d Only E eal, pkg m c K ...._. he qt. .. Rï¬.!foy . for .. t Only [ > ties und for ‘.... gs. for pkge . ' e. The ::q tockholders. 6 k . hes for , 8 tbs. for , Ige cans ch n mtdert aind . for ... 0 pkgs. oney, jar ly Soap Chi yonaise lephone H} P, 18 eet Pickles EST RI f }lgEEF , pke r'u' Only TS c barvice PAN can on ts | : iâ€"11¢ 496 1924 a * A A % tA I oonaf in meny nog 1 = MER 6TuTo m ‘ CLEANERS AND J;MERS THURSDAY,~0OCTOBER 16, 1924 Radi 38 e Avenue You are \invited t ng Room 387 Central Av ’nwtr‘}j"t‘vmk ed by . | FlrltChughl %ï¬a tist of Highland Park | HOURS: Wo&gn 9 a.n p.m. Sundays 2:30 to 6 p. reading only. 58 Soath Sto Johne Ave.. RHAPS the famil unâ€" PE work ftirin: our e Pamily vuhln# nd mtht:ko that = ‘her life| and ut of her hong ) forever. Why hot thne wig on sbout it over the phoqk ; i Wet wu_s;ffgu 11.00 Rough Dry, 1¢ For hfchï¬- call 1 land Park 87. This includes fiat: ; Ied Acjusted, %C&I('I)Ig'CE n. for ighâ€" visit |â€"United 8’:&- Easily â€" First n number;of telephones per 100 ulation, mï¬a'l leadership was evéen: more pronounced. There were, on| January 1, 1923, 18.1 “h%honea for" every‘ 100 people in the United States, as compared with 8.5 teleâ€" phones for every 100 in Germany, 2.3 in Great Britain and Northern Ireâ€" land, 1.3 in France and 0.3 in Italy. Although Japan had the best developâ€" ed ! telephone czyqtem of any Asiatic country, she could boast but 0.9 teleâ€" phones per 100 inhabitants, even prior to the earthqn@ko, of September, 1923. It is significant that these | foreign cortrieu have all entrusted the develâ€" optnent of tbt;elephone‘mteml to government ownership, whereas. in the United States the telephone business has been energetically developed by private initiative, Telephone systems opérated by private enterprise now inâ€" clude 71 per cent of the world‘s total telephones; only 29 per cent being unâ€" der government ownership. | Canada, with 10.4 telephones per 100 people, ang Denmark, with 8.3 approach nearâ€" est to this country in number of telâ€" ephones per 100 inhabitants. | _ . â€" Urbart and Rural Telephones 1;1 absolute gumbers New York City, with 1,072,632 telephones on January J, L923, was casily first among all the cities of the world. In fact, the Amerâ€" tcan metropolfs glone had more teleâ€" phones than the whole of any foreign country except Gérmany. New York‘s telephone development of 18.2 teleâ€" ph¢hes per 100 people far exceeded that of Berlin 9.3; Paris, 6.3; or Lonâ€" don 5.1. A tthe same date, Omaha had 28 telephones for every 100 inhabâ€" itants; San Francisco, 25.2; Minneapâ€" olis,‘ 24.2; Denver, 23; Washington, 228. The y important foreign city with a iparable telephone deâ€" velopment ) Stockholf | with â€"25.4 tellrphonea 100 people. + Pï¬m%ogwun'i:mnm been seen so frequently counâ€" try that it woul almeotfsefm'%uif he were running for office. United States has 63 per vnent of f@ll the tole)’:‘ohe. il:lithci fld?‘fn p on to popnh ation t country asg ten times as many es as the â€" world at large. 1e | average American uses‘ the telep nine times as much as the average Englishâ€" man, andâ€"téen times as much as the avz‘x:ge Frenchman." There are more telephones in New York City than in tl:fl whole of Great Britain agd Northâ€" erff Ireland; more in the city of Chicaâ€" go! than in all of France. (In. rural telephone _ development, _ America s:.?nh head and shoulders *bgve the rest of the world. t t 4 ‘3:1 most foréign countries telephone fagilities aore even more mIflcted in the. smaller communities than in the large cities. Farmers‘ telephones are ost unknown in. Europe. Teleâ€" phone develo:rent has, in many counâ€" , been concentrated principally in the capital ciites and large commercial ters. More than oneâ€"third of all British telephones, for example, areé in London; over oneâ€"third of all the French telephones are in Parig. 1meflcm mppreciate their unique telephone facilities and use the teleâ€" phone far : than do other nations. During 1922 there were 174 telephone conversations per person in the Unitâ€" ed States, as inst 85 in Germany, 17 in France 18 in Great Britain and Northern I C P U. L. LEADS WORLD * }Stt | â€" IN TELEPHONE USE ;,,, er| countries, including . the | entire Western Hemisphere outside of the United States, and Asia, Africa and nia as well, had only oneâ€"ninth of the total telephones in operation. Of the 1,100,161 telephones added to the wite systems of the world during 1922, ,670 represented the net growth of the telephone facilities in the United States. 4 Sl%lking Facts Hlu ve Of Leadership in. This Field ' ! Brought Out \By Interâ€" i esting Fizures |____ I Striking Facts | ) > (These and other striking facts, illusâ€" trative of this country‘s unchallenged leadership in the hlap;mne eld, are brought out in a recent compilation of teliepbone statistics of all countries. This study shows that on January 1, 1923, there were 22,004,415 telephones in use throughout the world, of which 14,347,395 were in the Uun:l States. ’rï¬s the American people, who form but oneâ€"sixteenth of the earth‘s popâ€" ulation, have at their service nearly ‘oâ€"thirds of all the telephones in exâ€" istence.â€" â€" Europe, with four times as many people as this country, has only about hmfll& as many telephones. the date to which these figures reâ€" late, there were 5,863,684 telephones in Europe, or but little more than oneâ€" quarter of the world‘s total. : All othâ€" HAS 63 PER CENT OF ALL L'rm.usg Willis Sainte Claire" Cylinder Cars . Right Cylinder Cars | Lake Shore Motors‘Co."! 55 Se. m‘Avmo ()bjéct1o‘ni may be filed to said apâ€" cation on or before the hour o»f ten (10) o‘clock in the forenoon of said f;s'rUDt:N'r CARRIES ON _ _ [ WHEN FUNDS STOLEN day |\The construction of a connected sysâ€" éem of kanitary sewers in the Sunâ€" et â€" Terrace Subdivision, Highland ark Special Assessment of said urt Docket No. 267,â€"and that appliâ€" tion hgs been made to said Court to nsider and determine Wwhether or not e facts stated in said certificate are ie. t :i heuring‘ 1 be h?xd um‘!: d application on ay, the y of October, A. D. 1924, at rg‘ ur of (10) o‘clock in the foreâ€" n of gaid day, at the County Court said Court, in the County House, at Wouk%un, in said e County. 1P p w Board of Local Improvements of the | City of Highland h*hlhoh B Dated at Highland Park; , Octâ€" | Latvig has tripled its £:rder guards n the |(Russian frontier to guard gainst ble invasion. It is underâ€" Esthonians have done likeâ€" vige. ces ( KE \Dan A. (Madden, Libertyville, oof of heirship taken, Hearing on tition for probate of will continued November 3, 1924. ... _ J Elsie (M. Swanson, Lake Forest, nservator given permission to sell V B. mnote valued at $1,000. Albert Basely, Waukegan. Hearing on final |report continued to October ‘Charle n final 924. .. Cecilis ory app lannk l Elien . pprovec | S‘:rrie | Fran Prichnx‘d,ogizhhnd Park Petition |for probate of will filed and set for .hearing October 20, 1924. Esâ€" te consists of â€" personal property alued at $2,000 and r?l estate ‘val= red at $8,000. â€" t *r24f| Admini Rhoades â€" hails from . Manzanola, Colorado, where he graduated from high school in 1922. Working one ‘season on his father‘s farm, he left home to become a tg:mtph operâ€" ator in Santa Fe where he earned money enough to attend Colorado Teacherg‘ college one quarter. | ©| L’}Phun Phoebe wants her money ck for her trip to. S¢ America. She couldn‘t see the equator. [ | t c NOTICE!| â€" °_ : ‘} .. | Public| notice is hereby given that he B of Local Improvements of he City of Highland Park, County of Lake and State of Illâ€,nbls, has filed the ty. Court of Lake County, Illinois, ia certificate that the followâ€" improvement has been completed, nd that it conforms abuhnflally to quirements of the original ordiâ€" ance for the construction of the me, toâ€"wit:. ; &i | Attracted (by promige of Khigher wages lP the east, young Rhoades left the west on foot, and accepting lifts from tourists, \finally reached Cambridge, Mass., where he worked long enough to save $175 with which he planned to enter colléege this fall. } Probot: action t.ken&.a:t week in several cases is as follows: | _ Petition for Letters of Administraâ€" tion .w filed. Bond, was fixed at $20,000.| Proof of hei%hip taken in estate o& Miss Jennie Hays. t | Action was taken also in the folâ€" lowing éstates: C m } PROCEEDINGS IN \ Prevented by lack: of funds from ntering any of the e ive instiâ€" tions of the east, ) decided o come to Illinois lege at Jackâ€" onville. _ A friend who owned an auâ€" mobil¢é took him to New York and m there Rhoades started westward n foot, He had reached Columbus, ghio, ‘ith the assistance of motorâ€" ists, when all his savinigs were stolâ€" en ï¬ofl his coat pocket in a barber shop. | P | Undaunted, Rh * â€"pawned <| a ï¬nmen to buy food and continued is hike to ‘Jacksonville. He arrived re penniless and stated his predicâ€" ent to the college rities who ermit him ‘to en upon his romise) to pay his tuition when ‘he could. He is now working in a Jackâ€" gonvfllo,’mtnunnt ‘eight and oneâ€" alf hoqrs a day to pay his expenses. Besides (working and at ing classâ€" esy; des is a musician and plays A cornet in the college: band. Action Taken In Several Cases Last| Week; Docket Entries \~And Orders n final th. ober 9th, 1924 at Jacksonville College Is Persistent in Anbiï¬on- ‘ â€"For Ed THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLIN FRANK L. CHENEY, E. A. PRESTON, â€"â€" YLE GOURLEY, s Koch, Wuukefln. Hearing report continued to ‘Oct. 18, t Kudrewicz, Ngrth Chicago. rator authorized to comproâ€" m against Mut;in Svete for for death of said Harriet Haben, Prairi¢ View. Invenâ€" roved, § T J. Ryder. Inventory approvâ€" {oran, Waukegan. Inventory PROBATE COURT $2â€"33 The large number of men who are wearihg‘ decorative ‘ clothing â€"| would that a new market is being created for mirrors. _ Political oratory may be t to voters, much as the alar sou very obnoxious to the : So far the automobile have not shown any anxiety to have their number plates made more easily visible at a distance. | |_ The people who think the is flat have not yet explained the world fliérs got around to thik counâ€" try a‘aln after going off the ‘The people who won‘t go to church becauge a collection is taken up ought not to live in any country taxes are levied. The difference between a : and a salesman is the same as differâ€" ence between a job and a on. Send this Coupon for 1 a w s s uon a 8 a / TROY METAL PRODUCTS Co., City Street Gen: : Please send me uMAH!m’hfluuhfl" We would welcome the nity to show Kitchenâ€"Aid home on the North Shore, deints iis anarmal prac un Send C There is positively no on your part to buy if the coupon requesting a ¢ 1t you ‘will fill out mail ei coupon at the of this a ent, you will not be pesâ€" t or annoyed by â€" t salemen. | : Themen répresenting Kitchenâ€" Aid on the North Shore|are not nl:amen in the true of. the word. u2s Those who now own Ki »â€"Aid bought them. Kitchenâ€"Aid‘was not sold: to them. $ In place of regular Kitchenâ€"Aid is ‘presented your consideration in your by demonstrators or service men. A demonstrator will put At the â€"North« â€"PARK, Its t« upon ‘which to those who hav chapel, beautif lined walks ar trees, it is All lots u:3 the largest T HE CEN TR absolutely gua: Gross Point 1 Yor esenting Kite th Shore are true sei of regular résented : your _ service men. cown Ki chenâ€"Aid was T he satc [ Wb 7 Linors _ & differâ€" x zo to |church en up ought taxes the is ed the o thik counâ€" the e. en who are ing < would tet is being e r8 ety have e more Llintton send in onstraâ€" mail of this be pesâ€" istent Descriptive Circulars M Send this Coupon for Free Denonsttn!h:‘ Te ® # oR H on 8 n #60 n n n n nB 8 8 B8 t 8 0o 8 8 8 a . rints of the editorial article pportuâ€" n every for the al value itchen/Aid ‘ll Not Be Pestered led in its quiet dignity and beauty., it ~/Of * \with Perpetual Care. â€" Connected with Memotial Park is one of care funds on deposit with a strong Trust Company of Chitago â€" which keeps the funds inviolable. Full perpetual care is oupon Today to See boundary of Chicago there is located a beautiful MEMORIAL 1 eqddnothnmndamdhbb{mdm mm.mm~vmumh-upwuqh gone before. . With the comfortable office building, the magnificent front park, located on the highest part of Cook County, its flower boulevards, jewel like lake, the abundant shrubbery and various M. J. BUCKLEY, Local Representative hland Park, Ilinois sn t L CEMETERY CO. OF ILLINOTIS _ _._.|., NON SECTARIAN stt B L‘ddm&~lmm Tel. Evanston 4266 [ go Office, 701â€"4 Marquette Building. Tel. Central 8330 _ | resome m clock leeping Beautiful North Shore Cemetery MEMORIA L PA RK alâ€" Our experience teaches us that Kitchenâ€"Aid makes friends whereâ€" ever shows. If a man or woman who sees Kitchenâ€"Aid demonstratâ€" ed does not buy, he or she has only words of endorsement and approval for it and gives favorable answers | Walter Knupfer If you say "I do not care to buy now, : but vi&lronhn one next month," you not see a Kitchenâ€" Aid man until the date you set for another interview. most magical electrical machine in your kitchen and show you how much it does in a new and better wayâ€"what it isâ€"what it doesâ€" boyitumtimeundh’lb;bo!u-m you can prepate an e rate = n:jrwi}tlaoutbeeominctooflrodto enjoy it. s After you have seen the machine and you decide that you do not care to purchase, all you need to do is tell our demonstrator so. He will take the machine away, after thanking you for the opportunity to show it to you. Will accept a limited number ‘of â€" on Monday afternoon _ | ©3 _/ > Telephone Highland Park 1994‘ ; For arrangement addréess _ > KNUPFER STV 400 Fine Arts : STUDIOE, 16 Pine Arty Besnaing PIANO PEDAGOGUE . Teacher of Many Pianists of Reputation Residence Phone: Evanston 6504 City ‘Gentlemen : MM&‘OM“‘*% mmwuu; x me uhder no «whatsoever. | /. 13 KITCHEN AID SALES AGENCY, 7614 N. Paulina St, Chicage. Mixes dough for bread, cakes, bit, P ~ doughnuts, rolls, ete. [3 w« x 14. flufhiness, |" e . Makes mayonnaise, (drops the oll grad , We . _ cup or as many as you like, L aee Wereeampante ot Ertaint oo _ ereuge, . abarliging flavor It alices potatoes (to any desired Ds BJ c COuts sBortening in pastry. . AW < ins the (either. Ant e o apaliite | 9e in It strains soups, purees, through a sieve Strains sapple sauce. It is not -.jq_-_ It grinds coffee, chips ise, chops meat, nuts, All of this it doesâ€"â€"and moré ! Telephone 1587 What Kitchen /1id g l Does For You _\ . A eard or the coupon beâ€" law wl Mring Kitthenâ€"Ald ip youf home at & time convenient to you. fommnt, ces o Rupe you npthing, nor Jm« m Soden‘tbdtï¬sif t see Kitchenâ€"Aid yw?: You will not be urged to & demonstrators : are C ewrbou.Weqepmnd W-m’%ï¬qvm you or § or dn ns wl pol in n mt cause Py oody uied you, | f( winoret naked about onr Sanching . It is not unusual to ve ders for KitchenAid, thing like this: "I saw E chine a year ago and State , Chicago ! PAGE ELE for ly s Ti