B‘N‘\\Vr} in mnrk um um] «11? 5.)- {he mull-An Y'N ‘ . \b ~05! !o n ...n YD!“ Ho?! 1': . 1*.1 “Nu-“fl tm.’ 12c! Don't )f :a« ti \ naxd 47.; There u m1: “Yum the >u The Inter- :tenve Schoois (DAL, hit the we t n help you >ur 1.!»- DY. Em D Fmsch STS any ,' W? L "921mm 214 v'(>v.,‘l tven izv mu'wr your 0i led r In» 3 Eveâ€- at (“I to ultrv 31 Ave. LKHIAND ‘Plll. 1U. NTUN. PA a. k. Illinois IDEICE SCHJOLS 05~M ery 1. I Fin-~1- e jam-=1 I)! and unmet: ‘3' gamut-u: flow; but an Hunted 1P «ï¬n! :nr of 10¢ : H colon name you: wok IN Imus. suom no mm WHEN you Go HOME. â€All Orders Gl‘vn MIN Alto-ma including extra attachments-- inplements that will direct the cleaner’s energy to walls, hang- ings, ' furniture, bedding LOUIS J. WROBLE' mama-saw"! Wm: OPTOIETRIST, 118 South Mon St HEMSTITCHINGâ€"l I Your: for efficiency in Whit line Vacuum Federal Electric Time, Trouble, Money By putchasing your Graphophone records and machines from your local dealer. April re- cord: now on sale. Cleaner Public Service Co. $33.75 All payable in 12 monthly installments Pratt’s 39 St. Johns Ave. Phone 1103 EMBROIDERY of Northern Illinois Save CHICAGO PLEATlNGâ€"BUTI'ONS i i i i l Won I! w... O-ndy Donor! With oi Treble“ Clint}... . ' ‘ . The Macy of mountain region: b generally move difllcuit to master than that of plains. because the rocks hue been more broken and tilted about. but the mology of certain parts at! Mississippi in almost as ditlicuit II! that of a mountainous realm. because 1 (ertuin wither distributed formation» bear few delinito.ident‘tflcntiun marks. particularly rem-ins and impressions of plants and animals that lived at the time the deposits were tot‘tuvd. ' A peculiar sandstone. “lilt‘b geolo- tlsts have called the L‘atnhouln sand- stone. has been studied with care by G. «1?. Human and E. W. lien-y of the United States gt-olngiuti survey. dc- pnrtment at the interior. who have been able tn identify and foiiuw the nudstonv by lllt'lllls «if the remains of plants. IIsSIsSIPPI “HAD CAMELS. . Among the plums {uuud ferns. leaves of date pal myrtles. ï¬gs,» and a tree ch “.an .._‘ ferns. leaves of date palms. tropical myrtles. ï¬gs,» and a tree clusely related to the proscnt day Mexican and Cen- tral American upota. from which most of MN material for chewing gum II obtained. These fossil plants show that at the time the sandstone was formedâ€"perhaps 5.000.000 years agoâ€"â€" the climax.- of this region was tropical, and bones of camels found by other geologists in the region and the simL larlty of the sand coxnplï¬ing theisand- stone to vermin tropical desert sands have a similar implication-Geological Survey. V {scientists in ï¬nd some-mun: [or up: lpï¬ople to out 8.010000 01' 9.000.000 } years home. it was not wholly a new I problem. Scientists long mm evolved 1 the scheme of sawing up timber into breakfast food and said that a man could so forth with a bucksaw and get enough sawdust out of a fence rail to keep himself and his family supplied 1 for some time. 1 One learned scientist thinks that he has solved the problem for all time. 1} He says that the nut trees could in a {1 pinch supply food for the entire world; i , L__ L‘nnmn - THE KNOTTY FOOD PROBLEM. A Scientiut Find: In Solution In I Nutty Proposition. Leave lt to the bewhlskorod old boys of sch-nee, they of the square specta- cles and ear muffs. and this world wlll be pulled through its rntlu'r precarious exlsteuce. Some time ago somebody who needed the money wrote an alarmist article for a magazine. stat- lng that in a very short timeâ€"la (not. within {£000,000 or 9.000.000 yearsâ€"the earth's food supply Would be entirely exhausted. , y...‘_ __._,‘ __, i This knotty question has become 1 [ earth now L They will u should be of good cheer. 0!: have to starve 8.000.000 9 yours hence.â€"Topeka State Journll. Y‘Allat uh“.-. Thls set all the solentisls going like gyrmmpes, and ln the dlzzy whirl of lun-stigatlmx some very interesting things came to light. It was up to the sclemlsts tn flml something for the people to out 3.010000 or 9.000.000 \‘Pnl‘s home. H was not wholly a new A Roquoat. ‘ “I shall never forget." says the ami- nent man of wealth during the coune of his little speech on “How to Become an I Am." “I shall never forget how I saved my ï¬rst hundred dollars." At this Jupcture a weary individual in the audience. who has heard this story many tlmes and has read it many times more. lnterrupta: ’ ’ “Well, if you can't forget it, for I heaven's sake me the rest of m' a 1 chance to." l ! i I i i l i â€a _-__-,,, upon n scene preserved from the mid- dle ages, “a perfect specimen, living. breathing and entire.†‘ “Yemenâ€"in. papa.“ said Barry. “I 8111': I fool."â€"Phlladelpma Ledger. Individuality. To each lmelleu belongs a special power. We lwlun" to oursehes. and we lnse tontrul of our own when “9 trv tn be «utm- um- else. The original mlml h; a mugm-ti (-entet fur the at (rm Hun or qtlu-r mlnds. But the lode stone loses :uutblng by attraction. lt remalm 1119 same. salary Ray. and Rain. “I-‘A'eryh-nly emits rays. An angry mnu omits \‘inlv! rnyq; a contented pen m «units pinkish rays." “S ~unds inn-rusting. I wonder If my hose wuuld omit a ton dollar rnlse nf Opposim Wingâ€"I summre we should an marry our opposites, angâ€" Yes. um there is no reason why 11 man WM! :1 future should marry a Woman with l punâ€"â€" Philadelphia Record. Enhance In Solution In I were pines. A Chi-ring 875 Miiu Long flop-ruin ’ ‘! Alukl From Gav-nag. WWII“: between (muntdes, ntntu Ind utte- md betwem cities and the _ nntry surrounding them are mark injurious ways. Sometimes ! it is by u stone post or montmént; 08- ! ten arena“ is separated from an Id~ 1 Joininb county by a pubUc r d. which ii: surveyed purposely on t e count! ' line. " In some or the wuthem‘afmes coun- ties which allow (-nttle to run at larga am when separated from 'thoae which do not In u fence. The boundary be tween Al:an and (unada 13 marked b) a clear strip In the woods 875 miles long. \th1 u highway vessels; from One country inn» another the traveler 1.5 made aware or me fact by the vustoms othrlals. Souxemues also, as in France, a tax: ls colkwted on rountt)‘ produce entering the vines. But In Ithinly aet- tled sections of the United States the bounduiea betWeeu counties and even betwoen states are not always marked. Ind. though kuowu to the Inhabitants. are often not to be rm-ognlzed by I stranger. . ....c-~. 0m: nbtable Instance of a marked boundary i4 tha great wall of China. which extends for a distance of more than 1.500 mues along what was once the frontier of that “pimaâ€"Chfllm Hand. A Logacy From the Day. When Pooph - Slopi In Boxw g in medieval times. when life In very insecure. it was usual for people to sleep on a bed which wns surround- ed by sides of boards with strong posts at the four corners. These sides con- tained sliding doors. which could be fastened inside. Whéu men retired to rest they took a Weapon with them. If ntuclned in the night they were around by the notbe nude by the crashing In of their wooden defense and were able to de- fend themselves. WWhéu the law became strong mough tqprotect human life the side. 'of the bedstead Were gradually dispensed wlth, but the (our post: remulned; The i hoxuke bedstead still survives tn the rnml parts of Scotland and is almost not-essary where the earthen floors and i Imperfect veilings cause much damp.§ Emily Bronte In “Wutherlmz Heights“ describes one of these bedstead: in the old mansions as forming a "little clos- .- ___VV , at." Mr. Lockwood, who had to deep In it. says. "I slid buck the panel dds. got in with my light. pulled them to- gether again und felt secure."-Imdon Standard. FOUR POSTER BEDSTEADS. Penalty of the Peach. TheEgyptinns appear to have been acquainted wlth what is commonly cflled prusslc acid, the m'ost deadly of pol-om. It is held that they distilled It from certain plants and trees, noubly the peach. In the Louvre there Is an ancient Egyptian papyrus from which the following has been declphered: “Pronounce not the name of I. A. 0. under the penalty of the peach." Th1: has been supposed to be 1 death warn- ing to those who might be tempted to reveal my'ntel'les ln connectlon with the religious rltes or the prlelts. i i i 1 l A Poor Pm. Agent. Max O'Reil was exceedingly popular as a lecturer, and the way in which his mother viewed the suggestion that her son should take to the platform is worth repetition. She wrote to him from the native village which ahe hnd never left (or ‘more than a day to aay that she did not think appearing before , audiences to be reputable hm and ’ when he replied that hehad decided to 5 do it and had signed. I contract to that i en‘ect. the dear old lady wrote back 1, that she was “still" his loving mother and that she would tell no one in the village about it. The Romans probably learned of prun- sic acid from the Egyptians. History has it that in the reign or Tiberius a Roman knight accused of tresson drank poison and immediately fell dead It the feet of the senators; a signincsnt circumstance. inasmuch as no other poison has the almost instantaneous eflsct of prussic acid. Porfoctly Reagan-bk. The picture flhnw had gutted uni *Deven-yearold Ruth an wttchl‘ug In- :tently when she Man! a man behind “ her exclalm pettismy: 3 “I can't sm' :1 (Nina. madam." ‘ . “Mother." demanded Ruth. “why cdoes he come here If he can‘t 9122?â€- i Photonlny Mnmlzlne. Ono Beyond. Willis-Do you think tint moving pictures are the ultimate development ’of dramatic art? Hillsâ€"No. There will be one more. On the lexitimntq stage you cm get :10»; with brains and no beauty; in the movies you can set lions with beauty and no brunt. and the next stage of development will be one where you an ‘get by without elther.â€"-Life. ' the client. 7 "I do." said the lawn-r. , “Wen." returned the disappomtcd client. “it seems strange that when I man pays for adflce he can‘t get the kind he wants" Hu- impérat ivo. â€"â€"Boston Transcript. Limitod io Om. Friendâ€"Woman. as some one h} lid. is a creature o! mooda. Heat! Peekâ€"M}: wire ain't. She‘s than in Be wiser than other people It ,0" can, but do not tell tï¬em â€M ï¬eld. you Disappoinpd. advise me not tn we!†And yet the report! of the “greet bird eeen only-vine! nlgbtfell!" were eNotntely true. After some of on bed exhausted our nd 0! orientnl lore about the t gigantic bird that we: of such use to wxioue Schehera- iade‘ or the ‘Thouennd end One lehte’Wn reecelng Sinbed end» other unlucky travelers from danger-and others had gone-o tar as to suggest a rem of the “bled dado m stupendoue proportions. It '7†dually suggested that somebody ï¬o to Kitty Burk end expoee the talker; A Carter“. For the Man Who IM- V 90M tho News “Flko.†Some years nab Manse. word I» mundtonoatjuto WuhinsmntrOm Kitty Hawk. N..C.. describing 1 [beat bird. men can at night. hovering over the and dune-"1nd bruuhwood of the locality. It was to W that Kitty Hawk wu non‘euminated u a new: pet once.) WWII would. Mtge- cept such “0116- under my circum- stances. The boy- on Newspaper row were too experienced to be caught by North Camila: Men. "Not on your life!" aid I. ‘Thm are as mun: tales right here in Wuh- mgton every thenty-mur hours a 1 cm to “pest"; ' The one man {is-ho anally Went with deep reluctance {summed (he myntery cud liter-11y “Illa-ovum!" that two young Ohio barb. the Wylsht Whoa of 0mm. unmoved the “W mm at nary! Wall-l Chun- bul. In the may: Ind.- E1763." w“ wiped on the new: 'THE emu ms THERE WoWh Rmnlhmi‘l 1'.th manna-lama CHICAGO NORTH SHORE and MILWAUKEE RAILROAD Take the Electric when you go to Chicago; low rates of tare save you money, and the improved service assures you a clean, quick, comfort- able trip. At Central Street, Evanston, fast express trains on the Chicago Elevaâ€" ted Railroads await each North Shore Electric train’s arrival-"no delay. And the Elevated brings you within easy reach of any place in Chicago. _ .mv "g, a Ask Tibket . Agents for Folders and Time Cards Spacious, easy n‘ding ca «many of thm all-stool. Double track nearly all the way bum“ Milwau- hu and Chicago. Thirty limited train; daily. Nu- merous local tmlns. prrecfl mlor Joiheg Wehayb Far 19;? The Singer Sewing Machine Comâ€"a pqnypasmovecl then" ofï¬ce and hem-: stgtchgng madame; where all hem, sutchmg Will be done at Levin’s J ew-g. elry Store. New Machines, and S " plies will be kept on hand. Ma ' rented. ‘ l . 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