W erient Work Narthwester iL 5 ce gr râ€"school #1so | rqm:* ;‘:niy due ", P 7 i n N( from thd O s busyoat 1as Hong : proudly aols q Deerfield z ‘ a° nationâ€" r {under the of Principal R. L. kas tly startâ€" .000 embly© hall ToBER 23, 1924 Lake Michigan » | Aw» PÂ¥ to the e!othu .of Princ gke L. with this uel:om‘ M# lerFalsuon torium which was It by populat subscription, an indication of. the quality of public b.&"“ t es this city. The 85 dis f the town is suggestive of ent municipal + managemen forâ€" ' streets are well kept, clean we It requires 1 cuble feet of air to burn ;' gallotn of oil. The Kléenâ€"Heet or and blower unit measures out ;nugt delivers,t atg?mom; of air. The result is perfect ?om- ion. tH} f | s | 3 Don‘t be lead to believe that you!can burn oil relyar;g on flue draft alone ; if you do, you are gaing to have a cos | and sad experience.. Invest in a Scientific and Reliable Autoâ€" matic Oil Burper, the ,| > 2 e t . Represented in Lake County by Heating Engineers, which assur oamers“ correct i&tnllations.{and prompt attention. Send for of KLEENâ€"HEET owners in your attention. se &r Oof RLIAISNâ€"HIDIL 1 owWwners own neighbol{i £ cf +T ud _ SOLD ON EASY TERMS IF DESIRED t 18 AL OFFICES . h “‘ 520 Central Avenue, Highland Park. Telephone i fimiet Susare Uike Toret." Teleptoug 398 Time FoT Fall‘ ï¬blanting Is App?oachipg Our nurser; the nursery an We have fruit shrubs and trees, ormamental shrubs and trees and the best ‘&reens for this climate, & k “_ : : C & : % ‘i 4 STOP IN AN AT THEM, OR TELEPHONE AND LET 8 TELL YOU ABOUT THEM [ ? t p Prairie Avenue, Highwood, III. _ Phone Highland Park 523 By placing k:ur order and plintmg early you are CV ,Aud{%ï¬tor Sunday Afte T R I U PRICES: AY, Food ,ï¬of Thought ALMZ At the t |are some Traffic girls, back row â€"The Misses Esther Pearsgon, Ml:rlcimn Katherine Pelnar, Ruth Spangler, Gieser. and ‘th‘&’:or . Front rowâ€"The Misses Ph Newbore, Viola Lonngren, Pearl Turner, Angela i, May Grimson, Alice O‘Nefil, and Mildred % the cirgle at the upper rightâ€"The Misses Anna , Ellen Jenkins, and Dorothea Evans of the Commercial Department, leftâ€"Anâ€" thouip-n&,ll and Clarence Pfster, Repairmen. lqwc rightâ€"some more of the Traffic girls are the Ml Mildred Hidnick, Frances wig, Loretta Steffen, Mabel as, freme Nelson, Mary Isom, Anna Hensel and Irene Vallmer. C oo t s t 14 BT _ ‘Arg aclck _: ‘$. _ $1,10, $1.65, $2.20, $2.75. Box seats K is included. SeatSaleN;iw. ! lito:flium._Theatre y Afternoon, October 26th ly the only Chicago appearance. 1 P H AIN T RE T U R N COMING t.ar'*lc‘n‘ Gar't;enhb mt t 9+ hests i\ GLUCK We, of the telephone business, apâ€" preciate the fact that gte center of all ivities, 3 , _ social â€" and oth €, is mtuj;nlly the: telephone office; for almost Qv'erytbin\g is done by wire these days. ligh Hi d Park has a very modern water sys and furnishes water to Highwood, the adjoining town. | ood. Come to The parties which have entered in the Illinois race are Republican, Democrat, socialbt. Progre';atve. Soâ€" cialist Labor, Workers Party of America, Commonwealth I‘fmd Parâ€" ty, Prohibiticn, Independent Republiâ€" can, Limit Land Manipulations and Rents, , Independent, nnd»f‘f%larmer- | Labor. . t 4. } | 'rheJnmmq; of Robert M. La Folâ€" | lette, and Burton ‘K., Wh ‘ appear twice in the presidential dandidates‘ column, this team having b« ‘.P picked to head the tickets of two parties, the | progressives and the soci hfl Each ' party has a different set df electors. | Candidates for President _ . The presidential choices| of minor parties in the election are: Socialist Labo& Frank T. Johns, of Oregon, Ipmsi nt; â€" Verne L. Reyjmg;ls, ‘of Maryland, vice president; . Workers t Party of America, William E, Foster, |Chica§o, president; Benjamin Gitlor, | New York, vice president; Commonâ€" wealth Lnnq party; William J. Walâ€" lace, New Jersey; president; John C. | Lincoln, Ohio, viceâ€"president;: Prohiâ€" | bition, Herman P. Faris, Clinton, Mo., | president; Marie C. Brel!m‘, Long ’ Beach, Cal., vice president. | . Proofs of the ballots on which IIliâ€" noig citizens will express their preferâ€" ence November 4, have been received by the office of the secretary of state. Twelve different political parties will be listed on phe ballots, eight of them having â€" candidates for the White House, I se gent 1 | TWELVE PARTIES ON ;TRAVEL&MPORTFNT : ILLINOIS BALLOTS â€" ~EDUCATION FACTOR LaFollettteâ€" and â€"Wheeler. must withdraw their ‘names from either the Progressive or Socialist ticket nog later than Thursday ofithis week to comply with a law which provides the same: man ‘cannot appear as a candidate: on two tickets. t was beâ€" lieved their withdrawal from the So+ cialist ticket would be ved at the office of the secretary| of state today or tomorrow. l ~ The Highland Park office is locatâ€" ed on the two floors above!the bank building, right opposite the railroad station, where all departments are concentrated.. _ The pictures of the switchboards in operation. tell their own tales. Busy is the word which describes both the local |and toll boards. A number of the| residents of Highland Park have thgir busiâ€" EIGHT OUT FOR PRESIDENT JOURNALISM MAN TALKS Proofs of Voting Paper Now In| Says Visits to For Lands Hands gl Secretary Eltnmer- \ . _ Helps to Broaden Mind in son Show Varied List ; Many Ways; H in of Candidates: | â€" | Study Co: Candidates for United ;Btrtfel senâ€" ator also number sevehr |including Charles S. Deneen, Chicag Republiâ€" can; . Albert: A. Spragug,| Chicago, Democrat; George Koop, | Chicago; socialist; Albert Wirth, Péoria, Soâ€" cialist Labor; â€"J. Louis Engdahl, Chiâ€" cago, Workers, Party; Dana Spaulding, | Springfield, . Commonâ€" wealth Land; P:rke'Longwg Chiâ€" cago, Limit Land Manipulations and Rents.®* . | / MEEC .Az Some of the minor parties have also filed complete state tickets, havâ€" ing candidates on the Ballot for every office from governor dgwn. HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS 3 Tt in‘ mor: real than{the vault of ~heaven which wears th¢ blue livery of nothingness," he declkred, "It is infinitely more eloquent |than a dead Tutankhamen. There is npt a point on all its surfacte but owes|its name to the immortalizing of sonie human inâ€" ¢ident, for it tells of the wanderings of the races Pf men. Every name is the memorial: of a battle pr the buildâ€" ing of a home, the fossiléd sighs and laughter of the ages, the cradles of empire and the tombs of ambition." ‘ lmpo of Kn age / Mr. Arnold showed how important it whforakumltmho the aspects of every «Ja) and the mode of thought of its people, anH their true ’ place in theIcomplex pukzles .of toâ€" â€"day and tomorrow, so that an item of news from ni:ron the sehs may not be served to the public in a curt unâ€" informative &ny but be[fused with life and mur‘ing. For the message in such a news item may be v vial" as the firing of a bullet at @/prince in Servia, yet if the geography of the act is understood, there afises in the journalist‘s mind the vigion of ‘a world war. American papers hold many such messages today: messages ‘from India, messages from South Africa, but most of them are still s Highland tains its sent standa cleanliness and ¢ will continue to grow in as a high class residen we predict f@g it a future. f ~Broadens the Mind Antiquated methods of endeayoring to teach to,w&mthful mirtds the diverâ€" gified aspects of nations and peoples dwelling the&in by me of dryâ€"as« dust geographies he said, are like an effort in making love by{auto suggesâ€" tion to a skeleton or to & wax dummy in a shop window. Only through aeâ€" tual travel or else by theé trained eyes of the min)d uld this be accomplishâ€" ed successfully and one of the best modes was by the early and close reading of great novels guch as Ivanâ€" hoe, The Cloister and; the Hearth, Westward H: and the Talisman,. _ "Travel," said Julian | an address on "Geogra Newspaperman" before School of Journalism of 1 tuiniversity, last week, " for all men and wsmem‘ purposes of cation, all â€"for those who as jo fill the ro of _ in foreign ne::i and wor! home readers." The lecturer described an atlas as not merely a sheet of paper bearing indications of lands anfl rivers and seas and mountains, but as the symâ€" bol of all the concenttated aspiraâ€" tions of mankind. F nesses and offices in which accounts for the large thll business between the two cities. & born for lack of 1 their conâ€" sequence in accordance | with the grammar and syntax of hy, he said. f ; \Most of the young want to work with their heads, the bulk of the work has to be lished with people‘s hands. : The lazy students to think that school marks aren‘t much more valuable than the German € ® want to the bulk plished }hy and the the â€"Medill orthwestern s . important and for all ut most of rnalists fulâ€" rpreters of 1 affairs to â€"â€" quiet â€" it importance prosperous ark mainâ€" of beauty, Arnold in Baggage, Expressing, Movin Telephone 1805 F T. T > \d0Pe ) T%r;;ï¬;ho, -I'JVI‘I‘bH wzw Accompanist 4 ® Residence Studio, 737 Cornelia Ave., Chicago. Phone 4 Highland Park Studio, 358 Central Ave. _ Tel, 3i Pack 19 In Highland Park:â€" Wednesdays and 9 Household Removals, Packed and Shipped, Hauling, E : Baggage, Freight Moving to all Points: Padded V ans i; 1 526 Lincoln Place Removal Notice JEWELRY & WATCH REPAIRING Alwvays at Y our S.eré,i GUST NORRLEN TRANSFER LOUISE M I wish to announce that I have moved to My New Telephone Number is Highland Park and Highwood 384 CENTRAL AVENUE IN THE RADIO SHOP EV ANS (IN THE LOOP) Telephone H. P. 1509 + w# CLARENCE B 1 9 1Â¥ t 4B