Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 29 Aug 1929, p. 27

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

"rip" G COMPANY L. Highland Pk. '. 535 m LAUNDRY] I Over Hunting Lives _ _ ' err, 3* Lost in ires Last ' . :ALPED POR. Year in This State .of character rship of home heavy initial int. _ held e.) August 29. 192t mos ready and start. : raping , GAS in Ihserfuld, 'ooms, modern In, on paved ’eme’nts irrand tools and butri-: tion. ' ROTTEN D BLACK dated. Lloyd lighlund Park ’attloc'k ’ayment ,, 'ile Co." Til 410 TH new adv priced very a seen to, ER Ave. " "‘Eighty' pen cent of the American raw fur is pokprocured by men and' boys' on the farms, not professional trappers," he points out, "but strangely enough the intensive trap: ping in well populated rural regions .‘dnes not decrease to any appreciable degree the amount of raw fur avail- ablefl This is accounted "for. by the fact that the trapper, with. his catch of mutkrsstsilskuriks, raccoons' and o'- Possums, will also gather in. many 'wilteiitttoxes, weasel/s, coyotes‘and other predatory t',','ll'ttpit,e,i,eohr' in esvilderirarionti, kill pit. g proportion of the vegetarian tyr-bearers." marshy. August 29, 1929 ."fhe proehsmation points out that property loss in 1928 was less than ii, 1927 and that the "pooplo of the state, are to be congratulated on this record." " _ _ _ . "Ninety per cent of our. life leases are due to carelessness, and-‘should be avoided.". .' ' . _ More than one hundred lives were lost as the result of fired in Illinois last year, according to a proclama- tion issued by Gov. Louis If, Emmerson, in which he calls on. the people of the state to co-Operate to cut down fires, and sets the week. of October 6-12 as Fire Prevention week. The proclamation was made public today. Property loss from the fires in 1928 were placedat above $20,000,- 000. _ . l _ "I appeal to évery individual to lend his eo-operation to the and that fire losses in the state shall be Ttttr. terially reduced, I ask all mayors, fire chiefs. chambers of commerce', schools and civic organizations to unite in a program of education in their rUpeetive communities in order that the state in general may be ad: vised of proper methods to remove -fire hazards and lessen fire losses." This interttstinirfaet is revealed' by C. M. Wiolworth, president of the country’s largest animal trap com- pany, in an article written for Stiles Management-magazine. For example, populous New. York state, with its 11,000,000 people, is now yielding $2,- ()00,000 worth-, at furs a year, crap- proximately ‘twice as Jnuch as sparse- ly populated Texas. _ The raising, of foxes, muskrats and other furrbearers in, eaptivity is im- portant, byt riot the most important factor in this situation, Mr. Wool- worth says. I, ", Kidding the Engineer "God must be in engineer," ttrum- hled the third mate. "There's always something leaking up there." - The American Magazine. V - . Wtts in such a hurry to' get back home. " - ’ _ Strange as it may seem, lit ii, not comparatively wild regidns of the west but the more densely pqpulated states that are now producing the greater part of the $100,000,000 an- nual American fur crop. . It is said that the larder of the Graf zeprelin' Was loaded with air- lthsteak and Virginia ham before it lpft Lakehurst. We can't see why it Most Furs Cqme from _ _ Populated Districts; Fewer in Wild Regions PI E4tt? BEARRGW James G. Barber Servieed5tation, 1508 Birdde Avenue, Evanston _ PIERCE-ARROW SALES CORPORATION . . _ . Jaetitrtt Branch) T 2420-22 South Michigan) CHICAGO. Telephone Michigan 2400 32775 To 3.8200 "AT BUFFALO In tttrthasiag a otrfrom imam thaavnage 2roa,c. mm " a good we'd tar wad/l} more than rover: 1le initial PierleUrva, k T payment- . _ ' THE PRESS Body. and E ugh" b Purceyt rrmr--asd Fina-A "or " "my part! No one could have foreseen the demand for the "new Straight Eight-and. it took nothing les§"than ca great automobile to sustain it. Today, however, the chances for early deliveries are 'excellent-in... cludingn numberpf the most favored models in the new Straight Eight line. . ' NEW STRAIGHT EIGHT by to' Sam?” "pi, Waiiing Demand PIE RC E-ARROW builded heir' think: _ knew when igproduced the new Straight Eight. Fox: this ultra-modern creation revolutionized the, fashitm in fine tars-dnd established a demand. almost overnightwhich tooknibnths to meet. ‘Before the new Straight Eight'): arrival, bulki-. ness was accepted as a necessary attribute of big- J1elis in automobiles. But Pierce-Arrow created a long, slender, low-swung car that combines grace with every essential to spacious comfort. Besides, ithas the addetr.diiitinction of being the dar for which America, wasrilling to wait. . i ‘ _ 1 , us Whine . 85 Milqpahour q t3pinch and “3-inch Wheelbas- . Nan-emanate ch. q Fender or Bracket Headlamp. _ _' . __ Jrrthmal without extr- charge t took greatness 26

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy