statements to the contrary, the war is not over, and will not be over, while there are still living those who have suffered of it. True, enmities are forgotten and gone, and Peace reigns, but the greatest responsi-- bility of war, the task of caring fo: the members of The American Le-- gion and Au'xiliary wear the Poppy on Memorial Day, May 30, as well as on Poppy Day, May 26. . Poppy Day _ The war is not over! Despite all seray evening. _Shall we not continue to hold' high the Torch of Service to Those i Who Have suffered ? Every eent} centributed to the P Day Fund ism'okeepthe'*hwithonr honored deai--to brighten the lives and lighten the load, for their loved ones and for their comrades. __Then let us remember: By buy-- ing a Poppy we show ur desire to :dfi;n fl;e great work of Rehabili-- n; by wearing the Poppy on or _ those w lie in Flanders Fields. . ©The Memorial Day Committee re-- quests that everyone, and especially The Deerfield Grammar school will close for summer vacation Fri-- day, May 25. Commencement exer-- cises will be heid in St. Paul's Evangelical church Friday eve-- ning. There are thirty--six gradu-- ates. Mesdames Minniec Whitcomb, Mar-- caret Whitcomb, Ed Long, Jose-- phine Toll and Ada Juhrend attend-- ed a meeting or the North Chicago R. N. A. last Monday evening. Miss Miriam Stryker completed her course at St. Luke's Hospital and graduated as a nurse last Wed-- nesday _ Mr. and Mrs. Henry Peterson, of Hazel Ave., had as their guests on sunday, Mr. and Mrs. E. Diebert, Mr. and Mrs. George Regner, of Chicagoa :. =-- >:-- Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Clavey of Second Street entertained a num-- ber of friends at their home on Saturday evening. Mrs. R. Greenslade and son, Bob-- by, of riighland Park, spent the week end at the B. H. Kress home. A group of O. E. S. members from Deerfield visited the Campbell V. E. 8. Chapter in Highland rark Wednesday evening. -- =-- _ : 28 and members of local R. N. A. Twenty--one members of Deer-- field R. N. A. visited the Liberty-- The Royal Neighbor . Camp of North Chicago will observe past or-- acle night on Monday evening, May Mr. and Mrs. Visosky have moved from one of the Stryker apart-- ments on Waukegan lkoad to the house on Hazel Ave., recently va-- cated by the George Colby family. An interesting exhibit was held in the Wiimot school Friday atternoon. viie K.N.A. camp last Tuesday eve-- be in blossom then. The next regular meeting of the club will be held June 20 at the home of Mrs. Leslie Brand with Mrs. J. W. Strong as assistant hos-- The subject for the afternoon was the growin % of Dahlias which was presented by Miss Winifred T oee Yeep (Rersuglly ant ber paser ve y r paper was bo& interesting and _hel;?\l:le. The members of the club were delighted to accept an invitation from Mrs. Martin Insull for Wed-- nesday afternoon, May 23. Mrs. In-- sull has beautiful lilacs which will The meeting adjourned for a so-- cial hour with refreshments. held in August. f Two new members were umnm ously elected to membership in clnglrs. Lewis Ashman and Mrs. C Scribner. Burroughs with Mrs. Hugh Pater-- son as assistant hostess. 2 During the business meeting plans for the garden market were discussed. The market will be held at the school Saturday, May twenty-- sixth. Plans also were ~discussed for the flower show which will be The regular meeting of the Gar-- den club was held on Wednesday, May 16 at the home of Mrs. Frank Summer school _ at Deerfield-- Shields this year begins Monday, June 18 and covers a period of six "sezf hich be tak jects which ma en in-- clude mathematics, flu Mills and Mr. Wolters, history, Mr. Slocum, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Clavey are in Rochester, Minn., where Mr. Clavey underwent a slight opera-- Mrs. R. D. Reeds entertained her luncheon bridge club on Tuesday at her new home on Orchard street. Senior examinations at Deerfield Shields high school will be given on Thursday and Friday, May 31 and Mrs. G. Miller, of Hazel Ave., was hostess to her luncheon bridge club on Thursday. The members are ail from Evanston and Chicago. _ u;_: l::ne of Mrs. R. Wh.eStevens, the a rnmgnt of t Highland Park Woman's club will hold a card party. The funds will be used to create a permanent picture fund. A young bold eagle, a species very rare in this section was shot last Monday by Thomas Mooney near his home on Ridge Road. The bird which had been flying over the reighborhood for several days was m to have been seeking or young sheep. ' The specimen has been taken to the Field Museum by Cohn San-- born, of Highland Park, a member of the museum staff, and the plan is to have the contents of its sto-- mach examined to determine what it has been feeding on in this lo-- cality. s Deerfleld students on Deerfield Shields Mfi school honor roll in-- clude first honors, Douglas Hastings and Wallace Reichelt, second honors Olive Frantz and Thayer Batt. we--w--se«--muecmmmmmemmumesmememmem tare for themselves, remains. COn |Poppy Day, The American Legion < Auxiliary Unit No. 788 presents to DEERFm the people of Deerfield an op{ortu- nity to aid in this great tas In Flanders Fields. 'cntmmmsmom ammaenmemns mm enmmmaiinnnmnnt se nc rmmen i mmmmmscmmmens: [ (The augoé of this mg' l'ifenti.- Col. John McCrae, a member of the Be sure to at"h?d h th?l Deerficl.1 First %anadian contingent, died in y prigge g:::::a; )chywésl :::ent:;; France on January 2g'e 1918, after beerfeld sehool house. 4 The car-i}'g::ty)""'s of service on the western den club has arranged for a com-- In Flanders fickis the * prese poppies blow C * mlwbb-e l slesnos tes; B':ztween the crosses, row on row, soilt ler:uyre rt;ng ': g:b!espo:rlxe:n; That mark our place; and in the sky paper bug. The tegt with take but | The larks, still bravely singing, fly a 1ew mfiu&n It is fhrzh:f charge Scarce heard amid the guns below. and he will tell you w r or not' Dead. Short da 'ou need lime and how much. We are the e y« age 3 O'hou" ;f:m«l'{_' &f gm 1, u::'we lg:l?:' felt ga'm, saw -- sunset the home o rs. . Stevens, + art L"Mt of the Highland| Loved and were loved, and now we com. | front.) ten.--club has arranged for a com--| land ;flem M lmb?i:; t:bth:nd tea; getween tll ils. erely & a poon 0. f::l being sure to put it in a clmn;mt mark Be sure to attend the Deerfiel] Garden )g:rket w!nil; w:él; open at 1 m. Saturday, ¥ at th Deerficleé school houss. --Tno" pu e of charge ; »carce ether or notiwe ar flere ll'; at ,We liv Stevens, the gl : Highlandl Loved hold a card lie ind A film library of 10,0090 slides, one of the most extensive in the coun-- try for purely educational use, is maintained by the visual education division of the New York Slate De-- partment of Education. There's supposed to be a use for everything: But there's not a mar-- ried man in Libertyville who can understand the idea of lace on the towels that she saves for company to use. As many as 126 special classes for handicapped children, with an enrollment of 2,800~ pupils, were maintained in public schools of Bal-- timore during the school year 1926-- 27. For mentally sub--normal chil-- dren 71 classes were provided, forl children having speech defects, 19; undernourished, 15; crippled, 12;] hard of hearing, 4: deaf, 3; and for children with cardiac troubles and defective sight, 1 class each was maintained. . When Cy started playing with the Cleveland club he received $75 a month. He was purchased from Can-- ton for $250. other day. His career includes more lthan 500 winning games, starting with the old Cleveland NMational club in 1890. The 500th victory came while pitching for Cleveland against Wash-- ington, July 18, 1910 : ---- The modern baseball hurlers aren't up to the standard of the old school. according to the veteran. The? pitci good games but don't seem to stand the gaff. Cy spent 21 years pitching in the big leagues. Occasionally he woul¢ perform three days in succession while some weeks he pitched every "Just finished making 200 fence posts," said Cy. "I keep pretty busy on the farm and don't hire any help. Do all the work myself. Keeps a man in good shape." -- a tree, and there are only a few wrin-- kles in his face, around his eyes. Laughter and smiles caused these lit-- tle crow's feet, friends say. Cy's real name is Denton T. Youne. He lives on a 160--acre farm at Peoh. in Tuscarawas country. Cy and Gov-- ernor Vic Donahey were raised to-- gether. Although past the 60 mark. the former pitcher is as straight as CLEVELAND, O.. May 19. -- Cy Young, former world--super pitcher and "iron man" of the big leagues, is now a quiet Ohio farmer. CY YOUNCG IS REAL FARMER Tuesday evening the League's bowling season was closed. Henry Weber's team won first prize, El-- mer Schwerman's second, and Louis Knigge's third. Henry Knigge purchased a new Pontiac Sedan. Miss Emma Peters, of Chicago, spent Sunday with her folks here. Next Tuesday evening, May 29th, an ice cream social will be held here. There will be prizes awarded for bowling. -- _ Miss Dorothy 'é;ugt;n:l;:--;flo is employed in Liibertyville, is on the sick list. Thursday evening, May 24th, the Young Peut:rle will hold their reg-- ular monthly social gathering. _ Sunday afternoon, May 20th, Rev. Streufert was installed at the Fairfield Evangelical Lutheran Church. ~--In Flanders fields. Take up our quarrel with the foe; To you from failing hands we throw The torch;: be yours to hold it high If ye break faith with us who die We shall not sleep, though poppies Ore Policy -- ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY BELL SsYSTEM If the person you are he cannot hear you, try as suggested. The rubber mouthpiece on the telephone 'trans-- mitter is designed to concentrate the sound waves when you'speak directly into it. If you merely talk at your telephone, holding the transmitter to one side or several inches away. from your lips, the mouthpiece cannot help you. [( y Rubber contraptions which are sometimes sold by peddlers do not improve transmission. They are more likely to impair it, as the telephone instrument has been developed into its present form after years of painstaking, scientific; stud¥y bV eXDErF ancinel. THE telephone user sometimes wonders why he does not hear the person at the distant telephone clearly. The chances are that the distant party is directing his conversation away from'rather than into the telephone. Talk Into Your Telephone--Not At It In Flanders fields. ihc study by expert cngmeersv are talking with complains that ; try talking into the transmitter "--~ TRADE BODY + Universal roull say he's right who tells you where .Good cleaning's done at prices fair. TAILORING Suits Made to Measure $25.00 * < Free Pressing s JOHN CICHY [ He declared, however, that an in-- Ptemational understanding. upon the tariff would be the most important censideration toward solving inter-- national trade questions. "Decisions made at the International Economic Conference in Geneva last May should also result in such under-- standings," he said in conclusion. M¥ i o 2M S . M SelRaeat sig, has served to make that city Ia commercial center for merchants of many countries. Machinery im-- provements are regularly exhibited, too." | f Peace will be firmly -- established \when nations learn to. understand each other commercially, and in auguration ¢¥,"a trade congress will especially help the unity of nations, replied Dr. Max Grasmann, man-- aging director of the Munich Indus-- trialists, wheqwasked their opinion of what the World's Fair of 1933 could accomplish toward internation-- al harmony. ces You'll say Poeeinel uie s 220 o meee en .A CA den Bergh Margarine Concern, cited the annual Leipsig Trade Fair in Germany. He characterized Leipsig and its Fair as an economic baro-- meter for Europe. "What Leipsig has done for Ger-- many, your Chicago World's Fair, with an International Trade --Con-- gress, should do for the world. New production methods,* new steps _ of industrial gro ss, and new inven-- ti_ons,h exhi itqs:e each year in Leip-- den his . discussion -- of the proposed| York, according 'congr'eczs. ~] State supervisor ' h" a 2 naftiqn is c&ncerned withl PuicnraTnime tm the trade of every other nation and % ; 'the old proverb 'He who will sell ! .\ 17 first TObim must buy' is true of international ' robberies comterce,' he declared. 'The nations | ts of the world would be greatly ben-l' } efited by an 'international trade un-- m derstanding." > t As an example of what a co may accomplish by an 'expos Herr.Schraudt, director of the Inmetrags 2C _ To _ CBP rT -- ynbbt CAE SDHY A Trade Congress of intemation-! European concerns--but .we pro-- al scope to adjust ilroblema of j duce articles of superiority in qual-- commerce should be a high light of: ity and tastefulness. . § the Chicago World's Fair in 1933,! "An International Trade Congress in the opinion of thirty--five Bav-- ' could teach us to produce in a larger arian capitalists now making an ex--| way, and Woms show you how to tensive business survey in Chicago.! achieve finer qualities of manufac-- Chicago's advantageous location| ture. Every country could learn to. and the unusual number of huge, improve and cut the cost of produc--, industries here, seemed to make ajtion." . hx j ; ideep impression 'upon the party,| _ Chicago is ideal as a site for a which is one| of severa} German| World's Fair and an annual trade tours being conducted through this conference, agreed the entire Bav-- country. Beauty of architecture,--| arian Industrial Commission. They | boulevards and park systems are| termed Chicago "a city of the fu--| remarkable as a study, say these| ture." In no other city had they . men. | _ _ jever witnessed such plans for ex-- Dr. Erich Meyer--Gmunden, finan--' pansion, they -- said. h c : f cial editor of the "Der Munchnor; "We shall voluntarily take an in--' Neneston Nachrichten" (The Mun-'.terest in your fair and> shall co-- ich Latest News) stated ; a belief, Operate in every way we can," as-- that an International Trade Con-- sured Dr.--Grasmann and herr Rail--. gress could be realized by appoint--| ing. | ment of a committee by the Inter-- «omm ntminzs { national \ Chamber -- of Commerce,| Hot lunches: at noon are served_ giving each nation a delégate, in in 2,286 schools in the State of New his . discussion of "the > nxnmnnankl W¥ azk ~ 2 m . ge t Nee W PHONE 551 VOCATED an 'ex pxposition, a country ) : The first robins are here, but Chi-- cago alone is able to boast the first --robberies. _ --.---- THE LAKE COUNTY REGISTER, WEDNESDAY, MAY 23. 1928 M 1 | -- We shall voluntarily take an in-- 'Aterest in your fair and shall ~co-- operate in every way we can," as-- {gurgd Dr.:Grasmann and herr Rail-- ing. 7 2rs, according <to a report of the State supervisor of nutrition, h aLF invracsus D).0 13 0 n oq utA < e --~AdC ~OGHCL---- jin 1983 and held annually thereaf--' China there are | ter, would probably baffle imagin--'through which t ; tion. You Americans manufacturé dead pass. Eight 'goods in a way far bigger than any | teen wards eaci, & European concerns--but .we pro-- ment is iriflicted | duce articles of superiority in qual--] Many of these _ 'ity and tastefulness. . 4 'enmargivad L. -- m «+ NO. 680 -- Roth beautiful printed cotton foulard . model in dark blue "An International Trade Congress could teach us to produce in a larger way, and wouls show you how to achieve finer qualities of manufac-- ture. Every country could learn to Herr Hugo Railing, president of CH the Munich Textile Printing Com--! pany, said upon this subject: "Tbe' far--reaching effect of an Interna-- ;ion,adlqg'radc: ('!_or'ljgress to be founded| : In at ho w m o m on n o *4.95 --{" 7.95 in our show window These and many other styles not pictured now on display Brilliantly Styled-;Net;)---Summ Cr to, / , CHINESE EXHIBIT _ ; "The| _ AT FIELDS MUSEUM TUB FROCKS :. _In the first court, the Chinese be-- {lieve, every man and woman must 'appear after death, and if their tale of good and evil works is equally . balanced they are returned to life, according to Dr. Berthold Laufer,. | curator of anthropology at the mu--| |--seum and noted ~Orientalist. M'flle,' ' may become female, female, m e,! hich, poor and poor rich, according | to their--merits. There is a mi'n'oré of. sin in which the wicked again| | behold their crimes on earth. Those | ' condemned ones are then dragg,ed; by devils into the second and suc-- ceeding courts for punishment, some ese purgatories as.depicted in the morality drama, the 'Fen Courts of Purgatory, popular on the 'stage 'in China. For example, many of the puppets representing souls under-- going the most -- horrible tortures have blandly smiling faces. A re-- production of scenes in the ten pur-- gatories drama forms on interesting exhibit at Field Museum of Natural History. f ucad pass. Eight of these have six-- teen wards eaci, and a separate tor-- ment is irflicted in each , ward. Many of these surpass -- anfything conceived in Dante's "In erno." However, a -- certain grotesquély humorour flavor is lent to thes%hin- s1.95 s2.95 s3.95 s4.95 -- $§.95 s7.95 the belief of the Taoists of there are ten purgatories t'h which the shades of the »»vadcioth of un us u. a-i colorings~very $6 a m No. 1031-- model in An Extraordinary Selling . of The Famous "ROTH" a+ . The Best Stove ~ On| the Novth Shoré m perfectly fitted, c;refully tailored frocks exactly as pictured here in the loveliest assortment of colors we've had in a long time. Every material is ab-- solutely guaranteed washable whether of linen, broadcloth, 'batiste, dimity, cotton crepe, printed charmeuse, English prints, or rayons and eyery size is rep-- resented. They are not 'ordinary house-- dresses but cleverly styled frocks in which you will feel perféctly dressed for afternoons at home an marketing. Select your whole ,sun1mers s Tub Dresses in this extraordir ing. You will find quaflity, sty and low priee all features of Just Unpacked .. . Colorful Prints, Rayons, Voiles Broad-- cloths and Linens of every size and variety. _ Upper left y in a mill composed fif two large , stones: they are stretched on a , rack; they are roasted' by being tied --| to a fiery pillar; they are forced to > climb a hill bristling with knives; ,| their 'hearts are scratched, and r | squeezed with pincers: their feet are r chopped off; their sinews are cut , | and their bones pulled out; they are , choked with fire; they are rolled and1 '\ flattened on ice; they are chopped ljin two at the waist; they are gnaw-- RUBIN'S--SECOND + e i o0 O en t on ed, bitten and pecked, at by dogs;] rats, nuge birds and other creatures; { being sent to only . While the great si;is are essen-- tially the same as those usually rec-- ognized as esuch by western civiliza-- """--"$ sollf w oniy one or two, ers to several or all, accordin the enormity and variety of | sins. whole sunimers supply of m h . ---- yA M Ne this exkraordmary sell-- uality, style,; value tures of this sale -- carefully tailored No. 1142--Roth/ upper right model, fashioned in colorful balloon print pat-- § sw . is ind T ngudiation handle attendance cases not recom-- f husbands | mended for actual commitment to an continuallyl institution. The plan has the ap-- ion of liti-- ' proval of judges of the juvenile d getting,court and it has proved so success-- :na warns a\;le that f;we:%than 2 per b:::t of Ifll:f, a cases heard require su uent _l:;}eli nfl:'attention of the judges. To avoid giving court records to children or the imposition of fines upon parents, a special school court is held one a week in Baltimore to 4 000 °CCC PCOA w Iuhd many kinds of wea ; y are boiled in oil, stcwed,p::: wmthyg out like clothes. In the. end all the shades are reborn on earth either as animal or people. they are 1.95 lacerated and pierced with and women who require the larger sizes will be delighted with the extreme smartness. debts. Lindbergh crossed the ocean in one jump; darkest Africa is now a flivver boulevard; the North Pole has been visited--but no one has C PIETIITE °/ T y _ ~ . "~%~ ufce TK the annual instittte of the Univer-- sity of Chicago June 18--20. ~Con-- flicting views on political and econo-- International finance and foreign investments will be the subject of winucked model of very fine broadcloth in Polkae Dot on m m o o us m ns treme Rayon Print of ex-- * No. 765 -- Roth ce t o m c o on up to 48 A8 ---- Roth ©5.95 PAGE THREE