YAY. NOVEMBER 4, 1926 palation of New Jersey is # many Hallâ€"Mills murder remain to be examined.â€" is Star. t n by the Geokogical Survey. stock is exhausted the pa e purchased from the Supâ€" t of Documents, Washingâ€" ..for 25 cents a copy. 5 ) Aloae, & her S T e :: â€" :. s tj ’ The Prussian government has cut its proposed settlement with the exâ€" Kaiser for the royal estates to $3,â€" $75,000. Still that sum ought to keep Wilhelm in sawingâ€"wood for some litâ€" tle time. j A coach has been chartered from the East St. Louis and Suburban railway for the trial period and if the experiâ€" ment proves to be the anticipated sucâ€" cess, the Sunday School special will become a regular part of the Sabbath schedule. Although the idea‘ is‘ not original with the local minister, the sixâ€"weeks‘ trial being given the plan is thought to be the first in Illinois. = _ <~ ©â€" Believing â€" that the application of modern principles of transportation will increase the attendance at his inâ€" stitution, an East St. Louis preacher has inaugurated a regular Sunday morning bus route to round up the distant members of his congregation and Sunday school . { & THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1926 PREACHER HAS BUS .BRING CONGREGATION clarity with the latter.plates. The reâ€" gults pointed unmistakably to an atâ€" mosphére â€" of | considerable : density laden with haze or mist. The old bogie of no air was overcome. f Probable Temperature "Again the temperature objections were removed by fairly consistent obâ€" ’aervntions from Mt. Wilson «Observaâ€" tory and from Lowell Observatory at Flagstaff, Arizona, indicating a temâ€" perature in the Martian tropical reâ€" gionâ€"at least above freezing, the latâ€" ter station finding a noonday tempâ€" erature in excess of 50° fahrenheit. “ But the poles are cold, ranging from zero to about â€"150° fahrenheit. Also the dawn edge of the planet was exâ€" ceedingly cold, indicating bitterly cold nights. Life, if existing there, must have adapted itself to the violent and rapid changes of temperature. _ _ ‘"During the â€" war, photographic reconnaissance of the ground develâ€" oped ~with anfulng strides, plates taken from planes, interpreted by exâ€" perts, were of the greatest value in | revealing â€" the‘ enemy‘s installations, and in testing the effectiveness of the concealment of our own., Such obâ€" servations could be made only on clear days and these were rare. In the latter. days ‘of the war it was found that by ‘using plates sensitive to the red, haze and even thin clouds could be effectively‘ penétrated and views could be obtained. <Light from the red end of the spectrum will peneâ€" trate haze and --miat‘where"i.he blue. cannot pass. For this reason the sun and mono are ruddy when seen near the horizon. During the last opposiâ€" tion of Mars, this principle was put] into operation by members: of the Lick Observatory staff. Mars was photographed "alternately with ordiâ€" rary plates and redâ€"sensitive plates, details of the ‘planet‘s surface was revealed with amazingly greater | clined atâ€"about t ime angle to its orbit as t h‘s to its orbital plane.â€"~ The rotation period is> but slightly longer than the earth‘s; therefore, the seasonal and diurnal changes are like ours. Snowâ€"caps may be seen at the poles reaching well down toward the temperate zones in the Martian winter and shrinking with the advancing summer, someâ€" times melting entirely away. Other seasonal changes may be observed; the progressive darkening of certain fine lines designated as canals. One cannot observe Mars with studious care without being convinced that there is some form of life there, cerâ€" tainly vegetable life which quickens with the warmth of summer. May Be Cold Planet "It has been argued," the astronâ€" omer continued, ‘‘that the distance of Mars from the sun would make it a frigid planet, too cold to sustain any form of life, that the atmosphere was thin, that the. cloudless sky indicated little water vapor. But close observaâ€" tion reveals not infrequent clouds, perhaps habitual night clouds. y | _ Mars was ©42,500,000 miles away ‘Y from the earth on October 27 and ~ | Prof. Phof}ip gox of Dearborn Obserâ€" : | vatory . Northwestern university ly through the university telescope. Asked "Is there life on Mars ?", he replied, "Surely, of some sort." t| â€""Mars makes the cireuit of the sun â€"| in 687 days," explained Prof. Fox in e di:cnu!nfl) Jfla approaching â€" phenoâ€" ) | menon. â€" "Itg orbit has an average disâ€" â€"|] tance from the sun of a little more than 1% times the earth‘s distance. R lltheeuthndllmmtogothoran ~] the same side of the sun at a given | date, the earth, making the cireuit in :| 365 days, will gain a lap on Mars in C iun ahverue of 780 days and again be ;\ in the position known as opposition. € _ Distance Estimated | _ ."On account of the eccentricity of | the orbids the distance at opposition | may be anywhere from 35,000,000 to +| 61,000,000 ~miles. The closest apâ€" .| proaches are at the oppositions which |occur in the latter part of August. | The last opposition occurted on the |22nd of August, 1924, at which time the distance was 34,600,000 miles. The approaching opposition will fall on the 27th of October, a little less than the average time between opâ€" positions since the last one. The disâ€" tance will be 42,500,000 miles. Since the planet is in the constellation of Taurus 15° north of the celestial | equator, it is very favorably placed | for observation from observatories of , the northern hemisphere. io Favie ; those on the earth and therefore most likely to sustain the formgâ€"of life with which we are familiar. _ Its axis is inâ€" clined atâ€"about theâ€"same angle to its low in the sky. Unfortunately for astronomical observing the telescopes ‘are mounted at the bottom of.a sea of air, a sea in which there is constant tumult, with currents and crossâ€"curâ€" rents of wind. The lorger the path through the air, the more disturbance to the image. Though the planet will be farther away than during the opâ€" position ‘of 1924, its more favorable position will afford full compensation. What Sort of World "What sort of a world is Mars, and why is there so much interest in it ? Well, it boils down to this; of all the planéts it offers conditions most like _ "During the opposition of 1924, Mars was far to the south of the equator in ‘Acquarius and though nearer to the earth it was at all times Prof. Fox Watching Planet Which Was Nearest Earth on October 27; Theories of â€"â€"â€" Experts Given (0) 3 SOME SORT OF LIFE ON MARS, IS BELIEF: NOTED ASTRONOMER vs. John L. Sullivan, Daniel Sullivan, Mary Johnson, Richard C. Shannon and Wikiam Holmes, Jr., Max Przyâ€" } borski, Guardian ad Litem of William | Holmes, Jr., a Minor. . * ERNEST S. GAIL, Attorney for Estate. PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that in pursuance of aâ€"decretal order made and entered of record on Octoâ€" ber 7, 1926, in the above entitled cause, in and by the Probate Court of Lake County, Illinois at the October Term A. D. 1926 of said court, the undersigned, as: Executor under the Last Will and Testament of Alice Sulâ€" livan, deceased, will on Tuesday, the 16th day of November, A. D. 1926, at éleven o‘clock in the forencon of said day, sell at public vendue at the premâ€" ises herein described, in the City of Highland Park, in the County of Lake, in the State of Illinois, to the highest: and best bidder for cash, all and singâ€" ular the following described real esâ€" tate, in said decree described, toâ€"wit: Lot twelve (12) in Block fortyâ€" two (42) in the City of Highland Park, Lake County, TIllinois: for the purpose of paying bequests, debts and claims against said estate, and éosts and expenses of administraâ€" tion thereof. f t Dated this 7th day of October A. D 1926. : f k State of Illinois, s County of Lake, ss. IN THE PROBATE COURT OF SAID COUNTY In the Matter of the Estate of Alice Sulliyan,~ deeased, and in the Matâ€" ter Af the Applicatian of Richard Shannon as Executor under the Last Will and Testament.of Alice Sullivan, eased, for leave to sell real estate to pay debts. ERNEST 8. GAIL, . Attorney for Estate. for the purpose of paying debts and claims against said estate, and costs and expenses of administration thereâ€" of. 5 Dated this 7th day of October, A D. 1926. N _ /<Â¥8. Inga Anderuh. Roy Andersen and Norman Ange’ryxun. * <PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given ‘that in pursuance of a decretal order made and entered of record on Octoâ€" ‘ber 7, 1926, in the above entitled cause, in and by the Probate Court of Lake County, Illinois, at the October Term A. D. 1926 of said court, the undersigned, as Administratrix of the Estate of Marinius Andersen, deceasâ€" ed, will on Tuesday, the 16th day of November, A. p 1926, at two o‘clock in the afternoon of said day, sell at public vendue ‘at the premises herein. described, in the City of Hizhland‘ Park, in the County of Lake, in the State of Illinois, to the ‘highest and best bidder for cash, all and singular the following described real estate, in said decree described, toâ€"wit: S Lot three (8) (except the west 46.62 feet thereof)}) in Block six (6)Â¥â€"and the West 26 feet of Lot 2 in Block -g (6) all in Exmoor Addition to Highland Park. in the: West half of the Northwest quarâ€" ter of Section 23, Township 43 North, Range 12, East of the Third Principal Meridian, in Lake County, Illinois, according to the plat thereof recorded July 11, 1903 as Doc. 91079 in Book F of Plats, pages 30 and 31, situated in the City of Highland Park, Lake County, Illinois, subject to . the dower rights of Inga Anderâ€" sen State of Illinois, County of Lake, ss. a IN THE PROBATE COURT OF SAID COUNTY : In the Matter of the Estate of Marinâ€" ins Andersen, deceased, and in the Matter of the Application of Astrid Andersen, ‘Administratrix of the Estate of Marinius Andersen, deâ€" ceased, for leave to sell real estate to pay debts. It begins to appear ‘as if Broker Browning‘s dear little "Peaches" is not one of the cling variety. Two railroad bridges and 30 acres of railroad tracks will receive new loâ€" cations, Mr. Noonan explained. When this is done, and the new channel dus, four acres of land, valued at $6,340, will be reclaimed, he added. C .. Removal of the costly kink in the Chicago river, a bend which now blocks five : important downtown streets and meanders over an unnécâ€" essary four acres of valuable properâ€" ty, is assured by agroement of the:â€" 18 railroads whose tracks form a netâ€" work in this area. Work is expected to begin in 30 days, Edward J. Nooâ€" nan, â€" railway terminals engineer, stated. â€" The project, involving a cost to city and railroads of $9.000,000 is expected to require about three years for completion. & "Each opposition brings some new information about Mars, some hypoâ€" thesis confirmed or abandoned.| With the development of new instruments, new technique of observing, its riddles are gradually yielding their answers. But even to the layman the approachâ€" ing planet, getting brighter each night, is a gorgeous sight in the eastern sky." _ t REMOVAL OF KINK ~â€"IN CHICAGO RIVER RICHARD SHANNON, Executor under the Last Will and Testament of Alice Sulâ€" livan, deceased. mmamnnrmmmnumrmmou ASTRID ANDERSEN, Administratrix of the Estate of Marinius Andersen, deâ€" ceased 38â€"36 Central & Second St. Tel. H. P. 949 33â€"36 Waukegan Ave. Complete line of Furniture â€" and Floor Coverings RICHARD (O‘CONNOR Cement Work & Grading Contractor Cement Sidewalks, Cement Floors and everyâ€" thing in the Cement Line. Estimates furnished on Excavating. All kinds of Grading. _ W. A. Noerenberg Co. CEMENT WORK CONTRACTORS Chimney Blocks Building Blocks TEL. DEERFTELD 275 DEERFIELD PAINTING AND DECORATING . Paints, Wall Paper, Glass Window Shades, Auto Glass .Painters‘ Supplies Highwood Fuel, Feed Hardware Co. Cinders â€" Grave! â€" Torpedo Sand CO Estimates on Request PHONE H. P. 1122 > DEERFIELD RoAD West of Briergate Station CARPENTER CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Highland Park Radiator and Fender Repair Shop 5138 ELM PLACE ;. Highland Park Drive your car in and get estimate Philco Diamond Grid Batteries _ _ _ TEL. H. P. 266 11 8. SECOND 8T. Startine â€" Lighting â€" P ts Gnmtm.. Starting, Ignition 'g::q'qlc"rbd Electric Systems Rechecked and red Autolite Boach Delso Remy Dyneto Stromberg Tel. H. P. 2774 JOSEPH J. BERUBE TIRES Firestone TUBES Au-ro»wcu;’qnm-um Phone M. P. 891 25 8. SECOND 8T. ~ Batteries Recharged, Rented and Repaired Haak‘s Auto Supply Co. Lake Shore Creamery C. B. Hansen BUTTER â€" EGGS HOME DRESSED POULTRY Telephone Highland Park 828â€"R 82 N. First St. Carpenter & Builder Contractor f Estiniates Furnished No Job Too Large or Too Smail 818 North Green Bay Road Telephone Highland Park 1482 Telephone Highland Park 2180 Percent Work a Specialty AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRICIANS CEMENT CONTRACTOR 7AL â€" WOOD â€" BLACK DIRT HAULING, EXCAVATING L. Stanger MOTOR CAR ELECTRIC SERVICE SEE S. BERNARDI for COAL, HAY, GRAIN, and FEED GENERAL HARDWARE Classified 217 North Green Bay Road Automobile Painting FIRST CLASS WORK Bring in your car and let us make it LOOK LIKE NEW Highwood & Palmer Ave. Telephone Highland Park 57 JAMES COLLINS Auto Painter LETTERING â€" MONOGRAMS EARL R. FROST BRAND BROS. CEMENT PRODUCTS Automobiles Stored and Repaired Batteries Charzed Accessories GARAGE and CAB SERVICE Telephone Highland Park 542 Sievers and Cervi AUTOMOBILE SUPPLIES AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR SERVICE BUTTER AND EGGS PHONE HIGHWOOD 1326 Tow""i W’ 'Obh,. R‘â€ï¬h’ 186 North First Street Chicago Motor Club Service Station Phone Highwood 1844 614 Glenview Avenue Highland Park CEMFNT BLOCKS P. UGOLINT DECORATORS LARSON BRoS. wer * A. Klemp Phone Highland Park 612 High ,Grade Work 516â€"518 Laurel Avenue 685: Central Avenue (Not incorporated) Manufacturer of COAL Highwood, IIL Tel. H. P. 1234 656 Deerfield Ave _*. Masonary and Cement Work * Estimates on Request az%'fflorth Ave. :. Phone H: P. 2391 & HIGHWOOD, ILL. N GENERAL MASON CONTRACTOR Estimates Furnished â€" Tel. H. P. 772â€"J 688 Central Ave. â€" Tel. H. P. 2443â€"989 Interior Decorations, Window Shade Lamp Shades and Draperies Furniture Painting and Decorating 688 Central Ave. _ Tel. H..P. 989â€"2028 Plowing, Excavating, Gravel, Sand, ; â€BMD‘:?,,uanm Railroad Ave. W. A. Noerenberg Co. 221 North Ave. ERWIN F. DREISKE Joseph Cabonargi CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Mason and Cement Contractors ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS RADIO AND ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES INTERIOR DECORATIONS AND FURNISHINGS GENERAL CONTRACTORS Contracting and repairing ~ Attractive line of fixtures PHONE HIGHLAND PARK 2222 *"Vetter and Better All the Time" Phones Highland Park 2358â€"824â€"J Telephone Highland Park 2180 Tel. H. P. * elmene ghien 1g regunt"""" Established in Highland Park since 1908 Tel. H. P. 245 Res. 606 Onwentsia Av ERNEST H. KUEHNE MASON CONTRACTORS ELECTRIC SERVICE *«‘ Painting â€" / Paper Husï¬l' â€" Interior Decorating Pirat Class "Work Estimates Furnished 5. A. Mess Wl o on otdiee Optcage 819 Ridgewood Drive * mxzmxs and DECORATORS l'hu:-l.nil'lrnltmlallhh.d â€"~~‘.Wall Paper â€" Window Shades Telephone Highland Park 962 JOE VENTURELLI ELECTRICIAN â€" RADIO SHOP AT â€" UR â€" DOR W. B. FREEBERG Mrs. Mezzini & Son Office Phone Highland Park 2750 MASON CONTRACTORS e Yï¬. .H!_CHOI‘Sv D.D.S. FLORIST Artistic Funeral Designs 53 South St. Johns Avenue Phone Highland Park 602 Boilini & Grandi PAINTING and DECORATING Wall Paper and Window Shade 4p8 Samples General Electrical c,g:.m Electrical Wi Fixtures and Appliances Telephone Highland Park 1236 INMAN BROTHERS JACK PETERSEN E; and Interior Painting Dm Vaud Paper Hanging 591 GLENVIEW AVENUE Telephone Highland Park 1849 607 GLENVIEW AVENUE Percent Work a Specialty 614 Glenview Avenue .& R. ELECTRIC "Say It With Flowers" DANIEL A. FAY SHERIDAN BUILDING Highland Park, IIl. 1317 Wade Street H. FRIEBELE Office Phone H. P. 1780 EXCAVATING Tel. H. P. 2371 638 Skokie Avenue 924 Estimates Furnished PROFESSION AL and BUSINESS FLORIST DENTISTS Highland Park Highwood, Iil. High wood, Illinois 11 8. Second St. FUNERAL DIRBC $ Private Ambultnce | _ 27 N. Sheridan Rd, H. F\ Kelley, Mgr For s REAL UPHO: 0 SLIP COVERS â€" Mattress Renovating â€" â€" Call o ¢ Telephone Wï¬â€˜w Tel. H. P. 495 Res. 366 Central Av. _ Tel. H. P. 2164 688 Central Ave. Tel. H.P. 2448,989 Sewer and Water Pij .ctor § House Se $ 09 Drainage and C asin . P.O. Box 186, | t 45 PRAIRIE AVE â€"® oop, . G. PONSI & COMPANY Tel. H. P Shophmr%h;;w.ï¬ï¬‚ Phone H. + R & we A. A. ROBERTsS PLASTERING CONTRACTORS JAMES VITI & sON 189 W. Madison St., Chieago * Onn::dhllmfl'_ B Structural ‘Ks Telephone Highland Park Y55.â€"M EVERGREENS‘ TREE$ SHRUBS Highland Park, ML â€"| _ ; . SEWER AND DRAINAGE CONTRACTORS | Telephone Highland Park 299 Moving Expressing Gengrel Hauling Mwhfa‘fl‘â€"a TD. Telephone Highland P#k 801â€"W J. STONEWALL PLASTERING CONTRACTORS Directo MOVING H. M. PRIOR CO. Peter H. K. Grimson PLASTERING CONTRACTORg Ornamental and Plaster & CM[W 652 Deerfield: Avenne ORNAMENTAL IRON AND Telephone Highlahd Park 530 Garments called for anil deliv¢red Exterior Jazs Finiihing a |Specialty Ann.a«om.fl::b-.. Jobbing Promptly | w‘ Dry Cleaning â€". Pr Tailoring and Telephone Highland. Pirk 2180 ANY AND ALL KINDS United Ornamental Ironto § in, Copper, Sheet Iron and Furnace Work ©| â€" _ Phones PLASTER CONTRACTOR UPHOLSTERING W. B. Freeberg 388 Central Avenue Office Telephone Highlang Park 34 . A. Noerenberg Ca. UNDERT RS, F. D. gavéy Ravinia Nurseries OFFICE s6$ BLOOM STREET 8. T. REBLING E. NELSON Motor Rxpfess 614 Glenview Avepue 441 526 8. Gben Bay Fa. TAILOR Highlard Park 1485 â€"91 SIGNS AND EXPRESSING 85 8.I8t. Jdhps Ave.? PAGE SEVEN Tel. Main 6158 | To lfle of e s the are 38