.& ., , July · 23; 1926 · WILMETTE LI'FE 2,000, dismissed from the. · Edw~rd Sanatorium at Napervil~e, Illinois. This institution is a department of the Chicago Tuberculosis institute. These patients will then be given the benefit .of an advisory service for which a small charge will be made. The ser'v ice will be accessible also to other ex-patients, to patients on waiting lists to enter sanatoriums, and to others at the request of their own physicians. · In the light of modern knowledge, the care of a tuberculous patient i~ as 'much a matter of education as of treatment. The good obtained in a sanatorium is often lost by improper care or neglect aftet: the disease has been arrested. Incipient cases and those obliged to wait to enter the sanatorium are also in need of special instruction. Hence this advisory service will be of great value, cl'S physicians and patients already realize.· The follow-up is one of many new activities to which the· Chicago Tuberculosis institute is turning its attenton, and which are provided by the Christmas seal.- - ~ore tlian half a million huntmg and fishing licenses were sold in Illinois the past year according to figures made public this week by 'Villiam J. Stratton, Director of the state department of conservation. Of the total of 618,552 licenses sold between July 1, 1925 and June 30, Jn6-321,062· were for fishing and 297,490 for hunting. Illinois' record in conservation duri11g the past four years has attracted manY hunters and fishermen from out:;ide · the state, 16,534 non-residents having bought hunting and fishin~ licenses during the past year. The shipment of fishing, hunting trapping and seine and net licenses for 1926-1927 to the count\·. citY and Yillage clerks will be conipletc;l this \Ycck. Judging from the original requisitions and repeat orders that arc · already coming in to the department oi consen·ation more licenses \Yill be ~old this year than in any previous t\n·h·c month period. it is said. This increase in the sale of liccnsrs i~ due in part to the acti,·e and inten-.i,·e enforcement · of the law 1)\· thr ,,·ardens in Director Stratton's d(·partm en t. . There in also a great!~· reYin·d intere~t in hoth hunting and fishing as a clirect result of the constructive t:amc and fish restoration \\'nrk that ·i~ being carried on. In <KI<lition to the purchase and e~ tahli~hmcnt of right fish hatcheries ;111d tV.·o game farms great quanities o f hoth ~a·me and fish ha\'e hern clis. trihuted throughout the stat<· . During t l1e pa~t four ~· cars more than fin hundred carloads of fish. almost t\\·o hundred thousanrl pheasant eg~s and more than fifteen thousand quail haYC heen distributed in this . tate . 1t is only natural that sportsmen .; J10uld " ·illingly buy huntii1g and fi :; hinl!' licenses as our law::; prm·i<le tl1:1t ;-t)] o.f this revenue must he spent i nr co n sen·ation of our ~amc and fi:-.h. Conservation ·Is Ethel Ericson to Said to Encourage Aid Ex-patients Hunters in State of Tuberculosis The Chicago Tuberculosis institute is inaugurating a new follow-up service for ex-patients who J1ave taken treatment for tuberculosis. Miss .Ethel Ericson,· who has recently been sen·ing as community nurse for Lyons and Yicinity, has been assigned to this work. She will first make . a study of the cases, upwards of An ElectricVentilator/tt,j Drives out steam, cooking odors and heat. Floods the home with Fresh Air an4$49.!permontA . SOCIOLOGY I ·· Charles A. Ellwood. profe ssor of "ociology at the Universitv of ~r is s::>uri. "ay s in. the preface to his new yoJume. "Thr Ps~·chologv of Human Sofiety" and "this hook is intended to '- tlprr secle .. his two other hooks. "So · l· i ~lOI.!\" in it s Psycholo~ical :\sprcts." and ·~rntroduct ion to Social PsychoiO).n'-." It is not a revision nf those t,,-0 hooks hut an entirrh· new work." Prof. Ellwood insists· that Social Ps,· rholo~y as a science must progress inrlt1ctiYelv hv tl1c studv of face to fare grot;ps:- and the ·method which the hook advocates and illustrates is principally that of the indi,·iclual participating- in the actiYities of a priman- g-rouo. and at t·he same time ohsrn·ing- its behavior. For the scientist, jjThe Ps,·cholog\' of Human Society" is a textbook offrring a clear introduction to the i hcory of modern sociology; for th.; grnera l reader. it prm·ides . a scient i fie hasis for iudging- the conflicting the nries \\·hich now divide our civilization. -Chicago Evenin~ Post. The North Encl circle of thr Congregational church will meet ~fondaY. .T uly 26. at 2 o'clock. at the horne \frs. Frank Merrill. 1106 Greenwood aven ue, to srw for the bazaar. /\LL THE fresh air in tl1e world is just outside f i your kitchen window-let an electric ventilator bring it in. It will drive out all steam, cooking odors and heat and send fresh pure air through the home-saves its ·cost in cleaning and decorating the first year. The whole house benefits. Enjoy fresh air all the time, in busy indoor hours as well as recreation time. Install an electric ventilator now. Operates economically from any electric outlet and you can obtain this household necessity the easy "Little by Little" Way. Ask us about an attic installation-quickly cools the room upstairs. · l I 15 days at our expense. When this proves the bene· fit of electric ventilation, send us $2.50 and tell us to add $4 each month to your light bill. Enjoy fresh air all the time. Special Offer: We will gladly install a ventilator for r of PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF NORTHI;RN IL~INOIS 1141 Central Ave., Wilmette Wilmette 2899 T. C'. Moore of Clarksville, Tenn .. is <;ne nding- several weeks as the guest of his son and rlauu-hter -in -law. ~[r. and Mrs. ,V. S. ifoore, 531 \Va sh ington avenue. The numher nf communities in Illinois rrcriving electrir. service has increased more than 6()(} per cent in the last fifteen years. · -o- -o- J no. S. Reesman, District Manager ·