Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 12 Jan 1928, p. 18

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_ Famous Portrait Painter Tells of Sessions with Coolâ€" ~were taken. The boy‘s said he left it in the depot, and it â€"~was found there and returned to the . ector. The boy aiso, the police say, «> _ RADIATES CHARM)| * NOT COLD AND TACITURN watch is valued at $150 and as it was a gift the owner is especially anxious * recover it. j Willam Reno of Northbrook, said to be 16 years of age, was arrested Saturday, charged with larceny, the specific allegation being theft of a from a car owned by Mrs. Leon Harâ€" is and parked in front of the Alden thop on Friday afternoon. According to Chief of Police Moroâ€" mey the lad admitted this theft and #ome of the articles were found on his person, but the ring and watch were missing. First he said he threw them away, the police report, and later he claimed that he had given | the watch to Joe Stanley, a companâ€" | ion. Staniley was arrested but denics all knowledge of the matter. Bothl the country are not for Coohd;e the President, but Coolidge the Man." the very opposite, and I am sure that the expressions of good will come to him each day from all over YOUNG LAD ARRESTED ON LARCENY CHARGE Radiates Charm "He radiates charm, geniality, and kindliness. I honestly believe that President Coolidge is one of the most popular presidents we have ever had. If he is unpopular with certain poliâ€" ticians, this is more than compenâ€" sated by his popularity with the masses, with the average citizen of Main street, for throughout the y:ar, on special occasions, anniverssries and holidays, such as Easter, Saint Valentine‘s Day, Christmas and New Years, the White House is literally deluged with grecting cards and perâ€" sonal expressions of rreetings pourâ€" ing in from every section of the counâ€" try. This to me seems significant. It certainly does not convey an impresâ€" sion of unpopularity, nor does it inâ€" dicate that people who really count regard the president as "cool and unâ€" approachable." I found him to be As a Man "From the viewpoint of a portrait pa‘iger, just what impression did you form of Coolidge, the man *" urgâ€" ed the interviewer. Is GGood Actor "Ii the impression prevails that President Coolidge is cold. unapâ€" proachable, silsnt and lacking in human qualities," declares Mr. Chrisâ€" ty, who was a guest at the White House for several weeks while paintâ€" ing a portrait of the President and Mrs. Colidge, "then I should say that the President is an excellent actor." "Mr. Christy was seated in his beautiful New York studio where such celebrities as Col. George Harâ€" vey, former Ambassadox to England, Will Hays, czar of the motion picâ€" ture â€" industry, â€" Colonel â€" Theodore Roosevelt, Senator Coleman Du Pont, and others, have sat for portraits. Peside him stood his dazzling wife, the famous "Christy Girl" of a thouâ€" sand magazine covers and illustraâ€" tions. "He is one of the most human men I ever met," replied the artist. "He is really a most interesting conâ€" versationalist. He is â€" extremely thoughtful of others. I could relate a dozen incidents illustrative of his solicitude for others, his humanness and kindness. Being very human himself, he likes to make human eonâ€" *The> President may be cool and unapproachable to politicians who conie bearing gifts in one hand and axes which they want to m’indl in the other, but he is an entirely difâ€" ferent man when with his fami]y' and friends. The President, reputed to be taciâ€" turn and uncommunicative, has even been described as cool and unapâ€" proachable. That this impression of Mr. Coolidge has gained wide curâ€" rency is indicated by the frequent newspaper refcrences t@ "Silent Cal," and waggish comparisons of the exâ€" ecutive to an iceberg and other obâ€" jects descriptive of frigidity and imâ€" mobility. Howard Crandler Christy, interâ€" nationally famous artist, illustrator, and portrait painter, disagrees with those who picture President Coolidge as "the grim, silent man of the White House." Reno, the police say, also admitted Say, Including Valuable _ | Watch, Ring, Etc. | lidge; Interesting un of the watch is not the police hope to recovâ€" | o-u-m-nn.;.uhl,gg..,a.....ap,..- [J _ 552 Central Avenue Phone Highland Park 3360 We specialize in cleaning and repairing } Oriental and Domestic Rugs. Reasonable | prices. Finest personal service. No one knows prohibition better than the women of the W;, C. T. W No une knew the bitterness of life under the reign of liquor traffic betâ€" ter than the W.C.T.U. They fought liquor ‘when it was a crime to pray in the streets for a release from the bondage of tum; and they are today fighting the outlawed boo}leg traffic. They have fought every compromise which the liquor people have offered, ard because they have had experience with every known device to curb or restrain the licensed or legal liquor traffic, they have adopted as their siogan for the year: "Prohibition is the best Method."" Wls Local members of the W. C. T. U. and their friends are interested in the celebration of the eighth anniversary of the adoption of the 18th constituâ€" tional amendment, which released the The slogan, Prohibition is the best method of dealing with the liquor traffic," has never been more apt than it is today. Around that theme the ten thousand celebrations of the White Ribbon army will be built. Requested ANNIVERSARY IS JAN. 16 . C. T. U. Members Celebrate Three Days; 8 Years Since _ 9 x 12 We also carry the finest selection of Orienâ€" tal and Chinese rugs, hooked rugs, braidâ€" ed rugs, Claridge Molton Carpets, chenille and hand tufted rugs. We have everyâ€" thing in floor coverings. These rugs sold regularly at $115 and $125 at Chicago stores Come to Vogue‘s for your rugs. Choose from Highland Park‘s own rug store: Every rug is perfect and fully guaranteed. ARAK WILTON‘S Now at these low January Prices . is the time to buy VOGUE, Inc. Exceptionally high grade s oi 1. ‘ L 6t 5en . ho S (OOke . SA ts C e ‘"?‘r&\"fi 'fi!‘{.;")"‘?"rr"w*?;!r j "IHE HIGHLAND PARK PRESSs, HICHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS â€" _ o °*‘ > aHHO RUGS men: $95 | _ At a recent meeting of the Englis!. Speaking Union, Mr. J. Alfred Spenâ€" Lder. former editor of the Westminâ€" ZNSLIESHMAN TALKS SENSE This is sound and sensible doctrine, says the National Republic. It is even conceivable that Mr. Spender might have gone a little further. Our only danger is not that we will transâ€" fer the unhappy feuds and quarrels of the Old World to America through our immigrants. There is another, that we may through skilful effort inside the WARNSU. S. AGAINST _ _ FEUDS OF OLD LANDS He Might Also Have Urged Care "America with its vast spaces, very thinly populated according to our European standard, will inevitaâ€" bly continue to draw upon Europe, though it may do so in a careful and regulated way. Jt may take the Gerâ€" mans their science and in industry and reject their militarism; it may take from the Irish their liveliness and imagination and add American ballast; it may get even from us British a little of our constitutionalâ€" ism and orderly spirit, our tolerance and neighborliness, without taking our ancient and feudal ways. â€"~Keep Out Feuds "But one thing it had better not do and that is to encourage any of these races to transfer from the Oid World to the new the unhappy feuds and quarrels which wrought so much misery in the countries from which they come. Help them at least to turn over a new leaf in that respect and teach them to live togethcr in peace and concord." ster Gazette, who has been vi:itingl in the United States very sensibly said : j & ganda Emenating from Europe Against Insidious Propaâ€" Insidious P pimaf ho. Acoia/e 0h 3 It is now being 9 x 12 He rarely revises his speeches, once they are written. He showed to. a friend his Annapolis speech of two"years ago just after the first typewritten copy was completed. It was the President‘s first utterance upon his policy of peace and preâ€" paredness. President Coolidge, according to Nation‘s Business Magazine, dictates all his speeches, even the most imâ€" portant ones. . When Governor of Massachusetts, he would sit in his chair, throw one leg over the other and write his messages, no matter how long they might be, upon a pad of paper in his lap. He usually had a package of oldâ€"fashioned pepperâ€" mint chocolates in his desk and would munch them as he wrote. He now quite often summons his personal stenographer to the White House in the early‘ morning or after dinner and distates his speeches and state papers free from intertuption. "That is a.remarkable speech, !r.; Préesident,"â€"Â¥aid the frisnd. "Ho#? long, have you been writing it*"*~ * "All my life," replied the Presiâ€"| dent. & . gates, but perhaps directed abroad, permit ourselves to come under an alien influence which will dictate subâ€" our military and maval policy in an effort to decrease our prepareduess, again» our merchant marine in a veiled effort to discourage the Ameriâ€" can people in their newest maritime venture, and will be directed in the future against any purely Amerâ€" ican movement which has for its purâ€" pose the promoting of American inâ€" terests when such interest conflict with European purposes and Euroâ€" pean ideas of how we ought to conâ€" duct ourselves. with the rest of the world. We want this sort of “'nuh'* influence" no wethuun%fi.m..‘ feuds of the Old World. Here is a danger on which Mr. Spender did not dwell, and it is one of which we would like to have his candid opinion. For, after all, the greatest peril to American institutions is not the igâ€" norant immigrant who parades every time there is trouble in Europe but the American with the international complex who thinks American paâ€" triotism is out of date and who draws inspiration from his political alma mater across the seas. PRESIDENT DICTATES ALL OF HIS SPEECHES Tell ‘Em Everythingâ€"And _ Watch ‘Em Buy! The Highland Park Press DVERTISING PAYS, BUT â€" only in proportion to what A you tell in it! That is, you can‘t expect "whale"â€"size reâ€" sults on a "fly" size ad. Folks, in reading your message, want to know all there is to know . . . . they want every fact and figure you‘ve got to offer. Besides, it stands to reason, the larger the ad the more attention it compels, and, the > Make More and "Bigger" Use of Phone 557 And Ask About It! columns and watch your business increase. We‘ll be glad to help you prepare your message with the aid of Bonnetâ€"Brown Sales Service which we maintain for your exclusive use! ed with two holdups, one in Highâ€" clothes. The suit of clothes caused the arrest, it was reported. A cettain element of our young men think that width of pants is an adeâ€" quate substitute for breadth of inâ€" telligence. rested in Highwood Sunday night by City Marshal J. C. Frame and chargâ€" on Oct. 6. The man settied up with the two victims and was released police report. City Marshal Frame charges that on Oct. 4 Nichell robbed Anton Basini of Highwoodâ€"of $30 in a holdup that took place just west of Highwood while John Usyk of Danâ€" ville lost $39 and a new ‘suit of SETTLED OUT (JOUIT' .J:...........‘.‘s:' .h over * mmmuse o{__,,,q l‘upflk-‘fia&n-ul:lm Joe Nichell of Highwood was ay.| been awarded is parking tags on their Joe Nichell of Highwood was arâ€" BETTER IT SELLS! SANTA FE | New Mexico winters are mild and sunshiny, but without the too conâ€" stant temperature of semiâ€"tropical resorts. Nights are crisp for sound * sleep, days brightened by brilliant A sun. _ At Los Ciros. a modern Ranch Resort just two miles from Santa Fe, a winter vacation becomes a jolly rourd of horseback rides, motor trips over broad highways to quaint Indian pueblos and Mexican villages, colorful niglits before roarâ€" ing open fires. The most fascinating country in America opens to your explorations from this picturesque and comfortable old rancho. For a completely illustrated booklet apply to the Ask Mr. Foster service, the Marshall Field Travel Department,; or direct to Edward H. Oakley, Manager. With Sunny Daysâ€"Crisp Nights At Los Cerros in New Mexico I A Winter Vacation Hacienda De â€" Los Cerros _ The old philosophers used to tell "ts vont huste uumirse waste, and we follow that plan in settling their old WoGun-u.'l'bDutm in Uphoistered Furniture Highland Park 181 I R ED A L E NEW MEXICO A%Â¥

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