Most motorists believe that if their ear should be burned or stolen, their,insuraltee company will pay them the amount stated in the policy. The fact is, how. ever, that the amount named in the policy is a valuation used to determine the cost of the insurance, the rate for fire and theft insurance being a certain price per hun- dred dollars of valuation. The policy says that in the event of a total loss you will receive an amount not to exceed the actual loss sustained. the settlement to be agreed upon by you and the adjuster for the insurance company. If you fail to agree, the claim will be arbitrated. This is the usual policy. which is known in the insurance world as the "non valued" form. -. Then there is the "valued form" policy. Under the terms of this policy you are paid t e face value of the policy, the amount on which you have paid prem- ium, should you suffer a total loss. The Inter-Insurance Exchange of the Chicago Motor Club issues a VALUED FORM POLICY. Other benefits of membership are'. bail bond, mechanical first aid, touring. home district and accident prevention services. _ in: Cut Motoring Expense." It is understood that wading .hyr this booklet pun-s me under no oblintion. _ , 'ourity year or Ill Sixty-four branches: 34 rho Chit... m (10. Indira. u u loco M - in... ’u'lu tt' â€II‘AGO Mo'rlutt Does Your Automobile Insurance Policy Say What YOU Think it Does? nth-mm only) M ll Due lliflJIfitff?, 315E; E. MOTORaub "viii).,' 00 " send mi 100.0% , per W l.l LO†A. A. A. a... In â€and not“ nulu Hr les: 34 downstate; 30 in Cook year $10.00. Enrollment fee (first trite for free booklet. «Clip coupon te' free Motor, Highland Park Branch . Attorney {or the Club J. A. MILLER Wanker-n Null Bunk 'u.A".hen Mechanical Service Station A: “mm-n1: 352nm sauna: In Nor". Set-uni Shoe! CHARLES M. HAYES, Pro. HAROLD KNAPP, Mgr. 4t N. Sheridan Road Phone 105 THE PRESS Reference 'Knadul’s Tillotson pocket. map of Chicago and suburbs, by Stanley Kan- dull. Tiinii's standard postage stamp catalogue. 1931:†. ed Haley’s Twentieth Century Form- ulaa, by G. P. Hiscpx. _ Christian Ethics Ind Modern Prob- I sworthy. lems. by W. R. Inge. Deepen Religion Outlav Archeology Ind the Bible, by Geo. Makes A. Barton. . Aveng Orpheus, Myths Paddle Colum. berley. Jobs for Girls, by“. R. Cades. 1 Natural History 1 Numbers, the language of Science, by Thomas Dnntzig. Goldfish Varieties, by W. T. Innes. Useful Arts Machine Tool Operation, by H. D. Burgh-Mt. Aircraft Yearbook for 1930. Boston Cooking School Cook Book, by F. M. Farmer. New ed. Fine Arts Modern Interiors in Colour, by Fe. lix Kmis. Hunting with Bow and Arrow, by Saxton Pope. Modern Archery, by A, W. Lam- bert, Jr. . New Backgammon, by R. C. Boy- tr Garden Primer, by Grace Tuber. Colour in My (Burden. by L. B. Wilder. Fun Sketching, by W. R. M. Foster. Witchery of Archery, by J. W. Thompson. Literature . Life of William Shttkesspeare, by J. D. Adams. Modern American Poetry, by L. Un- termeyer. New ed. - Glory, of the N'iehtinirales, by E. A. Robinson. Seventh Heaven, by Austin Strong. Youngest (play). by Phillip Barry. Fundamentals of Speech, by C. H. Woolbert. Best Short Stories of 1930, ed. by K. J. O'Brien. Beginning of Critical Realism in. America. by V. L. Parrington. . English Literature During the Time of S'hakespoare, by F. E. Schelling. History America. the Life Story of a Great Crmtirtent, by F. B. Linderman. Real War, 1914-lit, by H. L. Hart. Description & Travel Sitka, Portal of Romance. by B. Willoughby. . V7 "w". , Philosophy Behaviorism, by J. B. Watson, Socill Sciences Kine Mob, by F. K. Notch. Industry and Trade, by A. L. Bishop. Unity of the World, by G. Ferraro. Marriage, by E. Westermarck. History of Education, by E. P. Cub. Book of the White Mountains, by John,Anderson. Full Fathom: Five, hy F. H. Shaw. Romance of Japan, by J. A. B, Sherer. ' . Groduetiun tn Art, by tr, B, Cod LIBRARY of the World, by New Cattle, by W. M. Raine. Goodbye to Western Norman Douglas. ' Out Times: Pre-er America, by M. Sullivan. Vol. 3. Biography Taft and Roosevelt, by Archie Butt. Mahatma Gandhi, His Own Story, by M. Gandhi. . Picaresgue, by D. Hamilton. The Link, by P. MacDonald. Well-Meaning Young Man, by Luise King-Hall. Short Stories of Saki, by H. H. Munro. Pursit. by Roland Pertwee. John Riddéll Murder Case, by Coryc Ford. Vagabonds, by Knut Hamsun. Best English Detective Stories. Rock and Sand, by J. R, Oliver. Mysterious Waye, by P. C. Wren. Redlakes, by F. B. Young. By Reason of Strength, by G. W. Johnson. 7 Cakes and Ale, by Somemet Maug- ham. Philips, by A., D. fedtrsyl. - Secret of the Bungalo, by R, J. Casey. Break of Day, by Basil King. Mystery Book, by M. R. Rinehart. River Goes with Heaven, by How. ell Vines. _ Miss Mole, by E. H. Young. Glying Cromlech, by H. de Blacam. Man in the Red Hat, by R. Keverne. I Am Jonathan Scrivener, by Claude Housman. V In.“ of books in Spanish will be found at the library. No American Wants It No American who wants to buy a foreign cheap labor product in pref- erence to u product made by the bet- ter paid American worker can honest- ly claim to be an advocate of social justice, because he wishes to build up the policy of eheapenintr commod- ities by eheapenintr the man who makes them. Those who oppose a tariff system which makes it harder to encourage the foreign system of cheap labor production has any real interest in the standard of living for the masses. nor does he have an in- telligent appreciation of the essen- trals of our own national prosperity. Deepening Stream, by D. C. Fisher. Outlaws of Edeb, by P. B. Kyne. Maltese Falcon, by D. Hammett. Avenging Ikon, by Charles Barry. Dance of Youth, by H. Suderrmrnp. Fool of the Family, by M. Kennedy. My Own Far Towers, by M. Hiker. Mosaic, by G. B. Stern. Fiction On Forsyte Change, by John Gal. VALLEY ROAD Telephone HIGHLAND PARK HIGHLAND PARK ILLINOIS 2710 TREE SURGERY IN ALUJTS BRANCHES Pruning. Spraying. l-‘ealimr Moving (Inky Trentmrnt Year Round Service HARRIS TREE SURGEONS Thursday, Nov. 6, 1930 Culture, by