he. Udell Printing Co., EMBN~ Lake Forest, Dlingis. ’mmbi- ;as‘ af stockholders holding 1 !,._g‘g.w-n-ulu-l) RAOUURCC wot o% based e e s 1 ak e â€" iz., 24, 1912 E‘ ’{‘,‘,ï¬f.,‘j“'; L. Udell, bor,: Pau! L. Udell, Highland lber. Paal L. UJddU, Highland P Tauf L. Udel .Paul L Udell, Nationa!l Bank, subscribed before me OcTOBER 22, 1925 â€" Walter Cope, Public. A aines Reverjber 1. 1927) tement must be made in dupâ€" edpies delivered by the pubâ€" cal Improvements of Highand Park. | : hland Park, INlincis, PARK ATEMENT Wooded Lots on , M, HASTINGS, L. CHENEY, . the mv h')"'fl' of the C m% LE i LY PAYME &T vis. Park, RL 6 116B |â€"] forencon of said UAiW and other opt w 48 14 ® 2 a THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, Windes & Marsh | Tllinois Licensed . i Surveyors T Municipal Engineers | Phones 4 i ; Highland Park 650 Winnetka 222 DR. SOFIA HAAG NAPRAPATH _/ Nerve Specialist i Hours 10 to 12 a. m. and by appointment 342 Park Avenue . Glencee, Ill. Phone Glencoe 1126 â€" * FOR | DRY CLEANING & DYEING RUG CLEANING & CURTAIN . STRETCHING _ _ _|__ THE RELIABLE LAUNDRY PHONES 178â€"179 * "A strike by the employees df the street railways, or, a breakâ€"down at the power plant, gives a brief glimpse ‘of conditions as they would be without the services that are accepted as a matter of course. But temporary susâ€" pension of public service facilities often leads to suspension of all other work and effort as well, so that the | public of today only knows the differâ€" :ence between having these services ‘and not having them. It knows little or nothing of the great improvement modern public service ‘offers over the old methods The decrease in number of farms is quite general in central and southern Georgia and southeastern: Alabama where it ranges from one to ten per cent; in much of Michigan ahd Misâ€" souri, where it averages about two per cent; in most of Colorado; in southeastern Idaho and eastern Washâ€" ington, where it ranges in general from one to five per cent. Undoubtedâ€" ly some of this decrease is accounted for, it is stated, by consolidation of farms into larger economic units. The decrease in crop acreage was greatest in western «Georgia and southeastern Alabama, southern Missâ€" issippi, western Maryland, Pennsy!â€" vania and southern New York, Michiâ€" gan and southern Illinois, western Kentucky, and much of Missouri.~ The decreases in Illinois and Missouri were largely due to abandonment of Thete were 30,000 fewerfnl%ms in the United: States last year than in 1923 and there was a reduction of culâ€" tivated land in the sum of 1,200,000 acres. About a million acres of this decreased cultivated land was used for pasture. Looking at the decrease in percentagés, however, the decrease was small ‘being less than oneâ€"half of one per cent of thq total number of farms in the country and less than oneâ€"third of one per cent of the total number of acres under cultivation. Should be Appreciated "When we consider the maximum of conveniences that is, ours and the corresponding debt that we owe to developers of public service as we know it there should sink into our consciousness ‘an appreciation that should cause us to be exceedingly lenâ€" ient in our criticism of temporary inâ€" conveniences, and to be deegly interâ€" ested â€"and generous in our attitude toâ€" ward all steps that are taken for the promotion and progress of the things that are essential to a happy social and. economic environment." _ t The decTzase of cultivated acres in 1924 is said to have been due to the unsatisfactory agricultural conditions Practical talks on the vocations are given to highâ€"school boys of Allegan, Mich., by membersjof the local Roâ€" tary club. Business and professional men meet groups of the boys once & week and diseuss the problems peculiâ€" It Is Partially Accounted for By Consolidation Into Larger Units, Report | DECREASE IN FARMS i SHOWN DURING YEAR warm bed to start the breakfast fire in the old cook stoveâ€"or ‘who ever lived ten miles from a telephone ‘or telegraph station, the development of nurban and interurban transportatjion, of lighting, of gas and electric stoves, of the telephone and telegraph, is a source of wonder. To the younger generation ~who remember none of these things and who accept the conâ€" veniences provided by public utilities as a part of the natural order of things, full appreciation of the value pf these services is more difficult. ar to each vocation. Similar instrucâ€" tion is given to girls of the. high school by members: of the, Women‘s Business and Professional club. It is a characteristic human failing that we rarely appreciate the blesâ€" sings which : our fellows bestow upon us. This matterâ€"ofâ€"fact acceptance of things that make life really worth livâ€" ing, has been true, of course, in every age, but: at no time in history has it The modern householder can‘t much with the _bucksaw, but many them feel that skill with the golf c will make up #or it. : j ‘ The newspapers â€" are expected been moreâ€"strongly marked than in the hmentabl‘;eunconcem with which the (present generation accepts the marvelous ‘convenieces provided by public service corporations. y Thosrwho long for a return of the "good old days" may be intérested . in the summing up of the advantages of then and now by the American Exâ€" change National Bank of New York City, as follows: , hand out bouquets, where overripe veg appropriate. [ Modern Life Filled With Convenâ€" iences Pioneers Knew Nothâ€" ing Of, Bank Bulleâ€" "To the man who remembered the first trip of the first street car that ever ran in his townâ€"or who has stumbled from one dim pa‘tch of light to another thrown at intervals upon a dark street by flickering lampsâ€"or who recalls with a shiver the winter. days when he was forced to leave his HALCYON DAYS ARE NOW, NOT IN PAST COMFORTS AND BENEFITS TALKS FOR BOYS First«Street Car tin in cases would be y of club _ In the year just passed there was no death from smallpox, and only three very mild cases. > : e ers, particularly for rural schools. It was necessary last year to issue more than a hbundred provisional ‘teacher, certificates. In practically all cuu,i It is foolish, however, to say the less you understand the more readily you believe in miracles. §*.4 y ‘The radio is a genuine miracle of: science, and it takes intelligence toil understand it, A savage wouldn‘t unâ€" derstand it or believe in it. He would: simply say "witchcraft" :and go. hi.yl In old days, when the city of Paris, compared to modern Paris, was a small town, thousands died: of smallâ€" pox. in a year. §1.9f" * Paris enforces vacéination «most strictly. â€" Children in the primary schools, infants, 50,000 hospital paâ€" tients, are some of those yvaccinated. ‘And in Paris smallpox doesn‘t exist. To: what do gentlemen that oppose vaccination attribute that fact? . Is it just accident? . > j fourâ€"year high schools who had ‘teâ€" ceived at least six weeks of summer training. 4 i The cowboy mayor of Omaha : and Secretary of Agriculture Jardine are woing to have a calf roping eontut.ï¬ We ‘know of several statesmen who can put it all over both of them at throwing the bull. ; h While the American people cherish their patriotic holidays, the occasion which they celebrate most enthusiagsâ€" tically is pay day.. 4 5 His owner probabfy dead| by: this time, was Warren Hardy,â€" man of" quick temper. | Seizing his shotgun: by the end of the barrel, I-i‘ardy hit the dog with the butt. Neither he. nor the dog knew the gun was loadâ€", ed. Hardy is in the hospital, and probably won‘t recover, > $: .83 ‘AlF in one second the dog felt the} blow,. heard the explosion, saw his‘ cruel master stretched jon the ground. Knowing nothing ubor:t gunpowder, that dog will always believe in miraâ€" cles, and also in a special providence that avenges dogs, when they are hit with the butt end of a gun. 604 " Delaware is facing a marked short, age of prepared publicâ€"school teachâ€" ‘Why should this nation, déepending for its safety in war, upon flying maâ€" chines. and flying men, put the naâ€" tion‘s flying department under the control of human rabbits ‘from the navy or turtles from the army? , Not far from the ‘train on which this is written in Arkansas City, Kans., there lives a dog, name unâ€" known, and all the rest of his life that dog will believe in miracles. .. This nation needs an air force conâ€" trolled by ‘men that understand flyâ€" ing, men that are interested in the difference between an all metal monoâ€" plane and a weak cloth made biplane, more than in neat uniforms, or servile saluting. t | Providence, taking care of the birds, put in charge of them the brains of birds, not the brains of rabbits â€"or turtles. + | ; t The trade i nartificial silk is desâ€" tined to be enormous, If the farmâ€" er raising and shearing sheepâ€" can compete . with Asiatics, raising silk worms, he may enjoy a new kind of prosperity. i | . If to the exhibition of stya'ng! creatures of the oceans and lakes the John G. Shedd gift couldâ€"include some plan â€"for â€" economical: | distribution among the people of the food that comes from‘the ocean, that would add to the value of the gift. 4 . A plan to get rid of sharks that deâ€" stroy billions of valudble fish every year, and the small, savage whales tkmt prey upon the great schools of salmon in the . northwest would ° be worth millions . in â€" increased â€" food value. 4 Farmers are encouraged by news that makers of artificial silk will reâ€" quire great quantitiese of medium grade wool, to mix with wood fibre. | In Chicago, where this is written, John G. Shedd yesterday signed his name to an agreement under which he will supply :2,000?800 to buig the go’rld’s largest aquarium, in Grant ark. ® { , Thus, all over the United States, men that â€"have worked hard all theit lives, and built up fortunes with the help of the people, give back the money ‘to the, people among whom they earned it. & $2,000,000 FOR Flsq. wWOOL FOR SILK. THE DOG BELIEVES. . DISCOURAGING PILOTS. :: Mr. ‘Shedd‘s gift of a great aquar: ium is money well spent. â€"It will in crease the supply of public informa: tion. ud Ghinl P SHORTAGE OF TEACHERS THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HI Soh34te all cz duates Tust mguin omghee ahagks i has : been mwu of the American ‘people that they be let alone to work ‘out their own destiny. ‘They have ‘not always been permitted to do this. In the first part of the nineteenth century Great Britain .so mistreated our soldiers and our ships at sea that ‘we had to fight to protect them. A little more than a hundred years later the Imperial Germah government so ‘violated the rights of American citiâ€" zens and American property: on the highseas that again we were comâ€" pelled to ‘go to war to defend Ameriâ€" ‘can interests, > i â€" On each occasion we were, attackâ€" ed and Tulttutod because . kï¬â€˜ was thought that we ‘could or would not defend ourselves, Great Britain in 1812 looked down upon our migtm'e navy with contempt. It took the exâ€" ploits of our naval heroes of that period to correct‘this impression and to assure our being let alone to ply our business on the high seas, The German government had been led to believe $y a false showing of Amerâ€" \ _\ _ Phone Highland Park 1110 _ _ _ ~pVALILITY AT LOW cos t HOW TO BE LET ALO | & 1 tss to 040 4 R â€" | pred pt £$ hi gbe $5.+ & P 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,. |_ _ L. Know PRIVATE ROOMS, INCLUDING BOARD . THE INTERNE STAFF AND FLOOR NURSEF BOARD AND LODGING IN TWO:BED .dm THREEâ€"BED ROOMS INCLUDING ‘ATTENDANCE BY INTERNE STAFF AND FLOOR NURSE, $4 AND $5 PER DAY. â€" y fls taes y Main Entrance e C Homewood Avenue, two blocks west of Green Bay Road ‘ : Telephone Highland Park 102 â€" 103 f N Te Conch Fob.Flint Mich, ILLINOIS WM. RUEHL & CO. All About Your Own Hospital 120 N. First St., Highland Park ighlagd_ '_Parlt ,Hospital +~If China, had a navy which could fight like: the American navy did in 1812, or if she could equip an army capable of taking care of gs as the American army did in 1918, then the rest of the world: would: decide that it might pay to let China alone to work out her own destiny. _\ endure -!wfliimrlth« than fight in 1917., ; Again took â€"a: display of American fighting qualities to correct the impression and to assure our beâ€" ing let alone for another generation at least. | f : % .Cl‘hehvoiffth be emphasized is fl:: in eac ';cnpel'vum.‘_nw" cause it was believed that we could not or would not defend ourselves. When we proved that we could and would ‘we gained the respect hg the entire world.. ~ + 6 Now across . the Pacific there is China, a big country which: to be lét alone, too. But China has been abused and will continue to be 3 because of this same belief that she cannot protect herself, 14 i ~Both America. and China t to be let alone.: | Uncle Sam is let alone and treat?'l with respect beca he has proved that he knows how ito deâ€" Sn higher pricacors. dey duectaed. en ipenmgen errange Phner VV onerBiote wiudahicld, automatic wlnd&hld w In the Chevrolet Coach you will mofmqnlqndmhu_cug Come in and see for yourself this AND ATTENDANCE BY , $6 AND UP. es Dheonï¬n‘tad-'uklncphe-‘{d historical interest is a feature of his toryimtmd.wnia‘l‘nyht(hx.)% school. â€"A 115â€"mile tour was.made ut of China, They say that such an ample would induce the rest. of world to follow our examplé. dcthnidnnacdthehmm# much local history was uncovered many pictpres made, Already are practically completed for p suitable markers at appropriate China is not let alone and is treated with respect because she not defend herself. * The mistaken pacifists in Am rope to regulate our businéss :# overrun our territory all we need do is disarm until we have become harmléss as China. The Americ field: for exploitation is even ric than the Chinese prospect. China has not been able to ind anybody to disarm. Her helplessn is a pitiful but eloquent warning the United States. If we want.] MARK HISTORIC POINTS PAGE ietwntne® 44 34 ied