_ STATE UNIVERSITY e NEEDS FOR 2 YEARS Of the amount to be asked, nine million dollars of the total will be| necessary for the operation and[ maintenance of the ~university for the"coming two years: A total of IL million and a half will be used for| new buildings. This is a half million dollars less than was asked for buildâ€" ings two years ago, it was explained, and is in line with a policy adopted| by the board of trustees of the uniâ€"| versity six years ago. | Proposed by President 1 Atâ€" that time President Kinley ; proposed to the people of the state| that the university ask the same aâ€" mountâ€"five and a quarter million a yearâ€"for some ten years. He furâ€" ther proposed that for the first twoâ€" year period a sum of two and a half million go into new buildings and that thereafter the amount for buih:l-l ings be reduced a halfâ€" million dolâ€" lars each succeeding biennium. This! halfâ€"million dollars would then, it was explained, be transfered from thel building side of the budget to the opâ€"; Nerating side. For it was quite eviâ€"} dent that while the new buildings| would help relieve the crowded c"nâ€"‘ ditions due to large student increases, | the maintenance and operation of the . enlarged campus, together with adâ€"| ditional faculty members that would be necessary with increasing enrolâ€" ment, would require more money for that side of the budget. Plan Worked Admirably While this plan has worked admirâ€" ably, there are countless things the| university is called upon to do that: it cannot undertake because of lack of funds, but the board of trustees does not feel that it should ask for any increase from the state at this time. JS TWO AND HALF MILLION On the visit of the members of the state le(ishtmdy to Urbana, it was announced by University of lilinois officials that the university wold ask only the same amount for the coming twoâ€"year period that was approved by the state solons two, four and six years ago. The amount is $5,250,000 per year for the twoâ€"year periodâ€"a total of ten and a half million dollars. is. The building projects contemplated | for the next two years include a hnlf-‘ million dollars for the third unit, of the new library building, mget.her“ with equipment, a half million dolâ€"[ lars for the completion and equipâ€"| ment of Lincoln hail, a building which; was erected in part in 1911, and a| haifâ€"million dollars for the ere«:tion‘l and equipping of a materials i; sting‘ latoratory. +i Same as In Last Biennial Period to Be Asked, President Tells The need and use of the first item! is apparent to all who know the work { of the university. The present part of Lincoln hall is used for class room and seminary purposes, with the 4th| floor given over to museums. The} mew portion of that building will | contain a small auditorium and: g} few offices butâ€"the~"mtzjor portion of it will be given over to class rooms. Recognized as a world leader and| genuine authority on the strength o(\ materials and‘ kindred subjects, it is imperative that the university have a suitable place to carry on this work if it is to properly serve the state and nation in these important proâ€"| jects. Therefore, the board urged a new building for testing purposes. YELLOW CAB RATES PHONE HIGHLAND PARK 2000 First twoâ€"thirds mile ..............35¢ Each additional 1â€"3 mile ......10¢ «No charge for extra passengers. PROGRESS TLE CO . Piano, Keyboardâ€"Harmony Sightâ€"Reading â€" Earâ€"Training 12 Central Ave., Doerfield, IIl. Phone Deerfield ‘259â€"J Miss Frances Biederstadt CERAMIC FLOORS FLOOR and WALL TILE MANTELS and GAS LOGS Telephone Kildire 3499 Waveland Ave. Chicago Need Is Apparent Is Expended (Not Inc.) |_ Communists, it is said, have invadâ€" \ ed the schools, have aided in strikes against the government, and fought the police. Evidently the same sysâ€" tem of getting control is being workâ€" ed in Chile that has been used elseâ€" i where. Friends of the soviets will doubtâ€" less raise the cry of fascism against lthe minister of war. But fascism [ always follows communism. It is the | natural reaction, and the Reds will have none but themselves to blame 1 if the autocracy of the soviet is folâ€" \ lowed by the dictator. | The best way of course is that | which is nowâ€"being followed by the {.United States in having nothing to | do with the communists at all. | _ These trusting souls ought to read | with interest the news which has | been coming out of Chile during the Ipns! week or two. Chile is one of )the most progressive countries of | South America. A recent Associated 2000 ARTTCITCRL £1 MCCEME MSSDCIEUET J Press dispatch declares that "on the | ground that Bolshevism has been alâ€" lowed too great leeway and is at last assuming dangerous proportions in Chile, the minister of war, General | Carlos Ibanez, took the reins of govâ€" | ernment in his own hands today and [ supported by the army, is organizing La cabinet, which, under his leaderâ€" ship, he declares, is calculated to setâ€" tle the problem once for alk" In a statément by the press, Genâ€" eral Ibanez said: "Moscow‘s influâ€" ence in Chile must be broken, and the way to do this is to reorganize the government by the injection of younger blood." Now that we have telephonic conâ€" nectiom with London, wonder what would happen if we were to put in a call for King George. Results In Organizing Cabinet fondly cling to the belief that if all the world were to take the Reds to their bosoms most of our internationâ€" al problems would be solved. BOLSHEVISTS BUSY us who blindly hmon- nilchmvâ€"* that Soviet Russia is active in Mexâ€" ico, South America and China, and to â€"Resist Their Influâ€" 382 Central Avenue What should I pay for my new Spring suit? Huber Electric Co. Befter Cleaner we can satisfy the most fastidious in regard to fabrics, and the most critical in regard to style and workmanship. At the above prices you get a strictly tailoredâ€"toâ€"order suit, tryon service by the best fitters in Chicago, and your choice hrom zsevere! Inuxked of the newest Spring fabrics. The prices are possible because of what we save on high loop rents. Within the price range of P. H. EWEN, Proprietor The GREAT $35, $40, $45 and HOOVZR at this new homecleaning cfiâ€" ciency, We‘ll demonstrate it on your rugs. Appointments are being made by phone. The Greater moover‘s new and revolutionary principle of "Posii‘tivc Agitation" makes obsolete every previous kind of cleaning device. You‘ll be amazed and delighted $50 The day of "pinching‘" the public| for every slight infraction, is pnst.! The opinion expressed by police: officials at the recent National Motorâ€" J cycle Show held at New York was to the effect that it is no longer conâ€"| sidered good form to maintain polte' forces ‘merely to see how many arâ€"‘ rests can be made. On the contrary,| the majority of police and municipal | heads judge the efficiency of police| effort by the lack of arrests. In other i words modern police practice is folâ€"| lowing the plan of preventive -ctm! rather than punitive action. One| police official in his orders recently stressed this point to his subordinates by pointing out that an officer showâ€" ing an unusual number of arrests would be considered not fulfilling the‘ policies of the department. He pointâ€" ed out that a reduction of 'dcn!sf within an officer‘s sphere of ivity means more to the community than a large number of arrests for minor infractions. â€" 1 Municipal authorities who have} given a great deal of thought and | study to the problem claim that the| presence of a properly uniformed and properiy mounted officer on the read acts as a satisfactory deterent to deliberate law infractions and enâ€" ables an officer to thoroughly patrol a given territdty, lending aid to snarled traffic and by keeping veâ€" Does it pay police in cities and towns to be unusually strict in enâ€" forcing _ traffic _ laws, _ especially against strangers or does it pay to be more liberal? Many communities throughout the country have proved quite satisfactorily that liberal apâ€" plication of traffic laws with referâ€" ence to strangers is the most profitâ€" able in the long run. MAKING ARRESTS 6 NOT COP‘S OBJECT IN CONTROLLING TRAFFIC Only $6.25 down Day â€" of" "Pinching"~Public hi Slight Infraction Is Past, | Says Report on This | Subject | THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS hicles on the move, reduce the posâ€" sibility of collisions. Increased traffic cengestion in all localities has made it almost imperâ€" ative for communities to adopt motorâ€" cycle patrol to effectualy handle confusion and congestion.. Present street and road conditions require a type of patrgl which may be mvudnindutdtrm enabling the patrol officer to reach a given p« possible. TYPOGRAPHIC MAP OF U. S. HALF DONE Job Has Been In Progress for Generation; Four Parts now only 120 North First Street _ QOUALITY AT LOW COST @roventing mrosutve ds New Beake and Clutch New Coincidental Lock w Ignition and Lock) New Remote Control Door Handles New Duco Colors !l-(_l.‘oh(i-* New Bodics by Fisher New and Improved The Highland Park Hospital The Highland Park Hospital is essentially a Highland Park Instiâ€" tution. The funds for its erection and maintenance have been supplied almost entirely by our own citizens. It is your hospital and well worthy of your support. Bricht, airy rooms, upâ€"toâ€"date equipment. Painstaking nurses and attendantsâ€"Moderate charges The Highland Park Hospital Main Entranceâ€"Homewood Avenue, two blocks west of Green Bay Road WM. RUEHL & CO. Highland Park 2550â€"2551 Visiting Hours Daily 2 p. m. to 4 p. m. â€" 7 p. m. to 8 p. m. provements. Come in! gti._m test closed car value of all time! « quality features and mechanical imâ€" With the beautiful Chevrolet Coach reâ€" mapping is one of the steady, year after year jobs of the Geological Survey, Department of the ‘Interior, and in tonpection with the work at this time, four parts of a bulletin enâ€" titled, ‘Topographic Instructions of the. Geological Survey" have just been issued by the Interior Departmentâ€" matters only and is of principal inâ€" terest to officers and employees of the topographic branch of the Geological Survey. curate control of on any scale. Parts B, C, and D describe the methods adopted by the Geological Survey, after its 40 years‘ experience, A herd of long horned cattle, once so numerous in the west are to be preserved by the Department of Agâ€" riculture in Oklahoma. This will probably occagion another outburst of protest from our professional paâ€" cifists. Cotton, the soft, fleecy, lurnleu,’ appearing product of the south, from | which"we make our baby‘s dresses, is | the principal ingredient in enuonf powder used in the largest c;libn’ guns. | Amo m:nwcu-a. suited for | longer vision than his neighbors, and }he.evidcntly sees no reason to quit | using it just because he himself may | not be on the premises to reap the | harvest. ~ A wealthy man eightyâ€"one years of agecbought a bigâ€"farm in an inas~ cessible section of Indiana a week ot two before this is written, in spite HOW FARSIGHTED BECOME WEALTHY of scolding by his family for permitâ€" ting his money to be tied up in land on a back road that no farmer has ever been able to make pay. "It will be immensely valuable some day," he persisted. "Because of its natural beauty, millionaires will want it for villa sites. But it won‘t come into its own man has his own airplane. Then it will be accessible for suburban develâ€" opment for people in Chicago. Mayâ€" be that will be thirty years yet, but it will come." Imagine a man eightyâ€"one ~years old ever having the vision to buy land for the long pull, based on common use of aeroplanes! He has acquired wealth by having Tract Because It Will Be Useful In Far Future Phone 1110 THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1927 In addition to these low prices Chevrolet‘s deâ€" livered prices intinde Balloon Tires now standard on all models. All prices Lo.b. Plint, Mich, Thelandau . $745 Iairek, +395 low prices ‘ ut Heabd, *525 The Coach â€" *595