"THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1940 A new street lighting system was dedicated Saturday in Glencoe, and the_ lights were put into service. The lights which are tall overâ€" head lights gives brilliant lighting to the entire business district. A gift of property which will double the grounds of Grace Comâ€" munity church, Lake Bluff was forâ€" merly accepted at the Quarterly conâ€" ference of the church March 25th. The donors of the property are Mr. and Mrs. James F. Stiles Jr., who are active members of the church. The property which is valued at $6,000 adjoins the property on which the church building now stands and gives Grace church a total of 45,000 square feet of ground, one of the finest church properties on the North Shore. In celebration of the event, the Chamber of Commerce in cooperaâ€" tion with the village officials gave a dedicatory program at the Village hall at 6:30 p.m. The dedicatory address was delivered by Village board‘s public service committee. Winnetka plans to continue the metal plate form of village motor vehicle license, since 2,194 citizens from the 3,700 applicants for liâ€" eenses, voiced approval of this type of license. The F. B. Lovell Drug store in Libertyville, which has served the public‘s drug needs in the Libertyâ€" villeâ€"Mundelein area ended Monday when Frank J. Wenban of Lake Forest assumed the business. Mr. Wenban, who operated a store in Lake Forest for many years in conâ€" junction with Willis W. Griffis, sold out his interest to Griffis. He bought the interest held jointly by the Mrs. Augusta M. Lovell estate and James Swan for a reported $7,000. Mrs. Rudolph Kitzman of Liberâ€" tyville became a virtual prisoner in her own home last Wednesday, when her little two year old daughter Suzanne playfully shoved the panâ€" try door closed as her mother was putting away the breakfast dishes. It was not until 3:30 in the afterâ€" noon when an aunt, Mrs. Charles Ruhl of â€"Lake Bluff called at the home that she was released. There was no knob on the inside of the closet door, and Mrs. Kitzman tried every possible effort to release herâ€" self, but to no avail. Barrington records are now kept in an upâ€"toâ€"date loose leaf book, a very efficient descendant of the first townbook, an oldâ€"fashioned volume which served from 1860 to 1898. The original town minute book is preserved as a relic. In it is realâ€" ly the story of the beginning of Barrington, the great growth of the community from 1860 to the turn of the century. In the 38 years it served as a record, four different clerks kept the minutes. Two of them were Joseph D. Robertson and L. Bennett. When the original minute book was discarded, another regular volâ€" o PAY AS LOW AS $1 DOWN â€" SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTs AS LONG AS 5 YEARS TO PAY wl fe e oeerramee t piping but to your furnace as well. An AUTOMATIC i HOrVaP AniitcmndineA en fBecelre: rulbaice all i casd "mo might, vu-.ws-â€".-ar.m’,-'n"-hu..mu;'a-m d.flyAlmlA'fldew.Y-e-hnh'fl-aAM .--mb*...'llhu-mnl‘-mlucw. * Overheated hot water, clanking noises in excessive f_'_'!!f‘!'h'.!!-!""""‘,':g"""-“‘ Unless you have hot water at exactly the right temperatare, day and night, Tests show that the average installation of a furnace coil uses about %% of all the fuel used in the furnace. That‘s 14 of your fuel bill spent for hot waterâ€"and a water without cost. hot water supply at that! There‘s no such thing as getting hot ume succeeded it, but after a few years the present loose leaf system was inaugurated. Cuba township, Lake county, and Barrington township, Cook county. Arthur C. Burandt is the present clerk of the village, and he is also the guardian of the historical book, one of his duties as clerk. Besides Burandt, other officials of the village are Earl Hatje, presiâ€" dent; A. L. Wiedenbech, treasurer; Alfred D. Church, police magistrate, and David B. Maloney, attorney. Cuba township was originally Troy, but the auditor of the state advised the county clerk that there was another town in the state alâ€" ready named Troy, so the name was changed to Cuba at the meeting of the board of supervisors in 1850. 200 Ravinians Plan To Attend Dinner Dance There April 20 Two hundred Ravinians have alâ€" ready indicated that they are so doâ€" ing their spring planning that they will not be musclebound from garâ€" dening or spring housecleaning on April twentieth, which is the date set for the next dinner dance of the Ravinia Woman‘s club. In announcâ€" ing this number of early reservaâ€" tions for the evening, Mrs. Fred E. Law, chairman of the club‘s social committee, expressed the hope that others who wish to attend the dance would soon make definite arrangeâ€" ments to do so, for attendance is necessarily limited. She might have added that no one will want to be lame from cleaning or digging on the twentieth since music for the dance will again be provided by Pierson Thal‘s orchestra which reâ€" ceived such enthusiastic comment at the February dance and which is now playing weekly at the Blackâ€" hawk Grill in Chicago. All reservations for the evening should be made with Mrs. Law, H. P. 2088. It is suggested that those who are compelled to make late canâ€" cellations _ of their â€" reservations, schedule Junior‘s attack of mumps and kindred catastrophes a bit earlier than usual this time, for deadline will not be as eleventh hour as formerly. Instead of acâ€" cepting cancellations the day before the dance, none will be taken after Wednesday, April 17. Porkers Starve As Birds Capture Food Residents in southern Illinois livâ€" ing along the highway between Alâ€" bion and East St. Louis were conâ€" fronted in 1822 by a most unusual hardship. Their hogs depended for food principally on acorns and berâ€" ries during the days of late summer and fall. Suddenly, Aecording to an account noted by the Illinois Writers‘ Project, W.P.A., a vast flock of pigeons flew into the area and soon cleared the fields of nearly all these items of food. As a result, many hogs died of starvation. Advertise in the PRESS NORTH SHORE Zgai CO. Dr. Adler in his preface states: "Reading is a basic tool in the livâ€" ing of a good life. Those who can use it to learn from books, as well as be amused by them, have access to the stores of knowledge . . . Most of us have the problem of getting the education which schools and colâ€" leges failed to give us. Education is still open to all of us . . . if we know how to read." How to Read a Book; The Art of Getting a Liberal Education, by Mortimer J. Adler. How to Read a Book points out no short cuts, but as a book about how to play tennis is a practical guide to the playing of tennis, so this is a practical guide to the readâ€" ing of books. The first section discusses readâ€" ing in relation to learning and thinking; the second part tells us how and what to read. The third deals with the basic reason for literâ€" acy, discusses the obligations of the citizens of a democracy, and exâ€" pounds the thesis that free minds make free men. In an appendix Dr. Adler lists the great books of all time, ranging from the early Greek and Latin writers through the Middle Ages to Einstein and Dewey among the livâ€" ing. This list is based on similar ones used at the University of Chiâ€" cago, at Columbia college, at St. John‘s college and elsewhere. The man who made time stand still for 60 years. His name was Baron Ballysane and, from the days of Queen Victoria until his recent death, he refused to admit that the world was changing. Read about his strange existence in The Ameriâ€" can Weekly, the magazine distribâ€" uted with next Sunday‘s Chicago Heraldâ€"American. QualityCleaners Phone H, P. 178 RELIABLE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING CO. DAHL‘S Auto Reconstruction Co. 322 N. First St. _ Phone 77 SPRING SERVICE STATION WELDING AND SOLDERING Auto Repainting Cold Frame and Axle Straightening Body and Fender Repairing LIBRARY THE HIGHLAND PARK PR ESS According to the recollections of an early lllinois resident, any one in the state during the early years of its development who uttered an Language Lessons Costly To Some Early Residents | NORTH SHQRE Gas Co. Only Servel Electrolux freezes silently with NO MOVING PARTSI + Modern Convenience and Beauty a Permanent SHence + No Moving Parts to Wour + Continued Low Operating Cost + Pullest Food Protection *« Menty of lso Cubes 1 More Years of Service YOU ENJOY ALL THESE ADVANTAGES * When you‘re lining up a business trip, remember: appointments made in advance by telephone can save you hours of waiting. Allow you to set a schedule and stick to it. Spare you heelâ€"cooling in anterooms, frantic rushes to make up lost time. Ask your telephone Business Office how other firms use telephone service to greatest advantage . . . there may be an idea for you. to keep from * (% getting behind & elephone ahead °© Savings That Pay tor it An early chronicler, says the Illiâ€" nois Writers‘ Project, W.P.A., tells of an incident that happened in 1821 at GreenviHe in which a justice of the peace while walking with anâ€" oath in the presence of a justice of the peace could be fined one dollar. 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Upon his reâ€" turn, he is reported to have reâ€" marked to his companion, "Having discovered proper signs of contriâ€" tion, I am now considering the proâ€" priety of remitting the fine." Typical stationâ€"toâ€"station