IDLE ACRES MAY BE \umcmn | TSED FOR FORESTS) â€" KEEP FATHER BROKE In proclaiming the eighth annuai American Forest Week, the W‘ of the United States said: "Every year, on the average, 80,â€" 000 fires scourge our woodlands, steadâ€" ily undermining their vitality." Mr. cent of the land area of the United States is in farms, but the farm popuâ€" lation of the Nation has dropped by threeâ€"quarters of a million during the past year. m'saï¬.ll !or‘!l land of the Nation is estimated at 355,000,000 scres. The lumbermen have made a sad havoc of American forests, and they are charged by exâ€" these forests through careless and unâ€" and downs and it is amazing to beâ€" hold the waste of farm lands. 1 In New York ‘ New York State has embarked upon a program looking toward the reforestation of its 4,000,000 idle and Steps Should Be T for Reforestation; N« York Has Program in cipally of abandoned farm lands. America is now using almost four times as much wood as it now proâ€" duces, while New York State, formerâ€" ly the principal timber producing State of the Nation, uses seventeen times as much timber as it produces. tâ€"hâ€"aâ€"l s'ol;lelhm; must be done about a situation that is becoming worse each year. The productive farm lands of New York State have been decreasing at the rate of 250,000 acres a year for five years. A twenty to thirty year program of reforestaâ€" tion is being planned, and it contemâ€" plates anâ€"actual investment of $5,000,â€" 000 a year of public funds. The sum planting it with trees. If this tious );hn is carried out New York will doubtless lead the way in a Nation wide movement of reforestaâ€" tion. This prophecy may seem a little difficult to digest except for those who have seen with their own eyes the réforestation in Germany, France, Denmark, and other old Eurâ€" opean countries. In the old world they wasted their forests just as we have done in America, and now they plant trees that grow with such exact regularity as to remind one of our Middle West cornfields. Reforest Abandoned Lands A recent report by the State Inâ€" dustrial Survey Commission to the New York Legislature shows that the paper mills of the State have deâ€" ceased their production about oneâ€" half in twelve years at which time there were 96 pulp and paper mills in State. The State now maintains three nurseries operated under its Conservaâ€" tion Department and during the presâ€" ent year these nurseries will produce 35,000,000 transplants for the reforestâ€" wWOMAN, 73, BOSS OF OwWN PLANING MILL saw through a choice piece of cak timber, Mrs. Rachel Neill of Orange, N. J, has attracted statewide attenâ€" tion as a woman who for the past 35 years has been the first to open her mill door in the morning and the last to close it at night. _ At 7B Mrs. Neill has the satisfaction of having brought her property out five children and still looks upon reâ€" tirement as something far away. "How did I do it?" she said in an interview in The American Magazine. "How did Lindy get to Paris? He figâ€" ured it out for himself, and just got up and at it. And that‘s what I had Taking over her plant was not easy for this woman of 38, when her husâ€" band died and the forty men who were to work under her looked upon their employer as "the petticoat boss." In that day few persons in the United Statex had heard of a woman daring, to take over so difficult a task ax rumâ€" ming a planing mill. "I‘d never say 1 didn‘t‘ know, or, cuuldn‘t do a thing," Mrs. Neill says. "It never occurred to me that I would A good hog caller is needed to stand out on the roads of Ilinsis und call on the specders to go slow. _ Now two of Mrs. Neill‘s sons work with her in the mill, but they are asâ€" Place; First There in Mornâ€" ing and Last in Evening which are said to consist prinâ€" them, have often merely dfl-bu.\S-vuMh‘mfl'u‘ Be Taken ucaters Shows That Bil n; New For Clothing Large WAY| WHAT IT COSTS ANNUALLY Gou-â€"h&od.h&ql break Dad. Bent on finding out just about how much it costs a year to make the educators made a survey, and the reâ€" sults surprised them, says the Interâ€" outfits, estimated $1,500 and comâ€" plained of being poorly clad. costs father $1,000, and my wardrobe is almost threadbare at that." li;"ï¬v;u;ï¬-on. fmhnuar ‘:lt modest estimate. That group figured $800 a year as the minimum, with the added comment however, "most of the girls spend quite a bit more." © "Nine dresses, ten pairs of shoes and a half a dozen hats, for the year," the itemized account of the sorority, of the ‘$800 minimum" wardrobe. Underclothing of one sort or anâ€" other, for the average university girl, costs well into the hundred, it was generally conceded. credited, in some cases, with almost as much cost as the frocks. 0 Stockings, "service weight and sheer chiffon ran well to. fifty pair a year, at an average of $1.75 a paxr _ Nor is high school so easy on the family pocketbook, it mmuled. Questionnaires _ were . distributed through several Chicago and suburâ€" ban high schools. At New Trier high school, in Winâ€" netka, it was shown by answers to the questionnaires, $400 is the "absoâ€" lute minimum." Of course, it was admitted, numerous high school gitls "make out" on less, because of necesâ€" sity, but the average girl has $400 as her minimum budget, at that school. Fur Coats Favored * Trier girls found $800 a necessity far yearly clothing bills, and a few needed elothethnthehinineoftbespeg:iq. high priced, but which demanded large amounts yearly for repairs. At Evanston high school, Miss high school girl‘s clothing bill. College men and high -:}oo_l boys, for suits, shirts and other items, and wutheavu'.ce-fc-innity-m, with six shirts, three pair of shoes and a like proportion of ties, sox and cure for many physical ills, but unâ€" fortunately it doesn‘t appeal to many people because it does not cost anyâ€" thing. â€" _ Modern life is said to have too much pressure, and the people who get their toes stepped on at the dances The educators, in questioning high Fresh air is said to be a remarkable UTtmost iN RIDING COMFORTâ€" DisriNcrivE BEAUTYâ€" UnsUrPAsSsED PERFORMANCEâ€" MECHANICAL REXCELLENCEâ€" ECONOMICAL OPRERATION SPEED OF i5 TO &0 MPRâ€" FuULL POWER DELIVERYâ€"115 HP.â€" BunvEe» To LAST LONGERâ€" i __ Inpryimuar coror commmaTtion: e« AMERICA‘S SAFEST MQTOR CAR. _ An Automobile Possessing the Fine Characterâ€" istics and Qualities You Desire The Pickens Motor Co. Sales and Service The Splendid Stutz Motor Car tom high school, Miss , dean of senior giris, Lake County Distribaters .. WAUKEGAN, ILLINOTS PRICED $3900 to $6000 and more. Rquipped and Delivered . _ of Gets Volume on Which Â¥8â€"*wz2 of Effort Has Been Exâ€" President Coolidge has been preâ€" sented with the new Oxford dictionary, the fruit of seventyâ€"three years‘ efâ€" fort to standardize and perfect the when King George received the first eopyalthtvdn-n_oâ€"t. Prof. Craigie, who is now attached to the University of Chicago, said that he himself had labored more than thirty years on the work. The dictionâ€" ary was the result of twentyâ€"three years‘ gathering of material, followed by fifty years‘ actual compilation. at BARS GARAGE FROM PUBLIC BUILDINGS Fire Marshal S. L. Legreid has apâ€" pealed to mayors and fire CBIU!S throughout the state for coâ€"operation in enforcing rules of his department. were killed by an One of the rules forbids a PUDNC nrminunybufldin.dfwa school or place of assembly or detenâ€" tion, hotel, apartment, tenement, or lodging house, or within fifty feet of any school, place of assembly or detention. Prof. W. A. Craigic presented the ctionary on behalf of Oxford Uniâ€" Illinois would be the chief sufferer ; in the reallocation of radio stations | with the ultimate elimination of 143) stations suggested in a statement preâ€"| pared for submission to the federal| radio commission by the National | Association of Broadcasters, Federâ€"; ated Radio Trade association and the | Radio Manufacturers association. ( Two procedures are explained in the{ RADIO STATIONS IN ILLINOIS AF] Determined to prevent a repetition Iilinois of the dance hall disaster Elizabeth Silber Worth BARGAIN COUNTER . A similar ceremony was enâ€" 10 North Sheridan Road Loretta Shop valued up to $49.50, at $5 â€" $10 â€" $15 Sale of Hats TEACHER OF PIANO Remarkable values in Speofl"â€"_s‘ll-flv mer Rates CONTINUES of the m-*hï¬t‘ ment of 110 stations to each of ‘the The §7 licenses in Mincis would be m"!‘i‘h-.‘pqd-lh the other to 31. ; h'“_hmhu First of the gasoline tax refund “hmï¬hnwm‘-‘-“‘“‘-"‘i box car with ease. It is three times| 0f claims under the decision of the :-h‘.---whdybfl& state supreme court holding the law It uses 1,400,000 kilowattâ€"hours of| unconstitutional. HEINZ KETCHUP GINGER ALE SPAGHETTI QUAKER PUFFED RICE IVORY SOAP SWANSDOWN CAKE FLOUR JENNY WREN, package ..... SNOWDRIFT, 1 lb. can ......â€" CENTRAL INSURANCE SERVICE A. E. SMITH, J. P. â€" Room 3, State Bank Blidg. Tel. 574 â€" 1046 Highland Park, L That is the bitter i of a few who felt that they could carry their own Publm and Property Damage Insurance. You can drive with more confidence when you are insured for y(;,t:l know that the Insurance Company will assume your responâ€" sibility. The cost of this protection is less than an attorney would charge you to defend you in Court. â€" Insure today, your accident may come tomorrow. We write only Stock Company Insurance, no mutuals or reciprocals. w'dmflymmflmm&-nmm You May Save The Premium But You May Lose Your Home OVEN se § oven, confining the heat to the furnace. GAS TAX REFUND CASE FILED IN PEORIA, | ; and Saturday in These Stores NATIONAL BRANDâ€"A Blend made especially for AMERICAN HOME CARBONA! LEMON, LIME or ORANGE 3 MULE TEAM FOR A REALLY CLEAN ICE BOX FANCY LARGE SPANISH 5c refund for empty bottle DRY PALE BAL A‘f"a â€" } Ib. Pkg. 35¢ LRRA® £: 16 oz. Jar 25¢ BEOWN SUGAE, pound ......7%¢ | 4 Ib. package ........... Suignt impvovement in labor condi~ tions in the conl mining sections of the state. It is estimated approximâ€" &h“.dhhdh been a steady increase in the number of mines opening under the Jackson~ ville scale, but in LaSalle, Marthall and Putnam counties a reduction in wages has been accepted by the minâ€" PIGGLY WIGGLY STORE Large Bottle 21¢ 2â€"1 lb. Pkgs. 27¢ Large Bottle 17¢ Quart Jar 45¢ } lIb. Pkg. 25¢ 1 lb. Pkg. 16c 2 Cans 25¢ 2 Bars 21¢ Pint 15¢