ili iLA 9 1w ; t‘I 230 Nor‘tï¬ THE SANITARY ENGINEER The Billy Bowden Grocery As big as camping woods at night Is a healthy fellow‘s appetite. Which is agd it should be. Feed him the Buy your proviâ€" sions here And be ‘sure of their m;nd holesomeness. Our a ness : pleases. VIC J. KILUAN, Inc. RBLIAB goods bear famous .trade . ‘~Our perfect plumbing id marked with Skill, Reliability dnd Fair Price. Propâ€" er â€"Plum Provides Prevenâ€" tion. â€" Sanifation lengthens life and shortenk worry. . ; | OUR COAL is all that good eoal should{beâ€"plus a service that is plegsing and a weight that is entious. It will add comf. and economy to your housekKpeping. that, is ple that is co add comtf your house IS THE ONLY 4 POLICY â€" U NE have to coax. a ,!o # to drink ~milk! A n or ni{ht their . 1 break into smiles t the sighl of it! |â€"â€"~ > â€" May we your orders for ’&’Qfli * [A 2@ Remodeling 874 Center St., WINNETKA OUR 35 ‘! wotter‘h suazes / T sofl ST. JOHNS AVE. L. P. ts :c %Y ENGINEERS Specialists in. New Work A Bath a Day : Keeps Ygu Fit Every Way Paul J BUILD Tel. Winnetka 1260 HE LOVES MILK EERFIEL Hi Â¥/ MARCH 26, 1925 Borchardt NG MATERIAL phland Park 67 Bt. Johns Avenue & uy ){':,}3 <Ayrs y xt® M The "splendid work" of the Near East Relief in caring for orphan chilâ€" dren in Russian Armenia, received enâ€" thusiastic acclaim this week at the recent meeting of the Soviet congress at Tiflis. Doctor Orachavelli, head of the caucasus confederation, gave the congress a formal and cfetailed report on this American relief work, which he has personally visited sevâ€" _eral times. h £8 0 h1 ye You are reading some of the words utilized recently in a radio talk by Prof.. Conrad E. Tharaldsen, profesâ€" sor ofâ€"zoclogy at Northwestern Uniâ€" versity, who frankly discussed evoluâ€" |tbn with a. large audience. Discusses Evolution [r,. "Evolution is an established scienâ€" tific fact," said Prof.. Tharaldsen. ‘"The conflict between science and reâ€" | ligion is an old one and reappears sporadically. It is a conflict now beâ€" tween fundamentalist and modernist and each in his way is right in his Then he added::"Man is of lowly origin whichever route you . select. Science, however, demonstrates quite clearly ‘that man in his travel down the evolutionary ladder went far beâ€" low the monkey and reached, at least, the neptile stage. So, when you hear a peevish student refer to “r chum who hasn‘t lived jup to a campus agreeâ€" ment as a ‘mean little snake,‘ you may know it‘s a roast because there‘s something actually trie behind it. Or when a college dude is referred to as ‘snaky,‘ it may be well to pause and.think over his remote &ncestry. Common Origin ! "Yes, man has a common ancestry with the monkey but man is not deâ€" scended from ‘the monkey, although bgth had the same preâ€"historic parâ€" ents. Each ran for thousands of years along his own branch of life and these two branches are now widely separated.. Yet, about 2,000;,â€" 000 years ago the two branches probâ€" ably met and were as one limb. The evolutionary scale, then, runs along in about this orderâ€"Man, on the one hand; the monkey, on the other; the ancestry of bbth had a common parâ€" entage aeons ago in the missingâ€"link, referred to by scientists as the primiâ€" tive primate, and back of the primiâ€" tive.manâ€"monkey a species of extinct mammal and ‘way, ‘way back of the extinct mammal, the reptile. / ‘"The Near East Relief," he: said, "has cared for 30,000 children gx Arâ€" menia, and is still caring for * 7,000 of which about: 11,000 are in the orphanages at Alexandropol.. The orâ€" ganization does ncot mix in politics and deserves our full approval and ¢oâ€"operation . for its singleâ€"minded humanitarian work." 4A & s General econonÂ¥c conditions have improved somewhat in Armenia durâ€" ing: the past year, according to this speaker. Agricultural reports show that the area farmed is now nearly up to the preâ€"war acreage, but unforâ€" unately recent severe weather hu‘s L ult a xA ccs "This can be cireumstantially provâ€" ed by science And yet some of us who can demonstrate it are religious and are probably as devoted to religion as a force for human uplift as are our good friends on the other side of the caused heavy crop damage which will mean: great hardships ‘to the rural population and will set, back agriculâ€" tural reconstruction several years. fence." Bolshevist Official at Convenâ€" tion in Tiflis Says Great Work Is Done soOVIET TRIBUTE TO ; / _ NEAR EAST RELIEF "What, me monkeyin‘ with the cross word puzzles? Don‘t youever believe itâ€"a .feller gits enuf cross words that he don‘t. havter puzzle none over. As to man‘s origin, the professor humorously asked if it should be "mud or monkeys ?" Â¥ "Religion, too, must advance," he added, "or it will be hopelessly left behind: To attempt to make religion static can only damage ‘religion, not science." . « own sphere. The fundamen has the tactical advantage of d:%l;{x his position and sticking to c beâ€" liefs.. Therefore, he may be called a conservator. . The modernist reaches out for new truths. He is an explorer but both these advocates are usefal. Fundamentalists â€" unreasonably â€" fegrl that science is undermini:fl ‘their cherished religion ‘while entists cannot seé where there is any ccm-| flict between true religion â€"and evoluâ€" tion. There may be a corflict beâ€" tween the dilettantes or humbugs in both ranks but it‘s my opinion that the ablest theologians believe in evoâ€" lution and that most stientists are\| religious." . y "a 4 World Rapidly Chxnging ; ,Prof. Tharaldsen said the world is rapidlyâ€" changing, making progress, and it is the duty of scientists to keep abreast of the advancing host. â€" _ Don‘t‘ make fun of the fundamentalâ€" ist, for he is a conservator and helps to mgintain the balanceâ€"wheel of huâ€" manity; at the same time, the funâ€" damentalist is "static" while the modernist is an explorer and refuses to stand still. ; . BY Declares It Established . Scienâ€" tific Fact, But Says Fundaâ€" mentalist Humanity‘s . Balance Wheel EYVOLUTION SUBJECT OF RADIO ADDRESS Z0O0LOGY â€" PROFESSOR | _ It is ane of the greatest collections | of the world. To undertake a successâ€" ,ful fight against an insect pest, it is ‘obviously necessary to know with abâ€" | solute ccuracy what it :is, and 'thmugh this fact to know more easâ€" ily what are the habits of the. group to which it bel{r:gs, and what, if anyâ€" thing has been written about it ‘This more than .justifies the extremely |â€"close rel@tionship that exists between I the Department of Agriculture and the musgum, and, further, the employâ€" \ ment by|the department of a .corps ‘of, } highly expert "taxonomists," as men ; who do guch work are called. | It happened that a few days afterâ€" wards a member of the Canadian enâ€" tomological staff, who had been a missionefl to spend two years inc%l investigating a moth injurious to the eoconut, passed through Washington, His attention was drawn to the paraâ€" lsite "of this moth,, which appears to lbe very| abundant and, beneficial in | the Fedérated Malay states. He will |â€" endeavo immediately to introduce the {samp parasite into Fiji. M ds d | Transporting ‘pupils to and from school at public expense has raised some cammonâ€"sense questions that need to be answered, in the opinion of James .F}, Abel, assistant specialist in rural f cation of the Department of the |Interior, bureau of education, expressed in an. varticle in School Life. All the‘states and the District of Columbia are transporting | some school children. Pupil transportation has been the subject of a generous amount of legislation, and back of it lies the: fundamental principal that the state must provide means for an éducation to every resident child, gither by causing a school to be placed within hisreach or by transporting him to one. hn ; | Where| does the responsibility of the parent ckase and that of the public il;:gin‘.' he question is asked about most school activities. The answer as o ‘publi¢ transportation is generally ‘xpressed in terms of distance from me to!schocl, and the range under present jaws is oneâ€"half to 4 miles. Such transportation is not a new item in the expense of education. It is handled in a different and better way and its cost carefully â€" recorded. Twentyâ€"two states reported that 446,â€" 226 children were transported in 1921â€" 22, at an expenditure of $14,536,368, or an average of $32.55 per pupil for the year. The cost ranges from $9.36 in Georgia to $73.15 per highâ€"school pupil in some sections of Maryland. Costs differ with conditions, but for safe, comfortable transportation of any congiderable number of pupils a state 1 probably need to expend from ‘$30 to $40 for each child‘ per year. ; i The distinguish« the Near East Rel ed posthumously 1 of Allentown, Pa., cause humani Atmenia," He s7 relief work in the in Tiflis| and Ale Armenia, He won utation a finan later attached to bassies in Constan His hips in to the. develop which pelled ca a few months month at his \ Where parent c Egin? 3 most sch 0 'publicj %:preue me to RELIEF WORKER IS |__VICTIM OF CAUSE TRANSPORTING OF â€" | SCHOOL CHILDREN Ameri Who %ent 3 â€" Years In Near East Dies; Honors Posthumous ; Practical Questions Raised By \ _ This System Discussed © The maintenance of an adequate reference collection of insect speciâ€" mens is absolutely essential to the work of the bureau of ‘entomology, and jn recognition of ‘this fact Dr. L. Q. Howard, chief of the bureau, has for a,long time been honorary cura; tor of the entomological division‘ o{ the museum: ‘ The collection is main< tained by members. of <the‘ bureau staff who are specialists with regard to particular‘ insects, and who conâ€" stitute an emergency staff: which can be sent! out over. the country when serious |infestations | of an unusual character occur. : Foreign entomoloâ€" gists frequently visit this collection for the purpose of identifying ‘speciâ€" mens "or extending their knowledge of rare gspecies. f phsel t 1 is very| injurious to coconut trees, The sender wrote that he had been unâ€" successful in securing . identification of these jparasites. From the very exâ€" tensive erence collection of speciâ€" mens maintained in the museum under the dire¢tion of the bureau of entoâ€" mology of the United States Departâ€" ment of Agriculturg, the, species was identifi and agmgemenu were made for. the immediate publication of the description. [ â€" An interestin function of the a clearing hous mological activ when a geries d received| from mologist â€"of \/tl states. ‘These : tachinid fly par MUSEUM AIDING IN _ â€" : EP INSECT PEST WORK Collections of ‘Specimens Are ; Used by Entomologists I _ In Experiments He won a considerable repâ€" a financial expert and was hed to the American Emâ€" Constantinople and Prague,. hips in, overseas work led evelopment of tuberculosis, pelled return: to Ameriâ€" months ago. He died last his e in ~Pennsylvania. stinguished service medal of East Relief has been.awardâ€" imously to Wiliam A. Yoder own, Pa., for "service in the humanity : in Turkey and " He spent three years"in k in the Near East, mainly and Alexandropol, Russian _ of ;ithe : Federated Malay These spéciments were of a fly parasite on a moth which injurious (to coconut trees, )er wrote that he had been un teresting illustration of the of the National Museum as ig house for economic entoâ€" 1 actitity" occurred" recently eries df insect specimens was from the government entoâ€" HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, By Specialist I f you wan? the best‘f{or spring; . i| A here it.ifs | _ ./: 4E SCHAFFNER & MARX don‘t make finer L + clothes than theseâ€"and that‘s saying about all one can say when talking of clothes. _ _ _ â€" _ _ All that expensive tailors get threeâ€"figure prices for you‘ll find hereâ€"good style, rich fabrics, fine needlework, .. . [!) {9 . ;) [ ' . _ Other clothes by the same famous makers at _ North First Street 13 South St. Johns Avenue _ Telephone H. P. 307 Ice and Building Material FRANK Big reduction to those who ‘come‘ to our nursery and get the stock. l f [ Freshly dug, roots not dried out. _ Nursery at LINCOL AVE. .A N D â€" PETERSO ROAD. Go South on Ridge Ave., Evanston, to north line‘oi Rosehill Cemetery, then wes two miles to Nursery. _ { Cash and Carry B A R G A I NS _ BuYr Now | | y d Trees, Shrubs, Fruits and Vines . City Office, 30 N. LaSall: Bt., Chfeago * :!â€" > /+ | ts . EVANSTON â€" UNIVERSITY 1434 W\ 6 f reanrik B Serdis â€"r-â€"" ,â€"--â€"w bilffieatict uthurtrcd The Land. of the Pe 0 Nursery has b%l Sold, and we have but a Short f Time to Sell Off tï¬e.Stock. THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY. $25.00 up to $50.00 ILLINOI8 COAL PETERSON NURSERY Copytight 1924 Hart Schaffher & Marx STLJ ES TR OM Telephone Highland Park 65 SYRINGA For those who do not care to do their own pli;nt.ing we will‘ DELIVER, PLANT AND GUARANTEE _ Telephone Main 8613 Phone or write NOW PAGE FIVE 1