4Â¥ i9 PAGE TWO THE SANITARY ENGINEER 278 Beach St. ndpmï¬d- Windes & Marsh SANITATION 1S THE FOUNDATION OF And perfect plumbing of pracâ€" tical worth and real beauty is the foundation of our business suceess. _ Sanitation is health insurance and when it comes to sanitary. plumbing we‘re the doctors. _ VIC J. KILLIAN, Inc. rwuvnmagw, | E‘:: > l'?EE)D*L-TH,/ \‘Q Te Te L Phones. . Highland Park 650 Winnetka 222 LANDSCAPE GARDENER CHARLES BROMS 874 Center 8t., WINNETKA Tel. Winnetka 1260 Illinois Licensed Surveyors Municipal® Engineers. * A Bath A Day _ Keeps You Fit Every Way SANITARY ENGINEERS Specialists in New Work and Remodeling Black Soil and Manure Phone H. P. 1442 , Lverg INC3 After 1913 all of those.commodities began to rige in price _&ce)st, anthraâ€" cite coal. which varied slightly for three years, and gas which decreased in price until 1917. In 1918, the price remained stationery after ‘which it began to Fige slowly. Fromh 1918 to 1920 the price curve on house furnishâ€" ing goods, clothing, food, and anthtaâ€" cite coal rose almost precipitonsly. Housing clitmbed higher in £9zx than in 1920 and incregsed steadily to and including 1924. . / 24 itk) <. K Furnishing ‘ Among se‘ essential items the house furnishing goods reached the highest peak with an increasge of 192.7 per cent over the 1918 p:iee. This was in 1920, The same year also saw peak pri in clothing, food, : and anthracite , ‘while the cost of housing continued to increase steadily. Clothing advanced 187.5 per‘cent over the 1913 figure, food went up 110 per cent, anthracite coal rose 61.3 per cent while manufactured gas increasâ€" ed only 14.7 per cent. ; The price est point in advance. ove while in‘ the vanced 44.1 per| cent, hc zn:%nis)iing g coal 103.8 p prices. have these items steadily incr been consts Orders and Docket Entries in Settlement of Estates The estate of Aion, wa: probate â€" cou Decker. . Ott ed of: © Jennie â€"F gan. ~ Final closed. | â€" Statistics| compiled from es in the M@thl Labor Review, published by the U. $. Bureau of Labor Statisâ€" tics, show that of the following comâ€" moditiesâ€"nmanufactured , house furnishing | goods, clothing,: ‘food, anthracite coal, and housingâ€"gas has increased the least in price during the last eleven| years. â€" The 1913 retail prices of these commodities are used as the basis for‘ the figuri from which the following percentages of inâ€" crefise or ase are computed: for the period from 1914 to izit, incluâ€" give, + . s cite | coal â€" ros almtï¬t precipitonsly. Housing clitmbed higher in d\ifwzx than in 1920 and incregsed steadily to and including 1924. . 4 yaZ: , Price of Gas |_ _ The price of gas reached its highâ€" est point in May, 1921. THis was an advance. over 1913 of onlf‘ mper cent while in‘ the| same month had adâ€" vanced 44.7) per cent, clothing, 122.6 per|cent, hqusing 59 per cent, house furhisHing goods 147.7 and anthracite coal 108.8 per cent. Sinceithat time prices have| been fluctmtiLrpnlll these items except housing, which has steadily increased, and gas, which has been constantly decreasing. The percentage in the ease in coal were‘ based on p obtained from 30 cities; those in respect to clothing, housing, and hous furnishâ€" ing goods, on prices obtained from 32 cities, and those relating to gas on the rates obtained from 42 cities. LATE Pl;gCEEDINGS €9"; PROBATE COURT Estate: G Proceedings Estate close Herman J al report ap | Themodxmkid:havemchunc%to : do any work, as it takes all their time | to heg rides from motorists. | _: These are said to be times of great ‘uhrest, and they certainly are just | before it isitime to eat at the sumâ€" mer resorts; + . f Julia H-. F Will admitt erty. given foster moth igsued to M $4,000. â€"Pro ~Agnes S. mitted to p: sisters and of real esta ters of , Adr newr issu niece. Proc William Will admit given to ters Testa Stewart. heirship William |B. Stewart, aukegan, Will admitted to probate, all property given to wife, Jane M. Stewart. Letâ€" ters Testamentary issued to Jane M. Stewart. d of $18,000.; Proof ‘of heirship en, | 4 ; : Irene E. Brey. Hearing on petition to establish ‘heirship continued. Edwin Junken, et al, minors. Final report as Edwin Junken and curâ€" rent report as to other minors apâ€" proved. } . , Frederick Porep, Barrington. Inâ€" ventory approved. Joseph zec, North Chicago. Letâ€" ters of Administration issued to Agâ€" nes Marzed. Bond of $3,000.. Proof cf heirship| taken. Higs . Edwin grocki, minor. . Invenâ€" tory approved. ile s * s : * @harlot Yankawskas. Hearing on report of sale of real estate continued to July 15 is T George | Waldman, ~. Waukegan. Hearing on Final report continued to August 3. | > io ve Sarah Hook, ,Grayslake. â€" Hearing on Final réport continued to July 20. Milton Litwiler, Round Lake, Hearâ€" ing on petition for sale of real estate continued to July 9. ue in Meyer, Liberty;vflle. Finâ€" roved. Estate closed. rzyborski, North Chicago. to probate. |All propâ€" to Catherine Przyborski, rr. Letters Tesramentary ax Przyborski.| Bond of of of heirship taken. | Payne, Ivanhoe Wilf adâ€" obate. Property given to ‘nieces. Estate consists te valued at $6,000. Letâ€" rinistration with Will anâ€" d to Gladys E. Dolph, f of heirship en. ench Campbei&., Waukeâ€" report approved. Estate of Dr. George Billmeyer, closed ‘last week in the t by Judge Martin C. er matters heard consistâ€" orge M. Billmeyer, Zion. Final report ‘approved. Lake County ADE COMP ARED I ITEMS NOTED Affected LINGO EXPLAINED _ _ FOR TENDERFOOT "Eating the Gravel"â€"being thrown from a bugking bronk or steer. "Slick Ear"â€"an unbranded horse. "Scratching" or "Raking"â€"act of kegping' the feet moving in a kicking manner in riding animals. .. "Screwing Down"â€"Singing spurs into the cinch while riding a bucking horse and failing to move the feet in a kicking motion as provided in the rules. , t % "Bullâ€"dogging" is steer wrestling, "Hazer" is a bulldogger‘s assistant. After bulldogger has leaped from steer the hazer picks up the farmer‘s mount and protects him from being gored when he releases the steer. > "Dog Fall"â€"Putting. a steer down with its feét under him. The throw is not complete until the steer is flat on side with all four feet out. â€"If you are a tenderfoot and are not conversant with the cowboy language, you had ‘better brush up on thz lingo of the western plains before August 15, when the Chicago Roundup and world‘s championship roded starts its thrilling nine day contests . in ‘the Grant‘ Park Stadium, under the ausâ€" pices of the Chitcago Association of Commerce, " with Tex Austin, world fnxglon_s cowboy, in charge of the conâ€" tests. The western range has a lanâ€" guqcé all its own, and unless you can understand this picturesque lingo, you will be like a‘ stranger in â€" a strange land when Chicago is invaded by the hosts of cowboys with their bucking bronchos and wild steers to take part in the greatest rodeo ever held. : oo For the benefit of those unacquaintâ€" ed. with real western life, a study of the <following "Tips to the Tenderâ€" foot? will be of value in getting the full rnjoyment. out of the coming Roâ€" deo. eabe C3 f "Rodeo" is the Mexican word for "Roundup." . It is pronounced "Roâ€" d‘y '!' | n‘ â€" i . "Broncho"â€"Mexican ~word for a mean, vicious, unbroken horse. "Buckaroc" is a broncho buster. "Bucking"â€"Gyrations of a horse to unseat a rider. 8 Â¥ "Crow Hops" is a term describing mild bucking motions of a broficho. : "Pulling the Leather," "Shaking Hands with Grandma," "Grabbing the Safety Knob" and "Choking the Bisâ€" cuit" all mean holding to the saddle, which disqualifies a rider. Ts ."Biting the Dust"â€"Cowboy term for being thrown from a bucking horse and usually follows "Choking the Biscuit." ' ~_"High â€"Roller"â€"Horse, that â€"leaps high in the ‘air when bucking. * "Plum Cultus"â€"As bad as they make them. §2 ¢ o AND ITS "PLUMâ€" CULTUS" \"Seeing Daylight"â€"Term applied when daylight can be seen between ridérâ€"and seat of saddle. "Sunfisher" is a (bucking horse which twists its body in the air, standing on its hind legs so the sun hHits its stomach. ‘â€" ; "Salty" signifies apitif. or viciousâ€" ness in a horse. an‘* j "Four Fcoting"â€"catching an aniâ€" mal by the feet with a ropeâ€"to throw him.for handling. "Hoplihaning" â€" ‘Alighting _ from hcrse on horns of steer in bulldogging and knocking steer down . without twisting animal down with wrestling hold. This is barred at the Chicago Roundup. â€" & Py 4. "Qutlaw"â€"Horse whose â€"spirit is unconquerable and which never can be: broken to ride. : Widely Advertised Rodeo at ~â€" Chicago Will Begin Nine \ Day Stand August 15th "Chuck Wagon"â€"Cafeteria of the range, which follows the ‘Roundup and to which the cowboys go for their meals. § & Weligith "Maverick"â€"An unbranded animal more than a yéar old. i+ i) o MOTORISTS WARNED ~ _ OF NEW ROAD LAW Every State Highway Through . Thoroughfare . in County ; Also in Villages _ > The attention of Lake County moâ€" torists is called to the recently passâ€" ed ~ legislatiocn which automatically makes all state highways> "through streets" in villages of less than 7,â€" 500, < and . preferential . highways through the country.. A warning is sounded by the state highway departâ€" ment at Springfield to all motorists in the state to govern themselves acâ€" cordingly. f + e sc > The law does not apply in Waukeâ€" gan because the city has prescribed certain â€"thoroughfares : as "through streets," but it applies to every cther community in the county.. s4d9 Such a classification, officials of the highway department point out, makes it necessary for motorists to come to a full stop: before turning onto any state highway or cross}ng such an arâ€" tery. Because of the fact that the legislation was passed, such a short time ago, the customary "stop" signs have not yet been erected at all side roads but the officials warn that the new law provides no pericd of grace and that the absence of the signs will not excuse a motorist nor make him less liable to a fine, for failure toTeomply with the regulations. THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HGHLAND PARK, 1| _ "Be Sure ‘to Telephone! IN 1920 this comâ€" pany‘s average investment per teleâ€" phone was $125. In 1924 this had risen to $146, and it is esâ€" timated that in 1929 the figure will be $175. With this mounting investâ€" ment every year telephone rates must keep pace. > j ._New Roofs, or, Old Roofs Repaired _ CEMENT BLOCKSâ€"Now made in our New Cement Plant Get Prices for our New Overhead Garage Doorâ€"the BEST Garage Door Made i PHONE ZION 500 > * Screensâ€"Storm Sashâ€"Mill Workâ€"Carpenteringâ€"House Moving House ‘Raisingâ€"Wells Boredâ€"Wells Drilledâ€"Lathingâ€"Plastering ~_ _A wooden roof doesn‘t wear outâ€"it rots out. And Barrett ‘Shinglecoat offers the sure way to check this decay. Brushed on the shingle roof and siding of your home, it will keep the old shingles good for years to come. Wood treated with this valuable woodâ€"preservative beâ€" comes a rich, deep brown which will harmonize with prac» tically any color you choose for trim, shutters, and porch. Down! You Can Still Buy Yards, Vine Avenue, H. P. 27 Phones: Office 390 Central Avenue, P : oytad prearmgeuee aari comenuemgane y Give New Life to Old Roofs! DEPT. 4, BUILDING INDUSTRY, ZION. ILLINOIS NEW OR REBUILT PORCHES GLASSEDâ€"IN ILLINOIS _ MUTUAL COAL COMPANY Cut Your Fuel Bills ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY BELL SYSTEM f One Policy â€" One System â€" Universal Service ZION INSTITUTIONS AND INDUSTRIES at Reduced Summer Prices "Your Fuel Dealer Todayâ€"For Sale by emmmmommeen | en emelmer sez cmenomett cemmceeMeseeccamusmen e immg gnomd aantTmgrnir eamsy mss T:# WHEN business takes. you . away from home, think of the pleasure you can give your family with a daily visit: by teleâ€" phone! T y You can use stationâ€"toâ€"station long distance serviceâ€"call your home telephone and talk with anyone who answers. For this service the rate is about twenty per cent lower than pérsQn‘-,to- person service, which brings to the telephone the person you name. Read the information padu of your telephone directory. | "Clecan as the Sun‘s Heat" THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1 & THURSBDA Y Telephoge 1 Baggag E:.wmm“ Calf Bwe the 1b. Fresh Perch the Ib, ... The 1b. .......... Salmon Steak the IB, .....s.,... New Dry Onic 2 lbs. for ... Filet of Haddie Tlut H. .. .1..<:.an Fresh Lake the Ib. ... Fresh Lake 8 White Fish, Rib Lamb C the Jb. .......... Front Ler 1 California Ha the Ib. ... 1. Leg Spring L« the Ib. ... Frida Very Best Rib The IB. ........_.. Very Best Pot the 16. .......\â€"4 Pork Loir the 1b., .. Native Flank The Th, ..........: PHONES 1 FREE Telephones : Estimates he 11 ‘resh Spare he 1b. ...._._ resh Herring 315 Qakwood 4 8. First St. &. E. Fa High Lard for Veal