, -v .. “yuan“ As Brander Matthews has put the stamp of his approval on â€joint.’ ’I$uppose that runâ€"in†.wrll come to be accepted as one of those condensed and signiï¬cant bits of speech that this generation seems fond of coining. "For heairen ssake,†thought I u â€what did that man mean. by a run-in?" Laterl gathered from his conversation that he and the politician. had met and cngaged m an animated argument. that nare rowiy missed being a rumpusâ€"~a kind of near-row, so to speak._ The other’yday Iwas' talking with fa friend; a Harvard graduate, who was telling me of having had a run-in with some polIIician whom my friend disliked and was trvmg to beat. ‘ . I .Of course some of. the slant: is clever and so expressive ,as 'to win ultimate incbrporation in the chi~ dons, while sfomc of it is silly and some loses Vogue. It is hardiifor a~ man who tries to adhere t6 the niceties of the English language to ' comprehend a good deal of the talk he hears nowadays ‘ Let us begin now to teach the child how to eat and drink tor health. strength, endurance. ef- ï¬ccncy and gustatory satisfaction in such a manner as will build up a better race of people than the world has ever seen. It. can be done. a Let us have eating schools and drinking schools. It is the abuse of eating and the abuse of drinking that do the injury. They make dyspeptics of us all; they.haye 'made many ar’unkards and will make many more unless education steps i n andcalls a halt There is a generation growing up that we will be responsible for. The (“aching schools have done much in teaching children how to prepare food but have not yet taught them how to eat it after it was prepared. DIFFICULT TO KEEP PACE WITH SLANG f. Eating and drinking are as im- portant matters as we have to at- tend to in this life, therefore. thev should be xii/en as'much thought and attention as anything else. that we are called upon to do. By knowing how to eat and drink we are less iiébiie .to abuse ourselves in this respect. Is it not about time thatour pub' lic schools took up thexnatte'r and mid: some headway in formulat- mg a method whereby the child can learn something about the art and not continue to eat iikc an animal? how when they have never attend- ed a school that taught this prin- ciplc? How shall we eat and drink {or the attainment of hé‘hlth and long life?! understand it is the rule among school teachers to leave‘ these matters mainly to ‘the para cnts. That being the gase. how can we expect the parents to know Checks received To: Hntefed at the Post PROMOTE GOOD HEALTH AND LONG N 11th Share} Nrmz-flrtm. PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY n HIGHLAND PARKILLINOIS- wucmnmn. 31-50 A YEAR. 5c ï¬guripxion are at once onuripxion are at once creqitédtand the date changbd the printed label wighin a wnek' or two. urnun. @1-30 A YEAR. 5C PER COPY. SATURDAY. NOV 26,1910 “ . P DAVIDSON, Prod now wants to live and try again. She ought to succeed. hymen sensation- }o'vlng days, she has secured quite an advertigemgnt for her work. Conn- The young woman in New York who shot herself because she did not make an expected literary success, A feature of the census returns that surprises many is the population growth of the east as compared to that of’ the west. Despite the tre- mendous development of the west and the great number that have sought homes in that section, the east is showing up gains almost as great, and even greater when considered in pro- portion to the respective ten-norm areas. According to present indict» ttone the center of population will not move a great distance westward and will still be at some point to In- *Prof. ‘Willla'm L. Garner says that ._S.usle smiles on him. Susie is a little chimpanzee, hot the one who lived and loved_ in a cocoanut tree, but the one the professor recently hidhaped from her home in Africa. The savant maintains’ that Susie's smile proves her kinship with humanity. Before laccepting this statement at its .face value the public. is entitled to know whether the young African wrinkles her nose when she chortl'es. She is only seven months old and falling this corroborative evidence. ith fair to assume that she may simply be suffering from colic and, in need of a little catnip tea. Though some of the Germans are stirred up, nobody else in Europe seems to be unduly-excited over Em. pet-or William's afï¬rmation of the di- vine right of sovereignty. It is re called that he has said something to the same effect before. - But it is also remembered that constitutionalism‘ and liberal government have gone right along. 'Even Russia, where ab- solutism appeared to have such a hold, has been the creation of it Damn or parliament which affords the people a measure of representation. Then there are Turkey and Persia, both for- merly in the grip of despotism, now enjoying progressive rule and consti- tutional privileges. And Germany it- self "has some constitutional guaran- tees that the emperor would ,not think of molesting. ' ' PHONE 32 A practical railway man, . F. P. Roesch by name, and master mechanic 01' a southwestern railroad by occupa- iibn, advances a new reason for the many accidents on American, railways. Mr. Roesch says it is summed up in two wordsâ€"“chance takers." In a speech before the Railway Surgeons'. association this western master the chanic declared that the only way to do away with railroad accidents is to ‘ eliminate the ‘fchance takers," says: Indianapolis Star. His position is well taken, and his terse description of a vital reason why railroads of this country kill so. many people is rather startling. When one comes down to the only} phase of railroad operation that so far has been beyond absolute- control, Mr. Roes‘ch says, the element of human fallibility stands out as the primary cause in 99 out of every" 100 cases: is view of the matter, 'while- , not que ioned, is rather out or the usual in summing up causes for acci- dents on railways. The American peo- ple are the greatest chance takers on. earth. They not only take chances in making moneyâ€"the gambler’s chanceâ€"â€"but they take chances in poll- tics, education and in social life, and they risk their lives daily without the quiver ‘of an eyoiash merely to get somewhere quickly. Automobile rac- ing is. condemned in some quarters because of the great danger; football comes under the same bane; mara- thon racing is risky, as are prize ï¬ght- ing, polo and numerous other sports. CHANCE TAKERS. * flu ha 3t hgt beaten the pigeon. M. and; but mm m:- woman's help be In; no distanced them 11: the plea-gator m of blllln; and cool“. Oshkosh, Kokomo. Kalamazoo, Oc- onomovoc and Hackenuck have :11 made tenant-hula gains In population. Now. who an there's no advertising In magnum publicity? A Chicago protessor says thnt the law is a hindrance to some people. It by some people 'he men: burglars. ptckpockets and gutters, we might add that that is enctly what the law In Intended to be. ‘ Germans usually do things thor- oughly. and the announcement that there is no cholera in Berlin. although the disease has broken out in the vi ciniiy. no doubt testiï¬es to the ef- fectiveness o! the safeguards em- ployed. Modern medical science is- usunlly "victorious over the ailmentr once resumed as scourges, against which it as almost useless to con- tend. Yellow fever, cholera and the like 'sre no longer the terror they were formerly. matter Cbc" North Shun News-Wt Engineers at work on the Panama canal propose to leave as little as possible to chance. They are now en- gaged in experiments to determine the effect of sea water on concrete. an enormous quantity of which is em- ployed in the constr |cllon of the can-l. ‘ Concrete in diflere stages of prep‘ laratlon and with various forms of protection will be subjected to the ac- tion of the salt water and the results will be carefully noted. Probably 'lhere never was a great underlaking of this kind in‘ which so many pre- cautions were taken to guard against future risk. Still they come, those Chinese atuv dents who are to be trained at Ameri- can educational institutions. A party of sixty-eight has arrived at Honolulu. These students are some of the mini. her sent by the Chinese government. the expenses to be paid from the :Boxer indemnity money returned by the United States, says Troy Times. That kindly act has brought a rich to- ward in the form or the esteem, grati- tude and conï¬dence of China and the influence that will be exerted through the absorption or American ideas by the bright young men who are the beneï¬ciaries of the arrangement. Still another use for automobiles. The town of Jamaica. L L, had an unpleasant time when a main burst and the water supply was shut oil . completely. To say nothing of the su- noyztnce, inconvenience and danger in private qwellings. the orphan asyium and other institutions were subjected to especially distressing experiences. 'i'o u: out at least partially the demand i an automobile service was organized. the machines going with tanks. hr rels and othcr teceptacies to points where water could be obtained and bringing it to those in need. This was at best but a poor substitute for the regular system. yet it proved that in time oi stress the auto is a valuable auxiliary. The young girl who tried drunk ally to take her life in New York ro- 1' cently through disappointment and - disillusion placed the blsne upon the won:r shoulders. It in no decree rests upon either the business orpub . lic socisl side of America life, as" ’ ‘Washinston Post. The responsibility for such an outcome must be borne by ‘ those who are in duty bound to give their children right views or life. The night of s young girl. however preco- cious,‘ going to a" city like New York without friends or advisers to whom she would listen. and very evidently head-strong and impulsive, there to spend two years writing a book and precious manuscripts which she ro- mantically wishes to be buried with her, calls forth nothing but pity.» But ,thls sentiment does not obscure the fact that the girl was permitted to gain a false view of herself and her relations with the world. Acts such as here in no degree Justify the whole- sale condemnation of the business lite of our cities or warrant the sweeping statement or a young girl facing at once both womanhood and eternity in saying that “a girl cannot get along honorably in New York." W cannon'n mouti .la a well~known oponuon. but it I. sometimes new to woo literary luc- ces‘l u the match point. .GIRLS IN CITIES. Among um ace-am as» rlrdupolu hntndlleout. mututhecm M anionic†navigators :Mng phyl- lal lightweight; In this £ a: 30mm «hon-putat- good good- . ‘ton com} w: Ins-nu 0! ll“. "6‘, we If. M madam the lo mount. also doing won. ; tflwld beam! at um MK}; Then a a nun tn Onlij’nnla who went to deep on n unread: met, was struck by 3 fat min u’u scum! A Washington man hm}. been I» rented Ind ï¬ned for telling "Multa- gted out.†Send him rizht. At the present prim of “hen fruit" to pan: on tum-tum ind lmpme nuclei for the good nor: 1- to u†Insult tm Thou big “unclaimed emi‘avéa“ very often shrink, wmei’lmes 1) nothing- neu, when attempts uh made to iodine. The story tbs: an emigrant ‘from Gallcin came_ to tha country and mde‘ 330,000,000 or ' $129,000,000. which heir- in his native country are trying to locum. in: typical of many. “My the actual “nine or the es- um bu «crowd to sump. Prob- nbly in the an! act the uni:- will prove to be only I j'pipe dram." non-am may be the torrnnner of some extraordinary disturbances. It In Ibont time for the lug: to tome Into the spotlight unln. The bk: lunlnnry wu eclipsed. to scientiï¬c Inlet-eat tor a time. by the appearance. M the Hat lay comet and 'the speculw ions and obnrvauom accompanying that celes- tinl exhibition. Camornlu utronomoru report tho breaking up of a his lunnot Into a group of uncommonly small tn;- menu. and intimate am the pho- taste of her contemportflei: and lo far u this ago In concerned. I! there were any remains of her that could be Identiï¬ed, they would ce'r'dnly b0 the reverse of uttnctlve. Cleopatra in in the ebeence a! direct evidence unable of being spun out to inilnitude One alleged authority having noel-ted ihet the nu really very plnln, another come- tu her ree- cue with the indnunce the, line wu" one or the most beautiful women the world ever knew. The (Hip: e seem: somewhat melee. in View of the fact that the Egyptian queen «mm the The controversy over the av Cleopatra in In the thence (II evidence capable of being an to Inflnltude. One sue-ed nu Receipt. of she‘p st Omshe make I new world's record“ more than 63,000 hsvin; srrived in one as]. This in). mouse number taxed the enchant fscilitleo slmost to full cnpatity Yet the snnouncement of thee facts is coupled with the ststelnent â€11"! the msrket prices showed no tendency to‘ bresk. " Heretoiore n in. bee I alleged 1 tbs! high rote. [or men! were due to the short supply. But with unprece- dented shipments of sheep :inla rule certsinly does not spply to at ieset one clus or meat. tht is keeping up the prices? Would it be usisir to want thst the psckers' trust misfit throw some light on the situation? 'doteotorthedimhobiuthe author ’otthilecimnemmdovnwuio ‘_roouo¢Benedictinehepoineu- bree- tow-hing a curriculum in wiich the minimal item. are making model bedroom- diepoelnz of each, m and vents. preserving trouser creams, put;- ung away claim. an... room. deo- orntin; them. latching furniture. etc. All thin notional the outer non. but it doe. not provide (or the vrnvim o! the inner man. The kitchen should not be omitted. Unhepninew often berm ot breakfut nod culminates at dinner. Tough biscuits and burned roul- hove been the source it much :domeetic undoing. Domestic dyspep- Iio. for which no pepein reme dy bu yet been found, in I frequent ~ mu 0! dialed-faction. dernmment. «.ivorce. etc. tho variou- polmcd, pianos mum, “manual and ethical Mom. which have been mum m unti- town! up of Its success is the Maul“! of the new M homo. am the Chicaio Tribune. Inn and o! how to mike man no Y6 husbands up». out to In an moan and moral m. Tha m The new dome-t Jun opmzbd In the school of douutlc m and Id- onoos In this clq. in which nonwo- tln and mun; win- no to be um! TH: ICHOOL ion "was: To coir plate a†I unw- Ira-w ‘mtobotgn'uu (armor who yum to mm “d "“3 mum wm have“. m u h '1' “' Wm an lunch. on. The most con-tn Mud“. taco-at is the -3.-...-_ -. II. LIIvI-u mu chem than†lust ofton :2": Intimate-ï¬t M. had burned mu °‘ "f “w" this 1 def dyapep- â€no unis-d: h“ N“ In muse o! (JV/em It. ï¬rm-ca. â€a h work! equal he make 1 "if“ hen «3.000 “d ‘1 tum Imâ€" em f smoky“ â€993 Itlty. _ Yet 5 facts ‘. Abol that “the an! “ ndeency to when : keeping the Cu} "3"‘1' to o! the ( ‘“ nigh cut m won? What â€mu It I. '0 lane 3 III ‘53} eye? 11.. wooden or m †“lumen. “07 will all! ~fl; aw .. I. .2... 8 £1338 8 :3: my 23 at 3:883 838 2F . .5 a. 33:5... 3 .58 .1. B... :86. 333 3.2.5 . A new bufï¬ng†just hind W. St. Louis brews) will draw 81‘"! Year. A correspondence .0th m I department devoted to W In; our!“ to do nu dun-h “*3 Tho an.“ m o! the nu U“: The nqw torpedo-bout ;: _Paulding bu nude I my; bumlnz urchins by mum‘ï¬' mtg of 33.94 knots an hour: 1‘ was «complained duflu- i V Intlon trial-trip of! the ï¬lth. and seem to furnish m" men; to We wmivemu d 0" fuel. The woodpecker has Fan 7. A tuted for an bald headed and“ 8h Ornithological emblem on a. duly! ‘ml of the stile of WM Washington. ham; bee-n. 1 id- growlnx “use, ll fun of ‘ for the bird that works to III. W†forests Ind orchards clear at m ‘But what 0! many? 1! mi everything, what is to m » state from choosing a: it! pan of spraying fluid. v - soapsuda tad. kerosene? Those who have been obl- u back thelr vacation. untll m - be congratulated 0cm ll no i ; the ï¬nest months or the you b '3- ‘ cations :- uny one who has bu- ï¬r ,1 (none mm to hove two M t. †at this time will tell you. no a. try lies before you Thank-910;" tor exorcloe thus walking. M In the rullruty of her lot: I†foliage [I that but had III. M :2 “r of the uppmchlo; M! I- “1" able mornings. Soon n uni! N d' up all day. Why not hey I! â€D openalr vacation. hnhlu on my, “0'18 "lawns wood " nun an «it; do follow them. . About mu mne- of the Puma can! are now mingleu-d to the palm When there may be partial navigation, \vlule work on the remaiixder is going with a min. The complued pm ‘ 1:.an Enema or the “hole, " ,. though of course wbut_rmnain.~ to; _’ done Is the most usmvun includii the Culebfl cut and the construction ‘ or the Gama dun. Yet “coming events cut their shadows before." and it is now evident that the mum of- the in- terooecnlc. waterway is a nutter d comparatively short time. There had beamnrynuchmkotmgbqéa Uncle 3m and his mum W1 down on the lamina: In" â€W 000. from Germany. M, mu In I monopoly. It I. , ‘ this Industry In 0M.“ tome gamma, and (Mt tho hem pushed mule 1131;de “Venus. which ï¬ve: Iu- ' : ;' ton to believe that the“ " working In a fellow ï¬eld Ill equal mecca. Th. . ' ,- i'nfthy of note. In the W ‘ ‘ and in I" other counts-lo- Mun; h. en! fertilizer and other «awn _’ “M H “It dope-In near Kala-3' If; The Guild: mines “WNi only to: limited on.» u. a. to be rich In mum u “I“. “r. Denny aâ€: “M pom annually about m . â€MC N“. muea I! “1 mum val 1m. u “:35; W0"- Itn lumen. % relief from the W M â€poly. Con-u! Gena-u M h! at Vienna reporu g. M meat of commerce m kin? Alumna "Indicate Wï¬ "mind for the «M1 NEW Bounce or MI“Kilt: all kid. had" In conn‘ ‘8“) “(C an Came: a fun 1m HIGHLAND L A. HOLMES “" ï¬nished ALFRED A.) 1-3 Cantu! Ava HIGHLA] The W, â€WW give the woman u “0“}!ka ï¬nes ‘0 cmeon. â€ice 1 mode}: are usury bflmv 0‘ «we. H Accounts Hung: For denier 631‘ Ice, . m m 1‘ 8T. W0 HIGH