Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 28 Jan 1932, p. 41

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mpoo . ..........._..T5¢ U HAVE YOUR o :-'fii.’; valley of Texas; are be L MADE? For fvrsth::r mt' Thone '«::l- rdini specializes D. E. WJNK resses. For apâ€" 416 8. Sheridan rd:, Highland ° P. 2849. 36 Tel. H. P. 447 ane nement it ec00,,20000,,,...0,,000,20u00 \“Nâ€"__ ) EMPLOYERS ~~ BRRow monEy on ;h%nde Help . f * YOUR . AUTOMOBILE , Evanston zs after 6 p.m. ARBEK rs, maids, _ govern« taurant, office help, VELY 'Lv-um-} IGHBORS RENT _ , RGE ~DOUBL®E BED. ome . on Vh. gn_. 2 _ school ; suitable ‘for n beds ; would consider ht persons. ‘Tel, H. P. Winnetka 2662 NT AGENCY Highland Park . care for children eveâ€" reliable. Tel. H. P. ive uE.Mem‘;; â€"â€" Girl for general â€"Will be glad to do dollars a week if 1 â€"Young girl wishes earing for children, YMENT pleasant furnished bed. from . Cafeteria ; rent for + _AND PLAIN ING nfur. ment, heat mishea m iinorenl; bost Call Mrs. Newcomb i references. â€" Tel. IABL' JRSDAY, JANTt Winnetka â€" _ 32 896 Walker ave Greenbay rd. T. Hy I hooreretizated Wanted T HELP or hour by expeâ€" P. 4008. 47pd prices -'e-on-h;*i , . office work Tox "42" mras for North Shore at n rrcrecruersâ€"â€"d00 508. 47â€"49pd As stenog. Tel. couple ; man, 48pd â€" ‘Tel. ARY 2s el all 321 8E SsURE TO BRING LOST, STRAY, or siy aNrED pers To gapnans or !m TO RENTâ€"For sutmmer season. WEEKLY EXCURSIONS to the Lower Rio Grande valley of Texas, are being made Bow, $75 per couple, covers all expense. For further details phone or writeâ€" ICE SKATES WANTED 10 EXCHANGEâ€" '.".?Mls.ke- refrigerator, $250 value Un â€"and after this date (Jan. 21 932y I will not be responnihlk WANTED TO BUYâ€"Will pay cash for modâ€" &n 6â€"room brick house in good location â€" HELP WANTEDâ€"Man wanted of good ap» pearance. We bave a plan whereby you may. have a steady income from a digâ€" mified position.. Tel. H. P. 197. â€" "â€" 4s and white Hansen. HELP WANTEDâ€"Girl WANTED TO RENTâ€"For family of three ; renting from either April or May 1 to â€" October 1. ~ Write describing house and z'vut rental. Address K. E. Press o‘fa- PIANO TUNING â€" aAn eral housework ; private roomi and bath ; $ per week. Tel. H. P. 3117. 48 Alterations, . Dressmaking, Ladies‘ Tailoring and Fur Work. FINE CLEANING ‘Special prices offered up to January 15. ie H. P. PAHNKE Tel. Highland Park 2048 Ridge Farm Preventorium would iy ‘appreciate any kind of ice skates * _or clamp) for children, ages 8â€"16. Mrs. Henry Glidden, H. P. 511. 47pd Wanted to Buy Lost and Found Wanted To Rent ~During. Christmas vacation; wrist h with brown leather strap ; liberal WANTEDâ€" Experienced STITCHâ€"INâ€"TIME SHOP 698 Vernon Avenue, Glencoe. Tel. Gleneoe 1161 Help Wanted TION _ WANTEDâ€"High â€" school gradâ€" wishes office work ; capable ; reliable. H.â€"P. 3157. 48pd "Housework ; half time ;. $5 Phone Highland Park 1489 and 4 o‘clock. te Bank Bld., Evanston Tel. Greenleaf 2036 _ ; . We call for and deliver. : wireâ€"haired fox terrier, black ; 6 months old : reward. Bobbie reasonable. . Address "C.F.8." lan rd., Highland Park, T. Tel, H, P. 447 _ 48pd NOTICE Â¥, JANUARY 28, reasonable. woman for genâ€" guaranteed atz.) only that 41â€"48 for In the event of war, no shell or bomb as yet devised is powerful enough to penetrate the 96 feet of ~â€" Officials of the Banque de France _claim that should a riot occur in Paris, the bank would be in a posiâ€"< tion to go into a state of siege and resist all attacks for several weeks. In less than half an hour all the inâ€" stitution‘s executives and employes would be in the vaults, where emerâ€" them..â€" Here the staff could be housed and fed. Provisions are alâ€" ways kept stocked and kitchens are in readiness for the preparation â€"of meals. Sleeping accommodation is also provided for. ’ But that is all the visitor can see; gold and steel walls. The inâ€" tricate system of defense remains a mystery to him, as it does to the rest of the world with the exception of a few engineers. : Huge Steel Doors Access to the vaults is gained through steel doors, weighing eight tons each. Steelâ€"walled> corridors and winding staircases form a laâ€" byrinth that without the armed guide at one‘s elbow would prove impossible of negotiation. francs per ingot. the system of defense which proâ€" tects the gigantic treasury, but in certain cases visitors are permitted to inspect the vaults under guard. One can see the yellow ingots of bullion neatly stacked on steel shel ves. They lie in piles of five, each ingot â€" weighing 12 kilos (26.5) ingot â€" weighing 12â€" kilos (26.5)' ‘123: pounds) and estimated at 200,000 Blllldlllg and Loâ€"an over four years. Legends related in Paris about the tronghold wherein reposes â€"the country‘s gold reserve are fantastic, but actually the truth is still more so; for the vaults are even more impregnable than the famous Verâ€" dun forts that withstood the conâ€" tinuous assauts of Germany‘s might-J age when gold is re;arâ€"(i-e:i .:s_-t-i:: lifeâ€"blood of nations, France proâ€" tects it as such,. vaults that house France‘s â€"gold reâ€" serveâ€"the richest treasure in Rurâ€" ope, says an Associated Press story. _It is estimated that France now owns 30 per cent of the world‘s supâ€" ply of the precious metal, its stock being second only to the gold owned by the United States, and in this nee‘s Aladdirt‘s In one of the busiest thoroughâ€" fares in Paris, between the Rue de Valois and the Rue Croix de Petits Champs, buried under 96 feet of solid rock,â€" are â€"theâ€"imnregnahla Vaults Sunk 96 Feet and Surrounded by Water; Description DEEP UNDER GROUND | #««~« , but the danger of Legends Fantastic â€"power for and Are F H Pointing out that the second year of a depression phase is the test year for any institution‘s soundness, H. ,F. Cellarius, Cincinnati, Oh., secretaryâ€"treasurer of the _1 y predicts a countryâ€"wide 'in% confidence ingéneral business â€" -J tions as a result of this large diviâ€" early October. Some associations are paying semiâ€"annual ~dividends this month, while the majority will make their dividend disbursements on Jan. 1. Theâ€" total also includes quarterly dividend payments in some associaâ€" tions to be made the first of the Dividends totaling $226,000,000 will have been paid to building and loan association shareholders early in January, returns for the last half of 1931 on investments of 12 million saving and borrowing memâ€" bers of the associations, the United States Building and Loan league reâ€" ports on basis of earnings stateâ€" ments of associations throughout the country. ceases to move and eollects in one spot nothing but disaster can folâ€" low. So one is inclined to believe that it would be far better for a nation to suffer from a mild form of anaemia. Since their completion in 1927, a steady stream of gold has flowed into their hungry maw from other countries, particularly the United States and Germany, and the acâ€" cumulatign of precious metal is steadily growing. It is said that all France‘s gold travels one vnyâ€"‘ down to the vaults of the Banque de i o 1k * * blood of a nation, but any physician wi!l tell you that blood, to be beneâ€" That be as it may, one wonders g what France will doâ€" with all the er gold if, and when, she controls the in world supply. i its course into several tributaries that form a water jacket around the country‘s cash box. _ _ It took two years of labor by 1200 men, working night and day, to carve out the setting in the livâ€" ing rock to accommodate the vaults, and the cost ‘of construction is ”.1 timated at $5,000,000. * neling was also foreseen and guarded against. J3 Surrounded by Water ~On every side the huge treasure chest of a nation is surrounded by water. When the engineers who built the stronghold made their surâ€" vey for the site of the vaults, they discovered the subterranean river of the Grange Bateliere and diverted Assns. of U. S. Pay Out Huge Dividends the vaults being gained by tunâ€" ing _ was also foreseen and ir | ~MAUSOLEUM or HEADSTONE s y| _ THE OLD Aup Reusasic A tuoâ€"| Urge More General § *""| _ Use of Cereal Grains As Human Foodstuffs MONUMENT _ NVVO it, Western Ave., Chicago : WMWMMM . Longbeach 1161 â€" Free Booklet Also Opp. Oakwoods & Entrance Loop Ofleeâ€"238 unh.l-*n. 4. products RELIABLE LAUNDRY AND ; DRY CLEANING CO. with those foods supplying factors in which wheat is lacking the cirâ€" cular says. Vegetables and fruit may be ranked next in importance after grain products and milk as Generous quantitiee of ‘wbole wheat may be used daily if judgment is' nsgg in supplementing. the diet and tomato, chowder, muffins, raisin sandwich loaf, custard, brown betty and breakfastâ€" cereal. The cracked wheat ‘recipes include those for breakfast cereal, mush, griddle cakes muffins and hermits. Instructions on preparing wheat for cooking, cooking . whole . and cracked wheat, recipes for using cooked : whole wheat and cooked cracked wheat and menus are given in the circular. The whole wheat recipe include those for cheese pudâ€" ding, scalloped ~â€"whole wheat and Whole grains are highly desirable substitutes for commercially preâ€" pared breakfast foods, which are more expensive and often of lower nutritive value than the original whole grain, the circular points out. However, cereals are <not complete foods, either alone or in mixtures with one another, and must be used in comjunction with soâ€"called "Proâ€" tective foods," it is explained. to a new cireular, "Some Ways of C€racked Wheat," just issued by the home economics department of the Collegeâ€"ofâ€"Agriculture, University of Illinois at Urbana. More general andâ€"widespread use may well be made of cereal graing as human food at a time like this when these grains cost so little and many families have less money than usual to spend for food,â€" fecording WV NAL ie t editt w N eE ic Seus uBs More Â¥4â€"

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