_ WORKING GIRLS SHOULD | WEAR WORKING CLOTHES Dated at Highland Park, Tilinois _ . this 10th day of November, 1927. 37â€"38 to call and pay the smount assessed at the Collector‘s Office, City Hall, corner Green Bay Road and Central Avenue, Highland Park, Hilinois, within thirty (30) days from the date thereof. Notice is further given that the said assessâ€" ment is divided in ten (10) installments. That the amount of the first installment is $12,200.00 and that each of the remaining installments is $11,700.00. That all installments draw inâ€" “fl&-md.gc‘nn- from October 3, 1927. first installment is payable on the 2nd day of January, A.D. "he second instaliment one thereâ€" g-jg.l--â€"l'-m-lmh-u hn Pn n tds County of Lake and State of Iilinois, as will more fully appear from the certified copy of the judgment on file in my office. That the Warrant for collection of such assessment is this 10th day of November, 1927. . #1â€"38 after and so on annually until all installments rant for collection of such assessment is in the hands of the undersigned. All persons interested are hereby notified to call and pay the amount ausessed at the Collector‘s Office, City Hall, corner Green Bay Road _ and Cehntrul Av!-::. Highland Park, Illinois, within thirty (30) days from the date thereof. Notice is further given that the said assessâ€" ment is divided in ten (10) installments. That the amount of the first instaliment is $33.086.39 and that each of the remaining installments is $82.934.26. That all installmenté draw inâ€" terest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum olu;tifunhr-nini-(‘g-tnlAv!l-e. Deerfield Avenue, Deerfield Road, and other streets in the City of Highland Park, County of Lake and State of Illinois, as will more fully appear from the certified copy of the judment on file in my office~ That the warâ€" SPECIAL ASSESSMENT NOTICE SPECIAL WARRANT NUMBER :ss Public Notice is hereby given that the County Court .of l.a'ke Couaty.hlmhoh. has "'“1"1 judgment for a spec assessment vpon ‘property benefited by the following imâ€" provement:â€"The construction of a system "Suits are not so useful for business for they entail several blouses and even then do not give the changes that two or three dresses give." ___ at Play, Says Writer . In eb ue "Business clothes should be made of as god materials as can be afforded. Fabrics that bag at the knees or stretch across the back when the wearer sits down should be avaided. The business girl should steer clear of fabrics that rumple easily or get shiny. Proper cutting is important to make sure that materials do not pull out at the seams. Short or tight skirts, short sleeves and very low necks are entirely out of place for the business girl‘s wardrobe. | Carcerras®| | ~LaAunoRy {overnte oo mt mo‘ T Q * vw#nsl s 1 was TnE C 3 DAY 1+ "Half worn party dresses are inâ€" appropriate. Dresses that look as if they were made for matinees, dinner parties or afternoon teas are poorly chosen. "Girls are sometimes criticised for being too well dressed," Miss Cades adds, "but I believe that dressing too welli:hudkjodn. A girl may dress too elaborai yotontofproportionto‘ her salary, but so long as she is dressed appropriately, she will meet no criticism. Any business girl earns her living by the impression she makes on other people. She must conâ€" vince her employer and her associates by her every gesture that she is able and alert. But a business office is a work room and the clothes worn there should look workmanslike. It‘s a simâ€" ilar theory to the on& by which sport elothes are chosen. ~â€" YOUR ed is appropriateness, declares Hazel Rawson Cades, writing in the Womâ€" an‘s Home Companion on the value of clothes to every girl. clothes. Likewise if they are at play In fact, the secret of being well dressâ€" SWRET AND CLEAX RUBLY, Tors, a&nd the announcement is imâ€" portant only inasmuch as it indicates fresh centralizing of their speliâ€" binding activiti The days of political campaigning, stump speeches, and grand tours seem to be over. Whatever is left in the art of reaching the people will in the future be entrusted to the newsâ€" papers, the movies, and the radio. . _ President Coolidge has talked to the nation several times from the White House, and hookâ€"ups have been arranged in different parts of the country in the interests of politics, religion, advertising, music, and even prize fights. Therefore, there does not seem to be very much thatisuwl in the idea of the progressive senaâ€" | _ "The following common violations ;| frequently, to the driver, look quite | harmless:, Pagsing vehicles and trolâ€" | ley cars at street crossings; failure |to wait at railroad crossings after a train passes to ascertain if another. train is approaching on the opposite tracks; driving in and out of traffic causing vehicles traveling in the opâ€" posite direction to swerve from their course and strike stationary objects, or perhaps injure a person waiting to j cross the street. Motor vehicles are | so numerous and highways so conâ€"| gested that the greatest care must be | exercised constantly if accidents ‘“J to be avoided," says Mr. Hayes. _ _A plan has been mapped out by a progressive group of senators in Washington. to establish a small broadcasting station in Iowa, and arâ€" range for political speeches by Senaâ€" tors Borah, Norris, Nye, Brokhart and others, to be broadcasted and picked up by powerful stations so that the words of wisdom may be heard throughout the middle west. ‘ Scheme Hatched by Bloc Is Not Likely to Cause Furore; Not Novel PLAN TO BROADCAST WESTERN POLITICS Myl ogs Sm OO Te 1 eRomenepreneeds and after a while all sense of danger and fear leaves him. For this reaâ€" son, most drivers appreciate being told or reminded of some of the freâ€" quent causes of serious and fatal acâ€" cidents. sciousness of the common causes of uddm'illhlphuv.t-nnyd them," says Charles M. Hayes, presâ€" ident of the Chicago Motor club. | "Every motorist who drives a great deal commits certain dangerous acts MENTAL HAZARD IN _ MOTOR ACCIDENTS FALL PLANTING "There is a mental bazard involved Cause of Trouble May Help To Avoid It Crosley Steinite Sleeper Steffen‘s Auto Supply 522 Central Ave., Highland Park â€" Phone H. P. 350 668 Vernon Ave., Glencoe Phone Glencoe 6 It‘s a Pleasure to Stay Hom Those Long Winter Evenings We have an excellent stock on hand 'l‘hisis-t-!netimeofyearwbmcertdn planting should be done in order to obtain the best results â€" â€" such as We also.have battery equipped models when you have one of these wonderful allâ€" electric radio sets wise enough to adjust his theories to violations | facts, which is the scientific way. He ook quite| must know men and, in these later and trolâ€"} times, women as well, which is perâ€" "Politicians are interested in the end; reformers merely in the means. For most reforms are undertaken not or three elections to invent a new technique for the nominating primary, that noble reform which was to conâ€" fuse and discomfit the politicians and purify and redeem politics. But after two or three elections they learned how and have had no difficulty with the system since. Fnmatesdinbtmbin Py tabns d ticiat o2 it haps a more difficult study, though he | will master it. | "He has to change his technique | now and then as cireumstances alter.i It took our politicians in Ohio two! T. H. DECKER&CO. PLUMBING & BEA TING T "Oue reason why reformers do not cften succeed in that they kmow so little about human nature," says Brand Whitlock, former Ambassador to writing in the American on the ‘troubles of men in "They try to force the hard and stubborn facts of life into the narrow limits of their theory and, as this canâ€" not be done, something gives way," he continues. "Facts are the only things in the world that will not yield to force. The politician is generally | A clogged sink is the bane of the housewife‘s existence. Fathâ€" er comes home and tries a liftle amateur plumbing with a force pump. _ Often the results are nil. Moral: Send for us and we‘ll have your sink fixed in a jiffy. Keep our name and phone numâ€" ber handy for such emergencies. ‘They Are Interested In Means While Politicians Look REFORMERS FAIL, NOT â€" â€" KNOWING HUMAN NATURE Phone Highland Park 201 15 8. St. Johns Ave. \ ’untnch’-nflhh.b make anybody happier but to gratify t mt e nm, gotmnet & < as secretary. bottom ahnost wholly the amâ€"-‘ & ‘ "The Reverend Futher Ronald Knox says that these motives account for about ninety per cent of all the philâ€" anthropic movements in the world. Walter W. Wilcox Builder of Wilcox Homes + 710 Yale Lane â€"â€"â€" Phone H. P. 26 It‘s a La Salle! Fourbewar,newhomuj\utbeingmrted;othmtohemrud this fall for spring occupancy. Slowlybuttgdythechumijofthh&mufnlmflonh being established on a e that justifies prediction made %m%ï¬twm%dmmmmh Ihm.&rï¬mhomurndyfu ancy. Hot water actiy tavrne d * eomen it hy o ceepaaey. Hot reator heat Priced $12,500 â€" $15,000 â€" $17,000 â€" Cash or Terms Sunset Terrace Gaining in Favor . _ Four New Houses Just Being Completed J0â€"degree, Vâ€"type, eight cylinder engine as devd:petl by Cadillac engineers could produce the performance that everyone who drives a La Salle so enthuses over "It‘s a La Salle!"‘ Today, quite as frequently as when it first appeared, you hear these words when the La Salle flashes by. Men and women pay the La Saile this unconscious tribute of admiration. Only the LA Saurnr Companion Car to Wâ€"an $2495 to $2895, J. o. b. nnr;t 1810 Ridge Avenue * Evanst GREEN BAY AUTO STATION 500 North Green Bay Road Official Cadiliacâ€"LaSalle Service One of the Wilcox Special Built Homes The sharp tongue is the weapon of envy and malice. Jt hides under the mantle of truth the dagger of vinâ€" He thinks that only about ten perâ€" cent may be attributed to purely alâ€" NOR DULLS WIYH USE own.â€"Woman‘s Home Companion, Farm & Fireside. MEANIES '_ Intuition is a man‘s word for any . HONE, SWEET HONE _