mm? ; v 5 .. „"v•;!,** •?§», :i® ^5 -.. .-.. ftf< • '.-•••'* "• ' "" ." ' "ji-i" " «,?* -1 *"•>'• * »<f*" . .<&*> " J.1"** u* ^ * V •>. nsr / -"*r; '***?,» .'•^k-'Sv ••*'~i «PM r, MAY 21, ;M;. V. • •?- • , Y' - vr - - - < """vX . iM *<:' \r * :.* ^ c*" >-JS. ...£ , , 5# ." z£f' ' _ • Wflmot «1 Richmond 7SS Ship With OF MIDNITE FLYER Sates Reasonable For Full A Long Distance -.-. :j <**> * *£ • -.-Y-^i A" Wf a*-- 3 ®i&§ < H-"1 .Cfe*'. .•*'•*£"••.' *%> 'a ** . 'V *>&' .. Arnold Anderson Clarence M. Freund, Profw. 1 ». *V ' *'" - g?;#s •*• *- - drinkmore *-^p. / \X .•* •.•$ " »v :n**m -a iggqjp,*. -r ' J ; • ' "<' *•ir£%>'kvS':"xV " m, * *""niV** y v o'r' "• • v- Make It a part off your Dally Diet Tiy^^periniMt for a'weAs," Drink milk wifi| yi breakfast daily; then have it in some form for lunch aid dinner. After the week is over, note, you will, the relief from sluggishness. Note your ability to perform your daily tasks with greater alertness. Order milk daily from one of finest dairies in this community. . P ^ %1 HcHenry Dalf^A Props. TeL 309 , McHenry, HL L^nrioh * &r ' * t- .-f' M 11 ow, with1 Hot Water, wte'H show you some action" , | TTAPPY? You bell For bow theirwoik XX will be easy. Hoi water, handy jund plenty, helps make sharinf a pleasant Job. P j » K « n g l r y m i n g l y hImil Floor-wnhing and clothes-cleaning quickly, easily done. ' Hot water makes housework hour* shorterf and pleasure hours longer. ^ • 7 With gas, you can heat water automatically ,^ ^ in a machine so completely self - containeq, 2 tW it reduces your action to a simple turiir % of the faucet that brings a steaming floods , anytime, anywhere, for any purpose. Learn how little it will cost you to haT« this modern service all-year-'round. I^ain ., about the low prices ana extra easy terms^ ^ Small down payment. Liberal allowance fot ' - your old equipment. Come la today and iat_ZL_ •ettigate, or phone, or write. * SEE YOUR PLUMBER, OR WESTERN UNITEH WGAS *"d ELECTRIC C»MPANYL/ A. 0. B. Oollins, Diit Manager "ViT' Holly's ON •** LILT EVERY Wednesday and Saturday "MJ. «U»J COOL CLEAN -; COMFORTABLE Special Chicken and Steak Dinners 1 * - '• Sandwiches, Ice Cream, etc',. , _ -jp* «• KAY-SEE ORIGINAL RUBBER BAND Admission ; Gents 50c. ,. Ladies 25c •> ,1 Naughty Imptdf TWft Was Fell ad Vf Chirahry Amoac tha food atariea told j>? Mlaa JUM^Htrriaen, te famous lecturer In fknul arcbeolegy at Newnham eol- Ugt, Oarabridge, England. In bar autobiography, "Reminiscences Of a Student's Life," is this one: Miss Harrison was for a time a magistrate, and on one occasion there appeared before the bench a certain prisoner who, It seems, had used peev- Harly foul language. Instead of repeating It the clerk had had a typed copy made, which was circulated en the bench, Miss Harrison says: "The unknown to me has always had an Irresistible lore, and all my life I have had a cariosity to know what really bad language consisted of. In the stables at home I had heard an occasional 4d--n' from the lips of a groom, bat that was not very informing. Now was the chance of mf life. The paper reached the old gentleman next me. I had all but stretched out an eager hand. He bent over me in a fatherly way and said: '"I am sore yon w||l sot wast to see this.' "I was pining to read It, but sixty years of sex subservience had 4one their work. I summoned my last bluah, cast down my eyes, and said: "Oh, no! Now Thank yon so much.' Elate with chivalry, he bowed and pocketed the acrtpt^--Kanaaa City T1 w - - • -'• * \ Early English Dramas ' Acted Only on Sunday Thottftfc legislators In 1780 frowned on 8unday amusnneats, some of their predeeeeeors regarded them with a nore tolerant eye. In the Sixteenth century Sunday was almost the playpeer's only fiance of entertainment. » waa bet nntiv 1579 that plays were acted on week days, and until a considerable later date 8«nday waa still us th*» odctsion for thf* **50= duction of new pieces. Queeo Ellnbeth patronized Sunday plays, as did also James 1* and even the higher clergy took no exception to the practice. Indeed, We read of the then bishop of London producing "A Midsummer Night's Dream" at his town house on a Sunday evening as late as 1681. The practice, however, was not without many opponents, and there ean be no doubt that Sunday performances had not a little to do with the Puritan dislike of playgoing of •"fy description.--Manchester (Inc.) Guardian. Cowtd W*|M Days * Is the days of the pioneer treks across the plains courage was required to face the 2,000 miles stretching bleakly In front of them. A typical train consisted of one wagon, "two yoke of four-year-old steers and one yoke of cowsf" In front of them were rfoeVa, mountains, thirst, hunger, privation and the pestilence that over* took migrating hordea. Soon they were in a column of wagons said to be 500 miles long--all moving toward the west, their occupants without proper food, dependent upon unhealthful streams for water, enveloped In an intolerable dust. In calm weather the dust would rise so thick at times that the lead team of oxen could not be seen from the wagon. Then, again, the steady flow of wind would hurl the dust and sand like line hall, with force enough to sting, the face and handa. tteel Plow la tri "this country, about lTSt. John Newbold demonstrated a cast-iron plow. It was similar to cast-iron plows which had been demonstrated shortly before in England. Records Indicate that farmers feared detrimental effects from so much iron in contact with ilie soil, and evidently this first American cast-iron plow was never repaired after its moldboard became broken. The obstinate quality of the soil in the Mississippi valley led to the use of steel instead of iron strips on the moldboards of plows. John Deere, 18S7, and William Parlin, 1842, were pioneers in the steel plow business of the Middle West. Much credit Is due also to James Oliver, who, beginning his experiments in 1853, greatly advanced the process for chilling caat^trqo plow point*. ( > iii»iiiii;f ' Dumb A seven-year-old Cleveland boy believes that Santa Claus has a very poor memory. Just before Christmas the lad's mother tok him downtown to see Santa Claus, and the boy told what presents he wanted In his stocking. A few days later another whiskered Santa Claus stopped the lad and Inquired : "What would you like for Christmas, sonnyT" Whereupon the chap registered keen disappointment and answered: "Of all the chumps I I knew that you'd fojrget what I told you." Swedish heroes of a former day are recalled by the story of the deeds of Jarlabanke, one of the earliest of the Viking road builders, which are revealed on one of the Rune stones recently found at Taeby. More than 1,000 Rune stones, dating from the Ninth to the Eleventh centuries, aee now registered. One stone glorifies Jarlabanke for building a road across the swamp in Taeby. The road is still In use, and even to this day, carries the name "Jarlabanke's bridge." llMcti' "Conversation"* ft la believed that many insects ean communicate with each other, especially bees apd ants. Materials for Papar She following materials are used In the making of paper: Ootton, linen, china grass or ramie, paper mulberry, Idansohla, manila, bamboo, sugar bagasse or megasse, coniferous wood, Jute, esparto, straw and deciduous (A till. Wait em Niwipap«r Union.) To hear the call of th* thrushes soma late green plush attar* noon. Whoa broken, fading shafts of light Ko (rosing for the on* last sight of songsters In tfca gloom. " TO-SWing along a rugged trail that spruce and hemlocks climb. Till on tha hill's high top you coase to stand exalted in the sua! Ah, this is summer time. . ^ --Beulah Rect«wy "Ramp H*e expression a parliament? has grown to mean a parliament which no longer represents the will of the Majority of the people. The famous rump parliament In Bngllsh history was the long parliament, after It was parged by Pride of all but the Independents in 1648. of Cigarettes ^ There sees* (0 be no eOdal Information abont ihe Introduction of elf. arette smoking Into the United Statee. It apparently spread to the United States from England In 1805. England was introduced to cigarette smoking during the Crimean war by Russian troops. Panama offers an slid, necsuss of s the narrow isthmus, vered by the Panama rises in the Pacific ocean --'* sbtks te the Atlantic. Ships In UnTcanal travel from west to east to pea from the Atlantic ocean to the Padfle! FOR THE FUMY There are grown-ups who are fussy about.their food, but sometimes they are hopeless; however with children a firm hand and eternal vigilance will accomplish wonders. Children are naturally imaginative and keenly enjoy a fairy tale, no matter what it is about. Why not use this method in teaching him to eat the things he should. Every woman should be a good story teller, able to picture Interesting things out of the ordtnary. With really 111 people In bed, one may use about the same story for even grown ups, they get pleasure out of the things that the child will, if presented in a whimsical planner, A dish of floating Island." sb good for children who will not eat custards and refuse milk, may be presented in s glass dish with the cooked white of eggs on top. It may be a treasure island, an Iceberg with a "nut" to be rescued or a raisin will do. If it is not real enough make legs and arms of cloves, a head of a large clove. The rescuer will eat his way to being a hero. ' * Fioathif laiand.--This old-fashioned diftb of our grandmother's day will never go out of style, for It is so wholesome and good as well as pretty. To prepare the custard take three egg yolks, four tablespoonfuls of sugar, a pinch of salt, one and one-half cupful* of scalded milk and when cooked until It coats the spoon add one-half teaspoonful of vanilla to flavor. For the Island, beet the whites of the eggs until stiff, add four tablespoonfuls of sugar and drop by spoonfuls on hot water in a shallow pan. Cook until firm or set in the oven to brown. Remove the islands to the custard, ,cMU snd serve. Our grandmother^ Psejfj.jQ cook the egg white on top of tard while It was cooking, thos tbey conserved time and heat. ^ ^ < lluLLu. . a U n a " Both sexes snore alike, says a professor, and the sex of a snorer cannot be determined by the sound. In a pullman sleeper, however, one is "always fairly safe in assuming that the sounds actually Issue from a human snorer, and not from a hippopotamus strangling In a mud hole, although the opposite often seems net* probable.-- Oetroit News. i'&r-frv- • '•* m*.- -If? .'u «0£'.- '.3P. ' KV-.'s: ft " ;C-» f) *">. the facts behind tMU&t ? ¥* . -• V- • , v • YEAR GUARANTEE y*. <• fW:f e. .. . *'o • - V* * . hir$: p • t i l l % i • u-o-Hs^fj f i 0: * c| 1 mxioN cnofcAL eugtuc ilhave given e»pease-free Hfrttie is a tilKoM homeal Now General Electric.psaianiees--in writing--that yon. toe, will have no wwhs •»§ •pan for at least 3 loag years. sf . i- And, new low prices^ new refioenaits. Fi^er-tip latch. Sliding shelves. All-eteel cabinets, with poceelaio Uaisg that rpsist fraii aniis. X)>« famous iConitor Top ntfltatia* hermetically sealed in steel -- operates quietly in a hath of oil. An accessible temperature control provides fast-freesing of ice cubes and desserta. _ _ . _ Individual aones of cold meet every refrigerating pdJIIISIlfl tU lotP $*1 need, Broom-high legs auke sweeping csny. Instal* ®' X" . latton is as simple as connecting an electric fca, (WITH TWO WHOLE YEARS TO PAT) 'Joinuithth*Gw*t<alElectricPr0griH*,troadca*t*v1tjrSaturdaytvming.onanatitm ttndeNJLC.Hitwarh. /ILL< DOMESTIC. APAHTMK.WT HOllSt AMD COMMKHClAt K EF KIC Kg ATO RS-ELKCTSIC VAT KB Co6Lm •. -"j. •. ,K ' i!M -2 ^..." • 'ilv; , CAREY ELECTRIC SHOP"; r • 'SwVii ^.v flora Open Saturday Night nntil 9:30 p. m. WAUKEGAN DRY GOODS CO - 7, 9 North Genesee St. - . We are Tonight (Thursday nntil 9 p. * • % : * Thousands Were Here ill Be The Last Two Days of This Stupendous Event WAU K EG A N 200 EXTRA SALES PEOPLE - WRAPPERS, CASHIERS-- TO SERVE YOU BETTER • I UpHf WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES TO PROTECT Our CUSTOMERS A-V - TOP CROWDS AftB tRBMENDOOB Smek an ewe* as thia brinp *11 tiw thriftwise in the county flocking to thia stove. Aklss and Aoora are iaa*« med not a person in Lake County is ndaeinf their share of these savings 1100,000.00 WORTH OF WANTED BRAND NEW SPRING AND SUMMER MERCHANDISE AT .PfciCiS TPS LOWEST IN TEARS. €# •SlJ."' .U' 'J- #!' tBK VALUER AU MASVBL0U8 Oar Maw Tsvk Bajiag PWee msm^ ewy corner of the market for months securing the very best in valaee aat aawass fha the rinnaas ef tU •pet cask haying savee yea BEING HELD EXCLUSIVELY AT WAUKEQAN DRY GOODS CO. - YOU GOT ONE OF OUR 8- *•'( PAGE CIRCULARS. -- BRING S IT ALONG SO AS NOT TO f MISS A SINGLE SAVING. FREE PARKING Ytole i <uiJag to onr «>torsers tor thia Great Sale during store beam, cap thia coo poo snd present to the Ctaftai Garage, 122 K. <next to Clayton HaUl)' •- PLAN M0W-~80 AB NOT TO MISS THB LAST TWO DAYS : of this xvunr. Jim ' 1: - fe--. M j. . l&f Jl • • vl'7,. "t :L£.... I .-S.-. I M > ' ^ ' 1 x 'I •' .-J v., ^