‘ does not ion to our ‘know that aftâ€" ‘in our they are satisfaction. Use E. 0!\â€"6&. that ever Ieft i be Intest ew Year right! ‘â€" _ and warm! io. 0or ratmaal K PP comfort will reâ€" est eggs it HE WANTS ing to be OHNS3 AVE. i Park 1728 he coal for you rchardt MATERLIAL Johns Avenue stt meckt $JJ BER 24, 1925 ; good, dependâ€" d Park 67 the knowâ€" Grocery in â€" every RINLS MAE Nowy,; the » mt THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1925 BOTH PAINTERS OF NOTE UNIQUE EXHIBITION BY FATHER AND SON Production of Each Will. Be Shown at Art Institute ‘During the Next Few Weeks, Belief In 1917 he became a member of the National academy. ‘ He is also a memâ€" ber of the Allied Artists of America, the Society of Men who Paint the Far West and the Painters of the West. zï¬dnx of a recent exhibition of Mr. II‘s paintings held in Los Angeâ€" les, Anthony Anderson, the art critic of the Times, says "We know now, as we did not ‘ore, that Parshall €an paint the Pacific ocean with as eure a touch as that displayed in his interpretations of the Grand Canyon, There will be a rather unique exâ€" hibition of paintinigs at the Art Instiâ€" tute beginning mber 22, in that a father and his‘ son, both of whom have attained| a ‘nitional reputation, will each have an exhibition of their work at the same time. DeWitt Parâ€" shall, the father, Jr.but known for his paintings of . west.. He was born in Buffalos, New York, August 1864, and studied painting under Corâ€" mon and Alexander Harrison and at the Julian academy in Paris,‘ or even with the finesse that has deâ€" lighted us so often in his studies. of sy¢amore trees, laden with the golden spoils ufaugmm.gtaid like an intri+ cate decorative : pattern against a background of hills, pale blue , and delicately pink. Parshall paints the sea 30 superbly that one hopes he will aysay it often," | .â€"; . _: Son Also Exhibitor |., Douglas Ewell Parshall is a son of DeWitt Parshall and in the forthcomâ€" ing exhibition tb? works of father and son will hang side by side in the same gallery. Douglas was born in New York City, November 19, 1899 and studied art under the direction of his father. In this exhibition the canâ€" vases he will show ar» scenes of the rugged southwest, which is fast beâ€" coming a prolific and romantic paintâ€" ing ‘ground for the artist, Visitors to the exhibition who delight in the wide'spaces‘md:; the open, free life of the western country, will be thrillâ€" ed by the strong work of this paintâ€" er, who shows in such vivid manner the life of the. roundâ€"up and of the rodeo; who paints the rugged mounâ€" tains with the boldness and underâ€" standing of one who has gtudied deepâ€" ly of their fascination. Young Parâ€" shall has achieved recognition in early life, for among those who have purâ€" chasged his paintings are Fritz Kreisâ€" ler, Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, Jt .3 Mrs. Warner Leeds, William L. Ryerâ€" son, Mrs. Charles W. Dempster, Mrs. J. H.‘Steedman, Mrs. Henry Abbott and many others. U. S$. DEPENDENCE ON "These United States are, and of right ought to be free and‘ indepenâ€" dent states." [+% 5 1*% That declaration was made on July 4, 1776, and economically perhaps it was truer| then than now. How deâ€" pendent on other| quarters of the world were those estimable gentlenfen who signed that important document? They did import tea but they showed that they'ï¬â€˜onld do without it. The Revolution was a \demonstration of economico":indepcndence such as we would haâ€e difficulty, now in meking. __.__. FOREIGN COUNTRIES In Matter of Imports of Matterâ€" ial Not Produced In Our Tnlkingk:cenuy at Erie, Seqcretary Hoover discussed, foreign control of prices and incidentally set forth our economic dependente. Rubber, of course, is outstanding. We move in a worl? that could not do without‘ rubber,, yet we produce none of dlt. We dépend on others for tea and coffee and ‘cocJA. but perhaps we could grow used to abstinence. . . We can‘t well do without mangaâ€" nese. Without it our steel industry would stop. We turn to other lands for pnc{z-ny all our needs of that minreral. We need nickel and asbestos, andâ€"Clqrrada supplics wants we cannot medt ourselves. The list might be long drawn out. | 2 ts Here‘s a warâ€"time story, from The Nation‘s Busginess: Economists were seeking unnecessary exports. It came the turn 8f tapicca, and that was barred. A world ‘at war could live without padding. | â€" & The order went forth, and promptly tmwm’ a lemen who said mildly: | s . _‘"I only want to suggest that my company makes a glue of very great But why worry |about our economic independencé * Wt buy from the world, and the world buys from us, and we‘re going to see more rather than less of world trade. z There is a demand from the proâ€" ducers to have their prices fixed when they are going d@m.and to have free competition when they are going up. lhenepi t in =~ Soeiniaisas Action In Several Estates and Orders and Docket Entries In Such Cases 3 LATE PROCEEDINGS ~â€"â€"‘_IN PROBATE COURT Recent . proceedings in Probate court: «Py John /T. Erickson, Jr,, nm- Parkâ€"Final report approved, closed. S §upi s Visscher V. Barnes, Zionâ€"Final reâ€" port approved.. Estate closed,:| â€" . _ Charles C, ‘Copeland, Libertyvilleâ€" Final report approved. Estate closed. Bernard J. Simen, Libertyvilleâ€"Peâ€" tition for probate â€"of will filed and set for hearing Jan. 11, 1926.» $ John Paton Cater, minor, Libertyâ€" villeâ€"Letters of guardianship issued to Frank Cater,° Bond of $200. Inâ€" ventory. approved. _ lt Rugsell Horton, minor, Antioch.â€" Sale of real estate approved and conâ€" veyance ordered. 4 Ida ~O. Petitclair, Waukegan.â€" Proof of heirship taken.. Letters of administration issued to Joseph T. Petitclair. Bond of $200. Estate c sists of half interest in lot in Wauâ€" kegan. oo 0 Jackson K. Dering, Lake Villa.â€" Hearing on petition of executors to sell stock to satisfy claim ‘vs. Chas. 8. Dering. Special appearance ‘of Charles 8. Dering by Hon. Charles 8. Cutting. .. Motion of Charles S. Dering to dismiss petition. .Cross motion of executors for leave to file amended petition. Leave granted and hearing continued to Dec,. 21, 1925, at 11 a. m. *‘ % f Axet Norrlen, Highland Parkâ€"Inâ€" yentory and apraisement bill apâ€" proved. e hy + e on t k Stefan Miklik, North Chicago.â€"Inâ€" ventory approved. :: > > ~â€"../></; _ Joe Miklik, North Chicago.â€"Invenâ€" tory approved., : :; .. * ; larg Joseph P. Guerin, Waukegan.â€"Inâ€" ventory and waiver of widow‘s award approved. â€" f Â¥ kh mga ie _ Henry Dusenberry, insane, Waukeâ€" gan.â€"Inventory and waiver of widâ€" ow‘s award approved. es â€" Harty Dusenberry, insane, Waukeâ€" gan.â€"Conservator authorized to sell Liberty bonds. . . ‘ â€" .~>.,>_ n John Callahan, Waukegan.â€"Report of surveying . partner of Callahan Dairy Co. approved and partnership estate closed. chigy, f ~ Elizabeth Spoerl, incompetent, 2nd and 3rd reports approved. . _ â€" ... John Fox, Bristol, Wis.â€"Petition to establish heirship set for Dec. 24. Joseph Minogue, Waukeganâ€"Invenâ€" tory and waiver of widow‘s award apâ€" proved. o > Cecil E. Nussie, incompetent, Zion. â€"Conservator authorized ‘ to invest funds. 4 3 se id _ Adeline Elien Bellâ€"Petition for apâ€" pointment. of conservator filed ‘and set for hearing Dec. 17. > g> for hearing Dec. 17. ~ Alice Bellâ€"Petition for appointâ€" ment for consérvator filed and set Navy: Department Decides This ‘Would Be Economy ; Conâ€" gress Appropriation RETAIN GREAT LAKES TRAINING STATION Great Lakes was retained.as one of the important naval training. stations because of traveling expenses to be saved by its central location, the navy department declared last week, acâ€" cording to Washington: dispatcl_x‘es.". ~â€" The navy‘s quota from the Pacific coast is filled and no recruits are beâ€" ing accepted from there. Considerable traveling money therefore can < be saved by training enlisted ~men . at Great Lakes, instead of sending them to San Diego. o oo The navy recommended . abandonâ€" ment of Great Lakes but was overâ€" ruled by the budget bureau as a matâ€" ter of economy. Recommendation forâ€" an appropriaâ€" tion of 245,000 for the maintenance of the Great Lakes Naval Training Station for the next fiscal year has been included in the annual budget that has gone to congress, according to official information received from Washington. PX e o uy To Exert Care in Matter of Plats and Subdivisions _ Is the Object : : > SUPERVISORS PLAN i ZONING OF COUNTY The effect of the regional zoning association, held reeently in Chicago, was felt last week before the board of supervisors, when that body gave the chairman the power to. appoint & committee to draft a resolution covâ€" ering plats and subdivisions. ... Chairman Ray Paddock immediateâ€" ly appointed Edward Mawman, Lake Bluff:; George Bairstow, Waukegan; and J. B. Garnett, Highland Park, to sarve on that committee, County superintendent of Highways Chm Russell was also named to act ‘ Their resolution is to cover subâ€" divisions and plats, dedications, vacaâ€" tions, etc., so that the property laid out in the future will be so mapped as to meet the needs of the future as well as the present. â€"It will be the work : of the committee to see that subdivisions are accepted by the counâ€" ty under: the agreement that easeâ€" ment will be given for wider streets, so that increase can be made in roadâ€" ways as the traffic needs arise. ‘This is the initial step taken by the county in the zoning plan and more aré to follows, it is predicted. SS NOTED ARTIST WILL _ DISPLAY HIS WORKS WILLIAM HORTON, PAINTER One of the Most Interesting of Oneâ€"Man Exhibitions Being Shown at Art Institute â€"â€" This Month â€" . Among the group of oneâ€"man shows to be exhibited at the" Art Institute from December 22 to January 26, paintings by the American artist, William 8. Horton, will be shown. Mr. Horton was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan in 1865, and, obtained his art education at the Art Institute and inthw York, later going: to Paris where he placed himself under the guidance of Benjamin Constant. He has won‘ many honors and has‘ held many important oneâ€"man shows in London and in Paris. > <>*: / The French government has purâ€" chased no less than h:;m of â€" his works. The Carnavalet Museum has his original sketch for the larger canvas of General Pershing and the American Contingent on their memorâ€" able march through Paris during the Victory parade. Mr. Horton, besides being . representedâ€" in Paris, is also represented at the Bradford Museum, England, ~Brooklyn Museum, and in numerous private collections, includâ€" ing those of the King of â€"Spain, and Lord Henry Bentinck. f _ His style of painting has been comâ€" pared to that of the impressionists, but . Henriâ€"Fritchâ€"Estrangin, writing from Paris, says: "That he is an imâ€" pressionist may be questioned, as in the works of a Sisley, a Monet, or a Pissarro, we find them, as a school, occupied with . the exterior phenomena of landscape, while Horton is: more alive to complicated and often inâ€" tensely fugitive and poetic conditions. His vision might~rather be compared to Turner, as, aside from the syntâ€" phonic tendency, like Turner, he is joyously vecupied with ‘La belle maâ€" tiere flamboyante.‘ PA ce ~ "His results are the fruition of long labors, the cgreful consideration of thythmical line and mass, and lastly of minute study of the problems of color orchestration in their fullest sense." Mr. Horton‘s exhibition will contain some fortyâ€"five works, thus enabling the visitor to make a care ful study of) the art of this successâ€" ful American painter. w T ‘‘ _ SKIDDING IS SHOWN Suggestions by Experts Indicate . How to Avert Most of This _ ‘~â€" Kind of Trouble 1 HOW BEST TO AVOID "The way to stop: skidding," says a bulletin issued by the accident preâ€" vention department ‘of the Chicago Motor club, "is to practice skid preâ€" vention. . It is very difficult to stop a skid.after it has occurred, but it is comparatively easy to entirely avoid skidding. Ninety per cent of alt skids can be avoided, but in only 10 per cent of these emergencies can the motorist extricate himselfâ€" after his wheels have started to slide. Chains reduce the chances of skidding, but are not infallible. < Keep off â€" car tracks; do not drive:fast on gnowy or wet. pavements. (If the car starts to skid, steer. in the direction of the skid; not against it. Unless the brakes are equalized skidding is cerâ€" tain to result on wet pavement. Skidâ€" ding also occurs on wet pavement, ¢ésâ€" pecially in snow, when the car is started. To overcome the sideswiping which is common on snow covered streets, the motorist should start very slowly and in low gear." J The Royal: Neighbors . held their election of officers at their meeting last Wednesday evening, Dee. 9. . ; K. N. A. ELECTION: . : _ ; HELD LAST WEDNESDAY The following pfficers were elected for the ensuing year:~ .. F3 u‘?ï¬evï¬:l;z.t;;;flm;i‘ï¬â€œfe;joy a birthâ€" day party on Wednesday evening, Dec. 30, at Odd Fellows‘ hall on Laurel TELLS HOW TO WARM UP COLD CAR MOTOR avenue "Serious damage is done to. many automobiles during the winter season by drivers who do not know how to warm up the motor," says a bulletin issued by the mechanical first aid department of the Chicago Motor club. : "When the thermometer starts to drop ‘the oil congeals, and camnot circulate properly. If the driver jatâ€" tempts to warm his engine by racâ€" ing the motor, the thin film of oil is likely to be burned off, and burndd out bearings:â€"may be the result of this common practice, | ~ â€"_ © . s "When the engine is being raced, the fan is being driven at a high rate of speed which tends to cool the enâ€" gine, rather than to heat it. The en. gine should be run slowly with the wark retard:d. A réetarded spark tends to heat the engine quickly. .'§n the choke or the primer to keep t engine from stalling." THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS _/ Continued from page 1 the development is expected to be one of : the finest residential communities in the world.: «. >:<â€"‘ «_:\ ; Inclydes Lakes, Woods Something like twentyâ€"four square miles of attractive residential propâ€" erty are included in the plan, with lakes, rivers and woods and hills to provide sites for every taste and evâ€" ery purse. $ f HUGE DEVELOPMENT NEAR LIBERTYVILLE These twenty.four square miles of territory ‘comprise ‘parts of the vilâ€" lages of Libertyville and Mundelein, | stretching roughly four miles along the Libertyvilleâ€"Mundelein brianch of the North Shore Line and running south approximately six miles, â€" Virâ€" tually this ‘entire. area is : owned by Mr. Insull and his associates, or by interests in sympathy with| the‘ develâ€" opment plan. es The first step is the subdivision â€"of some 1,500 acres of land in and adâ€" joining Libertyville and Mundelein and sdjacent to the North Shore Line. This is the property that is ripe for immediate â€"development as homesites and ‘business property. It has been platted and streets are ‘now being put through. Other improvements will be put in next spring as soon as the work can be started. j The subdivision of 1,500 acres, even though it may spread over several years, is somewhat of an undertakâ€" ing, but it is merely the beginning. As the section. builds up,,. successive tracts farther and farther back from the railroad, are to be thrown open. As*the growth spreads . south the growth of the homesites will grow in proportion. In the urban portion, close to the railroad, fifty, sixty, sevâ€" entyâ€"five and 100â€"foot lots will preâ€" dominate. â€" °_ Soat . Country Estates Planned Farther back, there will be quarâ€" ter, half and full acre lots, and still farther back country estates of from five to twenty acres. Parts of some of the large country estate of Chiâ€" cago millionaires may be included among the tracts to be subdivided. ‘The French people seem to be pretâ€" ty Ithoroughly convinced by this time that it is a pretty expensive thing to win a war. * Th The Des Plaines river, with its heavily woodedâ€" banks, cuts through the section from north to south,. . At the western border is Diamond Lake, The doctors may be busy New Year‘s day, but not among those who attended the watch night meetings. Ructions reported in one newspaâ€" per office when the articles on "How to feed the pigs" and "Diet for boys" North Shore Gas Company To Our Customers In extending to you . our best wishes t SOr a : we also take this means of conveying to you our thanks for yqur cordial support and general friendly attiâ€" tude during the the past year and wish to express the hope that these good feelings may continue for years to come. ; § and just north and west of Mr. Inâ€" syll‘s private grounds, a lake of beâ€" tWeen forty and fifty acres has been scooped out and is rapidly being fillâ€" ed by underground springs, The shores of this lake are to be élaborately landscaped, and around it, at somée future date, will be laid out one of the de luxe subdivisions of the development. ' ‘‘‘This general plan is to be carried out by the Lake County Land associaâ€" tion, which has been made trustee for the vast tract. The directors of the association are Britton I. Budd, Samâ€" vel Insull, Jr., and J. C. Reuse.. Mr. Reuse has been manager of the Insull farm for many years and is president of the Libertyville Trust and Savâ€" ings bank and the Mundelein State bank, both of which institutions were recently organized.to assist in the deâ€" velopment of the Libertyvilleâ€"Mundeâ€" lein region. Arthur H.â€"Jones is genâ€" eral manager of the;ussociation and in direct charge of its subdivision activities, : t To Spend $32,000,000 & Immediate improvements in the secâ€" tion al&)for an ‘ expenditure of apâ€" proximately $32,000,000. Among these improvements are: Completion of St. Harytm Lake academy at Mundeâ€" Pos kh.l&aoutdflflmw tracking of the Lake Bluff 1 branch of the North Shore at a cos of $300,000, to accommodate visitor at the Eucharistic Congress at Mun delein next June; new passenger sta tion at Mundelein,; $50,000; new sew age system and disposal plants fo both Mundelein â€" andâ€" Libertyvillé $400,000; extension of Mundelet waterworks, ‘$125,000; new â€" banks theaters, schools, churches and com mercial buildings in Mundélein an Libertyville, $1,000,000; improvement of the Lake County Land askpciation and other subdividers approximatel; $20,000,000. i h:bel}ueh.ï¬nmat l:: in next year is expected to . about a big boom for Miindelein, : subdividers are burrying to have t} holding in readiness for this marl but. the bigger phase of the fut growth of the community :lies not the temporary boom, but in the lo time development planned by Mr. sull and his associates. oo Controlling the largest and on« the most desirable tracts in the « cago region, and backed by . unlim resources, they have the opportu to â€"accomplish something unique suburban development. 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