’d; "Suppose it was an extra good more conversational one, and his friend nodded agreement. *"Then what does a cat cost*" I inâ€" quired. myge "Dogs like that in China cost fi‘ emhâ€"â€"nayb:tene-au."m of them explained. £ . That price was what made the Chinaâ€" "Oh, thirtyâ€"A‘ cents," declared the P RODVCTS co n P oR A t !or lish Statesman of which the use attracts mi &pddlyEkuvm'a and patent L hair, a direct from natural objects are to be fbund in such great sion in the Museum. Th bm.-wng.lird-,upu., fish, plant lfe, the arts of pre student in act of 2 object he ‘dl‘twiu,.“a‘ ished wor If the student‘s p motion pict and has ~re made filmsiof the classes at w the Field Museum. Students A physiclan says that the , FEBRUARY of CAB RA P

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