All species of upland game are on the upswing i the natural cycle of repopulation, and, with continued g o o-d weather, Illinois hunters' shoulti find. an abundance, of game this 'fail and winter. Sprimg and early sumnier weather has been fa- vorableAto'propagation, Lynch.saii., Reports fromn the Dprmn' fiéld man. incâcte that apoi mately 90 per cent of' the 36,000 pheasant. chicks shipped this year to co-operative sportsmen's ýorgni. zations have survived and will, be released at ten weeks o! age. Last of these releases. wil be made ini early 'September, well in advance of'the huntng season, which opens Novem1ber 10 and extenis, tbrough November 19. The. pheasant sea- son will be four days longer than.in past years. The director said the lengthening of the, season was due. to the abundance of cock pheasants Ariother 20,000 rnatured pheasants wiU be released by the Department this faîl and i the spring of 1940. Lynch said that by spring, 1940, approxlrnately 25,000 quail will be releaseti by sportsmen's organiza- tions and the department in south- ern and central areas of the state, whieh a r e mnost suited for quail propagation. Mr. Phipps will go to the home office in Newark, August 1 for a .month's training andi ins5truction in the company'sý "Analagraph"ý sales procedure, and will then return to recruit, train and supervise his own crew, of salesmen. in the Parsons office. Mr. Phipp s isa:wllknown in-ý suranc e man with 15 years, of agen- cy background. He has held ùumer- ous executive posts li the insurance business, since going to work in 1925 for the Standard 01 America'Insur- ance company. N.. U.,Coaching School Wil Open Auguat 14 More than 100 high school andi college coaches from ahl sections of the country wi1nattend- Nol¶fwest- ern university's annual summer coaching scbool, August 14 to 26, Coach Carl Snavely of Cornell wil join, with Lynn Waldorf and Burt Ingwersen of Northwestern in giving the football portion of the school. Coach Dutch Lonborg of Northwest- ern and Branch McCracken of In- diana will conduct the basketball lectures and demonstrations. Other The "forgotten man" of traffi- Mr. Pedestrian-is beginning to be reinembered. American cities, long asleep to the problem he bas been, creating, are flnally shaking the sand from their eyes. In the past, atten- tion was concentrated only upon the motorist, then - boom! Statistics starteti to tell strange things-three out of every five persons killed in Pedestrians-% the green lig1I! uari i LLiexsonUI, tra 1iing. DLtep1en Epler, originator -of 6-man football, will give a series of lectures and,. demonstrations of the game. PRIZE PLAYHOUSE Creating somewhat of a sensation as a prize-winning display in the Wilmette Day parade last week, the "life-size" playhouse built by Paul on the curb Ever?, u'ear need not be ?ear" for the pedeatrian. Glencoe en- at dinner at Club last [ or S V s.