Thus wrote the eminent English essayist,. Macaulay, during the tryâ€" ing times of 1830. "Omn what principle is it," he asks, wthat when we see nothing but imâ€" provement behind us, we are to exâ€" meet nothing but deterioration beâ€" A Single Breaker May Recede But the Tide is Coming In! fore us > . Although â€" Ma stimulating anal it is in!erestinz makes specificre believe you will ested in‘ his com â€" History | natural pro in almost of mankind dividua der faster rUD proa the +h mugy)AY, heavily ta eve 1MR eou CEREETT UITC ET CPRTCTITEICE PM AIAm J ETY Westâ€"Riding of Yorkshire now are| "Six millions aâ€"year and a debt of â€"that cultivation, rich as that of a| fifty millions!" excelaimed Swift â€" Hower garden, will be carried up to "the high allies have been the ruin the very tops of Ben Nevis and Helâ€"| of us." 3 vellyn â€" that machines constructed "A hundred and forty millions of on principles yet undiscovered will‘debt." said Juniusâ€""well may we say be in every houseâ€"that there will\that we owe ‘Lord Chatham more be no highways but railroads, no| than we shall ever pay, if we owe traveling but by steamâ€"that our | hm such a debt as this." debt, vast as it seems to us, will' "Two hundred and forty millions appear to our greatâ€"grandchildren a|of debt!" cried all the statesmen of ArC ear 1 W rer x Ladies Sport Blouses Regularly priced at $1.95 Dofiar Day Dance Sets Of Pure Silks. Nothing finer could purchased for $1.95. s For this sale, only Colors, Flesh. White and Tem Rose Rayon Bloomers Extra and Regular Sizes Detlar Day Children‘s Sox â€" DAILY‘S aX LADIES‘ WASH FROCKS $IZE8 16 to 44. VALUES to $1.95 You‘ll hare to hurry for these i 544 Central Avenue _ Highland Park 1072 pair \ for DOLLAR DAY SPECIALS comments fu e value AUGUST 9, 1934 of society. We see part of the annals the industry of inâ€" aulay wrote this sis 100 years ago, to note that he wrence to 1930, We e unusually interâ€" we offered such values. t and be disappointed ! Vary More Interesting and Exceptional V alwes 1 Pew Silk Dresses are also to be include‘d. ir ‘OI former EUmes nceived;â€"a debt public debts that world added toâ€" f the peonle stuâ€" ired with which, c into insignifiâ€" ch as the most neare? i a ‘ We prophesy nothing; but this we sayâ€"if any person had told the Parâ€" nent English liament which met in perplexity and ring the tryâ€") terror after the crash of 1720 that in 1830 the wealth of England would s it," he asks,| surpass dll their wildest dreams, thing but imâ€"| that the annual revenue would equal we are to exâ€" the principal of that debt which ‘rioration be-‘they considered an intolerable burâ€" !denâ€"t.hat for one man of £10,000 wrote this then living, there would be five men 00 years ago,| of £50,000; that London would be 1ote that he|twice as large and twice as populous e to 1930. We| and that nevertheless the rate of usually interâ€"| mortality would have diminished to . {one-half what it then wasâ€"that the > signs of the| postâ€"office would bring more into the iety. We see)exchéquer than the excise and cusâ€" of the annals|toms had brought in together under idustry of inâ€"| Charles IIâ€"that stageâ€"coaches would up _ against| run from London to Yark in twentyâ€" ‘onflavrations,| four hoursâ€"that men would sail ns and more without wind, and would be beginâ€" is, creates ning to ride without, horsesâ€"our anâ€" ts can squanâ€"| Cestors would have given as much n f nattons in the can squanâ€" er invaders he eurrency ind _ impruâ€" n s _ one of small will we think for these unequalled for m on D« ip $1 $1 $1 $1 trifling encumbrance, which might easily be paid off in a year or twoâ€" many people would think us insane. (imes, what, in the fime of Uliver C:omwell, had been thought intolâ€" erably oppressive. _ To almost all men the state of things in which they have been used to live seems to be the necessary state of things. We have heard it said, that five per cent in the natural interest of money, that twelve is the natural number of a jury, that forty shillâ€" ings is the natural qualification of a county voter. Hence it is, that though, in every age everybody knows that up to his own time ‘proâ€" vressive improvement has been takâ€" ing place, nobody seems to reckon on any improvement during the next generation. We cannot absolutely prove that those are in error who tell us that society has reached the turning pointâ€"â€"that we have sean our best days. But so said all who came beâ€" fore us, and with just as much apâ€" parent reason. | azen "A million aâ€"year will beggar us, said the patriots of 1640. _ _ â€" "Two millions aâ€"year will grind the country to powder," was the cry in 1660. 16 m U Child‘s Wash Frocks 2 to 14 years, priced orIiNRINY M T‘D" Reautifully hand tailored and embroidâ€" ored styles. This is the time to lay in a supply for school wear. $1 «t the ridiculously low price of Silk Slips â€" Panties Sleeping Pajamas Fine Tailored and lace trimmed styles. Flesh, White and Tea Rose $1 Reduced for Dollar Day only to.. Regular $1.59 value Doliar Day only Rayon Panties Extra and Regular Sizes Dollar Day iss t to t illiver the prediction would have been and they would have perceived it was not altgether absurd, if had considered that the country then raising =«gry year & sum 1 would have purchased the feeâ€" le of the revenue of the Planâ€" rets â€"â€"ten times what supported rovermment of Elizabeth â€"three t, what, in the time of Oliver iwel!. had been thought intolâ€" nc values. Stock is bmited ars, priced. ofiginnlly tokfl.gs i nave given as much prediction as they gave Travels. 2 for $1 $1 $1 1783 in chorusâ€""what abilities, or what ecsonomy on the part of & minâ€" ister, can save a country so burâ€" dened?" We know that if, since 1783, no fresh debt had been inâ€" curred, ‘the. increased resources of the country would have enabled us to defray that burden, at which Pitt, Fox and Burke stood aghastâ€"nay, to defray it over and over again, and that with much lighter taxation than what we have actually borne.. On what principle is it, that when we see nothing but improvement beâ€" hind us, we are to expect nothing hut deterioration before us ? It is not by the intermeddling of Mr. Southey‘s idolâ€"the omniscient and omnipotent Stateâ€"but; by the p:udence and energy of the people, that England has hitherto . been catrried forward in civilization; and it is to the same prudence and the same energy that we now l6ok with romfort and good hope. Our }‘ulurs will best promote the ‘improvement of the nation by <trictly confining themselveg. to their rwn legitimate duties â€" by leaving capital to find "ts most Mucrative ‘burse, commodities their ffir price, industry and intelligence their naâ€" ural reward, idleness and folly their naiursl punishment â€" by imaintainâ€" ing peace, by defending property, by !iminishing the price of ï¬lw, and y observing strict egonomy in every department of the state. | Let the Government dn‘thisâ€"â€"â€"th‘e People will assuredly do the rest. | (From Lord Thomas ‘Babingtor Macaulay‘s Essay on Southey‘s Colâ€" loquies on Society, published: in Edâ€" inburgh Review, January, 1830. | Prairie View Band In Music Festival The Prairie View Concéert Band has been entered in the: Chicago Lond Music Festival and will play at the, Prake Hotel ‘Saturday mornâ€" Ing, Aug.,18. n the evening they will be one of the 46 bands which will present a concert in Soldier‘s Field | READ ABOUT but the care and feeding of automobilé§ is off our hands I £41 2 2f hk s THE PRESS Tedunts This CLTS is a joint emergency sebyige rendered through a large group of cooperating â€" settlement %hotjjg‘tes and other social and recreaâ€" |tiapal centers all over Chicago. It | is [#ponsored by the Mlinois Emerâ€" im‘#}cy Relief Commission and the '('h’ficign Council of Social Agencies. 1 .l),vpr at Olivet there are represenâ€" | tatives of 22 different nationalities, | bygiâ€"the . families for ,whom the '}c}‘:‘[rch and institute are an educaâ€" Lt flul and revreational haven, are | la]gely Hungarian and Ricilian. Peoâ€" \ pl#) 6f this latter nationalfty make iu'é‘:‘f Imost the entire patronage of th&j‘artivitivs that are being carried CoR 18 a branch location at Penn and O“vét Institute Has . / Leisure Time Service \ Wighland Park Presbyterians who subscribe to the work of Olivet Inâ€" stitnte, the community service cenâ€" tel;;:‘established by Chicago and subâ€" urbdgn Presbyterians as a mission 465!‘years ago, are interested just noW in the program of supervised hah‘fwork and constructive play whith closeto 500 people are pursuâ€" in*;loy’et there, aided by trained proâ€" feg§gional workers assigned by the CHildren‘s Leisure Time Service proâ€" i oA If a branch location at Penn and \'édd( streets, but there is a fasâ€" ci@Wating ‘variety of tongues among the ‘visitors frequenting the main buildings at 1441 Cleveland Avenue, sofn't'h of North Avenue in the 500 bl (He who every morning plans the trAnsactiqns of the day, and follows out. that ?)lar\, carries a thread that will guide him through the labyâ€" rinth of (the most busy life. The nrge,rly arranfement of his time is like a ray of light which darts itâ€" self through all his occupations. But \»"!Ld'ere no plan is laid, where the disâ€" pdgal of time is surrendered merely t(ï¬hc chance of accidents, all things llt’fhuddled together in one chaos, which admits of neither distribuâ€" tighn nor review.â€"Hugo. [ BOOUKS CHILDREN ‘Duquoin, IIl., July 5.â€"Have you perused ‘the graphi¢ arts code reâ€" cently put into effect by Mr. Johnâ€" son ? $ I One item especially intrigues me. The code provides that the printer charge < his customers * $5.50 for, a thousand 6% envelopes costing the printer .$1.80 per thousand. Now : Postmaster ‘General Farley, the government‘s superâ€"salesman of printing and other things, will sell you an envelope of, practically the same grade for $22.§#8 with a 2 cent stampâ€" attached, making the thouâ€" sand envelopes cost the customer £2.48, less than half what the printer must charge or be fined and imprisâ€" oned to sugch an extént as may suit the pleasure of, the presiding judge. Now Mr. Farley employs thousands of salesmen to sell his product. Every mail carrier, Plerk, and postâ€" master‘ will take your order. They will: be delivered to your office or residence, all transportation charges paid by Mr. Farley,{which is a conâ€" siderablé.item in view of the fact that they originate in Ohio. . siderable it that they or This isn‘t A LETTER Shampoo â€" shampoo â€" 506 Central or LILL x new ;deal l'te found a way to relieve my husband of bothering about the car. He doesn‘t have to remember to have it greased. A.J"ld we don‘t have it laid up just when we want to go out for an evening. § |I look after it myself, without any effort. Of coursg it‘s flt men at the Standard Oil Station who really do it. When I have them take the car to be greased, they never, miss ything. And, of course they have the very best ‘iubrh ants. So, we don‘t worry a minute, or even think about it" ey take the responsibility.‘ And we find they do it right. r expenses are less than they were before. So why ouldn‘t we leave it to them? } > Mrs. Rafforty â€" Edyth Ehreps venue Phone High! £3C1L + fIGIUET 1 Marcel â€" Manicure. se $100 $1.00 OFF ON PERMANENTS Y BEAUTY SHOPPE Set â€" Marcel Above New National Tea DOLLAR DAY SPECIALS . It‘s just! a resurrection of piracy on the hig seas, a sort Oof glorification of & pone tacketegring methods. _ And the administ.rition tells us that we may not like.it but that it is good for us in thefJlong run. But I‘ve a weak heart and can‘t run very well. R.R. Kimbro in The Chicago Tribune. Mrs. George A. Parker Is Buried Tuesday Funeral services for Mrs. Emma Parker (nee Backus) wife pf George A Parker, 596 Skokie Avenue, Highâ€" land Park, wgre held Tuesday afterâ€" noon â€" at St} John‘s â€" Evangelical Church, {Highland Park, with Rev. F. G. Piepenbrok officiating. / Mrs. Rarker was born August 17, 1863 at Kewagkum, Wis, and pasg}ed away August 4, 1934. She was married in August, 1890, to Gen% A. Parker. ~She is survived by her husband, five thildren Cerita, Isabel, Clarence, Julia and Helen; seven grandchildren and one brother Wilâ€" liam Backus bf Kewaskum, Wis.‘ Phone Highland Park 2037 Read the Want Ads PAGE FIVE 44 +4 tb F® ( E8B . 8P i x &0 oi F§ 4 # &