0.9. Sales of mailâ€"ordep T Detembe, fet sn mm P oc Me epnenony en tuat 15.1 per cent larger than in Decembey, 1925, and sales at 5 and 10 cent chain stores were 16.2 per cent larger, also better at the close of the yeat, to the report. â€" In. creases noted in the production hk i omm s aog serves & rom f â€"businéss conditions. i s NAVY BARS MARRIED : u':N ANNOUNCEMENT nd in their tate secrets, en equalled x the public. M men or men with depen. ?.‘.",3;‘ haz informed the hy aiti i a S ¢vm restrictions , were ordered hy the . bui to reduce special disâ€" charges. Too many married men with 2o tm 4n ~their:relaâ€" cord of all s and other traordinary » y# HURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4 â€" depe have enlisted and then reâ€" quest order discharges to better provide for their families the Navy brinounces. F \ Reâ€"nlistments by married men unâ€" der co service certificates are not affi by the new*regulations. If any action indeâ€" 3 | ting experiments to prove his point.| PAT°NS. ;. JNC IOUFUN R@NCTIALUIOT .DOLEE . Te Belts bromdcast" recently From | gives the child sixteen ancestors, the The Chicago Daily Nmndflg:h- fifth generation thirtyâ€"two ancestors, tion on "Psychology | of theâ€" Home"| &A 86 on. . ; ... fll 000000 cu20 and sumtharized the result of the inâ€"| _ "Go back only 30 generations, less vestigations and uplï¬lmmh o $y | Pn than years, and the blood of Northwestern university ‘students. | MOYE, & billion ancestors conâ€" m,,“"“" Why | ::ar:;n to make your child what he is "Recently I asked my students to ho . tm . C go out and .observe stri;inc Incidents | _ "CO back for 50,000 yearss thie time in the behavior of children and rePOrt | yopabty lreed on the earth, and has these incidents to the class," suid Dy. | Probably lived on the earth, and what Betts. _ "An attempt . was. nade" o a bev!fldérinc complex of heredity enâ€" explain the why of the child‘s beâ€" tegs“mbo' the making of a child of havior in each case. For example, a 'thf.' generation. on boy of six was put to sleep alone in Go on backward: still, if vou a room opening off a hall in which a choose, Into: the animal (fyeles and it light was burning at night. Frequent.| °s Dossible to think / of/ an endless 1y in the night he would quietly wey | chaim of Hfe extenting from the very out of bed, take a blanket or two, slip beginning. down to you! child and into his parents‘ foom nearby and bn!lgmg to ‘him the. di'fl'orent charatâ€" curt down .in & corher on the floor. teristics and t‘niu which he owes to Here he might be uncomfortable from heredity. ‘Fe v abe the cold and hard floor, but at least| . dlust Tws Fnctirs y3 he would not suffer from the tortures Just two factors combine to make of many children afraid in the dark, every individual what he is: heredity, Probably as lirge a proportion of my both near and remote, and the: influâ€" listeners tonight ‘have Had the same ences ‘of eh.wironment and training. experience. . Your speaker unblushâ€" Heredity brings to the child from the ingly ac ledges that as a child he long past of his race a great:eomplex s afrakl,dwin' the dark. t "| of instinects, All children have the Whetes C car* instinct of fear, though not all fear "Whence: comes this " ‘Surel :hh:om tll:inp. o Te o m o taod as children we were n r harmefl Md:n‘hde:t;c:h:tur ::;e h.: ;ived. in the dark and so made afraid. No,| dark, violence that (ime from the Ni we must go farther back to find the| and 'itqngc destruction that th:é: origin of our fear in the dark,â€"back | tened from ihe forces of nature,â€"all generations, back ages, back cycles|these things and a thousand oth of time,â€"back through the links of contributed through endless: t ergs the chain of heredity that binds us to| tions to give your child his mrt.; our parents, our grandâ€"parents, greatâ€"| of fear." s t ds PSYCHOLOGIST â€" EXPLAINS *"When the little boy is stubborn and refuses to brush his teeth or the litâ€" tle girl flings her doll to the foor and says, with a stamp of herâ€"foot, that she hates the whole worldâ€"don‘t sigh and whisper to your partner at the bridge table that "they certainly take after their fatherâ€"you‘ll notice his eyebrows almost meet," but asâ€" cribe it to a long line of ancestors who have been conttibuting for ten centuries to the illâ€"temped of} Mary and William. : a oo 1e HEREDITY AFFECTS HUMAN BEHAVIOR Dr. G. H. Betts of Northwestern University Tells Effect on Children of Ancesâ€" tors Experience This in brief is the contentien of Professor George Herbert Betts, psychologist at Northwestern‘ univer.â€" sity, who recently has been condueâ€" THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1926 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIALS, February 5 and 6 Y:orylb.B“t Pot Roast â€" 25C n momaonns.._.._._ aC ‘ to To ompnone. onl ~ o ns uhi nt o_ A3¢ . rnui«® ___ Jilc Ns Eegeoienpneantieny + 0 0 n n onl _ 206 n prlcs _._ _ SOHC T hae mr ... /. _ o91€ d aarmas. ... ade Furlann«®‘ _ _ J6%e n Mn ...~.....A06 Sommen Sek _________40¢ pettfe® _ ____._ 39¢ Sum:b.corfefw IZ*C fek thl .. _ So€ PHONES HIGHLAND PARK 1677, 1678, 1679 DEERFIELD 143 “swngdm Brand of Pure Foods" â€" â€" 24 NORTH FIRST STREET, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS FREE DELIVERY SERVICE TO RAVINIA, HIGHLAND PARK, HIGHWCOD, FORT SHERIDAN AND ?DEBRFIELD Fresh Herring Plate Corned Beef the 1. }â€";...«.>asr."> Rump Corned Beef Sh. Pork Chops the 1b ..........â€"mâ€">â€"4« Ground Beef ; the h |â€";.â€":specâ€"c0.s FOR FRIDAY ONLY _ Faney WHITE POTATOES the peck t 79¢ ..A farm that was traded for a team of horses back in 1841 is included among the 2,881 acres near Mundelein sold by the firm of Lyon & Rouse durâ€" ing the last few months for an aggreâ€" gate consideration of more than $1,â€" 500.00 Eleven of the farms, totaling 1.041 acres, were sold during the sixâ€"day period between Jan. 14 and Jan. 20. As in the case of most of the recent acre transactions in Lake county, the buyers prefer to conceal their identity. The Raymond Meyer farm of 190 acres is the tract that was sold in 1841 for the team, accordâ€" ing to R.YJ. Lyons, > SELLS FARM TRADED ONCE FOR 2 HORSES Lake County Tract Néar Munâ€" delein Brings Large Sum In Big Transaction grandparents, and so on backward to the â€"earliest clife _from which we sprang. es d e‘ 9e "Think for‘a miiznent what this means. â€" The child in our home today Kas two parents. Each of these had two, thus giving the child four grandâ€" parents. The fourth generation back gives the child sixteen ancestors, the fifth generation thirtyâ€"two ancestors, and so on. 4 4 v "Go back only 30 generations, less than 1,000 years, and the blood of more than a billion ancestors conâ€" ::drges to make your child what he is ay. v . "Go back for 50,000 years, the time which scientists tell us man has probably lived on the earth, and what a bewildering complex of heredity enâ€" ters into the making of a child of this generation. a ~"Go on backward still, if you choose, into the animal (fyeles and it is ~possible to think of} an endless chain of life extending 13111 the very beginning down to: your child and bringing to ‘him the,. different characâ€" teristics and traits which he owes to heredity. Li elet t +x4 -';?"'{ 3 GRAPE FRUIT Special prices by the whole or half case â€" Cottage Cheese the PKG. ... rorndlcdeess i. large can 28¢; doz cans Libby‘s Peaches, halves 8 Ige. cans for ............... t op 8. H., Pegches, Ige. can Libby‘s Pineapple Ige can 8 cans for $rrrimendenisisinnnnises 8. H. w le, ige can Malted Milk Tasties _ tb Ib- ....‘,â€".«.-...'.._........'.â€"..... the IB. :.!..««« Peach Creams the IG. .:......... Eux Mitk Chocolnte Iss‘** 40c Pineapple Creams Tthe Ib.; i.............. Cherry Creams Chocolate Eclair Te TD. :\..cslinslne... Chocolate Bon Bon Edinbnr'h the: Ib, ... Quaker: Butter Square the Ib, l Cocoa Bar the 1b. ... FOR MONDAY ONLY RAPP BROTHERS Read our ad every week in the Highland Park Press ~SPECIAL SOAP SALE A6¢ 15¢ 2.87 1.00 3.88 1.00 1.00 46¢ 46¢ 52¢ 46¢ 46¢ 43¢ 32¢ 30¢ Highland Park‘s Down Town Store SKIDDING DANGER IN WINTER DRIVING ‘ "Driving an automobile over packâ€" ed and polished snow is an undertakâ€" ing . not ~without: an . element â€" of danger," says a bulletin issuedâ€"by the mechgnical first aid department of the Chicago Motor club, "and a betâ€" ter knowledge of the way in which a car acts under these conditions will make for the safety of the winter driver. K "The inexperienced ‘driver has heard : veteran <drivers extol the use of chains, with the result that the tyro comes to believe that chains are an absolute skid preventive, It comes as a surprise then, for him to disâ€" eover his car skidding when he has thken the precaution to apply thains to his wheels. . Driving should not be attempted . without> chains, but many serious and fatal accidents have happened to drivers who have placed too: much confidence in the power of chains to stop a skid, When a quick stop is necessary, the rear wheels are likely to lock; if this occurs, the cross chains part, the: bare rubber. comes in contact with the icy surface of the road, and a skid results. > How to Stop Skid "A skid of this kind generally can \be stopped by releasing the brake ‘for a second and then applying it again. On long trips it is advisable to carry a stout piece of rope which can be wound around a section of the wheel if‘the chains should break. But This Will Not Prevent Acâ€" cident Unless Driver Uses . â€"â€"Judgment and Learns How to Control x USE OF CHAINS IS URGED "Another; difficulty in wirter drivâ€" ing is that snow and sleet form a coating of ice which the windshield is sometimes powerless to remove. The motorist who is farâ€"sighted enough to carry a bag of salt can quickly remeâ€" dy this trouble by rubbing the salt over the iceâ€"coated windshield." The bulletin concludes: y Always Under Control "The beginning of all wisdom in winter motoring is, however, in knowâ€" ing that anything may happen, and that the only way to be sure is always to have the car undéer complete conâ€" trol. If a motorist has arrived at this stage of driving wisdom, he will never fall into the most common of winter driving mistakes, that of ‘ traveling fast in ruts of snow. He will know how difficult it is to turn out for an oncoming car, and he will realize that a quick turn is liable to have disasâ€" trous results." # Log Cabin Syrup TBE HICHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, M\umors Mazola Oil quart can . Pint can .. Wesson Oil Pint can ... Miller & Hart Bacon Mickleberry‘s Sausage Quaker Oats, pkg ; Mickleberry‘s Sausage Frying Oysters the quart ....... Stewing Oysters. _ > the quart revmmenbssveserrnneinsndnness Good Luck Oleomargarine $ IDH. : ..2e onl ce ionine dniaibiccnaiite YERY BEST ELGIN CREAMERY ORANGES Special Prices by the case or half case FOR TUESDAY ONLY GRANULATED SUGAR 10 Ibs. for f 50¢ : . _ 48%c. 2c o1 _ 46¢ $1.25 . .39¢ ~â€"38¢ 62¢ 49¢ 90¢ 59¢ 27¢ ‘ ghe campaiznm Wiud s an essay contest for pup a lesson conâ€" ‘test in which teachers in mn& schools are to compete. In those conâ€" tests $6,500 is given for the % says and the best lessons, the the gifts of the National Automobile Chamber of Commerce, which coâ€" operates with the board in its highâ€" way safety enterprises, The contests close February 24, of this year, . { Engraved Certificates â€"_ In addition engraved certificates of merit will be given those schools in each state which comply with certain requirements of the highway organiâ€" zation in the teaching of safety eduâ€" cation. These certificates© bear the signature of Dr. J. J. Tigert, United !States commissioner ‘of â€" education, Department of the Interior, and of the state superintendent of schools, or the principal school official. Dr. Tiâ€" gert also is chairman of the Highway | Education Board. Planning the solution of the traffic problem a: generation ahead is the policy of the Highwa@dy Education Board, according to a statement anâ€" nouncing (the fifth national. safety campaign open to all elementary schools of the country, nas OPEN TO SCHOOL PUPILS PLAN ESSAY TEST : ON HIGHWAY TOPIC Highway Education Board Seeks Solution of Traffic Problem Generation Ahead . : of Present | The contest is being announced now [~~~~~~~â€";t"~â€""~~ $to o o oc to the schools of the country. Pupils| Alabama is nine, for California thirâ€" are re«g‘uesbed to write essays of 500 | teen, Texas nineteen, Iilinois twenty, words in length on the subject "My | and other states in proportion. . School‘s Share in Highway Safety."| ‘In the teacher‘s contest, three naâ€" Four hundred thirtyâ€"eight medals and | tional prizes are given, amounting as many cash prizes will be given for to $1,500, but the first consists of a the best essays in the several states, check for five hundred dollars and a while three national awards will be| trip to Washington for the best lesâ€" given for the premier essays that are son. The secondâ€" and third prizes reâ€" written <«by the pupiis of the fifth,| spectively are three hundred dollars sixth, seventh and eighth grades in | and two hundred dollars,.. . â€" school. The first national prize conâ€" ï¬ eo;m;re the fifth of a: conâ€" sists of a gold watch and a trip to | ce : undertaken by the Washington with all expenses paid, board at the suggestion of the Naâ€" the winning pupil under the care of| tional Automobile Chamber of Comâ€" board officials. > merce, looking toward some amelioraâ€" school. ‘The first national prize conâ€"| â€" tests are the fifth of a: sists of a gold watch and a trip to eeï¬ m undertaken wx Washington with all expenses paid, board at the suggestion of the Naâ€" the winning pupil under the care of| tional Automobile Chamber of Comâ€" board officials. : merce, looking toward some amelioraâ€" : Gold‘ Medals & 4 tion of present conditions. It is beâ€" In each state a gold medal and a|lieved by board officials and many check for fifteen dollars will be given | othersâ€"that the surest plan for relief, for the best essay, and a silver medal| both immediate and in the future, is and a ten dollar check for the second | to interest the schools, pupils and best paper. The number of third| teachers, principals and superintenâ€" prizes, each consisting of a bronze| dents, in a campaign which is broad medal ahd five dollars, varies someâ€" enough to involve humanitarian prinâ€" what in proportion to the elementary | ciples, and grave enough to affect the school enrollment. : New York state, foundation of our economic system for example, receives twentyâ€"seven insofar as it pertains to transportaâ€" state prizes, while the number for | tion. . : $ rags 8 Now is the time to buy canned Goods. Other prices on request Blue Diamond Tiny Peas Blue Diamond Ex. Sifted Peas, the doz. ...._._._.._._* the doBBN ...........ccase« Blue Diamond Sifted Blue Diamond Select Peas, the doz. ..........â€"â€"â€" Sweetheart Tiny Superâ€" SHG PCORB .:........._.coourcicine King Bird Peas â€" ‘ the : dOKON : .......«â€".sxsmssond Sweetheart Bantam Corn, the doz. .......... Aloha Corn the UOK, ./. ce crarcanmac in Sweetheart Ige. Tomaâ€" £068, OOE, ........wsssmoran Sweetheart No. 2 Tomaâ€" €068, dOZ. .......â€".~.«.......copast Aloha Tomatoes fllQ dol. Winencangerkhventinep aninbet Gulf Creek Tomatoes Sweetheart Little Kernel MILLER & HART SMOKED HAMS: A :\ ‘ Sweet and mild f FOR THURSDAY ONLY '2!4% Ib. sack of FIJOQB 143. . . 324%¢ $3,38 $2.15 $2.13 $2.00 $3.63 $1.40 $2.45 $2.18 $1.80 $2.45 $1.88 $1.80 $1.40 Dollar Sale, Wednesday, Feb. 10 American tariff can be put down flm absolutely as a political and not an economic activity. The one great barrier which stands between Democratic w:afl sucâ€" cess is the high level af prosperity prevailing throughout !ï¬il country. There is no need of anew as proof, the extraordinary increases in savings bank deposits, in thn; parâ€" chase of life insurancée policies, or the high level of American wages. . But the Democrats appreciate as long as this situation continues that their hopes of making headway:are blocked even at the very beginning. Not so long . ago, ~at the Woodrow Wilson celebration in New York, a Demo* cratic Senator admitted frankly that on the face of the returns, because of the confidence of the people in the President, and their satisfaction, with economic conditions, that Democratic hopes even for 1928 were rather an idle dream. © . X & Same Old Political Scheme Is Brewing; Prosperity To Be Attacked ‘ ANOTHER ASSAULT ON . PROTECTIVE TARIFF Under the circumstances it can be said without fear of contradiction that the Democratic leaders who are weepâ€" ing crocodile tears over the tariff and at the same time energetically striving to introduce the tariff as a matter of present legislation, are engaged in a deliberate attempt to disturb the presâ€" ent economic conditions. $ Good Luck Margarine L D. rene ioi rrarnedriithnc es Early June Poas Fancy Sugar Corn Fancy Tomatoos Good Luck Milk Red X Macaroni and Spaâ€" 10 large cans Faney Pink Salmon, Ib. can Woodcock Egg Noodles Ripe Olives, large cans, Pork and Beans 10 cans Yellow Cling Penaches POTATOES, Fancy New, the peck Bweetheart Chili Sauce § HOUEIBE .12.â€"020â€" caecarririnrncre Sweetheart Shrimp Sweetheart Golden Bantam Blue Diamend Extra Tiny Little Green Peas Select Early June Poas Pears, } $ large cans weaderexcemnnnan l l 86c $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 Bread and Butter Pickles J ADE ..3« anienerancvendreaitinclecincdinirennry Good Coffee 8. H. Tomatoes, No. 3 can Fancy Pears, No. 2 can 8. H. Grated Pinesapple 8 eans for California Ripe Olives Swesetheart Spinach, No. 8 can Red Pitted Cherries New Comb Honey 6 DE Mesecarted tremnanacean 3 cans for Red Cross Noodles : 12 pkge. for .............. Alola Sliced Pineapple No. 2 can, 4 cans for Imported Sardines 6 cans for ............. Fancy Juicy Florida Grapefruit, 10 large Fancy California Navel Orâ€" anges, sweet & juicy; lgt DRY CLEANING & DYEING RUG CLEANING & CURTAIN STRETCHING THE RELIABLE LAUNDRY PHONES 178â€"179 Choice Sliced Peaches PAGE FIVE 49¢ $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 Ble $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 51 $1 $1 $1