high grades. On Monday evening, Jan. 30, is the day and date of the next bouts to be held under the auspices of the Deerfiecki American Legion Post in the Masonic Temple. School Notes. The cightn grade held an election of class officers Jan. 11 and the fol-- omcs Lepack: vice preside porisl ames Lepack; vice president, Jane Galloway; secretary, Heien Engstrom; treasurer, John Cash-- Miss Elizabeth Schillstra of Kil-- bourn, Wis., has been secured to teach the third grade the second semester beginning Monday, Jan. 16. Mrs. Thormeyer is taking the B sections of the--fourth and fifth seveéral new pupils have decided , to take advantage of the training j &: on musical ifstruments by the . National School of Music and | have secured instruments and are umu for lessons. Elizabeth Hobart, kindergar-- ten teacher, gave an interesting talk about China to the eighth grade pupils Wednesday afternoon, Jan. 1. Miss Hobart has s}nnt more | than ten years of her life in China.! She told about many of the queer| eustoms of the Chinese. She con--| cluded her interesting talk by talk--, ing the Chinese language and sing-- ; ing a song in Chinese. © Mrs. Alex Willman entertained a g::p of ladies including Mmes. Labahn, Joeefihine Rommel, Fred Horenberger, P. Osterman, E. H. Williams and B. H. Kress on Thursday afternoon. llr.nnnd l;s. Otto Trute, Mr. am} rg. eterson were sts 0o Mr. and ;rs. Ernest Dgfl. of Chimob.!'»:ndll The rfield O. E. S. Chalrt.er will sponsor a masquerade ball in the Masonic Temple Saturday eve-- The Coleman Variety Store will move -- the stock from the Knaak Inflding"on Deerfield Ave., to High-- wood this week. Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Clavey enter-- tained a large number of friends and relatives from Des Plaines, Highland Park, Glencoe, Chicago more and Deerfield at their home on Sat-- urday evening. The occasion was in celebration of Mr. Clavey's sixty-- Mrs. Reeb of Springfield, avenue, entertained a few friends at cards miNR, aPohiHe . A2TD% Mimes. Seth Gooder, J. A. Reichelt, Jr., Alex Willman and Ra'ymond Clavey attended the Ossoli Club Fashion Show staged in the High-- land Park Club, Saturday afternoon. During the afternoon and eve-- n'ng hours of Wednesday at the Deerfield Public Library, 175 books weer checked out by the librarian, Mrs. Frank Russo, and her able and faithful assistant, Mrs. Chester The -- Deerfield American Legion| Auxiliary members are invited to . attend a district meeting which will| be held in the assembly room of the' Deerfield --Presbyterian Church on Wednesday afternoon, Jan. 25, at 2 Wolf. A higher standard of living is induced by the reading of good books and magazines and there is a large table full of current publica-- tions monthly. | 3 fifth anniversary. Five hundred j and dancing were the features. | Mrs. R. D. Reeds entertained her bridge club at her home on Deer-l field avenue, Tuesday afternoon. _ | _On Wednesday, Mrs. Fred Horen-- berger had as her guests, Mrs. Beh-- rens and daughter of Glencoe. The Wilmot Parent--Teacher As-- sociation --will hold its regular meeting in the school Friday eve-- ning, Jan. 20. -- _ ues Mrs. C. A. Stadler will repeat her| interesting talk which she gave at the Deerfield school on Frida ng All members are urged to attend. o'clock. A little paper, three and a half by five inches called "The Deer Lick Farm" entered at postoffice in Hutchinson's Grocery Store a num-- ber of years ago in Deerfield, of which the late James Howard Keh-- ler was editor, as well as owner of the farm, was brought to light re-- cently z.ww Gauntlet, who is having residence on the place remodeled. In the fikst issue, vol-- ume one, number one, October, 1911, whm people who joined the r Lick Farm Club and were din-- mMm:Johnaneofthe Blackstone, George Gazley of the LaSaile, Fred Cushing of the Moraine, -- Hunter Finch, Frank Bartholmy, William J. Sutherland, "the boss of the Pinkertons, who detected nothing but fried chicken, green corn, etc." "Old Ed Brown has been becalmed in his houseboat on the North Branch for quite a spell. B. L. T. (of blessed memory) and Doc Little, both of the "Tribune Medica Staff," and John McCutch-- eon were guests at dinner. Albert Kales, Mitchell Follansbee, Tedd I-ian.fljeboy.vrmllernv!thelid'I way, hiked across country to the The De-- Forest School Round Table gave a tea at the school on Sheridan Road Monday afternoon. Mrs. Hugh Paterson has become a life member of the Art Institute of Chicago. * Mesdames E. B. Jordan, E. A. Wood and J. A. Riechelt, Jr., at-- tended the meeting of the North Shore Chapter, Daughters of ~ the American Revolution at the home of Mrs. Mare Law in Highland Park Tbtndni. About $400 was appro-- m or patriotic education. Mrs. It was elected a delegate to the annual conference of the Na-- tion in Washington, D. C., and Mrs. Jordan an alternate to the state gathering in Bloomir)gton. The Garden Club of Deerfield, will meet at the home of Mrs. Farmer Thursday afternoon, instead of the usual day, Wednesday. There will be a speaker, and it will be guest % Elizabeth Schillstra, who #nrmerliy taught in the Deerfield * Mrs. C. T.. Anderson and Miss Eleanor Mever gave a bridge party Saturday --afternoon in compliment to Miss Mildred Knickerbocker of Chicago, and her sister, Mrs. Max Euler of Kitchener, Ontario, at the home of Mrs. Anderson. 'Directions are given how to reach the farm between Highland Park and Deerfield. DEEREFIELD ' and Tripp schools, has been hired | to teach in the Deerfield school as \ an extra room has been opened. | _ In a letter written by Seth Wash-- burn in 1853 Messrs. Theron Par-- sons, Captain Daniel \Vright, Hiram Kennicott and William Cooley are mentioned in the order named as the 1834 settlers in Vernon, accord-- ing to C. A. Partridge's History of \ -- The sad and ridiculous plight of Count Mario Grazia, in the comedy '"The Mask --and the Face," now playing to delighted audiences at the Goodman Theater, does not elicit much pity for his predicament, because he, himself, brings his men-- tal anguish down on his own head. : The Count (William Hallman) is a type of the fiery, emphatic kind that one sometimes meets with, and when he declares before arty of his friends that he would till his ;own wife if she were caught in an |escapade with another man, his friends refuse to believe him. His wife (Dorothy Ratz:nond) is faithful, however, but Count's closest |friend, Franco Spina, (l:wwp Dick-- 'inson}) endeavors with all~his wiles to win her love. Spina reaches the window of the Countess at night just as her husband is told of what is happening. He rushes into her room with drawn revolver, but his friends disarm him. When «their company departs the Count refuses to listen to his wife's explanations and orders her beyond the Italian border, bidding her never to set foot in his home again. 'He ii::s out the information that he has kept to acquit him, blackening the char-- acter of the Count's wife. The wife, however, did not stay beyond the border and her return causes the Count excruciating mental torture. The play is remarkably clever, is smoothly, even brilliantly produced, and retains the flavor of real Italian domestic atmosphere. -- The scenes are beautiful. It was written by l'Luigi Chiarelli <and translated by tC. B. Fernald, Besides the excel-- lent work of Dorothy Raymond and William Hallman as the principals in the satirical comedy, the beauti-- fully gowned ladies of the . play, Bess Johnson as "Lelia Fambri," Ellen Root as "Nina Zanotti," the banker's (Roman --Bohnen) flirta-- tious «+wife, and Mary Evans as "Wanda Borelli," prove a delight to the eye and make of the play a finely balanced production. Neal Caldwell as the sculptor, "Georges Almairs," carries well an unusually witty part and Art Smith, as the fussy mayor, is capital. The play will be continued every night except I Sunday night, with Friday matinee, | until further notice. his word that he would kill his wife| and safi that he strangled her and' threw her body in Lake Como. He! nrow nCr Jouy C inm --A/GCTods uV | is arrested and, after ten ~months ; spent in prison, is acquitted on the' grounds of gmtiflhle homicide, his ; best friend, Franco Spina, in order| NO PITY IS FELT FOR THS COUNT Lake County. A free dental clinic for children in the first two grades of rural schools of Alabama thas been an--' nounced by the State health officer,| who is acting in cooperation with the dentists of the State. The new | service will begin with one dentist, | who will travel from county to coun-- | ty visiting the schools. The* staft ' will be increased as the work be-- comes better organized. WHY is it that we are sometimes prouder of our little vices than o + our great virtues? i s Why is it that most of us rather pride ourselves on our disagreeable qualities while we seldom mention our pleasing attributes? > Take, for instance, the people who tell your that they always get up in the morning grouchy. They always act as though this disagreeable foible is something splendid, a unique thing, as it were, that sets them apart from those who greet the new day with a feeling of ammemmemmmmmmmememmmmemem -- ZTAtitUGG that theYy ATC Still AilVC-- q o y "You can imagine in what condition I am to buck up "KF ] against the affairs of the office after listening to the E: recital of every possible disagreeable thing in the hu-- P KA man category and baving most of them attributed to ~ Re _ & my inclination to make life a hell for the poor, patient MmMRS G|iBSON woman who sits across from me at breakfast. "I tried to persuade ber to have breakfast in her room, but that was pouring oil on the fire, as she said I surely did not love her, for if I did, I would not only be willing to sympathize with her hard life, but also I would try to makK> it easier." I do not think that anyone has any right to work off her ugly temper on a purely innocent person, and"1 certainly would banish from my break-- fast table anyon. who could .ot come to it with a smiling face There might be some excuse for one being rather captious in"the even-- Ing. after a hard day's work, but in these days of prohibition, when no one has any right to have an aching bheador a dark brown taste in one's mouth, there is no excuse for being seen in the morning unless one feels that Memo: 1t is the littl« modern man and woman. $731,000 in cash was distributed by C. W. Nash, President of the Nash Motors Company, among employes Christ-- mas Eve. This was the largest Christmas distribution ever made by Nash Motors. No éemplove was overlooked. . Nash Distributes Three--Quarters of a Million Dollars _ Among Employes for Christmas : n i;fi'n;ififvltr to-be seen--much less spbken to unti about lunch time," said a friend to me the other day. Just why, after a good night's rest, a perfectly healthy person should be in a temperamental cataclysm for two or three hours is something that a normal woman would like »xplained to her. . f A young married man said to me yesterday, "I am very fond of my wife, as you know, but 1 wish her mother or someone had told me that she was always impossibly grouchy in the morning.: 'Honestly, I do not think I would--nave married her. s "God's in his heaven, 3 All's right with the world." * t # LJ # # 4 6 little annoyances that make the martyrdom of 'the FOIBLES LOYALTY BIG PROBLEM FOR TXE Sp1 ons Still, somebody must also look aft-- er the states' and districts' joint nusiness--that is to say,. Uncle Sam's business. * f Federal taxation, for instance -- here's a subject that vitally con-- cerns us all, as a people, but not any one state. or group of states, Pag: tieular. b £ &n * af the Incal interests of the »lector i tos which send them here. | The politicians who deliver _the ' oncds. back where 'they haii from . are the boys who pile up th» bio | matorities when they go to the polis | Which is perfectly okeh States «r.0 distmcts bhave their rights -- It's to see that they get 'em that ther have serators and representatives at tho capital WASHINGTON, Jan.~ "*~.--In con-- *ress, the best man for the whole eountry isn't necessarily the best go-- setter for his own state or district Yet a very few states must con-- tribute, from among-- their senators and representatives, the specialists to deai with it in committee--to lick it Into such shape that congress car att on it. Otherwise it never would be acted on. Its problems are tor technica! and intricate for the aver-- age lawmaker to understand De-- nending on his politics, he votes for the majority or minority: committee report and lets it go at that Now, congress' few experts on auestions like taxation and expend-- 'tures, the tariff, foreign relations. the army and navy. the merchant marine--questions that call for deep study and hard. grinding work--es-- pecially the highly important bu not immediately thrilling question of zsovernment finance -- are kept tco busy with their various! specialties dunk." The lawmaker who concentrates on The ~1egislatures who 'come --~th> ~earest to qualifving for recognitior hv <the . American (people at Jlarge for the big things thevy do in Wash in@ston, quite commonly are yitterls ernwled about at home as nesiectf» «lse "Oh ves; our congressman's a creat credit to us." said the spokes man of a visiting delegation from out in the sticks, in Washington the ather day "Chairman of the com-- mittee on so--and--so!" he continued <sourlg. "Advises : the' pres.dent! Helps to shape our national desti-- nies! ; Neye --_'"In the meantime the 'steenth dis-- trict's virtually unrepresented. What we want is a new postoffice at Po-- The fuller his head is of nationa! *fairs, the less room he has left in 't Aor the -- relatively -- unimportant 'n--«iness of his individual bailiwick t They may be doing wonders for the country, but their constituencie: ire ant to be chafing, at home Indeed. he generally isn't In the rarure of things. he can't be nave much time for-- anythinz Embracing -- / seven institutions, three of which are penal, one refor-- matory and three corrective, show-- ing a total of~3,373 received during the fiscal year of 1926, the average average age of the 37 inmates re-- ceived during 1926 is 27,50 years or practically six months below that shown for 1925. x y tss age of the inmates increased ap-- proximately six. months -- over the previous year an'd approximately one year over the average as\shown for 1924. For the year 1926 the average age is given as 25.00 years, as compared to 24.12 years in 1924 and 24.62 years in 1925. -- > : % . Wide Range Is Covered _' A/mon&:bb'ws inmates recéived during year a range of 75 years is shown. At the St. Charles School for Boys seventeen inmates were re-- ceived during the past year who were but ten years of age. At the same institution twenty--nine were Record of Penal Institutions A -- corresponding difference is shown in the records of these com-- mitted to the penal institutions. In-- stead of a higher average age, a lower is shown in comparison to previous years. ner aiikke's. f received at eleven years of -- age, while one girl of 'eleven years was received at (the: State Training School for Girls at Geneva. Ages of the girls -- received -- at Geneva range from 11 to 18 years. Among these the danger period is is 16 to 17 years, with 136 of the 254 committed registering for those years. The average age is 15.08 years. -- en in enb y uc e t Inmates |received 'at the State Farm at Vandalia range in years from 16 to 70. Eight boys only 16 years of age were received in :1926. One man of 70 years was committgch The average a&e of all intmates t ceived during the fiscal year is 3238 years. * mss Among the 589 inmates: received at Pontiac during the year an aver-- aeg age of 19.12 years is shown. This is one--tenth of a year higher than shown among the commitments of 1925 -- At the Southern Illinois Peniten-- tiary the average age of 582 inmates received in 1926 is 30.55 years, or one year below that of 1925. . In ages of boys teceived at St. Charles range from 10 to 17 ({_ears_. with 254 of the 507 received during the year giving the: ages of 15 and 16 years. . The average age is 14.15 years. -------- 2: iC Among the 707 inmates received at Joliet during the year the average age is 20.66 years, or three--tenths of a year below the average for 1925; While at the Woman's Prison the JUYVENILE CRIME Sprirtgfield, II1.--Proof the pres-- ent generation is not going to the eternal bow--wows at a more rapid pace than in past years is offered in the survey of the Department: of Fthblic Welfare. This shows a de-- crease in juvenile crime, and a cor-- responding increase in the average age of inmates.received at the penal, reformatory and corrective institu-- tions of the state. *' A 'permanent summer camp in! Michigan, near Interlochen, has beenf arranged for the National High School Orchestra, composed of about . 300 high--school students from all: parts of the United States who havel beer. selected by their communities as musicians of unusual ability. Any'! high 'school may nominate a candi-! date for the camp upon payment by the school or other organization of a { scholarship of $300 to meet expense of the eight weeks in camp. . | als who know he's doing it. ans when he's done it spread 'ne tid: inos 'rcund among their friends. When his home folks call on --= congressinan who's All taken up with in affairs of the nation, they are "ikely to find him snowed under with some committee . meeting ~anc -- go back to his district to report tha* he's given 'em the high hat. The;average age of all male in-- mates received at penal, reforma-- tory and corrective institutions in Illinois during the year is approxi-- mately six months above that of 1925, or 25.89 years. Among. the female inmates the average age is 1662 years, or a combined average age of 25.09 years. ' The site selected is in the heart of the northern Michigan summer re-- sort district. It is centrally located, easily accessible by rail and public highways. 'The tract comprises 350 acres, and includes a natural depres-- sion which will be developed into an The next thing you know. that cangressman turns up missing the morning after a primary or an elec-- tion -- and -- we wonder why -- he scemed to be such a useful man't -- HOME FOR NATIONAL HIGH SCHOOL ORCHESTRA amphitheater, seating more than 20,-- It. doesn't make him promineiit but it makes him solid -- -- "; ersonal. service" --is the cha; who cleans up on election day., f . He runs errands all the . »me Fhat lie does, he does for individu-- THE LAKE COUNTY REGISTER, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1928 sSHOWS DECREASE persons. Here orchestra and l rts and other entertainments iwill be given, and the small charge fcr admissin will help meet ex-- penses of the camp. Separate camps are provided for girls and boys, and co&ages to be built will accommo-- date 10 players each and 'a coun-- selor.. | Mr. Joseph E. Maddy, super-- visor:of music in the schocls of Ann Arbot, is the originator of the idea, and is president of the newly formed National High School Orchestra As-- sociation, organized to establish and conduct the camp. * < # The orchestra was first brought together in 1926, when a concert of 280 picked players from 25 States was the outstanding feature of the convention -- of -- Music _ Supervisors National . Conference, held--in De-- troit. <It was assembled again at Dallas, Tex., last March, when 268 players. from 89 States . furnished music -- for: the: meeting of. the de-- partment of superintendence of the Kationa! Education Association. Springfield, II.--Search of pioneer records show four offenses for which the death sentence was prescribed, as campared to but one under the present criminal code of Illinois. These were murder, treason, arson and bigamy, with murder alone car-- rying a death penalty at present. The pillory: and -- whipping. -- post were the means of punishment most often resorted to.-- Violators of the law who were <sentenced --to the stocks ~were ~usually required to stand for three hours in a ridiculous posture. If sentenced to the whip-- ping post this punishment was gub- lic and twenty lashes on the bare back was the rule. ; Small Fines Imposed _ Although small fines were impos-- ed in the territorial days, the mone-- tary value compared favorably with heavier fines of the present day. The 1800 dollar was ample compensation for a @dav's work of fourteen hours. Perjury was regarded as & serious offense.: Upon conviction the-- liar was sentenced to a combined punish-- ment of the pillory, whipping, and to pay a fine. en ex. * _ Although across the river in Kea-- tucky gentlemen met on the field of honor and settled matters of per-- sonal honor with muzzle--loading hcw' Iilinois this method of -- /mottling disagreements . was frowned upon and he who killed in mss e FOR 4 OFFENSES | "Home study has Obroken de«n the ks *' .. mmmmmmmem > » _' +ayth that age: is a~ deterrent to Pillory and Whipping> Post Oftcni?»'«rnine There are thousants' of 'Res.orte'd' to in Pioneer Days . ® | tases on the records 5f tbe nation's in Crime Punishment. _ ; Fome study schools of men snccess-- x io o. s e fully: takins in the practice ci. law Springfield, II.--Search of pxor_xgq_r!',fl» studving bustsess p-ndministnt'on Larceny was punishable by a fine and whipping with restitution to the value of the stolen property, fre-- quently double the amount. _ . -- -- Legislators were sent to the gen--| eral assemblies with clean hands in | the early days of statehood. . The candidate who made bold to treat "with meat or drink," or: whose agents used this method in gaining support for their candidates, was in-- : eliyible to a seat for two years, al-- thouf'i such _ deprivation _ of privileges was to cast no stigma on | later campaigns. : l DEATH PENALTY Fast driviig on the public high-- ways was regarded -- as -- a -- menace meny years before the nfpearauce of: the first automobilé. Old Dobbin was regarded as a sedate and seri-- ous animal, given only to: walking while in the public highway. His owner was liable to a fine if convict-- ed of gialloping a horse on the public a duel was charged "~with murder, and 'his second was equally guilty. Sending or~ accepting a challenge was punished by depriving either person of the right to hold office. Strict observance of the Sabbath day was reqhired, with fines oi from 50 cents to $2.00 for those guilty of unseemly conduct. _ e Although hard liquor was the rule in _pioneer days and the bootlegger was . unknown, 'drunkenness was not ecnsidered (}Iuite proper and the of-- fender was fined "five dimes" for the first offense and for each subsequent offense this punishment was double. Failure to pay the fine brought pun-- ishment in the stocks. Correcting an item recently -- ap-- pearing in this column givin« 23 de-- grees below zero as the officially re-- corded minimum temperature in Illi-- nois, -- a Pceoria correspondent says the weather bureau recorded 26 be-- low zero there in Februaryv. 1995 CROSS EYES C. H. ARNOLD, Opt. D. Are Successfully Straightened by the "Arnold Method" A Child is Never Too Young To Start Improving Its Eyes For Consultation Phone 3445 wo/ 9y Nat'l MATRIMCNY IS BIG INCENTIVE "Biggest percentage of the men 'aking home study courses in Amer-- wca' are married," the survey sta'tes "Assumption of tamily responsibilities imcreases the need of greater earning nower. --In the United States there are 1,500.000 persons 'aking '*.ome study courses with the . object-- ol uuvalifyinge for better paying posi-- tions 'The average age-- of "}rese «tudents is 26 "Fears. CHICAGO, Jan. 5.--Far from pbe-- ing a ball and chain shackling am-- bition, matrimony is a powerfu' in-- ceniive for the average worker to i'mprove his circumstances, it is shown in a survey of the National H'ame Study Council, made public by Dr. John S. Noffsinger, director. Announcement of maturitiee which have been suggested in regard to the proposed $1,029.000'county hard road bond issue which it is expected will be recommended to the board of sup-- ervisors by the road and bridge and finance committees was made today by H. C. Speer & Sons Company of Chicago. Members of the two com-- mittees have indicated they favor maturities supggested. __ _ : The firm of C. C. Speer & Son: Company has suggested the followinr maturities: * £49.000 August 15, 1933. $51,000 August 15, 1934. $53.000 August 15. 1935. ~ £56.000 August 15, 1936. ~~$59.00)} August 15. 1937. $62000 August 15. 1938. . $64.000 August 15, 1939. -- ¢ $68.000 August 15. 1940. . $72000 August 15. 1941. > $74.000 August 15. 1942. $76,000 fiugust 15, 1943. $81,000 August 15. 1944. $85.000 August 15. 1945 $88.000 August 15. 1946. $91,000 August 15, 1947. ; 'The county board at the last meet-- ing mne';!( a resolution providing f 'holding an election on the bond issue proposition providing the Su-- preme court upholds the gasoline tax The measure provides that the honey received yearly by the county from the state gasoline tax be used to pay off the read beonds. * or studving bustsess administrat'on engineering. _ salesmanship, hotel management, accountancy. and senresof other subjects 'after the halif century mark." -- / f The survey showed that 34 per rant of the men and women taking h +me study courses came from towns of 2506 or undér, 23 per cent lived n towns of from 2.500. to 25000 16 ner cent resided in cities from 25 -- fh0. to 100.000. and 266 per cent »--ame from citiese of -- over 160,000 vopulation -- Approximately ~60 per cert of the total enrollment of bome study students are married A --course of study in character education, published recently by the Nebraska State Department of Edu-- NEBRASKA LAW REQUIRES CHARACTER EDUVCATION LIST YOUR FARMS The Car Looks Just Fine after we have given it a thor-- sugh wash and polish. The sost of this worth while ser-- vice is very little. We use the pressure wash J. A. Jadrich and Frank Jeffers Suite 203--1704 Sheri-- dan Road, North Chicago, Illinois. PHONES: 1766 Ree Motor Co. Phone No. 8 Libertyville SALE OR TRADE 2574 say cation, was introduced this fall in schools of the State. This is in con-- formity with an act passed in the 1927 session of the legislature, re-- quiring that beginning this year special emphasis be given in schools to morality, courtesy, obedience to law, re:sgect. for the flag of the United States, the constitutions of the United States and the State of Nebraska, -- and other . attributes which tend to promote upright citi-- zenship. ~Separate outlines are pro-- vided for the nursery school and kindergarten, primary grades, inter-- mediate grades, and junior and sen-- ior high school. j g8.. As time for preparation of the course was limited, the present text is considered tentative, and it is ex-- pected that constructive criticism by teachers and citizens will assist in the development of. a course that will enable the schools to accomplish all that they can be fairly expected to achieve in character education.-- School Life. A ten--page booklet showing new styles in shoes was recently trans-- mitted from the Atlantic to the Pa-- cific Coast. The telephoto process was utilized to transihit pictures of each page of the booklet over the transcontinental telephone wires. By this means it was possible to place SHOE STYLES CROSS COUNTRY--BY TELEPHOTO SAY '"*BAYER ASPIRIN'" and INSIST! Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds _ Headache _ Neuritis Lumbago Pain Neuralgia Toothache _ Rheumatism e coill * Mepioy \< AspID1 Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of | DOEs NOT AFFECT THE HEART | Even daintiest apparel safely washed at the Laundry The Forward Look * l'OMORROW'S telephone requirements must be foreseen today: the service of the future must be provided for 4 today; the service of the future must be provided for in the pre€ent. €"* In the America of tomorrow new industries will develop, trade will incrcase, residential sections will replace the vacant areas of today. There must be new tclephone buildings and switchboards; millions of miles of new wire and cable; yet a larger army of men and women to build and erer--t> the ever i:masini facidities; more and more trained executives 10 manage and direct. It costs about $385,000,000 a year to keep zhead of America's demand for \.n;kfi?hone service. If this vast sum is to be spent wisely and efhiciently, future demands must be forecast with as much precision as is humanly possible so that materials, money, manpower will not be{nki\ngvhel the need comes. Only through the forward look is the tele-- phone kept tcadytomectthcm:}ingdan&ndsd:gxwin' nation. ER S¥ P ASPIRIN & _ One Policy -- One System + U Mike Behm Resident Mgr. DAIN'I'Ydfinpdnddbovsbdonly clean in every pore and fibre. Established 1899 Reliable Laundry & Dry Cleaning Co. Highland Park, l"-_ T y esn l ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY which contains proven directions. Handi'*"layor" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100--Druggists. before the retail shoe dealers of the Far West detailed information as to forthcoming patterns and designs in stylish footwear only a few hours after the booklet was handed in at the telefhone office on the Atlantic During the first ten months of 1927, interest earned on state funds of Illimois totaled $827,955.76. --Stop Coughs Quickly--healing, "I was bothered with a hard per-- sistent cough, but found no other remedy so good and s quidddy re-- liéving as Foley's Honey and Tar Compound," says E. Bogaess, Pom-- ona, Calif. Coughs and throat irri-- tations, hard bronchial coughs, fl- ering "flu' coughs, almost instantly s:?maed. It combines the curative influenc» of pure pine .a> and the mollifying demuleent action of fresh clear heney with other healing in-- gredients. A boon to thos» who sgf-- er from troublesome night 00\\?'. Ask for Foley's Money and Tar Compound.--Adv.-- * 912 N. Charges FRED GRABBE Auctioneer -- Real Estate t only "Bayer" Libertyville Telephone 290 PAGE THREE Phone 1798 1 a oJ