Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 1 Jan 1931, p. 20

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More Bank Guards Are ‘Appointed by Sheriff Fashioned and Shaped Haircuts inn-unnu-lunar-nun"..-nun-"u".-"non-unu-nnu-uInunu.""nun-"unnu-uncut-nip."- W I - -- - ‘un-nt-nnnnnunnuuunu- Prices nurpriuingly moderate ttan Hula-Kan M. Evan Facials and Scalp Treatments W hl " a . Vou- IAIIQIMII Hot M. Rene de Tuunille RS 9:00 t W 'o r you'll o The Edgewater Beach Hotel A "wail! New Year’l Supper will be served at 310.00 per rom’r, including ottertoinment, souvenirs. favors and dancing. - Breakfast will be served after three own. For Reservations. Call the Reservation Oftiee. LONgbeach 6000 REMl-INIRER THERE WILL RF. ACCOMMODATIONS IN OUR GARAGE FOR A LIMITED NI‘MHER OF-CARS, SO MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS NOW Fifty-thra-o Hundred Block Th, “rt-ht eritf n A'0rt 30 Commencing nn In o.........--..----...---------- figs-1m rEayi-sriii_aieriEiEitiiri"i"" t Zion, Sabine, citie Wau Phil Spitnlny ter W I 9 3 0 - I 9 3 1 outing at 10:30 P. M., December Thirty-first, .Nineteen Hundred Thirty, in the MARINE DINING ROOM NORTH AND SOUTH DINING ROOMS I’ASSAGGIO AND LOUNGE ROOMS program of including the BEGIN NEW SANITARY BOARD PLANTS SOON Highland Park and Waukegan Disposal Works to Be Start- ed First ls Plan curried thl Th" hand A Formal Dinner Dance and Nor New Ye and mmmunitk It Mr Th, Alitit th [u unt ailing engineer 1- North Share wing the bond i the subsequent zed Pearse, (he has writing to e board, ts will l "l pt Mil. rssmc-nts fpr thi would total 815 f that the paym arrulrl he made in t-ri: " of 10 years. u-s little tMleulty W aukee hit Mu "'l "with a l' [rm-ml entertainment famous Rainwater F 'utt , asserted that payment :spssments tor intercept- will nut inconvenience property owner. 'tt pointed out Jhat spe- HICAG (I " ttntt "(1'3 ut t's, Eve di Shorid to heavy voting in Zion a south qt Waukekan, tion by a majority of ote 'an we Sanitary board, ll issue vote Dec. 20 nt canvass has lu- Ireeley and Hansen. ers, to prepare de. the eonstruetion of maul plants and the I existing plants. Mn Oliver, president onstrqvtion on the {in as soon as the ble to outdoor work. uml Highland Park Dancing will he continuous in Waukett owner. 1l out Jhat spe- this particuhr Ir, tor a 504th rnyment of this e in installments :ars. Mr. Oliver 'ulty from objec- ssment proceed- opposed an Celebration 0 pad (on Lake Michigan) THE PRESS 1m and to the {one features with three large and: Hotel Orehestra,' African Bushman Group of Relics in Museum Is Representative of Race A valuable collection of ethnologi- cal material representing the Bush- men of Africa, who are probably the most primitive people in existence today, has been received at Field Mu- seum of Natural History as a-gift from Arthur S. Vernay, of New York and London. Mr. Vernay, collected the objects while leading the Vernay- Lane Kalahari Expedition of Field Museum, which recently returned to this country. . The simple hunting culture of the nomadic Bushmen, against whom other African tribes as well as Euro- pean settlers have constantly waged war, is completely represented. As the part of the Kalahari Desert where this material was obtained is extrem- ely dillicult of access, the Bushman culture is illustrated in a form un- affected by European infiuenee. included in the collection are quiv- ers and poisoned arrows, bows, orna- ments consisting of ostrieh-egtt shell beads threaded to form necklaces, girdles and head bands, beaded ap- rons, and an engraved ostrich egg. There is also a well-preserved Bush- man skull, much valued because of the diffieulty of obtaining anatomical man skull, mm: the difficulty nf specimens, The Bushman, nccording to,W. D. Humbly, assistant- curator of Afri- can ethnology, are probably the old- est inhabitants of Africa, and thous- ands of years ago may have lived in the northern part of the continent. Other, tribes and white settlers have gradually pushed them south and into the least favorable localities. ""i.-i-e-ifr-e.r. __ n _ I l , SAYS 1930 BOY B MORE SOPHISTICATED Director of, Boys Federation Declares Modern Lad Is More Advanced The average American boy of 1930 is an improvement over the same composite lad of 20 years ago, but he breaks more laws, primps up like a movie actor, has to use slang to make himself understood, is healthier, brainior and more polite, believes R. K. Atkinson of St. Louis, educational director of the Boys' Club Federation of America. years. The average boy of today reads more “hush” because there is more trash published, but prefers articles on mechanical eontrivanees and in- ventions to wild west hair-.raiserst, he believes. . Lindbergh Their Hero Some of his other beliefs, are that the modern boy's hero is Lindbergh became Lindbergh embodies the same adventurous traits us did Theodore Roosevelt. "Ile is cleaner minded because he learns sex truths from his parents instead of picking them up "in the alloys." ...._,... He wants a while-collared job. thinks a college education is a right rather than n privilege and doesn't care much about being a policeman or a farmer. He shows more sincere respect for" his parents, partly hediuse they don't force him to. His parents are less dominating. He dresses better --has of clothes to one in 1910.. his sues more often and hair brushed. V "as More Freedom He isn't so inclined to run away from home because he has more in- [crests and his parents '1;ch him more freedom. He breaks more laws if he lives in a city because there is less room for play and there must be an out, let for his desire for adventure. He swears as much but only to relieve tension and probably uses mure slang-in fact, must use it to be understood by his comrades. He has fewer chores to do. He is more mature intellectually. m, is more sophisticated. Atkinsun has studied boys for 25 20 to 40% Savings on Leather Goods. Discontinued numbers and goods used for dis.. play purposes. RED TAG SALE HIM c" Us. CMCAG’ Ttaaihtih 6min}: Thursday, Jun. I, 1931 two suits He shines keeps his

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