‘ PAGE SX LOCAL AND PERSONAL NEWS Ohio to sbent~test week ith his family on Forest uve‘mï¬mk' t The Woman‘s Missionary society of the First United Evangelical church will have their monthly meeting Thursday afternoon, August 9, at 2:30, mt Lake Front Park. A picnic supâ€" per will be served. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Larson left on Sunday for Anchorage, Alaska. Mrs. Raymond Sherwin of Oakwood avenue entertained at a Bon Voyage luncheon and bridge on Tuesday for her house guest Mrs. William Oliver Butts of Joliet, who sailed Saturday for Europe. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Erskine and family of Forest avenue, left Sunday for a two weeks stay at Lake Minocâ€" qua, Wis. The affuirs given this week in comâ€" pliment to Mrs. Christine T. Egan «re a dinner at Exmoor, Saturday by Mr. and Mrs. Byron C. Howes and on Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Sheridan are entertaining at a supâ€" per. On Tuesday Mrs. C. L. Perkins entertained at a luncheon at her home on N. Linden avenue. returned to their home in Schenactady, N. Y. after spending the past week as guests at the M. H. Conrad home. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Fossum of Winnetka bave taken an apartment on Park avenue, Glencoe. Mrs. Fossum was formerixy Miss Priscilia Conrad Phoebe Swazey has returned home from Camp Warwick in the woods, Fayner, Wis., where she has spent the summer. Mr. and Mr cagh were the and Mrs. M. Govern street Mrs. Roy R making an in sister, Mrs. G to her home it week. Wis was formerly of this city. Mrs. Fritz Babr, Sr. Miss Tanis Greer and Hans Bahr are spending a few days of this week at Green Lake, cromby Mr. Albert Rebling and daughter Ruth of Chicago were the weckâ€"end gtests of Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Rebling of S. Green Bay Rd. Mrs. Robert E. Pettis and daughter Jeanne of Deerfield were the guests un Wednesday of Mrs. Arch Aberâ€" any farm relief out of thatâ€" It is said that if Al Smith is nominâ€" ‘atetl Tammay expects to popularize the brown derby as a campaign uniâ€" Mrs. H. F. Kelley of N. Sheridan entertained a number of friends at luncheonâ€"bridge â€" at â€" Bonnie â€" Brook Country club yesterday. Miss Catherine McMorrow who has been the guest for the past two weeks of her cousin Mrs. A. L. Johnson of Central avenue, has returned to her home in Pittsburgh. Mrs. Charles Larson entertained the members of her Five Hundred club at her home on Laurci avenue Saturday evening. The most convincing talker we ever heard of is the one who married a secâ€" ond time and got the bride to agree to pay the first wife‘s alimony. Mr. and Mrs. William Denzel and family are spending two weeks at Bear Lake, Minn. â€" Mr. and Mrs. A. N. McCallam of 888 Sheridan road, Glencoe, announce the engagement of their daughter, Jean, to Mr. Wallace W. Mclwain, son of Mr. and Mrs. Willigm Mclwain of Highland Park. Miss McCallum is a member of the Alpha Xi Delta sororiety of Northwestern university. Mr. Mcllwain is a graduate of the University of Hlinois, class of ‘25, and is a member of the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity. The marriage will take place in the fall. (Mrs. Herman Denzel will be hostess tomorrow to her Friday Bridge club. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Evansen and daughter, Madeline, of Lincoln aveâ€" nue, are on a month‘s tour to Yellowâ€" stone and Glacier National Park. Mr. F. Bauman of Switzerland who has been the guest of Mr. J. B. Mcâ€" Dougall of N. Green Bay road for a few days has gone to Yellowstone Park for a month‘s stay and will reâ€" turn to Highland Park for a few days prior to his return to Europe. The Ravinia Garden club will meet at Mrs. Fred Miller, 2440 Deer Park drive on August 10, Friday, at 2:30 with Mrs. William K. Harrison, asâ€" sisting. There will be a representaâ€" tive from Swaineâ€"Nelson Bros. to talk on an appropriate garden subject. Harry Canmon, Jr.. entertained twentyâ€"six of his friends at his sixth birthday party last week. . Counsilors Richard Pick, Jr., and Donald Vaughn entertained the little folks. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Marks and daughter, Mrs. Abe Gilbert, of Fort Worth and Waco, Texas, are the guests of Mr. anftl Mrs. Louis Marks. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Clark and the Misses Eleanor and Emma Mcâ€" Dougall of Camp Gray‘s Lake, who have been the guests for the past ten days of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Mcâ€" Dougall returned to their home this week. â€" Mr. and Mrs. Sidney J. Holland of ; Vine Avenue, returned last week! from a two months stay in Europe. ; Mr. David R. Thomas came from f Mrs. J. Dewey and daughter Muriel Mrs. John Hemmer of Chiâ€" the weekâ€"end guests of .\}r M. C. Conrad of 122 Mc Rhinchart who has been indefinite stay with her George Conrad, returned in South Bend, Ind., this to "ARNSUFEKIENT INTEREST " Citizens Too Prone to Let George ,__ Do It in Conduct of Affairs; Should Take Share of Work GOVERNMENT TAKEN FOR GRANTED OFTEN This is the condition which has ; brought about legislative action by organized minorities and groups havâ€" {ing special axes to grind. With the |great mass of the people indifferent, {the organized minorities find it easy \ to accomplish their desires by tremenâ€" dous pressure on the legislature or \Congress. The unorganized mass of the voters fail to make their wants ‘\known, but the lobbyists of the speâ€" {cial groups are on the job all the time, and are able to make enough noise to convince the legislative body that the whole country or the whole state, as the case may be, is with them. j Ear to Ground Now the average statesman of toâ€" :day, nominated in a primary, has an especially delicately attuned ear to what he considers the popular will and {he is quick to bow to what seems to ‘be the demand of "the people." And leaking at it from his personal standâ€" (point he is perhaps not entirely to According to Lewis E. Pierson, presâ€"| few weeks diclosed the fact that negâ€" ident of the United States Chamber of‘ ligence on the part of the owner in Commerce, the average American citiâ€"| locking his car encouraged the thief zen takes his government too much[!o make a quick get away without for granted and for this reason we ure fear of immediate detection. drifting more and more to legislative! | "Precaution in protection should be action through the pressure of special|the motorists first consideration" in groups, and are forgetting the funda-r.sa!rzuarding the interests of his maâ€" mental principles of equal representaâ€"| chine and too few realize the importâ€" tion on which this government was|ance of this in helping to discourage founded. ‘the automobile theft ring that prey Dofarrint‘ o ereat Aefoits created |upon the motorists, ‘ _ Referring to great deficits created under governmental operation of inâ€" dustries during the World War period, Mr. Pierson said: "The real disaster to American rights was the encouragement which these government ventures gave to the growth of bureaucracy and to the blurring of the sharp lines between the pure functions of representative government and the rights of a free and progressive people, "The â€" greatest â€" responsibility | of American business to our government, is the duty of recalling government to those great and dignified purposes for which that government was created." Unfortunately there is a great deal of truth in the charge which Mr. Pierâ€" son makes. The average American is forgetting his government, or is perâ€" haps taking it foo much for granted. The average citizen is forgetting to go to the polls with increasing freâ€" quency. â€" He reads the newspapers and is free to criticize the conduct of the government in his club, his office or his home, but he fails to do anyâ€" thing about it, and registers his disâ€" gust by remaining away from the polis which is of course, exactly the wrong thing to do. i â€" A local farm mortgage concern tells [ a Nonpareil representative that he has \a rather unusual individual loan recâ€" | ord. "On May 1, 1925," the loan man | writes, "we made through our local | agent, the banker, a loan of $17,000 on | 200 acres of land in Sac County, lowa, {all of which is not at all unusual. On | May 1, 1926, the unusual part of this program began. On that date he paid |the interest and $3,000 on the prinâ€" cipal. On May 1, 1927, he paid the inâ€" terest and $4,500 on the principal. On | April 24 this year he paid interest | and $3,000 more on the principal." "This man farms 200 acres, and has made this money off the land with the air of a good herd of Guernseys, and selling anything he had where there was a chance of making some money. Is Remarkable "It is remarkable how much money one farmer can make and pay off blame. He realizes that the average gitizen dovs not take any part in polâ€" itics, even to the extent of voting, but he well knows that the representaâ€" tives of the organized minorities will be at the polls on election day to reâ€" ward or punish him and will be busy making a noise the rest of the time. He must then either float with the tide or sink to the bottom. By way of information on the subâ€"| ject the local banker through which[ this man negotiated his loan and | through whom he remits to the mortâ€" | gage banker explains: | So long as we have the general primary system there will be no change in this direction. The only other remedy would seem to be the arousing of our "average citizens" from their inertia, to take part in politics and to make their wishes felt. Shows That Operating Program| Often Is Large Factor in | Success or Failure in | Agriculture USES SENSIBLE SYSTEM HERES A FARMER WHO NEEDS NO AID Truth in Charge "Extraordinary precaution â€" should be exercised in safeguarding the theft of your automobile," especially at this season of the year, according to m special bulletin issued by Si. Mayer, president of The Automobile club of Illinois. PARK CAR IN LIGHT w TO PREVENT THEFT This and Other Advice Given to Aid Motorists in Proâ€" tecting Selves Investigation in a number of autoâ€" mobile theft cases during the past few weeks diclosed the fact that negâ€" _Not only should the owner of “J ns alindtiicicnt 2ï¬ i id Bc ids utd W oi car properly protect his property by , meamrgenn~~ the use of suitable lock and key, but | Diets on the Brain keep his car parked in a lighted lvr-r Within the heads of some of my ritory instead of trying to find the‘ patients, said the old physician, there most secluded spot. Spare tires should | is a jumble of half knowledge and falâ€" be securely locked and attached (0’|2|("l('s and fads and fancies stored frame of car. Never use a new tire| away in the section labeled diet.â€" as a spare, but on the contrary, select | Woman‘s Home Companion. une that has about filled its miléage, â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"__.._.. ||“A,1“. 80 \* Notorists can do much to help fight against this existing menace to suâ€" ciety. California â€" Educator â€" Says Helps to Vitalize the Language That, in the vernacular, is th apinion of Dr. Frederic €. Hlanchard professor of English at the Universit; of California at Los: Angeles, say International News. MODERN _ SLANG GIVEN CLEAN BILL BY PROF "American slang rather than beâ€" ing maligned and despised, should b« depended upen to assist sin vitalizing and enriching the languarge," Dr Blanchard declared today. "This iâ€" a complex and expanding age, requirâ€" ing means of expression that ortho dox language sometimes fails to fu} Modern sJang is Okmnx and it‘s cat‘s embroidered necktie that many guys give it the razz. "Slang, like all bad children, deâ€" serves patient, careful handling. What is good in it should be salvaged; what is vulgar, silly and meaningless should be discouraged. fill "Much of it is simply the indicatinn of health, animal spirits, vitalty, adapâ€" tion to new conditions of thought and action, 2 "Ben Johnson, the purist, qtarâ€" reled with the slang employed by Shakespeare. But much of it has heen adapted in our speech as have some of the quaint but unorthodox expressions of Kipling. "The multiplicity of new activity which our modern life enjoys requires its special language and we have the slang of aviation, sports and even science. The best of it ultimately finds its way into the dictionary." Policeman David Lenahan, a rookie, shouted after a speeding car: "Stop or I‘ll shoot!" The auto sped on. Lenahan drew his revolver and fired one shot. His aim was poor, and he wounded himself in the leg. An amâ€" bulance took him to the sipsital. We protect only those/people who are weaker than ourselves and who we feel need our protection.â€"Woâ€" man‘ Home Companion. It is reasonable to assume that this . man is not worrying much about the | succes or failure of the McNaryâ€"Hauâ€" | gen measure. A complicated system of | amortizing a loan didn‘t interest him | as he was doing his own amortizing. | In like manner he would not be interâ€" | ested in a complicated system of handâ€" ling crop surpluses for he appan-nt!y[ plans to avaid troubles on this line by detour. | It is not possible for all farmers to emulate this one or some other of a different typ«. The suggestion in the success of this man is that relief may be found where it is needed more quickly by overhauling operating programs than it will be found through waiting for Congress to do something.â€"Council Bluffs Nonpareil. A Common Lack (Unly a man obscurely aware within himself of weaknesses, prohibstions. lacks that might prevent bis succeedâ€" ing. will become immediately indigâ€" nant with his wife‘s proposition that she continue working, says a woman critic in the Woman‘s Home Comâ€" panion. "He is not interest in our new amortized loans, for he amortizes acâ€" cording to his own scale." while his neighbor with land of the same quality and other things equal has a hard time paying his intcrest. This man will perhaps not make so substantial a payment next year as he has had to buy a new car and a new truck this month, but with fair prices I look for him to pay off $2,500 to $3,000 next year at that. Lamp Swappers The busiest Exchange Burcau in the world is the one at which millions of us are forerer trying to swap Old Lamps for New.â€"The American Magâ€" azine. + | THE HIGBELAND PARMK PRESS, RIGELAND PARK, LLINOIS â€"â€" It The Hon. Frank B. Kellogg is quite right in assuming that Canada would be a separate party to the agreement to outlaw. war, as proposed by the American State Department. has a separate membership in the League of Nations and our national | status was recognized in the signing | of the péace treaties following the| Great War. It is only proper, tben,l that this Dominion should ‘have the| status of an independent nation in | connection with the American State | Department‘s effort for world peace.| That the Dominion may be counted | upon to second any reasonable move | the United States may launch for the | outlawing of war, goes without sayâ€"| {ing. This nation js not a milit.l.riltk; funq in any sense of the expression.| | It is anxious to do everything that is | Jhumanly possible to avoid a repetiâ€" | tion of the tragedy of 1914â€"1918.â€"| { Border Cities Star, Windson, Ont. | SEPARATE TREATY FOR CANADA IS PLANNED t oS f P&Q\&Q\s& $s MVA ,.1 A Splendidly Large _ Selection of Fur Coats at Astonishingly Low Prices Final Clearance of All Summer Dresses Barnett Style Shop Muskrat Hudson Seal Included in this sale you will find coats made from the choicest and most popular furs. Vaixes up to $29.50 cG(4)@»n» 9(4}@»> Squirrel A GROUP OF DRESSES $9.95 Central Avenue at Green Bay Road Lake Forest, IMinois DeLUXE THEATRE â€" TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY, AUVG. 7, 8 wWALLACE BERRY â€" RAYMOND HATPON SUNDAY, AVG. 5 ANTONIO MORENO â€" OLIVE BORDEN "THE VANISHING PIONEER" THURSDAY & FRIDAY, AUG. 9, 10 SUE CAROL "SPOILERS OF THE WEST‘ "PARTNERS IN CRIME" "COME TO MY HOUSE*" "WALKING BACK" SATURDAY, AUG. 4 TIM MeCOY MONDAY, AUG. 6 BLANCHE SWEET FRIDAY, AUG. 3 Formerly priced at $12.75 ""SINGED" A GROUP $4.95 oF LINEN THURSDAY,AUGUST %, 1928 A &