: * ;-v-.y particular, dm e restrictive immigraâ€" mï¬bmmu as immigrants it can absorb, nflm L-â€":y’hï¬--:fyd_m Eflm&n“ its ‘this country of only those who * M SaÂ¥d Cone. HULL There are now in the United States about 8,000,000 unnaturalized aliens. The Commissioner General of Immiâ€" tion, Harry E. Hull, says that the g:n.dmm:nnllndh- tome exceeds that of the entire world, “‘::tlmnol M’:&l: be ous cur can be proâ€" only by restrictive immigraâ€" m-. When the United States is Lake Forest, Illinois North Shore Trust Company i-ï¬yf ‘in the new &ury;" of nsâ€" which anticipates the admission The DeForest School Graded School Thursday and Friday, Oct. 4, 5 "THE LITTLE SHEPHERD OF KINGDOM COME" with RICHARD BARTHELMESS Nai 122 North Sheridan Road, Highland Park Telephone Highland Park 2421 Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, Oct. 1. 2. 3 **. Sunday, September 30 "LEGIONNAIRES IN PARIS" omm fap Saturday, September 29 "HANKMAN‘S HOUSE" AL COOK â€" KIT GUARD Small Groups French Taught Friday, September 28 _ "THE HAWK‘S NEST" starring VICTOR MeLAGLEN Other bonds very attractive for investment of idle funds. "THE COP" with MILTON SILLS with wM. BOYD First Mortgages Real Estate Highland Park. form theâ€" sleeves and the other left free to drape over the shoulders. It sounds simple but let the woman who udopts it as a novelty for her wardâ€" good and fit citizens to be added to odr native born. ~ We are all familiar with scarfs and we all know whereof we speak when discoursing on the subject of jackets. A mantel might give us pause, though not our grandmothers. And now we have another new term â€"the mantellette. An amusing bit of frivolity, this combination scarf and slipâ€"on jacket concocted ingenâ€" lously from two searfs of any of the Two brightly eolored dblong scarfs cleverness, and chic, it will look for all the world like an invalid‘s bedâ€" secured by Property and around in silk or Telephone 832 ; MODERN HIGHWAYS â€" â€"| |â€" _ PREVENT ISOLATION President Leguia is advocating an expenditure of $3,500,000 more in the next three years to add connecting links to roads already in operation and thereby open new regions to deâ€" velopment by the sheep man, the plowâ€" man, the mine operatér, the sightseer and the immigrant from Europe. Large Sum Provided A sum of $800,000 has already been provided in the Government‘s budget for road building. The larger amount would be raised by a national loan. Systems of tolls on some of the roads are a constantly increasing source of rovenue for more road buiiding. 29. 3 EL o Pneanti2d M‘ â€u{-ï¬nw,m in Lima, Callao and other coastal cities, the splendid new boulevards and suburban highways extending far into the country are notable, says the Panâ€"American Union. These new traffic routes are openâ€" ing added delights for the tourist as well as for the citizen; and at least some of the more leisurely visiters to Peru are motoring in the heights of the Andes where they behold aweâ€" EXPECT TOO MUCH Some people just simply expect too much of the commen‘run of humanity. We are asked to keep the wheels of industry turning by purchasing the things that are being produced in great quantities, and then we are told we have no right to complain of our cbhdition unless we return to the simple life and get along with the things that satisfied our grandparâ€" ents. If we do the former we are pretty sure to get in a hard shape occasionalâ€" ly and if we do the latter we distress &mmwum manufacturâ€" ing. If we spend our money as fast as we make it there are sure to be times when we will be very hard up, but if we practice strict economy we distrub ‘industries that are speeded up to quantity production. 'o-n.zh-b willing . to do cither of things, because it is. our ambition to please, but we can‘t ï¬hh.mh!-g*m ter characteristics of the people he meets; intolerance becomes tolerance, anrd rudeness is transformed into courtesy. The love of art and culture that is first found in the seacoast cities is being freely shared with inâ€" land areas," Mr. Hayes points out, "and the result is a higher scale of living and thinking and a better mutâ€" ual understanding between the resiâ€" dents of different settions of the counâ€" try." > Today there are in operation more than 10,500 motor vehicles in Peru. Some of the traffic, particularly on the castern slopes of the Andes, is through the â€" primeval â€" wilderness which until recent years was traveled only by the mule and the llama caraâ€" Isolation Banished "The isolation that formerly men ignorance, suspicion, and poverty is practically banished with the coming of the automobile and the hard road. Women of the mountain districts now send their handiwork to the cities where it is appreciated and paid for by city dwellers formerly ignorant of the art of their more secluded neighâ€" lege that everybody enjoys and pracâ€" tices, whereas it used to be the luxâ€" ury of the wealthy, and the result is that everyone shares in the reward of a fuller and richer life. bors. It is a well known fact that the traveler tends to adopt the betâ€" Peru, one of the world‘s most mounâ€"~ tainous countries, has reclaimed, reâ€" surfaced and built 7000 miles of moâ€" tor roads in seven years, but Presâ€" ‘dent Leguia isâ€"not satisfied. He calls for more roads, and his sentiments are echoed all over the country, acâ€" cording to a statement issued by the Panâ€"American Union. SOME PEOPLE JUST might almost be said that the charâ€" acteristics of any group of people are determined by the adequacy and modernity of their transportation fa~ cilities," says Charles M. Hayes, the president of the Chicago Motor club. "The highways of today are acâ€" complishing a great thing in making it possible for people to go from place to place with ease. Travel is a priviâ€" Wants Additional Large Sums Appropriated For Highâ€" way Improvement; Says Dispatch PRESIDENT URGING MORE GIVE TRAVEL PRIVILEGEC PERU BUILDS GOOD ROADS IN COUNTRY "Highways occupy an important any Opportunitiee Now Are Afforded People of Remote Districts, Because of Roads second to none in $3 teleâ€" * in a report upon the progress of | radio beacon research, prepared for the Engineering Foundation here, the: Burcau of Standards envisages “an;’ epoch of safe and regular flying" as| the result of the radio beacon. It will’ supply the one needed link in the chain of technical developments which | Iwi]l make it possible for aircraft to| { navigate successfully regardless of , | fog or viâ€"ibility conditions, the report | { declarcs. | Mrs. Butler, then Julia Ann Pickerâ€" ing, and Hulda Minthorn were class~ mates in ® school taught by Joel and Hannah Ina.~-.r West Branch, MM lmillenenfldm was born. Reared in nearâ€"by Quaket communities, the women became close friends during the two years they atâ€" In a letter to an Towa woman, Herâ€" bert Hoover has asked: "Please write and tell me all you can about my mother." The request was received by Mrs. L. 8. Butler, mother of a Chicago atâ€" torney find a schooimate of the candiâ€" date‘s mother, Hulda Minthorn Hooâ€" ver. It was in reply to a note of conâ€" gratulation sent after the Kansas City convention. . On Fixed Airways | "The beacon system will probably render its principal service on ï¬xed! commercial airways," the bureau conâ€", tinues. "With the radio beacon madé“ practical and dependable, air route operations enter a new era of regularâ€"| ity and safety. Most trips formerly} omitted, or undertaken only at great | risk, can be confidently made. Occaâ€"f sional fog over the landing fGield it‘; self is the chief remaining obstacle." ! Under the War Department and| later under the Department of Comâ€"| merce, the bureau of standards hl.s‘ been experimenting with radio beaâ€" cons since 1920, the report says. ltf has devoted particular attention to | the development of a visual indicator by means of which a pilot would# have before him a direct indication of | his location. \| Direct Flyer The instruments developed as the result of the bureau‘s experiments enable a pilot to keep on his course by watching two vertical white lines on his instrument board. When one line becomes longer than the other the aviator knows that his airplane is veering off its course. If the line on the right begins to lengthen, the pilot immediately knows that his course is taking him too far to the right, and is able to correct his direcâ€" tion of flight immediately. HOOVER ASKS IOWA WOMAN ABOUT MOTHER Writes Friend of Her Youth to Tell Him Al She Can, RADIO BEACONS FOR AIRCRAFT HIGHW AYS Radio beacons for aircraft will be in use on the commercial airways of the United States within the next two years, according to a statement just issued by the Bureau of Standards of the United States Department of Comâ€" mevee. FOR COMMERCIAL LANES Expect System to Be Installed _Generally Throughout the Country in the Near Future HIGHLAND PARK STATE BANK Report Says A checking account costs the bank about $1.75 per month for handling it and thousands of banks all over the United States are making a "Service Charge" on all checking accounts where the monthly balance is less than $100.00. It is only right and fair that the customer‘ should pay a portion of the cost of handling his account. Don‘t you think so? It gives the owner a positive record of his receipts and expenditures, an evidence which may be used in Court, if required. The cancelled check often prevents ar setlle.s disputes over the payment of bills. The stubs enable the owner to check over his expenses and conform to a‘budget. He may know at all times his correct balance. Heknows how much he spends and what for. â€" Value of a Checking Account The Old Reliable and Progressive Bank 'l-»u-l:lmmm:-“: 300 people who could vore who wilf Kansas has some famous trees. Ome of thos politically noted is an overspreading cotton wood on the State House grounds in this city. It has a spread of 100 feet. Under its branches campaign speeches were made by former Presidents Harrison, VeKinley and Taft. It was under this same tree that Charles Curtis, Reâ€" ~ublican nominee for Viceâ€"President, was welcomed by his fellowâ€"citizens on his return home from Kansas City. lorget to go to the polls election day. Kansas has just 230,000,000 trees, statistics in the agricultural departâ€" ment show. These include 3,000,000 fruit trees and 555,000 street trees, besides wild timber, walnut and other varieties. landscapes are usually associated with the State of Kansas, but there are so many trees in the "Sunflower State" that the Kansas State Board of Agriâ€" culture is writing a book about them, for free distribution. Bright red numerals on a solid field of black will constitute the color ©chome of llinois‘ 1929 ‘automobile "winse plates instead of the green and white combination recently anâ€" nounced by Secretary of State Louis L. Emmerson. Sccretary Emmerson, who adminisâ€"| _ Service was extended this past sumâ€" ters the law relative to the sale of mer to these points from Mexico City, the:e plates, several weeks ago selâ€"| Ncuvo Laredo, Tampico, San Luis wotod a green plate with white numâ€"; Potosi, Saitillo, Guadalajara and Monâ€" ials. Scveral states in the central| terey, and Queretaro. Messages sent west selected similar plates for 1929 from these cities in Mexico travel over und asked Illinois to change its colâ€"| the International Telephone and Teleâ€" ors. | gr.';p;: llmes 0;‘] tChe Mexican 'tl':leghone The black background with red @"C lelegraph Company to the Texas numerals was the most distinctive of | bï¬rde’{, thence °"_i?’i th: Long x&“‘fi_’ l°f the samplef} presented and was pici;:ed} ;r: ph z::;:!:w 5‘ et;:‘ QOI:}!'ni::d $ t,:t:; ::r::: g;g :?tiinnitcr:::g thx:t } to the radio telephone sending station any state in the Union ever had used , 0n Long Island, then by transoceanic us comuimation of eclore | radio telephone‘to the British receivâ€" * ing station at Cupar, Scotiand, then, The state recently contracied oY | in cornperation with the Brivish Pogt the manufacture of the plates at *! Office, by land line in Great Britain, trifle more than eight and oneâ€"half "nd connection is made by submarine ecnts a pair. This is believed to 5* j cable to the various telephone sysâ€" the lowest price paid by any state in tems in the countries on the continâ€" the country. ent The black background with red numerals was the most distinctive of the samples presented and was picked for the 1929 plates. Secretary Emâ€" merson says he cannot recall that any state in the Union ever had used this combination of colors. The state recently contracted for the manufacture of the plates at a trifle more than eight and oneâ€"half ecnts a pair. This is believed to be the lowest price paid by any state in the country. BOOK TELLS OF TREES IN STATE OF KANSAS Has Two Hundred and Thirty Millions of Them; Not All Sceretary Emmerson, who adminisâ€" ters the law relative to the sale of these plates, several weeks ago selâ€" wotod a green plate with white numâ€" BRIGHT RED FIGURES â€" MEXJCO HAS TELEPHOX‘;E oN 1929 AUTO PLATES CONNECTION TO EUROPE Numerals on Black Field; State Service Across Ocean Extended Licenses For Next Year | This Summer to Cities of to Be Vivid | That Republic Expansive plains and monotonous estvacesesverse ol .-........-.........: T iL E +. 2 E E S FIREPLACES I mm::tnzn:n:n.t emmemmenmmmmmmmmrernce} Rees Building, 4416 North Clark St. Interior Tile Insta:lations and_Distinctive F urnishings Phoneâ€"Long Beach 8222â€"24 Andirons Firetools Screens Fenders Magicoal Grates Wood Holders Wood Baskets Driftwood Electric Logs with or without Heating Units Openâ€"Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday evenings. Is the most important feature in the home Let REES submit the proper fireside accessories THE FIREPLACE phone installed. This was a private brigndecand with Bootiand Tard. uot oven before that line wah constructed., in London published an interesting story about what happens when the King uses the telephone. When the King desires to make use of the telephone to converse with anyone outside the London arem, whether it be to the Provinces or to the continent, he has the privilege of claiming the first clear line at the exâ€" eh.lnge. and while he is speaking, no the caller with the king‘s private writing room. _ Marlborough House, where the telephone operator can interrupt to warn either him or the listener that the time limit for the call has expired. If you should go to London and deâ€" sire to put a call through to the King at the Buckingham Palace, you would be connected with the office of his private secretary, as no call is put through direct to the King except from a member of the Royal family, In such case, the operator connects The Republic of Mexico can now talk by telephone not only with any part of the United States, but with England, Scotland, Wales, Antwerp, Brussels, Paris, all of Germany, Switâ€" rzerland and Holland, Gothenburg, Stockholm, Malmo and Copenhagen. wWHAT HAPPENS WHEN KING USES TELEPHONE