in the Notz Hardware Store on Waukegan Rd. The one made by Mrs. E. B. Jor-- dan and Mrs. Hugh Paterson for Deerfleld Garden club which received honorable mention is now on display Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Gathman of Itaska announce the birth of a d&m Lillian Edlay, April.> Mrs. Gai before her mxmul.g): was Miss Ruth Johnson of Half Day. -- Mrs. Alex Willman and her Aunt Mrs. W. A. Colé celebrated their birthday anniversary at the home of the former on Sunday April 15th. -- Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Bingham and daughter Sally and Mrs. Amelia Pyle were guests at the Ender home Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Geary attend-- ed a dinner dance in Evanston, Wed-- nesday evening. Mrs. George Pettis entertained in honor of her birthday anniversar;y at her home on Waukegan Rd. Tuesday evening. Twenty guests in-- cluding mostly relatives attended. Caryle Frantz is ill with scarlet fever at her home on Waukegan Rd. m Ca'iq' Pflmipal o.f :he! butuitand MB i Audaad "Pl'l CaJ VC ul"'J Ts EhsP it icanhos t linbay y atos . Mre. Reiehelt Tofe Pridy for f & l ", Washington, D. C., where she is a in t::fignmcy. III., High school, has I delegate from the North Shore Chap-- anm e on Permanent. _ ! ter Daughters of the American Bird Houses in the Illinois Arbor' Revolution to the Annual Congress and Bird D'I'.,. B?k for 1928, ¢0m°|of the National association. iled by L. L. Blair and issued by| All of the schools in Lake and g'ranceo G. Blair Superintendent of| Cook Counties will be closed Monday Public Instruction last week. Fri--)\ in order to allow the teachers to day, April Twentieth and Friday| attend the meetings in Waukegan. October fifth have been proclaimed|} Mr. C. E. Bates principal of Deer-- as Arbor and Bird days in Illinois.} field Grammar school will represent Mr. and Mrs. Harold Young and the teachers and Mrs. Bates is the daughter Joan spent several days| delegate to the P."T. A. section of last week in Greenbay, Wisconsin. -- | the La;; gho¥ D;'vmon Aoi' the Illi-- > :1_ | nois eachers' ssociation wamc"l;'nm and :i:nogfh?'; oéoelrg] which will convene in Waukegan on of Todd Court mrsday and Friday.| Monday. The market of last year was such a suceess to the club, to the local florists, and to the village that the women are eager to repeat their ex-- })eri'lt in order to augment their unds to beautify Deerfield. week, may be assembled in an Eng-- lish village in next years show. _ The April meeting of the Deer--| field Parent Teacher Association convened in the seventh grade on Friday afternoon. The vice presi-- dent, Mrs. Homer Cazel presided. The chairman of the Nominating committee Mrs. W. Galloway sub-- mitted the following candidates for office for the ensuing year which were \ml'?onfly elected. . Presi--! dent Mrs. J. Smith, Vice President Mr. Bates principal who has formed a Junior Garden club told of its purpose, membership and how to be conducted. There are only Lhirtwmbers. twenty pupils from the rfield school and ten from Wilmot who were eligible. > This group of young boys are anxious to have a garden of their very own. Each have received some kind of tomato and aster seeds and prizes will be awarded to the one who grows the best tomato and aster from the séeds given them by the Garden Club of Deerfleld. A prize is also to be awarded to the best essay written about his garden. -- Mrs. W. A. Cole of Minneapolis, .fi and Mrs. N. McKellar of Far-- go, N. D. are house guests of Mrs. B. H. Kress. Mr.s McKellar is en-- route to New York City where she will visit her daughter, Mrs. Crom-- well Owens. Thke Garden club of Deerfield will have a garden market about the sce-- ond Saturday in May in the Deer-- field school. Perennials and garden ornaments will be for sale. The 47 tinyhouses and gardens that were on display at the Chicago Garden and flower show at the Hotel Sherman, which were on exhibition W furniture section of rs Field's retail the following tion as advertising man with the Goodyear Tire Co. Mr. Robertson is mnagn'xg' ;ditor of th: Sl}i't'.)tle i ich is a Nort re pum Mr. and Mrs. Robertson's beauti-- ful home in Bannockburn Woods (into which they moved a year ago frem the old Edgar M. Snow house on Central Ave. in Highland Park) is now on the market. Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Clavey have returned from Miami, Florida where they have spent several weeks. -- Mr. James A. Robertson publisher of the Home and Garden Review, the second issue of which appeared this week, has moved to Akron, Ohio, where he has accepted a posi-- _The two houses selected by Mrs. W. B. Metcalf and her committee received prizes and the house select-- A social, dance will be given at the West Ridge school, Saturday evening. April 21. Mr. and Mrs. C'% Bates were chosen as delegates the P. T. &A. section of the Lake Shore Division of the Illincis State Teachers As-- sociation which will be held on Mon-- day April 16 in Waukegan Township High School. The object of the garden $ r Eziznqnhte o Te =:' e m.inmvlanmud Pfr.l]!lateswilg né = onally 5 lvisiteachprdenyo n rsona me time durin g --the Mrs. W. W. Geary, Secretary Mrs. Irving Brand, Treasurer Mrs. Leslie Brand. The Association voted to send the newly elected president as deligate to the annual Stite conference of the Illinois Council of Parent Teach-- er Associations to be held at Streat-- or on April 24, 15 and 16. Mr. Elmer Clavey was re--elected president of the senool board of tue Wilhmnot district No. 110 Saturday evening. f 1 E>> SUST btumntntaitetndctrniemint~ read by Miss Leona Evans conclud-- ed the program. The house which headed list in North Division in last Sunday's Tribune Home Harmonious Contest decision was one selected by Mrs. J. A. Reichelt Jr., and her com-- summer but will be ai"-'rt-i;: *' nu:-.u s A w' mtergsting paper on DEERFIELD _ The P. T. A. luncheon will be held at the Hotel Clfi'ton at 12:30 P. M. and Alexander Meijeljohn, chairman | of the Experimental College, Uni-- versity of Wisconsin is to sruk on 1 "Some Phases of the School Curri-- i clum and the Parents' Relation to tit" | .Mrs. Wood, and Miss Bredin, one of the English teachers in D. 8. H. !S. who is to be president of the | D. S. H. S. P. T. A. will go to Streat-- ' or on April 24 to the annual con-- tfcrence of the Illinois Council of Parent--Teachers Associations. ed as best of group by Mrs. S. Good-- er and her Committee and Mrs. A. Willman and committee received prizes which was quite a record for the Deerfield judges. Mrs. -- Reichelt left Friday for Washington, D. C., where she is a delegate from the North Shore Chap-- ter Daughters of the American Revolution to the Annual Congress of the National association. All of the schools in Lake and Caok Counties will be closed Monday in order to allow the teachers to attend the meetings in Waukegan. Mrs, Edwin Alien Waod the nom-- inee for Secretary for the Deerfield-- thiclis high school Parent--Teacher Association is <the delegate to the P. T. A. section of the Lake Shore Division of the Llilinois State Teach-- ers' Association»>which is to be held in Waukegan Township high school Monday, April 16. Mrs. J. A. Reichelt, Jr., is one of the one hundred women from Illinois who are delegates to the National Congress of Parent--Teacher Associa-- tions which will be held in Cleveland, Ohio, from April 27 to May 5. Capt. Hough, 83 years old and re-- siding in a rooming house in Omaha. Neb., was bequeathed a trust fund of $20,000. He was quoted as scorning the bequest, calling it a "dirty trick." He was a fellow telegraph operator with Mr. Hughitt over a half century ago and in 1914 he retireda on a pen-- sion of $45 a month from the rail-- road and $990 a month from the gov-- ernment. ° RAILWAY BONDS BULK OF MARVIN HUGHINTT ESTATE With the filing of the inventory, the attorneys for the estate, Wey-- mouth Kirkland and W. Ayers Kep-- linger, made known that Capt: Jas W. Hough, picturesque Civil® war veteran and a half brother of Mr Hughitt's deceased wife, is not going to contest the will as he had intend-- ed. according to press dispatches. itt Frost of Lake Forest, and Mrs. Belle Hughitt Granger, also of Lake Forest. The two daughters are the wives of architects, Charles S. Frost and Alfred H. Granger. -- _ The late Marvin Hughitt, railroad man, pioneer, left an estate of ap-- proximately $2,000,000 invested chiet-- ly in railroad bonds, tax exempt city, state and federal bonds, and bank stocks according to an inventory filed Thursday before Probate Judge Mar-- tin C. Decker. Mr. Hughitt, a telegraph operator during part of the Civil war, rose to the position of a builder of a great railroad system. He left only one poor investment and that for only $3,500. The inventory lists 35 shares of Pul-- itzer Publishing. company -- capital stock as "deemed desperate." y Mr. Hughitt, who diea san. 6, at the age of 90, bequeathed the bulk of his fortune to his three -- children. They are Marvin Hughitt, Jr.. -- of Bourbonnais, Ill.; Mrs. Mary® Hugh-- must be a central overhead fixture, preferably one which fits closely to the ceiling. . This should be equipped with at least a 75 but preferably a 100 watt, lamp bulb. Very large kitchens need two such fixtures, but most modern kitchens do very well with one. This ceiling light should {be controlled by wall switches both 'in the dining--room door and the | entrance to the back hallway. Next to efficient lighting there is practically nothing which contributes more to the housewife's eomfort in the kitchen than plenty of conveni-- ent outlets, where she can attach her iron, dish washing machine, toaster or other> table appliances and * her washing ani ironing machines in the event that there is no laundry. Wall outlets are inexpensive to install, and what they bring to the woman who works in the kitchen in efficien-- cy and ease can never be measured in ~dollars and cents. If you are building: a new home--plan these outlets at the beginning. If you are at present struggling along in an inefficiently *%equipped kitchen, your electric power company will teli you how the difficulties may be remedied. -- © 34 THE LAKE COUNTY REGISTER, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, 1928 Next, over the sink, the work table, the kitchen cabinet, or wher-- ever the light from the ceiling fix-- ture does not give unshadowed light, there should be wall bracket lamps or a pendant fixture. This auxiliary lighting is imperative over the sink where the person washing dishes at night will be working in --her own shadow if degendent entirely upon the center light. Cleaner dishes in less time are the direct rewards of the special sink light. '~All lamps in the kitchen should And while we are on the subject of kitchen lighting, it might be a good idea to remind those who are build-- ing homes this spring that they will be acting wisely if they build their homes with an eye to an electric range. Maybe you will not want one this year, or next. -- But the time will surely come, when you wil} want one, and the time to prepare for it is now, when the special heavy wires can be easily and inexpensively laid, be equipped with translucent wahits glass shades, as this type is most efficient. BREITENBASH _ (8 FEXARMNER Airplane 'pilots are requirsd to pass one of the hardest phys.cal examina+ tions which is given before the} are given their licenses to operate an airplane 'whether commercially -- ofr privately. f s t1> department of commerc» director of agronautics. it was announced to-- day _ s k They are: Transport, industrial, priva'e, limited commercial and stu-- dent pilots Transport and limited commerc'al p'lots are -- required -- to take the examination semi--annually while the others tak»e a i annual test Thcese who are members of the beauty,-- protected, requiring care Wavlean Aviation schoel must pass| and attention, dféing nothing for the thes>e examinat ons before: they will % good of humanity, not even sending DC granted a liesnse t> fly and €2CD | out its fragranke #o the world-- class of pilot receives a separate test. | the otl h * in th D .. Oscar Breitenbach has been|! "'€, .9°"°© _st.a_ndur o noet perfurms appointed the medical examiner by | "UD!ight, wafting its sweet perfume t1> department of commerc» director| °NA the summer air, covered with of svronautics. it was announced to--| dust, it is LT,_bubdoing its best day s | to cheer the weary traveler. According to the bulletin which has been sent cut from the depart-- ment of aeronautcs at Washington, 10.--C., pilots have now --been divided into five groups COMINGAIN CONTACT WITH THE 7 DUST OF THE WORLD \\'vlcom'ing'- 'y'ourv view, as you drive past a certain old farmhouse nestling among the hills, is a great glowing mass of splendid pink roses, the bush spreading its branches on JOHN G. BORST all sides of the 'goft green grass i bordering "the dusty country road. <The hot sun beamigs down upon the | fowers, but they remain--unwithered ; --their glorious fr'gnnce floats up-- ward to greet the #&veary traveler as | his :eyes ~'behold"'3§their_ wonderful ' beauty, and he t&eis refresh:d }, 'the sight--grateful.to the Master of |Nature for this l?e]y specimen of His handiwork.; & 3 | _ Far, back in the #ard, hidden from view, surrounded Yby a protecting ~frame, stands another bush--large | crimson roses, shoiriqg the result of 'cultivation and care, no dust touch-- | ing their delicate petalg, no beaming | rays of. sun penet_'xisng to this mass ' of perfect bloom,--its fragrance lost |to the passerby. 2 > 30 .# These two bushes are like our lives--the 'onek placed in a sheltered nool:, to be taka@g care of and pro-- tected,' giving ndyng of its beauty to the world: (gga, ther, glad to stand by the dusty roadside in the gleam-- ing sun and '&ust, if it might help to lighten sofmie, weary heart.--Se-- lected. / C > #4, . j I could not help But compare these two bushes--the. gne in its lovely beauty, -- protected,} requiring care TUNNEY LIKES STREET CAR FOR RECREATION Grand Rapids, Mich. --For the first time in his career, Gene Tun-- ney was recently given the honors of a city while aboard a street car. The incident occurred during the champion's recent visit here, and he was so pleased with the facilities provided tliat he requested his pho-- tograph be taken standing beside the R\TF.S for long distance telephone calls to points 400 miles away and over have recently been very materially reduced. The greater the distance the greater the saving. On a call from your own telephone to the most dis-- tant possible point in the United States, the day station--to--station rate for three minutes would not exceed $7. Evening rates (7 to 8:30 p. m.) are aiout 25 per cent lower and night rates (8:30 p. m. to 4:30 a. m.) about 50 per cent lower than day rates. Jt is estimated that the recent reductions will save the telephone users of the United States $1,500,000 annually. --This economy has been made possible by new devices and new mcethods, particularly appli-- cable to talking over Jong distance, developed and perfected by the Bell Telephone Labora-- tories--a result of ceascless studies and experi-- ments to improve your telephone service. ILLINOIS BELL TELEPKHONE COMPANY BELL SYSTEM Long Distance Rates car. He commented upon the con-- venience of permitting the entire re-- ception committee and guest to be at ease and to converse together freely. He waved to the th? that greeted him while seated in the smoking compartment of the street We are never too old to learn the good die young. PAGE THREE