3, w1 k it 4 *%;i 8. d $ i $ 44 i Shatn i â€"Over 53,000 Motor Cars and| _ Colonel Harry:L. Milés arrived at Tracks Will Be Built Fort Sheridan Tuesday to take over i’ «This Month command of the Pnd Infantry there. â€" C1 . He relieves Major Drysdale, who has Detro@fl‘ , Sept. 17.â€"Sustained | temporary‘ |command of._the . troop d â€""%" bs _| since Colonel Cromwell Stacey left demandywAd‘ a" growing list of UDâ€"|jrâ€" mor; on August 25.~ <â€" PAGE SIX cnnvgg(gj MOTORS TO [qcou HARRY L. MILES TO INCREASE PRODUCTION| COMMAND 2ND INFANTRY . L This . 4 1 w Detroi ; deman F .a) filled onfets has Motor P :%?;f its y producti Septigwher. â€" .,? The schedulg ‘revision involves an incréase. of: more than 16 per cent over the‘ production program originalâ€" ly planned for September. The new schedule calls for 53,165 motor cars and trucks in September, a Chevrolet record for that month and only 3,â€" Septiyher. (‘)‘;ISZWlés;'t':;z\ the highest production month in history of the company. Both day‘and night shifts have been augmented to maintain the new schedule. The company shipped 4,â€" 284 cars to dealers on Aug. 31, esâ€" E:;Bli&hing a new record 600 higher than the largest previous shipment for one day. â€" _ The company, which recently made its two millionth car, attained during August a greater production thus far for 1925 than the entire production of 1924. & 600. Several factors have contributed to the unprecedented demand according to C. E. Dawson, assistant general salég manager of the Chevrolet Motor company. j "The August 1 reduction of $40 to $50 in the closed model prices toâ€" gether with the announcement of the improvements on all ‘models caused a still further increase in the unfilled order list," said Mr. Dawson. "The zr’atest ‘demand at present appears to ‘be for the Chevrolet Coach. Inâ€" creased popularity also has been gained‘ by the new Utility Express oneâ€"ton truck which has replaced the former truck of the same name. "Another factor in car demand is the rapid economic recovery . of the south and the southwest where purâ€" chasing power is now on a par with the remainder of the country." HIGHLAND PARK BRANCH f 397 Central Avenue Erskine Bank Building Phone H. P. 380 : HELEN TAYLOR, Principal GERTRUDE JANITZ, Assistant Highland Park Transfer and Storage Company FIREPROOF WAREHOUSE, 374 Central Avenue . BAGGAGE â€" FREIGHT â€" EXPRESS 25th Year OLUMBIA °= jch,, Sept. 17.â€"Sustained ‘.a growing list of unâ€" has caused the Chevrolet Lï¬lf to increase heavily MOVING â€" PACKING â€" SHIPPING SCHOOL OF Main School, 509 South Wabash Avenue, Chicago ALEX RAFFERTY, Sr.. Manager Office 374 Central Avenue ; Phones 181â€"182 * schedule _ during ISOK at your home with your "neighbors‘ eyes"! Is familiâ€" arity hiding: from you the runâ€" down condition so clearly apparâ€" ent to others? ' Yet all it needs, probably, is a coat or two of"Devoe Lead and Zinc House Paint which cost less, wears longer and looks better than ordinary paint. Highland Park Hdwe. Co. is NORTH SHERIDAN ROAD HIGHLAND PARK, ILL. Ask us about the Devoe Home Improveâ€" houseâ€" inside ut-â€".-qdy;cym Transfer of in ten. monthly installments. MUSIC Col. Miles came from Washington, D. C., where he has been on duty with the war department.. Major Drysdale remains as commander of the 1st Batâ€" talion, 2nd, Infantry. xos NORTHWESTERN R. R. _ â€" ADVICE FOR SHIPPER â€" Si;‘nultuneouoly with the inauguraâ€" tion of‘the air mail service between Chicago and New York City, the Chiâ€" cago & Northwestern railway installâ€" ed a plan of sending daily passing reâ€" ports giving definite information coyvâ€" ering the movement of carload freight over the C. & N. W. Ry. and conâ€" signees, and also sending by this servâ€" ice other important mail from the C. & N. W. Ry. general offices in Chiâ€" cago to their New York representaâ€" tives. A careful cheek of this servâ€" ice has been made and it has been found to work in a vhighly satisfacâ€" tory manner and be of greatâ€" benefit, both to the railway company and the shipper. & y % It is announced from Paris that the French debt commission will bring along its ‘own. champagne so that the experts won‘t suffer. Eviâ€" dently the fame of our deadly corn liquor has spread as far as ancient Gaul. ; About the only people who really labor on Labor Day are the baseball umpire‘s. . Claimed the motor tourist trade was worth $143,000,000 to Canada Tast year, and some people say that not all of them went up there to see the scenery. Osmle Reed Director quit wearing skins and iw their donned garments of wool or lindk, he began to think, tho not veg‘n sly, of the probléem of washing. HBpr a long time, lnthmpologistl telll jus,; these washings, of self and of fJothâ€" ing, were most infrequent, but Washâ€" ing had begun to be recognizedlias a necessary <if bothersome som®hing which must beâ€"done, if only very be a-‘ sionally. â€" i } WASH UNKNOWN TO ‘L ‘CAVE FAM Soldiers: of Caesar . FoundBthe|he: public to the faet that investâ€" Germans Using _ § |ments should be made through reliâ€" Shan ; | ~~lable houses instead of Ayâ€"byâ€"night At first, as is still the case if the most cannibalistic of the SoutH Sea islands, washing one‘s *person f[iwith water was most distinctly not e. Instead, these personal ablutionsfivere conducted much after the: mannefi still practiced by the nomads of the$Araâ€" bian desert where sand and sufflight are used in lieu of ‘soap and wallkr. After this, however, as the dafiin of time receded into the past, the ifile of water gradually came into cofffmon practice and washing â€" onesel “bnd one‘s clothing reached the ge where it became either a religi 7 or social rite. 8 Germans (Invented Soap Incidentally, it was Ca’esarj diers, who never washed abov waist, who brought back toâ€" from the Gallic war a new subi â€"the same thing which we no soap. These soldiers found the llike German tribes ‘living acro:j Rhine making and using it, maryveled and then, being: Ro adopted this new substance for own. : That is the way we got s After the decline and fall $f ‘the Roman empire washing and [fgoap went to, a large degree, out offfashâ€" ion. But it gradually came back into use during the latter part of thi {Xnid- ‘dle ages although the: banks of streams took the place of the ï¬ur- ious marble baths of the Ro ‘era. Here people washed themselves}{/when they did wash, and here also alliélothâ€" ];{ere people washed themselves they did wash, and here also alll ing was washed. In fact, washing clothes at t {gide of ‘a stream is still the popula ‘vlhun- dry method of a considerable ghrt of Europe, South America, Afrig |and Asia. Kipling ‘tells of, the @hobi" or washerman who spends his in breaking stonés with clothes.f Whis Hindu is ‘doing nothing out K# ) tke way. He is simply practicin i‘t e gentle art of laundry work jist as all the world did it until vety| reâ€" cently. . | Stones First Wash ) {+ A smooth stone at the sid ?I a stream served as the rub boafl|and clothes were always pounded® upon this partially submerged st {’.‘to whiten them. | In fact, it wall ‘held that the harder clothes were ded the whiter and cleaner they woflld be. But back in the eighteent® icenâ€" tury an Englishman had a brigBt lidea of a way tp save women much telly hard work. He invented and ntâ€" ed the first washing machine. [t}was a barrel mounted upon a frarge)and was turned by hand. Crude gifwas this first washing machine it@réally washed clothes clean and did ?om- paratively quickly. This was ifirst step in conserving women‘s stiength and time instead of consuming) them by the tub and ‘rubâ€"board me oï¬i of washing clothes. 1 After that many developmenfis) and changes were made in the a*ning machine, hut all of these washi Fma- chines were either handâ€"run, ff in a few cases, driven by water ors. So it continued until about 190 *hen an American conceived the ifflea of using an electric motor to dpérate the washing machine. . Th@,, he capped a climax started in land nearly 200 years ago. b 8 If it took all this time to dgvelop the electric washer, since 190%igreat improveéements have been. mad@# . and today in the United States .105 ‘ifl'er- ent companies> are manufa¢turing electric washers and approxithately 3,500,000 women are using t F to do the wegkly washing. K Most Profitable Industry $ Blue Sky Laws Prove No Def râ€" ring Factor ) \} Despite the activities .of â€"} Biness associations and "blue sky" | |ws, it is estimated that the Americ®@ pubâ€" lic will pay more than $1,0060,@( ),000 in 1925 to operafors of fradjilent stock schemes, empty oil wells and financial wizards of the Ponz{| fype, according to figures obtained} today by the Chamber of Commercel | CROOK "FISHERIES" >} ; NET BILLION IN ‘25 Through chambers ‘of conimerce, advertising clubs and otherâ€" s‘neu organizations, the activiti¢s lpf the investment quack are continualily kept under investigation. _ w td : The cost of this credulity in 1924 was well over the billion mar ‘,.Isa a report issued by the Bette ‘Pufl ness Bureau of New York, ghd the "gold brick" ‘artists may welf ¢laim 1925 to be a "normal" year.. § | . The habitat of the gullible confined to rural regions. â€" of the dweller on the Gold the doubting inquiry of the s Madison Corners in the daily complaints to states attorneys and business bureaus. uk + Meanwhile the campaign is carried on in more than fort by banks, brokers, investmen Just about the time HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS s |?llon- 14 joins ire at J + ze n d n nrepirne oo rrndcennndnonigy minnniennpiene snn | ~ 7 " 6 | hol- l? f hm petins i â€â€˜th@ .v 7.0 , | * ; of ei?me‘ ' f im I _‘Know All Abc !the | [Â¥3 4 hey|(§ . Visit the hospital any t Nen| 9 and 7 p. m. to 8 p. m.,, daily ‘P‘-he! & how low the rates are for 4. ’l * . FX3.. c 1‘21‘3!| BOARD AND LODGIN s 0 â€"INCLUDING ATTENDAN &u“f'i . NURSE, $4 AND $5 PER râ€" 1% ) 5> § 3 ~ men | § _ PRIVATE ROOMS, IN lotâ€" ||B9 _ THE INTERNE STAFF A {gide | ;5 L“‘, ‘ l#lm-ll | | j ; t of | | is ; ;andl | 3‘: . .J + y lobi"| | t . ‘77m ~ Hldhl: not of I e reereemenen neemelemermmemtnement CS CTEes biak Botmntti 5s e8, public utilities, newspapers and |â€" mercantile concerns. They are exâ€" pending every ;zort to bring those| swindlers© to e ‘and to educate promoters. ‘Fourteen radio stations, all in Illiâ€" nois, have volunteered to assist the Illinois Chamber of Commerce in figshing, out through the air to the nation| the story of Tllinois and the comingâ€" great Illinois Products Ex p:scéti‘ . This exposition, its sole obâ€" ject béing to "sell" _ Illinois‘ to the nation and the world and promote it industrially, will be held in Chicago on (ctober 8 to 17. s ILLINOIS PRODUCTS . . EXPOSITION OCT. 8â€"17 This is probably the greatest pubâ€" licity campaign ever undertaken via the air in the interest of a state. Beâ€" sides this, practically every ~newsâ€" paper in the state has been devoting space to the exposition because of its statewide promotional value. Sixtyâ€" five downstate cities and towns, a number of counties acting as units and probably 150 ~individual firms will take part in the exposition, <. Libertyville and Mundelein â€"-edsily reached on the North Shore Line _ Visit the hospital any time during visiting hours, 2 p. m. to 4 p. m., and 7 p. m. to 8 p. m., daily, and see the upâ€"toâ€"date equipment and realize how low the rates are for the Service given, â€" â€" BOARD AND LODGING IN TWOâ€"BED AND THREEâ€"BED ROOMS INCLUDING ATTENDANCE BY INTERNE STAFF AND FLOOR NURSE, $4 AND $5 PER DAY.} . tCc PRIVATE ROOMS, INCLUDING BOARD AND ATTENDANCE BY THE INTERNE STAFF AND FLOOR NURSE, $6 AND UP. t ‘ v $ m Main Entrance > > :c Homewood Avenue, two blocks west of Green Bay Road Telephone Highland Park 102 â€" 103 . Highlagd_ Parlc Hospital' â€"‘The annual petâ€"show at Eim Place ‘school was held Festerday .~ one o‘clock. â€" The children broufln their pets, all, manner and : variety they were, and assembled them for a paâ€" rade which closed the festivities. .. This afternoon they will hold their annual exhibit of flowers, fruits and vegetables in the elementary school building. ; The feature of the exhibit 6 fes uMX SA Mul ‘has iapec a Ne J Early in 1926 Eatly in 1926, the new highâ€"speed Skokie Valley Division of the North Shore Line. will be completed. © Fast, frequent service will then be availâ€" . . able from Libertyville and Mundelein direct to downtown Chicago â€" withâ€" out change or transfer. u. Libertyvilleâ€"Mundelein i c n omi? Teen dounie ticked m mhee h ARGE numbers of people are visiting Libertyville and Munâ€" c ;_ielein these lovely fall days. Thousands are seeking the natural the entire Lake Coynty Countryside. Here is the way. to reach Libertyville and Mundelein#*owâ€"a short, pleasant journey. Také the North Shore Line to‘ Lake Blyuff;â€" Transfer there to the Libertyvillé Mundelein Divigon of the sglcndors of this beautiful vicinityâ€" the rolling hills, the stately oaks, the lively fallâ€" colorings. ' Others are interested in the great new home development that is taking place in this attractive section. Every day we are asked how to get there. Every day, too, we are asked about the new SkokieValleyDivision of the North Shoreâ€" Line which will l:;:r faster service to Libertyville, Mundelein and North Shore Line. ‘Trains leave every 30 m&m from Adams and Wabash, and . Wilson and Broadway. growing needs of this k . Foresecing the udylvshmdmnbhm s thenmmdm“reqd' ho npls of the meet rements of t thousands of home setkers who even now are laying their plans to live there. Chicago North Shore and Milwaukee Railroad Co. eB 274 EAST PARK ANENUE ' Highland Park, RL ? Phone 1765 HOMES FOR SALE ONn MoONTHLY PAm Hospital EDW ARD M. LAING Beautiful: Wooded Lots on sDAY, SEPTEMEER 24, 1925 % * «37 4% «5 «5 v% By H. ol c argae . torist case O ing . of read and part of find out er If it is relieve a ing may tient to |