PINKY DINKY For Quality and Service “RANT" “5 Mali“ Rand MIMI-d Park mm? 799 Tse? ', N‘\ LN Inquire About Our Low Prices LAUGH/ MAIN OFFIFE AND PLANT Ill North Stale "and . Arlington I the former owner of North Shore Cleaners and Byers PEERLESS CLEANERS L).; D Y E R S U/x'rulal by \rlington Heights call Arlington Heights 123 Highland Park t3i7 I’HON ES THE PRESS By Terry Gilkison For the three your peroid of 1926 to 1923 inclusive " total of 150 accidents was registered with a total of 186 deaths. This is a marked increase over the preceding three-year period of 1923 to 1925 inclusive when the total num- by of accident: was only 112 with l While the statistics hold the akii respnnsihle for the majority of win. ter accidents. Alpine flowtrs are the cause of the great majority of sum- mer accidents. it is in trying to pick mum rare blossom on the edge of I precipice or on top of a peak that the average summer alpine climber hill to his death. Alpine Climbing Is Becoming Dangerous; To Keep Statistics no... W um'nc'lwam, m- THERB WAS A MAN m LYNN WHO WAS 50 EXCEED! NGLY _ THIN Tm WHEN HE ESSAYED To WINK LEMONADE HE SLIFPED Ttqrtootitot* STRAW AND FELL IN - M M: 4 waefier.. PtNKY DINKY JINGLES/ deaths 'ijrifii,'d/ Itrr Druce Lake Cottage" Lose Damsite Suit in Supreme Court, Report A battle between farmers ttnd cot- tage owners in the vicinity of Bruce and Third Lakes in Lake county was decided in favor, of the farmers last week when the Supreme court return- ed a decision upholding a permanent injunction grantnd the farmers re- straining the cottage owners from building a dam to prevent the two lakes from draining away. The case was listed as M. Blanch- ard and others against Carlisle Bruce and others. _ T Ccttage owners got a permit to rebuild a dam to save the two lakes from draining away, but the farmers secured an injunction permanently re- straining the cottagers from building the dam on the grounds that it in.. terfered with the eonstruetiorfot the drainage system being put in by the farmers who were reclaiming some of their low lands that frequently stood with water a part of each year. Owners of cottages around the Jake declare that without the dameoth Third and Bruce Lakes will soon be drained to small ponds. Saccharin By-Product of Coal; Other Things Obtained from Fuel "Sweeter than coal" is more accur- ate than the time-honored phrase, "Sweeter than Sugar." _ Saccharin. a by-product of coal, is the sweetest thing in the world, be- ing 500 times sweeter than one su- gar. Edward Steidman of the geo- logy department of the Virginia Mil- itary institute, Lexington. Va., and a contributing editor to Ameriea's newest encyclopedia. the World Book, told agroup of students. Mr. Steidman read the manuscript he prepared for the World Book on the story of coal. and called it one of the most interesting stories in hu. man annals. Hundreds of hy-prod- ucts come from coal, he said, and the rummodity touches everyday life in thousands of ways. Produces Strange Things "One ton of coal is capable of pro. ducing many things." said Mr. Steid. man. "One ton will yield 440 pounds of 235: over 1,400 pounds of coke, whose pr~ducts are used to make beta tery carbons; 6% pounds of gas Ii- quid, from which comes catholic aeid, creosote, fertilizers for gardens, laughing gas. used by dentists in extracting teeth, aspirin, with which to deeded. pain, and liquid ammonia for electric refrigerators; 120 pounds of tar, which produces dyes for mil. ady’s clothes; paint for the house; paving materials for the streets. and hundred, of other products and by- products. "Saccharin is a white, odorless powder, used ehiefly in the making of candy. and in baking and preserv- ine," said Mr. Steidman. "It is also used to counteract diabetes." "The United States possesses Ip- proximately two-thirds of the entire coal supply of the world, and we mine nearly twice as much coal each year as Great Britain, nearly three times as much as Germany, and I doxen times as much " France." Thursday, March 6, 1930