1 P i _ "All this shows that the man who knows how, knows it right away, and ‘does not have to labor long to anâ€" swer simple questions in his line of work. Trained workers are fast workâ€" ers and also easy workers. That is why they are highly paid and there is never enough of them. The brightâ€" est mind is a slow working mind if it is not specially educated for its _ "In another test given a large body of â€"average workers, an increase of 50 per cent in the time allowance raised the caverage percentage ‘of accuracy only 5 per cent. "A large body of slow workers and an equal number of fast workers classified according to their producâ€" tion records over a long period, were given a test of questions on problems used every day in their, regular work," said President Chapline. . "It took the slow group 110 minutes to answer 200 questions correctly. The fast group answered these in 20 minâ€" utes. While answering the 200 items correctly the slow group at the same time gave incorrect answers to 352 Mmupidmpve only 50 incorréct answers. * "In terms of production, the rapid group could: turn out five and oneâ€" half times as much work in a given time as the slow group. Recent Investigation by Expert â€"â€" _ Statisticians Indicates This Is True FAST WORKERS MORE . when we travel.. back through the years to ‘events that couldn‘t have been with the fairies left out. . ; in the answering correspondence of the American Aubu:;‘:or. ; Fairies? Of Course! Of course there are fairies. I )}e~ lieve in them. Some come, in our day dreams, some in our ‘dreams:at night, some hover about us at Christâ€" mas or birthdays, some come only Of course, I recalled her schoolâ€"the little girl was Bessie Mooreâ€"almost a ‘halfâ€"century ln;:;&a Who: can say just what part of our character and usefuiness, if we have any, is due to the kindly guidance, when little children, of a, teacher who cared enough for her tiny scholars to keep such a memento through more than fifty years . . . The work of the Emâ€" bassy halted and the letter of Miss Mar! Page Edgerton had first place. I am the Jamies Sheffield she taught as a little boy in a children‘s school in Dubuqueâ€"and also if I am the original of a‘ photograph she enclosed of said Jamie, in a yelvet suit, taken with a little girl "whose first name was â€" Bessie." . The extraordinary thing is that I am. The photograph must have been taken at lcut,“ years agoâ€"(My mother kept one on her table) and this dear old school teacher, reading your "Asg I Like It," recalls those far off yesterdays of some old man‘s boyhood, searches her cherished store of memorsbil., and pulls out that particular picture and sends it to me here in the Embassy at Mexico for confirmation . . . She has 15'?1; lived n; Dnbnquiel,itor many yenr: g in Waterloo, lowa. As 1 rea ;h-_r letter memory got very busy. A,dear old lady, for she must be very wich in years, writes to know if wiff Am s ~Letter :; > Embassy ‘of the {;ulud States of America, Mexico, October 17, 1925, ‘Your September Scribner‘s referâ€" ence to me has brought me one more letterâ€"but this a rare and choice one, like a bit of Dresden chiria almost forâ€" gotten on the top &tfl. In the current number, Dr. Phelps prints another lcn‘rt from the amâ€" bassador as follows: 3 Dr. Phelps stated that he would sin no more but that he was glad he had this once. $ t it ¢ In the January: Scribner‘s Magaâ€" zine, Ambassador Sheffield tells about receiving a letter from a former teacher who had lost track of him and _the story of it is this; A few months ago William Lyon| Phelps in his "As I Like It" department in Scribner‘s w referred to a "bush league m" in Dubuque, lowa. â€" In the Sepâ€" tember number he printed a /letter from Ambassador Sheffield rebuking him for "using your brilliant talents to injure the good name and fame of the greatest" town t.our middle west â€"â€"the one that has been big enough to outlive the fact â€"that I was born ; The ao_nonm.;.xmaun. sum:& may be ambassador to Mexico in minds of most of us but to ohe woman &h“J&mie"SMl{!inanlwt ABOUT OLD SCHOOLMA‘AM Hon. James R. Sheffield Relates sflmewho' ieve that thellnim How Al . lfl#‘e tates can e nothing on % hmm’:‘;um ‘ European debts until our tariffs are \ C | _ | lowered will: be |interested: to know Former Mentor / ¢ _\ [tnat during the first nine: months: of Wt m se .. | the year just imports into the : ; { | Unted States ware greater than in The Honorable |James R. Sheffield any whole year previous to 1919. This may be ambassador to Mexico in the| is in itself a pratty good answer to minds of most of us but to ohe woman | the charge that protective tariff 1 LCE OCC e e 0 ue cA e ud e is2 00 EO esn dP C 112. 1 i PAGE EIGHT EFFICIENT IS CLAIM f. That exports a booming, too, is indicated b'yy, the Fact‘that the averâ€" age monthly * va of exports was $398,000,000 which is an increase of twelve per cent bver 1924 and anâ€" other proof that| our foreign trade is not suffering bécause of the Fordâ€" neyâ€"MeCulbem tatiff law. The total for the nine months is three and a half billions and: when the exact figâ€" is stifling foreign| trade. The figures disclosing the above interesting fact are given out by the foreign »trade department ‘of the United States Chamber of Commerce. Fact Refutes Dpinion of Tho Who Think |Europe Unable To Pay Debts EXPORTS I#:EREASING DESPITE THE TARIFF yÂ¥ Practically every store wil Dollay Day Bargains that u Nt ,OmI )oll. ‘hwsda, February 25 l The Most Pretensious| i ‘In reading over this advince notice you and be honest with yourself remember â€" offered by Waukegan merchants for this Dollar of your sincere consideration. |It will pay you A Dollar saved is a Doll ‘earned â€" ma ping headquarters Thursday, F. ruary the 25th The desire to save in fotr sighted peopl All Northern Illinois is on tip awaiting for that Waukegan has ever held. : Sourt \ in Chamber of Commerce Retail Merchants Division _ ï¬;m Bs ï¬â€˜ i\“;; j a"‘"ï¬" hy ie it ue en Pm Shipments ‘of raw cotton from fanâ€" uary to September reached 2,500§800,â€" 000 pounds, close to‘ the fi for 1912, the year of the second gr t crop in the United States. Autihmoâ€" bile exports included 218,471 ca ind chassis, worth $162,090,000, a thew high récord. Gasoline, naphtha, ures for the last three months df the year are added it is expected|fthat the total will be around five ion dollars as the value of our 1 exâ€" James Anderson, 3815 Ful n avenue, about60‘yéars, was thelmost seriously injured of those s ing the‘accident. He received a dee} cut in the forehead and was rush@i® in an ambulance to a hospital in fChiâ€" cago where it is believed that, h@ has sustained a fracture of the sk Mrs.Emilie Kramer, 50 ye old, of Chicago, was killed and s Â¥ injured, one: seriously, in collisign of two â€"automobiles, which turnedEover after the V’luh‘, on Route 21, of Grayslake, at 3:30 o‘clock Sunda# afâ€" ternoon. B7 L WOMAN IS KILLED ï¬ , IN AUTO COLLISON TTE NNN THE HIGHLAND PARK PBJ Euse peiutinkor t advertise Waukegan by offering unusual l challenge the attention of all thrifty folks bndorsed by the ; ' sighted people starts at the cradle and ends at the grave. awaiting for the greatest Dollar Day Bargain Event ce notice you have only to think of your own interest remember â€" The vast assortments of fine merchandise for this Dollar Day are values genuine and most worthy t will pay you to come many miles for them. Refined copper exports amounted to 789,000,000 pounds, only 200 tons less than the record shipments of 1917. . Nearly every other important group of exports showed gains of from 2.4 to 35 per cent.> Lumber fell off 1 per cent and iron and steel shipâ€" ments 2.6 per cent. y also set a new mark, with shipments of 937,000,000 gallons, ~~At. a meeting of the Woman‘s Liâ€" brary club held Thursday of last week at Glencoe, it was decided to sell out the Gift Shop operated by the club on Park avenue. In a resolution passâ€" ed at the meeting it was said that the phenomenal success of the Thrift Shop, which is quartered in the rear, and is also operated by the club, has made larger qu@rters a necessity. It was decided to %: the goods of the Gift Shop on at reduced prices for two weeks. Thrift Shop will then occupy the entire building, and will be able to store many more artiâ€" cles than formerly. Members of the: club said that the Gift Shop had not: made a sufficient margin of profit to justify its continuance. I GLENCOE LIBRARY ~ â€"CLUB TO SELL SHOP WlE m:ke Waukegan business district your shopâ€" â€"€ 6: t : 8 Jor the benefit of the Community lt Highland Park Transfer and Storage Company FIREPROOF WAREHOUSE, 374 Central Avenne : Transfer of ; BAGGAGE â€" FREIGHT â€" EXPRESS Automobile Storage MOVING â€" PACKING â€" SHIPPING ALEX RAFFERTY, Sr., Manager Office 374 Central Avenue Phones 181â€"182 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18 , 1926 it Horsks ht TRIP 1CA old 17 mA pik North paid t the s like ¢ funds win bas the dren NJ higt fer & the â€" been tors prize make June un tion will the d {lege In prod this . puld ner . he i the Ca will | O 18 & ing PA