Much of the common and the unâ€" usual trouble of the world can be traced to the incompetence of people who cannot think in any other way but what "ought" or "ought not" to be. They outâ€"number by a thousand to one the trained thinkers of any city or community, and since our public office candidates know that the igâ€" norant vote is more numerous than the intelligent vote, we have legislators and magistrates and police who are quite indifferent about doing what ought to be done and too frequently do what ought not to be done. In other words, human nature being parasitical and every day in need and want of many things, is apt to beâ€" come an opportunist and forget conâ€" science and moral or civil or political obligations. In one community lately every office holder from the mayor down to the latest policeman have been found guilty of the most bare faced robbery of the treasury and all sent tongue because she can think only in terms of "what ought to be." It is the same as saying a blind man Mtbh-vceyu-ullee‘:::oï¬u people. Lady Astor takes pride in her critical powers that nobody has the ability to convince her that such anticism is unreasonable and makes trouble. ‘The ignorant people of her territory think she is a Godâ€"send. Beâ€" sides she is rich and spends money on their poor. She was one of the chief leaders of the conservative appeasers who could not believe the Germans were wicked and that England should be spending money on "Poor Relief" instead of building battle ships and aeroplanes. The noble Duke of Bedâ€" ford is another oughtâ€"toâ€"be fellow. He thinks that Chamberlain, Halifax and Henderson at Munich did not reason with Hitler. So that even today he insists that some one else ought to go to Germany and see what can be done to "reason with Hitler." This is going to shock some p but it has to be said because true. If you would like to be to pick out an inept thinking person, here is the sign and symbol of that wuh,“hade.ml be using the words "it ought" or "ought not." . The New Englanders say: "It hadn‘t ought to be." Such mkmu.nymbtb only sure and dependable form of mental training, and that is â€" logic and an understanding of the scientific Lady Astor, the American woman who has been a member of the British House of Commons, is one of these inâ€" WHAT‘S ON YOUR MIND? * s Jt ;. DO‘s AND DON‘TS FOR BAKING HAM DO follow my special recipe enâ€" elosed with every Wilson Certiâ€" fied Smoked Ham. DO have ham at room tempera~ ture before baking it. DON‘T forget that a cold ham requires about 5 minutes more per pound to bake. DON‘T cover the pan, nor add water when baking. Now! stay.â€"rresn, STAY.CLEAN MEATS fresh beef, lamb and veal, any out, large or small, immaculately protected against dust, handling; and evaporation of the juicesâ€" Easy Ham Glaze Roast an average size Wilson‘s Certified Smoked Ham (12 to 14 pounds) 18 minutes per pound, or until meat thermometer regisâ€" ters 155° F. Remove skin. Spread ham with syrup, sift brown sugar WILs ON‘s by Savant Week"" reaiprs _ The opera season with its presenâ€" tation of many articles, and its varied program inspires us to become more hï¬&-"&rhm and its direction scholar, the opera goer and the thinker views opera as a social and historical perâ€" formance. They may wish to examine it in relation to current issues, or to study the style of the composer, the customs of the theatre, or the folkâ€" lore of the times. They will find inâ€" formation and answers among the music books at the Highland Park Public Library, Besides the books on music listed here, there is a selection of opera scores and librettos for cirâ€" culation. American Opera and its composers â€"E. E. Hipsher. A complete history of serious Amerâ€" ican opera with a summary of the lighter forms. abroadâ€"M. S. Teasdale. 1900 through season 1937â€"38. Naâ€" tionality and character, time and places of premieres arranged chronoâ€" logically; with principals of casts in the United States. WD; L 1% B 72 H Pk. ® Woods to A Crobetti & wf its WD; Pt of N 100 ft B 2 in Plat C of Highwood. M Schweitzer to C Stewart & wf jts WD; L 11 in Arthur Dunas‘ Ravinis Terrace Bec 36 Deerfleld. Nevember B6, TBEX â€"â€"â€" ~.â€"â€">â€"â€"â€"â€":â€"â€" ‘The stories of the operas, with 400 of the leading airs and motives in musical notation. A book of operas, their histories, their plots and their musicâ€"H. E. Krehbicl. J Varon & wf to D Wanger Jr. & wï¬ jts B Lescault & hus to M Schreiner & wf is ;linlbuhlllmhll H Pk Acre Subn See 21 Dearfleld. . _ The Wagnerian romances â€"CG. Hall, Opera Synopseis, a guide to the plots and characters of the standard operas â€"J. W. McSpadden. American singer; a hundred years of success in operaâ€"O. Thompson. Midawy in my song, the autobioâ€" graphy of Lottie Lehmann. My Wife and 1; the story of Louise and Sidney Homerâ€"S, Homer. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS g-;yb;lian.uu:llm-u- o us Tds m 1y er WD: 8% N% L 34 in J 8 Hoviand‘s H Pk_Acre Subn Sec 21 Deerfleld. E Braucher & wf to A Phelan & M Pheâ€" lan jte WD; N 60 ft of L 9 B 11 in Lake Forest Heights See 8 Deerfleld. C Potts & wf to H Woodworth & F Seville jte WD; Pt of L 51 in Second Ravine Schumannâ€"Heink, the last of the Titansâ€"Mary Lawton. orest Sec 21 Sheilds you bake meats? Ever try the new low temperatures (300° F. to 350° F.)? These temperatures prevent wasteful evaporation of meat juices. For the holidays, try a Wilson‘s Certifiecd Smoked Complete opera bookâ€"G, Kobbe. coating of arystalâ€"clear, edible But why suppose? You cant For Wilson & Co. has perfected a way to take fine meats at the peak of their freshness, and seal them completely with a thin _ Ask your dealer for Wilson‘s Gela Seald fresh beef, lamb or does not add to the cost of the Well, thousands are giving this year "the gift that is there"â€" Wilson‘s Certified Meats. Practical to give or receive are Boned Chicken, Cocktail Saw« sagesâ€"and many other delss» table Wilson Certified specialtios. Back next week with Yule Library to Wilion & Co. 1883â€"1935â€" L E. C. Moore. CHRISTMAS SEASON OPENS I.on't-Wlnollu'u Do With Seats For Nine Season in Highland Park was officially opened, Barteilman Reports Dodge has begun production of two lowâ€"priced longâ€"wheelbase Fluidâ€"Drive models, one a sedan, the other a limousine, according to Bert Bartel man of Van Guilder Motors, Inc. "Though the company‘s literature identifies the larger cars as ‘7â€"passanâ€" ger‘ models, the seating capacity in reality provides space for nine occuâ€" pants," he says, "since even the foldâ€" ing center seats are so wide and so closely placed that three passangers may ride on them in comfort." ‘The dome light is arranged for double duty, functioning automatically with the opening and closing of the right rear door. A further conveniâ€" ence is provided in the form of a map light set into the instrument panel. For map reference, this light is turned on or off through a handy switth. At other times the light operates autoâ€" matically with the opening of the right front door. The limousine model has a second dome light separately illuminating the front compartment, With a wheelbase of 137% inches, the cars have an overâ€"all length of 219% inches. The attractively upholâ€" stered, heat and soundâ€"insulated inâ€" terior provides two pillar lights in addition to the dome light over the rear window. & f Lip Reading Class At Central YMCA A 12â€"week course in lip reading inâ€" struction for the deaf will be offered by Central YMCA College beginning December 8, Dr. Edward J Sparling, president, announced this week. Clasâ€" ses will be held on Mondays, Wednesâ€" days and Fridays from 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. in the College building at 19 south LaSalle street. Two instructors in Lip Reading of wide experience will be in charge. They are Miss Cora Elsie Kinzie, auâ€" thor of the Kinzie Method of Graded Instruction in Lip Reading, and Mrs. Medary S. Copeland, Principal of the Kinzie Institute of Lip Reading, Chiâ€" cago. The course will be open to adults with any degree of deafness having command of language, and is designed to give the student a working foundaâ€" tion in lip reading on which he may build indefinitely. Press Staff Photo A section of the crowd of several hundred mothers, fathers and childâ€" The Most Delicious Chicken You‘ve Ever Eates sOLD WHOLE OR BYâ€"THEâ€"PIECE marvelous Flavorâ€"They never touch the ground: 4 Fob 17 varietise of vitaminized feed snd . | fg_ All Ned prosared in our own moders A DELICIOUS DRUMSTICK OR womer SERVE enc fullt â€"~ WHATEVER o aXBL _ .. PARTS oï¬ f{’i«, role . FAaniLt aud @ im t MA snz : " on 4 aUESTS LIKE BEST JAMES BOWDEN & SON 536 CENTRAL AVE. DELICIOUS For Your Sunday Dinner! DISTRIBUTOR The United States Civil Service Commission announces an open comâ€" petitive â€" examination for HEAT TREATER HELPER, $5.28 to $6.88 a day, in the Ordnance Service, War CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS Applcants must have reached their 18th birthday but must not have passâ€" ed their 55th birthday on the closing date for receipt of applications. The age limits are waived, however, in the cases of those persons granted miliâ€" tary preference. Application blanks and full inforâ€" mation as to experience and other reâ€" quirements may be obtained from the Secretary, Board of U. S. Civil Serâ€" vice Examiners, Rock Isuand Arsenal, Rock Island, Iilinois; Secretary, Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, at any first or secondâ€"class post office in the States of Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin; or the Manager, Sevâ€" enth U. S. Civil Service District, Post Office Building, Chicago, IHlinois. Applications must be on file with the Secretary, Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, Rock Island Arâ€" senal. Rock Island, Illinois, on or beâ€" fore the close of business on Decenmâ€" Rock Island, IHlinois. ber 26, 1941 CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS The United States Civil Service Commission announces an open comâ€" petitive examination for MACHINE OPERATOR, SHEET METAL, $5.60 to 37.20 a day, in the Ordnance land Arsenal, Rock Island, IHlinois. Application blanks and full informaâ€" tion as to experience and other reâ€" quirements may be obtained from the Secretary, Board of U. S. Civil Serâ€" vice Examiners, Rock Island Arsenal, Rock â€" Island, _ IIliinois; _ Secretary, Board of U. S. Civil Service Examâ€" iners, at any first or secondâ€"class post offce in the States of Illinois, Michâ€" igan, and Wisconsin; or the Manager, Seventh U. S. Civil Service District, Post Office Building, Chicago, Illinois. Service, War Applications must be on file with the Secretary, Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, Rock Island Arsâ€" enal, Rock Island, IHlinois, on or beâ€" fore the close of business on Decemâ€" ber 9, 1941. no. BARKYARD Isâ€" Tuberculosis |Chiu-u$uh Are Now On Sale Mrs. Austin H. Niblack of Lake Forest, Seal Sale Chairman, reports that contributions to the annual Christâ€" mas Séal Sale of the Lake County Tuâ€" berculosis Association are comingâ€" in good so far. 4,000,000 Eightyâ€"one per cent of the money invested in seal progress last year stayed right here in our own county; the other 19% went to our State and National Tuberculosis Association, but much of this comes back to us through research work, educational matter, etc. Postmen have delivered seals to komes in â€"Lake County. The money from them supports the Lake County Tuberculosis Association and its yearâ€" round campaign against Tuberculosis. Anyone who didn‘t get Seals by mail can obtain them from his local Tuberâ€" culosis Association, Citizen‘s National Bank Building, Waukegan, Illinoisâ€" Phone number 1805. ® Men & Women Needed For Work In the next cighteen months the United States will require an addiâ€" tional 4,000,000 men and women workers in defense industries, Aubrey Williams, national administrator of the National Youth Administration, told a conference here today of state NYA heads from the middle western states. Iilinois, he indicated, needs to conâ€" sider immediately where it is going to get its share of these trained workers. "A million and a half workers in defense industries will be required within six motnh," said Mr. Williams. "And 80 per cent of these will have to be semiâ€"skilled or skilled workers. "My purpose in making this trip through the middle west to the Pacific coast and northwest is to learn at first hand what the training facilities are at present to take care of this huge labor demand. The National Youth Administration is doing its share in meeting the situation. Right this moment a full half of the young peopleâ€" getting â€"employment in â€"defense work have gained basic skills and exâ€" perience on «NYA shop projects." Most of the new workers required to keep the nation‘s assembly lines rollâ€" ing next year will have to come out of the age group from 17 to 21, Mr. Williams declared. To give these youth experience in defense jobs is the imâ€" mediate objective of NYA, he said. The U. S. Army Recruiting Office located in the Post Office Building at Waukegan, Illinois, reports that 12 U. S. Army At Waukegan young men have enlisted in the United States Army at the Wakegan office during the month of November. Joseph Gauranski, Raymond Grignâ€" tis, Louis B. Vickery and Eddie B. Piktel all from North Chicago, Illinois have applied for the U. S. Army Air Corps and are at present stationed at Biloxi, Mississippi. Wiley L. Cartwright of Minong, Wisconsin; Norman Lighthall, Robert J. Rowe and Edward M. Schieres of Wulb?n. Iilinois, and Albert L. Larsen Jr. of Zion, Illinois, have also applied for the Air Corps to be staâ€" tioned at Randolph Field, Texas. 12 Enlist In Howard B. Lund of Black River Falls, Wisconsin and Carl R. Bunde of Fox Lake, Illinois, have selected the Ordnance Corps and will be stationed in Puerto Rico. Joseph Janowitz of North Chicago, Illinois has applied for the Infantry Army Recruiting Station, states that the U. S. Army Air Corps is being greatly expanded and young men who are ambitious and are high school gradâ€" uates may now apply for the Flying course is the same that Flying Cadets receive. Young men with a lesser eduâ€" cation may also apply for the mechanâ€" ical training which the U. S. Army Air Corps offers to its enlisted members. Highwood announce the marriage of their daughter Betty Rose to Peter C. Murphy, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Murphy of Waukegan, formerly of Highland Park. Mrs. Samuel Carothers, Ft. Landerâ€" dale, Fla., has been visiting her sister Mrs. George E. Bliss for the past ten days. 7 So. St. Johns Ave. It is not too early to sit for your Christmas photograph by Mr. and Mrs. Max Engels: of The Gift No One Else Can Give . . . Your Portrait HECKETSWEILER‘S STUDIO 9:00â€"11 :45 2 m. Nursery School* 900â€"1100 am, 24 pm., 810 pm. Telephone Co. Meeting 4:00â€"5:00 pm. Freshmen Girls Club Tuesday, DeDcember 9 j 10:00 am. Y.W.C.A. Board Meeting 10:00 2. m. USO Meeting 7:00 pm. GSO Mecting Thursday, December 11 10:00 am. Creative Writing Class 2:00 p.m. Red Cross Sewing group 4:00 p.m. Toppers Club Meeting 4:00 p.m. Friendship Girls Club meetâ€" 4:00 p.m. Christmas Vesper Services * Nursery School runs from Monday through Friday 9:00â€"11:45 a.m. 7 :30 p.m. "Just Us Girls" meeting Checks Issued To Jobless Workers Good, Says Murphy workers under the Illinois Unemployâ€" of Labor Francis B.~Murphy said toâ€" day. § Camericeys,.] volved in the tieâ€"up of State pay checks and so banks have no reason to refuse to cash them, State Director "We have received hundreds of complaints in the past few days that banks and merchants are turning down the benefit checks issued to jobless workers," _ Director Murphy â€" said. "This is due entirely to a misunderâ€" pensation Trust Fund. They are in no way involved it the present court fight which affects only the pay of State employees who may be subject to civil service. Job insurance benefit checks, the Director explained, are drawn on a special Illinois Unemployment Comâ€" "Workers who are unemployed through no fault of their own count heavily upon their ‘ Unemployment Compensation checks," "gaid Governor Green when advised of the situation. "Any delay in getting these checks eashed often â€"may mean actual hardâ€" ship to Illinois families in which the breadwinner is temporarily out of a The benefit checks can be distinâ€" guished by the fact that they are printed on cards which have the upâ€" per leftâ€"and corner clipped. Across the checks are printed instructions "Do Not Fold." Below the State seal is printed ‘Not good after 30 days." The checks are perforated on the rightâ€" hand side. They are made out for even dollars and no one check is for more than $16. not only scientific, but it is also n, ud?nâ€" T eHY oo the nochind mad .«t_..:{.::‘:.‘:n Tedy es "wahee him. Is there, t justification . in which Christian teaches? It to be found all through his ministry, It __ Lucia C. Cou C & uuu-.::-u Member of the Board of Lecus divine power at the wedding in Cana where, y ef obtaining food, yet Jesus said to the disciples, "Giye ye them to eat." They Stly five Taves 1h4 tmo smail ficher and what good was that? But he replied, ‘"Bring he told the servants to fill sit waterâ€"pots with water. When they had done so, he ordered them to draw out the water and bear it to the governor of the feast. How strrants rekarded the stast testimeny they # senseâ€"testimony would ha‘ his but e o ve W » .-.-L the hungry multitude before them, and no away from the senseâ€"testimony up to heaven, the Joaves and fishes were mulâ€" tiplied. Agmin, at the bedside of Jairus‘ Inl::nur.hud'lï¬thmad he ied the senseâ€"testimony and c lt"‘l\-â€"l‘hmd-d.‘-t- * he declared; and allf their seornful could not move him. Gazing huu.mm‘«un.nwn.m to arise, and she obeyed. Finally, when one 33:’."« mhh‘“ hu-..‘-. that tremtndous . statement, ""Eiefore Abrabaid I am.‘" thereby proclaiming the inâ€" Tity oi hie parny "â€" b""onmmnek the In< h!v- l:n l:ll uno‘.hn-no..:l:hhh_‘â€" # poin that denial senseâ€" testimony _ was followed by change of evidence. The water was oh-.:l Inta winas )o Werromp i h ot ies ) 28 .2 evidence. The water was changed into wine: Mvunlhnhtï¬!:?d“;m maid was restored to life health. % htthChrhthhvhtlu.um her great book, "Belence and Health with Kery to wmm." has defined as "llom -â€ï¬‚ndum comes flesh destroy incarnate error" (p. 683). For the wonder and beanâ€" C’“mmhu.nn ceive it even faintly, as we correct our finite concept of man and the universe with the divine truth of their infinite mature, as we think and speak from the standpoint of absolute truth, something z'"â€"-'h--‘-.n)b. sical and mental problems, begin to change sica! and mental problems, m"‘â€"‘t"’ =ll';l E _of l:â€"-v and :H- Thursdoy, December 4, 1941 30 pm. Pi Delta Cicb Christmas Benefit checks issued to unemployed Phne 435