20 to 40 % Savings on Leather Goods. Discontinued numbers and goods used for disâ€" play purposes. Telephone Deerfield 72 MeGARVIE BROTHERS Painters and Decorators OF NORTHERN ILLINOL. PusBuc SEervic: CoOMPANY WILL GO WHERE VOU (0 6 Upstairs . . . downstairs or in milady‘s chamber plug one of these ha electric heaters into a conâ€" venience outlet, whereyver you are, and bask in its qllh‘k, radiating heat. Vin« for taking the chill off th« bathroom . . . for making : drafty corner comfortalbl for reading or sewing. Hot point “Focallpan†Heater are flpflfln“y d('sigm--l t lprénd their warmth over : wide area. The mod pictured is only Only slightly more the "Lit Linde" wary over a conveni period of time. Joseph W. Kehoe, Dist. Mar. * Evanston, HIL H. C. Reynolds, Dist. Supt. §1 9. St. Johns Ave. _ Tel. H. P. 2900 RED TAG SALE 'ea lor itt dn De A th th 1 Our W Th ent th 1 ind ind Whit hot fir ince xact! flattened t e leaving ( |lll centur | never have to see another headed child," someone reâ€" ind me on the train. It is se Javanese children have untry *is very interesting. v rice fields in terraces, and ith water most of the time. le literally live with their itor ind their heads exposed reile«s burning sum. It must ke them long to stand on Is! Tonight we will be back a, the very Dutch capitol, nany Dutch canals. Then to Columbus again‘! 7 ESTHER GOULD‘S o _LRAVEL_:: Â¥ CORNCLCRKR . rMInS dinary t h« tomn it we had an extraordinary through the Jungle at midâ€" was very impressive, tearâ€" less speed along the windâ€" ur headlights boring ahead impenetrable .: darkness, trange lights upward on l atives carrying their prodâ€" o the morning market in Their small dark shapes great bulky loads and lit 1 flaring torches they carâ€" them seem more gnomes < the ground than human entur th night in that c( Europe. t and . d heing ve pils uge m hady pulation ging on curves ibruptly avant the rty o o the them In‘t â€" th some the comb sul ind the he famou the much mort indu and afternoon endly top e. Imagine our joy 1. dusty, out of our ¢â€" confronted with verandahs, and the 1 drinks. Our rooms xtent with baths as hotel bedrooms. You hips to which Rayâ€" hip anC majestic trees, (As « we often came tly ~for safety â€" arrying their prodâ€" morning market in small dark shapes it with earth, and ed again until the sh ount the center the had a about tropi It 1 Ik the in ithfully, ac e out our : he possibly the aipe of grapeâ€" the: sides and In the short 1 0 Pagh\ It iter »]0¢ holy It in a good time t fifty of us ‘r of the isâ€" Boroboedoer at Buddhist po them s a strang in the cen carce Buddha We THE PRESS at a pet ng It eem U indary aborigâ€" ngalese at win of ul teps tudy t in time AVA over raw! hoos ord nd nt ters as a and vivid selves an pages. _1 Surely no one could ask for dramatic or inspiring subjec that taken by Emilie and ( Surely no one could ask for a mnre‘ dramatic or inspiring subject than that taken by Emilie and Georges Pomieu the French authors of this bo ok, "Three ‘Virgins, of Haworth." With the lives of the three Bronte sisâ€" ters as a subject, drama and pathos and vivid humanity walk out of themâ€" selves and take possession of one‘s pages, _ Much has been written about this family, which with one of those inexplicableâ€"â€"flowerings â€" of _ genius, suddenly burst: into bloom â€" in the m parson moors. the No matter is thrillin the gifte strangely a unique diately after ond these losses and lived only a few though not wide that it stimulate terest in these r il wa y Illinois County Fairs Receive Shares of the Illinois Racing Funds I!lin nual paying to the v ticipate them on the percent the law‘ allows.> The m ade by the legislatu aside $520,000 for the B y mily it The unty mportanct mnon has s to 1y bur inlikely milie and Georges Romieu. E. I‘. Dutton. ti th THREE VIRGINS OF HAWORTH" _ hristma s of hor k. The nare of state aid money in county fair premiums. al of $243.748.20 was mailed arious 60 counties which parâ€" in the fund collected from acks to support state and fairs and Four H club expoâ€" and â€" unsmilingly ironment, then the unsuccessful into rebuff it at every k home as the « me to them â€" and wealth, too late. . Emily died just critics discovered her to be genius, Anne died immeâ€" r the publication of a secâ€" and Charlotte, saddened by s and that of her brother, ly place on â€" the inexplicability as well as ce of such a‘strange pheâ€" : summoned many pens to But there is room for all. ow often it is retold there interest in the story of chi‘dren ‘growing up so armers s received their anâ€" present from the ecracing in the state gift was in the form « to 60 counties for markable in scop« ears wl ingly in their n their sorties, into the world. every turn and the only place .0om â€"â€"â€" in the barren country irsh â€" Yorkshire simultaneous wame, of their ‘ the most exâ€" the â€"history of T in our in istéers. In 61 w ents. County fairs held ‘at Aurora, Kanâ€" kakee, Jacksonville, Taylorville, Charâ€" leston, Fairbury and Marion benefitâ€" ted most through the state aid proâ€" gram, these receiving more than half of the total amount paid out. . > y : April is the time to gn away, to see new aces, new scenes. Just imagine the Mediterranean in the Springâ€"it‘s less crowded and the weather is decidedly better. Sail on the "Carinthia" on April 1 + ... visit the Azores, Gibraltar, Spain, Algiers, Sicily, Greece, Odessa, Turâ€" key, Naples, the Rivieraâ€"and above all the Crimea and the Black Sea. It‘s a short cruise,. Only 36 days to Southampton. The rates 8725 ‘ up include return to New York at your convenience. RAY MO N Dâ€" WHITC OM RAYMOND & WHITCOMB CO. 176 N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago or your local Steamship Agent + Please send me your bookâ€" M let "Spring in the Mediter» ranean". sSPRING CRUISE 176 N, Michigan Ave. â€" State 8615 CHICAGO Write for our booklet "Spring in the Mediterranean" cent of their premium payâ€" V Address Thursday, Jan. 8, 1931 Nz