ir, AUGâ€! 8, $rntnr, " h t5%t i. 8 lim- mm l ' vim --at5e “the It .,.....:10‘ W. SHEDD L HUB“! monk-en and ICI- i" (an... Cue, 4 (a ' "ttcr-M It... lit-61 q Senator Halal-7‘: in Evian. Admin! w. ‘U-.S- N., thy Chic: .of, Navigation. a. More “mm has had his emarted no} of, that be.) min- , “stewed that it In nit was cunt-nub Ind rest can, but no.6 minke.“ think M to workout)“ rd â€mull. 'to-tr-Ah-o- ,iatter and lilder . F Con-truths swans 33125 ' my 27 mime Incl _ Ill :94 Cum: Art. _ ._' 8-5;“ 'ttbe RFIELD p. IO‘II use, â€bar... as... Lulu It: 9. -----Mme t "a,--...-.," †bu. 81.19 . w. ..........-M but. SPECIALS for (It v" lAv-o I)?†oreahstrrf- 1TH 'ALBACB l 3: 81.“ Wtt Ite "I a l' t3 F. " THE SANITARY ENGINEER ' Illinois Licensed Smeyom Municipal . {Engineers awn/mow ISTHE FOUNDATION o' h- GOOD / HEALTH: Ad WDAY, AUGUST 20, 1986 - Shut-.3“ mMSL “4m tbt8 N. Mn Mt. IRVING C. SCHUR " Dentist Wade: t Marsh hi pysfeet plumbing of pne- tttal worth Ind real beauty it h: fmmdation of our basin-s IPP". Sanitation is we: Home and m it comes to Ptttar, plumbing "a. the TIli; J.KILL|AN,lnc. ' Phones Highland Park 650 Winnetka 222 “can. Wm J1'l."Trl'lia1Pa' Altatha D- Mrmrasmmv may nominal Ind-In. in Na Wad: _ nib-doling LANDSCAPE GARDEN“ CHARLES BROMS _ Guam C Black Soil and In." PM B. P. 1442 Cmo! snug», “one. ml While the an» idea 1be»: not hold of tremendously the United States, it in not native tothi'e coun- try. Fairs runfback to ancient days. but in the olden' timea _ were more !rftetrthyrttettrtttn aux-ornate hot, only held with frequency, very much like the hi intone in Germany and other peat; coun- tries today. The Ame Hair we. its ancestry beck only to' about the middle of the rel: th _ century. . when a group orpro ive farmers in the Tees river valley in northeast- ( em Britain Joined to their lived stock together for co patient. It has been termed the tl t agricultur- al fair and was the mo 1 after which were patterned the hundreds of coun- try fairs both here and in England. Origin of Fig I Elkanah "Watson of ' York has t been credited with being the father of, the American fair. In 1815 Wet- ta, organized the turrietiltuml ao‘clety of Albany, N. YL, andi'proeeeded to establish (sin and cattle shown in the neighboring e9tmtiee." In 1819, due mainly to his infhtertes, the New York legislature 'sprmrpHatedltert thousand dollars a year for six Year: for prem- iums on agricultural and home manu- Ueture products. In ttarthe state agricultural society wad founded hnd work started ittotlurr ektern states. Bue whilg‘Weteon wee‘ nay comm-- ting famiem end legialetors 'to the value of fairs, the Colombian Atri- cultnrel aoeiety held whet in believed to be the fhst exhibitioh or it: and in'Waehinzton, D. C., in 1810.; f . Motorist- who can’t watt a few loc- oetatouta.eerets-ofettt1t. am one. mhnftofmfor moastt_euimsfotdFmae. . yr \Thou who have been urging the lunar to keep books, ,)ill proInbly Mek when his book: show him in must raise his prices do corn, out - . ': _ After " madintt "hdttations jto ttenutift their city some; folks m- mnimonlly declare they} are willing to let Geode let outiuomo more and. ideal government 'exhibitl bring home to the {Irma-lax: in growing " products more om- ically Indlemci‘ently, and household furnishings and labor “Mn: devices on View work directly hr the im- provement of country Hip. ' , V "," The eddeationa1 'value iof the. fun implement and' equipment dhphyl that gamut of All thel 1»thth in omi of the moat communism: fu- tures, according to Mr. 65nd. pp.“ The development of the fair in the United States hasten one of normal growth and lexpa ion, laecordinx to Samuel R. Guard, direetor of the Bears.Roebuek . Agricultural Founda- tion and one of the.leadinx exponents of agricultural exhibits in America. The successful contestant in a lccal fair naturally wished to: compare his products with those of winners In other local fairs. That was how the county fair.came to he. The state fair. with its wider appeal was the next logical step, and there county winners went to settle disputes on the relative merits ' of their prodhcts. Eventually this led to: competition between states.~ culminating first in the inter-state fair, later in the na- tio'npl show and thitsiiy in the inter- national exhibit. Many a national champion grain grower or livestock breeder today can trace his success to some little honor captured at the county fair years ago. Inspires Ambition The appealing thing about the county fair is the opportunity it of- ten the farmer to compare his own work with that of his neighbors and so inspires in him a healthy ambi~ tion to" improve himself nd his work, states Mr. Guard. Within easy dis- tance of his home, he lean examine the best animals, grain), fruits and vegetables, poultry and lion†and de- termine where he falls short of the mark. Likewise hit wift an pit he! needlework, her baking? and pastry, her canned fruits anti vegetables agrninsrthose of other farm women and enjoy the thrill and} reward that comes of victory. “mad, the eountrditr stimulates l endly m' petition that has been responsible“! much so! the farm protress in the statrteerrtttrv,_utnrc. '_. . ‘. Pittahurg. Man" shortly thefoaftgr inaugurated regular agricultural [ex- hibits, and from the“ that “2:1!“ ab forts grew up ottrirtrteritt of Tm"tt nity, county, ante: district. national and international fairyl which} ébvet practically every' new of thi, coun- try. I These fhrur'es, in I nut-hell, tell She story of the. mmlom growth (#11110 American hit from thoi humble» bo- :innint to its mum; dip “than n important factor in "tkitlttrgaredw. cation. They ire cf ial interest hare in View of the Jilt2ld't, Lib. ermine fair which will|bd held sun d-T. t t' 7 111.1810, mink; in 1926. twp then- nnd fairs. In 1810, an attendant at About tha, thousand; in 1925 In bummed qt- tendanco of "?r"oxthtattti “out? tlee million. . F 'r" Approximntoly ‘25 Million Peo- ple Attend Such " Exhibits 1 “Ito-shout Country ' Each Year Boos'rs FARM PRODUCTS FAIR WGAL or' agar; GROWTH Some cheerful potions have dew ed‘they can meld . nod annular trig us their mater: can’t but: than will. they no mulling. . The kids kindly consent to so on t,,,NP, school picnic, ifthe m- - ldoallghowork._ __. Thm,m time- of tine distinctions, had pretty ‘soon they will be chim- ing that the constitution in undou- "ttxttionnt. . . . _ Among the moccasin] moline tav- intt devices, is the 1791ka may _ cr' a roving disposition, but then "ber always find things looking better in some place some dunno: may; " 'Many of the dim: villa and to work 16 hours a day in Europe; are not willing to gay oh the job eight hours I day in this tmmtrr. ' . world. There is enough money in our coun- try to f1mutee soles anywhere on earth. The general complaint against American goods in the ind-heme on immediate payment, no different from may of the organized credit plane of many European oountriee. This Baldwin finanett policy abroad he: given the company a lot of slow though sure assets, as compared with the other possible plan of selling only for cash or quickly realizable credlte. Firms like Baldwin carry the name of America in honor all around the The smell daily or country weekly that live: up to its otiportunitUs rep- resents the stand of pemnel journal- ipm in behalf of the community. As long In the mall city dime: and country weenie: remain true to their best traditions, with their edi- torials devoted to constructive jtoli: cies. their Influence in o'ournn1iim'thri11 increase. Baldwin toeomotives,igd under I long time contract, are running the railroads of the Republic of Poland. One payment of. $1,169,125 up “re cently made by the Republic for loco- motives bought in 1919. The owners, editors and publinlm-n are freer to 0::me their honetrt.'eon- victims than the highly 'commcr- cinlized city we“, too often run by hired employes, principally t6 an: dividends. _ ' "The market for most at this pro- duction is within the limits of the United States. Become that in the best market in the world the limit- less mo' of the south up en- riehthttt 'JTuhlll It in only in the beginning of its progress. The next quarter of I century will wit- lieu more ropid development in the south than in any other single eac- tion of the country, for the nee-on that it he: the climote, soil, mom“. home markets end e new spirit of enterprise which mkerthie poulhle. Our growing trade with Central and South America. will elm prove espec- ially advantageous. to the south.†The amulet pupa-s an conducted by their owners who are penduully knpwn to the people md batman men of thereortmtrmitr and read in nearly every fnmilr. / . _ BUILDING UP GOOD FOREIGN BUSINESS on. was t. rapidly tim'd ttttrr “I an. Winï¬â€™to‘ 3. Am number of the the“! ‘qunblie, and its meeutgstthe' _ timsislitth short‘ofm ' _ " 'frtIetstttueoyntihiiiry, F. ed a â€PM of -git'r'rdrtb. .imrttyetgtrarrurofaeitittiatiat 1th“ the Smith." the Nations! Mub- jlimes-om. “The "ttme tell, s re» amiable stag of menu} new. inseam ,ofthesonthsnptntss his multiplied seven fold since new. and four told since 1900. Total hsnk’ deposits in thar-ttttrn lucrdeiedfm per cent between 1900 end 1923. The: Donal-tier: at £89.th inert-id in round numbers from twentyouinin to thirty-seven billion in that treat!- thres your period; the true “in. of property 2,t'tt than seventeen MV lions to mo than seventy-one: bil..;, lions; the :vslue of manufuthrod‘ products from s billion and n 1','tdli nearly seven billions; the VII†ogl farm property from attoatulim) bil- lions to nearly twentyLiwo billions; foreign exports from less then ttve hundred millions to one billion tour hundred l, thousand; foreign imports from fifty-two million to four, hun.. dred and eleven millions; bat most sitrnifleant of all, school expenditures from thirty-eight million to three hundred and fitteen millions. Rail- road mileage has increased three and a halt times in the south since 1880. The south now produces half the us.- tion's lumber, twenty-nine per dent of its corn, eitrhtyifive per cent of its tobacco, , seventeen per cent of its wheat, eighty-three per cent of its rice and thirty-one per cent of its fruits and vegetables. The south is no longer a one or two crop country. The south produces one-third of the world', petroleum. The amount of coal produced has increased twenty- eight times since 4880. from nn ethical standpoint it an furly be chimed that the country press and mull clty- dailies have n marked advantage over the Me. nigh-9; politan newspapers. - - SMALL 1rgitAigiri', HAVE E ADVANTAGE NJOY PROSPERITY E IN SOUTHERN STATES G t “Efrem Made Below Mn. "tld,' gon Line ht Put Claimed that too m'nny'folkl have THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS. HIGHLAND PARK. ILLINOIS 'tii'isw Out in the cornfield, however, tho 'l) tumor it not worrying and; “but the hut. tt he does not W ttip normal amount of it, be trtimri Summer heat in very dint-stein! to may people, who at .11 wilted do“ when I hot day canâ€. They go but duttutertoeidhet,and%aiG upset if the thermometer is 10 d,- green above normal. r D. L. MUSTRIC BEAUTY SHOPPE Handling, Manicw'mg, Water irahg,lldtliqr; Shampooingand hiih WE SPECIALIZE IN HENNA PACK. HENNA RINSE. INECTO; DYEING and BCALP TREATMENT. Three alien Mar-cellar: " your service. , T [il STANDING THE HEAT gagaaasgaegg - Put Your Rootng Problem Up To Us il Mrwm . i J'hh, ONE of. the secrets of tele- ', C4) ' . phone reliability is'fPreven.. tBrair tive Maintenance" or “contacting THE company. troubles before they occur." must add new l ' ' "yum," " our" You often seethe "trouble men" e',",','",":',",',',?,-',-:': ',r,',r/'t,e on the oultskie lines, but costs I"'"" f as you _ o not see t e, arge force t'g,','tg,',',fnt, working in the Tntrl.offices tltisotettrtratrit+ttat making daily and nightly was be obtained had to fot rust. dirt and moisture. for ex- I',,',:'.,',?),,:,',',":",';:, cessive Wear, friction, electroly- mfg? I',',',',,',',',','. sis and imperfect adjustments. bode»: witbautade- This consumes the time of many quat' m . . employees and often Costs more LN. 'a!yit __ ‘ jthan it would to let things slide 'r, (4) . until the trouble comes. But it n Tif spells service-reliability. ". '- - ILLINOIS mama-ion: murmug. , , _ "hum " ' , 0-:qu I. Ones,“ f OMS,“ ' THE company 1 must add new. "'ilt'rmo" " our plant crrssarwte---at costs greater than the average of the present plat“. To do tlaotmo,cairityltttttst' be chained and to arttractthls,sattAf- Montana: mustbe paid. This canâ€! hem-(thunde- mte mm. um. t. Ivnnlib‘mmnv. non. Maro- '- NEW on REBUILT P03011153 GLASSEDJN ', r Ill Scree ty-sto tlata-Mill Work-c-terik-c, ll Mom ' Hons: 'ii1rllfl'L"d'lt Bored-WW, 'ia/Gtr-els",'";',,';',.'..'.'.?,.':':',','.' _ ," New Room, or,ourtootoerntrtd T CEMENT BLOCKS-Now made/m our New Cement Flint I . iftt Prices foe oettAtr OverheadGanco Dmreueahe BET Cami Burl-‘0' - y -r- PHONE MON 500 1 ', V ' - 7 ' - _ - - - "-"""""T""'-"' -,-, , T Preventive _ 3daintenance " Years of experience have taught us which roofings "look grxyi" and which megood. V * . We know no better value than Barrett Shingles. They're beautiful. With a weather surface of real slate-red, green or blue-black-r-they add,' value to any house, And they're fire-safe-won', rot or rutrt--never need painting or staining. Low in first coat, they’re lowest in east per-year-of-servide. W“ ROOFINGS tm mmwrms MDJNDUSIRIES . me people who he» aetimtr " when usually stand . period of hot weather-,4 Their constitution " m itself to than unmet. Whieh sunken: that the mom peeaiU ac- too-tttsth/sm-att-tire. AttotddrMtihiritke1-,raatt. 2rt'u,ttlhh2tt'td1',gget helping him,mrk¢t the products olhiolabor. 'm undane. has tatrtrhtttimhtrwtohaidmthiettaetf again» the don-Suing cam of a hotdny. ' . BAmCTn'hNG ‘SmnmbOpn. AMcmby-mm BEAUTY SHOPPE 0". I. to ' p. n. Hour- : 7 Roomsmds 'NerttmoietgnndPtAr1mt New State'Buk Building ' inthrtrrkadmimd.rrme willunuyolifyoudo _ttittrlt6a.mattdo-th. 1hmtttt-snturtuirnrkams. . -oetrtowirtfttt1mrV and 'mrmhtrtteatmthkttte-t ttsay 'trto,ttt-t-ttfttltt 1|me l ' trsdttteumttterhaaatrmrtsmmi dars;thoi-thert-tt-t. PAGE SEVEN