1 i 1| es . .â€" . TOMMY airTHs, svansron T _ % * _ DYCHB ST BV N . °C commercial accounts largely because of service inducement which they Chicago ‘ and other large communâ€" amounting to a pani¢c at times. The public generally, and especially deâ€" positors, have a right to insist that a bank‘s first duty and responsibility is absolute safety to its depositors, and any remedy for the present sitâ€" uation including revision of the of the banking laws of Illinois should be based upon this foremost responsibility. "Perhaps depositors themselves have a duty to perform and a cerâ€" tain amount of responsibility of which it is well to speak in connecâ€" tion with the present situation. Deâ€" positors in the era of competition OUNTY BA (Continued from page 2) were PARADE THROUGH EVANSTON _ BEFORE GAME m MILITARY REVIEW ON FIELD AT 1:45 P. M. ADMISSION $2.00 NoVvEMBER 12 â€"â€"_ 2230 P. M. â€"â€" MILITARY ACADEMY ST. JOHN‘S C U LV E B as a result of an optimistic belief on the part of bankers that depositâ€" ors would increase their balances to such an extent that the service ultiâ€" mately would show a profit. have not tried to correct that situâ€" ation which primarily grew about ness or factory cannot be operated at a profit when 66% per cent of the business costs more than is realâ€" ized. The depositor has a right to wonder why the bankers themselves as their right, which have grown to such dimensions that it "A depositor, particularly a busiâ€" ness man, should realize that busiâ€" became impossibleé for banks, inâ€" cluding the neighborhood banks, which suffered such a severe morâ€" tality during the last few years, to operate other than at a loss. These banks supplied collection and other important service, when according to the Illinois Bankers Association, twoâ€"thirds of the accounts repreâ€" sented only six per cent of the total deposits, and averaged only $25.00 V ET s U s TB A L L ! THE RBRESS Iissued at the Lake county courtâ€" house at Waukegan. "_ Willie Stange,â€"33, Highland Park; }hry. 'l‘r_ean_ior, 87, Highland Park. 11:00 a.m. Holy Communion and sermon. * Announcements: . Members of the Rector‘s Guild will meet on Monday, Nov. 7, in the parish house. Luncheon will be served at 1:00 o‘clock. Following luncheon there will be an address by Mrs, Albert Cotsworth, Jr., the viceâ€" president of the Diocesan Woman‘s Auxiliary. â€" Sunday, Nov. 6, the 24th Sunday after Trinity, Allegiance Sunday: 7:80 a.m. Holy Communion. 9:30 a.m. The Church school servâ€" East Laurel avenue F ~! The Hallowe‘en dance given by margue . __| the Social committee of the Ravinis M Si¢s, ~ . | Woman‘s club at the Village House snapdr Catholic Women Meet The North Shore Catholie Wom an‘s league wlu-holg their rezn:: . Puesday, Nov. 8, at 1 m Woman‘s> club. â€" Mrt . Blanche Chenoweth will lecture 0# f "Her. Heart‘s Desire."â€"~The hostess® P artistic manner with harvest deco rations and special lighting. Electrically lighted pumpkin: Jack oâ€" lanterns lighted the place, and 4 huge bouquet of decorative broom plants added its artistic effect. Arrangements © and | decorations were in charge of Mrs. J. C. Emerf of the social committee, Hallowe‘en Dance _ I you â€"â€"â€"Is Largely Attended #) â€" In Aaddition to his host of friends on the North Shore, Mr. Spencer‘s associates in the firm of Small, Spencer and Brewer, newspapers representatives, of Chicago, moum his untimely death. . __Mr. Spencer wayg a brother of the late Dumaresq Spencer, the first Highland ‘ Park boy killed in the World war, after whom the Ameriâ€" can Legion= post of this city is named. Egbert Spencer was a past® commander of Dumaresq Spencer post. M is living in Highland. Park; two brothers, Commander E. W:; Spencer of the U.S.S. "Saratoga," and Fredâ€" erick L. Spencer, of Barrington; and two sister, Mrs. oJseph S. Richâ€" artson of Concord, Mass., and Mrs. to Andover and Yale, from which he â€"was graduated in 1914. He left busiâ€" ness to enter Reserve Officers Trainâ€" ing camp at Fort Sheridan in 1917, after which he was appointed aide to Gen. Charles Martin, with whom he went overseas in 1918. He was with the Army of Occunation in Germany, and at the end of his period of war service was a captain. He married Miss Frances Kemp, only daughter of Mrs. Edward Kemp, of Winnéetka, in 1925. Their country home is "Stonewall," at Barâ€" rington. 3 Besides his wife, Mr.Spencer is survived by two small daughters, Susan and Sally; his mother, Mrs. Egbert Hughes Spencer, son of the late Earl W. Svencer and Mrs, Spencer, was born Aug. 18, 1890, at Stonewall. Jersey, England. He was 42 years old at the time of his death, I"'Jducated' in th;a i;;l;li;_s-é-l;o;i; :‘fl Highland Park, from here he went other nearby cities, as well as from the East, were here to pay their last resnects. _ The services were in charge of the Rev. Christooh Keller, of Trinity church, assisted by the Rev. Robert Holmes, of Evanston, who officiated at the wedding of Mr. and Mrs, Spencer in 1925. : The hall was decorated in a most (Continued from page 3) KNOWN HERE, DiFs THURSDAY, NOVEMBER ; plants. Mr. 1 lilies, across. these 1 bition, be no : In g Bahr‘s "Snow mums now o West well w Bahr‘s There but a Bea ~"Co usual the it will t Tong t ship c to hel Highl; child Qison Ma ditio All