ent r1al. ogâ€" ubâ€" pal urâ€" i&_‘ is of hig ners "an rul. ter. the th â€" â€"Pur iet_worry, â€"jealously, fear of losing‘s wne‘s job, one‘s moï¬rzwg; whole picture is changed. ~The emoâ€" tional â€"tension â€"tires ~both ~mind and body, which cannot go on without vicient ‘stimulation, and the process of decay is hastened. Most of the deaths from heart disease and kidney trouble are the result of emotional tension rather than any real defect in the physical organs, â€"â€" LIFERE With all the talk about tbe"ifn- treased average length of human e, thvmof’lonm:tmaimthenor- mal limit for the human being. â€" So Dr. Logis Dublin, medical head one of the great insurance companâ€"| ~The International Redâ€" Cross is preparing for the next war. One of the certainties about the next war on any large scale is that poison gas will â€" before. War is no longer an affair of kings and hired armies; it is whols nations against whole nations,. The aggressor in the next great war will ___.1ot_wait for theâ€"enemyâ€"toâ€"assembl an army but will try to wipe out from the clouds. _ Anger, fear, worry, especially the latter, kill more people than "real" dise according to a report recentâ€" ly m «o the New York Academy of Medicine. There is no such thing as overwork, either of body or: mind. The body, given sufficient nourishâ€" ment, will quit of its own accord when fatigue beeo?es too great, and a night‘s sleep wi put it back b:into trinm again. â€" Probably no human hasevermdhisbnintoitlfï¬ capacity. Men who have studied that subject say that magk af n‘ w2.. $ than What the Red Cross is looking for issomomea‘nsotdetactiuzthe most minute trace ofâ€"poison gas in the air. APï¬SOOf‘!,OOOi:pfle_rthom sucessful inventor. And we call this a civilized world! EMOTIONS . pacity, ._Men who have stnd{:d that bject say that most of us use less BUk HCL â€"WOrrC â€" HAhlancl._ 4â€"â€"â€"__ + GAS Now capital in large amount has been subscribed to finance industries which. will contract with farmers for their stalks, after harvest, send their own machines into the fields to gather them, and haul them to central points where they will be manufactured into useful products. This will help conâ€" serve the forests and will also add, to the profits of the corn growers. pean has put up to every farmer in the cornâ€"growing regions theprobhmofhowtomfldofhil cornstalks and hold the pest in check, new inventions for the utilization of this farm waste for making paper and also a substitute for lumber have been perfected. ‘ CORNSTALKS Th ie m?“ too great, and sleep will put it back into â€" Probably no human bei used his brain to its f:ï¬ James: . There goes the old rascal who swindled me out of $50,000, & Peter: How did he do that ? Jm: He wouldn‘t let me marry his daughter. Would not beâ€" worth fighting over. Coal is losing its importance in the economic scheme of things, now that oil has become the principal fuel for the . world‘sâ€"naviesâ€"asâ€"well as â€"the merchant marine. would If we ever do go to war a::nz: Great Britain it will be over s thing far more important than a coalâ€"bed .located where the temperâ€" ature is always below freezing and usually 40 degrees or so ‘below zero. COAL Perfectly Reasonable fhnot be THE HIGHLAND PARK HOSPITAT T HB PR B $ $s speed recovery. Forâ€"there he has all the facilities to More and more the Family Physician, as well as the Specialist prefers to do his work through a modern hasnital s elephone Highland Park s Jt was in the restaurant in one of the â€"smaller towns of England 4*] _"Have you any oysters?" ‘asked ©~] the diner. _ â€" y *) â€""No, sir," said the waiter. "*]| \"Any lobsters?" "No, sir. Oh, she‘s a fresh and fair land, Oh, she‘s true and rare land! Yes, she‘s a rare and fair land, This native land of mine. This native ,Ludf"fl“ni:;u "'1 And virtue still reward i reward her, _ No foe would cross her border, No friend within it pine. No men than hers gare braver; Her women‘s hearts ne‘er waver; I‘d freely die to save her, She‘s not a dull nor cold land; No! She‘s a warm and bold land; Oh, she‘s a true and old land, No â€"â€"(By Thomas Osborne Davis) She is a rich and rare land; Oh, she‘s a fresh and fair dand,â€" She is a dear and rare land, is heggs, sir." Petroleum Products Company Telephones : My omly shellfish we gressâ€"that will "strike out t the Iimitaâ€" tions on both sections, which of course is highly desirable. * amended, provides m.;mucwm for compensation must filed prior to April 6, 1930. This is covered under Section No. 209 of the act. Bectionâ€"No. 206 of the same act proâ€" vides that all evidence in support of chimwmmt be filed by April 6, 1930. tion is being prepared by the _pensation not Later â€"â€"â€"_. Than April 6th, 1930 sn uns l'-inl-vh-uas..-. 'Mm‘..““‘:“ You are cordially invited to visit the Reading Room HOURS: Week days, 9 a.m. to 6 o m First Church of Christ, Scientist of Highland Park 361 Central Ave., Highland Park * Maintained by J CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM 381 Hazel Avenue CHURCH SERVICES Sunday School 9 :30 a.m. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. only, 81 t] ty )