n why some people accidents seems to be. w how to drive too that a young=â€"man is ; e wholsale trade, may that he is trying to gitls at the same time, ‘sun baths that they ts mmer resorts may be all ; Rhey don‘t seem to to loosen the dirt. a nvélages RPh. ones 222â€"14 iness of a healthy x what your age, WMAN‘S MILK. It ist on ur te rular We have sokem o Remedies, all in. forts, vacation ‘«‘d: ual values on itermAs â€" e tore but an impo : substantial uvim ' : thing for a community ith center, but_each of n individual oné in hig n the form of a well HURSDAY, AUGUST lard of Quality Casdade mdid plan for the girls to: +, but they should till have things (L:o making fudge atter m en t ï¬tal | Creme de rmacy| ‘this Sale COMPANY Pag ILK te 5DC for Both ade Linen r Money st Dealing â€"| North Shore C ho THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1925 North Shore A Furnace Fire That . Lasts All Winterâ€" . Heating your home with gas is no fort and convenience of starting your looking at it again until spring. This gas heating can quickly be yours. The need change. The balance of your A card or phone call will, without data on your heating requirements. This modern conveniencée is now placed within reach mf:derate income by our _ 5 : New House Heating J \ _ Effective July 31, i9 Is the modern, cleghn way to a smok heating worries, sm: ‘dirti, and ashe: We shall be glad to explai portunities in the investment These shares are free fr« come tax and exempt from residents of Illinois, and the per share either on a cash 01 This high grade and steac ment can be had in the pop Cumulative Preferred Share Safeguarded by wellâ€"establis ing demand for service. â€" â€" ’ ‘I "' .r \' :I.‘\’ ) ‘\i A High Gr: Utility In Address Gentlemen: Name Please jhave your represent: parï¬cnhl-Jh:omminz your 7% Telephone Highland Park 194 Investiga Gas He M \M \ i WAUKEGAN 37 CoUPI obli ias Company , tive call and as Company nger a luxux"y. ‘Think ofâ€"the comâ€" eating plant in the fall and never reedom and comfort of: automatic iler or warm air furnace is all you esent heating system will serve. te Now less town and freedom from all hed and constantly growâ€" ly dividend paying investâ€" ular and well known 7% s of this company. ati_gg ration, bring you interesting cost y can be had for $100.00 a monthly savings basis. n these very attractive opâ€" de Public restment m the normal federal. inâ€" personal property tax to <Rate 925 + of families with me full THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS en ues If you want to build up the future of a town you have to use something more constructive than the hammer. Mr. Charles E. Piper, Jr., teacher of the Young Men‘sâ€"class in the Pr?- byterian Church school sent his usual weekly. letter that he finds time to write to his boys each week to the boys in camp. Letters are most. welâ€" come to the boys, some of whom have received no word from their homes up .to date. | s 1x _Last | Friday night: a Court of Honor was held in the mess hall ‘and the Scouts going: from one c:t:"w another had to pass their tests beâ€" fore the. court. C o & Mrs. B. H. Kress and grandson, Gordon Elmer Clavey, also visited the boys camp this week. o nk »Mr. and Mrs. Chester Wessling and Mr. Ira Fehr visited their sons at the Boy Scout camp at Delavan, Wis., on Wednesday. s NS 1102 Mr. and Mrs. John Stryker and Rev. and Mrs. R. M. Williams gspent Monâ€" day with the boys at Delavan. â€" . Latest letters from the: Boy Scout ‘camp at Delavan report that on Satâ€" urday the Kangaroo and Beaver paâ€" ‘trols, composed of the Deerfleld boys, won the morning inspection of tents, for which each boy received a tent stamped on his Scout belt. â€" l In the circus held Saturday, five of he Deerfield boys put on a signalling act. i They ran through the alpfaâ€" bet in the semaphore code. Raymond Stickler did a rope climbing act. On Sunday morning the Catholic boys went to the town of Delavan for mass, and the protestant boys went down to the slope near the lake where "Captain Bill" preached & sermon on Stanley Anderson, our local _ conâ€" fectioner, sent copies of the Deerâ€" field News, containing the account of the Deerfield Scouts going to Camp, to the boys. . ¢= > idns Mr. and Mrs. Stickler spent Saturâ€" day and Sunday in the visitor‘s tent at the camp. | > l aAyr i Alfred Johnson, Homer Fehr, Burâ€" ton â€" Hagi, Earl Johnson, Gordon Kress, Thayer Batt, Frank Bruggman, Raymond Stickler,â€" Robert Juhrend, Wallace Newcomb, Wallace Reichelt, Wesley â€" Stryker, Fred Kersten, Jr., Donald Savage, Russell Patterson and Kenneth Haggie. Owen Savage, scoutmaster, is spending. this week with the boys. * t Word has been received of the safe arrival of the Deerfleld| Boy Scou}s who left last Montay morning in a North Shore motor coach| for the Boy Scout Camp at Delavan, Wis. The Deerfleld boys are in twotpatrols with Alfred Johnson as leader of the Kanâ€" garoos in one tent, and Wallace Newâ€" comb, who leads the Beavers in anothâ€" erâ€"tent. Every evening they . sit around the camp fire in Bow!" and Mr. Edward P , the camp director in a blanket and head dress, acts as "Big Chief" and the boys are the "Braves." . Monday night each patrol sang a song and the Kangarâ€" oos selected "Keep the Home Fires Burning." . There is a chaplain at the camp who says grace before meals, and who ‘lwl the tents,.and disâ€" ciplines the uts. _A physician has charge of the physical emrc%lm and saswimming, and another young. man teaches nature study and conducts the examinaticns that the boys take in their studies. Still another. man has charge of the‘ cleaning up of the camp and gives other tests in Boy, Scout knowledge. e â€" The Deerfield boys who are enjoyâ€" ing the camp lifeâ€" at Delavan are: Rev, Mark Andrew Sunday, Aug. Church school and A 9:30 a. m,. } Worship and sermonâ€" .. No evening service. The Young Peéople‘s s party in the church last ning. 4 On Friday afternoon at four o‘clock the Junior choir will meet with Mrs. Wessling in the church. DEERFIELD BOY SCOUTS + AT DELAVAN, WIS. ‘On Thursday evening the Christian Endeavor held their regular business meeting in the church. The Mission Band meeting was held in the church: on y jat 4:00 p. m.‘ An interesting p m was enâ€" joyed by all ‘atte . : Summer Christmas Tree exerc were held. On Tuesday evening at 800 p. m. the Friéndly Bible clasg met in the chgrch__for their monthly meeting. From Aug. 21 to 81 our ;nnul camp meeting will be in ion in Barrington, < II1. There will be no services in the church during that time except Sunday schgol, which will convene at the usual n?:t of 9:45 a. m. Everyone is urged|to attend as many services as possile in Barringâ€" ton Camp. 6 _ Next Sunday, Aug, 16, Rev. Raâ€" mige, a former pastor of our, church, will occupy the pulpit both morning and evening. Rev. Williams and his family will be enjoying their vacation in Buffalo with their folks. _ Rev. Roy M.Williams, pastor SBunday schoolâ€"9:45 a. m. Momglf mhipâ€"élhbo'n. m. *./‘ Christian Endeavorâ€"7:00 p. m, Evening serviceâ€"8:00 p. m. Prayer meeting every Wednesday evening at 8:00 p. m. Homer Fehr passed his tenderfoot SV ADDITIONAL DEERFIELD Bungalow Church Church , pastor 16 ult class at 10:45 a ciety gave a Friday eveâ€" ~If state sssemblies must be kept busy there is plenty for them to do without legislating against the disposal of cigaret ends and the teaching of the Darwinian theory. A good job for the Illinois legislature would be to find a way to diminish‘the number of murders and holdâ€"ups per day in the state. â€" Anâ€" other would be to see that some convicted murderer is hanged before he has lain in the "death" cell long enough to be declared insane. t ie £914 & » There is a provision in the state constitution of Oklahoma providing that sheets for beds in Oklahoma hotels be at least seven feet long. The commonly accepted explanation of this provision is that when the convention met to write the constiâ€" tution many of the delegates were from the country districts, long rangy ‘cattleâ€"men, ‘and they couldn‘t rest comfortably in their hotel beds between short sheets. Whether this is true or not the law actually exists. t . Representatives in state assemblies may some day awaken to the fact that it is not necessary for them to legislate. Every state has too many laws now. What we need is fewer laws and better enforcement of those few. 7 * Nos . Massachusetts, older and sharing none of California‘s deluâ€" sion about the efficacy of statute law, also had trouble with forest fires. She had tried legislating against the fire evil but with Llitâ€" tle success, so she started an educational campaign. She began in the schools. Posters showing the results of carelessness with fire in the forest were placed everywhere. Literature on the subâ€" ject was circulated in every city. There are still forest fires in Massachusetts and lighted cigarets and matches frequently are thrown in dangerous places; but the situation has improved. Massachusetts knows, at any rate, that more is being accomâ€" plished. by the method of persuation than could possibly be. done by legislation. She has tried making laws for that sort of thing, and has seen"how they work. There is, for example, an ordiâ€" nance in Boston making it unlawful to smoke a cigar on the street or in any public place in the city. Years before the Eighteenth Amendment was passed Boston stopped trying to enforce that law. â€" It still exists on a musty page in the city ordinance book, but few people have ever heard about it. But California is a young state and will doubtless learn someâ€" thing more about governing people in a century or two after she has become tired of extolling the wonders of her own climate and scenery and has begun to, regard herself more as a serious commonwealth and less as a national picnic ground. j There‘s nothing new in tflat, of course. ‘California and her fortyâ€"seven sister states have many other laws just as absurd and just as‘impotent. No one expects that the law â€"will have the effect that is desired. â€" Legislation has become a habit nowadays. No g:hrpose seems to be necessary. ifornia has had trouble with forest fires and is seeking to find some relief from the fire evil. A lot of hardâ€"headed legisâ€" lators, devoid of imagination, fail to realize that there are og‘er ways of getting things doneâ€"better waysâ€"than by passing laws and imposing fines. * \ M The California law is futile because it cannot possibly be enâ€" forced. It is doubtful whether many not actually arrested for violating this law will ever know that is exists. The state canâ€" not hope to have a sheriff or state policeman on every train and behind every motor car. . Unless that can be done the law will not be. obeyed. Twenty years ago such a law might have been observed simply because it was a law, but that time has gone. So many laws now regulate our daily life that we cannot hope to know all of themâ€"much less abide by them. Being arrested and fined is no disgraceâ€"it‘s a gamble. f ' Word ‘comes from California that a new law has just been passed by the legislature of that stateâ€"a law that is aimed to diminish the nummber of forest fires. It has been provided by the worthy representatives of the people of that state that no one shall throw a lighted match, cigar, cigaret, or other burnâ€" ing substance from any vehicleâ€"motor car, train, or trolley. The maximum fine for the first offense is $500, _ j Enteted as Second Class matter March 1, 1911, at the office at Highland rlrl, Tllinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879. yost THURSDAY, AUGUST 183, 1925 The Higbland Park Press 16 N. Sheridan Road in individual molds for parties and special occaâ€" sions. ‘Also Chapel‘s Ice Cream in bricks. In addition to our home made Ice Cream and ices we are taking orders forâ€" * Announcement CHAPELL‘S SPECIAL ICE CREAM Published The Udell Co. at H veekbbym dellP:'inflnc at Highland Park, Ice Cream Orders Delivered â€"Packed * on Short Notice + Our fountain is open until 10:30 p. m. Try our delicious sodas and fancy drinks. This Week‘s Special Cherry and Pineapple 50e Quart Brick "THERE OUGHT TO BE A LAW Ts Phone H. P. 1849 PAGE THREE NUMBER 24