uy The election of the congressmen is now over but the big congressional roduvmeone.whonflhyequ,e. tain their seats. 1 hh The sophisticated kids will soon be trying to show their credulous ‘parâ€" ents that there is no such person as tem in coâ€"operation with the ‘state board for vocational education. ~â€"The school will be>conducted . in railroad shops as a part of the vocagional serâ€" vice to adults. Under a coâ€"aperative arrangement, the railroad y furnishes the equipment, nad“;:r(.‘nd t‘heldqryoftheteuhe?wmt’t?dd out of Smithâ€"Hughes funds. Â¥ TRAINING SCHOOL A school for the training of Jocoâ€" motive engineers is the latest d‘(; ing of the Denn_r, Colq._! school gysâ€" body, we need only to give it right foods, judiciously combined. Disease germs do not thrive in a pure blood stream." » ' 1 the body cannot work at the highest efficiency. _ Brain, muscle, bone and nerves depend upon the blood to furâ€" nish them materials; the blood, in turn, is â€"dependent on the food put into the stomach. To have a perfect "Many people believe it silly to think that perfect health and bodily structure can â€"be brought about by merely eating certain foods,. But is it? You would not try to repair a wire fence with silk thread nor mend a silk stocking with wire, would you? Each thing is good in its place, and the same is true of foods. The huâ€" man body is a complex machine deâ€" pending for its lifeâ€"building and lifeâ€" sustaining powers, science tells us, upon many elements found in foods free from the ‘improvements‘ of man. If tbue ‘are not all supplied properly, weight in others. > |â€"/ 3 "Eating, and notdrinking, | is the eurse of America today," says Mrs. Ross. "We are overfed, but underâ€" nourished. Not all are inteuxute in drinking, but most of us do not know how to eat intelligently." All foods are good if eaten correctly. Sevâ€" en years of close study has convinced me that every disease known to man is first caused by wrong eating. Lack of adequate food, supplied in proper variety, leads to overwrought nerves, and the victim seeks in: drink and drugs what he should ‘have found in right foods." e tp N / Wrong eating, rather than promisâ€" ecuous drinking, is what is the matter with America today, in the opinion of Mrs. Delle Ross, famous Bloomington, I11., dietician. Mrs. Ross is a former singer and teacher who having cured herself of the disease of overweight after years of struggle, is meem( exâ€" traordinary success in curing joverâ€" weight in others. | 14 "Eating, and notdrinking, is the eurse of America today." says Mrs. EXPERT DECLARES R AMERICA OVERâ€"FED Eating and Not Drinking Is the Curse of Country, Woman Says In Talk { "Old and young and middleâ€"aged should see life as a unit," Migs Potâ€" ter continued. "Discount the; stateâ€" ment made by disillusioned clion to many a high school girl or ‘college girl, ‘Now, this is your luppl:{,ï¬me.' The Creator never intended that life should end in an antiâ€"climax. If each year is lived in a joyous search for the real satisfactions for which every unspoiled nature spontaneously ‘reachâ€" es out, the years grow better and richer to the very end." f presence of a serious, though selfâ€" poised woman who, in a minâ€" ute talk, sketched the politi¢al situâ€" ation of her country, inia, and paid loyal tribute: to the fidelity of its soldiers, revealed & spirit ‘burdenâ€" ed with the struggle and suffering of her adopted country, yet, withal, raâ€" diant and splendid in its a deâ€" Â¥otion to the advancement of its cause and the welfare of its ‘poopl?" _ Remained to Pray / Apparently Miss Potter "remained ters, with ample opportunity $ ted. to pray" at this impressive emon- jal. Speaking of mothers and daughâ€" ters, with amplipe opportunity grantâ€" ed on the one side for making selecâ€" tions and decisions, and cheerful acâ€" ceptance on the other of dijrection which will make for «oritrolled action and for tastes and desires ‘vitiatâ€" ed by unworthy experiences. !; "I confess I rather expected to be amused at royalty taking jextreme satisfaction in the flattery of n people whose ideals hold no place for the diâ€" vine right of kings," said 3“ Potâ€" ter. "On the contrary, on seeing and hearing her, I confess I wys'-.rprua- ed and thrilled to find myself in the There is one woman who.iives In the Chicago district who was so won over by Queen Marie of Roumania that at a joint meeting of the Mothers ¢lub and Au-,zl high girls, she publicly admitted it. Miss Mary Ross | Potter,: ~<punselor fof;y? women at Northwestern university, speaking recently at Aurora, indicated that when she went into Chicagp to see the queen she had not gruupnthmi- asm for queens nor for this particâ€" ular queen. t y TELLS OF EXPERIENCE Counsellor at Northwestern : In Talk at Aurora Relates How She Was Impressed by Monarch _ _ ONE WOMAN SOLD_ ON QUEEN MARIE PAGE SIXI FOR ENGINEERS woman who..lives in 49 h . He told the audience that during the first 11 months of this year 50 new industries had been located in Publi¢ Service company territory, as compared with a total of 26 in 1925. This increase was attributed largely to the‘ activities of the company‘s inâ€" Mr. Learned summaftized the proâ€" posed activities for the industrial deâ€" velopmentâ€" committee of the state chamber during the next year, placâ€" ing particular emphasis on the imâ€" portance of industrial surveys for evâ€" ery, community, stating that 52 such surveys had been completed by the commitee and that 26 more were beâ€" ing compiled. f "It is equally true," he continued, "that the availability.of power has been an important factor in the inâ€" dustrial expansion of the Joliet disâ€" trict as well as other sections of the .tm-†ts t t "It is unquestionably (®ue," said Mr. Leatned in his opening address, "that every community and the utilâ€" ity companies serving "it, have imâ€" portant, mutual interests. . What benefits one, also benefits the other. Stressing the..importance of intelliâ€" fors ©ammmerce and) vaclous otitty bers 0 ' utility organizations as a vital factor in the industrial upâ€"building of a communâ€" ity, Viceâ€"President John G. Learned of ‘the Public Service Company of Northern Illinois, opened the indusâ€" trial development session of the Illiâ€" nois chamber ofâ€"commerce at Joliet Thursday morning, Dec; 2. Official of. Public Service Co. Emphasizes Its Value In â€"â€" Community ( URGES CO10PERATION _ IN CIVIC PROGRESS Telephone 2700 â€" hok " SHOES or CHILDREN ® j\p/ ORRIMGTON HOTEL THE DISCRIMINATING MOTHER ML QUICKEY _ RECOGNIZE THE SUPERIORIT® OF RUBYS SHOES FOR CHILDREN. THEY ARE NOT ONLY S3TURDY THEY ARE NOT ONLY 3TURDY BUT SMART IN APPEAPANCEâ€" Mc oo qeal \ope c ol hi ie njch, \\ fullâ€"cream milk! 0o RXâ€"6ar i# gast A02 Start using Bowman‘s Milk today. Simply te our | nearest dis. tributing ï¬u order from any of our 4 salesman. takenfrom the cow. ‘And freshâ€" delivered to your door in its natural, fullâ€"cream -Jn every day of the fresh, bottled milk is milk as Nature intended. ‘There is no substitute! year! With%a flavor and purity that makes it truly the best on the Only the fresh, bottled milk can q RuBrse OWMAN‘S ~Milk is just: such milkâ€"as ftich in cream as when It is said that omy seventyâ€"five Americans have an income of a milâ€" lion dollars a year. . Evidently the num of big bootl rs isn‘t as large as we thought it was. â€" Qu Marie has gone home much sooner than she expected, but the men say that not many of the women folks follovlvfller example, _/ [Forpign cement which arrives in this juntry on ocean carriers, chiefly as bi is putting a crimp into the American cement stry. . Because of extraordinary cheap ocean freight rates, and the extre low producâ€" tion cost, based on foreign wages, and becauge they are n;l:l:g a permanent market here, the ufacturers are willing to make all sorts of prices. So this cément is being introduced in all sections :of our ¢ountry. Imports beâ€" gan in 1920 with a fezhundred thouâ€" sand barrels. Since that time ten million barrels of foreign cement have. been landed whigh has displaced twenâ€" tyâ€"nin¢ million dollars worth < of Ameri¢an cement. American workmen alormre have lost sixteen and oneâ€"half million : dollars;| the railroads seven million; other manufacturers three’ million. In the Belgium . cement worh{ wage-‘k’re ninety cents a day in gold;. in the United States, four dollars lndi fifty céents. . > FOREIGN CEMENT Is [MENACE TO INDUSTRY Muck of It Dumped Into U. S. | Cgusing Damage to Ameriâ€" |\_|â€" / can Production d idmlopmt{ :department in coâ€"operation with ch‘.mbcu of: comâ€" me : . 1 4 THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS Over in England they have organâ€" ized the frankfurter industry, calling it "Hot Dog" limited. But our expeâ€" rience with ‘em is that they can‘t be limited to . anything. * > "*This | transformation, it may be said at once, has increased the proâ€" ductivity of. our (workmen beyond those of any other country; it conâ€" tributes® to our maintenance of high real wages and to the reduction of human sweat; it relieves the. homeâ€" maker cof many ‘irksome tasks and adds ~ immeasurably to home comâ€" forts." : "The application of electrical power to home use has received enormous expansion," said Secretary Herbert Hoover in the annual report of the Department of Commerce, made reâ€" cently. "The number of homes servâ€" ed has increased in six years from 5,700,000 to over 15,000,000.The numâ€" ber of: farms served is. expanding rapidly, and in some states farm electrification far exceeds that in any other locality in the world, _ USE OF ELECTRIC 368 Central Ave. Hig’hhnd Park Phone H. P. 2443 IN ALL ITS BRANCHES J. A. Torstenson&Co. Imported and Domestic W AL L PA PE R 8 DECORATING PAIN TING A N Dâ€" POWER IN HOMES The movement for parentâ€"teacher associa in colleges is growing. A committee for this service has been cmtadm:%flu national congress. The chairman says that college authoriâ€" ties welcome any reliable means of imparting information to the public The college parent teacher associaâ€" NOW WANT P. T. A. IN COLLEGES I8S REPORT MEIERHOFF HARDWARE CO. Join Planert‘s Booster Club THEY ALL ENVY HER! $‘500 HE is the most all the Slirh. She skims over ice with ease and The of her flflmdwnmls Planmert‘s Skates, "The World‘s Best." You, too! can enjoy skating mdpqnhflgby ag. Planert‘s ‘‘Northlight" or "W | Skates. Every pair is guaranteed. 2w sn THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2 and college©