e t Stenog: "I‘ll say you are one of them." o Boss: "I‘m smoking a. terrible lot of cigars these days." io Director:; "Well we can‘t find the artist who drew it so there‘s nothing else to do but hang the picture." William Francis, the new president of the Association, is president of the Francis & Nygren Foundry Co. He came io Chicago as a working boy from Ackley, lowa.~ {/% ErsKine Wilder (of Wilder & Co.â€" leather) of the Board of Managers mnlsochooenuemmanotthp city boys‘ work committee, George L. Danforth Jr. (Assistant general superintendent of the Illinois Steel Co.) was chosen as Chairman of the South Chlcagb::mmittoe of manageâ€" ment. . Alll officers remain the same. Mr. Hypes eontim:k‘, on the Board of Managers. 3 William Francis was elected presiâ€" dent ‘of tbe‘}om Men‘s Christian Association of Chicago at the annual meeting (Jan. 21) to suceced W. F. Hypes (of Marshall Field & Co.) who declined reâ€"election after ten years‘ service in the office. ; t lems common to us all furnish indesâ€" tructible grounds for emg and permanent coâ€"operation. / e conâ€" siderations are further strengthened by the conviction that there is no problem too difficult for the counâ€" tries of Latin America and ‘North America to solve, no catastrophe too dminous for the countries of the Western Hemisphere to ivert, proâ€" vided they stand . a United States of the A continent." Succeeds W. F. Hypes Who Deâ€" clined After Ten Years In Office; Others Chosen ; FRANCIS IS ELECTED HEAD CHICAGO Y. M. "Cangda beélieves in‘ the coâ€"operâ€" tion of all the countries on this conâ€" tinent. _ She earnestly seeks their goodâ€"will and to work with them in the interests of Jntnul‘ prosperity and the permanent peacée of the world, more particularly as these comâ€" mercial, economic and strategio probâ€" â€"â€" Destiny in A j "Canada is the oldest daughter in a great commonwealth of nations but her immediate destiny 1 on th e North American continent, in coâ€" operation with her neixbors. Canâ€" ada‘s investments in Central a n d South America are considerable, and her trade with the United States and these countries is s growing. She will therefore continuge to play an increasinngly important &;rk in . the development and prosperity of the Western Hemisphere. ©| _ "We hope that Canadian participaâ€" tion in this conference will mark the beginning of, not passive but active, Canadian participation in all conferâ€" ences of this character, and, we hope the holding |of some turure conferâ€" ence in Canada. f s .Ovn:muble in â€" has been manifi in the recent statemont by Frederic Hudd, n Trade Commissioner in the .United. States, to the effect that he: Canada wishes to be co aona of the Panâ€"American nations. | The stateâ€" ment was made before the Panâ€"Ameriâ€" can â€" Commercial to which Mr. Hudd had been made a delegate by the Canadian Depa of : the Exterior. It was the time Canâ€" ada had been grepresented in a Panâ€" American congress and Mr, Hudd deâ€" clared that for all her memâ€" bership in the British Empire Canâ€" ada feels that her immediate destiny lies on the North American continent in cooperation with her neighbors, â€" Mr. Hudd continued: . Term "Panâ€"America" ? "The term ‘Panâ€"America‘ in the popular mind has gradually come to have ‘a more or less purely Latin American significance, perhaps large ly through ‘Canada‘s own fault. But the term Panâ€"America includes or pertaing toâ€" the whole .of America, both North and South, and to all Americans. â€" Therefore no conception of Panâ€"America is complete that does not include the Dominion of Canada. Canada is an integral part of, econoâ€" mic â€"America. BIG â€"GAME â€" TY A::at.ur H;n& to another: “Yoh:t f name e animal you & »» CANADA WOULD JOIN _ |®LO9 PANâ€"AMERICAN UNION| ; . 8O COMMISSIONER SAYS PAGE TWO rough ‘Eldest o'f"ta'mtcom; monwealth of Nat Its Destiny Is In N. Amerâ€" â€"â€" *‘ ica, He Deelires The ‘Nose Knows ge t al T â€"if that‘s listen to The di and xn-dll{ says stoj 64 Are 1 "Yes 1 sold ‘till and Th!ï¬ the Win ‘The painting group of the North Shore League is now studying unâ€" der the direction of George Oberteufâ€" fer, who is an associate of ©Salon D‘Autome, Paris, and was for three years on the faculty of Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. Mr. Oberteutâ€" fer is at present an instructor at the Chicago|Art Institute and has recentâ€" ly received the Logan prize for parâ€" ticipation in the present exhibition of Chicago lartists, a + BL n waked zations ruary. Advo« lation annual 000,000 facture help m gf corn PAIN® TA Very interesting and acrimonious sessi of these committees will be the . â€" Each of the many agriculâ€" tural ups thinks its plan is the enly ible solution, and that all of the other plans are bad, unworthy of congideration, and should they be enac into law, will bring greater evils than they are attempting to cure. 4 A A of bills to benefit agriculâ€" ture is ‘a noteworthy feature of the 69th gress. A large part of the pro legislation has little, if any, mérit.| Some of the remainder is worthy of serious study and considâ€" eratio & y The Senate and the House Agriculâ€" turdl |\Committees~ will‘ almost imâ€" mediately start hearings on . t hese bills ‘and> attempt to separate unâ€" sound jproposals from those that are econonmjically sound. © 59â€" S. FLOOD OF BILLS TO > +BENEFIT THE FARMER "Tell r "What THE BEST OF FOOD for you. that is what we offer. We select the st, purest foods the marâ€" ket has to offer and prepare them for you in tempting style. Get a 0. Far ing 10 results_ of these moetings are with much interest. â€" in the prescnt exhibition of artists, $ & oup ~meets on Wednesday day evenings every week at netka ‘Community House. Artists Are Now Studyâ€" Under Expert of Interâ€" â€" national Note â€" ST, JOHNS AVENUE Phone H. P. 249 our eggs fresh?" nam, these eggs shouldn‘t be tomorrow!" ACK CAT SHOPPE ING GROUP N. 8. ART LEAGUE ference between a traffic cop is that .when the traffic cop he means it.: eneral Tailoring ning, Pressing, Relining o Best quainted with our "Bill e a story mama." kind, darling ?" hat I have to eat candy to Ladies and Gents North First Street M. WOLAK TOO FRESH Remodeling % Glowing names lik light their users. $ check their use? In this land of opportunity no one urges the cobbler to stick to his last. Why insist that he stitl to his name ? If the business. maA§|«who presses our trousers decides 111 call his plant a "pantorioum" he maÂ¥ only be striâ€" ving to to lift himself § bg;:rthe level of his trade. Just the other day we saw a sign of a "pai 5}: s extractionâ€" ist." Hasn‘t a baber ;;‘ï¬ght to be a *""tonsorialist," and a h }black a "shiâ€" nologist ?" 4 P f : In a sinful preâ€"wa! to pass a "refreshme a bar), which announ ologists constantly at Perhaps every one onl xto be urged to choose whatever n@me for his callâ€" ing he prefers. t |â€" A subject full of: 'r fculties. Men are always seeking npéw names for old ‘trades. Shall v 2’ discourage or encourage® them ? 'vÃ©ï¬ estate dealâ€" ersâ€"at least some ; mâ€"are réealâ€" tors; electric contractérs want to be electragists; and , poorest would not be buried by an |@ndertaker, but demands a mortician}t| =~ Shall â€"we check «h ‘mglse’, shal} we ‘regulate it, or sh jwe encourage it, asks the Nation‘s |Business? In its campaign to simplify and standarize the Department of Comâ€" merce has summoned publishers and advertising agencies Jnd : statistical bureaus and others tofgather around and consider the staifdardization of trade names. s 1P SHALL 'I‘RADWES \ BE STANDARDIZED? Department . of Corftmerce Co giders Phndvmonemns â€"In on 160 N. LaSalle St. 6644 550 Crescent Blvd. Gen Ellyn Key at A. C. Glen Ellyn office, from the C. & » (Mr. Knaak). This home could nc <“ dupliâ€" cated in this distrie} for less than $18,000 or $20 l D, and is located fairly close t& the main depots on the C. & N W. and A. E. & C. R. R. ;w Ellyn, Illinois. Price $11 Beautiful new English type, halfâ€"timbered seven| $pom home on fine lot with largefruit trees on paved street. lv has large living room \& beamed and _ vaulted â€; natural stone fireplace a 3: \chimney. Sunny dining -m,g» with kitchen by butlef‘s pantry. Four chambers an yl e bath. Garage designed ï¬? 'i- tch the architecture of the dWelling.‘ WE KNOW your tem from basement we‘ll put it in shi you properly. Ph you need us. 320 ho 8 IMO P lig oo New Home at Cost Do your heat pipeg kihock and ~ .pound? _ MMQ ~:~ We will silence. evety sound. â€"from the proverba6f Mr. Quick. Windes & Marsh A. C. HOY & CO. Fixtures by Cae Highland PL rk 6 Winnetk ï¬l;;2 Phone Glen Eliym 505 THE HIGHLANMPARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS Illinois Li¢ Surveyors Municip; Phonds t trees me has h beamed | natural \chimney. ‘s pantry. ile bath. atch the Ning.s TY word we used parlor" (not 4: "Four mikâ€" ur service," hese may deâ€" I Government ting sysâ€" attic and NCH & Across . depot. to. serve us when & Co.‘s 650 w 3b Wt North Shore Gas Company Sound Investment With A Satisfactory Return as to our plan for saving. Our local office will gladly give you the information means of accumulating money. To the former proposition your answer should be to save just as much of your present income as yout exist.ing needs will permit, even to the point of deâ€" nying yourself some things wShich ‘you: now enjoy. To the latter the preferred ahares of the North Shore Little is left to be said about the importance and "duty of saving. We owe it to dhmelves as well as to our dependents to save against that time when need arrives fo} money to tide us over times of unemployâ€" ment and incapacity. Our principal thought then should be what to save and how to save it. $3 TELEPHONE HIGHLAND PARK 194 ie l Company present you a safe easy consistent Distributors for Kleen Heet Oil Burning Systems Highland Park Officeâ€"384 Central Ave. . Phone 2139 AN ENTIRELY NEW METHOD OF HEATING QUAKER | Economical in operation â€" Burns cheap oil Extremely low in price Sold by se Lake County Engineering Co. Garage Heater HAS ALL THE ADVANTAGES OF OIL and as easy to installâ€"noiselessâ€"has no wicks, no moving parts, nothing to replace or get out of order.. Youâ€" set it at the heat you want and forget it. It maintains steady‘ heat without attenâ€" tion. No coalâ€"no woodâ€"no dustâ€"no dirtâ€"no ashesâ€"no labor. t with over 30 years experience in the heating business. .c Sops $ for small homes and buildings, filling stations, ls)teore:,sedgaram and wherever a coal stove can used. | M QUAKER MANUFACTURING CO. SIMPLER THAN A COAL STOVE Manufactured by the THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18 i errap $45 com dev to f nit dis @xC nitre Cloal and the Chi in â€" lies clud of shi Hu n