Ornamental Trom and Bronze Work -umtuâ€"â€"r-}u Â¥ening by appointment only . Phone ROGERS PARK MONDAY and FRIDAY Loop phone Dearborn 5698 LEPHONE HICHLAND PARK 11% trior Juzs Finishing a Specialty F. D. Clavey . Ravinia Nurseries Inited Ornamental Iron Works . A, Noerenberg Co. ASTERING CONTRACTORS "LASTER CONTRACTOR OPFICE 364 BLOOM STREET RCREENS TREES SHR Highland Park, HL > Central Av maxw:mm, Percent Work a Speciaity ‘ ooz Frempry Ailindes ts * ONSI & COMPANY _ House Service f & rainage and: Catch"Basin § : 0. Box 195, Highlana Park, N11 : .. | IRIE AvE . _ HtcHlwoop, ILL L D t O RECrors ter H. K. Grimson STERING CONTRACTORS imental and Decorative: Plastering ephone Highland Park 530 ral Ave Madinon St., Chicago S. T. REBLING TY AND ALL KInps3 Bradley C. Downing ‘ER AND DRAINAGE CONTRACTORS *°> ... .85 8. St. Johns Ave. mm INDm“ns mm hone Highland Park 299 M. PRIOR Co 495 REAL hone Highland Park 801â€"W irectory P. 441 529 8. Geen Bay Ra . B. Freeberg w og and Repaiting Phone H. P A. ROBERTS TONEWALL, 614 Glenview Avenue ES VITI & SON nbumâ€"â€".‘ ERS . WINDO RY Jor ovating . p POW SHADES ERING CONTRACTORS ne Highland Park 755â€"M 2 Deerfield Avenue OsSTEOPATHY ~â€"NURSERIES Telephons Highland Park 34 per, Sheet Iron and urnace Work . & Coment Contractors sDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1926 TAILOR entral Avenue nkâ€"iill‘mh' NELSON Manufketurers SIGNS 26 N. Sheridan Call Incorporated Tel. H. P. 2443â€"9839 Tet. H. P. 2164 of umg‘- Tel. H. P. 1041 as a partly clogged gas line may cause a great deal of trouble when the zero days come, especially if there is a little water in the gas to freeze. It is also advisable to inspect the ignition points and to renew them if necessary. The starter and generator also should be inspected. . The condiâ€" tion of the battery is important. The mechanical first aid department of the club receives thousands of calls each year from motorists whose cars are stalled because of weak batteries. Eo _ New Battery If the driver feels that he needs a new battery, now is the time to get it. It is much easier and less enxpensive to get a new battery now than it is to be stalled some bitterly cold night this winter. See that the cells of the battery have sufficient water to cover the plates. Far.too many motorists neglect this important precaution. Use distilled water in filling the batteries. After this is done, tighten all battery connections, clean the battery posts and apply vaseline. Now is the time to start getting the car ready for winter driving, says a bulletin issued by the mechanical first hid department of the Chicago Moter club. â€"The hose should be in good conâ€" dition and all connections should be tight. â€"Flush out the radiator now before it is filled ;with expensive freezeâ€"proof solution. â€" Repack the water pump glands and put on a winâ€" ter front before the first cold days come. . 4 Tune Up Motor Another precaution that the motorâ€" ist should take at this time is to see that his motor is tuned up. A motor that is running smoothly will save the battery, and the battery is one of the most important parts of the car, durâ€" ing the cold weather when it is subâ€" ject to additional strain. The gas tank and vacuum tank should be cléeaned,| IS CAR READY FOR WINTER DRIVING? NOW IS TIME TO PREPARE Hints Offered by Motor Club Expert of Value to Owner . of Automobile; What s Is Necessary THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1926 _ ‘Again, the publisher of a large city nerepages in the heart of the Great Whest '7\',] NE cannot travel about the country without beâ€" NTJE] ing struck by the s:eat individuality ofitscities, RLYJ} big and little. If there is anything which distinâ€" is /2 | guishes the average American, it is his aggresâ€" KX# | sive loyalty to his own home town. - Therefore, it is not astonishing to find that every community, save the very smallest, ‘has at least one voiceâ€"the voice of its newspager. There are nearly 14,000 such voices in 10,0d0 different communities, and in their med columns the spirit of each place is expressed. columns focus wrat may be called the accumulated town purpose in realizing Lcd ambiâ€" tions. :thtt;;er ::\;y m:;y be, it is through thenedv:s- per that knowledge of communi is disâ€" %mtcd and ideas are unified. ty PWPON‘ ¢ Cooditiouliketbaem’qhthnvedmneâ€"' ed the bravest. But an editor is not just one man; he speaks through his newsâ€" paper. When the mper spirit animates it, |n¢'spazisa of men, for it mobilâ€" izes the best citizens of the community inuon,&uform&»miuue:fmw m\n,ymllwyear,thhnfl:r:‘rerm sistently and constantly cen‘ its efâ€" forts to awaken th:&demmunifyw its shortcoming¢ and its opportunities. For example, in one town a publicâ€"spirited editor labored.for years . ‘""~ "~__ to awaken his city from the spirit of apathy that checked all progress. â€"â€" | This town was lagging far behind in civic| Belt devotes columns of his to conâ€" advancement, its roads were poor, its sideration of the problems t farmâ€" schools «antiquated, its business sectioners. This newspaper prints for them inforâ€" woefully behind the times, and its parks|mation it hu.ï¬lthaed from ï¬w& and public buildings shabby. Worstwf all, able source, all as it may help them to its affairs were in the hands of those who|solve their particular problems and otherâ€" seemed entirely lacking in desire for imâ€"\wise improve théir economic cqndition. provement. 4 ? Not satisfied with precept, this publisher Conditions like these might have dauntâ€"|devotes hisovm%‘:-we farm to tiâ€" ed the bravest. But an editor is not just|cal experiment. mbot&?ic one man; he speaks through his newsâ€"gains, he makes available to the agriculâ€" p.per.anenthe mpenmm animates it,| tural section which his serves. a newspaper is a host of men, for it mobilâ€"|As a result this .entire comn ~has izes the Et citizens of the community|\made definite and visible progress. _ _ Atlast it won, Today the old stagnation hsbeenmmfofludquonnnof}xu- qaiq.Nc;o:cua’hods,mmmï¬:'t ries, new new streets ; tfldtheimnmmbleoth:qmpmmi aane.%ecnn)\n&e:im@.?uityniuj t, all attest power of newspaper leadership. ~ _ *> . ; ~,>..~;. C Thus, while most vocations are more or less private, newspaper publishing is necessarily charged with a public interest. This has been true from the earliest days. When one of the first papers in the then (1804) wilderness of Indiana made its bow, the editor stated its object to be "to collect and publish such information as will give a correct account of the production and natural advantages of the territory." In other words, he proudly proclaimed himself a "booster," although the word had not yet come into vogue, This ideal persists today; it expresses itself in making the paper not merely a chronicler of the news, but also a leader in organized movements for community betâ€" terment. a 4 " "NEWS and PROGRESS" ECONOMIC SIGNIFICANCE AND SERVICE OF THE AMERICAN NEWSPAPER AND NEWSPAPER ADVERTISJNG-â€"FM latest volume in Manhattan Library of Popular Economics, Wubli hed in serial form through courtesy of Bank of the Manhattan Company, New York. SERVING THE COMMUNITY Or possibly the lack of men at the dances is one more sign of the disinâ€" clination of the modern man for work. Not merely did the elements create havyoe in Florida, but the political eleâ€" ments are getting ready to ¢reate still more of it on November 2. > If the hunters feel they inpust start a fire somewhere, they w better stay at home and start it in the kitâ€" chen stove. I9p 3 The poets ‘have written mbout the old swimming ‘hole, but. it" might be more useful at this time o year, if they would get up some}y in praise of Saturday night bath t effective support to seven different comâ€" munity projects; and fourth, for performâ€" mil:’hartecn separate services. % w the newspaper ï¬%‘i%::n reâ€" ward in joint expansion with its own comâ€" munity J::“indie.aevzl by another instance. Toward the end of 1925 a newspaper in a In 1925 a Community Service Contest was held under the auspices of the Wisâ€" consin Press Association and the awards recognized the conspicuous service of editâ€" ors in the following order: first, for "wakâ€" ing a oommnniz'eonodmlnd purâ€" ;l. m & + 'tm‘ forcaler teat for chruley tech Iof giving Telephone H. P. 2700 | For 51 Years the Standard of Quality Milr®r / DAIRY COMPANY b‘ï¬:amwmu.l.!. PC The newspaper mobilizes the best citizens of the community into a force for progress {} SCHOOL CHILDREN Need Bowman‘s Milk. SCHOOLWORK takes its toll of energy. And so does rollicking, romping play. _ Offset this daily fatigne with Bowman‘s Milk. It is rich in body and bone building eleâ€" ments, â€"rich in the vitamines that promote robust health. Bowman‘s Milk is whole ‘milkâ€"just as rich in cream as ‘when taken frow the cow. And it is fresh! One taste of its delicious natural sweetness will convince you of that. 'l“z it today. You‘ll â€" be delighted w i. Re member there is no substitute for southwestern city issued a special edition to commemorate its twentyâ€"fourth anniâ€" versary. That issue was devoted to a sumâ€" mary of the contrasts it had witnessed and had helped to bring about. When the paper first appeared the town was small, its streets were mud homm and graft were rampant, uho'bl:n churches were few and scarcely a ding was of more than two stories. The newspaper itself was of small size and practically without money. Twentyâ€"four years later, as the edition shows, the newsp: oechpics its own â€" sixteenâ€"story W which it is o slation o sigote inabitents is all population of 225,000 i ts, has tluevidnnceno(cnï¬:eudm!d:,m streets, parks, good government, at ant schools and churches, comfortable homes and an imposing business district. . Similar examples of reciprocal oqnlt‘ï¬blt:; tion to a common prosperity t ci:ed endlessly, They ‘ï¬m indu:: that America‘s : newspaper publishers: have learned, as American business as a whole is learning, to read selfâ€"interest in the oi oniin cbieviparing the f xt article, "Distributing ; e Nation‘s Goods.") The boys are figuring how they can step into someone else‘s shoes, but they will come out better if they try to make some shoes of their own. One more thing this country needs, is fewer people under the limelight, and more under the parlor lamp at home. There is a new refrigerating, plant in the White House, but President Coolidge keeps so cool that some will say that was not necessary. Nut crop now being gathered, and the rest of the harvest will be offered in the form of bills and petitions: to congress and the state legislatures. THE HIGHLANUW PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS No. in celebration of the Armyâ€"Navy football game to be played this year for the figst time in the %&mX%f.gbï¬?a%%inmmnn won y. ic is invited on y to a spectacular y pageantâ€"with parades, games, warâ€"time maneuversâ€"a rare exhibition of naval splendor and naval .+ Remember thedayâ€"-wednaday.Omberfl. Don‘tm&nthi-g'e-tevent. The North Shore Line, with frequent train service, will take you direct to the Great Lakes Naval Training Station. ts 3A B Chicago North Shore & Milwaukee Railroad in tipâ€"top condition for a day of successful business otf pleasure. f f ' tB The next time you go to Milwaukee, take advantage. t the superior service afforded on this h:ghgspeed. cce tricallyâ€"operated railroad. _ esnt on\ Atee ‘NORTH Shore Line ofters you a distinctive anï¬ri‘ + {1 *A YX â€"equalled transportation service to Milv}'aukee.7Â¥ BW There is a fast train every hour. ’ f ï¬{ it3 Trains operate into the very heart of the city, savi % you time and taxi fare. Located at Sixth % Sycam orey |. our â€"Milwaukee terminal is convenient. to everyw -;L G | Electricallyâ€"operated, North Shore Line trai?:s afford the :; utmost in cleanliness and travel comfort. No smoke) | no cinders. You reach your destination fully refreshed) . Note: Seven Milwaukeeâ€"bound trains operate each day viaâ€"}| |. the Shore Line Route, stopping here for passengers. At otherâ€" | |â€" hours, Shore Line Limited trains operating to Waukegan | + make direct connections at North Chk&)mm with : | .\ Milwaukee Limiteds operating over the Skokie Valley Route. , || For schedules, fares and other \information, inquire at ticket offu â€"eaort 7 m 1" to Milwaukee CXXX D TE L CADILLAC MOTORCAR COMPANY, EVANSTON BRANCH University 8600 Motor cars always need service. Withâ€" out it, none of them can long give the satisfaction which their owners rightâ€" ly expect. To the splendid performance of the New, Improved Cadillac, the Evanston Branch adds a service of more than general completeness. It is because Cadillac Motor Car Comâ€" gany fully appreciates this that it has uilt and equipped the most com;;llete service station along the North Shore â€" the Evanston Branch. Division of General Motors Corporation i810 Ridge Avenue, Evanston PRESS WANT ADS Rogers Park 91338 PAGE SEVEN