the end of 1 a minute t desperate t the specâ€" ‘ With anâ€" resented. not nearâ€" vd there ided the boiling er for a living course mensely. Benvenuâ€" 1 ~Segert ssible to Proviso‘s plunges. laying all over, very damâ€" s players. ed a wonâ€" ikle badly at ~Carrol )le to stay Is, the ibbery ye nearly , knocked e referee d it back, iyed their ring â€"one as ‘going g in the Shuter ed â€" in man‘s hockey at . the embers wherg Attends it came 23) +81, 1925 another crowd field Anoqre icneeget When Signs Fail F "Rhubarb must not be regarded as . â€"a sign o‘ spring, fer frequently we git our best sleighin‘ long after its first pink knobs appear above ==@ground:"=â€"Abeâ€"=Martin‘ in Farm and ~â€" Fireside. S S nc‘ e Explaining the system of telephone wires connecting instruments ~far apart, to his blind friend, Dr. Bell exclaimed, says Miss Keller, "Those copper wires ~up there are carrying the news of birth and death, war and finance, failure and success from staâ€" tion to station around the world. Listen!<]I fancyâ€"I hear taughter, tears, love‘s vows broken and o ndal" en t is Oe - :\‘\E‘\ j:ogg?ï¬ï¬ï¬' MILK, 'B'iiAfB'» % f [s}gg g,g;gï¬ a \§ gaï¬#'&%"’#:xlsgeg / | Eunltn::r:l:n "Doctor Bell experienced the anâ€" noyance as well as the happiness of having done something that his felâ€" low creatures appreciated. Wherever he went he was approached by peoâ€" ple who wished to shake hands with the man who invented the telephone. Once he spelled out to me, ‘One would think I had never done anything worth while but the telephone. ~This is because it is a money making inâ€" vention. ~It is a pity so many peoâ€" ple make money the criterion of sucâ€" cess. . I,b'!_-'ill,h’_“‘!..&{m!"_s@g&;hï¬dflh sulted in enabling the deaf to speak with lessâ€"difficulty. â€"Thatâ€"would have made me truly happy." j flicted," Missâ€"Keller continues, =â€"~~~â€"â€"Was Bell‘s Purpose Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the telephone, was more interested in his hope to aid the deaf than he was in the great national invention, according to Helen Keller, writing in The American Magazine. "He renâ€" ~â€"Hoped to Aidâ€"Blind ; â€"â€" k L Â¥ 9 ‘ Thursday, Oct Â¥ 50 31. 1928 pest for the unds sn og t n srng ons â€"months he earned as much as $1.30. Governor Len Small signed the apâ€" propriation â€"bill in June, 1923, which made provision for the erection of the first unit of the new building at a cost ofâ€"$750,000. â€" Another request for $500,000 was granted by the legâ€" islature in 1925 and. a third approâ€" The library has chad varied quar: ters since,its origin in a room back of the regent‘s office, and has been shifted from place to place as it outgrew its facilities.. Student assistants worked in the library in 1880 for five cents an hour, and there were always more appliâ€" cants than positions. Dean Thomas Arkle Clark was an assistant in his First mention of a library at the university â€" dates back to 1867; says anâ€"Associated> Press dispatch from Urbana when Dr. Gregory, regent of the Illinois Indystrial ‘university, was given $1,000 to purchase a workâ€" ing collection of books. Towering over the other new buildâ€" ings on the south campus of the Uniâ€" versity of Illinois, the library buildâ€" ing is but twoâ€"fifths complete. Lookâ€" ing into the future, the university officials have set aside a huge area for necessary additions in the next 30 or 40 years. *‘ Sixth largest institutional library in the world, the University of Illiâ€" 'n. lllinois Now Has Sixth Largest Among Institutions; Was Long Awaited OPEN NEW LIBRARY =â€" in â€"the presence T H E â€"P PE HIGHLAND PARK, ILL. priation was granted in 1927, _ _ 1. Ahereâ€" are 762166 Vohl%:ï¬iï¬ library ‘at the present time,â€"making priation for $500,000 was made in parison with other university libraâ€" ries in America, It ranks first in Next Week Nov. 9 Saturday Nov. 8 Friday Wed.â€"Thurs Nov. 6â€"7 Nov. 4â€" Sunday Fri.â€"Sat. Nov. Tel. H. P. 2400 Every Evening ‘at 7:00 Matinees Saturday, 2 to 5 â€" _\ "The Cocoanuts" A stirring war picture which had the full assistance of the French military. â€" It conveys no bifterness;â€" $ â€" no national hatred. . C "FOUR FEATHERS" "THE HUNGARIAN RHAPSODY" ~~~*THE MYSTERIOUS DR. FU MANCHU® "The Soul of France" A beautiful picture from the story by Marg LOIS MORAN â€" TOM PATRICOLA An allâ€"talking, thrilling, dramatic picture of a %.. ¢ dareâ€"devil aviator! f . â€"*L IN D A" THE BEST PICTURES AT THE 4 MARX BROTHERS Lh " : t â€" "o iC _ wo * ““6 Puthe® Pcvure “‘"“', C" 2a Sn BOYP HIGHLAND PARK The Allâ€"Talking Musical Revue AÂ¥ College loveâ€"â€"â€"~Rah, Rah life! HELEN FOSTER One of the best pictures in an . .. Allâ€"Talking Comedy Hit 4* Screamingly funny (Synchronized) c with _ _ â€" "The Woman «10 °+ enns yivania Tollowing in order. tunutothomomhryv;luaf&q volumes, but the inventory reveals a value of $1,574,797._ braries, with California, Michi with MARY: ASTOR ROY DARCY Doors open at 6:30 Continuous Sundays, 2 to 11 TELEPHONE H. P. 1034 oTTO LANG, Mer . Montague FAI