sl. I md~w c2', number of series, distressifxg, 1nd oc- msiorfaltr trngic cases of nervous trouble. making from men! maltut. iustmaat. This is not because college was hue been made more Itiffi- all, but because mu areOess careful um: this mien of Adjust. m Ind because many undidntee who are physically disqualified now am the college. who twenty your an Mid have numbed at home! - more watchful eyes and in the] on.†of friends or parents." I 'heAueeanraastnmrthertqiom, '"."d,Tt,ve,1rLtteiiae? meerftormodb.ihdiswudre. Patr. Mmybcooncnarit in .t"ttturemtaenrtuttuaalG2 Dean Gauss is inclined to dismiss) the idea ot I “suicide wave" but he1 an: N believe, however, that nearly] all college officials would testify that with the ml: to the colleges: there} ha been a considerable increase in) __ ,.___,- - W- vent a bor's doing this, because it is against the custom of the day, but the boy's ultimate education, his men- tal and moral health, and often his happiness as well, depend upon the decision.†communal: sense but_eeraee to “It will be a kindness to prevent him fam torturing himsélf further for what will be useless experience for him and In unncessary expense tor punts. It 'trttmetimes takes not only Of the 100,000 undergraduates who would be better off had they not come to college, Dean Gauss remarks: "Had the money which each of these boys will spend been invested for him and had he immediately entered the ranks of the economically productive, he and the world would have been far better for it, Thereis, of course, no reason in the world why I man who plans to enter the business world should not go to college, even if he has no intention whatever of being a professional ', scholar or teacher. It will enhance, the value of his later leisure and give him mmething to think about 'when the long winter evenings come.' Some of these men make our best Wider-i graduates. But no farther should urge his son to go to college tor the' social prestige it will give, or for any other reason than that for which the college exists, which is to train Pei mind by exercising it by study. It a boy does not care to study, a college‘ course will not edutate him and will give him nothing worth white", l Cites Rules H The Princeton dean cites a rule ; which he believes nlmost ierfaltible: f If a boy is nnhnppy about his studies 3 in high or preparatory school, hel thunk! notbe urged oremtouraee.d 'o) continue. . warren "WWW 'q Mrr@uliratttllrBiiit " hesitate to gmteralize," he Bays, “but I am inclined to believe that the poorer parents of high-school boys know their children better than par- ents who have sent their sous away to preparatory schools and summer camps after they reached the age of ten or twelve." Dean Gums, writing on "Should Johnny Bo to College?" deplores the custom of deciding upon a college for the children of the “may on the day they are born and enters I severe fu- dictment against parents who are not well enough, acquainted with their children to understand them. "o9 the six hundred mound 10m man now in college, it would possibly hive been better in nearly a hundred thousand cases, had they not come," declutd Christian Gauss, dean of the college at Princeton Uni- versity, in an article in the Octohgr Scribner's Maxine. I’d-echo Dun Says Ila-y Who Go To Univenitiu Are. Not Fitted Fer " all BBrhttt m WEBB PURSUIT HIGHLAND GALLONS $1.00 CRYSTAL Belttt put of College mmcom durum-u. Quinn" . Better Elsewhere r2 i Trmrrviiiifir, DIVISION it is} HOLD REUNION NOV. 19 1 Illinois veterans. assigned to the _iThirtrTsird Division during the “World War, and who played I most , i important part in the making of the :World safe for democracy, will gather , from all parts of the state. and ad- [ l joining states to which they my have »lscattered, for reunion in Chicago on Snturdny, Nov. 19. l The gathering will be held at the Hotel Lasalle, with a business session opening at “:00 o'clock. vnrious en- ktjr.tairiimmta during the afternoon Iand a banquet at 7:00 o'clock in the evening. CoL A. E. lnglesh announces 1th.! already a large number of ac- yeptances have been tweived fiom former members of the Thirty-Third _ Division and the hidietttiom, are the gathering will be one of the largest held by the uterine. The oitirtl eighteenth and nineteenth floors of the hotel have been reserved for the‘ Petytmmutirt of the vetenus. of its own, and an invitation to be Mt ll (MM to in tho and in the division either in America at Emu. of The tendency to nominate the wi- dow bf a deceased office holder'to his {post and salary is admirable from I. sympathetic standpoint, but it is [ harmful to the whole cause of woman 'suffrage. There are cases where the ilsnlary is an absolute necessity, but (that defense has been swept away in :recent cases where the women have been promoted not on the date-$2 of their husbands. but because of condi- tions which have brought about the _retirement from or removal of their jhusbands from office. Plugs carried by the various unit- of the division on the battlefields of Prune: will emblnxon the lobby of the Eng]. Each unit will have a dawn: ___ _____ '-sr..i__._r.. u. ...... mun, an. un- ‘ Woman voters anxious for the ad- cinnati. The Karin collection in Paris 'vaneement of the members of their once exposed to the beholder Ghirhur sex as serious candidates and aspie- daio's 'ndorable portrait of Giovanna ants for public elective and appom- Tournsbuoni. Now it belongs to Mr. tive office are disturbed over the in- Morgan. Mr. Kahn owns one of the clination on the part of the men, aid- great portraits by Botticelli. There ed and abetted by certain women be- are, Italian gems in the Goldman cause they are women and not be Frirk, and Mellon collections. cause in a cold blooded comparision The activity of the privnte collar of the two sets of candidates they are tor is deliberately stressed for it is better fitted. _ l he, or she. quite A: much u the public The tendency to nominate the wi-ymuseum-it not more thin that itt, dow ill a deceased office holder'to his iititution--who has brbught the “IL post and salary is admirable from I. inn inspiration intajha air. . 7 . â€inâ€... - -e" a“ -i'tN_ei .._, Ii; Ban be said that I vigorous, virile. open-handed, above-board debate on starrn issues and candidates cannot fail but in the end to contribute real advice and information to the Rlpu- blican leaders not only to the existing situation, but the most sensible way in which to correct it. The strength of the Republican Party has been sustained since Its incpention by reason of the fact that it has always been an opcn-door, free-speech party where " m? are always discussed and a tnel whole people make the. . ‘ Do Not Want Wives of Dead or Ditched Offiee Holders Elected Regardless " blunting 'Nt.tributioe, to our no [ideal life. Whether their delibera- tion. will climax in the Martian of I third party punideulinl nominee or the development of a platform is- sue which will he presented to the Republican u I whole, cannot he determined " this time. But the Re- publicu: party " . whole will profit by this discussion, and the openness [and the intensity of the Imments (ueed not worry tuW6ody. i' Unlimited debate in the Senate, )whieh has aroused the ire of Vice ‘President Dawes because of what he icons-idem a waste of time, has one 1great virtue: namely, that through! ‘Iree and unlimited speech the badl "eastures are nearly Ilwnys talked hout of every piece of leeristation be, Crore it is enacted. In the same way WOMEN FIND FLIES IN POLITICAL OINTMEN'I' 00W The new-â€per report: and editor- iais .ln'the Senna [mutant Repu- ttie " magica- ud_ â€til-tings um autumn: 11mm m as“: us ADVANTAGE nan-pm Du hum s: t he. h"Grd 1ri'lhlh'?Jle" In 'l%l'd F.d.tl1r..rriuit hel Colony Il,' Senate, of Vice what he has one through My owner: who halite the in fume! hillbility almost inva- ids: seek our service- without compe- tkion. Thy know in as only tho MOM that tin and ree onl lkilhdholplndueth "crying in 9.th well done. Also that our any. Elvin u modern: " we can I "The evidence I have cited if can. Jvincing enough but In additinat to it is to be reckoned with irhieh lends more foree to the argument. It in in- dicated in I great folio, appropriately bound in sumptuous morocco. cont-in- ing the privately printed caulogue of the collection formed by Chutney H. Mutiny. Doctor Wilhelm Yule"- tiner has compiled this book,' not only listing and describing the works ot art at Roslyn but discussing them .with scholarship and judgment And recording (verything concerning them (that-research could discover." once exposed to the beholder Ghirlnu- dajo's 'adorable portrait of Giovanna Tournsbuoni. Now it belongs to Mr. Morgan. Mr. Kahn owns one of the great portraits by Botticelli. There are, Italian gems in the Goldman F rirk, and Mellon estlteetions. The activity of the privm collec- Itor is deliberately stressed tor it is ( The late Isabella Bird Gardner made her Fenway Cvurt, in Bcaton-- 'ijso a public possr‘vion Sines her death ,--a kind of Renaissance shrine. No "1iorstione, or Titian. to mention only {a few of her masters can neglect it. l'rhe Titian-Bellini Bacchanale i. in 'the Widner collection. along with i Raphael's Cowper Madonna and Mot- l, toena's Judith. Mantegna min is nony represented in the Altman col-l lection, l Where those who love the Human once went to the Duke of Buccleugh'x to see his stately Tarquin aid the Sibyl they mast now search it out in the collection of Mrs. Emery at Cin- cinnati. The Karin collection in Paris "Just as the historian of British art now bus to journey to Californi- to see Reynolds's Tragic Muse Ind "uitvsborough's me Boy, so tho his- ltorinn of Italian painting must conic Ito Apiérica to study an always trs. creasing number of its most {Mi-pen» sable documents. The late John G. Johnson, who was omnivorous, took the Italians in his astride. and Mt numerous ‘examples of their work in the collection now owned by the City of Philadelphia. SEWING Royal Cortissoz, art critic MI that in banning number of tun- Ium of the art world In only to Almeria. [n his ankle in the Mr Scribner's Maguine. he point: old a. private collection: which emstain in- valuable pieces. He deals partieyUr- ly with the collection of Chm B. Itchy, President of PM.) Tele- graph. .ourAem.atrLkiir' l-nuuh-hlidhm “hm-IQ. A. ll. IUELKB man AGKKCY huh“. In M. "-s." 'tbl Critic Sty-MN“ of Noted (humbly PttarardrtsPtivasteaaa' WORM WWW FAMOUS PAINTINGS m U. B. N' OUR Wm """meaaatra-tvrmeatiireaas.staa MGR-'6 of 'ui'inan" Tau T Ait pen-u are: l SPECIAL Ans-sun? NOTICI _ "WILL WAR-ANT SUI". '" Pnhh‘c Nmice h hath: given that tbt coun- " Court of Ink: Cal-u. "but has nuan- " tudtrmertt tor . â€ski nun-nu - NW headed " the (“War m.- maul:- ~The mm. of a - of uni-r min- In It. Vllhu " .9 Womb Huh-"vim. nil in the Chr of "i.btoaq Park. County " task. Ind Stat. of "Iii-ah, " witl - NIX! App-9r (run tbe and“ - " a. "sa--- m "".-"""="'-""__PPFMN9_ tfur.hsytroue.i4Cttcii' (-0th tf, Inch In“: is in .4 ..- _..- _._., . _ "Wise is the womn who look: to her bread box," concludes the nuthor. "Within is revealed much of her chu- ucter. It tells how sharp is her basis ness svnse.and how clever she in u a ebok. Given I fine array of mate- rials and no scruples against wasting them nnyone an rush: ready I feastn Paying the grocery hill is . different, story." mt [ Bread crumbs the not find their way into deserts of union: kinds, the artieie continues. Ton-ted pudding with raisin um, die bmd‘pud- ding and a hatf ducal-3 other com- binations with fruit “use; all for the use of bread crumbs. Bread grid- dle cakes also are a novelty nude. from left-over bread. addanlishw mania-And on- plant when any are being fried. Foods zoom in a casserole may usually be sprinkled with crumb: be- fore baking. crumb- but tb. Ill-Alb " kn- overq," in â€this. eta mu. have. tilt bread crumb. but hoe-no no will to the handgun luau-1h nu kitchen at.» ail nah" In. his.“ I Inching whirl: crumble. land can; hi: the proper and uniform than, permit- tinz 9o!"rfobvmtiiiki, st1tttP/Pty'thvrGt-.%irG- invaluable for milhte chops. chicken and vegetabu. Moro cooking and -41 x _AI:_l ., . _ - F "riudik. ‘ VIM†G" "iiit"2' ". t12'l', 'Pee-d II) b m V 0'" up“. .. Inn, in“ netrf.th-oekuiTir, BOW which»; gl',', ms BREW†on a. A. osmnxrrk u. a HUI-Uh, u an In" Mi; ?.strpfyt.ojrioi tte Mun-t T ELM-blunt... 7mm nun-1': - v. w m ._..._... "" 'e .'reret 'e "'urmbr.otss.gto 'otakeeaeeofrmrmtram-ure-t chm'-csed---tttemmertrtreoved-.os "odutatroarHotidnrGeeeeie. Hacknliuofmthuue Em 'uiitk0reta,gtiixu I“ b haul - (an! 2hlt'l2't, M u. mat-‘b-duudh“ -_... nu, an m TNE HAT“! or' Till} mos or et.".sevttreretTiaiaa"irai. W" ' city tun. corn! " Gm it loud m Contact Am... lib-Maud Park. "Hm-h. unm- Ihhty 1|.) an ' &- du- STAT! or ILLINOLS COUNTY OF LA“ IL IN Till COUNTY COURT or LAX! :4)va TO THE 00108“ TN. A. . I't . - Ir.- mh "th "h.' iUUTit wMtbl-ylhh- hh‘h'dl... my. " D. an. t m. meqmtat “W - In: Mr '1'fa-"'liiiiirGaaciiGti"'Tr. 0-H " Hui-loud M "le an an dar at 0cm. 1m. n. In In! at a. I"... nu. ti'it?.heit's-"hiil'ij an; and a. lam-n - "ht at. _ ’out - ONIKI " Rm -. (NB I " Seth - "o. may Whrt a. (m 'n-th-ite.. Tun a. Bggtgqtqt nl the In: lath-g . w'.t:s,efrePtt_ieFFrio7iii'aair."C unit-Ia h nun... MK att inn-lb... tP...CheetAjG.GiGriGi7TaT'Tr. P": Yye Iueer IM- Im. The 1m --r_-_r- - w "I" ll") We'tPrtefaerLiriiFii.s .._... M a -- - - -.".-.. L"IP. I In!†tUetey.ei.tttrreTCi'FiFiiGiik 7~~â€"~- - - -r.. -... n lt tEiAtiyrlttEFiihit 3.- 3- sr- iii; in tinker that an the nu Ian- ....... .mm- as: g e at! d..- '.'l'le's. “-11... Ith, "" /lthh'l1Nl Box 142. Hid-land Park Tel B. P. 2575 FALL PLANTING This is the time of year when certain planting should be done in orfler to q obtain the best results - 1 such.†smwns - TREES - PERENNIALS We Have an' excellent stock on hand g: at 'Nlt8tttutttT ME [is , i V W -- - - 'ittgil1tibT..f.4titai with, said ".GArTiarrtiar..iii. - "a"GOi'i " the I†.1 d Now-hr. " I I'M 1'_ther-e-u.us.s".raisdGGGk- City .1 Hanna "re/ttLt a LGT, mud mum-d1 Inn-II." hut-d num-lluhuMI-w ,tthth.t-u.maum"stiu-ra-ii-ia .tLteru1ft may a†when 9-» mod â€HWY. um . H mmn‘? lla. I. to a I'm a o. "'.-“"’ iyi' ',itt'nhik'eril "itri. trf 11t4Ttalr.N,t,'. En.- - in“ - T7 ' tkt.ii'lif42l!,?.? 'st (lb-d): Mort KING. IDle I KING. JOB 2AMNLB. CREAM TITLE O TRUST 00-qu " 11:th “I No. â€ll all in: "a ;" _ Br nun NV. I, Ana-ml w. '.rra.-st-..-.ets..itr. I'M-h-thh-ui-L-h“ 'sure-UU-to-tv-tmoe.- _iimii