SwtwHrTs 14 THE LAKeIsHORE NEWS, fIjBaY, MARCtf 10, 1922 T__f Tonight at New Trier Auditorium ^CHARGES POLICE-ARE-CBU! Arrested for a minor offense, Gor- don Seybold, Oneida, N. Y., ex-service man, says State troopers swung him up by his wrists and pummeled him to get a confession. The American Legion has engaged counsel to probe the. charge. â- ...•» The William Owen Company presents 'The Servant in the House'* at New Trier High school auditorium this evening. The oast of characters as represented above is, from left to right, Ethel Castle, Harry Devitt, Ralph Bellamy, Margaret Edwards; kneeling, Harold Mouje and J. W. McConnell. ------------------------ WModern Girl Not So Bad As She Is llPditfted^eclares New York Bishop milesâ€"18 of them on snowshoes. Wounds received in Prance did not check his determination to "arrive.'* t NewasEYork.-â€"Bishop Thomaa „_F, Gaylor, head of the Protestant Epis- copal Qhurch of America, today took up the cudgel for the flapper. In an interview he declared" the as she is As for the modern womanf1 Since Methuseleh's Time get the education that culture and breadth of live ~ --That's because we of systematization. We are system- izing everything. % Efficiency, effi- ciencyâ€"as if human beings were gives a vision. in an age ccording&to JBishon J&aylor, women- ^America/UBishopâ€"^Jay4orâ€"eonttnuedr had reformers net up over the things they did to their faces and the way iSfahey^3^©^ their sklftsr=evexr in =^dayr when Methuseleh was a boy, i^s?'Woman is a new mystery every iiiiy," said the Bishop. £,-.â- - ^But slie~to centuries. The woman of today "in no country of the world do people go in „for_amusement_wlth-5ucn-fer- tile locity as we do here-in America. â€"We have been living on our nerves for ye^erica is dbses*e^ n nf <*ftA* -Una-fa »» T j-»rtlr at rha nA..» kl>u%<) i..t>* «<, «„.c <*â- «:**». **,;*>, «no1 ,#** _fthe .._ .... is lib difterent^fronr theâ€"woman of o£- the our grandmother's day or "Read Matthew Arnold's translation of the Fourth Idyll of Theocritus, who lived 400 years before Christ. ^^^oS'â- ':Biitt'"'tlie^!e"'twQ' women conversing jjjwnilethey dress for a concert. They Ipltalk dress and discuss ways to" humor and wheedle their husbands exactly lijpn the same way as women do today. jSfwear short skirts because it is the* ]fe|Th«y"might,.JH M*â„¢ Vftrk ^omen of t___ â- "^â- â- 'â- â- '^â- ^^^^ â- - -'â- â- * machines. 'We are living on our nerves in tion of "Get there." Look at the young people who pour every morning into the factories and office buildings of this greats city.- They are all in> man whc. liv«4-*etoi^^hristianityir =bued-with^he-*hmke^«©od^spirt^w^ > hear too much of the 'make good' spiritâ€"it encourages materialism." ^O^ih" frS? a* Always" •No," continued tlie Bishop,"women mre tile same as they ever were. You cant change them and you can't lay their town; tuck* general: rules for con- Speaking of the flapper^the^chAirch *It is silly to charge mere kids |with deep, dark immoral emotions and Sfinotives* .' There isTfothlng wicked libout * gii^^ghj|^Mba-her hair. Tf-fe mntsâ€"to~do-4t^ why shouldnt nh*>? Pftrhans it fo more-hecominis^to-^ her than longhair. "You do marvel at the amount of paint you see on girl's faces. Why, wonder how some of them open their mouths without cracking their faces. ... *&«â- .â- - ____ H0*Bnt".I never "wprry about the foibles of the young. Oirls rouge and l|aMt»i. J&oplspire^ following fashions. Young people are i particularly so. When I was in college it was j^^tr^atft: the boys to wear mustaches and we all wore them. Then some one cut his off and we all followed suit. feglf^ikJgara^fftBhfon ~to--go--aroua& with shoes unlaced, all the girls would ibe doing it*t â- ?%&$$$$ Youth As Good As •Oar young people ihop Gaylor, lay system of education, declaring that utilitarianism one of the Men are less educated than they were $6 years ago," he said. "Why, I get letters from big business men whose spelling sltueks im.. 3^^ i L"TJtiHtarfim^^ trouble. [There's too much specialization in jducation nowadays. Mere boys are DAISIES BRING HIGH PRICE Before sunset of the first day, 500,- 000 daisies were, sold in the -American Legion's "Daisy Day" drive through- out Massacteis©^8==4©r==funds to help unemployed ex-soldiersfeFour daisies hrought $125. -~-L^~â€" •â- ";â- . â- â- .â- •.i^y-v^- $1.00 PACKAGE OF GENUINE If you are thin and emaciated and wish something to help you put on flesh and increaseâ€"yourâ€"weighty Yeast. Vitamine Tablets should be used in connection with organic Nuxated Iron. VVith- â€"outorgante iron, both food*nd-V4tamineRare ^absolutely usele88,a8 your body cannotehange inert, lifeless food into living cells and tissue unless you have plenty of organic iron in your blood. Organic iron takes up oxygen from your your blood just as fire unites with coal or wood, and by so doing it creates tremendous power and energy^ Without organic iron in^ youFblood your food merely passes thru your body without doing you any good. _i4rrangemjfflts^,have,.been:made^with^he druggists of this city to give every reader of this paper a large $1.00 package of Genuine Yeast Vitamine Tablets absolutely free with every purchase of a bottle of Nuxated Iron. NUXATEDIRON IrorRfd Bloo^ffrtniftltTnl I BIG MEMBERSHIP GAINS On March 4, 1922 American Legion membership was 108,000 more than on March 4, 1921. New members have joined at the rate of 6,600 a day since January 1. These figures have been given out-from Legion headquarters to refutue the statement that the or- ganization is: losing members because of its stand on adjusted compensa- tion. BLOODLESS BULLFIGHT Armed with fence pickets, doughty ex-soldiers staged a bloodless bull- fight in the Jersey City stockyards to raise funds for the American Legion. The nimble matadors had -to jump the fence on several occasions. RADIO FEAT The longest wireless jump ever made at sea was recorded When the steamer American Legion, entering »mmimiinmiimiiimimNimiiiimMiiiiHiniiiiiiitiiiH»iiuuHimiittiimiming William Salmen CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER J _______________ 5 _=-==_=^£ST-IMATES :=-=_. | cheerfully furnished on I |__rr----------------------------------------- | 1-964 Spruce St ,Winnetka j | Phone Winnetka 1055 § ^iiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiHiiiintiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiuiiiuuiiiiiniiniiuiiiiiiuii Buenos Aires, picket! jup a: message from a ship off Honolulu^ 7,000 milf| distant:"' â- y^i^^^i:^MfM^3^^. $5 paid down E puts it in your house $6.50 a month EquaLto= 22 cents ay completes payment for a FEDERAL^ __ Electric Washing Machine with a Swinging Wringer ______JEtoiricity!^ardo^_ _1__r a week's washing Costs about 5 cents .--T_ Demonstration .....__.. at any of our Sales Rooms Public Service Co. ofNorthern Ills. â€" WHMTTF EXPRESS E. G. LINDGREN > telephone ' call will_ "tsfteginTe^foTnTiMr jut door in ar very few minutesâ€" WE^solicityour patron-^ DAY or NIGHT agei anH^wouioTappre- datc-any-suggestions -that- would improve our- SERVieEâ€" rmig$?^?d^*%K'i'W&£r< ?§s COMFORT SPEED Expressing â€" Moving â€" Long Distance Hauling S?%s|5ig 9 > "APPEAL TO REASON" Charging that the bonus is attacked "not by those who fought" but "by those who profitedc- the American I^egion-at--Mariont O., home of Presi^ dent Harding, has appealed to Con- gr«ss^to^oo*ia±rtii©zffflBtsz^^ of pure reason.' To TRUE LEGIONNAIRE attend an Amerioan-JLiegioHs tiation, an Oregon rancher trekked-3^ Wilmettelce & o&j^iyyn^D^ 3pnng.styles m i^-adiesWl Misllst)re_iill4 l^ fessidns they are 1559 Sherman Ave. ^^syer 1526 Greenleaf Ave. Phone Evanston 2720 No Deliveriesâ€"-Buying in Large Lotsâ€"Keeps Our Prices Down Choice Cutaif Native^ot toiii