ASSAIL FAKERS IN PUBLIC LFE Money corruption in this country is steadily on the decline and the nation is cleaner in this respect now than it has ever been. But money Am&.o-a;dononxfixf: ".._n_wn.. ?huhr.nmlnin ces -- cubain. . ds meipaa in aeiERRONEN Nes W > cerity. And~I urge earnestly that this sort of hypocrisy in men be con-- demned with all the emphasis and foree with which money corruption is condemned. Servicé is the most sacred word in the dictionary, and you veterans know better than any one else real-- hm-m.ndwhtucflfleo is, and are anxious to carry this ideal of service into civil life with genuineness, lack of pretense, of posing and of hypocrisy. T its i= full of contention. The eeaeenenet s CHme . O CCCC C200 C average person is fighting all the time for or against something, but "umfi@hnfi bitter, nor is it mecessarily directed through personal and antagonmistic channe's mb"dpolitiell life as much as of any other sort of life. No question of universal import hm.gfl.dumnimflv- People must contend, and to this we should have no complaint so long as this contention is carried on in A good :mwgy--wm"w"'nu does not exult and the loser will MANY FLOCK TOLAKE COUNTY _' Before a specially constructed outdoor altar on the banks of Lake St. Mary, the age old pagentry of Thursday before the eyes of more in honor of Chicago's newly elevarec prince of the church, George Card-- inal Mundelein, is a gem of mediaev-- al beauty set down in the rolling hills of Northern Illincis with just ....uum.m-muhmw it added magnificence. Tell of Plans. When first it was decided to hold mh;&hmwfiom zdmniditvmldboimpom '.ople to a coun-- y makee *_-- But the clergy insisted and so the PAGE EHGHT e ced OURCC uies 010 00 CC 0C 'h-'a'flu"*m'w of two years so that the "impossible" was made a reality. Dawn had hardly broken over the Lake Michigan horizen "t.il long h c andith cce stdbertinc cap eb t rpeartataned nbMAtal.m'm trains on the Chicago and North Mdcl:tfletho-nrtedurfieeat intervals of two minutes. Three raam railroads--the Chicago and Northwestern the Chicago, Mi kee and St. Paul and the Soo I broughit their respective quota. hour added thousands to the nuMm-- ber of people who came from the ""dunwcldtowimu a.wmuifieento{lnfimi"l pageants to pay reverence to the mto!thonhmdsuehuist. The central scene of the pageant was set before the entrance to the dignified chapel which looks out over the calm waters of Lake St. Marys. ns Nee CCCAE CCCE N CC ie c C Here a huge altar was built and nearby was a magnificent <purple thorne for John Cardinal Bonzano, '-udnmnhfinofroperin., mflflhflflln?fortheothf princes of the church were erected :.n.- to thé right and to the left of the altar. * Space For Priests. Space was reserved near the altar for the bishops and another space nearby for more than 5.000 priests. '!\onleptatndi.uneebnt within sight of all that transpired. Huge amplifiers . transmitted every word to the 500,000 onlookers. The festivities started at 10 a. m. with Cardinal -- Bonzano cele-- brating high pontifical mass in vest-- ments that have been preserved through the ages for just. such pur-- woses as these. Services at the altar three hours duration and followed by a sermon by His Eminence Patrick Cardinal Hayes, archbishop of New ~\Then, shortly after noon--with more pilgrams still coming by mot, oreade and trains--the beautiful pro-- cession around Lake St. Marys was started. It was a procession two milles in length and the march was of three miles so that the first of eorrup the procession was nearly back to its starting place before the last of the procession started. It was esti-- mated in advance that the proces-- sion would not be completed until: 6 p. m., at which time Cardinal Bon-- was to intone the words of the =gu.. of the »Blessed Sacra-- ment which brings the Eucharistic Congiress to a formal close. Never before have 500,000 people f on a"site so remote y&- has so 'huge a un-w-lml Spacious as the grounds were it was automobiles newly elevated from Chicago Milwau-- o Line-- ta. Each enacted : in the United. States and h'mwfi&fiwm 500,000 re getting them iuk':gh!t and 'other nearby cities was said--to have sur--. passed all records for handling of crowds, The nearest approach it was said was the handling of the crowds which witnessed the coronation of King Edward VILI of England. f The sun was low in the western saky before the great pageant was completed and ~it was -- midnight 'hefore the vast throng had . been |mpat.d away from the scene. Many encamped in their automob-- iles for the night rather than risk 'thednnmumm'mufim" tween here and Chicago. SAYS BRIT AIN SEEKS THE U. $ gomination, including the subjuga-- t'on of 'the United States. Some --lay the Christian youth of the world will rise up and deny the right of empitres to world--wide possessions. compelling them to withdraw or adopt policies that will universally <dvecate and traim the youth of thes» serritories for self rule. There is no more sordid chapter in the history of conquest than the gradual subjugation of Africa. To-- day there are only two tiny sec-- tions that belong to the black people +o whom centuries ago God gave the land by right of birth. Ninety--two pcresntolthewfltoryhheldby Eurcrean powers, and its wealth has bcen extracted for European profit. England is now practically domi-- aant. . There was a short period nrior to the world war when Ger many became ambitious to emulate the in.perialistic designs of England her greatest rival; but her defeat i' the war made short work of her colonial dreams. Americans should rememler that perhaps the biggest reason for the recent war, into whose vortex we had to cast our own sons was the commercial and imner'»!~ rivalry of Great Britain [ ard Germany. s 8 It is diffcult to say which was th»e bigger sinner. England seemed to bave ancre altruistiec motives, -- She was at least able to express them more ptously, if less frankly, and therefore the public opinion of the world, though highly--organized and widespread publicity agencies, was mobilized on the side of Great Brit-- a'n.~ But the real inner story of the causes leading up to the world war is yet to be written and man revealing things must vet come to light with reference to the commer-- cia)l vivalries and imperialistic de-- sizn« of selfish empires. The result of the war is that. most sf the German colonies in Africa have Leen taken by the British em-- pire. And the steady and unrelent-- lessdream of Cecil Rhodes and oth-- ers has 'now come true, namely, a Cape to Cairo railway. Only a short section remains to be built in this tremendous link between the north-- The dream of the British is world ern and southern extremities of the gr.}eon'hont. If you will look at a post--war map vou will see that the British flag flies over the whole line of territory through Egypt. through the Anglo--Egyptian Sudan. British East Africa, Rhodesia and the union of South Africa. 'Rhodes did not live to see the conquest so complete, but he foresaw it and announced it in bold and frankly ambitious terms. The holy land and Mesopotamia. vast tracts of the Malay Archipel-- ago, and much of the seaboard of China, in addition to Africa, are now in Britain's hands. Let the youth of America contemplate the last-- named territory in the foregoing quotation. Our only way of really feeling the sinfuiness of selfish world imperialism is to see that our own country is included among those t obe subjugated. <The average Am-- erican youth will feel a hame of indignation by merely reading the bold declaration by an imperial rep-- resentative of a great power that his America is to be absorbed. Very well. -- Put your own indignation into the black youths of Africa, who to day think America assisted the oth-- er white nations of the world in taking their lands and villages and resources. What Canaries Like . Canarvy seed albone does not fur-- nish a balanced feed for canaries, but in :combination with hemp and summer rape it forms a good ration. Much of the rape seed put up and sold in cartons is of a kind that even wild bords do nmot eat because of its pungent and bitter flavor, says the United State Department of Agri-- culture, but all birds relish the mild taste of true summer rape.. _ witnout --1CCiINg . Suugen sharp aches and twinges? Now from a strain, and you'll get relief the moment rw,ts?_m."'tg.':".t'" sooth> Quch! Rub Backache, :: Stiffness, Lumbago Rub Pain from back with small trial bottle of old #Bt. Jacobs O|l." Can't straighten By WILLIAM °C. REDFIELD, Former Secretary of Commerce, for the so--called "relieft ol the farmer which congress. recently de-- bated, stormily and Litterly, for several weeks, provide vast sums of money for agricultural subsidies in the form of funds for farm loans and for --price stabilization purposes. They are economically so,, unsound that they would prove a handicap rather than ahelp to the country's economic life. If course, the farm-- er is having a hard time. He get: less return per capita for his invest-- nent and his labor than any other national group, and his: average yearly profit is pathetically small But is --that any reason why there should be a national food trough provided for his benefit?! * 'The u-'r not need a loan furd or $100,000,000 which the Tin-- cher bill wanted to give him, any more than he needs lace ruffles on his plows." He already has better facilities for eredit than are avail-- able in any other important occupa-- tion. The banking system, with its three classes of banks established under the federal farm loan board --one of the achievements of the Wilson administration--has for its sole purpose the making of agricul-- tural loans, in both long and short term accommodations, at much low-- er rates of interest than the farm-- er formerly had to pay. ig > During the Jlast nine years this federal farm loan system has pro-- vided credits totaling more than two billion dollars. Last year the sys tem furnished agricultural credit: amounting to more than $436,000, 000. Besides this, local banks are always glad to extend credit to any energetic farmer. No, the agricul-- tural group already has all the bor-- rowing facilities it needs. 6 : f The Fundamental Problem. That brings us to what seems to me to be the basic difficulty with the farmer--the primary cause of most. if not alil, of his troubles. He has mot fully adapted his methods of production and of marketing to the ecnditions of modern life. In a world which has revolutionized these mathods 'he 'stilt clings to his anti-- quated, individualistie-- ways of do-- ing things.. Here and there you find a farmer or two, or a group of them who have kept in step with economic irndencies and commercial progress: and when you do, you will find them making Wig percentages of profit. ESTATE C approved in the estate of Fannie Hans, Prairie View, and the estate ' The final report was approved in the »state of:Archibald W. Fletcher Highland Park, and the executor second report was approved in the wingike :';:.';'.h'é"g'afeéa'.i '?'f NO FARM 8ELP Continued from Page One) E CASES ARE NUMEROUS AMERICA's FIRST EUROPEAN--TYPE LIGHT CAR The --»h § High ,ha; d Perk - * t ~¢i22.3 Hearing on petitions for probat-- ing ot wills of Ann Caslin and Mary Jane Rafter were.continued to June estate <.f Catherine O'Connor, Deer-- Hearing on petition to probate the foreign : will of: Richard F,. Good:-- man, was continued to June 28. The inventory was approved in the estate of Jennie E.. Moses, High-- land Park. The conservator was au-- thorized to administer and close es-- The inventory and appraisement bill was approved in the estate of Claus Harold Stake,-- Waukegan. Appraisers were appointed in the estate of Hannah F Norton, Wauke-- In the estate of <the late Mayor Theodore H. Durst, petition--to com-- plete sale of rea' estate under con-- tract was filed and hearing set for Hearir® an final report in the estate of John Matthews, Lake For-- est, was continued to June 28. Petition fo:r probate of the will of Jessie Fremont True, Waukegan was filcd and hearing set for July of Eliza Gainer, Wauconda, was au-- thorized to sel' chattel property. The administrator in the estate The NEW KELLY FLEXIBLE CORD Easier riding than the ord-- inary cord tire because it is more flexible. Moreflexiblebeuusethelnl&firalBead construction--used only by Kelly -- has ma@eponible"aflexibletreadaswellasa flexible carcass. -- _( _ s gedness of the tread but principally because the tire's flexibility allovlv)smrb the shocks of road 'obstructions instead of re-- A broad, tough, long--wearing non--skid i stoothane tm in an + ®@ . e# e x ty has ever bailt ~ _ * Milwaukee Avenue 626 N. Milwaukee Ave., Libertyville lived, partly because of the rug-- sRX T % In the estate of Frank Wepla,'et Al, «tm.mors, North Chicago, the in-- flan was authorized to pay for sup-- port: of minors. 1 COUNTY LOANS Business of 'the recorder's office for the week ending June 19 1926. . Number of conveyances filed 247 ': Number of chatte} mortgages 86 Number of trust deeds and mort-- Total amo..at of loans $508,870.42 Corresponding period week ending June 20, 1925. Number of conveyanced filed 202 Number of chattel mortgages 179 Number of trust deeds and mort-- odor by mixing formaldehydeé, lemon oil, eucalyptus oil and alcoho! and al-- lowiing it to evaporate slowly.. This odor in turn may be eradicated with a strong cigar.--Detroit News. room may be freed from tobacco They say the horse will soon be-- come extinct. But we are more in-- terested in knowing if horse sense Total amount of instruments filed Total amount of Loans $598,916.17 'otal number of instruments filed SHOW A DROP a Remedy. so that they can be identified after slaughter. This identification makes it possible to trace diseased animals to the farm where the infection or-- been devised for marking hogs as they leave the farm for the market move it. Such marks are valuable in establishing ownership of hogs in co--operative «nipments as weil as in combating desease. iginated. A tatoo mark properly applied resists all <attempts *to re-- ' THINKS IT'S POOR } |g/usoges§ s'r'?po a 1 OOFK W p 'AT HOME ! ,A' OAK TERRACE LAUNDRY IT IS GOOD BUSINESS--OUR LAUNDRY Prairie Ave., Highwood, IIL. P BUSY,PRESSES OAK Mr. Homeseeker: SERVICE PHONE 87 Have you been down to Copeland Manor lately? Things are just humming--like a bee hive. Water pipes going under ground, sewer pipes on hand, buildings go-- ing up! Copeland Manor will be completely built up within a few years. It will surprise you, the number of homes that are to be completed THIS SUMMER., Copeland Manor North is pretty well sold out now. Wonderful lots can be secured in Copeland Manor south. Don't wait until fall and take what is left. If you want a lot now, you can still take your pick on Copeland Manor realize the opportunity you now have. We will sell the lots anyway! It's just up to you if you want one. YOU will be the loser if you can not l6ook ahead and int Copeland Manor Sales Organization Haying Machinery } McCormick Deering Mowers Rakes -- Loaders _ Schanck Hardware Co. ttk Good Stock Priced Right s You will soon need -- Forks -- Pulleys +4