Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 11 Jul 1929, p. 20

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

A lucky man is one who, when ‘the has one foot on a banana peel, has his other foot on a wad of gum.â€" Watertown Times. ' Some folks‘ idea of ambition is to entertain prejudice against working with their hands. + £° 4 18 The Xâ€"Ray Department Name Address 310 S. Michigan Av. CLIP THE COUPON®FOR DETAILED INFORMATION EXCEPTIONAL YIELD, â€"maximum "*SAFETY and ready MARKETABILITY are perfectly combined in the Fixed Investment Trust securities we strongly recommengi. â€" *L * THIS Trust is founded on common stocks of the 31 dominant Standard Oil companies. FOR the current six months of this year these seâ€" curities will yield in exeess of "9%. ‘ . PRICE per share about $13.50 governed byâ€"daily New York market quotations. . J. B. Greenfield & Co. CHICAGO SPECIALIZING IN INVESTMENT TRUSTS Standard Oil THE HIGHLAND PARK HOSPITAL imprommommnmmmmimnirmmimmimminrrrim Forcorrtm As an Investment It is incharge of a Roentgenolegist skilled physâ€" ician andâ€"has been productive of truly wonderful We are exceedingly proud of our Xâ€"Ray departâ€" ment. The equipment is exceptionally complete and far excells that found in the average hospiâ€" tal the size of ours. 20 ' results. ‘Telephone Highland Park 2550 The greatest difficulty about the back â€"to the soil movement is that many persons fear it means back to the toil. Many of those who object to wortk most fiercely are still willing to work their friends. Harrison 3580 T H E PR ES S This nation, with its annual inâ€" come of Ninety Thousand Millions of dollars, treats education generâ€" ously. But the value of education depends not on money, but on the brains on which the education money is spent. A crop depends not entirely on the seed, but more on the soil. BRAINS AND SOIL. MACDONALD READS HAZLITT. THE FEAR OF DEATH. * A BRAVE COW.*~ =~ ~ And. many, too poor to pay for candles, climbed the church steeple on â€"bright moonlight nights, to conâ€" tinue their studies there by meonâ€" light. use _ B DR. GEORGE MITCHELL DEN'I'IST- 5 | Hours: 9 to 12-'1to5-7t09‘ .â€"16 North Sheridan Road Office Phone: . Highland Park 1035 Residence Phone: Highland Park 3378 Nearly nine â€" hundred <years ago, when Abelard, taught logic and theâ€" ology=to young men in the Univerâ€" sity of Paris, they gathered in Winâ€" tertime in a stone lined room, not heated, taking notes by candlelight. _â€" A_ few such. students might be worth more to the world than a thousand million â€"dollars of endowâ€" ment. *Edison gave to the world |This Week\ Irmm Eol--un:llnlluuuuln;n"u mmsrmiemmrermmnmim By Arthur Brisbane more money than wealth has ever given to education. So did Pasteur. Neither ever went to college. * Ramsay MacDonald, fiying from Scotland to London in a British bombing plane, a parachute strapâ€" ped over his leather flying coat, read Hazlitt on the way. Hazlitt, who worked himself into a fury over the French Revolution, quarrelling with everybody that â€"did not approve it, little thought that within 100 years of his death, a Socialist Laborite would be Prime Minister of England, without any revolution. _ } â€" Still less did Hazlitt imagine that a British Labor Prime Minister would fly to his work. Max D. Steuer, brilliant New York lawyer, says the best cure for any man that fears death is Hazlitt‘s essay on ‘death.: According to statistics one and a third billion dollars are expended each year in America for cakes. Yet the World war proved that" we are not a nation of cake eaters. An eastern educator says that big classes are tending the flivverize the schools.. Well, that ought to enable the youngsters to get a rattling good education. Briefly Hazlitt says that, since we don‘t <worry because we were not alive 100 yearsâ€"ago, we should not worry because we won‘t be alive or conscious a hundred years hence. In rural England, a â€"huge lion, knocked out of his cage in an autoâ€" mobile collision, jumped into a cow pasture.. A cow with a young calf dashed at him, and gored him, atâ€" tacking him again and again, until he ~killed her. â€" Others, later, killed him. j b2 t «The‘ cow, â€"not the lion, is the: inâ€" teresting animal, in that story, for she represents mother love, with its boundless courage. How many men would have attacked the lion with no better weapon than a cow‘s horns. _Consider also the marvellous inâ€" heritance of memory. The cow‘s anâ€" cestors, probably, had not seen a dangerous wild beast, in more than 1,000 years. But, at sight, the cow knew that the lion meant danger to her calf, and rushed to the attack. Man is not the only animal "fearâ€" fully and wonderfully : made." HORSES for PASTURE Telegraph Road E. 8. Dillenback 1 mi. so Belvidere Rd. Superintendent Sumlnervor Winter Woodlandâ€" Pasture ~ Reasonable‘ Rates > ‘% + Horses called for and delivered KENTUCKY SADDLE STALLION KING SANFORD AT STUD CARPENTER AND BUILDER Screens and Doors Repaired Sharpening Tools Any Outside Work Cement or Mason Work Highland Park, Ill. 153 N. Second St. Tel. H.P. 457 DUFFIELD FARMS A. MENONT Tel. Waukegan 4816 Thursday, July 11, 1929 Thursday, July 20% DISCOU BROUGHT A Reu 618 N. Green RELIAB & DRY CLE Progr SE Chas. Completed to move - hous These homes are five and in every pa streets, all in close to depo Offered to. who desire but cannot These home low and : 60 N. First H. P. 1457 °_ Greenw FRESH . MANURE MANTELS J.S8 No Do 5111 W FLOOR a Will TELE Tel. lot

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy