wo â€"toned ind metal retails arly at â€" NOW alue! ful lamp ESTIMATES FURNISHEp IC J. KILLIAN, Telephone 65 rial URSDAY, FEBRUARY aimed the boys have to be ‘president of ‘the es, but no doubt the inh s e â€" o esc ~§u;,. * $ furs $ > M M 2 . "hae *4 $\ P t s PA 3 ),’»'_" +k s ROM | TEL. WINNETK A 874 Center Street WINNETK A Ihe P on t apo the pPrOper use 2z Pat 4* e cl. Â¥okcst . The paper company is building a Plant with a blowerâ€"pipe system to serve its barges on the Columbia river. . Chips and butts will be reâ€" duced in the plant to sizes that will pass easily through the blower pipe to the barges bound for the X pany‘s mill at Camas. There it will be converted into kraft paper. I:: arrangement by the wo.m banies promises to turn waste into a more important and commodity. if ‘they hew to the line of their they will the chips fall where they pay. _ _ . New Devices Increase Econ‘ny In Logging Work; Saving Chips for Pulp | REDUCING WASTE IN This reminds me of the theft Oof a $600,000 necklace from a charming woman who left it on a table in a hotel room while she was taking a bath. This woman‘s father, from whom she inherited the money to buy: such trinkets as $600,000 Mckozei;c, got most of his wealth by coll & it from the public five and ten cents at a time. Though he later put up a building known today throughout the world, he at one time hadlzi money that he would have € to turn his back even momentarily on :oo,o& It ii‘doll:’m‘bttul H‘;l!: 1d ve even $1 within r of thievesâ€"in a hotel room. His m lem was not only to save his money but first to make it. : | he was well educ.tedundtcnll"ip. pearances a far more intelligent as well as more cultured man than his father.. The second generation can‘t always keep even what the first genâ€" eration hands to it. 3 | _ 1 _ 6 Want Pnat was the pride of the. city.: It had been mu;flm ually by a man who started, with nothin, ‘Today the place is in ‘decay, except one or two of the smaller buildings, that | have been sold for service garages. A son of the founder took charge of it after his father‘s death, and, though the business was tbmcttbehdghtofiupmpoï¬ty, he couldn‘t hold it to its course. Yet In the middle western indncu-h]jcity recently I, drove by a block of brick buildings, once a prosperous manuâ€" facturing plant that was the pride of Fred Kelly writes in ness Magazine: Children of Men Who Ha â€" Made Money Usually Spend It Lavishly C EASY COME, EASY Go OF INHERITED CASH _ _Other special feature pmkrï¬ns are under consideration, among which are the | "Housekeeper‘s Halfâ€"hour," and _the "National Farm School." In the latter the farm will be considered as the studgnt‘s laboratory. Timely lecâ€" ture courses which dovetail ff"‘ the daily farm work will be devel 1 and laboratory assignments 'iï¬pï¬ made which negej:“sitate putting ;h;,to practice the sul matter taught. These will be supplemented with a file of bulletins dealing with the subâ€" ject matter broadcast, offered as A featu The "flaghes" ï¬: consist ing current information farmers through the seve letters received each weel partment, p offered "Uncle Rert" the garde of Mr. Pickard‘s phanto: will entertain and instr and girls of the Radio . nior Gardeners with nat formation. Some of the | selves will be heard over they ask questions of T‘n Much of the material ished by the radio service will be prepared for "presentation in a ‘radically t manner then the g;uqt almost ‘uniâ€" versal practice‘ ‘reading â€"manuâ€" scripts. Broadcasting stations c+-op- sonalities | who | haveâ€" mill Keable qualifications to voice the information and material which in most em'm be presented in popular style and in the form of dialogue or questions and answers. ( ny ask:questions of Uncle:Bert.,: "Fifty Farm Flashes" will soon a variety of agricultural program material ‘to commercial brog stations serving farmer ; . Much of the material furnished by The vast fund of popular and scien. tific agricultural information orâ€" iginates on the farms and in labâ€" oratories of the United States ment of Agriculture will soon be| tapâ€" ped in a new place. This is an~ nouncement made by Sam chief of the newly created radio seryâ€" fee in the department. ~Steps wil bo‘ taken immediately, he said, to furnish. Plans to Tap Vast Fund of Inâ€" formation for Benefit of Farmers ' AGRICULTURE DEPT. . _ RADIO FEATURES NEW THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1926 LUMBER INDUSTRY O o i1 io t _ _WiH sdon â€"he regular feature on the air; s with mtureâ€"ctud* inâ€" ome of the juniors themâ€" _ the gardenm expert, one <d‘s phantom characters, _ and instruct the boys the Radio Order of Juâ€" consist of interest tion "sought by several thousand week by the deâ€" Nation‘s Busiâ€" i be prepared for radically different resent almost uniâ€" ‘ ‘reading ~manuâ€" ng stations c+<)p. tak" M "as cea e o4 219 Who | Have the radio as PRESS WANT ADS BRING RESULTS «auni2,"4 1. TD Cccurred. . Then. he sauntered in .and bought a few hunâ€". dred shares of bargains, .. ‘ MenoftheGeorgoF.Bakertypc never buy any other kind. I noted, too, that the stocks he bought were inconspicuous and long neglected, but by . uncanny coincidence they had a sharp rise within fortyâ€"eight hours. â€"Fred Kelly in Nation‘s Businm‘] Magazine, * each c?{y a broker‘s office in the hotel. But George F; Baker never went near the place nor showed the slightest inâ€" terest in stocks until one day when an alarming ‘slump occurred. : Then. he sauntered in .and bought a few hun> dred shares nf harmsn. _ _i was recently staying where one of the guest: George F. B;Iker, possibly â€" est banker of his gererat of the guests ‘were gaily the rise of prices in the ket Aand VigitoA Bansa‘ 21c i1p. | ©° ic war, asserts Royal Cortissoz, 1; ‘In the January Scribner‘s Magazine rd, | Mr. Cortino:.uy::“‘l‘hec!imnxu 3 m ienss t ap w essay my point :: of departure.; in them it is as though m | Forain faced the great theme of his ag | tite, and, summoning all his technical |resources, rose to the pitch of its adeâ€" quate celebration. > For several deeâ€" ‘Y| ades he had been dabbling in the ‘* | rather acrid "humors of Parisian life, ;‘ portraying hordes of its basest types, g interpreting some of the pettist ‘" i phases of its vice. : Thas. i. PC FINANCIER KNows wHEN TO BUY BEST Jeanâ€"Louis Forain, famo zation of his powers in his of ‘the war, asserts Roval ( FRENCH ARTIST 1s _ FINE ON war sornes Drawings of This Chmfl" hy This Painter Are Highly t & Nog L0 E0p0 f visited â€" from timâ€"e'"t; 'Eiâ€"l;;o- ;% a broker‘s office in the hotel. eorge F; Bakeg never went near . ; s Indicated, to a certain mind and ï¬nlflmtion, the s crisis of hisâ€"older years fitted to celebrate it with ty, and a noble rage. He thal, the dangers of exagâ€" A terrible truth it stampâ€" war drawings. It is more of the guests was ‘Mr r, mb‘y the ghre;é. his generation: : Many & 11 gaily discussing the stock marâ€" ?, famous French are being exhibâ€" reaches full realiâ€" m in & hotel drawings DEPans C ES â€" ox by | Those Why ‘ 6â€"N0us, perhaps constitutionalâ€" perhaps ~not. _ But will it defeat houseâ€"toâ€"house selling if that be a deâ€" sirable, economic _ way‘ . of _ selling goods? ; Probobly not. : If the public wants houseâ€"toâ€"house selling, it will have ‘it. * If the public ‘gets what it wants better and more ‘cheaply from the local retailer, whom will it patroâ€" nize?. .| : £ There‘s only one answer to houseâ€" toâ€"house selling, and the atiswer isn‘t a law,.â€"Nation‘s Business Magazine. m ,gé- bntodratitnies‘ shidhad..4 17’ 1‘ H toâ€"house selling is a .thorn in the : side of the retailers in many towns, And here‘s this latest way to remove it :; t o eip Pass a bill which makes the salesâ€" man fn;nish a list of the ‘correct names and adddresses of every ong upon whom he intends to call the next day. ‘"Then the list is censored by the city clerk, to whom any resiâ€" dent may write saying that he or she does not wish to be bothered by canâ€" vassers. . Such names are stricken ; from the lists, “ Ingenious, perhaps constitutionalâ€" | perhaps ~not. _ But will it defeat houseâ€"tochousn seflins iP a120 1200091 6 FOR :; ; c <.. DRY CLEANING & DYEIN RUG CLEANING & CURTA ~â€" The business man! § ‘Who cries the loudest for more laws to help him whenever he‘s in trouble? The business man! 3 " Perhaps that isn‘t true, but someâ€" times we feel that way. We have just been moved to that feeling <by reading an account of legislation proâ€" posed for:one or more southern Caliâ€" fornia communities and reported by the Dl"y’ Goods Km lc t iy ‘ STRETCHING â€" â€"â€" THE RELIABLE LAUNDRY PHONES i78â€"179 laws? DEPENDS ON WHOSE | OX Is GORED Acam Those Why Cry Loudest for ~â€" Fewer Laws Often First to Cleaning, Pressing, Relining Ladies and Gents 102 North First Street General Tailoring Who cries the loudest for‘ fewer THE HIGHLAND PARK M. WOLAK Remodeling Ask for More 0_ ‘nat Ffeeling <by it of legislation proâ€" more southern Caliâ€" es and reported by Chicago North Shore & Milwaukee Railroad Co f The HighSpeed Electrified Railroad WE SPECIALIZE IN HENNA PA TREATMENT. _ n > CRNNA,PACK Marcelling, Manicuring, Water Waving, Bobbing, Shampooing and Facials ; HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS Telephone 140 . L. MUSTRIGC BEAUTY SHOPPE NY KXC * C '.;'wf‘ xA [ + ind _Ié hM 1!& Amory .'*J.;,.i { \! , d\ | \"\w \ I mf ; "‘“é““E j a Special 3 !(“y j {/“ ® Sew- Tm e. gb ‘a i.!,l/, 'I'h Iggfl;n eMiracle 9 GUNNA_PACK, HENNA RINSE, expert Marcellers at your service We Specialize in Boys‘ Haircutting Auditorium, Chicago Throughout the full six weeks engagement of F. Ray Comâ€" stock‘s and Morris Gest‘s great production, "The Mirâ€" acle", ‘at the Auditorium, Chicago, we will maintain the following special service direct to the doors of the theater: Arrangements for seats at the Auditorium may be made through our ticket agents. HAIR CUTTING Highland Park Ticket Office From 9:58 p.m. to 12:58 a.m., all northâ€"bound trains will make a special stop at Congress and Wabash for homeward â€" going passengers. All southâ€"bound trains arriving downtown beâ€" tween 7 p.m. and 9 p.m,. will make a special stop at Congress and Wabash, at the doors of the Audiâ€" torium. UTY SHOPPE m to 6 p. m. Hours : m. to 6 p. m. New Siate Bank Building Rooms 8 and 9 Telephone Highland Park 1999 appointment -‘é' D ju‘t« , DYEING PAGE SEVEN