" E: Fe: , . 3.} t" A ' _'. y I 'err, o) " I". u l r i 'sp. . i 'ik'. 3w ' tieaztt--Without my. obligations on mit part: please ". ad me“: Bqt of KLEEN-HEET hm: and full informiy I ' on about KLHEN-HKET. . ' _ . ‘ man: on TELEPHONE '_. , Local onees l .. Park, Phone 2189 'Waukegan, Phone 1706 It Forest, Phone 1860 Libertyville, a 'Phone 64 AIL'I'EIS COUPON How-Am TELEPHONE . o , LAKE FOREST 1136 , ' _ your no A a under the direction of a trained lands'upe garderi- e wiirbea veluion to you. _ , . You 1|!" seen the homes of meny of t.he"rtrarle in your on t devalued from what appeared to be hopeless uglgneu into I tie gem-o! art. ' "y l . n o unboufm dhnithniatr' 6:16;»??118'6332.’ ---'i--'_MriN. Only 20 hutmnatien11y controlled oil burners have been en- Dd br, tbs Underwriterl’ Laboratories---- ' , ' Ute order for next Winter's Coal Supply until you have V tho‘truth about KLEEN-HEET. The money you Would IN'. W nut order of eua1.nriiriryrt_at1 a KLEET-BEE OIL BU - BYS’I'EH in your_preaent boiler. . You an clause from coal to Oil Firing in 4 HOURS NOW. A: 0,010.91! can you can secure on ubuuéunce of hot water il ml 10‘ tll Jl.lT1r1eet ,rt'th.the _KLEE'N;HEET‘Automatic _ _ '. Are You Carrying Enough? l i' ," “Mum for Auto News.“ Nota,rrPeisie PAUL SCHROEDER & CO.; Real Estate an onhtr-d Art. We iritop full line of insurmce in seven] dt the b‘ut nor successfqllx- apd permanently established Highways Co'nstruCtion Co. 'nsunrne--Are, Tornado; Liabilhy IRE AVENUE, IIGBWOOD; ILL. dams Perhaps Ignny be of nuisance to you! ame lama. Twin-'1’?» j l, intake County '7 “"77“ .KE COUNTY ENGINEERING COMPANY . CHAS. BIEGER, General OMee & Warehouse T Dtrtrttmtor Lake Blulf, In. _ AUTOMATIC OIL BURNING SYSTEMS mom mums AND HEATING E mammogram Given, ' Jobbing ta splat†mm BLDG. F , 360 cm E. was... a. P. 1m . Be... B. P. 'tUT) 3.11m): (nun; mag.) - 1 Pin... 12 ' A IN ID M at V W . _ Viola, tf2ttt deuce Studio, no Ridge Terrace, Evanston, Tel. Universit 8671 'hmdrtr1trtttatr,gtiststtmtave. _',":')',"-?)',,?;,?,::,?":'?"" In Highland Putj'rnood-n. Wodnudm and “Nun-numb]... "af, ' ."i"U"Gr.'Tlluihl'.".f= 'dttt.Pgt 13%}. Unfolding Beauty lil COUNTY ENGINEERING CO.,' GENERAL CONTRACTING but and Private Roads, Sewer: and Water I Fin-vamp; and Grading , . Barnum FURNISHED m. nun-i L. a. my, We. m: i A w. A. wan; M. MORAN BROTHERS Landscape Gardening) lune: Eighlnnd Park. m. EVANS Phone hhrhiand Park Mttt CLARENCE you“. PHONE B. P. 528 New“ 1063 ', 18 of there 20 "tni the patter of Deaths Mirror 19d "(flipper advertising they were U. r. C/ eompanies, but when actors spoke} one toujtother they wen Toe 'lllfelif'i" u _ , t," _ be srtNtsrerine. No playuin the world, probibly, has ever‘ had half so many isr.oditetiins. Tom he: nppeered in the. iery biggest cities and the moat goahewful tank towns.’ He has hum- bly hut smuzly remarked to Simpn Lem that you mayykill my body, many, but you can't kill my eon], in, the Ingest 'giteflit't,f theatres, the dinki'est kerosene- it' halls over the head nutter: of volunteer fhri-engim, “minus, and every kind of 1 show.. tent ithat ever a when; crowd of troupkn ranted in. F “4.0 statistician has the f1irures of how Lmany times Tnele Tom's Cahin'. has been played in America since its first. performance ht 1862. If they coqu be assembled. the result would Speaking of the vogue of this play, he toys: "In America today are vast numbers of middle-aged men and 'warhen who remember that ‘Unelle Tom’ was the dirigt theatrical 'per'- formance they ever saw. Also the second, third, and fourth, very likely, uni as 'Ten Nights in a Barroom' also hapiiened to come to that town. I was; one of those. Until I was thirty years old I never saw a professional company of actors in anything but 'Torit'--bat I had seen that sterling pro$uction five or six times. " ach time with a new excitement, too/ a thrill such an never-will by kno by the modern sophisticated) i't,2'itt' who comes home from the fee-1 tare: picture to remark that Jackiel Coogan wasn’t half bad. ' on PTom Shbws†in the Xpï¬â€"l "SHE ner), Magazine, but doubts that his masz of 26 hy!.ever been equalled. J. Frank Davis, author and dunn- tie Let-hie, is in the field for the una- teur attendance record at these per- forimmees. "He modestly claims only therNew England record in an article m - â€n.†_--_- v-Iv-u sv-u a “on", At New York company revived it and attiracted much attention. There is now a musical comedy based upon Mris. Stowe'a classic. But mast peo- ple': remember it as a melodrama pre- sented perhaps undér aitent or in the town hail.. V Just at a time when people were foggettigg about "Unele Tom’s Cabin," Writer Describes Some of 1 Features of Famous Play % Of Abolition l eeretary Jardihe’a statement, wif/ii' is his first public utterance since ha been e identified with the pruident's 11'le,i, will appear in the April imsuerof""'rhe Nation', Busi- neiss," th_'e oftieitu organ of the Cham- bet of Commerce. "TOM SHOWS†IN "What we all need to do is t less tominyrot and throw monkey wrenches into other IN machinery. We want to' stop ‘ at line up one group 'against gtoups. We want to work tog Americans should be eo/operatin quarreling with each 6ther ow interests of this gmnp or that." [ The Secretary of Agriculture point- eii out that there are now 5,000 co- operative grain marketing aa,soeiations, in the United States, and about the same number of co-operative livestock shipping associations, and he declared that if it were applied in. the proper manner co-operation could make of the farming industry in Ameritas “a big voluntarily unified, permanently and dependably profitable business in a? way that no paternalistic 1etris0. tion could possibly do." _In conclusion, Mr. Jarmine says: "What we all need to do is to talk' less tominyrot and throw fewer Mr. Jardine said that the farmer's stay, out is not by curtailing Produc- tion but by increasing it to a point “(here he can make money. He char- 'uicterhed the talk pf curtailing pro- duction as “loose talk," and said that even if this were practicable it would dot get the farmers anywhere. iThehope of the sraner,Ureetrdimr tir Mr. Jardine,.is in improving his marketing methods, and this can be tt by eo-operation. He points out t at most of the farmer’s capital is in his land and that he must make a fair ri te of interest on this. But with lrnd at its present price the farmer cgnnot make a fair rate of interest by tusing the marketing-methods of 1900. A . 'iw, only legislation he wants it I gisl tion that will assist. him in tteb- t ng reasonable credit on sound secur- ity;' legislation that will help him brim up machinery on a ptr with oth- e business men." . i-titsiiness man does not seek légil- union to fix price; or regulate de- tails. (gre knows that legialntion can- riot npllify economic laws. “The farmer doesn’t want to Iris éitl‘edi or babied by other people," Mi. nrdine asserts. "What the farmer Wants is just this: He wants him buai.. (tlt, lo, have in equal opportunity , itlr itther business. The Bound farm- l The) farmer is not a ward at the overhment and doésn'twnnt the sow rnmdnt . constantly mankeying with bt'is business, acéordigr- to g state- ent a%rtted by Secretary F Agricuh re Jardine to thd 'hj)u States Chamber of Commerce. I Mine Say; 8ttri4ultttre Able l _ to, Studio: Own; Feet and 1 , Its Hope}: minim-ov- _ f in: Marketing Pe ok NEW SECRETARY FARMER was Mr C li, WANT TO BE mm!) fun: maxim Rum PRESS. maximum“. Megs sion, Mr. Jarmine says: all need to do is to talk' yrot and throw fewer mches into other people's We want to' stop trying one group 'against Sg. a want to work toget r. GOOD-OLD TIMES I be 'o/operating, no; each dther over the General Tudenddrsr has nnndunced himself a candidate for President af Germany in the coming election, but no far Wilhelm has mot shied his hat into the ring. .- I A Bible, says a fool and his money ire soon aux-ted. which should links bulimia good for the mm. l It is stated; that the gunfire on Warships can now be directed by radio.. This does not mean, havesâ€, that therein going to be my effdit to jun uplfbeA nay. . T "The phrase 'economy ot, material' suggests another danger to which the novelist and t e writer of short stor- ies_are equally exposed,†Irrftet Edith Wharton'in "Telling a Short 'Story" in the April Scribner’s Magazine. “Such edortomy is, in both, mes, near- ly always to be advised in the nltrlti-, plication of aeeidtptal luippentmrs, minor episodes, surprises and contra- rieties. Most beginners crowd into their work twice " much material of this sort " it needs. The iehietinee to lookvdeeply enough into a subject leads to the indolept habit' of'decor- sting its surface. I was once asked to read, a nianuscript on the eternal theme 4t a loversI Quaml. ' The quar- _ telling pair made up, and the reasons for dispute and reconciliation were clearly inherent in their characters and situation; but the author, being new at the trade, felt obliged to cast labout tor an additional, a fortuitous, pretext for their reunion-ao he sent them for a drive,E made the horses run away, and causedthe young man to save the "untr lady’s life. Thit is a crude example of a frequent fault. Again and again the novelist passes by the real meaning of a situation simply for lack of letting it revieal all its potentialities instead of dashing _ this way and that in quest ofrifretshf seffeeti. If, when once draw-d to a subject, he would let‘it grow 1lt1tlt in his mind instead df hunting about for arbitrary combinations ot circum- stances, his tale would have thalamus; scent and flavor of a fruit ripened in the sun instead of the insipldity of one forced In ' hot-house." [ . pr,, At Least, Mating “Ought so . And Spoiled antral _ _ Sequencq Minnie Roaeittrertrer, Pox ,Lake. Leb. ters of administration itatretd to A. F. Beaubien; Bond bt $7,000" ', Emily Di Wade, Denvpr, Colo. Peti- tion to 'rrtabria heimhits f"ded and set fogihepriqrg A Til 16. _ [ . NEEDED RUNAWAY _ , TOFINISH STORY Julia Nolan, Lake FGreet--liseeds t2? authorized to depaitileiraey of S to Apdrey Mummers With county " Martha Teuman, Wauke’gnn. Let zen of Administration issued to Anna Teuman. Inventory unprqved. trmumrer'. ; David E, Shannon, incomtetent, An- tioch. Comusryator antho to'pny $10 permonth' for word atiHineI Me, morial hospital for dothink and iner- dentals. ‘ _ F garish A. spiintr--rinal lrebort ap- proved. ' Estate closed. V 1 w Natliin A. Griffin-Let rs of ‘nd- ministration with will nnexed to Clarence W. Diver. ' Home! B. Pearce, Anti wry approved. - Ernest 'E. Mead, ins: Lake-Report of sale 'or approved. am} if Bell, Highum Park-an- ventory 7 and appraiaethe tr bill ap- proved. , - - I k William Peddle, Lake' Pre"--"- ventory approved. _ a - -- - Richard W. stattord-- tee in re- sale of real estate under 'ontract en- tend. , . t "Lintord. C. Barthel, I 'ventory and nppraisemc proved. r Sale of chattel p thorized. ' . Homei Coolie, 16uketr; ed invgntory approved. '1 '8???)sz Ptays t1.oted., V Grace E. Edmonds, Hearing on final report April 13. i George lil.. Goerler, Final report approved. _ E John Loumun, Town 0 Final rgport approvebd. E Margaret E. Sauter, Final report approved, T E Albertina. Berg, wal, admitted to probate. Pr ship made. Bond of' testamentary issued to M husband. All property be Magma: Berg. Josephine' R. Matthew tent-marine on .report real estate continued to A; ed. Charles A. Butte, Ziot heVship taken. utters? tration issued to Lynn Ei Bond of $1,000. Apttralif Elizalieth M. Thomas, l Proof of heirship taken! administration issued ' Watrous, daughter. Bo Willinjq Guinmi, Imam tss-rim report, Ippro‘ closed. T Margaret, P. Prenden Libertyville-Guardian I invest 82,000 of funds 1 mortgage. V Elisabeth. B. Vande Lake Blue-Att-trf allowed in. re-settlement a] Surety company. _ my: in Probate court: RECENTAC'HON m 1 'v ‘25 T ' COURT OF FBOBA'I’E Wings in Settle'mént of Various Estates in This Following are last weik'ts, proceed- County of Late m1??? auketran-'s tate closed; _ Warren--'- tate closed. ankegan» at." closed. n-Amend. ind report L, Lake Fm}. ed.: Estate , iilcompe- of sale of til 2. aukegan~ :ont'mued to ne, Grays real came eh--Irtven.. let) minor, |th¢rited to f minor in rntityeh---rn. n; bill npo mpertyLnu- vith {Kathi- "atkegartd-- Later: at r Anna E. l of $8,000. ".-Proof of "strart---Witl 'ot. qt heir, o. Letters mus Berth queathed to of 'sdminia- Sutte, son. an appoint-' 1215 Wuhiutoni Anny. a B. STEFF EN TRANSFER CO. Not 'ttemireftteteeuttne 1nttel-dthqtahar4t-.-tnttt.' moat modem and thorough ’way. Mata old hat: like new. We dean and dye anything and everything that may be handled in a canal»: modern plant - direct to the homehold. . Matti cleaned and blocked, $1.’Caps cleaned and pun-ed. Me. Baggage, ‘Expressihg, Moving " Highland Park and Highwpod _ _ File/your _drder NOW and take ad- vantage of our early Spring PRICES. They will interest you! . . Telephone 1805 , . BEST BY THE TEST l 7 OF TIME! ' .“Since 1893 the Standard†INSTALLED BY OUR OWN MECHANICS, SPECIALLY TRAINED, HIGHLY SKILLED ' Amt _ Annie": Railway Express Telephone 235 New. no City Telephone 1689 Nun. In“ the an an estimate for aura. ..-.-.....orhtdonm. 5 (in-balm Haul ,l2flty& 00.. L. 1044vo 8. Durban: Bt., Addressâ€..- ' WILL o:jtvMBAcrf JOHN ZENGELER CHAMBERLIN METAL ':1 WEATHERSTRIPS Phone 828-R Shop Studio IM Bo. Second St. CLEANING (CORY/isms THE ATLAS CO. Manure, Black Soil and God ( (Not incorporated) _ 890 Catrat Avenue GENERAL HAUUNG AND TRANSFER FREIGHT AND BAGGAGE â€Northmw “OPERATE otmojimrsavrm HIGHLANDPAIK . Painters and Decorators SEND IN THE COUPON jll.il,i.ttistg,iS Cleaner and Dyer Sash, Doois Work ' 9 , no. Box 144; Highland Park; In v; MUZIK, ja. “when M. P. m Telephone H. P. 1405 HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS TYrUaNrttea1tuevte. THURSDAY. APRIL " Mull-ah i5? in 1lithy.ekatlt , AM' thing“ J 1 li? cm. "I, sMI'Mhivksremodd f a ‘1 . trotted" _ t/l 25! Nitjith It of IW AD EARL Batman; ll it Hi [H RA f a, than C.- milea to mp. 125 (ir Biemdmt) “0' stock. " Myq Nu! lama. H a few spa in full t Uttdnrd tUtd,', "when “Ifm 1.2m dank-1 .'o'ulvho'I r, irsai. at I’m Them OM11 [CD as. thin van DIAMOI NLRB non“: Id "It! old. I scum BOUT, 50m: mum iiiriii'i, DIAIO! DIAIOJ SAW!!! " DIAIUJ EXC, .Ait'?’ which Wi1 “any = DI 24