O â€"~ IN DRIVING MOTOR CAR .. Boy: "Yeou sir; ¢ CHIEF PRINCIPAL *~ ~ _ Hix Specialt lnn.cvmr :*You‘re th':bv-t ""h -u Aren‘t you #h'l T at An additional saving of $130,500 in the enforcement of the automobile laws has been made possible by Govâ€" Small in placing the .work in the hands of the State Highways Patrol, evercoming a duplication of the servâ€" iee which has been in evidence in the Iilinois automobiles will carry liâ€" cense plates during 1928 with white figures on a maroon background. The outline map of the state carried by the plates during 1927 will be omitted. . Orders have been placed for 1,500,â€" 000 of the 1928 plates with the exâ€" pectation there will be the average increase in the number of licenses isâ€" sued during the coming year as has been shown in the past. Stronger @ompetition than usual is in evidence with the result a saving of two cents On each pair of plates is made, or a gohlnvingt.othemteofpnetkdo ly $30,000 company, which has constructed a number of large, airy tenements in New York for rent at a reasonable Illinois State Department Is Thus far the building promises to be an exception to many New York coâ€"operative experiments which have met with severe criticism and to proâ€" vide an example for tenement conâ€" struction â€" which may revolutionize present metropolitan housing condiâ€" tions, working ultimately to the creation of a city without slums. - Another successful experiment in eoâ€"operative building pointed out is that of the Metropolitan Insurance WHITE ON MAROON FOR 1928 LICENSE PLATES The coâ€"operative method of financâ€" ing the house was adopted, and poâ€" licemen, firemen, ‘bookkeepers, teachâ€" ers and others with small capital are rapidly purchasing apartments. An investment of from $1,000 to $1,700 in cash is required and payments range from $64 to $100 a month, which covers, upkeep, taxes, interest and amortization. Through the. backing of John D.{cnd be rat Rockefeller, the plan of neighbors‘precise of banding together to build a frontier} One can log cabin has been successfully apâ€"| this show plied to the construction of a 166 legs of th apartment skyscraper in New York, their own the Woman‘s Home ‘Companion h@s‘"Totem P discoveréd. : Istaws sue Twelve men who. were bricklayers, electricians or other skilled ‘workers conceived the idea and, being assoâ€" ciated with the Rockefeller industries, they succeeded in getting financial backing for their plan. Recently they moved into the product of their own handiwork with as much pride as the early settler who had hewn out his home from the forest. "Common sense teaches that license plates are for the purpose of easy identification, and that it is not reaâ€" sonable to expect the authorities to tolerate tags covered with mud or ob~ scured by luggage. Most acts that are unreasopableâ€" are also unlawful. Any one can keep within the law by keeping within the bounds of reason. There is no law against playing safe â€"and the wise driver always plays safe." BUILD COâ€"OPERATIVE APARTMENT LIKE CABIN er. He follows the rules of common sense and finds that they almost inâ€" variably tie up with state, federal, and local laws, rules and regulations. These are the motorists who are least liable to be troubled by the great varâ€" iation of laws. They use their heads and are governed in their acts‘ by their own good common sense. "Whether or not it is permissible to pass a standing street car is beâ€" side the point. li(;sto\u-ist can be arâ€" rested for not ing a street car, and that is the safe course for the motorist in doubt. At Least That Is System Deâ€" scribed in Magazine; Rockeâ€" feller Aids "Whether the speed limit is twelve, twenty, or forty miles an hour, wheâ€" ther there is a law against trespassâ€" ing, whether the law rules that cerâ€" tain equipment must be carried, are matters of minor consideration to the experienced motor traveler and campâ€" "Observance of the law of common sense will often serve in the absence of knowledge of the laws on the staâ€" tute books," says Charles M. Hayes, president of the Chicago Motor club. Says Motor Club In Offerâ€" ing Suggestions To Car Owners Half of Them of l’ "Yours Truly" is deserving of the" success which awaits it in Atlantic |City. 1t is lavish, tuneful and, as it | only too modestly announces, "abunâ€" ’dant with girls." And Leon Errol‘s legs are more resilient than ever. 1 I The other members of the big castl }include: Evelyn Hoey, Douglas Steâ€"| | venson, Jack Stanley, John Kearney, { Theodore Babcock, Vic Casmore, Au-[ drey Berry, David Herblinn, Geneva| Mitchell, Anastasia Reilly, Tom W:t-} | ers, Forrest Yarnall, Vera Myers, Van ]Horn and Inez. ’ burdensome taxation which has reâ€" sulted in forcing more and more lumâ€" ber on an unwilling and ‘overstocked market is the root of the trouble. Face to face with these facts, an efâ€" | _ The storyâ€"much more in evidence |than the usual comic opera contrivâ€" |anceâ€"is laid in New York‘s Chinaâ€" town, and concerns itself with the adâ€" |ventures of an heiress who conducts a mission, and is helped to the fulfillâ€" ment of her thwarted plans by a bizarre friend, Truly (Mr. Errol). |This plot takes on the hue of reeking melodrama at one point in the story, and serves to introduce a few unexâ€" pected talents of Leon Errol. Make no mistake by calling this particular star a clown. He is an artist in the sense that our finest pantomimists are artists. There is a finesse in the technique of his bufâ€" lfoonery .which is not found except when talent and ripe experience have met in the consummation of an art. infinitely â€" difficult of | attainment. \ There are clowns one can dismiss with "He is funny." And there are | comedians, however broad and obâ€" | vious their methods, of which one can say, "He is an artist." Among these, numbers Leon Errol. His performâ€" ance is a piece of true craftsmanship, as carefully and minutely wrought as the most solemn characterization. ‘ When will comedy be given its due, and be rated, as it should be, the most | precise of all theatrical technique? J rail and 80 per cenit of waterâ€"borne freight comes from lumbering activiâ€" ties. Three hundred and twentyâ€"five millions yearly of new money enters the state of Washington. Unwise and out of Tumbering, and 65 peri cent of During previous wars patriotic women often tore up their petticoats to bandage the wounds of soldiers. In future wars petticoats will be turnâ€" ed to national defense. § The cotton growers of America are hopeful of this eventuality, says the Woman‘s Home Companion, and they see a great ray of hope in the reâ€" port that the American planes which crossed the Atlantic were dressed alâ€" most entirely in American cotton. So, since women refuse to wear pettiâ€" One cannot list the talents found in this show, although the wellâ€"trained legs of the John Tiller Girls command their own paragraph. Not since the "Totem Pole" has there beem on any stage such an exhibit of musical coâ€" ordination. ' PETTICOAT MATERIAL FOR DEFENSE, REPORT Cotton No Longer Used For the Former, So To Be Tried on Airplanes Joseph Urban is responsible for the extravagant and interesting scenery, and Raiph Reader arranged the clevâ€" erest and cleanest dances seen this season. From the beginning to the end of this happy show there is a welcome absence of the usual alluâ€" sions which corrupt the beauty of too many musical attractions. Opers house, Chicago. Gene Buck gives us Leon Errol in a new, gilded piece called "Yours Truly," a resoundâ€" ing and resplendent hit. Showered with the best talents of Clyde North and Anne Caldwell, who wrote the book and lyrics, steeped in the madcap, often wistful music of Raymond Hubbell, and embellished with the beauty of an exceptionally trained chorus, Leon Errol is at his best. The funniest man and the best musical show of the season are now playing at the Four Cohans Grand CAPTIVATES CHICAGO IN PLAY "YOURS TRULY® ~* chicago, in Ome of Best _ Chicago, In Musical Plays sns |_ "Bag worms" are the most prevalâ€" 1 R |g¢nt of the insect pests which have C nine ronkresd an ol hoh oepuet | famaged shade trees in Hiials tile awaiting congress as the ne'sptpers‘wmm" sctording to ts iv. see it: . ks I < Mississippi flood control, farm nâ€"};fl:gfn&:;:a:‘“"“’r R.O‘B..Illle; :' lief, tax reduction, the Mlled nï¬er»,pm‘i ut ‘"‘e r‘;te of lpo"u'“nda to inval heprouvimiens mowiger: pem. | hity pallone loti watst: can be gacd g:gle‘ggor:{:"“'o"s{ Bo * * but this should be done in the spring, Nothwithstanding the fnct that 90â€" (Migtoint to axtorminate any ather time: gres: thus has its work out outs 14 is | Thg bags can be picked from the intimated that one or two mem;rs‘l;mb. jut this methad is laborious of congress have also made up r P OSE ts { own list of issues. Iand not very effective. Mississippi flood control, farm reâ€" lief, tax reduction, the soâ€"called water power monopoly, senatorial contests, nayal appropriations, Boulder Dam, Muscle Shoals. â€" . Unfair Question Shim: "You drive awfully fast, dont‘ you?" Him: "Well, I touched seventy yesâ€" terday." ; "Did you kill any of them?" Tickets for the ball can be purchasâ€" ed at the leading banks and also in the Orrington hotel, Evanston. Mrs. Leslie Kennedy, Mrs. Edith| Rockefeller McCormick, Mrs. Edgar l Foster Alden, Mrs. J. C. Healy, Miss| Olga Menn, Mrs. Frank S. Whitney,| Mrs. Henry Searborough, Jr., Mrs. T.\ W. Truitt, Mrs. A. J. Lindsiley, Mrs.| G. A. Brand, Mrs. William Eeverin,| Mrs. Paul Roach, Mrs. Fred P. Reyâ€" nodis? Mrs. Herman Bundeson, Mrs. George Dixon, Mrs. A. J. Monahan,| Mrs. B. C. Bowen, Mrs. E. H. Uhiâ€"] mann, , Mrs. Channey Martyn, IN.; W. C. Hinn, Mrs. T. J. Greaves, Mrs. T. T. Greaces. t EJGHT GREAT ISSUES FACING U. S. CONGRESS Marked interest has been manifestâ€" ed by the ladies high in social and club work along the North Shore and the ball promises to be one of the outstanding successes of the season. Among the many patronesses, the names of the following are noted: enrolling the first class to start Octoâ€" ber 3, and when the other units are built the North Shore Military acaâ€" demy will be one of the most imposâ€" ing schools in this part of the counâ€" try. Enrollment is open to cadets in junior high (7th and 8th grades) and high school. Later, junior college will be added. The tuition fee has been placed at $250, exclusive of uniâ€" forms for day scholars, $1000 for boarding pupils, including uniforms. the roof ball room of the OrTIMGtO®)| o) Joe Miller hotel, Evanston. It is being sponsorâ€" E:Lm ed by the Ladies‘ Auxiliary of that Oklahoma, insi organization, with Mrs. James W. "The Bennet, president, and Mrs. Sarah A. the old :’m Langfitt, chairman of the committee. hep z::-; Proceeds of the ball are to be used | £*** m for equiping the dormitory of the "‘".""‘“".";‘-F first unit of the academy. terview with P NORTH SHORE MILITARY â€" | INDIAN 8HC INCREASRE TN POOD _ |pork, lamb and mutton of nearly two To Be Held Sept. 29 on Roof of| So Declares Col. Miller of RBig umm;hnhn-ï¬dml-x Orrington Hotel, Evanston; 101 Ranch Company; Tells crease in the total of food products| pounds, and there has been an inâ€" Many Interested Reasons ::uhdd::muufl:muu--uuuâ€"d.. â€"The Inaugural ball of the North| "Thire is a swenme A.....s +._|tracting the attention of those enâ€"| AMLi¢@n cheese supplics alons are Shore Military academy is to .. EMPLOYMENT BUREAU First Class (White) Help Telephone Highland Park 1205 American Employment Bureau of Highland Park 256 St. Johns Ave. Highland Park Suite 4 H. P. State Bank Bidg. Dr. IRVING G. SCHUR 16â€"18 N. Sheridan Rd. Tel. 2190 Dr. M. C. K. Little, president, is GREENSLADE 21 South St. Johns Avenue DR. B. A. HAMILTON ELECTRICAL i| CONTRACTOR THOR WASHERS 547 Gray Ave. "But I forget all the why and wherefores when the big tent is full and sees the crowd leaning forward, |thrilling again to the spectacle of stage robberies, Indian raids, heroic cowboys riding hard and shooting straight. They are living all over again the stories they first heard when they were children at their father‘s knee. And man, how they enâ€" | joy it." a / | _ Miller tells how his wild west show }origin-ted with the visit to Guthrie, | Okla., of the National Editorial assoâ€" ciation. The boys on the ranch ofâ€" fered to get up an entertainment, By the time the editors arrived, 100,000 | other visitors had flocked in, too, and when the event was over, the ranch ?hxnds had $50,000 for their trouble. ‘The show then took shape and eleâ€" \ phants and other animals were added [ to the frontier attractions. ‘ BAG WORMSâ€"DAMAGE TO TREES IS REPORT Ks S O Et 20 COT cOe ’w:«mu-.mamtmun. ler brothers of the "101 Ranch" in Oklahoma, insists, "The more civilization wipes out the old forms of western life the greater the demand for wild west performances," he continues in an inâ€" terview with Farm & Fireside. "The fact that more people flock to our show every year is proof of this. In the twenty years we have been exâ€" hibiting the old frontier has passed completely into history. America has become pretty tame, but it seems that there is a part of the human being that never grows up, that resents beâ€" ing civilized the same way boys reâ€" sent soup and stiff collars. ‘The more citified the city, the better business we do when we play there. ‘ cowboys and Indians in America than ever before, especially in the East," mest FoW \ncri;\;fl es \ \\\\\\\ O T‘}a 67.-.3?\.';'.";%;‘_ 1 o_ 10 49 *o, ho * ues CC ed, | e zy\ ie ertemacn s \ ?&fl‘flâ€'& asfsenamer" t , paste® 1 T acroet ~*_"*Y" V | & ' for and two thousand pounds, as against thirtyâ€"five million in 1926, and a fiveâ€" year average of thirtyâ€"eight million. There has been an increase in beef, gaged in the production and marketâ€" ing of these commodities. The total holdings of frozen poultry is stated at fortyâ€"two millions, three hundred P ap uo uo w un us un us un us un us un us ud ue ue us se is ______ P Y?!"""V"l""V'!V""""V""'V"V'V"""V' 18 * rat , seodio£ (1o""" _| nn“d::d (;‘“ € gven mort ‘ . shas | w ie _ 67’35 m Averag® "jjj Otbe! yente s Lob N* 12e ht P , artved, ht c C srtabi® Soas had Droaidaend pren hk t P wet 5ts wopple® """*" io 'W'...nv&", _ Mets “’“.’."...d- e "" / @B 0. safte A.B-)‘ ‘d’dw:d.nfl & & h & & & & p :â€" Au U""’A. Ra,c‘ 9: . ) A * uncesn ‘in meï¬(‘«a smaller which unhsppily may be exâ€" plained by reason of importation of foreign cheeses, and the natural disâ€" mu\ï¬ow.“ Any interpretation\of this situation canâ€" not but cause distress to.the agriculâ€" turist, 3 % «