* -- Jevne's aunt, Mrs. Cowles. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Rouse enter-- tained Mr. and Mrs. John Hanson and children of Chicago and Mr. and d:nerh Og.mw Budahl of Evanston, at evening. Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Porteous and children and Mrs. W. D. Porteous drove to mon. Sunday after-- noon and on Mr. and Mrs. Miss Daisy Bakken, of DePere, Wisconsin, is visiting at the home of Miss Edna Rouse for two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bauernsmith and son Raymond were Waukegan visitors Saturday evening. Little Rosemary Engelbrecht ac-- companied her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Engelbrecht of Half Day on an outing at Lake Geneva Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Thalero and son Gus returned home Sunday af-- ter appearing in St. Louis with the Trained Animal Act for a week. PACE TWO Mrs. Louis Hendee entertained a number of friends"at her home -- on Friday afternoon for the benefit of the Ladies' Aid Society. -- on _ Mrs. Fred Monroe, Miss Jessie Knudsog and tl:cf lnormgr'sl ll.'??ihr;w' Bobby Ev orris, ve to Plano m and spent the day with Mrs. Schuning. _ _ _ ~'Mrs. Hoffman and daughter, of Libertyville, spent Monday at the home of Mrs. John Morrison. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Lusk, of Wau-- kegan, called on Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Cook on Sunday. -- ~Yesx Mrs. J. W. Chandler and Joel Chandler were Waukegan visitors Monday. * Mr. and Mrs, Frank Baumgartner returned home Saturday from a week's trip to Niagara Falls. They will make their home in Liberty-- Mrs. M. C. Decker, of Waukegan, and Mrs. Orville Smith, of Liberty-- ville met at the home of Mrs. Or-- pha Harding to plan for the An-- nual Ivanhoe Ho oming which is to be held at Gtg'l:.ake in the near Mr. and Mrs. Myron Wells, Naomi and Juanita Eger spent Sun-- day with Mr. and Mrs. George Cross of Fairfield. ville, spent Friday with Mrs. Louis Mr. and Mrs. Noel and sons, Bud-- dy --and Walter left Saturday to drive to Neilsville, Wis., for a few 'Paul Roder is spending several weeks with his uncle, Will Tonne, Mrs. Charles Parker of Grayslake and Mrs. Will Decker of Liberty-- "hiike Dorolhy Herschberger. -- of Te m ts Sn Hater °*A John Newell and sons, Harry and John Jr., of Gary, Indiana, spent the week end at their home in Mun-- Mr. and Mrs. Ed Peterson and son, of Chicago, were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Volkman William Bostwick, of Chicago, spent the week end with Gene Hen-- Helen Russell spent Monday in Chi-- Miss Zelma Dawson is enjoying a motor trip around Lake Michigan with a party of friends during her }aufionfromherpositioninlake orest. The Annual Sunday school picnic of the First Congregational church will be held at Gages Lake on Wed-- nesday, June 11. Mrs. Thomas Russell and Miss Harry Carsteson, of Chicago, spent Monday at the home of his sister,; In..lohnDictt j flr.andlts.WnZersendrove' to Palatine, Sunday and called on | the latter's sister, Mrs. .Lonis' Schultz. h Mr. and Mrs. Ed:&n Roder and sons Paul and Earl were entertain-- ed at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Herschberger of Long CGirove on Sunday. ---- -- -- .: _ l Rev. anddm C. Arthur Jevne and family to Hinsdale, Sun-- day and called on Mr. and Mrs. rgrv'm:'d Mrs. Wm. {(he:n, of Lib-- are gendmc ir vacation it Superior, Wis. Mr. Keen is the brother of Mrs. Baumgartner of Mundelein. Ralph Rouse returned home Sun-- day after a business trip of sey-- eral days to Colfax, Wis. _ Mr. and Mrs. Ralgh Dunn, of Lake Forest, anf Miss Josephine Baum-- grtnr of Brule, Wisconsin, spent undagatthehomeoftheiraunt, Mrs. Frank Baumgartner. Miss Ruth Decker, of Waukegan, spent Monday with her cousin, Leone Hendee. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bauernsmith and son Raymond and Mr. and Mrs. Morris Chandler and daughter Ruth drove to Union Grove, Wis., Sunday ejoums..-- .' . .. _: fg 2s The Ladies' Aid f-Socicty l}:;le & new consignment o Bug it may be purchased from Mrs. Frank Mitchell, Mrs. Henry Kublank and Mrs. W. D. Porteous. daughter Myrtle, of Dundee, and Mrs. Montgomery --Aand daughter Ruth of Chicago called on Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kane and Miss Genevieve spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Hahnfeldt and family at Arlington Heights. On July 4th, the Ladies' Aid of Fairfield will give a chicken dinner in the hall. They will start serving at five o'clock daylight saving time and will continue until all are serv-- ed. Various articles of fancy work will be on sale. z : "'rrsd.'y' evening, July 6th, the Con-- cordia Mutual Benefit League will meet at the Wm. Buhr home at Lake Zurich. Mr. Carl Schwerman and Miss Lil-- lian Doliman, -- of LaGrange, were united in marriage on Saturday eve-- e es Site." and Mrs. W. Peters and fam-- MUNDELEIN Mr. and Mrs. Fred Meyer PHONE 543--J GILMER ay in Chicago where Illinois has a "magnificent," a "unique" opportunity "for taking the next great forward step in the con-- structive solution of: the crime prob-- lem by rehabilitation of the crim-- inal," says a joint report on paroles of a committee designated by three universities, appearing in the current issue of the Journal of the American Institute of Criminal Law and Crim-- mology. That step, according to the report, is to get politics out of the parole system and courts and es-- pecially cut of the prisons, where, in the case of Joliet, rehabilitation -- of the criminal is balked by illegal, "cruel and unusual" prison discipline, in the opinion of the committce. This committee is the same which was set up at the instance of Hinton G. Clabaugh, chairman of the parole board, and this is the first publica-- tion of its report as a whole since it was tendered to him in January. Personnel of Committee The committee comprises former Judge Andrew A: Bruce, professor of law, Northwestern: Prof. Ernest W. Burgess, sociology, University of Chi-- cago, and Albert J. Harno, dean of the college of law, University of Tili-- nois They were assisted by John Landesco of the criminology insti-- tute. oE WANT POLITIGS OUT OF PAROLE SYSTEM AND ILLINOIS PRI On the subject of prison discipline, Judge Bruce says, "We bel'eve that solitary confinement as n~w imposed at Joliet, or what the prisoner terms 'stringing up,' is improperly inflicted. 'There the practice nas prevailed of compelling recalcitrant men to stand often for twelve hours a day, with intervals of half an hour for meals, with their hands projecting through the bars of the cell securely bound, and in some instances this punish-- ment has been continued as long as CROCER EDITS UNIQUE SHEET BURLINGTON, Wis., July 2.--Sev--| these t en miles southwest of this city in the| receive village of Slades Corners, which has| they w 72 inhabitants, an unusual man is| quired weekly printing a newspaper which | ficials. has obtained a circulation of 400. find re He is Paul J. Sauer, editor of the|borer 1 Slades Corners Mugwump, and he is| eral cc free towadmit that if it wasn't for | positiv the Burlington merchants who place The a preponderance of advertising in his| a foot paper, he would go bankrupt. so far Since he was 15 years old S@Uuer ) able to has been using the rear part of his ;« a p, ;grooerystaeu.prmtshoprorms by the paper. The room is only 8 by 14) in line feet in size, but it is large enough to st hold a small power press, two cases :':fiw of type, stool and paper stock. + nf th Instead of scouring Slades Corners for news, the Mugwump editor has his news come to him. On winter 'eyenlnp about his big soft coal stove jin his store, the villagers gather to swap yarns and recite the gossip of lthe day. All Mr. Sauer must do is sit quietly by and absorb what he Sauer has a sense of numor, as seen on the editorial column of his little four page, 9 by 12--inch paper. Under the name of the paper is the practical, matter--of--fact announce-- ment, that "The Mugwump is always on the safe side." 5 It is often difficult to find news items in the Mugwump and Mr. Sauer has said without so much as a smile, "I have never believed in let-- ting news items crowd out the ads." Before the World war, with its de-- vastating effect on the costs of raw materials forced Sauer to increase the annual price of his paper to 35 cents, the Mugwump would carry the subscription rates as follows: end of --the week the Mugwump pub-- lisher, who has no one to help him, wife and his daughter Ramona (not the one in the song) to tend store while he gets down to the practical job of setting type and printing the four--page paper. "Rate for six months, 15 cents; for one year, 25 cents; no subscription taken for less than one year." Mugwump published has been pre-- served. It is dated Friday, Sept. 16, 1892. Advertising rates allowed the most humble businessman to spread 'ges message to his heart's content. could have a column run the en-- tire year for $7.35. Sauer in this first edition follows the practice hoary with 'radition through continual use by country editors, and slips in advertising lines among the brief news items. Between the two announcements,-- that one should "shovel the snow off of your sidewalk" and "send us n:xs items," the editor commercially pped the request. that "you should smoke the 'Ditch' 'five--cent cigar for sale by Paul J. Sauer." State and federal men will work together guarding Illinois against the European cornborer again this season. O. T. Olsen, superintendent of the plant industry division of the Illinois department of agriculture outlines plans for the cooperative defense against the pest as follows: A staff of twenty--five representa-- tives of the plant industry division, under Olsen's supervision, will leave Springfield Saturday, July 7, for Ohio. Traveling by automobile, they will reach Toledo Monday, and will receive intensive training at the cornborer laboratory operated by the United States department of ag-- rirc'l;ltm. Men who have h:'g':ie:é eral years' exfluhneo in co| this insect will conduct the men on a tour of the infested area, acquaint-- ing them with the nature of the pest arnd the damage it causes. °-- COMBINE AGAINST THE CORN BORER After receiving this special train-- ing, the staff returns to Illinois. Twenty men employed by the United States ° department of agriculture will accompany them, and the com-- bined force will scout the fields along the eastern border of the state. In addition 3&5 forty ?:ledtein- m'vfi 0 cover r-- ritory from Zhicago southward sys-- copy of the first edition of the press time approaches «t the out whether any thirty days. We have no doubt that it would be considered cruel and un-- usual by the Supreme court of Illi-- nois "There is no man living who can stand erect under the conditions de-- scribed, for even ten days without serious injury to his physical condi= tion, to: say nothing of the delateri-- ous effect upon his mind." : Judge Bruce says that solitary con-- finement as authorized in the stat-- utes meant isolation " panied by torture," and that abuse of it must be considered in violation of solitary confinement on the com-- plaint of a guard for n?' greater of-- fense than cutting off "the sleeves of his underwear for comfort in hot weather. | punishment Judge Bruce declared that prisons should be looked upon as educatiOnal institutions, but Mr. Landesco's sur-- vey finds in the state institutions a general lack of intelligent -- instruc-- tion, either vocational or academic. The teachers in the prison schools are usually inmates or guards, with-- out previous teaching experience. vey finds in the Sstalte UCULuIoOnsS -- & ; * * % general lack of _mtelligglnst instruc-- S_Comrrfentm.g on the three decisions tion, either vocational or academic.; i. Mayer, Vice--President of the As-- The teachers in the prison schools sociation, and President of The Au-- out previous teaching experience. that there is a growing tendency on Present--day adult educa}tional meth.: the part--of the court to hold a mo-- ods are as absent fronj' the Joliet ; torist to Stl:lct accountability where schg?l. he says, as are plumbing and damage of injury to a third person toilet facilities. is concerned. "The motorists, as a He pictures the Joliet school as a| whole, will be protected by a strict place of noise and coanmon. where | rule of law which makes every other "lockstep methods" are in use, and motorist responsible for all of his adds that the instructiox: there is de--| wrongful acts," Mr. Mayer declar-- scribed by an intelligent observer as (d, 'farcical." Pontiac fa little bett.er! ie is en tegere rodnerenmennn en noommamies at his hands, but he says a start to-- f * award better things has n made at, MR'S' HOOVER ths southern Illinois penitentiary atl BRAVE WOMAXNX out . previous u:acmnfig'lt €ApCLiCLICC. Present--day adult educational meth-- ods are as absent from the Joliet schg?l' he says, as are fllumbing and toilet facilities. | Menard. of the insects have ar*ived in Ili-- nois or not, there will be--an emer-- gency squad of five 'rained men. This crew of "trouble--shooters" will be detailed to look int' any cases that may be reported suspicious specimens, Amasert cone With the specialized| instruction these trained investigators will have received when they return to Illinois, they will be able to render the re-- quired protection, according to of-- ficials. Any insect specimens they find resembling the European corn-- borer will be submitted to the fed-- eral cornborer control bureau for positivej identification. 2. The cornborer has not yet gained a foothold in the fieléF of Illinois, so far as state officials have been able to 'determine. This investigation is a precaution against any invasion by the pest, and is to be carried on in line with provisions of federal anfi state legislation nti\at has been enacted for the control and eradica-- t of this insect. The expense of this protection is to be borne jointly by the nation and the state of Illinois. The weather makes tired and disgusted at times. ut would it be any better if men instead of the Lord controlled it?----Atchison Globe. Everybody is going to the carni-- val this week in Libertyville, held in Copeland Manor given by the American Legion. © | $ > There was a large attendance of the Vernon Cemetery iety mem-- bership at the meeting in the home of: Mrs. Alfred Stancliff, Sr., last Thursday afternoon many out of town:members atended and had a social time. | ROME, July 2--Three great sea-- pl.:??--the Finnish three motored er and the mnma of Majors Maddalena and Pe: soared over a wide area around the encampment of L:euterant Vigliera Sunday attempt-- ing to find trace of the lost dirigible FORGED BACK BY ELEMENTS "Bashful Mr. Bobbs," is ilhe name of a play to be given at Half Day town hall on Thursday and Friday nights of next week. . | The supply ship,. Citta Di Milang, advised this morning t:got the -- three big planes had depar and then re-- turned to their base at Virgo bay. Italia, but were forced by fog to re-- _ Landing Impossible Other airplane, expeditions--includ-- ing one in which a Finnish plane had intended to niake a landing near the Viglieri encampment--have been can-- celied owing to fog and also owing to advice from Viglieri t*at a --landing now is impossible. f Mr. Landesco notes é&::vhere that _one case a prisoner sent into COPENHACGEN, J*lly 2 -- Long smouldering criticisms of the flight of the dirigible Italia to the Nort: Pole broke today with the apparent disappearance of the fiussian rescue iviitor Babushin. | Peter Freuchen, famous Danish c«-- p.orer, voiced the resentment fels by mmst"fcnndinavian explorers.® when he in an. article in the news-- parer Politician that the Italia never sho 1 have started for the North Pole, because® General Nobile, .ts commander, lacked practical experi-- ence. ® The responsibility of a motorist, where an .injury has been done another, has been jsarified by the terms of three recent court decisions according to the legal department of the American, Motorists' Associa-- tion in co--operation with The Auto-- mobile Club of Illinois. The first, and considered of major importance to the motorists, holds him respon-- sible when he parks his vehicle on a dangerous curve and either di-- rectly or indirectly causes injury to anotlfer. The second held that a motorist was responsible when a wheel became dz}&achpd, sgriking a pedes?s'an. The third decision is to the effect that the driver of an auto-- moboile is liable to a licensee, riding in his car, only for willful injuries. The 'decision involving the ques-- tion of parking on curves was ren-- dered by the Pennsylyania Superior Court which held the defendant--mo-- torist responsible despite the fact that the plaintiff did not stn!;e the COURT DEFINES DRIVERS' LIABILITY HALF DAY THE LAKE COUNTY REGISTER, WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1928 solitary con-- in the stat-- accompanied s abuse of it violation of and unusual SONS ht was no contact between the plain-- tiff's automobile and the parked one, did not relieve the defendant--owner liability In the case where a wheel ; became detached from a moving ve-- | hicle, striking a pedestrian, the Con-- i necticut Supreme Court sustained an | $8,750 verdict of the lower court on teh theory that it was the duty of the motorist to give his automobile such close supervision and inspec-- tion as would prevent such an acci-- dent.. In its verdict the court placed 'the burden of proof on the motorist to prove that the inspection had ! been made of his vehicle, the benefit | of a doubt being given the suing ' plaintiff. : -- +. x ', E2CE E CCE 609 a _ .A New Jersey motorist, sued by _the administrator of a licensee--pas-- senger was held in the third case to be not responsible for the pas-- | senger's death swhere the passenger had been invited by a third party to go for a ride. The driver who was also the owner of the machine had not extended the invitation. . The. New Jersey Supreme Court held that unless the motorist had -- been guilty of willful injury that he could not be held responsible, --in-- asmuch as the passenger that was killed was a "mere licensee." parked car but wrécked his machine in attempting to avoid it. The court held that the mere fact that there The American public is just be-- ginning to learn that there is a Mrs. Herbert Hoover. ' It has known, of course, that somewhere in the vague backgroynd of public life the Secre-- tary of Commerce had a wife and two sons. But Mrs. Hoover as an entity; a personality, has -- just emerged since the Kansas City con-- vention. * And what a personality! What a career to have been hidden under a bushel! all these years! Consider this excerpt from a biographical sketch in the Farm Journal. "She has lived through revolkition where she regularly served food un-- der fire; has been reported killed and read her own obituary; has cared for her children in .desert regions where évery emergency of the pi-- oneer mother had to be provided against; has worked at translating i and copying:; has met the exactions | of foreign and American social sea-- sons--all the while finding her great-- est pleasure in her own family circle." Served in China. The desert referred to was the Chi-- nese interior where Lou Henry Hoover, newly from a California col-- lege, went with 'her engineer hus-- band, daring disease, dirt and ban-- dits to be at his side. The revolution was the Boxer uprising, in which, at Pekin, she not only served isod un-- ger fire, but once manned a machine gun in an emergency. It was there that she was reported killed. In South Africa she went with her husband, and in other parts of the world, mothering her two sons anrd making a home wherevéer she went. Incidentally, she found time to aid Hoover materially in his translation from the Latin of Bauer's great his~ tory" of metallurgy. L Through his six years of war re-- lief work, Mrs. Hoover was her Aus-- band's chief aide. It was she who interviewed 1,000 stranded Americans in London at the outbreak of the war, and cashed from personal funds the checks which brougbt them Incidentally, Hoover's staunchest supporter is blessed with a sense of humor. She says: "If you want to get the gloomiest view of any sub-- ject, ask Bert about it." A machine--appliance course . has been inaugurated in the commergial department of Hamtramck (Mich.) High School following a recent sur-- vey of: the needs in commercial education. The: following . courses, open to twelfth--grade students, have been announced: Billing machine, bookkeeping machine, comptometer calculator, and a general office ap-- pliance course. All courses are in process of development and will be adapted to meet changing needs. The rolling stone gathers no moss, but who wants to go around all covered with moss anyhow? _ Atate Bank of Mundelein With the _ A€ MUNDELE STANDS UP FOR MODIFICATION ALBANY, -- June . 30.--Governor Alfred Smith will conduct the same kind of campaign Aas presidential candidate as he has fought in New York state for the last 10 years. _ _"I propose to, talk to the American peorie in the same way that I have talked to the people of my own state," the governor said . today in 'gaisc;tlxssmg his plans for the coming ttle. t --In that quotation the governor partically said that there will be no "carned speeches," that he will idiscms only those problems about which he is thoroughly acquainted whether by contact or after 'careful study and that be will not take any material for a speech unless .it moets his ideas. Smith will carry on an "offensivye campaign." He will not devote very much time with ridiculing or find-- ing fault with the methods of the '»pposition | His campaign plans are not yet formulated but the major issues in the campaign are these: | 1--Pronibition--In this he will ad-- iwocate a modification of the Vol-- ';tmd' act and urge that states be iven the right to determine what phall be construed as the legal-- alcoholic content of an lnwxxcaungl drink for beverage purposes. | 2--Social legislation--Along this ine Smith will probably advocate Enore governmental supervision hrough which the nation as _ a whole can be benefitted. | 3--Labor legislation--Under _ this Kmead Smith undoubtedly will ad-- rocate many laws, adapted of course, the federal viewpoint which he t\:a urged in his home state. In-- Eluded in this group will be the eight hour law for women and fe-- male minors in industry, and a pro-- iposal to stop the issuance of in-- |junctions in -- labor disputes until L;ner a trial of the facts before a 4 MA 3 » . * € We '~4--Water power legislation--Smith will be particulariy at rhome on thit tonic as he had been devoting mutch of his time to a study of it for years, but his argument must be cqonfined necessarily to a strict en-- forcement of tlauhws already on the -- federal--sta books. _ These are believed to be in accord with most. of his views. > * It is more than probable that before he starts on his campaign, the governor will devote a good deal of time to the present struc-- ture of the government and if he is convinced that consolidation of bureaus and departments should be made in order to bring about a more efficient administration Re will make it an issue. The Strong Man from Norway was booked on the Orpheum circuit. His sgcialty was breaking paving stones with a sledge--hammer on his wife's head. It was a.wow, as we used to say in the old country. Sud-- denly his bookings were switched. They put him on the small time, They <put him on the smail timeé, where he had to do four and five shows a day. ae ky' He did it for several weeks, then cagcelled his centract. "What's the matter?" they asked him. "Is your wife getting headaches?" -- __-- _ --_ #Oh, no, it isn't that," apologized the Strong Man, "but I'm afraid she's getting fallen arches."--New York Graphic. * sUGGEST PUBLICITY FOR CITY MUSEUMS A St. Louis paper wants to know why it would not be a good plan for the art museums of Chicago, Cleve-- land, Philadelphia, New York, Min--' neapolis, Baltimore, Toledo, Pitts-- burgh and Cincinnati to make pub-- lic from time to time the amount of money paid for their paintings. As for the Art Institute of Chicago, its policy has been subordinate _ the money value of a painting to its art value.. While the St. Louis pap-- er makes the point that its money value is also an educational item, the fact remains that the average person places the value of a painting almost wholly upon-- what it cost. That is an unsatisfactory way to assess values. Millet used to sell his paintings of French peasant life for $30 to $50 each. Can we say that was their true value, even at that time? Why have they advanc:-- ed from twenty thousand to*a hun-- dred thousand since? And will they be worth these figures fifty or-- a hundred yéars hence? Cezanne was N, ILLINOIS wHERE THE SHOE PINCHED 1 of July wan to throw his canvases in the waste basket as worthless because he was disgusted with his own li-- mitations. -- Many of these discarded canvases were rescued by his ad-- mirers and now A fairly good Ce-- zanne will bring $20,000. Michelan-- gelo worked f8r what in our money amounts to $2.50 per day and yet four hundred years after his death the product of a day's labor by Mic-- helangelo is worth many hundreds of dollars. Like everything else, the price of painting is governed by the demand. Because there are only so many Gainsboroughs, Constables, Titians, Valesquezes, Michelangelo, Da Vincis, Whistlers, Sargents, and the demand for them is steadily in-- creasing, the prices obtained for them through sheer competition are rapidly advancing. Fabulous prices therefore are -- due largely -- to competition, . because -- the piC-- tures themselves arenobetter . to-- day than when they were painted. There is no doubt whatever but that a wise buyer today may purchase a quantity of canvases of living Ame-- rican and European artissts and rea-- lize handsomely on his investment in the years to come, besides having the pleasure of living with them in BART TYRRELL, LOOMER NAMED the meantime. Detective Sergeant Bart Tyrrell and Night RPatrolman Howard Loom-- er of the Waukegan have been an-- nrounced winners of the $25 monthly efficjiency award by Police Commis-- sioner Wilson Gee. This makes the second time Tyrell has been honor-- Sergeant Tyrrell's work in return-- ing three. Waukegan boys for trial from Joliet after they nad stol-- en a machine here and robbed a grocery store in Joliet was responsi-- ble for his being selectéd. One of, the youths was com to St. Charles reformat last Saturday. Vigilan and strict ati to duty displ@yed by Loomer on the night of June 5 when he | "Pm James Sullivan, of Highland as he was driving away in a stolen Chrysler car, won him a share in th award. The effort is still being made to devise m:ethods for carrying on war in a "humane" fashion. The no-- tion still prevails, however, that Sherman was right. The story is told by an old preacher who was captain of a company during the Civil war. With his passing was revived the story of how this serv-- ant of the Lord, while captain, was about to enter what promised to be freely spoken than he, to address the soldiers, which he did, as fol-- "Byes, it looks like it's goin' to be a d--n big fight. Yonder's the eremy! Go fer 'em an' give 'em Whereupon the "pious . captain wishing to do his part toward rous-- ing the men's courage, added: _ _ "Yes, boys that's right. Go for them and give them what the ser-- geant has suggested."--Bostopr Globe. < _ CENERAL@ELECTRIC | Refrigerator TTTUS BROTHERS When you buy an electric refrigera-- tor, do a bit of investigating on your own. Look under the cabinet, look carefully insideit, and,aboveall things, listen to it. When you look under the cabinet do you find moving parts of machin-- ery or no machinery at all? In the General Electric Refrigerator, you'll notice at once that all the models are up--on--legs, This means an easy job cleaning under them. And it--also means that #// the machinery is safe-- ly sealed away in the air--tight steel k at the bottom, look inside .. ... and listen to it! To determine the value of Alas-- kan reindeer meat for food, samples bave been officially tested recently for chemical composition and nut-- ritive value. It was found to possess high protein, low fat, and compara-- tively low moisture. The test is valuable in connection with.the com-- mercial introduction into the United States of reindeer as an article of food, as well as for the information of Alaskan natives, for whom rein-- deer meat provides a staple article of food. Two departments of the Govern-- ment are cooperating in the study, and the analyses and experiments followed a meeting in Washington between representatives of several bureaus of the Department of Ag-- riculture and a representative of the Department of the Interior, Bureau of Educational, the governmental agency charged with the promotion of the reindeer industry in connec® tion with the educational work among Alaskan natives. Further ex-- periments will be conducted, and re-- sults of the completed study will be incorporated in a popular bulletin on the cooking of reindeer meat, similar to bulletins on the cooking of beef and lamb.--School Life. ALASKAN REINDEER MEAT KICH IN PROTEIN Numerous demonstrations of the practicability of night flying have brought many new problems to the lighting engineet, and these will be discussed when the first Internation-- gl Illumilnatiogx C{rmgreu meetsbe at aranac Inn., N. Y., in . A group of foreign m will attend, and at the conclusion of the meetings they plan a tour of the LIGHTING EXPERTS TO _ _ ___ DISCUSS AERIAL BEACON® _ MUNDELEIN, IIA. _ All Kinds of Auto Repair Work Complete Battery Service Competwut Mechanics Day and Night Service Phone 817 501 N. Milwaukee Ave. Harry Pfannenstill, Prop. Oil Compound ... For Long Bobs All branches of Beauty Culture imlué% Fingerwaving the Swirl Style f Open E gs by Appointmant to choose from Frederic's--Vita Tonic Compound ............. $12.00 Lemur--Steam Oil Pro-- CESS ... ooonftmafuencciones Km Gabrieleen--Réconditioning Libertyville 438 THE STAR Three different systems Permanent Marcel Waves Garage THE HARRIET BEAUTY SHO casing which you see mounted on the top of the caginet. 6 Look inside. Is there really ample food space? You will find in the General Electric Refrigerator that the chilling chamber is amazingly com-- pact. It actually takes litle more space than the trays in which your ice is frozen. , Then listen. This you must do. We want you to judge for yoursekf the quietness of this remarkable refriger-- ator. Come in today. Time payments can be arranged, if you wish. 420 N. Milwaukee Ave. H. MATTHEWS united States to observe notable ex-- amples of electrical illumination. In addition to the, problems og aer-- ial lighting, the experts will ml those in connection with the = nation of thoroughfares, factories and public buildings. The effects on production in the case of industrial lighting, and the effects on sales in the case of shop window illumina-- tion, will be considered. The con-- gress is beinf held under the aus-- pices of the Illuminating Engineer-- ing Society. About all a lot :.f fl:'ls :zarl-)ré atdai "finishing school' sti more disagreeable. The only thing as bad as a canned meal is a canned complexion. You'll say he's right who tells you where Good cleaning's done at prices fair. TAILORING Suits Made to Measure BEAVIV ULTVRE JOHN CICHY Libertyville, IMinois PHONE 551 $25.00 * Free Pressing