Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press (1912), 28 Sep 1922, p. 10

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Ema nu CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM 387 Central Avenue Maintained by, First Church of Christ, Scientist. Highland Park Services are held in the church edifice. 381 Ham avenue. Sunday morning at 10:45. Sunday school at 12:00 o'clock noon. Wednesday evening Testimonial Service‘ at 8:00 o'clock. You are éordially invited to attend these services 1nd to visit thc Reading Room. ' Rain. snow. nunâ€"it gets them all. It must sand the wear and ten of driving. humping. all your outdoor life. Poor fabrics simply won't. do it. Hart Schlner Mm $30.“, UP overcoat: that any stylish The Comforts of the Electrified House Are Multiplied by Electrical Appliances â€"example The Electric Washer 13 South St. Johns Avenue of Northern Illinois 51 S. St. Johns Ave._ in.“ 7 Days Free Trial Given PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY Electric Washing Machines WANHMAKER. JEWELBR AND OPTOMETRIST “unfit Grade French Clocks. Hall Clock: and I: Watches. Talking Midi-a. Sllnmn ind M Jon-dry Repairing. Work WAfOIV'VI‘ doflvcnd. Copyright 1911 Hart Schaffncr Man With Swinging Wringers $5 down puts a Federal in your house Balance $7.80 a month FEDERAL Pn'omi HIGHLAND PARK «so 392 Cantu] Ave. Highland Put. Ill. YOUR OVERCOAT M U ST’BE G 00 D S. FELL I. H. NEMEROFF New fl It takes over the worst drudgery in the house and does the job better than hands can do' it. 11 Its wages are 5 cents for electricity con- sumed. d 1} It’s easy to figure that the savings it makes in laundress‘ wages will pay for it in a short time. Telephone 568 Telephone 307 i t? abandon the station. : Hugh Wilson Fisher, chief clerk to ;; die commandant at Great Lake-a viait- ed Highland Park. Lake Foreat. and 'qther North Shore rities Saturday ;‘ 4nd nnferred with municipal author- ities and- umciala of other local organi- ‘ gations regarding the effort being . made to save the training station and d\'erywhere received auurancen of fiupporti it is planned later to hold ‘ series of meetings- in then cities in khalf of the movement. : “Stranded to Death" .‘ Through political influence exerted favor of the Atlantic aeaboard ata- 'ons it is believed that the Great ‘ Lakes station in being nlowly strang- fi-d out of existence. It in the opinion .df Chicago and North Shore men /ho have studied the situation that ‘ ia station undoubtedly be abandon- ‘o'd unleaa strong pressure is brought {b‘force the government to change it- ‘olicy in this regard. ; i No recruits are now being trained 1 r the navy proper at thia atation. ' _ five or an hundred men now in i station being wholly in trade ‘Jrhoola. Thus. it is evident. that if ; do reeruita are to be brought to Great ‘ Lake: for training. the reoult will be fiat the station will aoon pan: out o! iatenee as a naval poati Q” So the question is whether will ‘ ~one of the Atlantic malt atationa he ‘ 'Jhandonod or the one at Great Lakea. ‘ as there Is a feeling in government ‘ circles that four stations cannot he 1 Quntinued indefinitely. l ; It goes without saying. however.‘ .1]! the element of political expedi- l *(m'y enters into the whole question. and all up and down the Atlantic coast states: tremendous influence iii hiring brought to hear on (‘onmiu to ”rep hath stations on that ”llmll’d l’ml Tlose one of lht' otherfi, pmlflbl)“ the inland station on the lakes. Ail étuvh will he done {or the San Fran- cisco station. should its existence be hreatened. and the midweat atation. ii the North Shun- must depend on Is friends in thlil region {or help “any to he Enliated . \Vith 3000 men to he enlisted in the our) «luring lhr en-uinz year. aitiiiy. if not "\(nl of whom Will bI‘ e“ lllt'll, th-v llllll‘ is regarded in Iiiigiilsirl) opportune for the friend: of tin-at Lakiw to urge that itn It’ll\‘l- ties ln- niiide commensurate with its me. importance and value to the Lexy and the N‘t‘(lt>ll of ”W country ‘ rt-prrpelitx ; lt I~ suggested Unit the inti-rest of Illrflfllllzlllunh in thL~ matter may lu- ‘l’i‘~[ i-llmtiu-ly regimen-d by strong Qrsolutioih and by leters, not only "l‘hlll urgiiiiizatiuiis theiiiaelven, but ‘rhlll [ht-Ir otlici-rs and memlien. | Where to Appell * ll l‘ further suggested that re» filtioiis and letters should be forward- qltl lo the Honorable l-Zdwm Denby, Set'rehr) of the Navy. Admiral Robert E. Cooiitz, L'SN, (‘hiet of Na- ‘ial Operations, Rear Admiral Thomaa jfi‘ashiiigtoii, (TSN, ('hief of the Bu- ‘geau of Navigation, I), C., and to each of the senators and representativea of {he llliniou delegation in Congress (or lthe senator! and representatives of he delegations from the stat»: or: tates in which particular organiaa-L tions are located). both resolution- 'Qnd letter: strongly to urge that gen- {ral training for Naval recruita hould be resumed immediately at the“ ‘ teat Lakes Naval Trainin‘ StatiouL ‘alao that the Naval Appropriation) ‘ Bill {or the next fiscal year‘ aha“ eon-i tain provisions not only for an ade-. ‘quate appropriation Yo: the mime-l {fiance and operation of Great Lakaa,‘ fibut expressly stipulate that the far t‘ilitiea of thia training atat'ton ahall l uaed {or the training 0! naval w! :truiu in accordance with the purpoaa‘ illor which it was originally eatab-‘ :hahed. ‘ ‘ . ‘ (‘1'. iv ofl‘u'mls and otganlutionn in Â¥u|th Shore cities are being urged to mpport the movement launched by mesidcnts cf ‘28 leading (‘hicngu in!» at a meeting held Iul week at e l'nion League club in that city m discuss the neu-uity of continuing Great Lakes as a leading naval train- imz station and to pretext. lain-t die Apparent plan 0! the gm'vrnment STATION MAY BE CLOSED Chicago and North Shore Cities : Begin Campaign in the 9' Mid-West to Retain ’ Post ( Mean Much to Religion This. the promoters o! the move- mrnt to pave the atation. mean: much ‘1) the people of the middle welt. t it generally felt that there should an active naval training station in the midweat and on the Great Lakes. 3 appears that the government in un- willing or unable to maintain {our atiom. Two, it appeara, for po- mical and territorial reaaona muat be m the Atlantic coast. at Newport. R. l. and Hampton Ronda, \‘a.. and one (in the Pacific coast. at San Francin- ; These arr said 10 hr ldvnncin‘ limes. and they mm to be u respect- ;jrin-s nnyw-y f It will greatly assist in the electiw‘ prosecution of thin maven-at if eoj pics of resolution: an sent to “mil-r; Organizations heated in othtr statu' .mbrlced by the nem'on known .- the! Hiddk' West. I _ Conspicuous among {he flower ex- flibns In- (hr nrtlficul rose: on the firl's cheeks 3m: mam rm pull. km '0'! TO . SAVE GREAT LAKES Enmm... m: sun. ufmmv comm ' luSnH;luyBcheoNI-- nmmmm ' MIND-rifle]! ___. Am. The deficit h "pond I! Ibo"! 32.000. I! was unburied that donmldbomadewndmw number of day- perhaps to dint. '10- : View to Mot-in; (W In the future. The pron 0! Lake mm, and all who helpod nuke (he fflr I soon” we" thanked by tho pro-6- dent. The Antoni-don full that. Al- While mnrdod u I moon-(u! a, hibiu‘on. the 1922 Luke county hit failed a» meet expenses. according w report- mud. n a mood“ of the dimton held In! wool u the home ofIHu- pmidong W. I. Woodin. It LAKE com [All The story is well told, and will command the attention of' readers everywhere. Many of the author’s opinions and state-:; ments are fantastic from the American point of view, but in-'_ terest in the narrative is increased, rather than lessened by; this fact Old controversies are sure to be revived, old discus-«‘ sions renewed, by the former kaiser's defense of Germany' and his attacks on the leaders of other nations. For instance, ~ he takes seriously the old absurd canard about a secret treaty against Germany and Austria, in 1897 by the United States; Great Britain and France. This is only one of his declarations, that will amaze-7- and amusemthe American reader. The long-awaited autobiography of Germany’s deposed em- peror will be publisfied in The Chicago Daily News begin- ning Tuesday, September 26, continuing in daily install- ments until completed. Here are some of the significant “high spots” in a topical analysisf of the story: Why Bismarck Went Out Diplomacy With Euland Tangier Visit and Moroccan Crisis Germany’s Denial of War Aims Propaganda Before War Germans and Art Treasures “The Wrong of Versailles” Secret Talks with the Cur Visit to Victoria's Deatbbed King Edward's “Bnelrcle-ent" Failure of German Diplomacy Attitude of Sir Edward Gray v Emperor Karl of Austria ' Swapping Zanzibar for Hellgoland’ Chamberlain OIer of Alliance Rmsians as Asiatic- Ger-auy's Naval Plans. Charges of Atrocities ' Wilson and the 14 Points * Germany When Deleat Came ' Fatbel'laad and World’s Opinion 'lbe Flight to Holland 0 Why Kaiser Avoided Suicide ' Ger-any of the Me Publication of this remarkable autobiography how my week inf The Chicago Daily News -â€" the first installment on Tuesday, September. 26. Newsdealers throughout the northwest have increased their usual" suppl'y of the paper, and can give new waders either back numbers be, ginning with Tuesday, or an advance “reprint" of all the chapters print. ed in the paper from 'I‘ueodny, September %, to Saturday, September 30, thus insuring to every new reader “The German Kuiser’s Own Story” from the beginning. Readers who find it more convenient to get the poper by mail may send $1.00 to The Chicago Daily News. 15 North Wells street. Chicago. and get it. postage paid. daily for two months. mation. It is a story of absorbing interest to the reader of history and of': current events alike. and is bound to create a world of discussion. It/ deals not only with the direct events of the war, but covers a mass of most important collateral matter intimately or remotely related to the. Beginning with the chapter on Bismanck, the ex-emperor traces his- tory through four decades. In a general way the story is chronological.‘ although in the opening chapters the writer often- diverges into events! long past. or into the remote future. But from the time he reaches the period immediately preceding the world war the story moves in rapid: action and is in many respects informative. notwithstanding the author’s.; prejudice. eccentricity. and. in /many instances. his surprising misinfor--; war. Fora! Pro-"vet. W 1- 1". 9..., vi" sun «on an Polo dub mall- at Uncoln and m imam It 9 o'clock. Hon. cu 5' sent in to the cubic-It the Polo ground- on Saturday Md". and will :0 ambled. fed. groomed and and, by 8 o’clock Sunday manningâ€"tho Pmimt bud-t. Cid protua ioMl men Will W F“ a" Emperor Karl of Austria ' Swapping Zuuihu' for Hdlgohnd’ Chnbainiu Me: of Alliance Rulin- u Addict M and nib. hula “MW- lead a. '07. Th. Invitation“- g... ml to I" who want to agingâ€"m brin; a horn and join the My. it... J. Sutherland .na Wm. M trip from thou to the Polo m very“ litmus. Pgruahrly bountiful knot. rival Evan-ton And Gloncoe. und dun ii up! .\ 0‘ l‘l. ‘xni‘

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