cial comuuttee in charge of the service at the home of Director of Recreation, Daniel M. Davis, 920 Fifteenth street. The service will'be similar to that of previous years, followinig. the tradition founded several years ýag< wheu a group of villagers represent- ing the various churches met on the lawn of the Vil lage Hall building and sang Christmas carols. The service was. discontiuued for .'atime jusi previous to. the béginning of. the RecreatIon Board -and after 'that' organization came into being, they- were requested by the churches- and other civic organizations to takce charge of the service. Complote Decade This will ma rk the fi-st decade of community carol, singing and meni- bers of the -committee are bending their efforts to make it one ma rked bY.'the largest attendance of carol singers recorded during the years.the servke bas been an institution. R. D. Burtner, who has led the caroling for the past five years will, agaiu be the leader and musical ac- companimeut will be furnisbed by- a band of high school boys under the, leadership 'of Mark Simionds, 834 sixteeuth street. Village President Earl F,. Orner, wiil give a- short address of welcon'e to the carolers and various firmis and agencies iu the village are cooperat-- .aag in making the occasion a, success. The public school junior Police corps will act as u9hers. Meeing Non Sectsnian George H. Redding, chairman of the carol comnittee, emphasizes the fact that the community service 'is not a sectarian affair and is nlot restricted to any group of organiza- tions, .but that its -aiu is a simple servce. wherein every. p erson iii Wil- mette meets bis. neighbor and joins 'with hlm in a short Yuletide servi .ce, singiug the carols taugbt to every school child of every nation. The service will be short, being planned to .start promptly at 7:30 o'clock and end by, 8:15 o'clock Christmas iEve Harold W. Schlueter of 166~5 Speecer avenue,. Wilmette, was re- -cenytt pledged to Sextant, honor- ariv naval. frate rnity ai Northwest- rnunhversity. Scitlueter sç a mem- ber of MOnaroaet fraterniy ai that school. Labor -Arbiter The Dyers action1 to Regulate Cleaning Rates North Shore Cleaners and association, f ollowing simlar taken recefitly by, tbe Master Cleaners and Dyers association of Chicago, is en tering intoe an agree- ment Iwith Dr. Benjamin Squires, ecotiomist and labor arbiter, to 'act in the saie 'capacity witb the dlean- ing industry as Judge K. M. Landis does to basebaîl. A' meeting 'of the nôrth shore cleaners' organization was to be held at the Green Tea' Pot.' inHighland Park Thursday nigbt of this week for the purpose of giving each meni- ber of the association an opportunity to sign an individu al c ontract with the economist giving him the power of deterrnining prices and directing policies. -The North Shiore Cîçaners and Mrs. George N. Lamb, chairman' of the mernbership commîttee of the Wilmette league, said: "If Wilmette women are really sincere, they will not be content, to stop with just gjiving old clothesand mvneyv,-giving unitil it ýhurts, but tbey will want to do really constructive work. to reine- dy. the sad- economic condition of unetnployment and to prevent .its recurrence if possible.- That. can be done by understanding. this, probably. the most acute,. problem of, our gov-ý ernment today." Other si milar evils need. thoughtful handiing. "The League of' Wome;î Voters, is an instrumnent handy' for the use of alwomn wo ealy care . . . for the league is a great national organ- ization whic' tde hs vitàl ques- tions and-in an intelligent, unbiased ~way, gives out information through its interesting local- meeting and through its enlightening literature." Ini the Deceeber issue of the Illi- nois Voter, the state organ of the League of Women Voters, is an arti - cle on the stabilization of employ- ment. The fundamental causes 'of u-nemployment are now understood, some of which are- the cyclical fluc- tuations which occur with such regu- larity that it is safe to predict that out of every ten years there will be two bad years. "Isn't that encouraging?" Mrs. Lamb asked. "Calling last year a bad year, this one certainly is. Next year will be better and the next severi years' increasinugly so. 'Cheer up! Join-the-"egue of Women Voters and prove your sincerity," Veteran Printer Dies;' Resident Here 2 Years Edward Theobald, 151 Prairieave- nue, Wilmuette, for 'the past twelve years a proof-reader. and compositor on the Chicago Herald and Examiner, died suddenly of heart attack while at work early Tuesday Morning, Decem-- .r urbiuuvuftgnnitawin ue tile subject of an illustrated lecture to be: given by Lowell Thomias, war cor- respondent, world travéler, and au- thor,. at the Wilmetté Sunday Eve- ning club this Sunday, Deceniber' Il. Lbowell Thomi*as has visitéd practic'- ally every part of the' globe. As a minerand,newspaper editor in. the Cripple Creek mining district in Colo0- rado bis life' had been,,ful of ad- venture- and, action even* before the' United States entered the. World war. Then he was. selected by the late President Woodrow Wilson on a spe'- cial- mission'- to. the Allied. armies for the purpose of obtaining materiai for an offiicial 'popular record 0.of the campaigns on the Allied fronts. <WitIi AII.by in Holy Land This work took him to. the Near East, where he accompan ied Field Marshal Viscount Allenby on hisý famous conquest of the Holy Land and where a real Arabian Nights' at- mosphere enveloped LoweIl Thomas with his discovery of Colonel Law-* rence, ' the British tnystery man of Arabia. He accompanied Lawrence into the Arabian désert, which they caîl the "Mlue," and was there to watcb Lawrenice's strategy in guerrilla war- fare against the Turks. For two years Thonmas trieci to 'get permission to enter Afghanistan, the wild, mountain-guarded country in Cen- tral Asia. of which so littie is known, and 'he was success fuI finally. He pene- trated Afghanistan f rom India by way of the famous' Khyber pass, the niost strongly forti'fied mountain gorge in' the world. Froni the Central Asian end 'of Khyber pass he and bis photograpbic companion, Harry Chase,' and the otheir members of lis exkpedition journeyed for niany hundreds of iles over the Afghan desert and across. four rang es of barren m iountains to tbe heart'of thiSý mysterious countrywhich, is wholly eastern in character.- E'he -tryof hie story experiences tp, be. one nf o-~ -<-.quis of C re of 100 Sixteenth JFred S. Rye returned to his home The Lun themerubers of at 1714 For-est avenue f rôn the Lake- day after at luncheon aud view hospital this week where he under- Klaner ch afternoon, Decei- weut an OPeration for the removal of cago, and bis tonsils.i-a.Pr son is the foi-mer iîered uîson, swere held Fri- daughter of Mr-. and Mrs. Aaron 'M. mber 5, at the' OIson of Kenilworth,- formerly of Broadway, Chi- Winnetka.. Both bride and' groona Place at Memo- are graduates. of Nortliwestern uni- Versity.