____W.F. Franzen, Jr. _ LUMBER, COAL, BUILDING MATERIAL --building material is the next m to consider. Lumber ' a big part of the house, s should be selected with abor on poor material. Let lumber, and you will be re: ble cost. fy, °CC -- ~@ capand IL c fie pmspered.] bond dn l ns the profits from tteg | ;m, nneélley Corporation and R. R. Donnelley & Sons, gave him more than enougni pay in full all the creditors of the | Q brokerage company. But Airm's receive; --dollar. By th: meliey was not W{en he i prisus Pss f to exp h & few venr t. b J_ ce _ "~~~~ cFm®m. wag culk tinued to April 12. _ . _ J _ In the estate of John Irving, Antioch, hearing on the final report was continued to April 16. Thoncandreportandweoum was approved in the estate of Edmund Russell -- Dawson, minor, Lake Porm' The guardian was authorized to in-- vout Frmis aicaring on Kutchera in s1eiu. iil¢ OOnG was set at $4.500 Proof of heirship was taken. -- in the estate of ° May Goodwin Mitchell, Waukegan, proof of heir-- ship of Alice E. Mitchell was ad-- mitted in evidence as supplemental proof of heirship. s The inventory and appraisement bill was approved in the estate of Samuel C. Litwiler, Round Lake. The administrator in the" estate of rene J. Grimoldby, Round _ Lake ras authorized to transfer stock stocks and securities. Hearing in the final report in the u.hclkminecnrhtemen. Lake Porest, was continued to April 3. In the estate of Frederick C. Schaefer, minor, Lake Forest, the final report of Ruth Schaefer was approved. Letters of guardianship 'u!_bmd'tothel.akel'brestmt ond was set at $2,000. Letters Issued d:flwapemertfm ( hlang estate * . Highland Park, were issued to Egbert H. Spen-- cer. The bond was set at $200,000. Proof of heirship was taken. The tfinhtr!tam_snflwnzedtosen Savings bank * LIBERTYVILLE, was established in the fary Scott, North Chicago. mthechhno:Mm n the estate of -- William , Highland Park, was con-- I$ PROBATED managed by Mr. og'rtuers failsd Settlement vas made by the 27 cents on the to Edith J. Oster-- estate of Charles hen the plans are author-- Forest, rk | 1 enarThacrit@s4a t *!1 Libertyville Shoe and care. Don't waste good a reliable yard furnish sure of good quality at . In a certain city, according to Mrs. Hansoh, the school board forbids the teachers, both men and women to smoke. Whether or not a smokeless .. _Anere_are --several=districts> where teachers must be in bed by 8 p. m. In numerous districts the --schoo! boards make the teachers sign con-- tracts before accepting them, stating they will wear their skirts or smocks just so many incHes from the floor Smoking Banned In a certain city, according to Mrs. Hansoh, the school board forbids the feem on ouloe e w e o uo nE 0 9 L OK NnA avecial i seriais ic tiris mt Ginwas Ausi "It is hard to realize that a school, board in a suburb just outside ot |} Chicago insists they will not keep a | teacher who is not in bed every night h7 i0 p. m. This means she cannot go to Chicago. a few miles away, for theatrical entertainment or evening lectures, while she is teaching . Also that she cannot have dinner in the,} city, because she would not be able: to get a train home in time to put out the lights by 10 p. m. ' I "Women -- who _ are intelligent enough to pass examinations en-- titling, them to teach children be-- lieve they are wise enough to deter-- mine the length of their hair and skirts, how much sleep they should have. and whether or not their ga-- loshes should be fastened," Mrs. Florence Curtis Hanson. secretary and. treasurer of the federation, says. tion, will preside her dress, have so roused the Amer-- jlcan Federation of Teachers that they will make an issue of it. with plans to launch a drastic campaign to abolish such rules, at the national convention to be-- held during June, in Chicago. Mary C. Barker, of At-- lanta, Ga.. president of the federa-- teachers' contracts by individual school boards, with a view to regu-- lating the _teacher's mode of life and "Don't smoke cigarettes!" No. ma'am, these are not "blue laws" -- intended for the boarding school miss, but for the "grown--up" schcol ma'arm in various sections of the country. vcur ankles!" CHICAGO,--NL., April 4 tlap your galoshes!" "Don't stay up after 8 p. "Don't bob your hair!t" Charles Jordan Libertyville, HIL. TEACHERS HIT ~ AT BLUE LAWs$ _ _ Supervision of the health of children from birth to 5 years of age, as well as during the school Eeriod 5 to 14 years, has been rought about in Middlesborough, a manufacturing and seaport town in Yorkshire, England, through coop-- eration of the education committee and the child welfare committee. | Kaiser Building Peters' Good--Wear Tbeae,_ and ukerfla:s"wr-i-t-t;x; into T P Sm e Sm y °C ATCC OHHL Y the principal due, but am a fieam sum in interest. It would apt enough to say that here Dio nes might make an end of his classic quest. But it seems more worth ' while to believe that the old--fashion-- ed conscience is not so rare that it needs to be featured as news.--Na-- ' tion's Business Magazine. of twenty--two years' standing was purely a moral one, that he did not rest until the finding of every one of the original creditors, or his heirs or assigns, and that he rdd not only the D!'incin.l 7 ) ) TOrend gninfrendencreA of [ 0 o0 e S eorecuo? CCAt -- U mind in contemplating the evidence of this man's hixh-mgtdedness. No one is likely to miss the significance of his example. For the evidence is tl'mt his obligation toward creditors First Class Shoe --for he paid not but also the ints ip, [ ..\ _ JU0fress to another until they were located. This search re-- quired months of investigation and correspondence. When he had the needevro information, he m#iled out checksl amounting in all to $645.000 ie paid not only the principal, so _ the interest that had ac-- sinee the failure. ood many comments come to n contemplating the evidence man's hlth.mdodnesa. No your skirts above gazine. the water is frozen the geensusteasniairees prey on the --slippery the health of|P2ige's first thought wa th to 5 years of| h2G been chased by luring the school| Cli08e search did not . years, has been signs. Unless excited. Middlesborough, a|R&YE &" instinet for sa | seaDOrt tawn ;,, [mMade a mistake and n: the significance ----*"Don't $645,000 / irter ne was admitted to the that place, and after two ve NSE Ructoain®its is tfi iss h c 4 1 is in Mexico on a legal and diplo-- lmatic mission for the government. | Mr. Strawn's life story is distinc-- tively an American epic. Born near | Ottawa, IIl., slightly more than sixty-- one years ago, he received the rudi-- ments of education in the high school there and was graduated at the age of twenty--one: Four yearsl later he was artmittas ~. _1 _~, 7PA be _ Silas Hardy Strawn. of Chicago. one of the leading members of the nation's bar. This announcement® is made after long distance correspond-- ence to avoid a conflict in engage-- ments. At the moment Mr. Strawn e ©hke We is pacl c & ® Lake Forest be Silas Ha Dill, named for Dr. Abraham (Lef-- lkowit-z. vice president of the federa -- lt.lon. and chairman of the legislative committee of the New York Federa-- tion of Labor, who was recently ap-- pointed head of the department of history of New York city, has to do with the filling of teachers' positions on merit only. STRAWN IS LAKE FOREST SPEAKER bill, named kowitz. vice Melptetcinliii ind --inds ind ME ce cce 1 cA remains that under such --cireum-- stances a man like Lorado Taft could not teach sculptoring if 'he should want to, Paderewski couldn't : teach music. Edison couldn't. instruct -- in science. and Einstein. couldn't . teach the theory of relativity. es as An effort wii aiso be --made at the convention to get: bills -- introduced into legislatures throughout the country like the Lefkowitz bill now being introduced in New ¥York -- Thi< existence might EIT «00 S Comine . Te NEltke signs. Unless excited, deer usually have an instinct for safety. This one made a mistake and paid for it with its life." s s Fepain t Sglin Srle d nds Aaniringst NCc +; wl instinctively make for water, and if the water is frozen they become easy prey on the ~slippery ice. Ranger Paige's first thought was that the deer had been chased by coyotes but a close®search did not disclose nmnvata raige returned several hours ,u'e;: ward with a rifle, but the deer was ;!ud and the ravens were enjoying a east. «"When -- pursued by coyotes, deer Te S L0 Ge o Core 9 vemqeis YE LNG Unlt' o CIER PARK, Mont.--Su . Eq. |ed States to the special conferenc kix? I&tA Glacier National Park ?etm at Peking on Chinese customs tar. a tragedy of the wilds was observed |iffs and as 'American member -- o by Park --Ranger "Tiny" Paige while| the Chinese Extraterritorialty, com-- patrolling the shores of Lake McDon-- mission. Mr Strawn is not a colleve rald. Through swirling snow the nng-gf graduate. er noticed a number of ravens clrclingél It is of note that last year's com-- around a spot about 300 yards from mencement speaker at the college. shore, utth-'i:eul;brcteg'yld not i;:e flr;#, Dr.-- John Timothy' Stone, has just make ou their ' accepted the presidency of McCor-- Finally," says Supt. Eakin, "the snow | mickp'rheologlcal Seminary. letbup suficient}y"!or the ranger to ; Reuae T commencement ~ speaker still "informcft'(;;n call Liber ty U ille 1 04 U Ideal sites for "coiint_ry homes; ample room for lawn and garden. Low taxes, no assessments. Drive in and see what others have done in this : subdivision. -- -- . _ f Pick out your homesite and make small down A payment, balance at f UPON TRAGEDY Spring Opening Sale g1it not be beétter for Hanson argues, the fact t l.l_x_)de!'_ such --cireum-- t instruct -- in [ 5)2 B Oy 48. by its alias of ""Popol-- couldn't instruct in 'etta di Milano." By all means let nstein. couldn't . teach our menus be exposed.to. the uplift relativity. --._... [ of the higher learning. Oxford gave i/'aiso be made at theim"mll'& and <a manner to the get -- bills -- introduced | world.. And it was Cambridge that es _ throughout the (contributed science and a sausage.-- e Lefkowitz bill now l Nations Business Magazine. : . ud PCs o SRRCasi e e uin onl ineteraals LUUCF Sunset Acres 416 Sma'er Al on June 12 will April 2nd to April 7th One-- Mile --Office on grounds open 8 a York : This e bar in years of choice three quarter acre tracts ne e Ne We en tetireies ho &4 /44 l an" | By the rating of C. L. Schweitzer is one' oty Chicago, "thousands don't know t --with ' but what it's hors 'de combat. Some-- times it is." -- --------] : All this is bad enough for the un-- S I educated palate. And yet, all is mot 0t | darkness. The--very fact that ham-- : fact l burger has names in seventeen lan-- CUT-- | ruages' points to the bright hope could , that some day every one will know hould | it as well by its name "a la Duke of teach | Marlboro" as by its alias of "Popol-- t In I| aktn B METL.: .' "pyelc o e T $10 per month | Libertyvillé-:i I Building and | Loan As'sn. / t ;' _ Whatever the public may think of | >| the American menus, a meeting of | >| organized chefs arld caterers in Chi--| 1/ cago has given special interest and | r'convincing authortiy to the proposal | > to uplift our dishes. Even soups are | ) to be standardized. It-- is the con-" tention of the cooks that we have shown no national ingenuity forj making culinary conquests. "In the | " past century," uid,lflred Schmidt of | Louisville, "all America has produc-- | led is chop suey, hamburger --steak, | and hot dog--and nobody knows' , what's in them." And denser is thej {i'gnor:nce about a hors d'oguver. |! t e o kh 1 e l s FCET practice locally he went to Chicago, j CONTEST $ _ where he has achieved his dhflnc-'SCHOOL STIM tion. Since 1918 he has been senior -- member o%€ the firm' of Winston, | -- Debating cont r Strawn & Shaw. He has been + on popular of the : several previous missions for the | interhigh--school 'govemment. as delegate of the Unit-- | by the Universit -- |ed States to the special conference | university exten s|at Peking on Chinese customs tar. | the school --year djiffs,. and as 'American member of | schools participa e|the Chinese Extraterritoflam; com-- | 223 entered for -- mission. . Mr. Strawn is not a colleve 'mlmber of high-- --]graduate. n 16 > anintsaRl c Rl oo Telephone 406 for particulars Is the average paid by these guociatiom throughout the tate, Series number 4 will be open on April 1st to new members, We urge you to take advant-- age of this ideal way to ac-- cumulate funds for future Invites you to member of their 1% Interest North of Libertyville on Route 21 UPLIFTING: OUR MENUs tR -- of of competing schools, 129. In base--/ ball 73. schools competed, in football | 38, in dramatics 45, and in mathe-! matics 36. . Language contests at-- of F tha« 1a _ 17. ,/~ Ne AAVBE | UCpPoL l popular of the 16 varieties of S'tate' standa interhigh--school contests sponsored | poster, by the University of North Carolina,' magaz university extension division, during | the school year 1926--27. 'Of 343 _ A 8. schools participating in the contests, | aside 223 entered for debates. The total ' of Los number of high--school entries in the | ren cl 16 contests was . 720. Basketball| ground b:-ought out the next largest number | ground _ JOHN G. BORST armniiyw'}1}}, PLrIWEEN HIGH SCHOOL STIMULATE INTEREST . m. to 8 p. m. Reliable Laundry & Dry _ Cleaning Co. HIGHLAND PARK, ILL., Libertyville 290 j for satisfactory 5 --_--_ Laundry and. Dry -- Debating contests proved the COAL, FEED, SAND, GRAVEL, CEMENT, CIN ; f DERS, ETC. 42-- Office and yard at C. M. & St. P. Tracks _ *~ . RONDOUT, ILLInoiIs 4 all Mike Behm The LAUNDRY does it best! Phone Libertyville 679-M-' Established in 1899 Cleaning Service most aside 1lor use of Chinese children of Los Angeles, Parents and child-- ren cleared the lot, and the play-- ground department installed . play-- ground equipment, including a swim-- ming pool: The children attend Bublic schools during the day, and in the evening, receive instruction in Chinese language schools. w4 poster, typewriting, newspaper. mag'az'ine work. & W!P pefs tracted 52 schools for contests | in French, 33 in Latin, and 4 in Span-- ish. Other contests promoted by the department were track meets, tennis, standard physical ability tests; and --acre playground has been set Edward Conrad If I am nominated and elected, the surviving relatives and friends of those unfortunate ones who meet death through an accident or in some temporarily unknown manner will be assured 'that jurors will be chosen who .will make -- -- thorough and searching inquiries as to the cause of death, and they will be given every o {JGi"u'dfli-by to render impartial verdicts, and maé: 1 such recommendations, when necessary, as the 1 evidence in each case justifies, years, 1 am fully equ necessary to cafry on now seek-- Dear Friend: An old--timer is a fellow who m' We've remember at the time the murderer| most wo is brought to trial just when the,v.m, i murder was committed. their ail CORONER thi aving served as Deputy Coroner Of Lake REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE . In the Day's Work ILLINOIS BELL TEI;EPHONE COMPANYy fully equipped ;Viéli--izl-xe of Lake County pped with the knowledge the duties of the office I Coroner for many their ailments ve a sneaking suspicion Chat women wouldn't care to be in-- if they couldn't talk @out -- _ Universal Service