mauiire appearance in current issue. Resluons of condoience, cardEr of. hanks, obitu- a»les, notices of entertaluments or other afta.lrs where an admîttance charge lu published, will be charged nt regiiIar advertlstng rates. If the ardor of those wbo are.valiantly fighting the efforts.of trucking companies to, gain possession of, fine residential streets in ail of thé: Trucks vs. New, Trier' villages. Pro perty Rights is somnewhat damp- enied hy the lack, of Support on the, part of citizens wbose property, rigbts. are seriously threatened, * it wouid be.no -;uMtter for Wonder.. .To explain this apparent iack of support, in- ditierence and general apathy is not easy.' If our citizens were warned that soine sinister menace was, swooping down uponl their homes intent upon. destroying their valued personal possessions, how mnany. wôoild go to a pieture show or a dancoe and leave their homes, unprotected? And yet that is practically what they are doing regarding their streets. 'A mass meeting-was called i n Glencoe. last Friday nigbt, sponsored by the North *Shore Property Owners' association, to formulate plans to combat the attempts of trucking companies to secure f rom the Illinois Commerce commission an order permitting them to use Sheridan road and other beautiful and quiet residential streets as routes for bigh powered, beavy * freigbt trucks. Tbe granting of sucb an order by the commission means a comn- plete sbattering of the peace and quiet-, that bave made properties on tbe desig-, natedl street5 desirable and valuable, and an immediate, depreciation of tbose values amounting to a huge sum. And yet onlyý a few recognized the danger confronting them and. took the, trouble to attend thç meeting. supported by "ail the people." -No citizen of either of the villages affected bas any moral right to .hold aloof and deny to fellow townsmen belp that might turn thec scale at.a critical mo menlt. Many evidences are at hand to show that tbe young people of .1933 are looking ahead with a clearer. notion of ."what its, ail: abQut" than did tbeir Youtk Not parents. They recognize So Flaming f roth for what it is. A smartmazie pop- ular onlyý a few years ago, witb, collège students, has, ini the vernacular, ."f'olded Up", for want of support. The football hero of yesteryear isn't lionized quite s0 mucb a ,s he ias. Why?, "We sc bim in. the classroom, one young lady smilingly told an inquirer. Athletics are increasing- ly regarded as means of acquiring personal enjoyment and health and flot as public spectacles alone. In short, a new youth, flot quite so incandescent as bis older brother or sister, is emerging from thèse late depression days. The plain fact of' the matter is, bowever, tbat the whole world is getting over a giddy beadache,. brougbt on by the World war. It is seeing more clearly tban it did. The responsé to the National Recovery Act is in itself testimony of a growing understanding of the troubles of economic and social bealth. Newspapers are print- ing less news on "sex, môney, and crime". to make space for news on science, busi- ness, religion, and education. Labor con- troversiesý are being settled More and: more by arbit ration and less -and less by violence,,and bloodshed.. In short,. youth is but one of many sigus of the times that a iiew epoch is emerging.-The Rotarian Magazine. h imself can survive the prophesied woes which wîil set earth's seas a-sizz1ing before the "gle-orions" dawn of the predicted twenty-second century. Another scene is indeed a refreshing one. A country bumpkirr is basking on a hiliside 'neath-a sky .of October blue. And why is the scene refresh- ing? Refresbing because -the frost is on the bump- kmn, and consequently said brpi feels peppy enough to make "smart" 'remarks at H. G. Wells' predictions. The bumpkin, you may, ask-wbwere is the bunip- kiim? Somewhere on, tbe outskirts of 'Meirose Park, 111.,,.U. S. A. And wbat is bis conne ction witb H. G. Wells? A trans-Atlantic.connection which Mr. Marconi will explain upon receipt of, a letter accom- panied by a stamped and self -addressed envelope. Anyway, the ethçr- waves 'are such that the bump- ki'n hears H. G. Wells' soughing soothsayings,' and' Mr. Wells -hears the bumpkin's brisk, bellowings. Hl. G. Wells: "The twenty-second centu..ry will be er . . . ah. . . comparatively a jolly good timne-cities will be more livable, and social if e will be organized'arou nd public clubs in wbich will be grouped sports 1 halls, perpetual news- cinemnas, studios, and social cepters. And no more of: those naWsty systraper's will be gtaftidîng. Country Bumpkin: "You sound like you got a niustache. You inean the twentyýsecond century wil? be swell? That means I won't bave to go to my dentist then. But, what'll they do with the Twentieth Century Limited?" H. G.: "Clumsy lout 1 You are deucedly irrelevant. 1 view life in trends, net in tidbits. My generalizga- tion is that the twenty-second century will mark. the dawvn of a truly luminous if e. But wait tilhi I describe the sufferings in store for-y>oujyour tuorop progeny, and tbeir .fellow nitwits." C. B.: "Aw, go on, talk Engiish, will ya ?" H. G. (haughtily) : "I refer, if you must know, to my 'Time Table of the Future' which takes us. frotu the present to the- year 1978." C. B.: "I got an idea; PU l olier the year, and you tell me wbat your darned time table says wilI happen that, year." H. G.: "Ait right, if you niust'play your cbildisb C. B..: "Don't get sore, Old Mustache. What's gonna happen ini 1937 H. -QG.'Naval wr-tbe Unitedý States, versus Japanl."P C. 1.:.,"Wbat's on the menu for 1943 ? H. G-.: "Second World war starts:," C. B.: "'You're a cheerful cuss. When"hl the fracas, end?" H. G. (sighing):- "A peace of exhaustion will be --tiffeA ;n 104" it must be the order and in: the strq There miust be posSible I.planned, the United States because tliey did net observe tb ese simple rules of ,safety., *Parents sbould repeatedly 'cali these, *rules ta the attention af tbeir cbildren. *your Say, dentals,s win the1 mental G Wells,." er il. 1-11 be a. organized then." «'Since you've bad you mention inci- Sto state who wil ou can't be such a Yel ..Well-I .1-K .W. N. . j E.- i w