Forty thousand Armenian my nude homeless by the series of arth- - which begin last Ottoher. ere Mn; the 2tts,t,t, ihkimoe, lheltcrad in snow hut: dugouts. A description of their gallant turht to “dis themselves in'before the nr- rive! of winter has just been received by Samuel M. Hastittes, their†of the Golden Rule committee of the Near East Relief, from Dr. Joeeph Beach, director of the American or- phunge schools in Leninann, the cents of the earthquake district. The organization has spent nearly $200,- one in relief work for the nClrreSe) victims, and is appealing for an addi- tional $250,000 for the same purpose. The tetai budget of Near East Relief 1eHlge!!tsr23tteteitty - ttrewood in the wrecked buildings, and repairing plows and implements for the spring planting. Under the - the fall savings art doing well, "We visited hundreds of these fam- l mes in their one-room dug-outs, where the whole family sleeps around l I pit-fire of dried turf, with the eat-', tte occupying about half the cramped ; 1pm. Most of the homes shelter :1 neighbor or two, t',Tgft"tr,,"r1iz, funnies lost in the qua e. During/ the dar everybody is occupied with the routine drudgery of peasant vii-l luge'life __ carrying water, seeking, is well illustrated by the success of the Armenian peasantry in meeting maximum complete chaos which fol- lowed the A.TA'a,""gsattsei' says Dr. Beach. "'1 ave just returned from a visit to thirty of the wrecked villages. Even new, four months liter the disaster, the surviving vil- lagers still suffer severely from its! effects, and they will not be able tol recover even their initial mterilll losses until another summer has ttiv- en them new crops and an opportun- ity 2" rebuild their homes. I um these ruined villages. buried um} der four to eight feet of snow, life goes on, somehow. as everywhere. If sorrow is a part of it, so are all others I human emotions. With two doctors and two nurses I travelled on sledges, I often breaking trail over roads than had not been opened for many days.1 There was plenty for the medical still to do in every village. We real- ized that all our cleaning up of earth- y (nuke injuries at the central hospital'; Ind at our emergency stations, had by no means cleaned up the cases of I many hundred villagers in their shat- tered homes - especially the women; and children. l Dill: Themselves In "Most of the homeless families have dug themselves in as best they could, excavating circular trenches on which they have mounted a few beams and branches to support a roof of sod and snow. The villages are groups of these odd-looking Eskimo houses. which one enters by a tunnel. ( "WWW“ Ingenuity of Ila-nu "The ingenuity of the human nee '!tt Iberian: of overwhelming disaster tiger: "k'GTiiiitiiG, "iai7itTaiuiiFto misc th'e Illinois quota for Near East Relief. ‘muauon‘z m AsarsmiA i CoMiaiir- --- - mm mom Fugue SERVICE N10 Gift Bond -dtiEciaariaGGa It.MtttM-ePtrtg" Says cha'ndiso of yourownseleo- tiOnat thePub- lic -Sirrvice Store-is being given free with every Federal E l e c t r i c Washer. This is for a limited time only. good for $10 come at Today'. ls Notable 'ty friiiiiiiii,hietnt â€VIN" F l “ . -N " "\(il'thQ-Wl' 's'iis1irttittlti?1193"eihitiiciv, { The topic will be "The Soul tyt: Child." Tickets of admission will placed on sale next week at the local .4rtrtheteE,ta, l A. _ ‘. the teacher's (if theVJannQEWu; at, tend. _ . Dr. Adler was 3 pioneer with Sir mund Freud 25 yenrs ago in the de- velopment of pseho-arstaiytie methods. The two men in more recent years have pursued divergent paths, Dr. Adler interpreting life's experience Alfred Adler, world famous psy- chologist. nbw visiting the United States, will lecture in Highland Plrk at the Woman's Club on Tuna-y afternoon, March 22. His lecture will be under the auspices of the Def/Vb est school of Highland Park. . "det-ide-rt-d America “than. to the cuti- quke victims In to. cool-d 'eiturto.eehiesatthers.- eat we ha been Sv-ttteh - vanilla-ion of the W. Itatioem of food “chain; I.†been made to cubic the childnn to remain in their villages. "that than “Mia‘s“ government orphan». deg-tx-at The American orphan-gal in I-ai- hn have therefore opened their door: to no net childm - hos- pital as“. and it is hoped that " next summer the crippled will-gel will be able to take are of their on problems. NOTED PsYCH0LoGIST' AT H. P. WOMAN'S CLUB â€MMAN. I’ll-cl“! WM". This new 1926 model with the handsome free swinging nlum- inum winger with safety release is the ttneat machine we have ever built Wringer locks in my position. Envy can): tut-elf-draining. Comes completely equipped with motor. winger and cord ready to use on any electric tight Docket. " Price 8125.“ Del“ New Butterfly Electric Washer M. J. TIMBERLAKE JOHN BllllilNGllillMilR Highland Park Transfer and Storage Company nurnoop “unease, m emu Am Automobile Storage Moving, Packing. Shipping We Operate Our Own Plant in Highland Park ALEX RAFFERTY, Sr., Manager Omee 374 Central Avenue Phones 181-182 Cleaner and Dyer â€Exam-Io“ Telephone H. P. 16 9 -teasu"miaatieattrNrhi-i Our mushy in u ("at w. txmitgiatheeomirtquthi.-uw .doebsur. FumMm-w hemildlmnwmml. Leo Hogan, formerly of Lake For- est,iapaeeserinosrtewreattrArm in Chicago, recently organ“, with Henry E. Donny of that city an the other member of the firm. ru Inn name is Hogan & Dom. [new with omen at 612 Upper Michigan avenue. They will specialist in downtown and north central real estate. According to the Tribune, they will be exclu- sive agents for the new Pam" building. now being erected, and have charge of the t3-story apartment building at 442 Wellington avenue. just completed. Hmn's friend: here pitl be glad to learn of his was“. Public "iiiitL"art%uilre""-Tra"iiiT, in Illinois produced 571,687,000 kilo- watt-hours of electricity during De- cember, 1926. according to the United States Geological survey. This is an increase of 9 per cent over December, 1925. 'r-ut-r-d-.- “Walt-Minn- 9am . -KAiii, a if.. Those who Inn‘hud De. Adj: “.WWWWWH FORMER 'tttg-ttiii-ily Leo Hogan Partner in Newly Organized Concern in Butterfly Electric Wuhan have been testednnd approved brGqodHousekeer ing Linguine and ‘by the New York. Tribune Institute. Thousands in use. Extra large apa- city. Washes 75 to 125 miscellaneous pieces at one time. Does a big washing in one hour. Wash- es anything tht’s washable without hand rubbing. Wa- terproof motor. All working parts com- pletely enclosed pre- vents maidens. Equipped with ALUMINUM WRINGER and ALUMINUM DRAIN BOARD IN REALTY Fl“ in _iil Egan-imi- See the Want-d Page DODGE BROTHERS MOTOR CAR ' Tads Telephone H. P. 2700 , BE "tljiitt"ri! "m..- clip C) L- - --e. In Choosing Your Milk! byï¬nlbmmuinhodyM1$mmdhflnw peNrahaft,ditreemmuiaod_tsatts Jyd4tothme,thenmrththe-ineremom-amn- mmmmmxumm "hmieeameierttnewstar'tist. Wynn-ad 'e'ttother.rte.hett-tiundvamiiieamsttam, mmemgteoehtisrtturur'-r--- "s "ThofinestDodeeerertmittt" uq1esrytderDr?dtreBrotherasMotorcarstoaoareaexxmsed 'othwidespreadttndenthusiastic commendatimt--. T “new body lines and attractive color t:omhinatioetr- Anewtseatintorraneemessttttatmovidesstinmoreroomi- tae-and-fort--- _ A new. dutch, simple, sure, aiient-- Botterpedaiaction, easiertrearahiftine-- y A, G. McPherson that DraurCrouodn and Sway Buyers FOR 51 YEARS THE STANDARD OP Q‘L'ALITY TtSerra-ie/rec-sei." Pi'; 9 T" â€no i. I, thomï¬twmmgi’s Milk. They know it is rich; mo 'and pure. They know ibis reliably deliv- ered in all kinds of .weather by a com- pany of 51 years dairying experience. Bowman's Milk is available to you. Don't be without it, Simply order from any of our courteous milkmen or telephone Highland Park 2700. HEN buying milk be just as Wear-em! as when buying other food products. Make sure you get the best. for only the best is good eiusistor, xgugxsié yours'. ' BOWMAN DAIRY com - um