Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 13 Aug 1931, p. 22

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Says Walking In Rain Good Beauty Aid; Snow -----nimiE-e-rattg6Sttmttae If a certain beauty hint hinted re- cently by the woman's page of a me- tropolitan daily should impala the ladies as itapparently didthe Ameri- can Game Atnsoeintion's wild life edi- tor (who failed to explain, why he was looking at a woman’s page), a amuse and wondrous sight might il I id I l li I Downtown Dinky Room . IBI'N. Michigan Ave; Randol‘h 4061 HUBBARD o0Dtr-4t" Hula An. WM: 1513 . Frigidaire Jubilee" Celebrating 15 years of » i . r' Achievement _ _ Special Demonstrations SOUVENIRS 'I'O , ALL VISITORS Special Jubilee Offer ht all who Purchase A x eel, 11 led d I: cbm servie MP ta:':'ji?t'ihi?lf:'i'i': TTS'.' new FE, Sf. will? sizzw tt"gtt"ptl'dft't, “ml-“:2- " on our ' m 1e,'u'f/u',l '5" it If m -a.. .x-oevaeatioethw-thin summer. but“ of running for shelter the "ratttiiirii-iiarTttarirrmitrmr made,” the complexion expert is quoted on saying, "don old clothes end go for e hike, turning your hoe up to the. batons. letting the gentle dripping of Jain act a 3 beauty tratmexit'. Snowjnlling on the {we else stimulates ""ieircuiation and so brings a surge of clan, new blood to the" skin undue, improving the STOVER CO. m -iii'i'IrTe" amazed bfuihtccirih'iituft -." tity" tests which show how T!rigidaire's finish withstands hard knocks, C-a 'the tii'itire%"i'tiit "'tjTiaWe"s's"it'ter8r" every household Frigidaire to insure lasting beauty. l Mm YOU ARE CORDIALLYJNVITED TO ATTEND See how the Hrdrasitr makes even wilted vegetables crisp and trestt-- how the Cold Control makes possible' a wide variety of delicious, frozen desserts-how the Quickube Ice Tray enables you to remove ice cubes one” It a time or a whole myth]. - A OINIIAl more“ VAL“ GUARANTIID re" 8 YIAIS FRIGIDAIRE There are souvenirs for ell who attend and a very special anniversary oEer to those who purchase now. And during the Jubilee my house. hold Frigideire my behsd for a smell first payment and the bslsnce arranged to suit your convenience. TE! 1'3!!! Guard Olen- _ 310-89 R. North Wntae St. 0 WW no: 'WANtmtN--t68' Shut-u Ara Ore-bl a“ Tho jam semiotic: mud! this n the thtnt, conclusive end do- vutatinx proof that Ana-la in en- mfttr-air'mtntttmrare--Nrrrt- leaving pills and nontra- behind end turning back to have for health nerd periods of mutation from urti- Bear life, on proved by an lactating number bf hunters and Brthamnatet, tourists, campers. end has and play- ers of all outdoors sports. Who, knows but what the next adventure in reversion may not be e View of up- to-dnte females “singing in the min" . _ ‘ "N“ H ' - 'GW-ME. "a WWW Th Specimens 'of Odd So t Iranian Animal Shownu h in This Exhibit on exhibition today at PUtd Museum of Neturol History, completing the eerie: M. habitat groups [of South '5Niqrtah"Nt-ti"9ttmrsNrrstttte recently installed in this section m the march deer, mince, “out ant, eater, Joyner, and anyhow. Three Aninell Shown The new group is compo-ed of the. "t'tmaat,-lesaftertatisr-amds partly mm yum one, Tupi“ an exceedingly dimcult to pupae for exhibition, end few if any other groups of this kind are to be found ‘in eny museums. The specimens Arere collected by Colin C. Ssnborn, assistant curator of Minds, while in southwestern Brazil as a member of the Marshall Field South Ameri. can Expedition. - GROUP OF TAPIRS _-__ELMMUSEUM A group of South American twin with w--duetioet of I scene in their mun-s1 environment-maybe“ The tapir in one of the ~most de- fenseless inimals in the world, ac- cording to Dr. Wilfred B. Osgood, -aiiatTtrarariairgt.r-at-tt_miraew- active, and depends on ttilieen' sense of smell to protect it from the up. preach of enemies, chief of which is the jaguar for which thar tapir is a favorite prey. It is fond of ira1iow. ing in mud and water, but is also found in relatively dry uplands. . Related to Horse Among present'day animals, tapirs are closely related to horses, says Dr. Osgood. Their toes are divided much like those of prehistoric tive-toat horses, and although they have de. veloped a short prohoacis mumbling an elephant’s trunk, the shape of tupirs were widely 4iatribytod over the earth in ivy-gone "es, but today are found only in South America and the vMalay Peninsula. Dr. Osgood states,” __ - ' _ --e--e---e- - _ A. Garvin, both 'of whom :re mem terr-ofthe-am-muff.-- _ -eee _ ur--rirGider-ats. groupiaAhgmrk of Julius Friesur, and the painted background wag pr_epa_rod by Chm-lei The executive board of the Lake County Tuberculosis usocintion‘ last week refusal to1eeept the mism- tion of Min M Waterman, execu‘ tiva secretary, and instead granted her a in” of theme for . you. Miu Wnteman undated her resil- nntfon when Ibo as given one of the two national scholnuhips to' the Mnsrrsaehttsetta Institute of Technol- on tn' Boston, Hm. The course covet-I child vellum The bond, nth” than lose the services of Min Waterman, urged the lava of thence. Sh. have: in Septembcr to - the scholgnhip. thick m the on. cloud by the tt.ttortnrq'tttr-htM-rlattott. Tho It.“ Micah ha and to furnish om of in "practicum”. Ruth Bettdrkhmm, during tho chum! of liu'Wm. _ Want M: an: Insults. ' Thur-thy. August " iFiiiiitii'trlaWtt 1931

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