30 WILMETTE LIFE July 8, 1927 I White Plague Death A car you should own at .a pnce you can pay brings new ease of steering, turning, parking. , the heart-warming dependability Hydraulic 4-wheel brakes f. or a that have endeared Peerless to quick safe stop! a long generation of car buyers. A 5coreof other features that make This new Six-60 has every me· the Six·60 everything you've al· chanica) advantage that can be ways thought a Peerless must be. put in a car. .Todar., more than ever, Peerless A big, 7-beariog crankshaft as is budding for those admirable on all Peerless Sixes-with freemen and women who want the dom from vibration satisfaction of own· that will amaze and Open cars · ing the best that delight you. can be bought for Closed. Cars the money. ·~Ring Trueu bearings- machined to Such people have al· ways had something a point of fineness in common with that makes them interchangeable. Peerless-and ol· WD.)'S wiJ/. Nelson Bobnalite PBBRLBSS MOTOR CAR Pistons to give CoRPORATION, CliNt.·~. Oll· silken smoothness. Mft·f·et·r·n ·I tu I·· .., JOG Y·IJH Billti·H. Ill SU·lZ. tltt Sl6·11. '"' Su·H ··tl 111 Su·fl Ross steering that (AU~/. ·· f./tltftt7) I Rate in Rapid Drop, I Says Health Leader "In the city of Chicago deaths from tuberculosis have declined from 173? per 100,000 in 1900 to ~3.0 in 1926. Tht~ decline is noted both m the rates £:om pulmonary tu herculos is ( consu~ptton and from other forms of the <llsease . :-.tates Dr. Herman ~. Bundesen. Clnj -cag-o com mi ssioner of health, in his 1 latest bulletin. "There are more deaths among males than among females fro~n tube~ cul osis. In every 100,000 men, etghty dt e frotn consumption each year. In every 100,000 \\'omen only sixty-six die from this disease. " Death rates from tuberculosis are irom two and a half to three times a:-; high for the negro as for the whitt' population. The increase in the tuber culosis death rate in the general popu lation is due to the increase in th t· death rate among negroes. For chil dren under 11 years of age the negrn death rate in the vears 1924, 1925 and 1926 has been from 10 to 20 times a:high as for the white children of th e same ages," continues the Commi . . sioner. "Among persons under 11 years of age, the mortality from tuberculosis i ' tremendous among negroes . Nearly 41 per cent of the deaths in this agt group in 1926 were deaths of negrr, children, although only three percent 0f the children under 11 years of age are negroes. "The marked declines in the tuber rulosis mortalit\' in the last twelYl' ,·ears have beet; in the age periods 0 to 11. and 20 to 60. The lowered mor talit\· in the first few years of lif (' is dt;e to a \·crv marked decrease in the numb er of de-aths from forms 'of tu berculosis other than pulmonary. Th t· dl'clines in t h<' rates after 20 vra r s rot;l.Q'C are due to reductions in the de at 11 rat l' s i ro 1ll pulmon a rv t uher'C' ulosis. ' "Sn iar as \\·e ca n karn irom tlw I n·cord:--, the\· .show lower dea th rate-; in j t lw month~ - ~; incr the es tablishment oi tht· ordinance which limits Chicago'.., I · tnilk .; uppl~· to tha't milk coming only from .te.;ted herds than .in the corn· . . 1 )'lltHiingmonths of the immcdiatrl _ \prl'ceding year:-. This is evidenced !J,· the average rates for the nine month:-' period and for fiH of the months takl·n '-l'Parate ly ," says Dr. Bundesen . "The larg-est number of deaths fn11 1l t uhcrcul0 . i.;. among children c01lle in -\pril. This seems to ar the mnnth of _ !!ttt' for the . QTcate r nrrd for care dur in!! the winter lllonths." concludes tht· commissioner . . J !, J-1.. Typical in the high quality- AND a typical Peerless, too. l $1295 $1345 1 I Hub Announces Annual Store-Wide Saving Sale Thi s week the annual Store-Wide Sa\·ing July Clearance sale s \rerc inaugurated in every department of The Hub's Evanston Shop. They of ier innumerable opportunities for thr purchase of tine merchandise at defin itdy lower prices, it is explained. ~[one\· North Shore 17·35 Auto~nobile AVENUE Co. BAHAI LECTURES 'Korth Shore residents are invited t0 attend the meetings in the studio of Louis Bourgeois. architect, 536 Sheridan road. \Vilmette, at 3 o'clock, Sun cia,· afternoon. A studv class in the teachinRs is held in the -home of C. P. Christensen. 1138 Oakwood avenue, \V cdnesday evenings at 8 o'clock. These meetings are informal. BENSON PHON·E UNIV. 1047 PBBR.L'ES8 · HAS ------- PEERLESS ALWAYS · BEEN · A 4 J. Hn!rh Fo::;ter, 921 Greenleaf aH went to the St. Francis hospital T·:,·anston, the middle of ~his week to tt"dergo an oneration. Tt was expectr<l that he \\'ill he there for about two \Y\,'cks. I'tte, G 0 0 D · . (:A R - ---------- -oX orn1an \\. eyl, now associated with the Chicago . Tribune in New York City, is visiting- relatives in \Vilmette.