2# - 1 SEWING MACHINES "On general principles, the public‘s increased or decreased buying of auâ€" tomobiles might appear to be less sigâ€" mificant an index to the state of trade than its purchase of clothing, for inâ€" Financial Expert In Scribner‘s Magatine Says It Furnishâ€" es Barometer; Effect . of Ford Plan Some oldâ€"time guideâ€"posts are no longer serviceable to the watchers of business conditions, and a new one h»e.chowhtbhd three years, asserts Alexander Dana Noyes in his financiat department in the December Scribner‘s Magazine. That one is the production and sale of motor cars. "But the reason why the motorâ€"car trade‘s reports were taken as a sign of tendencies in others was that the since 1924 had seemed to be symbolizâ€" ed in that industry. In 1923, the year of trade revival, the American output increased 1,427,000 cars or more than 5O per cent. It decreased 508,000 in the year of industrial reaction, 1924, 200,000 cars above even 1923. 1927 by very great reduction. In the nine months ending with September, less cars by 624,190 were sold than in 1926. If the increased buying of motorâ€"cars during the recent period of rising American prosperity was evidence of that prosperity, the great curtaiiment during 1927 might have seemed to prove the opposite. But financial markets refused to draw any such conclusion., They did so because of the.fact that the great Ford autoâ€" per cent of all the cars produced in the United States, had in 1927 decided to readjust their plants to an entirely all but stopped production. present year‘s utput._o( 'l‘:or&' was gate decrease in the whole American production. The rest of the producers, indeed, taken together,‘had enlarged their output. To the argument, thereâ€" fore, that the smaller purchases by the country as a whole meant reduced buying capacity of the American conâ€" it merely showed how orders by paâ€" trons of the ‘Ford‘ had been suspend~ ed through virtue of necessity. But that was only the beginning of a very curious controversy. Difference of Opinion . "People who held to the lastâ€"menâ€" it indicated nothing of the sort; that total sales of car: in the United States would reach an unprecedented total, with all that it implied regarding natâ€" ional prosperity.â€" To this the usual rejoinder was expression of incredulâ€" ity over the supposition that 624,000 potential buyers of motorâ€"cars could have deferred their purchases for so chases. We shall learn the‘ truth about this singular conflict of inferâ€" ence when the Ford works resume ufacturer, and that the only intelligiâ€" ble test, in matters of the sort, was trade has adjusted itself to supply und demand under the new condiâ€" "But this was suddenly followed in desives work in high class home. Teacher of French, also German, GEO. S. SCHW ALBACH Phone Kenwood 6462 , which as lately as 1925 62 es aele C1 ies k x 2s C620 "ol. wih ult ts aeh s © e CRew e Dismisgal by the courts of Kansas City,. Mo., of the writ of Harold Jackâ€" son, sued out in the hope of thwartâ€" ing efforts of the Division of Pardons and Paroles to regurn him to Iilincis as a parole violator, promizes to be of farâ€"reaching importance. Jackson was paroled from the Hliâ€" mois State penitentiary eutâ€"ofâ€"state to Indiana in 1919. He failed to live up to the rules of his parole, but unâ€" IMPORTANT DECISION FOR PAROLE SYSTEM 5:' j“- 4 Fugitive 5 der the provisions of the law was reâ€" found within the state of Illinois. During 1925 he was arrested on : federal charge of transporting a stol against him. With the completion of his sentence in Leavenworth he was turned over to Parole Agent W. J. Beynon for return to Illinois. During 1925 he was arrested on a "Parents," he continues in an arâ€" federal charge of transporting a stolâ€" | ticle in the American Magazine, must en motor vehicle from one state to | find out what those fears are if they another and for a time was held in | want to solve the problem of .why the county jail at Danville. "While | children do not always tell the truth. here an lllinois warrant charging‘Phe~days of arbitrary parental rule Jackson fought requisition â€" at Leavenworth, but a decision favorâ€" able to Illinois was handed down. Sending his attorney ahead to Kam sas City, Mo., a writ was issued against the parole agent on arrival here. Jackson alleged immunity from the Illinois, warrant on the grounds he had not returned to the state volâ€" untarily. Investigator A. M. Neal and a representative of the attorney general‘s office joined forcés with was dismissed by the Kansas City court upon a showing of the facts, after a continuance of ten days. ‘The decision will stand as a preâ€" ofâ€"state . A new substance, much superior to anything previously known in cerâ€" tain magnetic properties, has been discovered by the tesearch scientists of the Bell Telephone iaboratories in New York. The new material is callâ€" ed "permalloy" on account of the fact that it has a very high permeaâ€" bility to a magnetizing force. The particular alloy used in : telephone loading coils consists of about eighty per cent nickel and twenty per cent iron, and requires special heat treatâ€" ment,in manufacture. » Permailoy has already been used NEW SUBSTANCE USED IN TELEPHONE MAKING in transoceanic hkfllï¬h cables in the form of a tape around the core, with the result of multiplying the number of cablegrams whitch can be transmitted in a given time. It has also been used in telephone relays and transformers. In another form it has recently been employed asâ€"core material for loading coils which are used to increase the efficiency of long Permalloy Is Name Because It Is Highly Sensitive to Magnetic Force STATE HAS SMALL FUND FOR THE COUNTY FAIRS Le=s Than $200,000 To Distriâ€" The state of Illinofs will have but slightly less than $200,000 to disâ€" tribute among the county fairs next to distribute among county fairs for both this year and next. If the fairs pay as much in premiums next year as they did this season, they will reâ€" bounds. It hasâ€"been repeatedly pointâ€" ed out to them that increased premâ€" iutms would cause a deficit in the apâ€" "Fair officials will do well next seaâ€" son," Director Stanard of the departâ€" ment of agriculture states, "to keep CHARTERED BY STATE . v pee» ki ... _A charter was issued recently by Secretary of State Emmerson to the NEW CORPORATIONS â€" Harry Hofman and C. L. York. _ T erp veninan ts ingrease in capital s am stock from $25,000 to $75,000. * The Chicago," Milwaukee, St. Paul with a capital stock of $10,000. The shares of no par value stock. bute for Next Year for of outâ€" ARE INHERENTLY GOOD and they tell fibs only when some fear lurks behind the untruth," deâ€" tlares Angelo Patri, New York public school children are widely known. Angelo Patri Confused in His ~ Psychology of Inherited and Acquired Traits; Makes have understanding must be mrixed ed with digcipline if they want to make a good job of rearing a boy or girl. their lies dissolve. Each child has a different fear, each one tells a lie for a different reason. But the principle Patri cites the case of a New York school girl whose fear of the study of arithmetic became so acute that she forged her mother‘s name to a letter stating that she was being placed in a private school. It was not until weeks later that her parents, both of whom were of the higheSt type, discovered the fact that she was a truant. is clear. No fear, no lie. "The case required only the realizaâ€" tion by the girl‘s parents and teachers that arithmetic was not for her. She was afraid of it and that small fear grew to such proportions in her mind that it led her to an escapade of which she would not otherwise have dreamed. When the difficulties of her arithmetic were smoother out the girl did extra work in other subjects such as music and drawing to keep up her average grade and by the following term her fear of mathematics was gone und she approached it successâ€" fully. "Children, contrary to numerous rhapsodic comments, is a period of unâ€" certainty, of sonstraint and restraint, of comstant chafing against irksome commands and rules of life which are not clearly understood.© It is there that fear is borâ€" The fires coa farms and in rural communities took a toll of approxâ€" imately 3,500 lives, and wiped out $150,000,000 worth of property last year. Secretary of Agriculture Jarâ€" dine declared that all of this waste is "essentially meedless and could be prevented to a very large extent by the elimination of carelessness and the adoption of effective and recomâ€" mendedâ€" equipment methods." _ Most fires are caused by lightning; and the principal other causes in the orâ€" der of their importance are: combusâ€" tible roofs; spontaneous combustion; careless use andâ€"storage of gasoline and kerosene; defective chimneys ’lnd flues; careless use of matches and smoking; faulty wiring instailaâ€" tions and the improper use of elecâ€" trical appliances. . Secretary of Agriculture Reâ€" ports 3,500 Fatalities FIRES ON FARMS TAKE HUGE TOLL IN LIVES "When children‘s fears are removed, SAYS N. Y. EDUCATOR g We have fruit shrubs and trees, ornamental shrubs and trees, © amd the best evergreons for this climate.. Stop in and look at them, or telephone and let us tell you about them. JOHN ZENGELER Our nursery is located at Praitie dvenue, Highwood. Come â€"â€"Mrs. Mezzini & Son * to the nursery and see our grow‘ng stock before you buy.. Plowing, Ezxcavating, Gravel, Sand, â€" _ Gpennaeeetearees Â¥* _ _ Black Dirt, h".."".,'.'hk. es Last Year # We Operate Our Own Plant in Highland Park Cleaner and Dyer 25 North Sheridan Road Telephone H. P. 169 §00 N.‘Green Bay rd. $2 N. First St. Tel. H. P. 1234 BLACKBURN WELDING CO. | mm ELECTRIC ARC and ACETYLENE CABINET WORK Cracked motor bIOCkS WElded WithOUt | enmmmmmmmmemmmmmmmenmmmmme in To & i noont on CABINET WORK & REFIN] Night Service OF FURNITURE Phone H.P. 2694 Phone H.P. 2881 Plaxs t P °e Tel. H. P. 2146 4 Central Court | h‘ . Redr of telephone bldg. | °* OPEN FOR BUSINESS Wrecks Rebuilt Haak‘s Auto Supply Co. \| Golden Spike Ginger_Ale toâ€"day | 420 North First St. . Tel. H. P. 1700 Telephone H. P. 2774 Autolite Bosch Deloo Remy Dyneto Strombers Phileo Dismond Grid Batteries TEL H. P. 266 §15 LAUREL AVE H. P. 688 â€" GREEN BfY AUTO STATION AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRICIANS HIGHLAND PARK AUTO BODY & FENDER WORKS MOTOR CARâ€" ELECTRIC SERVICE Repair or Rebuild Any Make of Rediator Takes Bumps and Dents out of Your _ 4ARSON PROF, <| _ cement contractor LETTERING â€" MONOGRAMS High Grade Work 516â€"518 Laurel Avenue AUTO ACCESSORIES â€" BATTERIES _ Highland Park Auto Radiator Shop Telephone Highland Park 542 JAMES COLLINS Auto Painter ' Auto Body and Fenders Drive your ear in and get estimate CADILLAC â€" LA SALLE OFFICIAL SERVICE HIGHLAND PARK BEVERAGE CO. Opposite N Manufacturers of Carbonated Beverages Orde: a case of Highland Club Supremacy our foundation BEVERAGES $13 Eim Place «= . || aewerat comtracror |. ©"ARLOTIED. WORTH . ~â€" I| ERWIN F. DREISKE BUTTER AND EGGS Interior Decorations, Window Shades FRESH DRESSED POULTRY Lamp Shades and Draperies TO ORDER Furniture Painting and Decorating 519 Oakwood ave. Tel. H. P. 1128 | 702 Deerfield Ave. Tel. H. P. 2443â€"939 Cement Work & Grading Contraetor thing in the Cement Line. Estimates furnished on Excavating. All kinds of Grading. CABINET WORK & REFINISHING OF FURNITURE Paints, Wall Paper, Glass Wirdow Shades, Auto Glass Painters‘ Supplies _ Central & Second St. Tel. H. P. 949 Painting Paper Hanging â€" Interior Decorating First Class Work Estimates Furnished Formerly with Hesselgren Studios, Chicago S. A. Maxwell Wall Paper Patterns 638 Skokie Avenue C. V. NICHOLS, D.D.S. DR. G. G. POSTELS DENTIST 319 Railroad Ave. _ Tel. H. P. 3198 Opposite C. & N. W. Depot, Highwood w. b. Freberg New Olander & Brown Bldg. 702 Deerfield Ave. Tel. H. P. 2028â€"939 C m e o ons c nenert Dry Cleaning â€" Pressing auanmmanmmemmemenmmmaationmeemmemennmenemmeemmenemen Tailoring and Repairing ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS Garments ealled for and delivered RADIO AND ELECTRICAL _| Te H. P. 495 _ 35 S. St. Johns Ave. APPLIANCES Telephone Highland Park 57 Lake Shore Creamery DR. A. L. BERG, DENTIST APPLIANCES *~*~. *Say It With Flowers" # John Kelly; Prop. UPHOLSTERING EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL Joseph Krasny, Prop. ‘ Radio Troubles â€" We‘ll Fix ‘Em ‘ | Upholstering and Repairing; Slip rnor‘k fit io . CWNIRAL AYk Covers made to order; Mattresses Railroad Ave. ‘_____ Highwood, IIL. BRAND BROS. |‘ PLUMBING & HEATING PAINTING AND DECORATING | â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"mmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmememum M FLORIST l"“*â€"__‘__" __ Artistic Funeral Designs _ MISCELLEANEOUS PHONE HIGHLAND PARK 2222 "Vetter and Better All the Tima" BUTTER â€" EGGS HOME DRESSED POULTRY Office Phone Highland Park 2750 |~ o ELECTRIC SERVICE Telephone Highland Park 1482 Telephone Highland Park 1349 217 North Green Bay Road GEORGE TUCKER HIGHLAND PARK ELECTRIC SHOP DANIEL A. FAY FRANK MOWERS PAINTING â€" DECORATING °PAPERHANGING 314 Railroad Ave., Highwood Phone Highwood 2151 Hours 9 to 12â€"1 to 5 Evenings by Appointment flm&lï¬;fltvw «. 649 Vine Ave. _ ; F6 one Highland Park 1261 HIGHLAND PARK, ILL. At ma °C nrranrexacc, . _ | Announces the ofening of a win! ALEX. 8. BURGESS Ig-hd fiction technique clase SHERIDAN BUILDING Highland Park, IL Contracting and repairing Attractive line of fixtures 664 Deerfield Avenue P. UGOLINL 685 Central Avenue H. P. STANLEY DECORATORS P EXCAVATING DENTISTS WIRING l rao General Building tractor 622 Railroad Ave. cï¬i-‘h'nod, L 688 Central Ave. _ Tel. H. P. 9389â€"2028 W. B. FREBERG When you are contemplating building or Remodeling, consultâ€" w. E. CUMMINGS 122 Wrendale Ave. Highwood, 111 PLUMBING and HEATING Phone 219â€"R or 219â€"J Deerfield, III Ofice Telephone Highiand Park 34 F. D. Clavey * Ravinia Nurseries Incorporated EVERGREENS TREES SHRUBS Highland Park, Il1. Telephone H. P. 993 Durant Oil Burners 217 Burchell Ave. Highy PLASTERING CONTRACTORS TEAMING, EXPRESSING AND FURNITURE MOVING â€" Telephone H. P. 368 Renovated Work called for and delivered 388 Central Ave. Phone 2412 INTERIOR DECORATIONS AND FURNISHINGS MOVING & EXPRESSING NICK BRANDONISIO Peter H. K. Grimson PLASTERING CONTRACTORS EXPRESS AND MOVING Will eall for and deliver ‘ Sewing Machines mdjusted and cleaned ) waAsSHINGTON ST. PHONE 22st . Highwood, TII. ‘~~ Telephone Highland Park 530 PLUMBING and HEATING Por a REAL UPHOLSTERY JOB BLIP COVERS â€" WINDOW SHADES Highwood Upholstering Shop Telephone Highland Park 573 ANY AND ALL KINDS W. B. Frebetg GUST OSTRAND OFFICE 363 BLUOM STREET M. A. FRANTZ UPHOLSTERING E. NELSON HIGHLAND PARK UPHOLSTERING NURSERIES TAILOR SIGNS Highwood, i