ing and Vork. iter Co. RNTALS igs renâ€" rder. 474 ay 9, 1929 Covers rk, Slip ttresses, Window H.P. 3096 T 1918 2440 n back _ order. k Bldg. ES SHOP 573 Thursday, May 9, 1929 THE OPENING GAME. HOOVER‘S "WING." _ > AIRCRAFT OUTPUT Thousands paid to see the opening game between the Yankees and the Red_Sox.â€" Fifty million Americans that know who the Yankees and the Red Sox are, haven‘t the faintest idea who Pythagoras and Thales were. They are just as happy, and Thales and *Pythagoras don‘t care. ‘ Baseball observedâ€" that President Hoover was "wild in his pitch," throwâ€" ing the ball that started Washington‘s baseball season. , Technicians said that throwing the medicine ball had "made the Presiâ€" dent a little strong on the wing." "Wing" is ‘baseball language for Uarm.!)A t â€" Intelligent baseball men will say to President Hoover, as the artist of old said to the ruler, annoyed at beâ€" ing excelled by him, "God forbid that you should know as t’r)uch about this as I know." p â€" There is ‘such a thing as knowing too much about baseball. | ,. 3 _ _ = . President Coolidge becomes a direcâ€" tor in the New York Life Company in place of the late Ambassador Herâ€" rick. s difficulty find work more useful than life insurance. > It inculcates thrift, provides for widows and children. â€" ~_The United States, producing 4,600 airplanes in 1928, leads in aircraft output. $ was “ > France in 1928 built only 1440 airâ€" planes. . . § _ Great Britain sells more airplanes abroad than we do. ip â€" France, however, has five times as many fighting planes as we have. Such a man as Mr. Coolidge could BRING US YOUR LAUNDRY AND CALL FOR IT. YOU WILL SaAVE 20%. : :;~ _ ~RRLTABLE LAUNDRY â€"â€"â€" & DRY CLEANING COMPANY 618 N. Greem Bay Rd. Highland Pk. 514 Laurel Ave. Telephone 555 Highland Park GREENSLADE Electric Shop ELECTRICAL _CONTRACTOR THOR WASHERS APEX CLEANERS H. P. 555 Her fighting fleet is so big it makes Great Britain very polite. France is the real airplane country, no matter what others may manufacâ€" ture. Britain is catching up. We lag behind, but that will change. j <â€" A gentleman of the Americanr Deâ€" fense society, who would only accept immigrants as much. as possible like the Puritans, keeping out others, says A Telephone Age > ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY F OUR THOUSAND personsâ€"scientists, Fmathematicians,Atechniciansand their assistantsâ€"in the Bell Telephone Laboraâ€" tories are constantly studying the human voice and human speech. _ _ They study your telephone service and how to make it better. They strive ceaseâ€" lessly to extend its range, its accuracy and_ its usefulness. In all of these things they hopes of a few years ago. The IHlinois Bell Telephone Company, as one of the units of the Bell System, offers to the public it serves all the advantages of its connection with these laboratories, the world‘s greatest agency of practical scientific research.. _ | One Policy â€" One System Universal Service T HE P RES S Truly we are living in a telephone age "President Hoover doesn‘t know as much about immigration as some of us." . * Mr,. Hoover knows a good deal more about immigration than the American Defense society knows. | Stuyvesant Fish sues officials that stopped his yacht, looking for liquor, of, which he had none. It was a new yacht. 4 BELL SYST EM Mr. Fish wants to "protect the rights of yachtsmen." â€"â€"‘To protect the rights of row boats and other small craft is or ought to be, even more important, in a reâ€" public, since there are more of them. However,; "republic or no republic, stopping a rich man‘s yacht seems to create more excitement than breaking into a poor man‘s house and killing his wife. s ' ’ a2°*~