Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 24 Nov 1927, p. 26

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'hnt.,Mr.t-r.aidt"tttoou.. b'. “curmuthooldhho- wgmtnumuwh. ' 1 hula-mutual“ BB, 'wmmrm _"irlrtFiiiiGVarGriraGi"'ii"i7 in. mmammm I1i1t,iiii.d F.irijiae _ that . - I almond-huh)”. l ti.erqMrhieaftmmna.tse 'p bib-Hummus.“ l Jrreit.r,W.T.tmadaasd _ Ila-ham T'ftg'd2erAttt " “at“. '. milk-r7 ."Ir.lp-lundd. ”his “WWI-mm Prtt.ohehrn"rer.t-r.nu. , huanMn-IHM “Whume artefq"9threnmTteambesse- _ brtftirwaperer." "But my chief criticism of Ana-i- nn hampers is the Net that they anew their new: column to be but- led about thew-tea by the avertin- ments. lam pupal-s print the same future. in the lame place every by. The Engliahmn knows this and like: it, and when the London Impapor man and: his new: awe being dictated by Advertisements. he limits the advertisements.” Enlist: Pip!!! Mot about the Ill-e - to lports u the Mach an - do, local-din: to Mr. M” - _ "But the young mu entering jour- ntliun unit not be diseouraged by the pneent tendenciel of the profession," he mt on. "r believe the press is now passing through one of the most critical periods of history due to the enormous the of the modern publica- tion. But drendy in England I be- lieve that t can detect a swing back to the more conservative jaunt! of opinion. Young people entering jour- nalism can make the profession whatever they wnnt it to be." Anode“ and Engiish The most important dithsenee be- tween the American And English newspapers. according to Mr. Spend- er, in not in the content but in the mutation of new. “Some of your most “national editions," he said, "if presented to London in the English fashion would really be considered hichbrov pa- ”munch“ In. Duh-u- ttNlItltt'dr" “HMnodununmbomu-I a..iouousutroiit.domiamtioa brutetrtasioess,'tt--sttwitl "tioadietthrtiBertruth- pin.” J, Alina! 8m,e§imof “There is in England a movement toward control of the press by syndi- cate! and powerful finnncinl ortputix- otiona,” Mr. Spender told his audi- enoe. "Bat if modern newspnpers permit their policies to y dictated entirely by business considerations someone will come along Ind will have new laws and stricter ones. That is what bu happened in Russia, Italy and Roumania today. Part in World er The port that newspapers played in -riritatiase the world wor wos de- plored by the ruddy-faced English journalist. "Not that they were di- rectly responsible," he said, "but for your: iM-feeling ins provoked by the printing of inelegnnt incidents and the Idpm'euion of explanatory circum- st-nces surrounding them, This on of ill-“vised propaganda culminated, in that epic of blood - the world I). Westminster Guam of Marlon. - when and - af Sign: Nb Chi, "Mu-ind imsmatism Mm " Northwestern unintui- tr, may. Mr. Spender, who dentribed himself a “an otdanatMned English journa- 'rt, who took his politics seriously," j! I unit-l holder of the Wulter Hines Page Fellowship and in in this coun- try Wu: American newspapers. II “Ni-hen one ot the oldest and most conservative landon papers. My 1: vary hm In qA-teferot- “cumulus“ ”addendum-nu ,hun-mm blind-001m _ ’ “new A, tu~nuuo¢ In rm m BRIG!“ LAWS htdirttautrlehtetrt-t.trtr-. mdMlnryMqu. “than omit"! limit! In mulch fanndmuitformmrbdm (min for umpcm " Null". ar-r-ttu-e-sew' t'AlAt',',tt 'rat2eteu'. an can. u 'a%tlNlNtU'Mt.T,t -a.ttunrd'v"tode-Gv"in -e-th.tmt-trk.mtttrte t'rdg,tAe't"gh.t',Paatt'.,i, and". a-e-o-m. hymn-WW ,fM.airtrtmMtmerfthuemotV lka-IHMMM m m - old-Int, than ost--.----.- mus-ramm- The immediate mean-Ry for a u. bor tribunal to when the Nation-l 1ksardofJxrrudiethmaiA-wa, emphasised nttuopesthwofttse mmtth when the Int-ttq-t Union ofBHeh1-,Ma-tdpt- tr'tttdrenrftxterstuBe1d- M mmdmmrm th-euhor. [mun-eon- Mm‘pohhhthfm thrsaremrnNitatimsbo.rd h h "mdett..ermstdmstsrst-ttss. Wanton. [ti-w tMtthyxrtthfret.etsti.a-.. "s'stttkntmrfah-t- tin M -tttrqaftnb.rehufBtnth.trui. tamfrfttf'trirtaruat to hold I -t-thustewtribrrGi, Twenty-live Lending Ollie: The group of twmttr-itee citiel in which the green-t volume of permits were issued in October reported 8169,- 531,628 counted with $254,437,728 in October was, and $131,094,216 in October 1925. ' The loss we: " per ‘cent from October 1926 and 28 per cent from October 1926. In these heavy loam the lad vu taken by New York City when oofr I, little more than ova-lull of the volume of new Mil-'1; in min pm- pect " computed with the correspond- in; periods of the Inst two you. Lou uvm lone- u: revealed in Chieaeo while other large cities shoving un- favonbly on l two ”imam m Detio it, Clown-int; Baum-.7 if}; Punt-co. Wuhinuan and Hm A study of the October recon! is. however. more reassuring than might be indicated by the comparative to- tai. While it in true that the glow- ing down protest” are general, the specucnhr drpp in October was due to a considerable extent to wadi- tions in New York and Chimp. The former exhibited 1 ion, in round numbers, amounting to $58,000,000. while Chic-go's loss was $24,000Jt00, Thus, these two cities lost 82,000,000 out of the 8134300900 of the entire 651 cities. The trend of new building commit- ments dropped rather precipitately in October, according to the ofBeint re- ports from 55t cities made to S. W. Strains & Co. The total of building plans filed or permits issued in these plates was $288,879,612 compared with $412,893,035 In! October. a loan of 32 per cent. In September the totals were $297,934,158. The cities included in this survey account for more than 80 per cent of the entire urban population of the United State: and are the major cen- ters in the 48 Mates, These itttxtres, therefore, represent the only approx-‘ imately complete one“ data on tmild: ing prospects in the country end are to be diatinguiahed from reports of, activities nlready planed. These rec- ords also exclude ntilnatel of reed building and engineering project" which at times are crroneouely ineor-l poured in building has. The loan in October wan much more severe than that sustained in any previous month in recent year! and trroutrht,the activities of the industry about 43 per “under the level of 1926. mama-~53- 1'trAtt2tM=tg1ll't " built“ all-hall» numb-mum» mm:m¢b1mm m.mammu Jail-adults“. I“ thmtr-i-ntirt.amaanmk Width-stun..." AWui-m-thh mmaloe-id-odverri-taattb, tin-m. Aitttemehmttndv-t- trte.nrrartkttineintaotatitmntd- tritl.roirttodtott-Uqmras "tearnmpuofttowaeoamt-bq "ddentrptuedirstothirtottts OCTOBER RECORD BASIS “kWh-tutu“ Survey" of U. S. Improvements During That Month Show Decrease, According to Strains & Co. “I consider it the mponIibility at the jounnliltic "Illusion," h laid. "to.hartoutaod-ttted-m" whirlpoola und rapids of internation- nlim, so that who n crisis doc- u- rive the public being inland - act inteuigelitly in the matter." teraatierUt aim. BUIIJMNG TREND B DOWNWARD IS REPORT 1'"! W".- 'otetee m a» Itept teee., , -r-orrtat N Gas is med exclusively for baking ke cream cone- in Chic-go, who" more cones are baked than in my other city in the world. ‘The custom of holding an Annual homecoming, now so popular among American callus 1nd amireraitiea, was originated by the Uninnity of Illinois in 1910. illinoil rank; and Je a at; in the number of ehctric m uni power custom“. On an - children in 1tthrM. "tend school IV.36 yarn. The W for the United States is T Jun. Registration of auto- in Illinois during the Brat half of 1927 - bend 1,366,060. sn inc-nu: of les per cent over the corresponding m iod of the pnviom year. Alva S. Kelloog, at the Illinois Sela dien' and Sailors' Home " Quincy, is the only living Civil Far soldier who heard Lincoln deliver Mn Gum'- bug address' the h Ilhoun count, app Warn of Illinois. produce- fore luau than any are: of equal the in In mid. that slightly faded, or " that], In considered pmiculnrly - and ‘give the - (meet opportunity for individuality. The Paris com-pendent- o! the muuine timhs in the adv-nee vista showings that the growing popular ity of the circulnrly an Airt is partly reapottsibie for the donut lip elect: uni the ever-growing W- er toward lures an inmo- the trend Mud hip detiasitiou. Pum. an appealing everywhere, directly in the from of thins, OI can“! "all at the sides. The elect is manually uneven hemlinu, especinlly for even- ing gowns. The run {at “but in the particularly pronounced in Paris. INTERESTING FACTS up nah. At but hip- - . it use.“ I MI- Irh~h H Woman‘s a... Caulk. ht_h tho Ianeo Pain - ' Tu: dUtietet hunch-t: - ed up. no (Blunt tn- W line nodal: of the not _ or put: in any of tho m undo at the now than taheiea tho -ter. an: at which In their lith- all ptiabilitr. The material; “It rather thinly shout the hip. In! into draperies u natunl M a can u spam, uneven ham-lin- “a. 'stirs. the drape elect. M -ehtt, pleasing evenin (model: haw anh- ed from gum, one being in " you velvet and naother of gold but“. in checked pattern with I any law- er, in end: tau-re. Both an and. up in the "muted-tsip fanhims. No gram. BO beautiful at th. W of the materials mulch- I!“ 30““ Another interesting “it Mtoeqm- ityr thr my nun-pliable an“ I. Arnold PM 1'hmairt ' Hum Islet-[Amo- “all“ ti". ‘3'. “than. 'rqneth and a o a I o I t. II o d o r n "rtna do- nand this n o d o . n method a! [tantalum an “In... d u a t a lad guise)» Amt-In ABOUT THIS STA“ Some of our mu who fall may in love, It but retain con-cm suftheierstlr to do their courting mt the telephooe, instead of putting it down in block and wince. Thrtimeth.eiruaretowttt. wanting the Mann. new new to .bed.evotedtomaaimauti-tri- The umpnpen all the [iris bow locook'enJuntheyueI-mnon- bitiom airlock well. 5mm: col-III I‘M but: dir. tinxuhhhlo In. “1‘ - eiv-nrmart-trudot.iLGiii'. b_itiorua%wwtthMoth-gtmr, the'produt. Th. an m b of ftulr "W - a a. itbm d,e,'g'arttr."tfggttr,ge beirwrotdhthate. and mi in up van-a sm- amt-ll. B,tteideetrtmth-ofts.ttx, inell. an writer “a nut m. itrirtth_Nrt-irmGe- mandarin-human familrithitere.tr-iitir on. It in "tit-tod that $00,000,000 tons of corn-talhmguhgtomu in AmerfeaaeettpearFut,hr the he"! ”and prom-us,” pa- eentof.yr.tiruiree.itatGis convertihlod into silk It". III-Ilia substitutu and other mick M ire bent“!!! through was which In beiase curled on continu- only. 'rentativetr, it in he!“ that the “can corn hm: as like his product, market the can. Mn the field And still all the mum Mb for a value which rill null " per acre within I shot: time. The Ban]: Hymn of the Republic was all right foe wn time. but that We need now is n working hum; much “a...“ 's','"',',","),.",?.':.',,".','.',, 'seeethoJqretttnt.t- Windhohsrqu- tt'eeec"Pa.neryurrGt. bitin- din. "ch0va ulna“ HERMAN DAWN u. "ak. 2700 turtsGdte-c-tA-aarso- Thanksgivind D?ner $1.00 COLLEGE INN your. But it is only by man; Remit Milk that you can truly ap’ prod.“ its goodness; So won’t you try it many? . It is a pleasure for us to sell Bowman's Milk be- . cause we know it pleases so many people. It’s the kind of niilk you want to drink - flagrantly fresh and richly delici- one every day of the mm“ All) our: nun “LAD your“: - mun . "vrrht mun-an new; Edith- Inn or - _ cum “his. 'trr-u. cum ”0001.! BOOP Vacuuc Jvll Flu I. luff. Cocktail OYI'I'II oocrnu. PHI-m "GIG -_ (mi: an GA Henry G. was uni-0mm mourn

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