Eva Jeffery Carqueville, Highland Mâ€"-QII admitted to probate. Esâ€" tate yalued personal $500,000,, real $100,000. Estate given to husband two children. Letters testamenâ€" jssued to Alexander R. Carqueâ€" Â¥ille:. Bond of $1,000,000. Proof of taken. Appraisers appointed. Jane Haskin, Highland Pafk â€"Inâ€" Wentory and appraisement bill apâ€" l s Naomi Comstock, Pfighl.nd Parkâ€" Petition for probate of Will filed and set for hearing June 16. _ John C. Hueh!, insane; Deerfieldâ€" Letters of conversatorship issued to Lowisa D. Huchl. Bond of $7,000. 49 coneediont?haculrviantiiie c is 4 tb A ap id Louis E. Hertel, Lake Zurichâ€" Hearing on claim of Hyde Park hosâ€" flh) continued to May 19. Charles L. _ Vlriâ€"endrick-. Highland Parkâ€"Coâ€"partnership account and reâ€" port approved. > William Tillman, Highland Park.â€" Waiver of widow‘s award approved. Lizzis D. Flinn, Highland Parkâ€" Letters of administration issued to Howard H. Flinn. Bond of $200. Proof «6f heirship taken. Ambrose Cramer, Lake Forestâ€" Will admitted to probate. Estate esâ€" timated value $200,000 _personal and $100,000 real. Property bequeathed to wife and children with a few beâ€" quests to other relatives. $1,000 to Charles Anderson. _ Letters testaâ€" mentary issued to Isabelle C. Cramer. Bond of $400,000. Proof of heirship h!ln Appraisers appointed. Ruth Mansfield Keller et al minors, Highland Parkâ€"Letters of guardianâ€" ship issued to Ruth M. Keller. Bond of $2400. Willis Wesley Griffis, Lake Forestâ€" Letters of administration issued to James A. Griffis. Bond of $24,000. Proof of heirship taken. Edwin A. Bishop, Libertyvilleâ€"Inâ€" ventory and appraisement bill apâ€" proved. Edward Gallup, Highland Parkâ€" Petition for probate of will filed and set for hearing May 23. Harry Hall appointed â€" guardian ad litem â€" for minors. â€" a Ruth M. Keller et al, minors, Highâ€" land Pnrkâ€"}\]rgwntorg approved. Recent proceedings in probate court of interest in this part of the county are reported as follows: IN PROBATE COURT Recent ;Action In Settlement of Estates of Interest In â€" â€"This Section Charles A. Comiskey, "The Old Roman," president of the Chicago White Sox baseball team, developed more speed than his ball team accordâ€" ing to Motorcycle Policeman Pat Smith of North Chicago and was nabâ€" bed for burning up the roads 35 miles an hour through North Chicago one day last week. Haled before Justice Harold J. Tallett, the Oldâ€" Roman spread out ten dollars in the coin of the realm, and continued on his way. LATE PROCEEDINGS Chicago North Shore and Milwauâ€" kee railroad will install but one secâ€" tion of the proposed loop in and out of the County street station in Wauâ€" kegan this year, it was announced by Mayor L. J. Yager, following the reâ€" ceipt of advices from officials of the railroad company. Due to the sluggish way in which owners of dance halls and roadside stands have paid their annual tax to the county supervisor George McCulâ€" lough, of Warren, and his committee, will soon ask the aid of Sheriff Lawâ€" rence Doolittle in making the collecâ€" tions, it is reported. Warden Eimer Green one day last week entertained sixty state senators at Joliet prison at a dinner and then held a show, put on by prisoners, in their honor. Sheriff Lawrence Dooâ€" little, who spent the day in Joliet, was the only Lake county official who attended the banquet and celebration. After fighting the case out three times to three jury disagreements a jury in Waukegan awarded Joseph Learsch $25 from Edward Salmon for repairin@" and painting a door: wo;l;!-r automobile. He had asked $35. kegan aggregation placed second in the marching and playing contest and sixth in the regular band playing. It placed eighth last year in the main event. The Waukegan high school band of 54 pieces returned recently from the state band meet at Springfield with two honors to their credit. The Wauâ€" stead of the ten n,orin';s»;rTzâ€"'h’niry planned is stated by those close to the plans of the project. A pessibility that the hotel to be erected at the corner of Sheridan road and Washington street, Waukegan, will be twelve stories in height inâ€" NEIGHBORKHOOD Interesting Happenings About This Part of North Shore and Vicinity; County B CLUBS AND PRIVATE ES MAY HAVE scork WEREE BY TELRPHONING 78 OR CALLING aAT THE Seat Doings JOTTINGS If the Furniture Mart, Chicago‘s largest building, were filled with gas, it would supply the people of Illinois During 1926 Illinois produced oil valued at $15,000,000 at the wells. The average income tax payment in Illinois this year was $102. â€", It costs one and oneâ€"half times as much money to build Illinois, electric railways as the Panama, canal. In 1867, Champ;igtr‘a;\_d"â€"-i}rbam paid almost $250,000 to obtain the University of HMilinois. There are 25,120,000 laying bens on Illinois farms. Illinois packed meat products valâ€" uel at three billion dollars last year, the packers paying an average of over $8,000,000 each business day. Superpower had its origin in Illiâ€" nois when, in 1895, transmission lines supplied ‘electricity to Yates City from a generating station in Elmâ€" The largest tree in Illinois is on a farm west of Paris. It is a burr oak, 108 feet high and 18 feet around the lower trunk. People in Illinois averaged 287 rides per person on the street cars during 1926. The national average is 140 rides. Illinois has oneâ€"fifteenth of t 000,000 autamobiles registered United States. There are in Illinois. > ‘"We have been so successful in handling this food situation at the camps that every young man who atâ€" tends one leaves in the pink of conâ€" dition. The medical service is also of the best. As a matter of fact there are no spots in the country where people congregate any healthier than the Citizens‘ Training camps," said Colonel Judah. ‘"The personal hygiene taught in the camps, would, if for no other rea son, justify themselves." INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT THIS STATE Many Items Which Show Markâ€" ed Improvement; Things Which Many Forget _ That is a sample of a day‘s wellâ€" balanced meals. p\(ow as to quanâ€" tity: the boys get all they can eat. The young men are growing and they are not confined to a limited quantity of food. The army cooks who prepare this food are especially trained men for this particular work and it is the pride of the corps serving at the Citiâ€" zens‘ Training camps to see that the students get all they want. \ Supper: meat pot pie, potato salad, mayonnaise dressing, bread and butâ€" ter, ice cream, chocolate cake and iced tea. . â€" o e e e ty Breakfast: fresh fruit, cereal, ham omelet, fried potatoes, toast, butter, jelly, fresh milk, coffee. Dinner; roast beef, mashed potaâ€" toes, gravy, creamed corn, combifiaâ€" tion salad, French dressing, Yorkshire pudding, apple pie, bread and butter and lemonade. Following i;;;;'ple menu showâ€" ing how balanced meals are provided. These menus are changed every day. w 20 7. : B â€" F8 Consequently~ the menu supplied [the youths at the Citizens‘ Military Training camps has been devised by experts. _ Colonel Noble Brandon Judan, civilian aid to the secretary of war for this region for several years now has not had a complaint, while on the other hand, many testi~ monials have been received as to the excellence of the "chow" at the varâ€" ious camps in the Sixth Corps area, comprising the states of Michigan, Iilinois and Wisconsin. how important proper food is to the growing youth. And further, scienâ€" tific disco ;"-zu- ï¬&ï¬"&“ï¬h‘ï¬l shown necessary it t youth be not left to a haphazard diet. One of the things that worry mothers most when their sons first leave home for a short or long period is what the boy is going to eat. They know probably better than the fathers TRAINING CAMP MENU DEVISED BY EXPERTS Good Food and Plenty of It Is Provided at C. M. T. C., Says Buys a lot in Ridgeview Subdivision on Deerfleld Road. Water, Gas, Electricity, macadam road in and paid for. Three blocks from Briar Gate Station. Call Deerfield 130 for auto to take you to property. FRANK W. RUSSO Telephone Deerfield 130 $200 Down $25.00 Per Month Announcement 1,409 telephone exchanges â€"fifteenth of the 22,â€" in the THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, The college professors can walk to to their classrooms, but of course the students cannof be expected to do so and they ‘must have automobiles. The miore we read about China the more thankful we are that we beâ€" long in the United States. . in the threeâ€"dimensional form â€"so highly valued by the school of Cezanâ€" ne. ‘"This characteristic‘ says the New York Times, "is brought out by the almost unconscious line that is likely to follow along the tops of houses and then turn and flow into a distant horizon." Simplicity, which is in accord with the peasant life and surroundings, is another keynote of Mr. Macrum‘s work. He is content to let the bright sunlight of the Midi, with its warm shadows and purple distances speak for itself. Mr. Maâ€" crum has exhibited often at the Paris salons during his stay abroad, and several galleries in America have add~ ed his painting to their collections. In the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, the "Pile Drived" has a permaâ€" vent place, and the "Pardon of the Mountains" has been bought by the Canadian National gallery in Toronto. Picturesque old houses, with mediâ€" val city walls, boats and towers, such as are found only in the twelfth cenâ€" tury towns of France and Italy, form subjects for most of the paintings by George H. Macrum, which is on exhiâ€" bition at the Art Institute of Chicago which closes May 29. Although he has lived abroad since the war, Mr. Macrum is an American, whose early home was in Pittsburg. He studied at the Art Student‘s League in New York and later with. Joseph Cumâ€" mings Chase. During this early period he made a name for himself with his vivid pictures of New York docks and skyscrapers. Of late years, however, the sturdy peasant architéeâ€" ture of the provence, with is accomâ€" panying light and color, has made a strong appeal to the artist. Mr. Maâ€" crum is closely allied to the modern school of painting, although his work is largely naturalistic. Much of it is SCENES IN PICTURES VERY PICTURESQUE Notable Showing b George H. M t Exposition In Art ni;:t.itl:te Cxlnaes May 29 The first steel plow and first iron stove made in the Mississippi were mapufactured at Grand Detour, near Dixon. ‘AWO-M"u-w,-..m geon, one of the rarest fishes, was caught in the Hlinois river, near Henâ€" nepin, recently. for 3 Aud Hbauluutes. "â€" ““:z ng:'-um-h. Chicago has 139 automobiles mile of payment. DISEASE lurks in neglected or faulty plumbing. We are doeâ€" tors of sanitation and we are ready to respond to your Â¥all for assistance. é B# M 3 ï¬N%j] 22E T N C3 r children‘s health is worth great pain». us inspect your sinks and drains. from the or â€" (A uthorized W utlitzer Dealer) 544 CENTRAL AVENUE HIGHLAND PARK, Phoue Highland Park 3066 / ‘ NEW MUSIC STORE Announecine ianos Orthopllo;xic Victrolas â€" Victor Records | Sheet Music and and Orchestra Instruments WurLT 3. CARLSON MUSICAL INSTRUNENTsS vited to call for a visit of inspection. Here you will find a wonderful exhibit of the very newest in everything musical for the home. Prices are in keeping with quality. Our terms are very convenient Come in and look around * You are welcome and will in no way be obligated to purchase. â€"_~(This Week) ' ‘ompletc Line of Celebrated The most beautiful music store along the North Shore is now open and you are inâ€" vited to call for a visit of inspection. Here HIGHLAND PARK e Opening Open Evenings Convenient Service ofa P1iano Designed â€" especiâ€" ally for apartâ€" ments and where small space is reâ€" quired. ~ A wonâ€" derful new grand piano with excelâ€" lent tone qualiâ€" ties. Model Grand