Â¥% B e AK fe it Ii was considered something of a miracle when the daring fliers landed in an.Irish bog, little the worse for their rapid, if hazardous, passage from America. _ beside the present samples of airâ€" craft development would seem like negotiated the first air crossing of the Atlantic. § That man, Sir Arthur Witten Brown, now an electrical executive on a visit to the United States, took off with Sir John Alcock from New. Since Colonel Charles A. Lindâ€" bergh made his spectacular flight from New York to Paris in 1927, much has been said and written about the prospect of a regular transâ€"Atlantic air service. But it a service was predicted eight years before the famous Lone Eagle flight by the first man that every crossed the gray Atlanticâ€"wilderness inâ€"an airplane. Sir Arthur Brown Who Flew Ocean in 1919 Not Optiâ€" B1 South St. Johns Avenue FLYER NOT HOPEFUL began beating eggs, whipping cream, mashing potaâ€" toes, stirring up cakes (and oh, what cakes!) and doing dozens of other mixing tasks quickly, efficiently, electrically. Now a new Mixmaster does all these things and more! Extracts all the juice from oranges Mixmaster and lemonsâ€"speedily, cOMpletely. complete with 2 green Almost a Miracle No» MIXMASTER into the hearts of thousands of women when it first salad dressings. All for less money. Formeriy $24.30 PuBuic Service ComPanY mistic Today exsoineerco â€"OLdIOtS» , makes better ’ ... salad dressings ~~OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS Joseph W, Kehoe, District Manager \__*. _ Rvanston, Illinois ~Granted that the Atlantic has eeded at did not take the full eount. Planes will continue to beat it, but it, also, will continug to have its share of victories. In fact transâ€" Atlantic flights are still purely «tunts. > Tt is Sir Arthur‘s belief that alâ€" though the present safety of planes Sir Arthur himself was no less enthusiatic about the future of aviaâ€" tion, but was far more conservative in his predictions, setting ten years as the time it would take for the new ~mode of transportation ~to be developed to a point where transâ€" Atlantic flights would be a reasonâ€" ably zectre and frequent occurance. ~Sir Arthur‘s ten years have come and <gone. â€"Old Man Atlantic has been beaten by daring souls who picked un his challenging gauntlet and made good many times since the Brownâ€"Alcock flight. But when Sir Arthur landed in New York the other day. he admitted that his preâ€" diction of 12 years ago had been advocatesof â€"aviation â€" proceededâ€"to manufacture a Summer out of one swallow. : "The Atlanticâ€" has been conquered," they said, and predicted that a few years would see transâ€" Atlantic flying as commonplace as interâ€"city automobile traffic. . _ Highland â€"Papk 2900 â€" Need New Type Plane low price mixing bowls to match complete with 2 green yet CHICAKAGO & NORTH WESTERN RY. / _ ~Relief committees all ‘over the country, in preparing for the worst, are acting very wisely. â€" Usually when you prepare for the worst, it doesn‘tâ€"get that bad. talr ly. Only preliminary work is being attempted, ‘he admitted, because considerable more work will have to be covered faced by several delays due to changes in the laws by the hindrances to be faced by the audiâ€" tor will be the change in payment County Auditor Has ___:_ Begun Work on Books *‘‘Samuel E. Sims, "of Pontiac, audiâ€" tor for several counties in central and northern Illinois, last week comâ€" menced his regular annual audit in the county offices. & Before transâ€"Atlantic air crossâ€" ings can be made with the same certainty that one makes them on an ocean liner, there will have to be somethingâ€"new in â€"aircraft ~ design. Thus the man who predicted that long ocean flights would be but a routine~matter â€"in~ 1930 admits : his overâ€"optimism and maybe he has put his finger on the trouble in diagâ€" nosing the reason for the failure of his prediction. After‘all, it is quite possible that our aviation exâ€" perts have been trying to scale a 100â€"foot wall with a 50â€"foot ladder. the element of.cheance has not been eliminated, nor will it be eliminated in the present type of plane conâ€" struction. ~It is his opinion t.htl* aviation has progressed as far as it ever will with the orthodox design | and the equipment available at this i time. > has been developed to a high degree, Midget BUrglar in _ .. A century ago, thirty miles was a CHICAGO & NORTH WESTERN RY. Commutation 4 â€"â€"â€"cAnnounces Weekly Individual Commutation Tickets day‘s journey.â€"Collier 12 Ridesâ€"Monday to Sunday, inclusiveâ€"Effective Nov. 2 12â€"Ride Individual $2.53 en ioh dn ie Ein t reanemeecon ons s Week And Another Bargain Goes With It round: tfl& nckets ~betweenâ€"any two points in the suburban district on your division for yourself, your family or friends, up to oneâ€"half of the mileage represented by the 12â€"ride ticket at the low rate of 2¢ per mile. Por full particulars and tickets see your s C. & N. WY. Ticket Agent _ 1 Here‘s a new idea, in keeping with the modern trend to make smaller purâ€" chases and more of themâ€"the Weekly Individual Commutation Ticket. It‘s conâ€" venient, calls for a smaller cash outlay, and the fare per ride is lowâ€"but little more than for the 60â€"ride ticket! The new 12 few years ago seem to have into comeâ€"quitters. James DeWitt, who was accused by Highland Park police of attemptâ€" ing to shakeâ€"down lovers in parked cars by use of a Cook county offiâ€" Tory Taigeâ€"Paees charges. of m personating an officer and carrying concealed weapons, filed in county court last week by State‘s Attorney Johnâ€" Mundro, North Chicagoans, have been shortened by Gov. Louis L..~Emmerson on "the â€"recommendaâ€" tion of the board of pardons. The success in hardening copper has opened a great new field to meâ€" tallurgists, it is believed here. In the business and economic world just now our goâ€"getters of a A. V. Smith. DeWitt was arrested by Highland Park police some time ago and bound over to the grand jury by Magistrate Schwery. f _A purse containing $22 was over: looked. The wrist watch is a 15â€" jewel â€" Elgin, â€"and â€"bears the name "Inez," engraved on the back. The pipe was the only other article missed by the family, all of whom had been absent during the afterâ€" noon. The thief entered by breaking out aâ€"window pane. â€"Only a child or a very small man could have crawled through the opening, according to Devputy Sheriffs Geno Palmeiri and John DeSmidt, who were called. A midget burglar gained entrance to the Ackerman home near the Wil. son farm at the outskirts of North Chicago last week and stole a wrist watch and a 15 cent pipe. ~~N,. â€"Chicago Gets in ‘Thru Window Pane mochle hi e e it ces tntn es t ut duriiarchnaigs on hevins t it i t and s hn h Hevuiginth ie momintncdiiatter isnn Aotipnms un rÂ¥vaniatenccivicem ns «â€"fide ticket Perfoi day is in re sehool! & of the n ganza, & a local given ~I Deerfiel ary, on nings, 1 Briefl Grande‘ Ranch and 8i intrigu there about URSDA An : ected â€" under rulous feet im a close Kenne! atric=l the Gr Kenne ticle" often. his p ductic ed in duce Ca chief of th Not 1 with« it w bank a yo ist i Miss the the in of all of as fie Je qu: Gr