From the economic standpoint perhaps the forest is most imâ€" portant just now because it affords an opportunity to take up a great deal of our idle land,â€"not only in Wisconsin and other pine tree states, but in other sections of the country, where there is land available for trees that is practically worthless for any other purpose. Now if a great deal of our poorer land is set aside for forests, it naturally follows that the farmers who work and develop the better agricultural land will have a better chance to make money. Taking a certain number of acres out of cultivaâ€" tion only adds to the value of the land which remains under cultivation. And best of all, the forest land will in time pay for itself and pay good dividends in the bargain. â€" The people of the United States are steadily becoming more interested in the problem of forestry from the ethical and the economic standpoint. They realize that our forests mugst be preâ€" served and cultivated, not only for their beauty but because they form an important link in the chain of our economic welfare. Despite the fact that we are using steel and concrete in larger quantities each year, lumber is still necessary for a great many purposes and perhaps will always be essential fer the comfort andâ€"weifare of humanity. Forests also, gn certain parts of the country, may play an important part in floodâ€"control problems, and it is maintained by many scientists that trees have something to do with our climate. Miss Helen Reichelt is visiting Miss Alice de Bower, of Chicago, at her summer home on Gage‘s Lake, this week. Mrs. Philip Scully, Sr., who has been quite ill at Excelsior Spring, Mo., reâ€" turned to her home on Deerfield avâ€" enue last week. Mrs. E. Therrien of Highland Park was a guest of Mrs. S. P. Hutchison, Miss Gladys Reid is spending this week with Miss Hazel Behrens, it Sheboygany, Wis. Miss Behrens is principal of a school in Globe, Ariz. Mr:ililary Reid spent the weekâ€"end in Downer‘s Grove. Wallace Reichelt was the weekâ€"end guest of Jack Williams at Slocum Lake. 6 . Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Pettis and daughter, | Jean, were the dir:wr guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Holt, of Boelmanor, Sunday. The Ladies Aid of St. FPaul‘s Evanâ€") gelical church will meet at the home) of Mrs. E. H. Willman, Thursday afâ€" j ternoon, August 2nd. Mrs. J. Rommel and Mrs. A. Winter will have charge, of the program. \| Mr. and Mrs. Harry Muhike and | daughter Betty motored to Alpaso, Ill., | Sunday ‘where they visited relatives.| The Highbland Park Press Thursday. chased the C. W. Getty home on Cenâ€" tral avenue and will take possession of it in the early fall when the Getty family will move into their new home Mrs. Miller of Michigan is visiting at the home of her son, Guy H. Miller, of Hazel avenue. Miss Martha Karch left Sunday evening for Washington, D. C., where she will spend a week. Miss Verda Varner and Miss Irene Mitchell are at Camp Grey at Saugaâ€" tuck, Michigan this week. Mrs. A. R. Warner of Deerfield ayâ€" enue, was hostess to the Just Sew club at her homeâ€"on Thursday afterâ€" noon. Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Miller enterâ€" tained a number of friends from Chiâ€" cago at dinner on Sunday. Entered as Second Class mat§i 1, 1911, at the office at Highland MM-‘.:&M&W pest Published weekly by The Udell Printing Co. at Wighiand Purk, Lake County, Nlinois Mrs. George Engstrom entertained at a bridge party last Thursday afterâ€" noon in compliment to ber sister, Miss Gladys Reid, who is assistant superâ€" intendent of schools in Globe, Arizona. There were twenty guests. Miss Helen Bock is assisting at the Deerfield post office during the abâ€" sence of Mrs. Austin Plagge, who with her daughter Lorayne is visiting relaâ€" tives in Duluth, Minn. Mr. Theodore Knaak left Saturday to attend the International Convention of Rexall Druggists at Boston this week. Mernbers of one of the bridge clubs enjoyed a picnic at McHenry, Wednesâ€" day afternoon. Mrs. Delbert Meyer gave a bridge party last Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. C. T. Anderson had as her Iuncheon guests last Friday two of! her classmates at the Northern !lli-) nois State Teachers‘ college, Miss Berâ€" mice Tucker of Highland Park, and| Miss Peg McTague of Dixon, IIl. $ Nir. and Mrs. Ernest Diebert of Chicago were weekâ€"end guests of Mrs. Diebert‘s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Klemp, Sr. Mr. apd Mrs. Chas. Selig, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Selig and Miss Victoria Willman were guests of Mr. and Mrs.| Frank Ott of Chicago, Friday. | Mrs. M. Andrew and two children, Ruth and David left Tuesday for Pennsylvania, where Mrs. Andrew‘s mother is quite ill. The Edwin Easton family are on a motor trip through the west, they spent the past weekâ€"end at Black Hills, South Dakota. - THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1928 Mr. Deerfield News FOREST CONSERVATION | _ Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Brand and two children returned Friday from a two | weeks visit in Michigan. | _ Mrs. E. J. Ginter entertained the | »xecutive committee of the Wilmot ) Parent Teacher association at a lunchâ€" , con on Wednesday. °_ Mrs. Mary Cooksy returned to her home Sunday after spending two weeks with Mr. and Mrs. W. Tronjo at | McHenry, 111. Bernice Juhrend is visiting at the ‘hnme of Mrs. Hugo Lais of Chicago. | _ Miss Mae Titus has returned to the home of Mrs. Jack Myers after spendâ€" ‘ing thrce weeks with ber aunt in ‘ Chicago. | _ _A group of ten ladies from the ) Ladies Aid of St. Paul‘s Evangelical Dr. and Mrs. S. H. Fritsch and daughter Helen Mary of Cleveland, Ohio are visiting relatives in Deerâ€" field. They arrived Monday evening and expect to stay until September. on Eugene avenue, which is now un der construction. Mr. and Mrs. Percy Prior and chilâ€" dren of Highland Park were luncheon guests o! Mrs. K. E. Pettis, Tuesday. Miss Louise Kersten of Evanston was a guest of Mrs. C. G. Pettis, Sunâ€" day. 2 The R. N/ A Camp of Deerfield is contemplating a picnic at Lake Zurick. Date will be announted shortly. The Juveniles will also have a picnic in the Jewett Park within the next few weeks. Now that taiking movies have been perfected, what is to become of all the people who went to the movies just for the pleasure of reading the titles aloud ? to be published. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Cooksy, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Juhrend and daughter Victoria, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Benz, spent Sunday at McHenry as guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Tronjo. Mrs. Archie Abercromby and two caughters of Highland Park were luncheon guests of Mrs. R. E. Pettis, Wednesday. day afternoon. Mrs. C. E. Pi'per will be in charge. Roland Hoffman of Glenview was a guest at the Fred Horenberger home on Central avenue, Sunday. church attended the joint meeting of Federation of Arlington Heights and Highland Park Ladies Aid last Thursâ€" day. The meeting was held in Sunset Park in the morning and on account of rain afternoon session convened in the church. There will be the usual story hour in the Deerfield Public Library Saturâ€" The Nature Study class of the Glenâ€" coe Woman‘s club on Monday afterâ€" noon made a tour of the beautiful gardens of Mrs. W. Aitken, Mrs. Alâ€" bert W. Torbet, Mrs. K. F. Towler and Mrs. C. C. Brackett of Bannockâ€" burn. t 1 Long Island Weall excited about | a nan who has such strong teeth | ind teugh tissues that be can eat| vi~ors of glass and remain unharmed. We‘d like to see how he reacts on the drst biscuits of some prospective bride« we know! A New York judge decided that a young man had a perfect right to kiss a girl during a movie performâ€" Jean Pettis was hostess to the soâ€" ciable seven at her home on Monday afternoon. Parisian ladies are wearing live tor‘oises on their handbags. They should be trained to bite pickpockets! ince. This is one verdict of the law which is sure to be upheld by the ounger generation. The only mystery about some mys NUMBER 22 Mr. and Mrs. Henry Peirce l‘op\-,‘ formerly of Glencoe and now of thei Seneca hotel, Chicago, are spending a | (few weeks at Hyannis Port on Cape| |Cod, where they joined Mrs. Pope‘s| j daughters, Mrs. C. B. Cook, Miss Helâ€"‘i ‘en and Miss Emily Pope. and David | Chawplin, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Champlin of Glencoe. Mr. Pope is ln norted to have recovered sufficiently | from his recent iliness to take tl\e}‘ (trip. | |__Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Strong of Winnetka are planning a trip to Alâ€" |aska as their vacation this summer. ; They will stop first in the Canadian Rockies for about ten days and then on their way back from the north will go to California. Mrs. Donald McePherson is lelvingJ' Indian H next week with the baby for Pittsâ€"| contly fr field, Mass., where she will visit her | Empress parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick West. } three dat Leaving the baby with her mother,| Joan, ac Mrs. McPherson will make various| return i short trips in the New England stale>,: «chool. visiting friends on the Cape and hl.‘l" son, Donald, who is at Camp Bonnie‘ George Dunc there. She will go to Vermonthis latest to see her daughter, Fannie, who also}| Some cy ‘s enjoying a season of camping at) so little Bratticboro. Mrs. McPherson and !helm limit i children will all come home about S'-p-l tember 10. Fannie will be hereâ€"but a| One f few weeks when she will return to| ho 4s the cast as she is to enter Miss Hall‘s ‘?rfl’ id ‘school in Pitisheld this fall. , of the s Mr. and Mrs. D. K. French, 503 Hawthorn lane, Winnetka are planâ€" ning to leave for the east the middle of August. They will be the guests of Mr. French‘s uncle, Herbert G. French, of Cincinnati, at his summer home in Maine for several weeks and on their way home Mr. French will attend the convention of the American Chemical society, which takes place at Swampâ€" scott. near Boston, on September 10. There was a social hour with reâ€" freshments and the members all enâ€" joyed getting better acquainted with all the guests. The engagement is announced of Miss Anne Kelly, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Kelly of 1071 Ash street, Winnetka, to Edward Greenâ€" wald, Jr., of Highland Park. The wedâ€" ding is to take place in the early fall. club was held at the home of Mrs. E. J. Ginter with Mrs. C. W. Boyle and Mrs. C. E. Piper as assistant hostesses on July 18. It was an evening meetâ€" ing and the husbands of members were invited as guests. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bates and Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Meyer who are taking charge of the Junior Garden club in the Deerfleld and Wilmot schools were also invited us guests. + MR. KENNICOTT TALKS , ON "CONSERV ATION" At Garden Club Meeting on J 18; ï¬:ld at the Home o(‘ly Mrs. E. J. Ginter In the absence of the President, Mr. W. W. Geary, the Vice President, Mrs. Frank Burroughs presided. The busiâ€" ness meeting was very brief. The Flower Show, which is to be held on August twentyâ€"ninth at 2:30 o‘clock is to be managed by Miss Sadie Galâ€" loway in the absence of Mrs. William Galloway. The speaker of the evening was Mr. Kennicott of the Forest Preserve Board and he gave a very interesting talk on conservation. The Forest Preâ€" serve bring joy to literally millions of people.each year. More wild flowers were picked and destroyed yearsâ€"ago when the woods, were not preserves and comparativily fewer people enâ€" tered them than now when there are twice as many people appreciating the upportunity of enjoying the woods. Judge Mary Bartelme, aunt of Ferdinand E. Barteleme of 1134 Sheriâ€" dan road, was initiated recently as an honorary member of the Grand chapâ€" ter of Kappa Beta Pi, legal sorvirity, at a dinner in the Hotel LaSaile on Wednesday, July 11. Miss Belle Simâ€" ons, dean of the alumnae chapter, presided. (% Mrs. Frederick Fisher, president of the Garden club of Illinois, was hostâ€" ess at a tea at her home in Lake Bluff Tuesday afternoon. Miss Barbara Crowe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Burt Crowe, 243 Raleigh road, Kenilworth left last week for camp Neecarnis, in Baldwin, Mich. She will be gone all summer. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Owen and family of Winter Haven, Fla., have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. John Hiclsr;(» Kenilworth for a few days. The Owens were fommerly of Kenilworth. Dr. and Mrs. Horace Kent Tenney, Jr., of Madison, Wis., who are well known here, are in Winnetka for a few days before going on to New York to sail for Europe. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Kent Tenney, with whom they are staying, will leave shortly for a stay at Huron Mountain, Mich. North Shore News The regular meeting of the Garden THE HIGHLAND PABK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS )/ _ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bersbach of | Indian Hill road, Winnetka sailed reâ€" {cently from Quebec, Canada, on the |Empress of France. for Europe. Their {three daughters, Barbara, Helen, and | Joan, accompanied them. They will | return in September in time for i school. his latest work to "intelligent women." Some cynics can‘t believe he cares so little for royalties that he wants to limit its perusal to that class? Fronche, France, the former Harriet R. Nichols, who has been visiting her mother, Mrs. Edgar Stanton of 30 Locust road, Winnetka, for the past month, left Saturday, July 14, for New York, to sail this weekâ€"end for Paris. This was Mme. Dupeyre‘s first number of ‘parties and dances were given in her honor. She lives in the Dupeyre "Vills Charmonnier" at La Fronche. 21 Indian Hill road, Winnetka, and their daughter, Emily sailed last weekâ€"end on the Beigeniand from New York City for four months of Euroâ€" pean travel. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Norseman and their little son, Joseph, Jr., accompanied them. From the west comes the announceâ€" ment of the engagement of Miss Mary Ameli& Edmunds, daughter of Mrs. David Edmunds, of Los Angeles, to Harold Patterson Owen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Starr Owen of 456 Ida place, Winnetka. Tentative plans for an Autumn wedding are in the making. Mr. and Mrs. James C. Freeman, 262 Mapleâ€"Hi#â€"road, Glencoe are enâ€" joying a six Wé¥ks visit with their grandson, Freeman Scenningson who is here with them from Montreal.} Freeman has visited here several | times before and has many friends in the village. | One of the debutantes of the coming fall, Miss Jean Stevems, is spending the summer in Winnetka. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde G. Stevens, have taken the Francis Peabody Butler heme on Private road, for the sumâ€" mer. Their son, John, will return to Princeton for his senior year when the family goes back to its home at 1412 Astamstrect for the winter seaâ€" son. f Miss Elizabeth Kelly, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Kelly of Kenilâ€" worth, entertained at a luncheon for Miss Harriet Bellamy last Friday. One farm plank all the parties can agree to is a resolution disapproving of the seventeenâ€"year locust! George â€" Bernard Shaw â€" addresses Mr. and Mrs. William G. 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