Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 3 May 1928, p. 12

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t Cost. We sell more Fine Clothes than any other Store in the world. We won that position by giving greater Value. We keep it by increasing our Value as our Volume grows. You save because we buy cheaperâ€"and because it costs us less to do business. The newest Style Ideas are here alwaysâ€"handâ€" pivckAedA from our Main Store‘s unâ€" These Features Stand Out In Our Great Clothing Selections: "Chicagoan" One and Two Trouser Suits and Topcoats ‘* C and $ 4 0 FINER WOOLENS Clz In Our Evanston Shop CONOMICS tell you the Greater the Volume the Lower the Selling CHICAGOâ€"Srate and Jackson Lincolnâ€"Market 519 Central Avenue Henry C.Lytton & Sons PORK SHOULDER ROAST, Tb ............. LEAN BOILING BEEF, tb .............0... FANCY LOIN VEAL CHOPS, Th ........... FRESH NATIVE BEEF TONGUES, Ib ....... GROGAN‘S FAMOUS BONELESS BRISKET CORNED BEEF, Tb .............2.00 Consider Quality â€" Since the dawn of History the man MENT OF FINEST FRESH FISH EVERY THURSDAY AND FRIDAY. SWIFT*‘S PREMIUM SLICED BACON, Ib .... .. OUR BEST SMOKED HAMS, whole or half, Ib .. SHORT LEG OF MILKâ€"FED VEAL, Ib ....._. CHOICE NATIVE POT ROAST, Th ...... ... .. FRESH MEATY SPARE RIBS, tb ....... .. ... _ NEW SAUER KRAUT, Silver Shreds, quart .. .. JUICY MILWAUKEE RED HOTS, tb .......... DELICIOUS BREAKFAST PORK SAUSAGE, small links, Th ........1.2.......222.2.22 22. who has gained permanently, has gained on quality. DON‘T FORGET WE CARRY A LARGE ASSORTâ€" Evanston Shop Open Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday Evenings Phone in your order and call for it later. Phone Highland Park 3140 EVANSTONâ€"Orrington and Church 38e 25¢ 30c 25¢ BGT 25¢ J2¢ 28¢ 17¢ 12¢ 18c 18c 25¢ â€" Dark Part 1 cup grated chocolate. 1 cup brown sugar. !4 cup sweet milk. Let this come to a boil in a double boiler. When cool, stir into above mixture. Bake in two layers. Bake in oven at 375 degrees for 30 minutes. stand "Tour hours Ra*pberrtes peaches or shredded pineapples may, be used instead of strawberries. ‘ FROZEN DESSERT * Strawberry Mousse 1 box strawberries. 1 cup sugar. %4 box or 1 tablespoon granulated gelatine. 2 tabs. cold water. 3 tabs. boiling water. 1 quart cream. . Wash and hull berries, lprinkle‘ with sugar and let stand one hour.} Mash and rub through fine sieve and | add gelatine which has been soaked| in cold water and dissolved in boiling| water. Set in pan of ice water and| stir until it begins to thicken, then| fold in whipped cream. Put into mold | Annual war against the mosquito will be started along the North Shore and in the Skokie Valley district on| May 1, and indications are that many | thousands of dollars will be expended by the fight to eliminate this pest, | The various mosquito abatement districts along the North Shore conâ€" template spending large sums of money in the fight this year. Heads of these groups believe that if the fight is to be carried on it should be made as thorough and relentless as possible. A lot of dough doesn‘t necessarily keep a man from being halfâ€"baked.â€" Farm & Fireside. Drainage of the Skokie marshes, one of the prolific breeding groundsJ for this insect, is one of the mjor, projects contemplated in the war, and it is expected that when these( lowlands are dry that the number of insects which invade Lake county mh{ ANNUAL MOSQUITO WAR STARTS ON NORTH SHORE year will be considerably lessened. ‘__DEVILS FOOD CAKE COTTION SPINNERS AKS IT 1% cups brown sugar. ""t eup mcz‘ k 5 =~â€"+~ amp ewest it . _ _. Experience Shows Value of Proâ€" !4 cups flour gifted 5 times. , H 1 teas sods sifted with flour. tertion to American Indusâ€" 2 egg yolks. tries; Value Better 1 egg . white. Realized 1 teas. vanilla extract. | CULINARY HINTS | BY DRITISH BODY ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY THE TELEPHONE COMPANY The Loca! Telephone Directory and give notice of any changes or corrections that should be made in their listings re v e mraimemmistiges ice)â€"and allowâ€"=toi _ . * ®O _ CC Now England has for generations been known as a free trade country. John Bull has boasted of his principles and of the fact that they made Great Britain the greatest trader in the world. But the British are a practical \ people and they never have permitted | a general theory, like thatof free | trade, to interfere with the realities | of life. For this reason they have \ from time to time used the tariff to | stabilize a particular home industry, | when such stabilization was necessary. | there are many countries where the| Experts also have found that the‘ \cost of living and the wage lflk} modern woman on the average is a | are lower than in England. Without @ | far more economical shopper than ! tariff in Great Britain it is easy to | her mother or grandmother. This is see that a well organized continental, attributed to the fact that most | yarn industry might easily flood the | young brides held down jobs of their [ English market with yarn at a price‘cwn and learned how hard m dollar | cheaper than the British could afford | came and how far it went before they }m make it. | took over the task of handling their | _ Now if certain tariff schedules are | husbands‘ money. The modern houseâ€" | needed in England it must be true { wite also, it is pointed out, is weary { that they are all the more needed in | of buying cheap goods at cheap prices i,the United States where there is -iibelieving them bargains and as a reâ€" much higher wage scale and a much | sult purchase more wisely than their Jnmre attractive market. The differâ€"| mothers. | ence is, too, that in the United States Y _ _ | we are now pretty definitely comâ€" ‘ mitted to the protective policy reâ€" [ DR. BECK IS RENAMED & | gardiess of politics, whiteâ€"in Great | AS COUNTY PHYSICIAN ‘Britiln the theory of free trade pre~l =â€"â€"â€"~ | dominates, although protection is at| Dr. Karl M. Beck, county physician, times employed when needed. * _| today was rehired for another year No Room For Argument by the board of supervisors. There is no longer much room !or’ In their unanimous vote they recâ€" argument over the question that the| ommended that the chairman, Thos. United States needs a tariff equalling| Murphy, and clerk, Lew A.â€"Hendee, | the difference between the cost of| and hospital committee enter into the ‘ production at home and abroad. We | same contract as the one expiring in need this for our farms as well as| July which calls for $5,000 annually. our industrialists. That the farmer is| â€" His position covers the superintendâ€" beginning to realize this need is evi-} ing of the county hospital, county ldenced by the demand this is coming | physician, contagions, etc. Present reports from Great Britain recently carried the interesting fact that the Yorkshire Cotton Yarn Spinâ€" ners and Doublers Association has reâ€" quested the spinners point out that their foreign competitors can dump yarn into England at a less price than the home manufacturer can afâ€" ford. there are many countries where the | cost of living and the wage mlcb are lower than in England. Without a | tariff in Great Britain it is easy to| see that a well organized continental | yarn industry might easily flood the English market with yarn at a price cheaper than the British could afford to make it. The complaint of the yarn spinners Complaint Interesting In the interest of good service subscribers are requested to call Goes to Press Soon ntions} Shopping by women is assuming an ountry. | increasingly important place in the uip]“{nalm of mational economy and the : Gréat | conscientious . s hopper â€" works in the|harder than most men, New York actical | mercantile experts have discovered. rmitM{ "The woman who shops all day, in f free | Crowded stores actually works harder calities ' than the farmer who ploughs a ten y have | acre feld," says the American Magaâ€" ariff to zine. "She remains under one roof dustry, J but covers more ground than the farâ€" essary. | mer, for the area of a big department *| store‘s floors is from fifteen to thirty» pinners| acres. _ And the shopper‘s savings adoggi reâ€"well with the man‘s .carp,, from various parts of the country for protection on certain specific crops. These demands come from the south as well as the north and west. The farmers, fruit and produce growâ€" ers of Florida, for instance, well realâ€" ize that they have to have some proâ€" tection against cheap importations from Cuba and other nearby islands where the "ttst of production and standard of living is lower than in Florida. That is why we now frequently hear the assertion that the tariff map is changing.â€" The people of the south, as their industry and specialized agriâ€" culture develop, are beginning to realâ€" ize more and more the necessity of the protective tariff. MODERN WOMAN IS ECONOMICAL BUYER In their unanimous vote they recâ€" ommended that the chairman, Thos. Murphy, and clerk, Lew A.â€"Hendee, and hospital committee enter into the same contract as the one expiring in July which calls for $5,000 annually.

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